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Israel's Gaza Offensive Presents Ankara With Diplomatic Challenge

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  • Israel's Gaza Offensive Presents Ankara With Diplomatic Challenge

    ISRAEL'S GAZA OFFENSIVE PRESENTS ANKARA WITH DIPLOMATIC CHALLENGE

    EurasiaNet
    Jan 8 2009
    NY

    Israel's attack in Gaza is proving to be both a test and an opportunity
    for Turkey's continuing efforts to establish itself as a regional
    mediator in the Middle East, observers say.

    Ankara, for the last few years, has actively sought to establish itself
    as a kind of regional (soft) power broker, working to strengthen
    relations with neighbors that it has previously kept at an arm's
    length, and even bringing Israel and Syria together for a round of
    secret meetings in Istanbul.

    Turkey has been conducting its own shuttle diplomacy in the Middle
    East, with the country's prime minister recently visiting Syria,
    Jordan, Egypt and Saudi Arabia in an effort to bring about a ceasefire
    between Israel and Hamas. But harsh government criticism of Israel,
    along with rising popular anger to Israel's actions inside Turkey,
    could compromise Ankara's ability to play the role of honest broker,
    experts say.

    "We think that Turkey is a country that has a role in the Middle
    East. Turkey has contacts to all the countries in the region. They are
    on speaking terms with everybody. The potential is there for Turkey
    to help facilitate a solution in the Middle East," says a Western
    diplomat based in Ankara.

    But, adds the diplomat: "During this crisis, Turkey might have a
    bigger impact if they had a slightly more balanced position, and if
    the prime minister's criticism of Israel had not been so harsh."

    Indeed, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's criticism of
    Israel has been significantly stronger than even that of many Arab
    leaders. As the Turkish newspaper Vatan noted dryly on its front
    page, the only other leaders in the Middle East to use language
    like Erdogan's have been regional firebrands Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and
    Muammar Khadaffi.

    Speaking at a recent municipal election campaign rally, for example,
    Erdogan said Israel was "perpetrating inhuman actions which would
    bring it to self-destruction. Allah will sooner or later punish those
    who transgress the rights of innocents."

    Erdogan also has characterized Israel's actions as a "crime against
    humanity," and has publicly stated that he is refusing to take phone
    calls from Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert until Israel stops its
    Gaza attack.

    Some critics are wondering whether Erdogan's statements have undercut
    Turkey's ability to deliver on what it insists is the added value
    it brings to the Middle Eastern table -- its ability to serve as a
    conduit to Israel. "The reactions by the prime minister at the start
    of the operation have weakened a very important trump card in his
    hand," political analyst Cengiz Candar said on NTV, a Turkish news
    network. "The war in Gaza has . . . battered the country's political
    influence."

    In Israel, some of Erdogan's statements have been greeted with
    dismay. "There is a lot of anger in Israel over what Erdogan said,"
    says Ephraim Inbar, Director of the Begin-Sadat Center for Strategic
    Studies at Israel's Bar Ilan University. "Turkey needs to understand
    that this is like the talks with Syria. For Israel, Hamas is a red
    flag; it's seen as a terrorist organization that wants to destroy it."

    "I think Turkey has exaggerated this time around," Inbar adds.

    Still, experts say that mutual interests -- particularly on
    regional security issues -- will keep Turkish-Israeli relations from
    rupturing. The two countries, for example, signed a $141 million deal
    on the eve of the Gaza attack that calls for Israel to provide the
    Turkish air force with airborne space imagery intelligence systems
    over the next four years.

    "Long term I don't see much impact. Both nations need each other,"
    says Lale Sariibrahimoglu, a military analyst based in Ankara.

    "There might be a kind of a cold atmosphere between the two countries
    for perhaps weeks to come, but I don't anticipate any further action
    by Turkey in terms of reducing relations, particularly in terms of
    diplomatic ties," said Sami Kohen, a columnist with the daily Milliyet
    and a veteran observer of Turkish foreign policy.

    Despite his own impassioned rhetoric, Erdogan has rejected calls
    by members of the Turkish parliament to suspend Turkey's ties with
    Israel. "I would like to remind those who call for Turkey to freeze
    ties with Israel that we administer the republic of Turkey, not a
    grocery market," Erdogan recently told parliament.

    Erdogan's reaction is based on a real anger that his efforts of
    the last few years to bridge the divides in the Middle East --
    particularly between Israel and Syria -- may have gone up in smoke
    because of Israel's actions, but there is also a domestic component
    to his response, analysts say.

    The public reaction in Turkey to what is happening in Gaza has
    been visibly angry, with large daily protests taking place all over
    Turkey. Even a basketball game between a Turkish and Israeli team in
    Ankara had to be called off after shouting protestors stormed the
    court. "This is the first time that the public reaction has been
    so widespread. It's very intensive this time. There haven't been
    such widespread and spontaneous anti-Israel sentiments before,"
    says Milliyet's Kohen. "It's not just the Islamic circles. It's
    also the secularists and the nationalists. The protests have been
    representative of the whole of Turkish society. I don't remember
    seeing such a public reaction on any other issue before."

    With Erdogan's Justice and Development Party (AKP) facing local
    elections this March, the government's relations with Israel could
    be a liability. Already, placards have been appearing at protests
    showing Erdogan and Olmert shaking hands and accusing the AKP of
    "collaborating" with Israel.

    Erdogan may also find himself walking a tightrope when it comes
    to distancing Turkey from Israel. Ankara has long depended on
    Israel to act as a conduit to the Washington and to American Jewish
    organizations, who have frequently acted as a kind of surrogate lobby
    for Turkey in Washington. In the past, Jewish organizations have been
    instrumental in helping Turkey block efforts to introduce resolutions
    in Congress recognizing the Armenian genocide of 1915.

    "There is real anger with Erdogan on Capital Hill and among people
    who follow Turkey in Washington," says a Washington-based consultant
    who closely monitors Turkish affairs. "Nobody is threatening anything
    right now, or knows if there are going to be repercussions, but this
    is going to have an effect."

    Adds the consultant: "There is a sense that Erdogan's used up a lot
    of good will."

    Editor's Note: Yigal Schleifer is a freelance journalist based in
    Istanbul.
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