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Tel Aviv: Analysis / Turkey: a friend for trade

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  • Tel Aviv: Analysis / Turkey: a friend for trade

    Ha'aretz, Israel
    May 1 2005



    Analysis / Turkey: a friend for trade

    By Zvi Bar'el

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan waited three months after
    his foreign minister returned from Israel before calling Prime
    Minister Ariel Sharon and setting the time for his visit here.

    Erdogan arrives today, and it can be expected that Israel and Turkey
    will continue to maintain ties on two different tracks - economic and
    military on the one hand and political-diplomatic on the other hand.


    >From the economic-military perspective, life appears rosy as usual.
    The trade between the two states totals some $1.4 billion; Turkey is
    about to purchase some $183 million worth of Israeli drones; Turkish
    Defense Minister Vecdi Gonul, who is arriving with Erdogan, intends
    to discuss purchasing Popeye and Arrow missiles.

    Israeli tourists continue to flood Turkey, which would also like to
    see Russian gas for Israel being piped through it.

    But, as far as Erdogan's Middle Eastern policy is concerned, Israel
    is seen as an external force at best and a hindrance at worst. Turkey
    and Syria are cooperating in economic security affairs - in mid-April
    the Turkish president visited Damascus in defiance of American
    pressure to cancel the visit. Turkey's relations with Iran are
    warming up due to joint interests regarding Iraq's future.

    Turkish public opinion vis-a-vis the United States is not merely
    critical but at times hostile. Turkey does not consider its
    friendship with Israel as capable of influencing Turkey's acceptance
    process into the European Union. However, Turkey sees no
    contradiction between its strong economic-military ties with Israel
    and its sometimes blatant criticism of Israel (Erdogan called
    Israel's policy in the territories "state terrorism").

    Turkey is trying to keep all its options open. For example, it is
    willing to cooperate with the U.S. in the defense force against
    Russia in the Caspian Sea region while at the same time purchasing
    from Russia a strategic product like gas. It wants to be a member of
    the European Union but refuses to yield to the demand to recognize
    the Armenian massacre in 1915 as genocide. Turkey needs American
    support to continue receiving World Bank assistance, but it slams
    American policy in Iraq and in the Middle East.

    "Turkey still believes it is a power, at least a regional one," a
    Turkish official tells Haaretz. "But it keeps discovering that it is
    not desirable as a broker in regional conflicts, and finds other
    powers doing as they will in `Turkish' areas." Israel's relations
    with Turkey should be seen in this perspective, he says, noting that
    "Turkey is not expected to change its policy of keeping its options
    open following this visit."
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