Category: Israel

  • Turkey Denies U.S. Complained Over Comments Against Israel

    Turkey Denies U.S. Complained Over Comments Against Israel

    Turkey denies that the United States expressed concerns over remarks made by the country’s officials about alleged Israeli raid in Syria.

    By Elad Benari

    First Publish: 2/8/2013, 3:15 AM

    img373481

    Turkey’s Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan

    AFP/File

    Turkey denied on Thursday that the United States expressed concerns to Turkish authorities over remarks made by the country’s officials about an alleged Israeli raid on a military convoy and a research center near Damascus last week.

    Diplomatic sources told the Turkish daily Today’s Zaman that the U.S. embassy did not convey any concerns to the Turkish side over the remarks.

    “There has been no initiative or a meeting in Ankara [between Turkish and US officials]. We couldn’t understand what they were referring to,” the sources told the newspaper.

    On Saturday, Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu criticized the Syrian government for failing to respond to the alleged Israel airstrike, suggesting that the Syrian stance raises suspicions that there is a secret deal between the two countries.

    “Why has the Syrian army, which has been attacking its own people with warplanes and tanks for 22 months, not responded to this Israeli operation?” Davutoglu asked.

    “Why doesn’t [Bashar al-Assad] throw a stone at the Israeli planes while they fly over his palace and insult his nation’s honor? Why doesn’t he do anything against Israel while he drops bombs on the innocent people of his country? Is there a secret agreement between Israel and Assad?” he added.

    A day later, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan accused Israel of waging “state terrorism” as he condemned the alleged air strike as an unacceptable violation of international law.

    “Those who have been treating Israel like a spoilt child should expect anything from them, at any time,” Erdogan said.

    “As I say time and again, Israel has a mentality of waging state terrorism. Right now, there is no telling what it might do and where it might do it,” he told reporters.

    “We cannot regard a violation of air space as acceptable. What Israel does is completely against international law… it is beyond condemnation,” Erdogan said.

    Responding to the comments, State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland called them “inflammatory” and said they are “obviously very troubling to us.”

    Nuland told reported that the U.S. had “conveyed our concerns on this matter with senior Turkish officials.” She added that the U.S. administration had expressed these concerns to Turkish authorities via the U.S. Embassy in Ankara.

    The U.S. embassy in Ankara declined to comment on the matter and said it is impossible to provide more information than what Nuland said.

    Tags: Syria ,Turkey ,Recep Tayyip Erdogan ,Ahmet Davutoglu ,Victoria Nuland ,Turkey-Israel relations ,IAF-Syria

    via Turkey Denies U.S. Complained – Middle East – News – Israel National News.

  • Turkey Steps Up Criticism of Israel

    Turkey Steps Up Criticism of Israel

    By: Tulin Daloglu for Al-Monitor Turkey Pulse. Posted on February 5.

    Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan shakes hands with Syrian refugees as he visits a refugee camp near Akcakale border crossing on the Turkish-Syrian border, southern Sanliurfa province, Dec. 30, 2012. (photo by REUTERS/Kayhan Ozer/Prime Minister's Press Office)  Read more: https://www.al-monitor.com/originals/2013/02/davutoglu-erdogan-turkey-accuses-assad-israel-conspiracy.html#ixzz2KDShC2Xq
    Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan shakes hands with Syrian refugees as he visits a refugee camp near Akcakale border crossing on the Turkish-Syrian border, southern Sanliurfa province, Dec. 30, 2012. (photo by REUTERS/Kayhan Ozer/Prime Minister’s Press Office)
    Read more: http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2013/02/davutoglu-erdogan-turkey-accuses-assad-israel-conspiracy.html#ixzz2KDShC2Xq

    The Turkish government can say nothing positive about Israel. On Sunday, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan repeated his now-classic line that Israel is the “spoiled child” of this region, and that it conducts “state terror.” While there might have been some truth in the Turkish government’s criticism of Israel, its comments seem to carry no weight in Jerusalem.

    About This Article

    Summary :

    Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan reacted fiercely to Israel’s attack on a Syrian military convoy, accusing Israel of conducting “state terror,” writes Tulin Daloglu.

