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  • Provoking Turkey is Not a Good Idea

    Palestine Chronicle
    Jan 17 2010

    Provoking Turkey is Not a Good Idea


    Erdogan attacked the Israeli policy in Gaza on several occasions.

    By Uri Avnery ` Israel

    I tried to resist the temptation to tell the same classical Jewish
    joke a second time, but circumstances delivered a plausible excuse.

    Almost every Jew knows the sentence `Kill a Turk and rest.' The whole
    story goes like this:

    In Czarist Russia, a Jewish boy is called up for the war against the Turks.

    His tearful mother takes leave of him at the railway station and
    implores him: `Don't overexert yourself! Kill a Turk and rest. Kill
    another Turk and rest again¦'

    `But mother!' the boy interrupts her. `What if the Turk kills me?'

    `Kills you?!' the mother exclaims in sheer disbelief, `But why? What
    have you done to him?'

    Jewish jokes reflect Jewish reality. So this joke became true this week.

    Unfortunately the joke is on us. It happened like this:

    Turkish television aired a rather series, in which Mossad operatives
    kidnap Turkish children and hide them in the Israeli embassy. Valiant
    Turkish agents free the children and kill the evil ambassador.

    One can ignore such a story altogether or protest mildly. But our
    illustrious Foreign Minister thought that this was the right occasion
    to demonstrate to all and sundry that we are no longer abject ghetto
    Jews who take everything lying down, but proud, upright Jews of a new
    breed.

    So the Deputy Foreign Minister, Danny Ayalon, summoned the Turkish
    ambassador to the Foreign Office in Jerusalem for a carefully staged
    exhibition of national pride.

    When the ambassador arrived, he was surprised to see the place
    crawling with TV crews and journalists. He was left waiting for a
    considerable time and then shown into a room where three solemn
    officials, including Ayalon, were perched on high chairs. He was
    seated on a low sofa without arms, and had no choice but sit in a
    reclining position.

    Not satisfied with this, Ayalon expressly requested the media people
    (in Hebrew) to pay attention to the difference in height between the
    chairs and the sofa, to the absence of the Turkish flag on the table,
    as well as to the fact that the Israelis did not smile and did not
    shake hands.

    Perhaps Ayalon drew his inspiration from a memorable scene in Charlie
    Chaplin's movie The Great Dictator, in which Hitler and Mussolini sit
    on barber's chairs, each of them jacking his chair up so as to tower
    above the other, until both chairs topple over.

    Ayalon then delivered (again in Hebrew) a sharp rebuke ' all Israeli
    media used this word rather than the diplomatic term `protest'.

    Well satisfied with his work, Ayalon saw to it that it got maximum
    exposure in the media, especially on television.

    The Turkish reaction was, of course, violent. Turks are more sensitive
    about their national dignity then most (witness their reactions to
    allegations about the Armenian massacre almost a hundred years ago),
    so they were foreseeably upset.

    Ayalon got, of course, the unreserved backing of his minister, mentor
    and party boss, Avigdor Lieberman, who was full of praise.

    A few weeks before, Lieberman had assembled all the Israeli
    ambassadors from around the world, some 150 of them, for a pep talk.
    He rebuked them for not properly defending the honor of Israel and
    announced a radical new policy: from now on, the main duty of an
    Israeli ambassador is to stand up for the dignity of his country,
    attack anyone who criticizes Israel and leave no insult unanswered, be
    it big or small. This should take precedence over all other diplomatic
    duties.

    No one in the audience, which was mainly composed of long-standing
    career diplomats, dared to get up and point out that there may be more
    important Israeli interests, such as good relations with foreign
    governments, military and intelligence ties and economic matters.
    Except for one ambassador ' who smiled and was soundly rebuked '
    nobody demurred.

    In less that a year in office, Lieberman has already broken a lot of
    diplomatic china. He has insulted several friendly governments. In one
    noteworthy case, he publicly rebuked the Norwegians for celebrating
    the anniversary of their national writer, Knut Hamsun, who had
    sympathized with the Nazis. In another case, he attacked the Swedish
    government for not protesting publicly against an article by a minor
    scribbler in a Swedish newspaper, in which he made the accusation that
    Israeli soldiers kill Palestinians in order to sell their organs for
    transplants. Lieberman's exaggerated reaction turned this into world
    news.

