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Israel Tries To Calm Turkish Row

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  • Israel Tries To Calm Turkish Row

    ISRAEL TRIES TO CALM TURKISH ROW
    Abraham Rabiinovich, Jerusalem

    The Australian
    Jan 14 2010
    Australia

    ISRAEL'S Deputy Foreign Minister Danny Ayalon offered an indirect
    apology yesterday for having deliberately humiliated a Turkish
    diplomat after Ankara threatened to recall its ambassador to Israel
    amid escalating tensions between the countries.

    Mr Ayalon triggered the fresh row when he summoned the ambassador,
    Ahmet Oguz Celikkol, to be rebuked for an anti-Israel television series
    in Turkey depicting the Mossad as baby-snatchers and for attacks on
    Israel by Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

    Departing from diplomatic protocol, Mr Ayalon invited Israeli
    television cameras to record the beginning of the meeting at which
    the ambassador was seated on a couch a few centimetres lower than
    the chairs on which Mr Ayalon and two colleagues were seated.

    Mr Ayalon told the cameramen in Hebrew, which the Turkish envoy
    does not speak: "Pay attention that he is sitting in a lower chair,
    that there is only an Israeli flag on the table (and no Turkish flag)
    and that we are not smiling."

    The conversation that ensued in English between the diplomats after
    the cameramen left was polite, both sides reported, and it was only
    after learning of Mr Ayalon's remark to the cameramen that Mr Celikkol
    realised an attempt had been made to humiliate him.

    The Turkish Foreign Ministry summoned Israel's ambassador to Ankara,
    Gaby Levy, to demand "an explanation and an apology" for Mr Ayalon's
    behaviour. The ministry issued a statement calling for "corrective
    steps to be taken with respect to the treatment shown our ambassador"
    and an official warned that without an apology, the ambassador would
    be withdrawn.

    In Israel, criticism of Mr Ayalon's behaviour was widespread, even
    among serving diplomats, several of whom called it, anonymously,
    "an embarrassment" and "childish".

    Mr Ayalon initially defended his action. "Others will respect us
    only when we protect our honour," he said. Yesterday, however, he
    issued a statement aimed at terminating the episode. "My protest of
    the attacks against Israel in Turkey still stands," he said.

    "However, it is not my way to insult foreign ambassadors and in the
    future, I will clarify my position by more acceptable diplomatic
    means."

    There was no immediate indication from Ankara as to whether this was
    considered adequate apology.

    Mr Ayalon, a professional diplomat who served as Israeli ambassador
    to Washington, began displaying hardline views after being chosen by
    Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman last year to serve as his deputy.

    Mr Lieberman has called upon Israeli diplomats to make a forceful
    response to perceived diplomatic insults and not to seek favour.

    In a statement issued earlier this week, Israel condemned Mr Erdogan's
    "unbridled tongue-lashing" of Israel for its incursion into Gaza last
    year. The Turkish Prime Minister has repeatedly accused Israel of
    disproportionate use of force against the Palestinians. The Israeli
    statement, alluding to Turkey's actions against its own Kurdish
    militants, and perhaps to its massacre of Armenians in World War I,
    said "Turkey is the last country that can preach morality to Israel".

    The falling-out is of significance to both countries. The close ties
    that have existed for decades between them bear far-reaching political
    and security resonance.
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