    Author: Tulin Daloglu

    Posted on : February 5 2013

    Categories : Originals Turkey Security

    Erdogan, like his Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu, was reacting to Israel’s reported attack in Syria targeting a military convoy and a research facility that supposedly had advanced weaponry destined to reach Hezbollah. Turkey, so far, has not counter-argued that the target was not carrying any weaponry, but it did declare that Israeli war jets should not dare to fly over a Muslim country.

    “Is there a secret agreement between [Syrian President Bashar al-]Assad and Israel?” questioned Davutoglu on Saturday. “The Assad regime only abuses. Why don’t you use the same strength that you use against defenseless women against Israel, which you have seen as an enemy since its establishment?”

    Two things: Davutoglu must be aware that the minute there was retaliation by Syria against Israel, that would carry a serious potential to turn into a regional war. Second, why has Davutoglu — or the Erdogan government, for that matter — not shown the same sensitivity to the Syrian women abused by the opposition? The fact is that Turkey should have been able to state these wrongdoings without taking sides based on a principled position.

    Moreover, the Erdogan government recently launched a public campaign against terrorism, an act that needs to be supported by all segments of society. That said, Erdogan’s government should also apply it to terrorism attacks against Israel.

    Turkey does not carry any baggage that will make it obliged to take a side. These conflicts are not of Ankara’s making, nor does Ankara have the answers to fix them. If Israel has acted upon reliable intelligence, Ankara should not feel politically embarrassed to ignore Israel’s attack.

    But while Davutoglu went on to accuse Assad of conspiring with Israel, Turkey’s opposition is also blaming the Erdogan government of having secret deals with the Jewish state. Nothing about removing weapons that would only lead to more bloodshed, and chaos in the region needs to be secret. Surely, the Middle East will never be short of any kind of weapons, or the desire to kill opponents, but it is about time for responsible leaders to change the rhetoric and say out loud that no sort of violence is acceptable, and that the states must truly join their efforts to fight against terrorism.

    Once the hypocrisy and the “blame game” in the region nears an end, there will be hope for bringing closure to all long-lasting conflicts in the region — from the abuse of women to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. For this to happen, though, people need to see each other as human first, rather than as Jews or Muslims, or whoever they may be.

    Tulin Daloglu is a columnist for Al-Monitor’s Turkey Pulse. She has written extensively for various Turkish and American publications, including The New York Times, International Herald Tribune, The Middle East Times, Foreign Policy, The Daily Star (Lebanon) and the SAIS Turkey Analyst Report. She also had a regular column at The Washington Times for almost four years.

    via Turkey Steps Up Criticism of Israel – Al-Monitor: the Pulse of the Middle East.

  • NATO missiles in Turkey shield Israel, a plot against Russia: Layos Szaszdi

    NATO missiles in Turkey shield Israel, a plot against Russia: Layos Szaszdi

    An analyst says NATO missiles deployed in Turkey under the pretext of protecting Ankara against Syrian attacks are in actual fact aimed at Russia in pursuit of Israeli interests.

    The comment comes as the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) military alliance says it has made the first set of Patriot missiles operational on the Turkey-Syria border.

    NATO’s Supreme Allied Commander for Europe Admiral James Stavridis has backed the deployment of Patriot missiles, saying it shows the alliance’s willingness to defend allies facing threats.

    Six batteries of the US-made missiles, effective against aircraft and short-range missiles, will be deployed in the southern city of Adana and the southeastern cities of Kahramanmaras and Gaziantep.

    The Syrian government has censured the plan, calling it another act of provocation by the government of Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

    Press TV has conducted an interview with Layos Szaszdi, political commentator in Washington to further discuss the issue. What follows is a rough transcription of the interview.

    Press TV: Mr. Szaszdi, we see foreign-backed insurgents literally killing civilians in Syria, execution style. Why has the international community remained silent on this and why isn’t it doing anything about it?

    Szaszdi: Well, because they do support the rebels. They want them to succeed because their ultimate goal is to topple the government in Damascus and this is a broad coalition that includes Western powers headed or led by the United States and including France, United Kingdom, Germany, Turkey of course– a major spring board for the rebels.

