Category: Israel

  • Turkey denies Israeli report that Mavi Marmara lawsuits dropped

    Turkey denies Israeli report that Mavi Marmara lawsuits dropped

    Turkey denies Israeli report that Mavi Marmara lawsuits dropped

    Submitted by Ali Abunimah on Fri, 01/13/2012 – 15:30

    Mavi Marmara

    Turkey’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MFA) today denied a report in the Israeli newspaper Yedioth Ahronot, carried also on its English website Ynet, that Turkey was to drop its legal actions and lawsuits against Israelis it holds responsible for the attack on the Gaza-bound ship Mavi Marmara on 31 May 2010 which killed 9 people and injured dozens.

    Turkey’s Anatolia News Agency carried this report, which has been translated for The Electronic Intifada:

    Turkish Ministry of Foreign Affairs denied the news report on Mavi Marmara published in Israel’s Yedioth Ahronot newspaper

    ANKARA – MFA Spokesperson Selçuk Ünal denied claims that Turkey suspended cases that were opened against Israelis connected to the attack on the Mavi Marmara flotilla.

    In his statement to the Anatolian Agency, Spokesperson Ünal said “the claims in this report do not reflect the reality.”

    A news report published in The Israeli daily Yedioth Ahronot had claimed, based on sources in the US State Department , that Turkey suspended all cases opened against those Israelis involved in the raid on the Mavi Marmara flotilla going to Gaza in 2010.

    Israeli report allegedly based on “US sources”

    Earlier, a Ynet report headlined “Turkey dropping Marmara lawsuits” claimed:

    Sources in the US State Department said that the Turkish attorney general has ordered that all legal proceedings against Israeli elements involved in the IDF raid on the Marmara ship in May 2010 to be halted, Yedioth Ahronoth reported Friday.

    According to the sources, Turkish prosecutors were instructed to withdraw all proceedings against the elements that gave the order to take over the ship or who actively raided the vessel, an event which resulted in the deaths of nine Turkish citizens.

    Turkish sanctions on Israel

    Turkey’s decision to pursue legal action against Israel for the attack on the Mavi Marmara was announced as part of a package of sanctions last September which included downgrading diplomatic relations and severing military ties over Israel’s refusal to apologize for the attack and lift the siege of Gaza.

    via Turkey denies Israeli report that Mavi Marmara lawsuits dropped | The Electronic Intifada.

  • Will Turkey Demand an Apology From Iran?

    Will Turkey Demand an Apology From Iran?

    Michael Rubin | @mrubin1971 01.09.2012 – 11:45 AM

    Iranian border guards reportedly shot two Turks crossing illegally into Iran from Turkey. Perhaps this can be the moment of truth for Turkey and its prime minister. When Israeli forces warned and then fired on Turks attempting to run Israel’s lawful blockade of Gaza, Turkish authorities demanded apologies, compensation, and a complete end to the blockade of Hamas’ administration in Gaza. Yet when Iranians kill Turks without warning, Turkey’s response is silence. Perhaps Turkey’s problem isn’t the protection of its citizens after all.

    via Will Turkey Demand an Apology From Iran? « Commentary Magazine.

  • Turkey, Israel, Iran—Winners and Losers from Arab Spring

    News Analysis

    By Gary Feuerberg
    Epoch Times Staff Created: January 8, 2012 Last Updated: January 9, 2012
    Related articles: World » Middle East

    An Egyptian demonstrator waves Egyptian and Palestinian flags at Cairo’s Tahrir Square on May 13, 2011. There is strong pro-Palestinian sentiment among the Arab populace, which will make it harder for post-Arab Spring leaders to advocate peace with Israel. (Khaled Desouki /AFP/Getty Images)

    WASHINGTON—Arab Spring upheavals have not only affected the balance of power in countries where they have occurred, they have also had a strong ripple effect, shaking up the strategic outlook of the region’s dominant countries: Israel, Turkey, and Iran.

    Superficially, the Arab upheavals—with dictators being overthrown and popular cries for democracy—may look desirable to the liberal democratic governments of Israel and Turkey, and a blight for Iran—but a closer look reveals that the regional winners and losers may not be so obvious.

    Israel

    For Israel, the Arab awakenings has created a “dramatic transformation” in the structure of the Middle East peace process, said Robert Malley, program director for Middle East and North Africa at the International Crisis Group (ICG), and a former special assistant to President Bill Clinton for Arab-Israeli Affairs (1998–2001).

    Malley spoke at a Middle East Policy Council (MEPC) sponsored conference on Capitol Hill on Jan. 5 titled, Israel, Turkey & Iran in the Changing Arab World.

