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Ankara: Erdogan Says Decision To Bar Israel Was People's Will

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  • Ankara: Erdogan Says Decision To Bar Israel Was People's Will

    ERDOGAN SAYS DECISION TO BAR ISRAEL WAS PEOPLE'S WILL

    Today's Zaman
    15 October 2009, Thursday

    The government was listening to the public when it decided to exclude
    Israel from an international military exercise, Prime Minister Recep
    Tayyip Erdogan was quoted as saying yesterday, days after the Foreign
    Ministry denied the decision was politically motivated

    Erdogan told al-Arabiya television that his government acted as a
    "spokesman for the conscience of the people" and that the Turkish
    people did not want Israel to participate in the exercise, the Anatolia
    news agency reported.

    Israel has extensive defense ties with Turkey, a NATO member and one of
    the few Muslim nations to have built an alliance with the Jewish state.

    Yet tension prevails in the ties between Israel and Turkey,
    particularly since Ankara's harsh criticism of Israel's
    three-week offensive in the Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip in December and
    January. Erdogan reiterated in the al-Arabiya interview that Israel
    killed 1,500 people, mostly women and children, in Gaza and destroyed
    schools and hospitals.

    Turkey and Israel both denied on Monday that the cancellation of air
    force exercises scheduled for this week posed any threat to their
    long-standing bilateral ties and strategic interests. The Turkish
    Foreign Ministry, in a statement on Monday, ruled out comments made
    by certain Israeli officials who suggested that political motives were
    behind changing the exercise, urging Israel to display "common sense"
    in their statements.

    Meanwhile, Syria, a regional rival of Israel, has said it will hold
    military exercises with Turkey. "We held our first joint land military
    exercise [with Turkey] last spring. And today we have agreed to do a
    more comprehensive, bigger one," Syrian Defense Minister Ali Habib,
    speaking at a news conference held in the border city of Gaziantep
    on Tuesday evening at which Syrian and Turkish ministers responded
    to questions following the first ministerial-level meeting of the
    High-Level Strategic Cooperation Council, recentl Minister Ahmet
    Davutoglu (R) and his Syrian counterpart, Walid Muallem, shake
    hands after signing an agreement at the border of the two countries
    on Tuesday.

    In the Syrian border city of Aleppo, Syrian Foreign Minister Walid
    al-Moallem commended Ankara for canceling of the exercises, speaking
    at the same meeting as Habib.

    "We warmly welcome the decision. This decision is based on Turkey's
    approach towards Israel and reflects the way Turkey regards the Israeli
    attack on Gaza," Moallem told reporters in Aleppo, where the first
    part of the High-Level Strategic Cooperation Council meeting was held.

    In Washington, the US State Department gently criticized Turkey on
    Tuesday over the exercise controversy, with Assistant Secretary of
    State for Public Affairs Philip J. Crowley telling reporters that "as
    to the question of whether there was a government that was invited
    to participate and then removed at the last minute, we think it's
    inappropriate for any nation to be removed from an exercise like this
    at the last minute."

    He was asked whether that was what happened and if Israel was the
    spurned country. He confirmed that it was correct. Also on Tuesday,
    in Israel, Deputy Prime Minister Silvan Shalom urged Turkey "to come
    to its senses" in comments over the issue. "Turkey is an important
    Muslim state sharing strategic ties with Israel. I hope the Turks
    come to their senses and realize that the relationship between the
    two states is in their interest no less than ours. The deterioration
    of ties with Turkey in recent days is regrettable," he said.

    Davutoglu defies pressure by Israeli lobby

    In Gaziantep, Davutoglu was asked by a Syrian reporter whether he
    is worried about any probable counter-attacks by Israeli lobbies in
    the international arena following the recent uneasiness between the
    two countries.

    "Turkey's foreign policy has always been based on principles. When
    there have been bad policies, as in the Gaza incidents, we have shown
    our position. Turkey has never interfered in any other count utoglu
    said first of all, underlining that Turkey has consistently favored
    regional cooperation and stability.

    "I'm telling this to you as the foreign minister of the Turkish
    Republic. There is nothing over which the Turkish Republic should feel
    worried. We are ready for dialogue with everybody on every issue,"
    he said.

    The Syrian reporter's question was an apparent reference to remarks
    by Israeli defense officials cited by the Israeli daily The Jerusalem
    Post. In regards to the exercises dispute, those officials told the
    daily they would end Israeli support for Turkey in its efforts to
    stop the US Congress voting to declare the killings of Anatolian
    Armenians by the Ottoman Turks genocide.
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