    And that’s why the Patriot missiles are being deployed in the regions where they are near the city of Adana, near the city of Kahramanmara because probably those areas, certainly the city of Adana were the US base of Incirlik Base are entry ports; from where? Well, not entry ports but staging points where supplies are provided to the rebels in Syria.

    So because of this broad alliance or coalition including Western powers and Middle Eastern powers, Persian Gulf, Arab States of Saudi Arabia, Qatar, probably Israel also is supporting the rebels so that’s why they don’t denounce the crimes committed by the rebels particularly the al-Nusra front which by the way the United States has declared a terrorist organization.

    So there is this common goal that unites the Saudis, the Israelis, the Turks, the Germans and the Americans which bring down the government in Damascus as part of the information war, the propaganda war.

    They are not going to mention or accuse the rebels of committing crimes. Everything that is going wrong; any war crime that is being committed in Syria they are always going to be blame it on the government in Damascus.

    Press TV: As far as the NATO Patriot missiles are concerned, you spoke about them, how should one interpret these missiles and of course where does the international law fit in this?

    Szaszdi: Well, Turkey is a NATO member, they do have the right to deploy, these NATO allies, the US, the Netherlands, Germany (have the right to) to deploy these Patriot missiles which are regarded as a defensive weapon in the Eastern borders of Turkey.

    Now of course it’s my belief that where the missiles are being deployed near the city of Adana, Kahramanmaras were the Germans missiles, two batteries of Patriot missiles are being deployed, they are being deployed there because it’s a staging point from where the rebels obtained supplies, weapons, and volunteers.

    So they are military targets, that’s why they are deploying missiles in case that Syria supposedly would like to retaliate launching attacks against those staging bases from where the rebels are being fed with weapons, volunteers, supplies, and etcetera but of course Syria is not going to provoke NATO to intervene.

    I would say that these Patriot missiles are part of an extension of the European missile defense system which is actually aimed against Russia and Iran and the Russians know it.

    They know that this is an excuse, the deployment of the Patriot missiles claiming that it is to protect Turkey against Syrian missile attack or air attack but in fact it’s aimed against Russia and its part of a broader missile defense system that does not just include NATO European missile defense System but also Japan presumably.

    And in the case of the Patriot batteries being deployed in Eastern Turkey they could be connected to the more sophisticated missile defense system which is the Theater High Altitude Area Defense system also known by its acronym (THAAD) and there is a fire control [system and a] radar for that missile system which is the AN/TPY-2 and that radar is mobile so supposedly now it’s pointing Iran since its mobile it can turned pointing Russia.

    Why Russia? Because I believe that these European missile defense system including the Patriot batteries can be linked to that fire control radar I just mentioned, could be used to defend Israel in case that Israel would attack Russia for instance move their intercontinental ballistic missile force including the Jericho-III ICBM that can reach Moscow and St. Petersburg.

    And Israelis have been targeting the Soviet Union since the late eighties presumably they’re still targeting Russia due to its support to Syria, to Iran for instance though it is a friendly nation. So presumably the missiles can be used against Russia too.

    VG/JR

    via PressTV – NATO missiles in Turkey shield Israel, a plot against Russia: Layos Szaszdi.

  • Can Israel’s New Coalition Fix Relations with Turkey?

    By Steven A. Cook

    Tensions between Jerusalem and Ankara run too deeply for a single election to make much difference.

    Nir Elias/ReutersSince Yair Lapid and his Yesh Atid party’s surprise showing last week in Israel’s elections, there has been an outpouring of commentary about a new dawn in Israeli domestic and foreign policies. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, whose Likud, in conjunction with Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman’s Yisrael Beitenu party lost a combined elevenseats in the Knesset, will have to form a broader government that includes centrists like Lapid. As a result, a conventional wisdom has developed that this new coalition will lead Israel out of its international isolation. Typically, observers have been asking what the Lapid phenomenon means for the “peace process” — as if that is something that exists. Yet a handful of commentators have also zeroed in on Turkey-Israel ties as ripe for rapprochement under a new, allegedly more conciliatory, Israeli government. It is a nice idea, but so are rainbows and unicorns. The reality is that, despite Lapid’s rise, nothing has or will likely change to convince Israeli and Turkish leaders that mending ties is in their political interests.

