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  • Gaza War Created Rift Between Israel And Turkey

    GAZA WAR CREATED RIFT BETWEEN ISRAEL AND TURKEY
    By Sabrina Tavernise And Ethan Bronner

    New York Times
    http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/05/world/euro pe/05turkey.html?ref=world
    Feb 5 2009
    NY

    ISTANBUL -- The four daily flights to Tel Aviv are still running. The
    defense contract signed in December has not been scrapped. But since
    Israel's war in Gaza, relations with Turkey, Israel's closest Muslim
    ally, have become strained.

    Israel's Arab allies stood behind it in the war, but Turkey, a NATO
    member whose mediating efforts last year brought Israel into indirect
    talks with Syria, protested every step of the way in a month of angry
    remarks capped when Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan stalked off
    the stage during a debate in Davos, Switzerland, on Jan. 29.

    In the week since, both sides have taken pains to mend fences, with
    officials in Israel and Turkey making conciliatory statements.

    "Turkey and Israel attribute a special importance to their bilateral
    relations," Turkey's deputy prime minister, Cemil Cicek, said this
    week. "We want to protect our relations with this country."

    But both sides acknowledge that some damage has been done, and while
    the full implications for the relationship are still unknown, many
    political analysts say they sense a shift.

    "It's not a business-as-usual relationship anymore," said Cengiz
    Candar, a columnist for Radikal, a Turkish daily. "It's a very uneasy
    sort of cohabitation in this region now."

    Turkey is unique in the Middle East for its robust relations with
    Israel. It was the first Muslim country to recognize Israel as a state,
    and it has built up more than $3 billion in annual trade with Israel,
    far more than for any other Middle Eastern country.

    Mr. Erdogan encouraged the relationship, visiting Israel in 2005
    with a group of Turkish businessmen and becoming the first Turkish
    prime minister to visit the office of Turkey's chief rabbi after a
    synagogue was bombed in 2003.

    But when it comes to Hamas, which controls Gaza, they disagree. Israel
    views it as a terrorist group and focuses on its doctrinal commitment
    to destroy the Zionist state. Mr. Erdogan sees other aspects: Hamas
    began as a grass-roots Islamic movement, and like his own Justice and
    Development party, also Islamic-inspired, was democratically elected
    against overwhelming odds.

    "They identified with some parts of the Hamas story," said Femi Koru,
    a columnist for Today's Zaman, a Turkish newspaper. "They were also
    outcasts who were not allowed to join national politics."

    Turkish officials argue that Mr. Erdogan's stance against the war was
    simply healthy criticism -- words of warning from a close friend who
    sincerely believed that Israel had gone too far.

    "Turkey has lost its patience with the status quo in the Mideast,"
    said a senior Turkish official, who requested anonymity because he
    was not authorized to speak publicly on the matter. "Gaza is the
    bankruptcy of the military solution."

    The official added, "Israel is there to stay, and Palestinians are
    there to stay, and they need to be talking right now."

    Israel, for its part, feels that Mr. Erdogan is no longer a
    disinterested party in the peace process, and though the two countries
    will remain allies, the trust is no longer as strong.

    "He has burned all the bridges with Jerusalem," said one senior
    Israeli official, who spoke anonymously because of the delicacy of
    the issue. "He won't be seen as an honest broker anymore."

    While Israel said it went to war to end rocket fire by Hamas,
    Mr. Erdogan said he saw the war through the prism of democracy.

    "The world has not respected the will of the Palestinian people,"
    he said in an interview with Newsweek on Jan. 31. "On the one hand,
    we defend democracy and we try our best to keep democracy in the
    Middle East, but on the other we do not respect the outcome."

    He also rejects Hamas's use of violence. "I'm not saying Hamas is a
    good organization and makes no mistakes," he said.

    Mr. Erdogan's stance has won him praise in Arab societies, which
    opposed Israel's military campaign and chafe at their leaders'
    support of it.

    "In one stroke, he became the moral patron saint of the Arab world,"
    said Mr. Candar, the columnist. But some Turkish columnists criticized
    Mr. Erdogan for what they said was an implicit hypocrisy -- raising
    the issue of the Israeli killings of Palestinians while failing to
    mention his own country's abuses in the mostly Kurdish southeast
    during years of war there.

    "One would naturally ask Erdogan, who stands up against violence
    imposed on people in Gaza, what he thinks about Kurds being killed in
    his own country," wrote Ahmet Altan in the liberal Turkish daily Taraf.

    The fallout has affected Israeli tourism to Turkey, which is down
    in recent weeks, according to Avi Mendelbaum of Unital, a Tel Aviv
    travel agency. He said that his agency alone could fill a plane of
    180 tourists going to Turkey a year ago, but that this year five
    agencies have joined to fill the same flight. The economic crisis
    is partly responsible, he said, but other destinations have not been
    hit as badly.

    But Israelis make up less than 2 percent of Turkey's tourism industry,
    and it would be far more serious if there were repercussions in
    the United States, where Jewish groups have helped Turkey block
    a resolution that condemns the genocide of a more than a million
    Ottoman Empire Armenians from being discussed in Congress.

    Abraham H. Foxman, director of the Anti-Defamation League, said that
    Mr. Erdogan's criticism was "like a shock to the system," but added
    that the league had not changed its opposition to the genocide bill
    in Congress. "It's not a question of punishment," he said. "There's
    too much at stake in the relationship."

    As for charges that anti-Semitism is flaring in Turkey, Mr. Foxman
    said it was no worse than in any other country.

    Though Turkey's role as a mediator in the Middle East might suffer,
    the broader relationship will not, analysts said. A $141 million
    contract for surveillance equipment signed on Dec. 25 has not been
    canceled, said the Israel company that signed it.

    Sabrina Tavernise reported from Istanbul, and Ethan Bronner from
    Jerusalem. Sebnem Arsu contributed reporting from Istanbul.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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