    Malley said, the Palestinian cause weighs more heavily now due to popular sentiments in the Arab world that Arab leaders ignore at their peril.

    Israel’s strategic outlook has historically been one of “pre-empting threats,” said Malley, which has required having a good sense of what the threats are. That approach, however, is harder to apply after the Arab upheavals when the unpredictable and uncertainty of the masses enters the equation. It’s impossible to know what the threat will be in a year’s time, he said.

    “It’s one thing for Egypt to develop a certain strategic posture when you have President Mubarak or Gen. Tantawi in power. It’s very different if you have the Muslim Brotherhood,” said Malley.

    Israel also has to deal with the reality that public opinion in the Arab countries has a greater role to play than it did before. The question of Palestine resonates more deeply today, Malley said. Any Arab political leader now will not enhance his popularity by reaching out to Israel or by advocating peace with Israel, he said.

    The “peace process” between Israel and Palestinians will have to be “reinvented,” he said. The days of strong moderate Arab leaders and a strong U.S. role are called into question, said Malley.

    Karim Sadjadpour, at Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, said that Iran’s Supreme Leader Khamenei is increasingly centralizing his control of the country while President Ahmadinejad has been in a power struggle with him. Listening is professor Omer Taspinar, at Brookings, who spoke in what sense Turkey can be a model country for the Middle East. Both gentlemen spoke at the Middle East Policy Council’s Capitol Hill Conference, Jan. 5, 2012. (Gary Feuerberg/ Epoch Times)

    “Who are the Arab leaders that are going to stand with [Palestinian President Mahmud] Abbas in the event of a peace treaty?” Malley asked rhetorically.

    Malley said that he sees Israel adopting a “hunker down mentality,” waiting and acting very cautiously. Changes in the Arab countries are viewed in Israel as bad news with the exception of Syria. If Israel does anything bold, it would be against Iran and its nuclear program, he said.

    Iran

    In recent years, Iran has moved in a different direction from Egypt and other Middle East countries, beginning with its repression of democratic sentiments in 2009. In Iran, “power and influence are increasingly driven by Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei,” says Karim Sadjadpour, who in the past has interviewed dozens of senior Iranian officials and hundreds of Iranian intellectuals, clerics, among others for ICG.

    The real power behind Iran’s nuclear program and Iran’s role in the Middle East is decided by Khamenei and the sector of Revolutionary Guards with access to him. President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is no longer content to sit on the sidelines, and a power battle has ensued between him and the supreme leader, said Sadjadpour at the MEPC conference.

    While suppressing democracy at home, Iran in the past has welcomed the representative government movement in the Middle East, as it has served Iran’s own interests well. Elections in Lebanon led to Hezbollah; in Palestine, Hamas won; and in Iraq, Shi’ite interests became dominate. So, Iran assumes, “The average citizen has much more in common with Tehran’s world view than the West view,” said Sadjadpour.

    Robert Malley says the political upheavals in the Arab world have introduced more uncertainty and unpredictability resulting in a more cautious Israel. Dr. Malley is director at the International Crisis Group. Prior to joining ICG, Dr. Malley served as special assistant to President Clinton for Arab-Israeli Affairs. He spoke at the Middle East Policy Council’s Capitol Hill Conference, Jan. 5, 2012 (Gary Feuerberg/ Epoch Times)

    But the actual result has been mixed. Sadjadpour said Iran did not anticipate the Syria uprising. Syria is Iran’s “only consistent ally,” he said. “The loss of the al-Assad regime would be a tremendous blow to Tehran.”

    There are already reports that Iran has threatened to withhold funding if Hamas relocates its headquarters from Damascus to Doha, Qatar, revealed Sadjadpour.

    Iran’s patronage of Lebanon-based Hezbollah—“the crown jewel of the Iranian revolution”—is going to be very difficult to sustain in the same way, he said. Hezbollah was created with financial backing from Iran in the early 1980s after Israel invaded Lebanon.

    Turkey

    Turkey is often touted as a role model for the Middle East, and one could argue that Turkey was the big winner of the Arab Spring. It is simultaneously modern, Islamic, and democratic. No one has done that before, says Sadjadpour. It owes its current form to the Islamist-based Justice and Development Party (AKP), which was victorious in the election of 2002.

    Despite the Islamic origins of the AKP, Turkey’s government is secular. When Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan visited Egypt in recent months and argued that Egypt should be a secular country, the position “shocked the Muslim Brotherhood,” said professor Omer Taspinar, speaking at the MEPC conference. Taspinar teaches at the U.S. National War College, and is director of the Turkey Project at the Brookings Institution.