    To be fair, the Turks themselves have led foreign observers to believe that a change in Turkey-Israel relations was possible. For the better part of the last four years, Turkish officials have indicated that Israel itself was not the problem, but “this Israeli government,” meaning, of course, Netanyahu’s outgoing coalition of right-of-center parties. It is true that it is difficult to work with Prime Minister Netanyahu and that Foreign Minister Lieberman had, contrary to his job description, a knack for aggravating relations with other countries. Still, with the exception of the Mavi Marmara incident, the biggest problems in the Turkey-Israel relationship — the blockade of the Gaza Strip and Operation Cast Lead — predate Netanyahu’s tenure. Indeed, the idea that a new broader and allegedly more moderate Israeli coalition will lead to reconciliation between Jerusalem and Ankara badly misreads the dynamics of Israel’s left-right politics, the profound unpopularity of Israel in Turkey, and the centrality of the Middle East to the architects of Turkish foreign policy.

    A handful of commentators have also zeroed in on Turkey-Israel ties as ripe for rapprochement under a new, allegedly more conciliatory, Israeli government. It is a nice idea, but so are rainbows and unicorns.

    Turks have often pointed to Israeli policy in the Gaza Strip, especially the blockade of the area, as a prime example of its problems with Netanyahu’s previous government and the primary obstacle to better relations. This is a principled position, but Ankara seems to have its chronology incorrect. Israel’s land closure of Gaza dates to June 2007and the naval blockade was implemented in January 2009 — both under the premiership of Ehud Olmert, who after leaving Likud to join Ariel Sharon in his breakaway Kadima Party has developed a reputation as a centrist. There was no way that Netanyahu was going to reverse Olmert’s policies and there is a slim chance that that he would do so now even with Yair Lapid — who is not actually all that to the left on foreign policy — in his government.

    Even if Israelis had given a resurgent Labor Party the most Knesset seats and its leader, Shelly Yachimovich, was tapped to form a government, Israel’s land and sea blockade of the Gaza Strip would remain firmly in place. A left-of-center government simply could not be perceived as being soft on security and Gaza. The cliché “only Labor can make war and only Likud can make peace” was coined a long time ago, but it still holds today. Over the last two decades, Israeli prime ministers have consistently been brought down from the right often over some issue related to the country’s security. Politics aside, there really is not much disagreement among the country’s major political parties that Gaza poses a threat to Israel’s security. If the Turkish demand that Israel must lift its closure of Gaza is serious, and there is little reason to believe that it is not, ties between Ankara and Jerusalem are likely to remain strained.

    It is not just the Israeli politics of the Gaza blockade or the actual threat from Gaza that is the problem in Turkey-Israel relations. Those who see an opportunity to restore good ties with the emergence of a new Israeli government or who become positively giddy at every leak of high-level contact between Turkish and Israeli officials — which the Turks invariably deny — are not paying close enough attention to Turkish politics. Israel is not popular in Turkey and never really was despite the blossoming of strategic relations between Jerusalem and Ankara in 1996. Those ties served the Turkish General Staff’s specific national security and, importantly, domestic political interests at a time when the officers’ power was at its height. That was during an era before the rise of the Justice and Development Party (AKP) when public opinion mattered very little in Turkish foreign policy.

    Prime Minister Erdogan, who is an astonishingly talented politician and has a keen sense of what makes average Turks tick, understands the political benefits that are derived from strained relations with Israel. To be sure, it took Erdogan some time before putting the bilateral relationship on ice. He visited Jerusalem in May of 2005 and invited his then counterpart, Ariel Sharon, to visit Ankara; but as he and the AKP grew more confident at home, relations with the United States improved, and Turkey became a player in the Middle East and wider Islamic world, it became easy to jettison ties with Israel with the approval of many Turks. Israel’s only constituency in Turkey includes parts of the business community, but even as Turkish-Israeli trade has continued and even increased, there are few voices who want a resumption of the alignment of the 1990s. Turkey’s opposition rebukes Erdogan and the AKP mercilessly on a wide-range of issues, but not on the quality of Ankara’s relations with Jerusalem.

