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Israel Says Turkish PM's Criticisms Endanger Ties

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  • Israel Says Turkish PM's Criticisms Endanger Ties

    ISRAEL SAYS TURKISH PM'S CRITICISMS ENDANGER TIES
    By Dan Williams

    Vision Insights and New Horizons
    http://www.vision.org/visionmedia/article .aspx?id=24331
    Jan 11 2010

    JERUSALEM, Jan 11 (Reuters) - Israel issued a strong condemnation
    of Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan on Monday, saying his often
    fierce public criticism of its policies could undermine relations.

    Turkey, a predominantly Muslim but secular country, is a key ally
    of the Jewish state but ties have frayed since the Gaza Strip war a
    year ago, which killed some 1,400 Palestinians and drew censure from
    Erdogan, head of the Islamist-rooted AK party.

    Hosting Lebanese Prime Minister Saad al-Hariri in Ankara, Erdogan
    criticised an Israeli air strike that killed three Gazan militants
    on Sunday, and suggested Western scrutiny on Iran's nuclear plans
    was unfair given Israel's assumed atomic arsenal.

    "Israel is careful to respect Turkey and seeks continued proper
    ties between the countries, but we expect reciprocity," the Israeli
    Foreign Ministry said in a statement, calling Erdogan's remarks an
    "unbridled tongue-lashing".

    "The State of Israel has the full right to protect its citizens from
    the missiles and terror of Hamas and Hezbollah, and the Turks are the
    last who can preach morality to the State of Israel and the Israel
    Defence Force (military)."

    The veiled dig at Turkey's own military conduct broke with Israel's
    long-standing official reticence on the matter.

    An Israeli army general was reprimanded by the top brass in February
    for saying in a newspaper interview that Turkey should remember its
    past treatment of Kurds, Armenians and Greek Cypriots before weighing
    in on behalf of the Palestinians.

    Asked about the tenor of the Foreign Ministry statement, an Israeli
    diplomat, speaking on condition on anonymity, said it aimed to avert
    what Israel saw as Erdogan's erosion of ties. "We value the Turks
    and want them to wake up and realise what their prime minister risks
    doing," the diplomat said.

    DIPLOMACY AND DRAMA

    Erdogan brokered short-lived peace negotiations between Israel
    and Syria in 2008, and has voiced umbrage at the current Israeli
    government's refusal to return to the indirect talks.

    Some Israeli officials have argued that Erdogan's remarks on the
    Gaza offensive -- on one occasion made in a public shouting match
    with Israeli President Shimon Peres -- and his burgeoning relations
    with Iran invalidated him as a mediator.

    Yet Israel is also troubled by signs of spreading hostility among
    regular Turks.

    The Foreign Ministry complained to the Turkish ambassador on Monday
    over a Turkish television drama that portrayed Israeli diplomats as
    masterminds of a child-abduction ring, calling it anti-Semitic.

    There was similar outrage last year over a Turkish series which
    featured Israeli soldiers murdering Palestinian children.

    Israel says it went to war in Gaza to stem Palestinian rocket and
    mortar salvoes. A resumption in the cross-border shelling last week
    prompted Sunday's air strike, Israel said. Three members of the
    Islamic Jihad militant group were killed.

    At his press conference with Hariri, Erdogan questioned Israel's
    justification for the strike.

    "Why did you bomb Gaza? What was there? Are you going to say they were
    firing rockets again? We are looking into the matter ourselves. Right
    now there are no rockets coming from Gaza."

    Turning to Iran's nuclear programme, which Tehran insists is peaceful
    while Western powers see a covert military programme, Erdogan said:
    "Those who warn Iran about nuclear weapons, don't make the same
    warning to Israel. Israel has nuclear weapons."

    (Writing by Dan Williams; Additional reporting by Ibon Villelabeitia
    in Ankara; Editing by Robin Pomeroy)
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