    According to Malley, the main reason for Turkey’s ascension in the region is that it “speaks loudly for the Palestine cause,” which is popular among the Arab masses. For example, Erdogan gained popularity points when he walked out of a conference in Davos, Switzerland, in 2009 to protest Israeli President Shimon Peres’s speech defending Israel’s Gaza offensive.

    Although Turkey is a member of NATO, and until the Gaza flotilla fallout had military ties with Israel, in the past it has also tried to maintain good relations with its neighbors Iran and Syria. Turkey’s Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu proclaimed the “zero problem with neighbors” policy, which aimed to establish a zone of peace and tranquility between neighbors.

    Its nonaligned policy led Turkey, joined by Brazil, to vote against new sanctions on Iran in June 2010. Taspinar says that Turkey does not want to give the impression it is following Western foreign policy. Rather, it states that it wants “regional solutions to regional problems,” said Taspinar.

    However, the sudden breakdown in Turkey’s relations with Syria, Iraq, Iran, and Israel has forced Turkey to abandon the “no problems” doctrine, said Taspinar. Turkey’s relationship with Iran soured when Turkey, agreed last year to host radars as part of NATO’s missile defense.

    Taspinar said one positive remainder of the Turkish approach is its avoidance of the Sunni-Shi’ite divide. Turkey as a secular state disagrees with Saudi Arabia and Iran’s sectarian agendas, and is a voice for peace on this divide that is playing out violently in Iraq and Syria.

    All three speakers agreed that post-Mubarak Egypt will recover its top leadership role in the Arab world. Even in its current chaotic state, Egypt has had more influence than Turkey on the Palestinian question. Egypt brokered the prisoner exchange involving Israeli captive Gilad Shalit, after Turkey had tried. The reconciliation between Hamas and Fatah was hammered out in Cairo, although Turkey had tried very hard, Taspinar said.

  • E-mail from an Israeli about Turkey …

    E-mail from an Israeli about Turkey …

    Note: Here is an Email I received earlier this morning, from a friend living in Israel.  I thought what he had to say was something all should hear and with his permission, here is his letter  Please note that I have taken the liberty to highlight some of his comments, and that the letter is a translation from Hebrew.
    Flag of Jerusalem realistic colors
    !Shalom
    Turkey announced yesterday to Iran, on the subject of Iran’s claim against Turkey that Turkey, an American radar sets, on the soil of Turkey: “Turkey will not allow for radar, give warning, ON Iran’s missile”. It was message from Turkey to Iran.
    So I ask the United States: – – What are you doing? Turkey, not your friend – they’re Muslims., sharing all that you give her with other Muslim countries.  Turkey says the message to Iran, even after Iran is threatening U.S. aircraft carrier .  There is nothing rational, … Why? Why do the United States not react against Turkey, on that Turkey does not make the ban on Iran – they do not make economic sanctions – against Iran. Turkey trades with Iran. Most of the produce of Iran comes to Turkey, and there, it replaces the flag, with “Made in Turkey”.
    Turkey announced yesterday – to Iran, that Turkey would not allow the U.S. or any country, to attack Iran, from an area of ​​Turkey.

    Very ridiculous to me, that the U.S. bases, are in Turkey. Therefore, a reason why the U.S. is limited in giving a reprimandor looking unhappyto Turkey?

    I will not ask, “Why are not your bases in Israel?” – It’s your decision. But we promise, – that Israel is the basis of one single force loyal to the United States. We in Israel, we are “not a military base in the country”. We are’one country in a military base.”  So we are defined , and laugh at how we see ourselves.

    You are the U.S.Turkey would give to F35 aircraftbefore you are interestedgive it to IsraelWe do not know  what to tell you about itTurkey – like our enemy. She threatened a few months ago about a war with us, you remember?

    Turkish prime minister this weekmet with Hamas leader in the Gaza StripRemind you  Hamas is set to a terrorist organization – by the United States own definition. You did not  say anything about it and we wonderwhyThat you believe that your friend is Turkey?!

    Turkey, may one day betray the U.S. and in large. I tell you. Betrayal of Turkey in you, you will be very painful. Turkey with Islam. Do you think that they do not share your technology all the time – to your enemies? …

    I say now, you are arming your enemy. They snake under the tap. They will not let you operate from your base, against the enemies – the best case. In the worst case -they might give Americans a trap, then make my words – in your best English.

