Can Cyprus be a model for Middle East peace?

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Analysis: Can Cyprus be a model for Middle East peace?

As he toured a series of European capitals in May, Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman told his audience at a dinner party in Rome that he believed Cyprus – which was divided between its Greek and Turkish citizens in 1975, after years of bloodshed – was a fitting model for ending the conflict between Israelis and Palestinians.

Turkish soldier opens door in temporary wall by UN buffer zone on Turkish-Cypriot side of Nicosia. Photo: AP
Turkish soldier opens door in temporary wall by UN buffer zone on Turkish-Cypriot side of Nicosia. Photo: AP

“We’re interested in this,” Lieberman said. “In Cyprus, it was the same situation as in Israel. Greeks and Turks were living together, and there was friction and tension and bloodshed.”

Greeks and Turks did live together, for hundreds of years, on the island, but Ottoman and later British rule kept a lid on violence between the sides. When the British left in 1960, the groups united in what was then called the Republic of Cyprus.

But in 1963, the Turks were pushed out of that government, and the following 11 years were marked by incessant violence. The Turks say that Greek actions in their towns and villages constituted nothing less than a coordinated campaign of ethnic cleansing.

On June 20, 1974, five days after a Greek Cypriot coup d’etat on the island, the Turkish army intervened – or invaded, depending on whom you ask – and pushed Greek forces back to the southern part of the island. A year later, the UN oversaw a population transfer – Greeks to the south and Turks to the north – completing the separation that lasts to this day.

And it was precisely this separation, Lieberman said, which had brought about peace and prosperity there. Now, he claimed in May, the Netanyahu government was basing its approach on the model provided by Cyprus.

But is Cyprus really a good example?

While the Greeks enjoy stability and international recognition, they continue to view the north as “occupied territory” that was “illegally invaded” by Turkey in 1974. Their motivation for a comprehensive agreement has been less robust than the Turks’, if only because they don’t need an agreement as much as do their neighbors to the north.

The Turkish Republic of North Cyprus goes unrecognized by every nation in the world except for Turkey, and has tough international restrictions on investors and developers that has local restaurants such as “Burger City” and “Pizza Hat” filling in for their original counterparts – since Burger King and Pizza Hut are not allowed to open branches, due to international embargoes.

Greece continues to use its EU membership and international weight to prevent the Turkish Cypriots from gaining international recognition, which would, first and foremost, allow the Turkish Cypriots to open their air and sea ports to international flights, a development that would render North Cyprus a formidable competitor for the island’s main source of income, tourism. As of now, every flight into the north must come from Turkey.

Greek Cypriots are unsatisfied with the current situation, but have a Western standard of living that allows them to wait, while Turkish Cypriots decry their international isolation as unbearable. And while both sides have been negotiating a comprehensive agreement for years, it remains unattainable, for now.

Therefore, another problem with Lieberman’s argument is that Cypriots themselves view their situation as a temporary one. Separation is viewed as a means to achieving a final, comprehensive agreement, not the end of the conflict.

While that agreement has historically been viewed through the prism of federation, an increasing number of Turkish Cypriots are awakening to the reality that such a deal could see Greek Cypriots return to the Turkish part of the island en masse, effectively ending Turkish autonomy there through demographics – an Israeli equivalent to a one-state solution.

Speaking to The Jerusalem Post at a reception on Monday evening to commemorate the 35th anniversary of the 1974 Turkish “Peace Operation,” Turkish Cypriot President Mehmet Ali Talat said, “Maybe your foreign minister was referring to the fact that there has been no violence here since 1974.

“With that I agree with him. But the central goal in North Cyprus is federation.”

But when asked how Turkish demographic integrity would be maintained after federation, Talat said, “[Greek Cypriots] will be able to come here, but with restrictions. They will not be able to settle here freely.”

Not only are Cypriots’ wishes regarding their political fate different from those of Israelis and Palestinians, their conflict remains unresolved.

So could the Cyprus model be an example for Israel? And if so, is Lieberman referring to a 35-year-old military standoff as his vision for ending the conflict? Or is it simply a separation of two peoples, in which one is recognized, and the other is not?

