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Turkish Foreign Policymaker: Iran Poses Threat To Turkey

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  • Turkish Foreign Policymaker: Iran Poses Threat To Turkey

    TURKISH FOREIGN POLICYMAKER: IRAN POSES THREAT TO TURKEY
    By Zvi Bar'el

    Ha'aretz
    Dec 10 2008
    Israel

    "I don't think that a military option against Iran will work," visiting
    Turkish politician, Murat Mercan, told Haaretz on Sunday. "Sanctions
    against Iran will be effective if they are applied efficiently. But
    the truth is, I don't know whether it is realistic to expect full
    sanctions when countries are still prepared to veto these sanctions."

    Mercan is visiting Israel, not for the first time, as a guest
    of the Shalem Center's Adelson Institute for Strategic Studies,
    headed by former minister, Natan Sharansky. Mercan, a member of the
    ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP), is one of Turkey's most
    influential foreign policymakers. He chairs the Turkish Parliament's
    Foreign Affairs Committee, is a close adviser of Turkish Prime Minister
    Recep Tayyip Erdogan, and served in the past as AKP deputy chairman.

    He said on Sunday that Turkey believes the entire region should be
    free of nuclear weapons.

    "Israel too?" he was asked.

    "I wish Israel would not feel threatened; then it, too, could disarm
    from nuclear weapons," was his circuitous answer, which allowed him to
    refrain from commenting directly on whether Israel should disarm. He
    immediately added that Israel was not the only country that felt
    threatened by Iran's nuclear plans. "Iran is first and foremost a
    threat to us," he said. But the feeling of being vulnerable did not
    prevent Turkey from recently signing a memorandum of understanding
    with Iran to develop gas fields in southern Iran, not to mention that
    it still maintains its extensive commercial ties to Tehran.

    "We are not diverging from the policy of sanctions," Mercan explained,
    "because a memorandum of understanding does not mean that anything has
    actually been done. In general, Turkey will not deviate from any policy
    that is accepted by the United Nations Security Council with regard to
    Iran." After a short pause, he added: "You can't expect Turkey to do
    more than other countries with regard to cooperation with Iran." These
    remarks were directed primarily at Germany and Switzerland, which have
    signed major trade agreements with Iran. Two weeks ago, Turkey offered
    to serve as a mediator between Iran and the new U.S. administration;
    the Iranian response to the proposal was favorable. "But now we are
    awaiting Obama's entry to the White House," he said. "Before that,
    I don't think there is anything that can, or should, be done."

    Turkish President Abdullah Gul is due in Israel in January for a
    three-day state visit. Several joint policies regarding Iran and Syria
    are expected to be proposed, despite the fact that it is not clear who
    the Israeli decision makers will be after the elections. With regard
    to Syria, Mercan believes that until Obama takes over and until the
    results of the Israeli elections become clear, any indirect talks with
    Syria, that were promoted by Turkey, should not be expected. "The
    next stage is direct dialogue between the sides and that is what we
    are working on," he said. "But a dialogue of this kind will have to
    wait until after the elections."

    "Dialogue" is the key word defining the fronts in which Turkey is
    involved - whether Iran, Syria or Hamas. Turkey received Hamas with
    open arms, but was harshly criticized for its actions; as such,
    Mercan now employs diplomatic caution regarding the group.

    "Yes, any attack on civilians is terror," he said with regard to the
    attacks from the Gaza Strip on Sderot. "I visited Sderot, and I saw
    how its residents were being attacked, but I also know the tragedy
    and sorrow in Gaza well. I advise Hamas to stop attacking civilians
    and propose that Israel stop imposing sanctions on Gaza. After all,
    how is it possible to imagine the two nations living side by side if
    each causes the other to suffer tragedies?"

    A few weeks ago, Hamas considered turning to Turkey to mediate with
    Israel over abducted Israel Defense Forces soldier, Gilad Shalit,
    the release of Palestinian prisoners and the opening of the border
    crossings, but it seems that Turkey has decided to leave this work
    in the hands of the Egyptians.

    Nevertheless, there is one subject about which Mercan is prepared
    to speak directly and without diplomatic lingo. "It is forbidden to
    endanger the ties with Turkey on a subject that should not be discussed
    by the parliaments but by the historians," he said. He is referring
    to the definition of the deaths of the Armenians in 1915 as a genocide.

    Custom or law?

    Mercan was personally in touch at the time with Knesset members to
    persuade them to abandon the issue. Now he is waiting to see what
    President Barack Obama's position will be; Obama promised to recognize
    the event as genocide of the Armenians.

    The veil worn by observant Muslim women is once again stirring anger
    in Egypt over its religious function. Is it a duty or an option? The
    radical organizations offer all the suitable quotations from the Koran
    and the important adjudicators to "prove" that Mohammed literally meant
    for every woman to hide her face and hands, and not to make do merely
    with a head covering. They believe that the eyes are the gate to the
    woman's soul and therefore need to be hidden. On the other hand, the
    sages belonging to the centrist stream of Islam believe that the veil
    does not appear in any of the precepts of Islam and that, at most,
    this is a custom which must be permitted. But of course, as usual,
    this is not a purely religious-legal argument aimed at fixing the way
    in which Muslim must women appear in public. The argument is political.

    At a time when the Egyptian government is investing vast efforts to
    uproot religious fanaticism and is not merely making do with the
    arrests of members of the Muslim Brotherhood organization, but is
    banning women with veils from appearing as announcers on TV programs
    and postponing the appointment of women as religious instructors
    because they wear veils, the following initiative is merely the next
    obvious step on the way to the religious de-legitimization of the veil.

    With this, I refer to a new book being published by Egypt's Wakf
    Ministry, written by cabinet minister, Mohammed Hamdi, who is a
    religious sage and religious law analyst. In the book, he "proves"
    through signs and omens that wearing a veil is not a religious edict
    but rather a custom, and as such it enjoys a lower status; with
    this, it will soon be possible to call for the custom to be uprooted
    altogether. The co-authors of the book, which will be distributed
    to all the imams in Egypt's 140,000 mosques, include the head of the
    Al-Azhar Mosque, the most important religious institution in Egypt,
    and the mufti of Egypt. Hamdi explained that the veil is not merely
    the result of a radical religious point of view, it even creates it.
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