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  • Gaza War Still Strains Israel Ties With Turkey

    GAZA WAR STILL STRAINS ISRAEL TIES WITH TURKEY

    The Jewish Week
    10/13/2009

    "Supporting the war on terror is not an anti-Palestinian act," says
    former Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni, left. Turkish Foreign
    Minister Ahmet Davutoglu implied that Israel's military action in
    Gaza last year led toa cancellation of NATO exercises.

    by Stewart Ain Staff Writer

    One of Israel's best regional friends, Turkey, is apparently having
    second thoughts about their relationship.

    Just days before the two countries were to participate in a NATO
    military exercise this week, Turkish officials informed Israel that
    it would not be allowed to participate. The U.S., the Netherlands
    and Italy then withdrew in protest and the exercise was canceled.

    Turkey, one of the few Muslim nations to have diplomatic relations
    with Israel, has had a testy relationship with the Jewish state
    since January.

    That was when Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan, speaking at
    the World Economic Forum in Switzerland, publicly criticized Israeli
    President Shimon Peres over Israel's military offensive in Gaza last
    winter and then stormed out of the meeting.

    Turkish Foreign Minister Values To Heal America Ahmet Davutoglu
    implied last weekend that his country barred Israel from the NATO
    military exercise in Turkey this week because of the Gaza operation.

    "We hope that the situation in Gaza will be improved, that the
    situation will be back to the diplomatic track," he said. "And that
    will create a new atmosphere in Turkish-Israeli relations as well. But
    in the existing situation, of course, we are criticizing this approach,
    [the] Israeli approach."

    But Anat Lapidot-Firilla, a specialist in Turkish politics and society
    who teaches in the Department of International Affairs at the Hebrew
    University of Jerusalem and runs a Turkish forum as a senior research
    fellow at the Van Leer Jerusalem Institute, said the Gaza offensive
    was only "used as an excuse" by Turkey.

    "You can see a consistent trend in Turkish foreign policy that has
    to do with many issues but not with Gaza -- Gaza is just an excuse,"
    she said. "If you have to pick one event from which problems started,
    it was November 2002" when Edrogan and his AK Party were elected.

    Lapidot-Firilla pointed out that Erdogan quickly began using Davutoglu
    as a foreign policy adviser.

    "He ran the show" even before being made foreign minister, she said,
    adding that the new foreign policy course he steered for Turkey
    collided with that of Israel.

    "Israel did not want to allow Turkey to position itself as the regional
    broker -- the mature parent in the neighborhood," Lapidot-Firilla
    explained.

    Nevertheless, she said, "Turkey has a very interesting, very aggressive
    foreign policy, a very active foreign policy that aims to regain some
    kind of strategic cards in a very problematic area that since 2003 has
    the United States as a regional player since the occupation of Iraq,"
    she said.

    "It's positioning itself as a state that is a moral leader of the
    Muslim world and the region," Lapidot-Firilla added, pointing out that
    the current administration is "quite secure" after three elections
    and a majority of the parliament.

    Internal politics has proven a lot more difficult than foreign affairs,
    however, and some reforms that were promised were never fulfilled
    because of a strong constitution and legal obstacles.

    "The only place where they could play with free hands and voice an
    Islamic agenda was in foreign policy," she said.

    Israeli opposition leader Tzipi Livni appeared on Turkish television
    Monday to urge that there not be a crisis between the two countries
    over Israel's actions in Gaza.

    "I am saying to the people of Turkey and their leaders: Supporting the
    war on terror is not an anti-Palestinian act; it is an anti-terrorism
    act," she said. "Hamas does not represent the national aspirations of
    the Palestinians. It is not acting on their behalf or promoting them."

    It is no coincidence that the row with Israel occurred just as Turkey
    and its longtime nemesis A ent establishing diplomatic relations,
    Lapidot-Firilla observed.

    "It was more important to sign the agreement with Armenia, but because
    of the reaction from inside the country -- to block the opposition -
    it was easier to voice opposition to Israel and Israeli aircraft and
    thus regain the moral ground in internal politics," she said. "This
    government wanted to come to an agreement with Armenia for financial
    reasons -- because of oil and gas and a lot of money. ... It is easier
    to appease the opposition [parties] by having aggressive rhetoric
    towards Israel."

    But the reaction of NATO in canceling the exercise took Turkey by
    surprise.

    "I don't think they realized what the reaction would be,"
    Lapidot-Firilla said.

    Asher Susser, a senior fellow at the Moshe Dayan Center for Middle
    East Affairs at Tel Aviv University, said he believes Turkey's action
    against Israel is emblematic of a "shift taking place in Turkey's
    foreign policy that has far-reaching ramifications."

    "Turkey is undergoing an historic change since the 2002 election and
    is taking more of an Islamic identity and policy," he said. "All of
    this has to do with the rise of an Islamic party [in Turkey], the fact
    that Turkey has not been admitted into the European Union and is going
    back to the Middle East because it has been pushed out of Europe."

    With the Europeans giving Turkey the "cold shoulder," Susser said,
    "Turkey is becoming more Islamist in political identity. The Iraq
    problem next door and the relative weakness of Arab states gives
    Turkey a sense it must play a greater Middle Eastern role, and in so
    doing it is shifting its relationship with Israel. The secular country
    that had a common cause with Israel is not the Turkey we have today."

    He said Israel's relationship with Turkey is "critically important
    for Israel -- perhaps more than it is for Turkey -- and Israel has
    every reason to not let this [tension] escalate. It doesn't have many
    friends in the region and will try to keep things on an e

    "Turkey too is trying to calm things down because the U.S. is siding
    with Israel. It has no interest in taking this any further. It's
    difficult to say how this will play out."

    The Turkish Foreign Ministry released a statement Monday that sought to
    play down the NATO exercise, saying it was cancelled in consultation
    with other participants and that nothing further should be read
    into it.

    "Therefore, it is not correct to impose political meanings to Turkey's
    decision to cancel the international part" of the exercise," it said,
    adding that Israeli officials "should act with common sense in their
    statements and attitudes."

    Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak issued a statement Monday in which
    he spoke of Turkey's importance in the region and added that there is
    "no reason to be dragged into words of harsh criticism against it."

    And Deputy Foreign Minister Danny Ayalon made similar comments,
    saying: "Our interest is not to reach a point of friction or crisis
    with Turkey. We consider Turkey an important strategic partner of
    Israel's and an anchor of stability."

    Susser noted that Turkey has "shown a measure of sympathy with Hamas,
    which has caused a crisis with Israel in the past. There is still a
    residue of that crisis in the relationship."

    He was referring to Turkey's effort to serve as a mediator between
    Hamas and Israel, just as it had served as a mediator between Syria
    and Israel. But Israel refused this summer to allow Davutoglu to enter
    Gaza from Israel for talks with Hamas officials, and then return for
    talks in Jerusalem with Israeli officials.

    Turkish officials were visibly steamed by Israel's decision.

    Asked if she believed the friction between Turkey and Israel would soon
    ease and if the NATO maneuvers might be rescheduled, Lapidot-Firilla
    said that had a lot to do with American pressure.

    "I'm pretty sure that with a lot of pressure it will be only a
    postponement and nothing else," she said. "It's a political game and
    they're checking the boundarie ce in a while they discover they have
    made the wrong move. So if Israel were to do something politically
    correct in their eyes, it would be a good excuse to restore the
    exercise."
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