Category: Israel

  • Turkey, Israel resume reconciliation talks

    Turkey, Israel resume reconciliation talks

    JERUSALEM (JTA) — Israel and Turkey resumed informal reconciliation talks.

    Turkey’s foreign minister, Ahmet Davutoglu, confirmed to CNN on Sunday reports that the two countries were discussing how to repair the relationship between the governments that broke down over Israel’s raid on the Mavi Marmara ship.

    Nine Turkish citizens died when Israeli Navy commandoes boarded the Mavi Marmara, which claimed to be carrying humanitarian aid, on May 31, 2010 after warning the ship not to sail into waters near the Gaza Strip in circumvention of Israel’s naval blockade of the coastal strip.

    Turkey has demanded that Israel apologize for the raid, compensate the families of those killed and halt its blockade of Gaza. Israel has offered to fulfill the first two of the requests.

    A Turkish court earlier this month began a trial in absentia of four Israeli military commanders responsible for the raid, including former Chief of Staff Gen. Gabi Ashkenazi. The Israelis could be sentenced in absentia to life in prison.

    Israel’s government-appointed Turkel Commission found in its investigation that the government and the military behaved appropriately, and that the blockade of Gaza was legal. The United Nations’ Palmer Committee also found the blockade to be legal but said Israel used excessive force while boarding the vessel.

    Turkey’s inquiry deemed the Gaza blockade and the Israeli raid to be illegal.

    via Turkey, Israel resume reconciliation talks | JTA – Jewish & Israel News.

  • Time to talk with Turkey

    Time to talk with Turkey

    Time to talk with Turkey

    It would be absurd if Israel, which was prepared to negotiate with Hamas about a cease-fire, was unable to find the right words to apologize to the Turkish people for the Marmara raid.

    Haaretz Editorial | Nov.25, 2012 | 1:40 AM | 8

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    If the resumed reconciliation talks between Israel and Turkey, reported by Barak Ravid in Sunday’s edition, succeed, they could be the most significant diplomatic achievement of Operation Pillar of Defense.

    After the two countries understood the degree to which their interests overlap, they overcame the disconnect between them and agreed to have the head of the Mossad and the Turkish intelligence chief work together during the talks in Egypt that eventually achieved the Gaza cease-fire. One could also point to the tectonic shifts in the Middle East, the crisis in Syria and the negotiations with Iran about its uranium enrichment as mutual lines along which Israel and Turkey could continue to cooperate. Just as Turkey understood that bad relations with Israel haven’t helped it become accepted as a regional leader or achieve its ambition to be the crisis resolver in the Middle East, so Israel recognizes that, given its international and regional isolation, and with its ties with Egypt so tense and fragile, Turkey is a necessary ally.

    There’s a lot of bad blood between the two countries. It didn’t start with the 2010 Mavi Marmara incident, in which the Israel Defense Forces raided a Gaza-bound aid ship and killed nine Turkish citizens onboard, but with Operation Cast Lead almost 18 months earlier, when Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan asked then-Prime Minister Ehud Olmert to hold off and give him a chance to reach understandings with Hamas. The firm friendship between the two premiers at the time was shattered by the Gaza operation.

    The history of the rift between the two countries, however, is not so important now. Great damage has been caused to their mutual relationship and, no less important, to the relationship between the two peoples, because both governments had stooped to keeping petty accounts accompanied by insulting remarks. But the meeting last week in Geneva between Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s envoy, Joseph Ciechanover, and Turkish Foreign Ministry Undersecretary Feridun Sinirlioglu demonstrates that the two governments are prepared to try to bury the hatchet.

    Indeed, it would be absurd if Israel, which was prepared to negotiate with Hamas about a cease-fire, was unable to find the right words to apologize to the Turkish people for the Marmara raid, just as it would be ridiculous if Turkey, which is now prepared to negotiate with Kurdish terrorists, rejected Israeli overtures. It’s about time the two countries became friends once again.

    via Time to talk with Turkey – Israel News | Haaretz Daily Newspaper.

  • Israel and Turkey resume talks to end diplomatic crisis

    Israel and Turkey resume talks to end diplomatic crisis

    Israel and Turkey resume talks to end diplomatic crisis

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    Senior Israeli officials say Netanyahu’s envoy, Yosef Chiechanover, met with Turkish envoy Feridun Sinirlioglu to discuss reconciliation after the crisis that broke out following the 2010 Gaza flotilla.

    By Barak Ravid | 20:13 23.11.12 | 40

    Israel and Turkey have resumed talks on ending the crisis in relations between the two countries, two senior Israeli officials said on Friday.

    via Israel and Turkey resume talks to end diplomatic crisis – Israel News | Haaretz Daily Newspaper.

