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Turkey & Israel: Friends And Allies

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  • Turkey & Israel: Friends And Allies

    TURKEY & ISRAEL: FRIENDS AND ALLIES
    By Elif Aydýn

    The Muslim News
    Jan 30 2009
    UK

    Anomalous isn't it that the one Muslim country that has strong
    and cordial ties with Israel has been the one to speak out most
    vociferously against the latter's heinous assaults on Gaza?

    It has surprised Turks themselves that among Muslim majority countries
    observing the horrors, it has been Turkey that has been foremost
    in its utter condemnation of Israel's conduct. The Chairman of the
    Turkish Assembly's Foreign Relations Committee, Murat Mercan, quit
    the assembly's Turkish-Israel Friendship Group in protest at the
    latter's actions in Gaza.

    Turkey's Foreign Minister, Ali Babacan, accused governments and
    international organisations of recklessly and irresponsibly engaging
    in a 'wait and see' politics. He criticised these same governments
    and international organisations for drawing distinctive reactions to
    events in Georgia and those in Gaza.

    The Turkish Prime Minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, spoke of Israel's
    actions as constituting "a crime against humanity" which would be
    judged by history. And facing calls at home, similar to elsewhere, to
    break off diplomatic ties with Israel and at the very least to expel
    the Israeli Ambassador from Turkey, he replied, in his characteristic
    vernacular style "We are running the Turkish Republic, not a grocery
    store."

    Indeed, which is why he dispatched his Foreign Minister and Chief
    Foreign Policy Adviser, Prof Ahmet Davutoglu, to Cairo to lend Turkey's
    support to the Franco-Egyptian sponsored ceasefire negotiations.

    It has been the AKP Government's willingness to take tentative and
    difficult steps, and withstand the emotive reactions of its detractors
    that has helped it develop its policy of making friends and not enemies
    in its neighbourhood. Its relations with Greece, Russia and Armenia
    have all benefited from Davutoglu's wisdom and Erdogan's charisma.

    Turkey boldly invited Head of Hamas Political Bureau, Khalid Mish'al,
    after Hamas' victory in the Palestinian elections, a move furiously
    protested against by the Israeli Government at the time. It meant
    that Mish'al's visit had to be demoted from an official engagement
    to a meeting with party's officials and no audience granted with
    Erdogan himself.

    And from strong Syrian-Turkish animosity in the late 1990s, when the
    PKK Leader, Abdullah Ocalan, was taking refuge in Syria, Turkey has
    moved to a situation where it is able to confidently mediate in peace
    talks between Syria and Israel. The question now faced by Turks is
    whether the AKP has succeeded at all in using her relationship with
    Israel to lean on an ally, using her own example of courageous first
    steps, to help the peace process along and normalise relations between
    Israel and the Arab regimes.

    There are those who have argued that Turkey, better than others, should
    appreciate Israel's behaviour given that Turkey herself had crossed
    into northern Iraq to conduct operations against PKK terrorists that
    threatened Turkey's own security. Turkey's actions then, similarly,
    merited muted responses from the Bush administration given her
    importance to the US Government and the reconstruction effort in Iraq.

    Perhaps the analogy is more revealing in it what it tells us of
    the crimes that can be committed if the devil being resisted is
    terrorism. And the term itself indiscriminately employed in the
    same way the 'war on terror' phrase was and is deployed to quell and
    silence legitimate opposition to a government's excesses.

    Of concern to those that have trusted in Turkey's goodwill in
    mediating for peace is the prospect, given prime ministerial and
    ministerial statements, of impartiality on the part of Turkey in
    future talks. While Turkish-Israeli relations are unlikely to remain
    sour or strained for long, particularly given the close co-operation
    and regular joint exercises between their respective militaries,
    the statements made by Erdogan and others in his Government will be
    exploited by neo-cons in the US and Israel that work to undermine the
    AKP's orientation by throwing at it a pejorative rendering of the term
    'Islamist'.

    The critical voices of AKP ministers and deputies will be seized upon
    as examples of a leopard not having changed its spots.

    There are those also that will see in Turkey's manoeuvres a tactical
    move in service of aggrandising her role as a powerful and important
    regional actor. And with domestic troubles like the Ergenekon case
    continuing to uncover further plots and personalities that are accused
    of supporting an anti AKP coup, rallying the support of Turks who are
    outraged over Gaza seems a useful decoy in deflecting attention from
    events closer to home.

    Cool relations with Europe also offers Erdogan's Government the
    opportunity to impress on Europe one of Turkey's most frequently
    cited arguments in support of her membership bid - that Europe needs
    Turkey to realise its aspiration of being a strong and credible actor
    in international politics.

    And there is no doubt that the "new way forward, based on mutual
    interest and mutual respect," that US President Barak Obama hopes
    for in his forging of a new era in relations between the US and the
    Muslim world, will require a considerable presence from Turkey.

    The hope that Turkey does hold out, as her response to the Gaza crisis
    demonstrates, is her willingness to be the kind of critical friend
    to Israel that former Prime Minister, Tony Blair, failed to be to the
    ex-President George Bush. And if President Obama is true to his word of
    wanting to enhance mutual interest and mutual respect in US relations
    with the Muslim world, there are lessons in friendship that Turkey can
    teach him far better than almost all the other Muslim majority states.

    Elif Aydýn is a Researcher.

    USE AS QUOTE: The hope that Turkey does hold out, as her response
    to the Gaza crisis demonstrates, is her willingness to be the kind
    of critical friend to Israel that former Prime Minister, Tony Blair,
    failed to be to the ex-President George Bush.

    --Boundary_(ID_Gt+AXFfbXW6Bywsl5MRYYw)--
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