    I say this, that everything has a consequence. Everything starts from something, but here, it’s not just something you do not see, read between the lines of the Turks. They are not a friend. They are not friends. Turkey not only against Israel, known to the world that Israel is like a brother, a state of the U.S. overseas. Here in the area, that want to know what do the U.S., so we are small attempts of this. So they question you, the real tests on Israel. If you like it or not.
    Take all my words – and understand that I am a person who cares very much for peace for the United States.

    Sincerely, with best wishes,
     ___________________________

    Bee’s Note:
    Here is one Israeli very concerned about one thing – his loyalty towards the USA and the thought that perhaps the U.S. does not understand the consequences of arming the very enemies of both the U.S. and Israel.  He asks, “What are you doing?!”  Don’t you see that Turkey is wearing the skin of a snake, and is loyal not to the U.S., but to Iran, our enemy sitting in the very Gulf of Homez threatening U.S. naval ships?!  

    That being said, how many watched or listened later to the speech and announcements made by both BHO and Panetta at yesterday’s Pentagon press conference?  I wondered if anyone in the Press would ask the right questions, such as the ones being asked by our Israeli friend – none were asked that could possibly explain the down-sizing of our military, while up-grading our enemies!  

    ADD IT UP!  Add up all the “gifts” of taxpayer monies to the Palestinians (not even a state/country); the military equipment and training to the Palestinians, Egypt and Saudi Arabia; the billions to Pakistan, Afghanistan; Iraq; …. all under the guise of humanitarian needs; nation building; etc. given to our “allies”, when to accept the hand of friendship from such countries, would they first not have to be of “like-minded” and not just holding their hands out to receive our money, while telling our other, more worrisome enemies that they would prevent the US from attacking those who threatening us?!

    Why, when you actually put pen to paper, adding up the BILLIONS of DOLLARS shared with the countries mentioned (above), you can bet it amounts to more than the amount this administration has decided to decrease from the budget of America’s Defense Department.  And, more than the amount contributed to the hospitals and medical treatment of our own troops.

    To Congress and everyone in Washington, DC – your hypocrisy is showing!  Your blindness about aiding America’s enemies, for the sake of oil, or whatever else it is you think these enemies will give back, is outrageous!  They will not give you one night of sleep; not one grain of peace of mind; but they will, when opportunity strikes, give all of us a rocket up our own A##s and by our own weapons!  Israelis are not the only only folks attempting to warn us of harm directed our way … see Allen West’s comments (below).


    Peace will never be obtained through bribes, military equipment and cash, as long as Islam sees us as their enemies, and according to the teachings of the Koran, we are the enemy of Islam!  That is an ideology – not a religion – and time the United States woke up and accepted that bit of history as fact, not fiction.

    Congress, and all who refuse to accept the truth, 


    Here’s your sign ……….. 
  • ‘Turkey must end US, Israel intel. coop’

    ‘Turkey must end US, Israel intel. coop’

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    Turkey uses Israeli-made Heron unmanned aerial vehicles in its military operation against Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) terrorists. (File photo)

    A senior Turkish politician has called on the government for an immediate end to its intelligence cooperation with the United States and Israel, Press TV reports.

    “Turkey’s reliance on Israel and the US for gathering intelligence in fight against the PKK (Kurdistan Workers’ Party) can create serious problems for Turkey,” Mustafa Yilmaz, the deputy leader of Turkey’s Felicity Party, said on Wednesday.

    Yilmaz highlighted a recent botched airstrike in southeastern Turkey that killed 35 civilians as yet another proof that Ankara needs to develop its own defense and intelligence infrastructure and end reliance on Israel and the US in this regard.

    “The question is that did Israel, or the intelligence it provided, mislead Turkey to carry out the airstrike? The issue should be closely reviewed,” he urged.

    The remarks come amid Turkey’s military campaign against the Kurdish separatist militants of PKK which sees the Turkish army employ Israeli-made Heron and US-made Predator drones.

    Yilmaz also called on Ankara to reconsider the list of its “strategic allies and partners,” that include the US and Israel. Washington and Tel Aviv are only after their own interests and do not respect the rights and borders of other countries, he noted.

    The remarks come amid Turkish media reports that an Israeli spy drone was detected flying over a military zone in the southern province of Hatay in September.

    The Heron drone has been reportedly hovering over the military command post for several hours in order to capture the pictures of radars and missile systems in the area.

    After the aircraft was confirmed to be an Israeli drone, two Turkish F-16 fighter jets were scrambled from an airbase in the southeastern province of Diyarbakir to ward off the Israeli drone.

    Turkish officials have not made any comment about the report.

    MRS/JR

    via PressTV – ‘Turkey must end US, Israel intel. coop’.