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Turkey Lines Up Alongside Syria To Condemn Israeli Incursions

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  • Turkey Lines Up Alongside Syria To Condemn Israeli Incursions

    TURKEY LINES UP ALONGSIDE SYRIA TO CONDEMN ISRAELI INCURSIONS
    By Gareth Jenkins

    Eurasia Daily Monitor, DC
    Tuesday, September 11, 2007

    Turkish Foreign Minister Ali Babacan's blunt condemnation of an
    alleged violation of the Turkey's airspace by Israeli warplanes has
    dealt another blow to already deteriorating relations between the
    two countries.

    In 1996 a military training agreement between Israel and Turkey was
    hailed by many as heralding a new strategic alignment in the eastern
    Mediterranean. Over the years that followed Israeli jets regularly used
    the Turkish air force base in Konya for training missions while Turkish
    pilots underwent specialized training in facilities belonging to the
    Israeli Air Force (IAF) in the Negev Desert. There was also extensive
    cooperation in the defense industry, with Israeli firms receiving a
    string of lucrative defense contracts. American Jewish lobby groups
    became Turkey's strongest supporters in Washington. However, plans to
    underpin the relationship by transporting Turkish water to Israel came
    to nothing. While a number of disagreements over defense contracts,
    and allegation of corruption involving Israeli defense suppliers,
    soured relations between the two countries' militaries.

    Relations began to cool rapidly following the victory of the moderate
    Islamist Justice and Development Party (AKP) in the Turkish general
    election of November 2002. Although the AKP's leaders publicly
    reaffirmed Turkey's commitment to friendship with Israel, much
    of the party's grassroots support remained simply and viscerally
    anti-Semitic. After taking power, the AKP downplayed ties with Israel,
    while trying to form a closer relationship with other Muslim states
    in the Middle East, particularly its neighbors Syria and Iran. The
    last five years have seen an unprecedented increase in bilateral
    contacts and AKP leaders have become frequent visitors to both Damascus
    and Tehran.

    On September 6, after the Syrian government claimed that Israeli
    warplanes had overflown its territory and dropped munitions onto
    deserted areas, fuel tanks belonging to IAF warplanes were found on
    the Turkish side of the country's border with Syria. The assumption
    is that they were jettisoned in order to increase the IAF planes'
    maneuverability as they sought to avoid Syrian ground fire.

    On September 6, the Turkish Foreign Ministry issued a statement
    supporting the Syrian protests and informing the Israeli government
    that Ankara took "a harsh view of the invasion of Syrian airspace by
    the IAF" (Hurriyet, Milliyet, September 7).

    On September 9, Syrian Foreign Minister Wallid Moallem flew to Ankara
    to seek Turkish support and met with Babacan, Prime Minister Recep
    Tayyip Erdogan and President Abdullah Gul (Sabah, September 11). On
    September 10, Moallem and Babacan held a joint conference to condemn
    the IAF's incursions on September 6.

    The exact circumstances in which the IAF fuel tanks were deposited
    on Turkish territory remain unclear: not least whether the warplanes
    themselves entered Turkish airspace while flying close to the border
    or whether the tanks were carried across the border by their own
    momentum after being jettisoned. However, standing alongside Moallem,
    Babacan strongly condemned the incident.

    "This is an unacceptable development for us," he said.

    "We would like all the countries in the region to respect the sovereign
    rights of other countries and be meticulous in avoiding taking any
    steps that might create tensions. A wide-ranging investigation is being
    conducted into this matter. The country in question has been asked
    to provide an explanation in the very near future and the necessary
    contacts with Israel have been initiated. Turkey is a country which
    strives for peace and stability. It expects the other countries in
    the region to show mutual respect and conduct their relations on the
    basis of trust" (Hurriyet, September 11).

    The tensions over the Israeli over flights come less than a month
    after the U.S.-based Jewish lobby group the Anti-Defamation League
    (ADL) caused outrage in Turkey by announcing that it now accepted
    that the massacres and deportations of the Armenians by the Ottoman
    authorities in 1915-16 constituted a genocide.

    The accusation has always been strongly denied by Ankara, which,
    in the face of considerable evidence to the contrary, has preferred
    to characterize the events of 1915-16 as the product of an Armenian
    uprising.

    Israeli diplomats in Ankara have been circumspect in their reaction
    to Babacan's denouncement. "When it comes to Syria, we can remain
    silent. But we owe the Turks an explanation," said Alon Liel, Israel's
    ambassador to Turkey (Sabah, September 11).

    However, inside Israel, reactions have been less restrained. Several
    commentators have noted that Turkey repeatedly staged incursions
    into northern Iraq in 1990s in pursuit of members of the Kurdistan
    Workers' Party (PKK) and still has a brigade permanently deployed
    inside northern Iraq. In addition, Turkish F-16s frequently violate
    Iraqi airspace during bombing and reconnaissance missions against
    PKK militants (Jerusalem Post, September 11).
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