Category: Israel

  • Iran’s Bank Mellat: All Turkey banks have cut links with us

    Iran’s Bank Mellat: All Turkey banks have cut links with us

    Iran’s Bank Mellat cannot do business in Turkey as all Turkish banks have cut links with it due to U.S. sanctions over Tehran’s nuclear programme, the head of the bank’s Turkish unit, Younes Hormozi, said on Wednesday.

    His comments came a day after the United States blacklisted another Iranian state-owned bank for its role in what Washington sees as an increasingly sophisticated campaign by Tehran to evade international sanctions.

    Ahmadinejad and Erdogan, May 9 2011, Reuters

    3498226258Iran’s President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad (R) shakes hands with Turkey’s Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan in Istanbul May 9, 2011.

    Photo by: Reuters

    David Cohen, U.S. Treasury acting undersecretary for terrorism and financial crimes, said last week that Turkish banks which persist in dealing with local branches of Bank

    Mellat were risking U.S. sanctions.

    Mellat was first sanctioned by the United States in 2007 for helping finance Iran’s nuclear activities, which the West says is aimed at developing nuclear weapons. Iran denies this.

    Cohen, the U.S. Treasury’s top financial intelligence official, told Reuters that Mellat’s Turkish branches are “key conduits” for Iran’s international transactions, including potentially dangerous weapons proliferation activities.

    The Treasury could cut off some Turkish banks’ access to the American financial system if they violate a 10-month-old law U.S. law that implements the U.N. resolution, the Comprehensive Iran Sanctions And Disinvestment Act, or CISADA.

    Asked in a telephone interview if there were Turkish banks still doing business with it, Hormozi said: “There are none left unfortunately. That is, all banks have cut links with us as of today. We know this stems from America and we condemn it.”

    “We have come to a point where we are unable to do business,” he said.

    Hormozi denied any of its activities were illicit.

    “All business we have done until now has been legal and in line with Turkish and international law. If America has documents to prove Bank Mellat has done illegal business, it should show them,” he said.

    The European Union has also blacklisted Mellat, but a UN Security Council resolution approved last year does not specifically order the bank to be cut off.

    Turkey, which opposed the latest round of UN sanctions against its fellow Muslim neighbour, is taking a narrower view of the Iran resolution and has allowed Mellat branches in Istanbul, Ankara and Izmir to continue operating until now.

    Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan’s government, facing re-election next month, has steadily increased trade with Iran since taking power in 2002 as part of a strategy to make Turkey the regional business and finance hub.

    via Iran’s Bank Mellat: All Turkey banks have cut links with us – Haaretz Daily Newspaper | Israel News.

  • Israel Sells Spy Camera to Turkey Despite Risk

    Israel Sells Spy Camera to Turkey Despite Risk

    Written by Arieh O’Sullivan
    Published Thursday, May 19, 2011

    Honoring contract from friendlier days, Israel holds out hope for renewed warmth

    UN F16In a carrot and stick move, Israel’s defense establishment has approved the sale of a sophisticated intelligence system to Turkey even the Knesset decided to debate a resolution recognizing the Armenian genocide, an issue that will almost certainly anger Ankara.

    “I can see a coincidence here. On the one hand, Israel approves a defense deal and, on the other, lets the Turks know that there is a limit to what Israel is expected to take,” Amikam Nahmani, head of the department for political studies at Bar Ilan University near Tel Aviv, told The Media Line. “There’s room for both states to renovate and improve their ties.”

    The once close Turkish-Israel alliance has greatly deteriorated, particularly since last May’s assault by Israeli commandos on a Turkish ship participating in a flotilla trying to break Israel’s blockade of the Gaza Strip. Eight Turks and one American of Turkish descent were killed in the raid.

    Turkey has recently asked Israel to provide it with the identities of soldiers involved so it can prosecute them. Israel has warned that it will meet flotillas planned for next month with an iron fist.