    His tendency to insult foreign governments ` a rather original trait
    for a foreign minister ` may have been exacerbated by the refusal of
    many of his foreign colleagues to meet with him, considering him a
    racist or an outright fascist ` as, indeed, do most Israelis.

    When Netanyahu set up his government and appointed Lieberman as his
    foreign minister, the news was at first met with incredulity. A more
    absurd appointment could hardly be imagined. But Netanyahu needed him,
    and could offer him neither the Treasury, which he wanted to lead
    himself by proxy, nor the defense ministry, which is the private
    domain of Ehud Barak. The foreign ministry, which few people in Israel
    take seriously, was the only viable alternative.

    Therefore, Netanyahu could not criticize these two Neanderthals,
    Lieberman and Ayalon, and their antics. But Barak was hopping mad.

    As it so happens, Barak is due to visit Turkey tomorrow. The relations
    between the Israeli and the Turkish defense establishments are as
    close as can be. Not only is there a certain ideological affinity
    between the two army commands ` both consider themselves as the
    guardians of national values and look down with contempt on the
    politicians ` but the generals of the two countries are real buddies.
    Also, the Israeli defense industry depends very much on Turkish
    orders, about a billion dollars annually.

    Lately, some dispute has arisen about drones supplied by Israel, and
    relations have deteriorated. Barak's visit is therefore considered
    very important. Some Israeli commentators believe that the whole
    Ayalon affair was a not so subtle ploy by Lieberman to sabotage his
    cabinet rival.

    Be that as is may, the whole Israeli establishment realized that
    Ayalon's stupid charade has done great damage. He was obliged to
    retract, and did so in a graceless, half-hearted manner, without first
    finding out whether this would satisfy the Turks. It did not ` and the
    Turks, becoming more and more furious, demanded a clear and abject
    apology. This demand was presented as an ultimatum ` until midnight on
    Wednesday, or else. Else meant the recall of the ambassador and the
    downgrading of relations.

    Netanyahu caved in. Ayalon apologized again, this time unequivocally,
    and the Turks graciously accepted. Barak will be going to Turkey.

    Behind this childish episode lurks the more serious problem of
    Turkish-Israeli relations.

    The Turkish Prime Minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, reminded Israel this
    week that Turkey has always welcomed Jews. He was alluding to an
    historic chapter that is never quite acknowledged here: When Catholic
    Spain expelled hundreds of thousands of Jews in 1492 (some speak of as
    many as 800,000), the vast majority of them settled in the Ottoman
    Empire, from Marrakesh to Sarajevo. While Jews in Christian Europe
    were tortured by the Spanish inquisition and suffered untold
    persecutions, expulsions and pogroms, culminating in the Holocaust,
    they flourished for centuries under the benevolent rule of the Muslim
    Ottomans.

    These historic memories were, alas, erased during the short period of
    Zionist relations with the Turkish administration in Palestine in the
    early 20th century. Every Israeli child learns about the lovely Sarah
    Aharonson, a member of a pro-British spy ring in World War I, who
    committed suicide after being tortured by the Terrible Turks.

    Cordial relations were resumed only when masses of Israeli tourists
    started to arrive at Turkish resorts and were surprised by the warmth
    of their reception. The tourists love it.

    So what is happening now? Turks, like all Muslims, were upset by last
    year's Gaza War and the horrifying pictures they saw on TV. Erdogan,
    echoing these sentiments as a good politician would, attacked the
    Israeli policy on several occasions, cancelled joint army maneuvers
    and once left a public debate with President Shimon Peres in a huff.

    After being shown the cold shoulder by the European Union, Turkey has
    turned towards its Arab neighbors and Iran, seeking to act as a
    mediator between East and West. It also began to mediate between
    Israel and Syria, until it realized that the Israeli government had no
    desire at all to make peace, which would compel it to dismantle
    settlements and return territory.

    The relationship between Turkey and Israel will probably return to
    normal, if not to its former degree of warmth. Turkey needs the help
    of the pro-Israel lobby in Washington. (Ayalon himself has in the past
    been sent there to help repel efforts to recognize the Armenian
    genocide). Israel needs Turkey as an ally and arms buyer.

    So what about the joke? Well, it serves as a reminder that provoking
    the Turks is not necessarily a good idea.

    - Uri Avnery is a peace activist, journalist, and writer. He
    contributed this article to PalestineChronicle.com.

    http://www.palestinechron icle.com/view_article_details.php?id=15690
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