Pedro Sánchez's government has sent the King of Spain on an official visit to Jordan in the midst of a war in that area.
The Sánchez government is not only putting Felipe VI's security at risk, but has also spiced up this official visit with a tweet in which it announced that Minister Albares would accompany the King, which includes a confusing image:
What appears in the animated GIF included in this tweet does not look like the flag of the Kingdom of Jordan, but rather the Palestinian flag. Both are very similar, but there are some differences. The most obvious one is that the Jordanian flag has a seven-pointed star that does not appear in the Ministry's tweet:
The Palestinian flag does not have that star, as can be seen in this image:
Another difference between the two flags is that their triangles are different. On the Jordanian flag, the right tip of the triangle reaches right to the center of the flag, while on the Palestinian flag the triangle covers only one-third of the flag's length.
It is difficult to know which of the two flags the Ministry has used since the Jordanian flag is not shown in full, using the Spanish flag to conveniently cover the place where the Jordanian star appears, although the inclination of that angle is more similar to that of the triangle on the Jordanian flag than to that of the Palestinian flag.
In any case, it is reprehensible that a Ministry publishes an official tweet with a misleading image and which omits the most characteristic element that distinguishes the Jordanian flag from the Palestinian flag. strong>Have they done so deliberately?
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