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Armenian Lobby In Washington Will Keep Turkey In Line: Jewish Tribun

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  • Armenian Lobby In Washington Will Keep Turkey In Line: Jewish Tribun

    ARMENIAN LOBBY IN WASHINGTON WILL KEEP TURKEY IN LINE: JEWISH TRIBUNE

    news.am
    Nov 16 2009
    Armenia

    Eli Shaked, Israeli Former Ambassador to Turkey, is not alarmed with
    "Worrisome trend of Turkey's souring relationship with Israel,"
    Jewish Tribune article as of Nov 12. reads.

    According to him, "Turkey's anger at Israel and its embracing Syria
    and Iran is a tactical, not a strategic, move. Nonetheless, on the
    very day that Shaked made his observations, a Turkish mob threw eggs
    at the present ambassador, Gabi Levy. A few days before, Turkey signed
    a US $10 million oil refinement deal with Iran, in defiance of the
    US call for sanctions," the source reads.

    Shaked explained that Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu is
    backing neo-Ottomanism which "favors a common market with its Muslim
    neighbors."

    The paper quotes Shaked saying that Davutoglu "aspires to transform
    Turkey into a superpower and enhance its military and economic
    strengths while avoiding conflict with its neighbors."

    "Turkey recently restored diplomatic ties with Armenia, its eastern
    neighbor and century-old enemy. This in turn upset Turkey's cordial
    relationship with Azerbaijan, which disputes territory occupied by
    its Armenian neighbor. In the past, Turkey performed joint military
    exercises with the Jewish state. However, Turkey's Prime Minister
    Recep Tayyip Erdogan accused Israel of war crimes during its Cast
    Lead operations in Gaza. Yet Ankara never condemned Hamas for firing
    rockets into Israel's south," Jewish Tribune says.

    Shaked maintained that Turkey's thrashing over Israel "is merely a
    way of expressing its frustration at not being admitted to the EU."

    He also underlined that "whether the Turkish PM is an antisemite is
    less significant. What is more important is whether Erdogan will
    restore its economic and military ties with Israel. Other Turkish
    leaders were anti-Semitic but knew how to hide it," the source
    quotes Shaked.

    The paper concludes saying that "despite Turkey's dampened relations
    with Israel, Shaked feels that Europe's castigating Turkey for
    its human rights violations, along with a strong Armenian lobby in
    Washington, will keep Turkey in line."
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