    The fact that the prime minister has been able to leverage the Palestine issue to great political effect without penalty suggests that the Turkish public’s now manifest solidarity with Palestinians was not just manufactured in 2002 when the AKP came to power. Still, outright enmity toward Israel was generally confined to Turkey’s hard core Islamists even if the broader public remained wary of Ankara’s relations with Jerusalem and critical of the Israel Defense Force’s policies in the West Bank and Gaza Strip.

    This changed during the early days of Operation Iraqi Freedom when unsubstantiated stories of Israeli support for Kurdish independence in northern Iraq surfaced in The New Yorker and Turkey’s less well-regarded dailies. Then the way in which Erdogan exploited Israel’s Operation Cast Lead in late 2008 and early 2009 and, of course, the Mavi Marmara incident in May 2010, transformed solidarity with Palestinians into hostility toward Israel, which has become political gold for Erdogan. The U.S. government believes that in Turkey’s last elections (June 2011), which Erdogan won with almost 50 percent of the vote, Turks voted on two “p’s” — their pocketbooks and Palestine. Under these circumstances, Erdogan, who plans to be Turkey’s president one day and who believes that the AKP will be dominant for at least another decade, is unlikely to be receptive to a substantial improvement in Ankara’s ties with Jerusalem.

    Even as Erdogan plans his path to the Cankaya Palace, he is currently content to be “King of the Arab Street.” The Turkish prime minister is consistently ranked the most popular world leader in polls of the Arab world. Erdogan’s standing is primarily a function of his position on Gaza, but also his early call for Hosni Mubarak to leave office during the Egyptian uprising, and Turkey’s harboring of tens of thousands of Syrian refugees fleeing Bashar al Assad’s brutality. These policies are emblematic of a broader Turkish engagement and activism in the Middle East that distinguishes Erdogan and the AKP from previous Turkish governments. The architects of Turkish foreign policy — Erdogan, President Abdullah Gul, who served as prime minister and foreign minister, and Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu — believe that Turkey is the natural leader of a region that the Ottomans once dominated as imperial overlords.

    The combination of Turkey’s economic might, diplomatic clout, and cultural affinity to Arabs and Muslims is central to the prosperity and political development of the region. Some have called this “neo-Ottomanism” to a fair amount of controversy, but whatever it is called, Ankara could not truly be a regional leader, trouble shooter, “inspiration,” and economic engine, as well as the many other designations and appellations Turkey has picked up over the last decade, while simultaneously nurturing close ties with Israel.

    The Turks were already suspect in the Arab world given the legacies of Ottoman colonialism, the Jacobin secularism of Mustafa Kemal, and Ankara’s institutional ties to the West through NATO and its efforts to join the European Union. These deficits ultimately proved to be surmountable, but at the cost of Turkey’s ties with Israel. Nothing about the way Turkey’s leaders view the world, the Middle East, and the Turkish role in it has changed now that Benjamin Netanyahu is poised to make Yair Lapid his junior coalition partner.

    It has been 16 years since General Cevik Bir, then Turkey’s deputy chief-of-staff, revealed to an audience in Washington, DC that Ankara and Jerusalem had upgraded their ties to a strategic relationship that included a robust security component. For some it was a golden age — and even if that level of cooperation and coordination is an artifact of the past, it is worth salvaging Turkey-Israel relations. There has been every effort to do just this over the course of the last four years to no avail. This is unfortunate, but the disincentives for both Turkish and Israeli politicians to improve relations are great.

  • Prospects Dim for Turkey’s Ties To Israel

    Prospects Dim for Turkey’s Ties To Israel

    Supporters of Hamas' Gaza leader Ismail Haniyeh shout slogans against Israel in front of the cruise liner Mavi Marmara in Istanbul
    Supporters of Hamas’ Gaza leader, Ismail Haniyeh, shout slogans against Israel in front of the cruise liner Mavi Marmara in Istanbul, Jan. 2, 2012. (photo by REUTERS/Osman Orsal )

    By: Semih Idiz for Al-Monitor Turkey Pulse. posted on January 20.

    The current woeful state of the once mutually beneficial Turkish-Israel ties resembles Humpty Dumpty after his proverbial fall. None of the king’s horses or of the king’s men have been successful so far in putting these ties back together again. This has not, however, stopped Israel from trying to come up with formulas aimed at appeasing Turkey. Ankara’s position nevertheless remains firm, with its preconditions for normalized ties almost writ in stone.