  • ‫الذي لا تراه عن غزة في الأعلام – What you don’t see in media about Gaza‬‎ – YouTube

    ‫الذي لا تراه عن غزة في الأعلام – What you don’t see in media about Gaza‬‎ – YouTube

    الذي لا تراه عن غزة في الأعلام – What you don’t see in media about Gaza

    via ‫الذي لا تراه عن غزة في الأعلام – What you don’t see in media about Gaza‬‎ – YouTube.

  • Turkey’s Erdogan Labels Israel a ‘Terrorist State’

    Turkey’s Erdogan Labels Israel a ‘Terrorist State’

    ISTANBUL—Turkey’s Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan accused Israel of being a “terrorist state” on Monday and criticized world powers for supporting the weeklong bombardment of Gaza that has killed more some 115 people, signaling that the three-year-old rift between the countries is deepening.

    International Crisis Group Arab-Israeli Project Director Rob Blecher joins the News Hub to discuss what all the fighting means for both sides of the Gaza-Israel conflict. Photo: AP Images.

    Speaking in Istanbul shortly after returning from Cairo, where he held emergency talks on Gaza with Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi, Mr. Erdogan railed against what he called Western powers’ failure to take concerted action to stop bloodshed in Syria. But harsher words were aimed at one-time ally Israel.

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    European Pressphoto Agency

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, seen here in Cairo on Sunday.

    “Those who speak of Muslims and terror side by side are turning a blind eye when Muslims are massacred en masse,” he told a gathering of the Eurasian Islamic Council. “Those who turn a blind eye to discrimination toward Muslims in their own countries, are also closing their eyes to the savage massacre of innocent children in Gaza. … Therefore, I say Israel is a terrorist state.”

    The comments mark a recent low in relations between Turkey and Israel, which have been strained since Israel’s 2008 offensive in Hamas-controlled Gaza.

    Mr. Erdogan’s latest comments appear to pour cold water on the prospect of a thaw in relations between Washington’s two top allies in the region. Recent reports in the Turkish media suggested that the two sides were making headway on repairing ties, although these reports were denied by Turkey’s cabinet ministers.

    Turkey, a member of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, stepped up its diplomatic involvement in the Gaza conflict over the weekend, when Mr. Erdogan visited Cairo to help Egypt’s Mr. Morsi push negotiations for a cease-fire. Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu plans to travel to Gaza on Tuesday with a group of foreign ministers from the Arab League, Turkey’s state news agency Anadolu reported on Sunday.

    In a veiled criticism of U.S. President Barack Obama—who on Sunday reiterated his support for Israel’s right to defend itself against Palestinian rocket fire—Mr. Erdogan said it was unfair to cite Israel’s right to defend itself to justify Israeli attacks, arguing that Israel is the aggressor.

    On Sunday, President Obama reiterated his support for Israel’s right to defend itself against Palestinian rocket fire.

    Israel says its military action against Gaza is a response to Hamas-fired rockets, which in recent days have been fired as far as Tel Aviv. One of these was struck down by Israel’s Iron Dome defense system, with parts falling into the city and setting a car ablaze, in the first such damage on Israel’s largest metropolitan area since the 1991 Gulf War.

    Turkey’s prime minister also criticized the United Nations, which called on Israel and Hamas to work with Egypt to achieve a cease-fire in the conflict. “I’m asked how much I trust the U.N. I don’t trust it,” Mr. Erdogan said, urging once again to reform the world body to make the Security Council more inclusive and effective in stopping bloodshed world-wide.

    —Laurence Norman in Brussels contributed to this article.

    via Turkey’s Erdogan Labels Israel a ‘Terrorist State’ – WSJ.com.

  • Protests held worldwide against IDF op

    Protests held worldwide against IDF op

    WASHINGTON – Pro-Palestinian activists protested Friday in several world capitals against Israel’s Operation Pillar of Defense in Gaza under the banner, “Free Palestine.”

    Hundreds demonstrated in Istanbul and Ankara, in Australia, outside the parliament in Rome, and opposite Israeli embassies in South Korea, Istanbul and Madrid. Protest rallies were also held in the Arab world – in Tunisia, Yemen, Egypt and Algeria.

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    Ali Golin, who protested in Istanbul, said: “I believe that all Muslims should show solidarity. Factions and differences destroy our goal. If we want to answer Israel we must do it together. We won’t achieve anything by condemning Israel. We must take real action.”

    A South Korean human rights activist who took part in the protest outside the Israeli Embassy in Seoul said, “You must not force the Palestinians to sacrifice. You must not kill children anywhere. Children are precious whether in Palestine or in Israel. They must not die in a massacre. We are calling on the Israeli government to come back to its senses.”

    Sylvia Hale, a former parliament member on behalf of Australia’s Greens protested in Sydney. “The Israelis are adopting a policy of slaughtering the people in Gaza,” she said.

    via Protests held worldwide against IDF op – Israel News, Ynetnews.