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Peres Visit Highlights Policy Differences Over Iran And Hamas

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  • Peres Visit Highlights Policy Differences Over Iran And Hamas

    PERES VISIT HIGHLIGHTS POLICY DIFFERENCES OVER IRAN AND HAMAS
    By Gareth Jenkins

    Eurasia Daily Monitor, DC
    Nov 13 2007

    Turkish hopes that the official visit to Ankara by Israeli President
    Shimon Peres would strengthen Ankara's recently strained relationship
    with Israel received a setback, following a very public disagreement
    over the two countries' attitudes toward Iran and Hamas.

    The 1996 agreements between Turkey and Israel to cooperate in military
    training and the defense industry were hailed by many as the beginning
    of a strategic realignment in the eastern Mediterranean.

    There were widespread expectations that they would be reinforced by
    stronger political and economic ties. However, although bilateral trade
    has continued to increase and Turkey has become a popular destination
    for Israeli tourists, hopes that the rapprochement could be underpinned
    by strategic projects, such as the transportation of Turkish water to
    Israel, have come to nothing. Fundamental differences on a number of
    key issues have overshadowed closer political cooperation, particularly
    since the moderate Islamist Justice and Development Party (AKP) came
    to power in Turkey in November 2002. AKP ministers have frequently
    been outspoken in their criticism of Israel's policies toward the
    Palestinians. Privately, a large number of AKP supporters are not
    just anti-Israeli but simply anti-Semitic (see EDM, November 5). In
    February 2006, the AKP outraged many in Israel by hosting an official
    Hamas delegation in Ankara.

    But the October 10 decision by the U.S. House Foreign Affairs Committee
    to characterize the killings of Armenians in World War I as a genocide
    (see EDM, October 15) served as a reminder to Ankara of the benefits
    of a good relationship with Israel. Previously, the Jewish lobby in
    the United States had frequently campaigned on Turkey's behalf in
    Washington. However, in recent years - and particularly since the
    Hamas visit - Jewish-American support for Turkey has waned. In the
    wake of the Foreign Affairs Committee's approval of the genocide
    motion, several Turkish newspapers noted how many Jewish members of
    the committee who had previously tended to support Turkey had voted
    for the motion (Milliyet, Radikal, October 11).

    The AKP is keen to play a major role in the Middle East peace process
    by attending the summit meeting in Annapolis later this month as part
    of a longer-term strategy of establishing Turkey as a regional power.

    Yesterday (November 12), in an address to the Sixth International
    Ataturk Congress in Ankara, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan
    gave probably the most candid exposition to date of his government's
    goal of transforming the Middle East into a zone of Turkish influence.

    "If those who want to do something in the region fail to achieve a
    result the most important reason is the concept of doing something
    'despite Turkey.' This is the biggest mistake made by the Europeans
    and others," he said (Radikal, November 13).

    But an attempt by Turkish President Abdullah Gul to reassure Peres
    of Iran's peaceful intentions led to a very public demonstration of
    how far apart the AKP and Israel are in their attitudes toward the
    regime in Tehran. Gul tried to assure Peres that Iranian threats to
    "wipe Israel off the map" were just rhetoric and that Tehran had
    no hostile intentions. Speaking at a joint press conference, Peres
    retorted that Iran had publicly threatened Israel, that its nuclear
    program was not for peaceful purposes and that Tehran was supporting
    international terrorism. When asked whether he was worried about Iran's
    nuclear ambitions, Gul, in an unmistakable reference to Israel's own
    nuclear capabilities, replied: "We are against all nuclear weapons
    in our region" (Milliyet, Radikal, Hurriyet, November 13).

    When pressed by Gul to support Turkey's efforts to prevent the killing
    of the Armenians being characterized as a genocide, Peres merely
    commented that he believed that all discussions about a genocide in
    Turkey should be left to historians (NTV, CNNTurk, November 12).

    However, he was more forthcoming about Turkey's preparations to stage
    a cross-border military operation against camps belonging to the
    Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) in northern Iraq. Peres declared his
    support for Turkey's right to defend itself before pointedly adding
    that Israel was also struggling against terrorism and condemning what
    he described as the steps Hamas was taking against the peace process.

    In an implicit reference to Turkey's contacts with the organization,
    Peres then asked Turkey to use its influence to ensure the release
    of two Israeli soldiers captured by Hamas in summer 2006 (Hurriyet,
    Vatan, Radikal, November 13).

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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