    About This Article

    Summary :

    Semih Idiz reviews Turkish-Israeli ties and sees no incentive for Ankara to improve ties with Israel at this time.

    Author: Semih Idiz
    posted on : January 20 2013

    Relations between the two countries, already strained over Israel’s “Operation Cast Lead” against Gaza in December 2008, plummeted after Israeli forces killed nine Turkish pro-Palestinian activists in May 2010.  The Turks — one of them a US citizen also — were shot in international waters in the eastern Mediterranean by Israeli soldiers raiding the Mavi Marmara, a Turkish aid ship that was part of an international flotilla trying to force the Israel blockade of Gaza.

    Turkey continues to wait for Israel to formally and unequivocally apologize over the incident, and is also demanding compensation for the killed Turks, as well as the raising of the siege of Gaza, before it considers improving ties with the Jewish state.

    Israel, for its part, argues that the Turks on the Mavi Marmara were armed and hostile; a charge vehemently denied by the organizers of the international flotilla and Turkey. Not surprisingly, the right-wing government of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has refused to meet Turkish demands.

    Israel has nevertheless sent out feelers, mostly through members of the Turkish media, for improved ties. The latest attempt came a few days ago from Israel’s deputy foreign minister, Danny Ayalon, who told daily Hurriyet that the manner in which the US and Pakistan had resolved a similar dispute provided a convenient blueprint for Israel and Turkey.

    He was referring to the letter sent by the US to Pakistan after American jets mistakenly killed 24 Pakistani soldiers in November 2011 in an air raid. “I could consider resolving this problem by using the text of the US-Pakistan agreement,” Ayalon was quoted saying.

    When asked if the letter he was proposing on the basis of the US letter to Pakistan contained an apology Ayalon said, “Yes. If you read the text of the (US) letter it is very clear to everyone.” Turkish diplomats sounded out by Al-Monitor, however, are not so sure.

    They argued that Washington’s letter, while expressing regret over the Pakistani soldiers killed, nevertheless fell short of a full apology that could bring legal liability with it.

    They also pointed to the fact that although former Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman has endorsed the US-Pakistani model, he has, nevertheless, said that this would not amount to a formal apology.

    Ayalon, who is key a member of the Knesset for the nationalist “Israel Our Home” party, has insisted in the past — together with Lieberman — that the Turks on the Mavi Marmara were armed and dangerous and so there is no need to apologize to anyone over the incident.

    Ayalon also gained notoriety among Turks for contributing personally to damaging Turkish-Israeli relations, after he insulted the Turkish ambassador in 2010 by inviting him to the foreign ministry, to be informed of Israel’s displeasure with Turkey, and seated him in a low chair, in front of reporters, while he took the high chair.

    The move was widely considered to be a setup planned by Ayalon to willfully belittle Turkey, and was also criticized in Israel where many felt it was Israel’s image, and not Turkey’s, that had been harmed by a serious lack of diplomatic finesse.

    What Ayalon is proposing now, however, is not good enough for Turkey, according to government sources, who say Ankara’s demands should be met without any ambiguity. Diplomats in Ankara say Israel is reluctant to provide the apology Turkey demands because this would amount to an admission of guilt, which could expose members of the Israeli armed forces to international court cases.

    Meanwhile, a court in Istanbul began a trial in absentia in October 2012 against former Israel army Chief of Staff Gabi Ashkenazi, ex-naval chief Eliezer Marom, former head of military intelligence Amos Yadlin, and former head of the air force Avishai Lev, who are accused of masterminding the Mavi Marmara raid.

    Israel has dismissed this as a “kangaroo court,” while Western diplomats in Ankara say the trial, whose legal basis is questionable, poses no risk for Israel given the September 2011 findings of a panel of inquiry commissioned by the UN Secretary General.

    According to the “Palmer Panel,” Israel’s blockade of Gaza is “a legitimate security measure.” The panel also maintained that Israeli troops faced “significant, organized and violent resistance” on the Mavi Marmara, even though it added that boarding the ship and the use of substantial force was “excessive and unreasonable.”