Source:  www.jpost.com, Jul 26, 2009


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4 responses to “Can Cyprus be a model for Middle East peace?”

  1. “Help came first from the Kurds. These fierce mountain tribesmen who had been fighting Iraqi central governemnts for decades to achieve autonomy had begun a far-reaching clandestine alliance with the Mossad in the mid-1960s. Israel, which viewed Iraq as one of its chief adversaries since independence, had considerable self-interest in supporting the Kurds in their struggle. The Mossad’s military experts provided training to the guerrillas of Mustapha Barzani, the principal Kurdish chieftain, along with weapons and even a field hospital. Now that the Jews needed aid, the Kurds were ready to provide it. Working with Mossad officers, the Kurds led approximately 1.500 Jews to safety across the border with Iran, where Iranian Kurds took over. The Shah’s security police, the SAVAK, which, as noted, had close ties to the Mossad, provided added protection. At that stage the Kurds in Iran were at peace with the Shah. From Tehran, HIAS [Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society] flew refugees to Israel.

    […]

    “Since Iraqi as well as Iranian Kurds were old friends of the Mossad, small but significant numbers,’ according to a HIAS report, were able to leave Iran `by walking through the mountains to Turkey with the help of Kurdish guides … But this route is extremely dangerous and costly.’

    […]

    “The Iraqis would not allow direct flights to Tel Aviv, so the Jews were flown to Cyprus, then moved by air and sea to Israel.” p. 208

    Source: “The Secret Alliance – The Extraordinary Story of the Rescue of the Jews since World War II” by Tad Szulc, 1991 [Farrar, Straus & Giroux, New York]

    “Finally, this book would not have been possible without the belief, on the part of individuals associated with the [American Jewish] Joint [Distribution Committee] and HIAS [the Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society] in the United States and the Mossad and the Jewish agency in Israel, that the time had come to tell an extraordinary story that has been kept largely under cover for decades.” [p. xvii]

  2. Jailed Israelis: A Spy Fiasco Or a Warning By Cyprus?
    http://www.nytimes.com/1998/11/09/world/jailed-israelis-a-spy-fiasco-or-a-warning-by-cyprus.html

    Strange case of `Mossad agents’ [in Cyprus]
    http://www.independent.co.uk/news/strange-case-of-mossad-agents-1190225.html


    Article: Spy trial closes in Cyprus, but Mossad receives blemish
    http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P1-23060777.html

  3. Can Cyprus be a model for Middle East peace? | Turkish Forum | Cool Med Radio Cyprus

    […] is a new Post at Can Cyprus be a model for Middle East peace? | Turkish Forum. As he toured a series of European capitals in May, Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman told his […]

  4. Kufi Seydali Avatar
    Kufi Seydali

    Sir,

    In the past, people have asked the same question with regards to
    Yugoslavia and Lebanon. Which really confirms the belief that the
    Cyprus conflict is an old, chronical conflict and not one which started
    with the legal intervention of Guarantor Power Turkey in 1974.

    In fact, since the collapse of Communism and the Soviet Union in 1989,
    many nations have acquired their freedoms and independence
    (Czech Republic, Slovakia, Slovenia, Croatia, etc….).

    However, in Cyprus the wheels turned the other way! Europe, and the
    USA whilst busy nation-building and divide et Impera all around the world,
    have been busy “uniting” the so-called “last divided country” and “Cypriot-
    Nation”. This is no joke, it is the brutal reality of Cyprus. Everybody
    wants Turkey to get out of Cyprus but no one talks of the British and
    Greeks going home! Recent EU policy on Cyprus is the biggest international
    joke, and unfortunately the Erdogan Government played along those lines.
    For what? EU membership! Yes, that is a joke and it is as funny as the
    so-called Republic of Cyprus in the hands of the Greek Orthodoxy.

    No dear Israel, Cyprus is not a model solution for anyone around the world,
    because Cyprus in not Palestine, and is not Lebanon. And, most important
    of all, the Turkish Army is not the PLO or Hamas. Finally, it must also be
    said that, being Turkish is just as difficult as being Jewish in this world.

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