    On Wednesday, Israel’s Knesset decided 20-0 to openly discuss the Armenian genocide. Until now, the government has always acted to keep the issue under wrap inside the closed-door Defense And Foreign Relations Committee in order not to jeopardize ties with Turkey. This time, the government supported the proposal.

    And yet, earlier in the week, Israel’s Ministry of Defense finally approved the sale of a sensitive spy camera to Turkey, despite fears that the technology could find its way to hostile, third party elements.

    The deal had been signed at the tail end of the flowering of strategic ties between Israel and Turkey. Deliver of the system, an airborne camera capable of being mounted on fighter jets, had been delayed for development problems. By the time they were solved, bilateral relations had deteriorated and the government began foot-dragging on delivery.

    The system is the LOROP or Long-Range Oblique Photography pod, built by Israel’s top defense companies. It is considered the pinnacle in Israeli technology, one of the reasons why the Israeli Ministry of Defense was hesitant to see it in foreign hands.

    All Israeli weapons sales must be approved by the Defense Export Department, or Sibat, a branch within the Ministry Of Defense. According to Israeldefense, an Israeli website with close ties to the defense establishment, Sibat approved the transfer of the system in order improve the strained ties with Turkey.

    It also estimated that should advanced components of the system fall into third party hands, despite Turkish commitments to the contrary, the damage would be “not very bad.” It also said that not honoring a signed agreement could be problematic for the future.

    Defense Ministry spokesman Zeev Finer declined to confirm or deny the decision, saying only that his ministry “did not comment on defense exports.” Defense industry officials also were unusually mum on the report saying that they had been instructed to tie their tongues regarding any defense sales to Turkey.

    The LOROP is produced jointly by El-Op, a subsidiary of Elbit, and Elta, a subsidiary of Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI), the two largest defense firms in the country. Its electro-optic camera is considered one of the most advanced in the world and capable of taking high-resolution images used to locate targets and assess attack damage, night or day.

    One of the advantages of this system was its communication package, which reportedly allows real-time downloading to command centers and the ability to photograph at angles so that jets do not have to enter hostile airspace to get a picture of the battlefield.

    The deal was reportedly worth $140 million. Turkey had filed a complaint over the delayed delivery. Now that it finally won government approval, the system is expected to be transferred to the Turks in the coming weeks, the daily Ma’ariv said.

    While Israel hasn’t signed any new defense deals with Turkey since last summer, it has allowed contracts that had been signed previously to be completed, including the supply of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) and upgrades of battle tanks.

    Turkey remains a lucrative market to be tapped. Turkey expects to spend more than $4 billion for defense procurement in 2011, according to Defense News. Its domestic defense industry grew 19% last year. Israeli defense industries are expecting a defense export dip and still see this as fertile ground for their platform-enhancing systems.

    “Turkey is invited to repent,” said Nahmani. “I don’t think they benefited from abandoning their alliance with Israel. I don’t see how the Arab world was returning to them any dividend for this and there was no reason for it. I think that both states have joint interests; they are both stable and pro Western.”

    Even as diplomatic ties chilled during 2010, bilateral trade reached $3.5 billion, up from $1.3 billion just a decade ago. The uptrend has continued into this year. Israeli imported some $354 million of Turkish goods in January-February, up from $282 million a year earlier. Meanwhile, Israeli exports to Turkey reached $302 million in the first two months of the year, up from $170 million the same time in 2010.

    Nahmani said the era of relations between Israel and other states being a function of government and defense interest is being overtaken by business interests.

    “Businessmen and tour operators and traders and industrialists and exporters are interested in making a profit and as long as they are making money the relationship will remain. The longevity of the Turkish-Israeli relations is explained because they were built only because of the government/defense relations were a minor part.”

    He said “hundreds of thousands” of people in Israel and Turkey have a vested interest that this commercial relationship continues.

  • Knesset to discuss Armenian Genocide amid deteriorating Turkey ties – Genocide

    Knesset to discuss Armenian Genocide amid deteriorating Turkey ties – Genocide

    Israel Knesset

    A motion by the Meretz party to direct the Israeli Knesset’s education committee to discuss a resolution recognizing the Armenian Genocide was unanimously approved on Wednesday, reported Asbarez.com, citing the Armenian National Committee of Jerusalem.

