Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Turkey vs. Israel: Emerging Conflict of Strategic Interest

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Turkey vs. Israel: Emerging Conflict of Strategic Interest

    Hellenic News of America
    Jan 17 2010

    Turkey vs. Israel: Emerging Conflict of Strategic Interest



    The mass media in Israel, Turkey and the Arab world, have been
    preoccupied in the last few days by another sudden and rather serious
    diplomatic crisis in the Turkish-Israeli relations. This time the
    insult was initiated by the Israelis intentionally, and apparently
    orchestrated by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. It came at the
    anniversary of last year�s diplomatic scuffle that embarrassed many
    Turks and Israelis, who believed that the two countries were strategic
    partners with common interests in the Middle East.

    As you may recall, it was about a year ago when the charismatic and
    rhetorical Prime Minister of Turkey, Mr. Tayyip Erdogan, criticized
    Israel publicly, in an International forum, for its brutal attack on
    Gaza a few months earlier, which had thousands of innocent victims.
    The Israeli President, Mr. Peres, who was present at the Davos
    International Meeting, apparently took offense by it, but Erdogan
    scored political points among peoples in the Middle East and beyond.
    He became a kind of hero for the Muslim masses for having the courage
    to say publically what other Muslim leaders would whisper only
    privately.

    Since then the situation has not improved, in spite of Israeli efforts
    to patch up the conflict. The recent incident will make a bad
    situation even worse diplomatically, with unforeseen consequences for
    the future of the Turkish-Israeli relations and possible political
    re-alignments in the Middle East. Indeed, the rudeness of this episode
    was rather unusual for the diplomatic chronicles, even with ME
    standards. The Turkish Ambassador, Mr. Celikkol, was invited by the
    Israeli Undersecretary of State, Mr. Ayalon, to a meeting ostensibly
    to receive the official expression of the displeasure of the Israeli
    Government for a Turkish TV serial, which portrayed Israeli agents,
    and Israeli people in general, in a negative light.

    Mr. Ayalon arranged so that his displeasure would be visible as well
    as audible to Turks and Israelis. In front of the rolling cameras he
    refused to shake hands with the Ambassador of Turkey; he had the
    Turkish flag removed from the table in the meeting room; he placed the
    visitor in a law couch, while he and his assistants were sited on high
    armchairs looking down on the Turkish diplomat, who looked
    uncomfortable in this strange and undiplomatic arrangement. But the
    Turks got the message he meant to send them, and not surprisingly
    reacted furiously, as befits men when they are insulted.

    The President of Turkey, Mr. Gul, issued an ultimatum demanding a
    formal apology by the Israeli Government, which found itself in an
    embarrassing situation by the rude acts of its diplomats. It took the
    intervention of the President of Israel, Mr. Peres, to persuade the
    Netanyahu Government, which had supported Ayalon�s actions, to provide
    Turkey with the apology which it demanded and deserved in this case.
    At the end, the Israeli Deputy Minister made a `diplomatic statement'
    stating that he `had no intention to personally humiliate' the Turkish
    Ambassador. This could only mean, in this context, that the Israelis�
    intention was to insult and humiliate the State of Turkey itself,
    through its Ambassador.

    If so, this does not add up to an `apology' to Turkey; but it has been
    accepted as such by Mr. Erdogan himself, apparently in an effort to
    de-escalate this diplomatic crisis between the allies, in light of the
    expected visit to Turkey, this weekend, of the Israeli Minister of
    Defense, Mr. Ehud Barak.

    This situation would have been unthinkable a few years ago, before the
    Islamist Party of Mr. Erdogan (the Party of Justice and Development),
    came to power in 2002. This Islamist Party has capable and gifted
    party members, such as Mr. Gul, who has become President of Turkey,
    and Mr. Davutoglu, who was initially Erdogan�s political adviser and
    has become now the Secretary of State. Working together as a team with
    clear political goals, this `Turkish Triumvirate' has brought many
    democratic changes in Turkey and, above all, has transformed its
    foreign policy. Turkey�s openings toward Armenia, the Kurds, Syria,
    Iraq, and even Greece (but not yet Cyprus), are real achievements and
    to their credit.

