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  • Confronting Turkey

    CONFRONTING TURKEY

    By JPOST EDITORIAL
    02/05/2013 23:59

    The West must stop deluding itself with regard to the political
    leadership of Turkey. The time has come to recognize that Turkey has
    changed radically - and for the worse.

    How can one explain the reticence of the US and other Western powers
    in the face of Turkey's aggressive declarations? On Saturday night,
    Ahmet Davutoglu, foreign minister of Turkey, a country that is a
    member of NATO and a candidate to join the EU, threatened to launch
    a military offensive against Israel, an important US ally.

    Turkey would not "stay unresponsive" to an Israeli aggression against
    any Muslim country, Davutoglu said, according to the Istanbul-based
    daily Hurriyet, in response to Israel's reported air strike on an arms
    convoy inside Syria. If those are not fighting words, what are? On
    Sunday, meanwhile, Turkey's Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan kept up
    the heat claiming Israel has "a mentality of waging state terrorism."

    Israeli officials, speaking off record to The Jerusalem Post's
    diplomatic correspondent Herb Keinon, rightly noted Ankara's "brazen
    hypocrisy."

    Erdogan and Davutoglu have no qualms taking Israel to task for a
    "crime" that Turkey itself is guilty of perpetrating.

    Have the two men forgotten that just last October, after Syrian
    shelling killed five Turkish civilians, Turkish military forces fired
    salvos at Syria? Or that Ankara actively supports Syrian opposition
    forces? Southern Turkey has in recent months become a launch pad
    for the smuggling of crucial supplies across the border into Syria,
    including weapons, communications gear, field hospitals and even
    salaries for soldiers who defect.

    But what for Ankara is taken as an inalienable right to self-defense
    becomes "state terrorism" when applied to Israel. Indeed, anytime the
    Jewish state resorts to force to protect itself, Erdogan is quick to
    issue denunciations, whether those on the receiving end are Turkey's
    close allies, such as Hamas terrorists in Gaza, or foes, such as
    Syria's repressive military forces.

    According to nearly all media reports, last Wednesday's purported
    Israeli air strike targeted a Syrian convoy that was trying to
    smuggle into Hezbollah-controlled southern Lebanon Russian-made SA-17
    surface-to-air missiles that are designed to attack anything from
    cruise missiles and smart bombs to fixed- and rotary-wing aircraft,
    to unmanned aerial vehicles. Introducing these SA-17 missiles to
    Hezbollah forces in southern Lebanon would compromise Israel's air
    superiority, which has so far provided important deterrence against
    Hezbollah attacks on Israel.

    Turkey's hypocrisy is so blatant and absurd that we wonder if the
    flurry of accusations and threats is nothing more than a diplomatic
    ploy designed to distance Ankara from Jerusalem so that the impression
    of an Israeli-Turkish entente against Syrian President Basher Assad's
    regime is summarily dismissed.

    Perhaps Turkey is simply jumping at an opportunity to galvanize support
    across the Middle East, from Cairo to Tehran, by using the standard
    method known to all Middle East rulers for the last 80 or so years -
    bash the Zionists.

    Whatever the motivation, the unfortunate fact remains that a NATO
    member state threatened to attack one of America's major non-NATO
    allies - and nobody in Washington, or for that matter, London, Paris
    or Berlin, bothered to issue even the feeblest denunciation of Turkey
    or defense of the legitimacy of the purported Israeli air strike.

    The West had high hopes for Turkey's ruling Justice and Development
    Party, better known by its Turkish acronym, the AKP. The Bush
    administration saw an AKP-governed Turkey as a model Islamist state -
    moderate, democratic and with a booming economy - for other Islamist
    parties in the region to follow. The Obama administration seems to
    have adopted that optimistic approach. In a January 2012 interview
    with Time's Fareed Zakaria, US President Barack Obama named Erdogan as
    one of his top five international "best friends" together with German
    Chancellor Angela Merkel and British Prime Minister David Cameron.

    The West must stop deluding itself with regard to the political
    leadership of Turkey. This is the same leadership that, according
    to the Committee to Protect Journalists, has broken the world record
    for jailing the most journalists (more than 70); that threatened in
    2011 to attack Cyprus over gas drilling off its shores; that made the
    ridiculous claim The Economist was a part of an "Israeli conspiracy"
    because its editorial board recommended ahead of the 2011 elections in
    Turkey not to vote for the AKP; and that in 2009 denied the genocide
    in Darfur and defended Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir, the man
    responsible for this genocide.

    The time has come to recognize that Turkey has changed radically -
    and for the worse.

    http://www.jpost.com/Opinion/Editorials/Article.aspx?id=302232

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