    The motion presented by Meretz delegate Zahava Gal-On also received the support of government representatives who voted for the proposal.

    In the past the Knesset said that a resolution recognizing the Armenian Genocide should be debated by the parliament’s defense and foreign relations committee. That committee holds its meetings behind closed doors and concerns have been voiced that under such circumstances, the committee could propose to not consider the motion.

    During the more than 30 minute debate on the Knesset floor, various party members expressed their views on the resolution.

    Meanwhile, Israel’s leading Haaretz daily wrote that many in Israel see the move in the Knesset as a further sign of Tel-Aviv’s deteriorating ties with long-time ally Turkey.

    “Israel has long evaded a public discussion of the 1915-era killings of Armenians by Turkish forces, also avoiding calling the attack ‘genocide’, out of fears of disrupting its long-standing diplomatic and military alliance with Turkey… However, in what seems to be another sign of worsening Jerusalem-Ankara ties, the Knesset moved to hold the first public discussion on the Armenian Genocide,” stressed the Israeli paper.

    via Knesset to discuss Armenian Genocide amid deteriorating Turkey ties – Genocide | ArmeniaNow.com.

  • Israel Matzav: Turkey fears losing its best friend

    Israel Matzav: Turkey fears losing its best friend

    AssadErdoganTurkey has stepped on the toes of its best friend, Bashar al-Assad. And now, it is trying to figure out what it will do if Bashar should fall.

    But what annoyed the Syrians was Erdogan’s remarks in Turkey against the use of force and the fear of “a new Halabja and Hama,” referring to the use of chemical weapons by Iraq against the Kurds, and the massacre of 10,000 residents of Hama in 1982 by Assad’s father, Hafez Assad.

    The Syrian newspaper Al-Wattan, which is owned by Rami Makhlouf, Bashar Assad’s cousin and the richest man in the country, launched an unprecedented attack against the Turkish declarations.

    “Since the start of the recent events in Syria, the official Turkish echelon has demonstrated haste and improvisation,” the paper wrote. “It seems that the preaching in favor of reforms that is being manifested vociferously by Erdogan on every possible stage in Europe, and that of the new Ottoman engineer, the foreign minister Davutoglo, do not provide any special means of bringing about solutions to the invented difficulties so as to deal openly and clearly with these events.”

    Makhlouf’s paper didn’t stop there. “If the political and economic prosperity that Turkey enjoys must be attributed to its secular history and to the strategic corrections made by Davutoglo, then the way it is being conducted in the face of the Syrian question is likely to cause it to take a step back,” it continued.

    Erdogan, who attributes Turkey’s economic prosperity to himself – and justly so – was surely not happy to read the translation of these remarks, especially since the volume of Turkish trade with Syria stands at some $2 billion.

    Last week a representative of the Muslim Brotherhood from Syria, Mohammed Riad Shafeka, visited Istanbul and told the Turkish media that his movement was indeed the moving force behind the protests in Syria. By doing so, he actually played straight into the hands of Assad’s regime, which has claimed all along that the disturbances were being caused by Islamic extremists and separatists.

    Syria does not understand why Ankara allowed Shafeka to go to Istanbul from his exile in Yemen and why its media were allowed to interview him. And indeed Erdogan hastened to declare through his foreign ministry spokesman, that “Turkey will not allow any initiative on the part of the Muslim Brotherhood to harm the execution of reforms in Syria.”

    According to reports from Turkey, Syria has sent information to the head of Turkish Intelligence, Hakan Fidan, showing that the Muslim Brotherhood was involved in shooting at Syrian security forces during the protests, so as to counter the declarations by Erdogan that “there are no armed gangs in Syria,” contrary to what the Syrian regime claimed.

    Erdogan explained that what is happening in Syria cannot merely be considered an internal Syrian affair, or merely a matter for Turkish foreign policy.