    Turkey, however, rejected these findings, arguing that the inquiry that counts is the one conducted by the UN’s Human Rights Council in 2010, which found Israel guilty on almost all counts. And there the matter rests today, with neither the US, nor any other country interested in resolving this dispute, having had any success in trying to normalize Turkish-Israeli ties.

    What makes a settlement difficult is the fact that there is an asymmetrical situation in hand. Israel needs improved ties with Ankara much more than the other way around. The importance of improved ties with Turkey was also admitted to by Ayalon in his remarks to Hurriyet.

    “Economically, strategically, and for other reasons, it is very important for Turkey and Israel to cooperate” he said pointing to the turmoil in the Middle East, and expressing his hope that 2013 will see Turkish-Israeli ties set on the right course.

    However, a rapprochement with Israel, and especially one in which Ankara’s demands are not met, would be a political liability for Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, not just at home, but also in the Middle East where his reputation among Sunni Arabs is running high. Put another way, there is no incentive for the Erdogan government to improve ties with Israel at the moment.

    Meanwhile, the fact that Turkey recently lifted its objection to Israeli participation in certain NATO activities in 2013 appears to have raised hopes among Israeli officials for improved ties. Many Israelis see this resulting from a trade-off between Turkey and NATO after Ankara requested Patriot missiles against any missile attacks from Syria.

    Officials in Ankara sounded out by Al-Monitor disagreed. They argued that there was no such trade-off, since NATO would have harmed its image as an alliance if it failed to respond to a request by a strategic ally in order to please a non-member country.

    They also emphasized that Turkey has not given NATO a carte blanche in its dealings with Israel.

    Even if Turkey’s NATO allies are keen for a rapprochement between Turkey and Israel, it seems unlikely that this will come about until Ankara’s demands are met by Israel. Given Israel’s hard-line stance, despite its search for a formula that might appease Turkey, it is not difficult to see that Turkish-Israeli ties will remain in the doldrums for the foreseeable future.

    But even if Humpty Dumpty could be put together somehow, it appears, from today’s perspective, that the cracks will continue to show, the shell having been broken once.

    Semih İdiz is a contributing writer for Al-Monitor’s Turkey Pulse. A journalist who has been covering diplomacy and foreign-policy issues for major Turkish newspapers for 30 years, his opinion pieces can be followed in the English language Hurriyet Daily News, he can also be read in Taraf.

    Read more: https://www.al-monitor.com/originals/2013/01/turkey-israel-flotilla-gaza.html#ixzz2IbrTJDVQ
  • Israel could apologize to Turkey, deputy FM says

    Jerusalem is prepared to mend ties with Ankara, Deputy Foreign Minister Danny Ayalon said Thursday, going so far as to express willingness to write a letter of apology to the Turkish government.

    Danny Ayalon Photo: Screenshot

    “I see some kind of improvement and opportunities” regarding Israel’s relationship with Turkey, which deteriorated following the Mavi Marmara raid in 2010, Ayalon told the Turkish daily Hurriyet.

    There is a way to ease the ongoing tension between the countries and rebuild relations, the outgoing deputy minister said, pointing at an “American-Pakistani formula” that “could be a good platform to clear away the issue.”

    Ayalon was referring to an incident in which American forces accidentally killed 24 Pakistani soldiers, an event that strained the relationship between the countries.

    “The Americans sent a letter that was accepted in Pakistan,” Ayalon said, noting that the same idea could be used to mend Israel-Turkey ties.

    Ayalon answered “yes” when asked if such a letter was an apology. Based on the text of the letter sent by the US, “I think that should be clear to everyone,” he said.

    The deputy foreign minister has been seen as having played a substantive role in Jerusalem’s deteriorating ties with Ankara, after he apparently attempted to publicly shame Turkey’s ambassador to Israel by seating him on a low chair and failing to display a Turkish flag in the room during a 2010 meeting in which he rebuked the envoy for an anti-Israel television series screened in Turkey.

    While communication between Ankara and Jerusalem hasn’t been as open and comprehensive as before, the deputy foreign minister said, there were still “lower-level [talks]” and “back channels” being used by the countries.

    via Israel could apologize to Turkey, deputy FM says | The Times of Israel.