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WSJ: Erdogan Calls Israel 'Threat' To Peace

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  • WSJ: Erdogan Calls Israel 'Threat' To Peace

    ERDOGAN CALLS ISRAEL 'THREAT' TO PEACE

    Wall Street Journal
    http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000142405 2702303591204575169980169518418.html?mod=WSJ_hpp_M IDDLENexttoWhatsNewsTop
    April 8 2010

    Turkish premier's remarks further strain countries' alliance as
    analysts ponder nation's foreign-policy leanings

    By MARC CHAMPION

    Relations between Turkey and Israel, already at a low point, took a
    further battering Wednesday when Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
    Erdogan described Israel as "the principal threat to peace" in the
    Middle East.

    The remarks, made to reporters on a visit to Paris, came after Israel's
    foreign minister had compared Mr. Erdogan to Venezuela's Hugo Chávez
    and Moammar Gadhafi of Libya earlier this week.

    Israel responded quickly.

    "We are interested in good relations with Turkey and regret that Mr.

    Erdogan chooses time after time to attack Israel," said Prime Minister
    Benjamin Netanyahu after a news conference in Jerusalem, adding that
    such remarks would do nothing for Middle Eastern stability.

    This promises to be a tough month for Mr. Erdogan's relationships with
    some of his most important Western allies, as he seeks to balance
    Turkey's interests in boosting trade and political relations with
    its immediate neighbors--including Iran, Syria and Azerbaijan--with
    the conflicting goals of Western policy makers.

    Mr. Erdogan's clashes with Israel and rapprochement with Iran and
    Syria have led some analysts to believe Turkey is making a fundamental
    foreign-policy shift away from its Cold War partners in the West,
    in particular the U.S., and toward Middle Eastern powers such as
    Iran. At a recent meeting of foreign-policy analysts in Istanbul
    held by the Turkish Policy Quarterly, Israeli and Turkish analysts
    agreed on one point--the alliance those two countries built on shared
    security concerns in the 1990s is probably unsalvageable.

    But a 38-page report by the Brussels-based International Crisis
    Group think tank on Turkey's new role in the Middle East, released
    Wednesday, said the belief Turkey is turning away from the West
    is "incorrect." The report noted that Turkey's trade with Europe
    continues to outweigh its trade with the Middle East by a wide margin,
    and European Union membership remains its core goal. But the report
    also warned that Mr. Erdogan risks losing the trust of Western allies.

    Mr. Erdogan was in Paris on Wednesday to boost a trade relationship
    that has recovered from a brief setback caused by France's recognition
    of the 1915 slaughter of Armenians under Ottoman rule as genocide,
    and to push for Turkey's EU bid, which France opposes.

    Next week, he heads to Washington for a conference on nuclear security
    to be attended by leaders from some 40 nations--including Mr.

    Netanyahu. There, he is likely to come under pressure to back
    U.S. and French efforts to secure unanimous support at the United
    Nations Security Council for further sanctions against Iran. Turkey
    currently holds one of 10 rotating seats on the 15-nation Council.

    So far, Mr. Erdogan shows no sign of backing down from his opposition
    to imposing harsher sanctions on Iran, which together with his tough
    rhetoric on Israel and support for Hamas in the Gaza Strip have
    brought him popularity in many parts of the Middle East.

    "I don't think those [sanctions] being discussed can be effective,"
    Mr. Erdogan told French daily Le Figaro in an interview published
    ahead of his visit. "Sanctions have already been agreed on two
    occasions. Those who took the decision to apply them were the first
    to violate them," he said, specifying the French, Germans, English,
    Americans and Chinese.

    Mr. Erdogan also repeated his skepticism on whether Iran intends to
    use its nuclear-fuel program to build nuclear weapons, saying there
    is no such uncertainty concerning Israel's undeclared arsenal.

    Asked on Wednesday if he wasn't concerned Israel could become the focus
    of attack for proliferation during next week's nuclear conference
    in Washington, Mr. Netanyahu said, "I'm not concerned that anyone
    would think that Israel is a terrorist regime," the Associated Press
    reported.

    Western governments and nuclear analysts say there is ample evidence
    that Iran's nuclear-fuel program, which can be used to enrich civilian
    or weapons-grade fuel, is being developed to give Iran a military
    capability.

    Also on the agenda in Washington will be Turkey's troubled initiative
    to reopen its border with Armenia. This week, Mr. Erdogan sent a
    senior diplomat to Yerevan to discuss how to keep alive an effort
    that a growing number of Armenians see as a ploy to ensure President
    Barack Obama doesn't recognize the 1915 killings as genocide in an
    annual statement to mark its April 24 anniversary.

    Turkey was angered by the Obama administration's failure to lobby
    strongly against a resolution to recognize the genocide in the House
    Foreign Affairs Committee last month. Its ambassador, withdrawn in
    protest at the vote, returned to Washington this week. While there is
    confidence in Ankara that President Obama won't use the "genocide"
    word, the White House continues to press for ratification of the
    Armenia deal. Turkey says it won't open the border until Armenia moves
    toward settling a territorial dispute with neighboring Azerbaijan.
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