    Turkey is concerned both by the possibility that the Assad regime will fall and by the fact that it does not see who could possibly replace it. Meanwhile it seems that Erdogan and his regime are mainly worried that the all-embracing foreign policy started by his government could crash and have an effect on the results of the elections to be held on June 12.

    This policy, which has the slogan “Zero problems with all neighbors,” is now coming up against the unexpected reality in which Turkey, despite all its efforts, finds itself floating on stormy waters, without being able to influence the course of events, and being seen as a supporter of the Assad dictatorship.

    One day the Turks might even come to regret befriending Iran and shunning Israel. One day. But not now.

    via Israel Matzav: Turkey fears losing its best friend.

  • IAI, Elbit selling intelligence systems to Turkey

    IAI, Elbit selling intelligence systems to Turkey

    IAI, Elbit selling intelligence systems to Turkey

    Israel fears the highly sensitive technology may be passed on to a hostile third party.

    15 May 11 09:49, Globes’ correspondent

    Israel Aerospace Industries Ltd. (IAI) (TASE: ARSP.B1) and Elbit Systems Ltd. (Nasdaq: ESLT; TASE:ESLT) unit El-Op Ltd. are delivering highly sensitive intelligence systems to the Turkish Air Force, Israeli daily newspaper “Maariv” reported today.

    The systems will be delivered in the next few weeks to Turkey, despite the deterioration in relations between Israel and Turkey, because the contract was signed before the diplomatic crisis between the two countries following the flotilla to Gaza last year.

    Israel reportedly fears that Turkey may pass on the technology behind the system to a third party, possibly a hostile country. The system can scan areas of dozens of square kilometers from a long distance even during difficult weather conditions and at night.

    The contract is worth about $100 million to the Israeli companies.

    Published by Globes, Israel business news – www.globes-online.com – on May 15, 2011

    © Copyright of Globes Publisher Itonut (1983) Ltd. 2011

    via IAI, Elbit selling intelligence systems to Turkey – Globes.

  • Turkey Demands Israel Give Names of Counter-Terror Commandos

    Turkey Demands Israel Give Names of Counter-Terror Commandos

    by Tzvi Ben Gedalyahu

    Follow Israel news on Twitter and Facebook.

    Turkey has petitioned Israel to identify the names of the Navy commandos who stopped the IHH flotilla last May from reaching Hamas-controlled Gaza and killed nine terrorists.

    The Turkish daily Today%u2019s Zayman reported Saturday that %u201CIstanbul Public Prosecutor’s Office has submitted a letter to Israeli judicial authorities, demanding the identity of responsible people%u201D in the counterterrorist operation. The letter demanded names and contact details along with an official copy of information and documents related to the incident.

    Turkey has accused Israel of premediated murder and its probe of the May 31 flotilla clash implicated Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu, President Shimon Peres, Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman and Defense Minister Ehud Barak.

    The incident froze what already were frigid relations between Israel and Turkey, which was a long-time friend of the Jewish State until Operation Cast Lead two years ago and Prime Minister Erdogan’s rapprochement with fundamental Islam, Syria and Iran.

    The flotilla clash sparked international accusations against Israel, which contained some of the condemnation with documented evidence that the IHH %u201Chumanitarian aid” flotilla was a camouflage for an intended armed conflict with Israeli soldiers.

    An inspection of the Mavi Marmara boat, which was the only one of the six ships in the flotilla that was involved in the clash, contained no humanitarian aid at all.

    Videos taken from the ship showed that IHH activists took and made weapons on board and attacked the Navy commandos, which were unarmed except for paint-ball guns and revolvers, as they descended on deck from hovering helicopters.

    Another flotilla, including the Mavi Marmara ship, is being planned in June to test the Israeli maritime blockade on Hamas-controlled Gaza, where the terrorist organization has smuggled in advanced weapons, terrorists and hundreds of tons of explosives over the past several years.

    (IsraelNationalNews.com)

    via Turkey Demands Israel Give Names of Counter-Terror Commandos – Defense/Middle East – Israel News – Israel National News.