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Barak's visit to mend Turkish-Israeli rifts, ties hard to recover

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  • Barak's visit to mend Turkish-Israeli rifts, ties hard to recover

    Xinhua, China
    Jan 17 2010

    Barak's visit to mend Turkish-Israeli rifts, ties hard to recover

    www.chinaview.cn 2010-01-17 23:53:22
    by Duygu Tamer, Wang Xiuqiong

    ANKARA, Jan. 17 (Xinhua) -- Israel's Defense Minister Ehud Barak
    started his one-day visit to Turkey on Sunday, a move Ankara expects
    to help repair the rifts with its long-time ally after a diplomatic
    row further strained their relations.

    Barak met with Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu in the
    Turkish capital on Sunday morning and is scheduled to meet Turkish
    Defense Minister Vecdi Gonul later on the day.

    He was the first Israeli official to visit Turkey after Ankara
    threatened to recall its ambassador in Tel Aviv who was treated in a
    humiliating way by an Israeli diplomat earlier this week. Israel
    eventually apologized for the incident and dissolved a crisis.



    EXPECTED ROLES OF THE VISIT

    Turkey expects Barak to ease recent tensions with Israel but it
    will be hard for the two countries to restore their relationship to
    the past level, Turkish officials and analysts said.

    "Barak is an important figure in Israeli politics and both
    Davutoglu and Gonul will give the same message, 'such kind of events
    should not happen again,'" a senior Turkish diplomat told Xinhua on
    condition of anonymity.

    In the meantime, Turkey will continue to press for an end of
    Israel's blockade of the Gaza Strip and resumption of peace talks
    between Israel and the Palestinians during Barak's visit, said the
    official.

    Barak is also expected to reassure Turkey that a long-delayed
    order for Israeli-made unmanned aircraft would be delivered by the end
    of year, according to the official.

    Turkey reached a deal in 2005 to buy 10 Heron drones from Israel
    but the over 180 million-U.S. dollar purchase has been put off by
    technical problems.

    The two countries have been close allies since signing an
    agreement on military and intelligence cooperation in 1996. Their
    trade and defense ties boomed before Israel's offensive in the Gaza
    Strip in December 2008 drew ire from the largely Muslim country and
    cooled bilateral relationship.

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan publicly criticized
    Israeli President Shimon Peres over the Gaza conflicts and stormed out
    of a session of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, in
    January 2009.

    Last year, Turkey banned Israel from participating in a NATO air
    force drill and later refused to censure a fictional television
    program that features Israelis killing Palestinian civilians.

    Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman has then questioned
    Ankara's impartiality in mediating Syrian-Israeli peace talks because
    of its "insults and tongue-lashing" against Israel.

    Turkey brokered negotiations between Syria and Israel in 2008. It
    has improved ties with Syria, once its regional foe, and Iran as part
    of Erdogan's "zero-problem" policy with neighboring countries.

    In the latest barb-trading, Israeli Deputy Foreign Minister Daniel
    Ayalon summoned Turkish ambassador in Tel Aviv Oguz Celikkol on Monday
    to express discontent over a recent Turkish TV drama which portrays
    Israeli intelligence agents as baby-kidnappers.

    During the meeting, Ayalon was caught by camera to urge the
    photographers to pay attention that he and his assistants were sitting
    in higher chairs than Celikkol's seat and there was no Turkish flag on
    the table.

    Israel sent an apology letter on Wednesday after Turkish President
    Abdullah Gul threatened to recall Celikkol if Israel did not make up
    to Ankara.



    TIES HARD TO REVIVE

    The fact that Barak's pre-scheduled visit was not held up by the
    recent diplomatic crisis would serve to mend fences between Turkey and
    Israel, but it seems difficult for their ties to return to the status
    of the 1990s, said Meliha Altunisik, head of the Department of
    International Relations of Middle East Technical University in Ankara.

    "Barak's visit is important since he is coming despite the
    diplomatic crises. Luckily pragmatism worked out again between Israel
    and Turkey," Altunisik told Xinhua. "However, don't expect the close
    relations of the 1990s."

    He said that change in relations is inevitable because Turkey is
    pursuing rapprochement with Syria and the Arab world and that the
    Turkish dependence for Israeli armed sector has decreased.

    Israel's strategy in the Gaza Strip was a major stumbling block in
    Turkish-Israeli ties, while the divided attitudes among the Jewish
    lobby in the United States regarding supporting Turkish claims on the
    death of a large number of Armenians during the World War I, Altunisik
    said.

    Armenia has said more than 1.5 million Armenians were killed in a
    systematic genocide in the hands of the Ottomans during World War I,
    but Turkey insists the Armenians were victims of widespread chaos and
    governmental breakdown as the 600-year-old empire collapsed before
    modern Turkey was born in 1923.

    Turkey's former ambassador in Washington Faruk Logoglu said
    relations between Turkey and Israel will continue but it is almost
    impossible to have the close relations of the past.

    "Barak will say some platitude words but the cooperation between
    two countries will continue to stay at the lowest level," he said.


    Editor: Mu Xuequan
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