    This one thing, therefore, is clear for political observers of the
    Middle East: Under Erdogan�s charismatic leadership, Turkey is moving
    fast in many diplomatic fronts and is increasingly recognized as a
    growing regional power that is capable of affecting the politics of
    the Middle East in fundamental ways.

    This political fact is not good news for the State of Israel, which
    was used to having a monopoly of power in the region due to its
    favorable connection to the Pentagon and the US Government, via the
    Jewish Lobby in Washington. Traditionally, Israel has thus controlled
    or manipulated arms sales to the Turkish Governments, since the time
    of its establishment, and continuously during the Cold War years.
    Because the threat of Communism was `the real enemy' all those years,
    democratic considerations and human rights violations had to be
    covered up or brutally crushed by a series of military interventions.
    So, having good relations with the State of Israel was perceived in
    Turkey as indispensible for the Military establishment, no matter how
    the Israelis behaved toward the Palestinians and other Arabs and
    Muslims in the Middle East. The Turkish Triumvirate came to change
    this convenient arrangement.

    The first great political victory of the newly elected Erdogan
    Government came in the spring of 2003, when George W. Bush decided to
    attack Iraq and needed help from Turkey, our NATO ally. To facilitate
    the war effort, the American Government at that time needed to open a
    second front in the North of Iraq. Bush thought that he could persuade
    the Turks to go along with the NATO plan, or buy them out. But Erdogan
    proved him wrong. Turkey would not allow NATO forces to enter Iraq
    from its soil. This sounds unbelievable, but it did happen. It is a
    historical fact: Turkey humiliated America!

    Now is the turn of Israel to be humiliated by apologizing to Turkey
    for the mistreatment of its diplomat, instead of Turkey apologizing to
    Israel for the way its public media portray the State of Israel and
    its citizens! Apparently the Turkish Triumvirate does not think that
    it needs Israeli cooperation for the procurement of American arms, if
    it can buy them from Russia which is closer and needs the cash.

    Things are changing indeed in Turkey and in the Middle East, thanks to
    Mr. Davutoglu, Mr. Gul, and especially Mr. Erdogan. He has been lucky
    so far, but if his good luck continues for another year or two, he may
    become a great Turkish leader, much greater than Kemal Ataturk. The
    later established a nominally `secular' Republic at the end of World
    War I, about the same time when Lenin and Stalin were trying
    desperately to establish the first Communist Government and the
    `Socialist Society' in the Soviet Union. It is significant that the
    Kemal�s `secularism' has lasted longer than the Leninist-Stalinist
    experiment. Its success might have had something to do with the
    Israeli connection and its unwavering support over the years. In all
    probability the Kemalist era in Turkey is coming to an end finally and
    we will be witnessing its demise in the near future, if the luck of
    Erdogan lasts a little longer and the Military does not react soon in
    its usual and brutal way.

    Anyway, one of the great achievements of Erdogan and his Government so
    far has been the dexterous way that they have handled the process of
    accession to the European Union. They have used it masterfully to
    weaken the Military�s chocking hold on political power and
    developments in Turkey. Thus, they keep knocking on the door of the
    EU, although they (at least the Triumvirate) realize that the outcome
    is uncertain and, in all probability, will be negative at the end of a
    long process. Being smart men and shrewd political leaders, they have
    started preparing the ground for an alternative solution to the
    Turkish Problem. If they cannot be part of the EU, hanging on its
    economic tail, like Greece and other poor Mediterranean members, then
    why not try to be the leading power of the Muslim world in the Middle
    East and beyond? Why not hope for a revival of the `Ottoman Empire' by
    other means?

    This being the case, it would not be surprising if the Erdogan
    Government came up with some new proposals for the reunification of
    Cyprus and for the reopening of the Halki Theological School. Both
    these political moves can help them regarding their European
    aspirations and regional designs.

    The Erdogan Government cannot be serious when it claims to care for
    the Roma minority, while ignoring the Ecumenical Patriarchate and His
    All Holiness Patriarch Bartholomew. If Mr. Davutoglu finds
    inappropriate the `crucifixion' metaphor, he could and should do
    something to alleviate the burden that his Holiness caries having to
    operate under the oppressive conditions established by the Kemalist
    regime almost a century ago. It is time for change in this front too,
    and good will may follow indeed.
Working...
X