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Gaza's Waves Will Crash On Turkey's Shore

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  • Gaza's Waves Will Crash On Turkey's Shore

    GAZA'S WAVES WILL CRASH ON TURKEY'S SHORE
    David Aaronovitch

    Times Online
    June 3, 2010
    UK

    If the flotilla incident turns Turks against Israel and towards the
    east, it should fill us with fear for the future

    Somewhere, in some coastal briefing room, some Israeli officer must
    have told his colleagues of his plan for having commandos slide
    slowly, one at a time, on to the deck of a ship partially peopled
    - as Israeli sources had already warned - by fanatics who welcomed
    victory or martyrdom without discrimination. And somehow - intellects
    suspended - they must have agreed to what the novelist David Grossman,
    writing in the Israeli newspaper, Haaretz, described as the "insane
    operation" that left ten flotillistas dead.

    If only (and it would be bad enough) the harm done was limited to the
    families of the killed and the bodies of the injured. And if only
    the question didn't matter so much, so disproportionately, to take
    a vogue word, to so many people. Gaza and Israel are small places,
    the annual casualties in their various incursions, rocketing and
    bombings would fill a Darfuri week. I have yet to see a figure given
    to the Pakistan-Taleban war, but I would think it dwarfs the victims
    of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

    And yet people care more about what happens here, per square inch,
    than anywhere else outside their own lands or seas. When North Korea
    decided to send a torpedo into a South Korean corvette, the governments
    were grave but the campaigners were silent. When the Mavi Marmara was
    "stormed" by Israeli troops three nights ago, the carescape lit up
    with a zillion outraged tweets.

    Me, I felt fear. The Marmara, which hosted the clubbings and then
    the shootings, was a Turkish boat, and it followed that many of the
    dead would probably be Turks. If so, the reaction in Turkey to this
    one incident could help to determine all our futures.

    For many years, to say that Turkey was an ally of the West was not to
    claim any great pleasure in the association. Turkey was intermittently
    run by military juntas, and even civilian governments lived under
    the perpetual threat of a coup.

    With a name like mine the assumption is often made that I must be an
    Israelophile. In fact I am much more of a Turkey-lover. I can see
    well the mistakes and crimes committed by Turkish governments over
    the years, and yet I love the country and have watched with pleasure
    its evolution from a Republic of Fear to a disputatious democracy
    that really does, in a way no other country can, span the chasm
    between worlds. Again, I have no liking for religion in politics,
    but the Justice and Development Party of the Prime Minister, Recep
    Tayyip Erdogan, has been pragmatic and moderate, though Islamist,
    since first elected eight years ago.

    But there are problems, as the world discovered at Davos last year. On
    stage with the Israeli President, Shimon Peres, shortly after the
    rocket war in Gaza that left more than 1,000 Palestinians dead,
    Mr Erdogan became very angry, accused Mr Peres of lying and stormed
    off the stage. Not long afterwards there was a troubling sequence
    of events sparked by the transmission of Turkish TV programmes in
    which Israelis were shown committing a variety of crimes, including
    kidnapping Turkish babies.

    Such fare is commonplace in Syria and on Hezbollah TV in Lebanon,
    but seemed ominous screened in Izmir and Kayseri.

    In an extraordinary piece of diplomatic cack-handedness the Israeli
    Foreign Minister invited the Turkish Ambassador in to complain about
    the shows, pointing out to the Israeli media that he had placed the
    envoy in a lower seat and banished the Turkish flag. The Turkish
    media were outraged at the snub and Mr Peres had to apologise. "We
    must learn not to do this again," he said.

    Of course, the relatively new-found interest of Muslim Turkey in the
    humanitarian condition of the Palestinians has its ironies, as Kurds,
    Armenians and Cypriots could all confirm. But throwing that back
    in Ankara's face, as though engaging in a debate that can be won on
    points, would be utterly counter-productive. Far-sighted politicians
    in the West have long understood the need to have Turkey take its
    place at the European table, before it sought an alternative and -
    to us - less palatable way of expressing its identity.

    For the past 20 years the strategy for cementing Turkey into a real
    alliance of interests and values was to hold out the prospect of EU
    membership. And at first the question was how to find a way to get
    rid of the various obstacles to Turkish accession. But gradually,
    especially in Paris and Berlin, as enlargement lost popularity, the
    issue became how the obstacles could be used to deny Turkey full entry.

    Nicolas Sarkozy famously said that Turkey could not be in Europe
    because it was "in Asia Minor" (though, mon cher, Guadeloupe remains
    a departement of France). Britain, Spain and Italy took the contrary
    view. Only last November David Miliband, then Foreign Secretary,
    reiterated our strategic desire for Turkey to join the EU.

    The Turks have noticed the snubs and Turkey has tired of waiting. More
    recently there has been talk of "neo-Ottomanism" - of Turkey creating
    an orientation towards the Orient. This might suggest rapprochement
    with countries such as Syria and Iran and a weakening of alliances
    with the West, whereas we have wanted to see a democratic Turkey,
    leading by example in the region to its east and southeast.

    This is high politics, but in democracies high and low meet.

    Democratic Turkey is a young nation and still a touchy one. Even
    acknowledging that there was a genocide of Armenians in Turkey in
    1915-16 has been enough, until recently, to earn the acknowledger a
    spell in the Turkish slammer, or a bullet from an ultra-nationalist
    "militant". In such a country a mass movement centred on hostility
    to Israel could do immense damage. With Gaza such a movement has
    its potential unifier and, in the events of the Mavi Marmara, it has
    gained its first Turkish martyrs.

    In this, yet again, the issue of Gaza shows its capacity to cause
    polarisation and violence well beyond the land itself. The wealthy
    Turkish backers of the first boats are now putting together the money
    for another flotilla. And what will our clever Israeli commander
    do then?

    The risking of the relationship with Turkey symbolises the
    impossibility of current Israeli policy towards the strip. This
    blockade must be lifted and some way of having a dialogue with those
    who run Gaza must somehow be established. Time to brandish the carrot
    and to hide the stick. The stick is broken in any case.




    From: A. Papazian
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