Turkish
president Recep Tayyip Erdogan has been expressing his desire for a
reconciliation with Israel ‒ clearly a ploy designed to achieve wider regional,
if not global, objectives. His nominal
desire, however, is matched by a genuine wish on Israel’s part for better
relations with Turkey. The problem is
Erdogan himself. If it wasn’t for him,
relations between Israel and Turkey could return to the glory days before he began
his climb to power. Unfortunately, for
well over a decade Turkey’s leader, first as prime minister then as president,
has sought to reverse the policy of Turkish secularization initiated by his
renowned predecessor, Kemal Ataturk, and enhance his credentials in the Muslim
world by adopting an increasingly anti-Israel stance.
It was not always so.
Once. the three non-Arab states in the Middle East ‒ Iran, Turkey and Israel ‒ stood
side by side. Back in March 1949 Turkey was the first Muslim majority country
to recognize the State of Israel; a year later Iran followed suit.
Following Turkish
recognition, cooperation between Turkey and Israel flourished, particularly in
the military, strategic, and diplomatic spheres. Trade and tourism boomed, the
Israel Air Force practised manoeuvres in Turkish airspace, and Israeli
technicians modernized Turkish combat jets. There were also plans for high-tech
cooperation and water sharing.
When Erdoqan became prime minister of Turkey in 2003, he initially maintained a "business as usual" approach, and indeed paid an official visit to Israel in 2005. However his sympathies, shaped by his Muslim Brotherhood background, very quickly resulted in his realigning Turkish policy in favour of an Islamist pro-Arab stance. Relations with Israel deteriorated rapidly, reaching their nadir in the 2010 Mavi Marmara incident, when an attempt, backed by the Turkish government, to break Israel's naval blockade of Gaza led to an armed encounter on the high seas resulting in the deaths of nine Turkish nationals.
In recent years Erdogan
has taken every opportunity to hurl insults, condemnations and dire warnings at
Israel. He consistently accuses Israel of illegally seizing and occupying Palestinian
land, blissfully oblivious to the old saying: “Those in glasshouses shouldn’t
throw stones.” In 1974 Turkey invaded
northern Cyprus, seized nearly 40 percent of the island, and set up the
self-styled Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus ‒ an entity recognized by no
international organization and no country other than Turkey itself.
Turkey is not a
signatory to the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) and does not
recognize the government of Cyprus, its Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ), its maritime
border agreements with Egypt, Israel or Lebanon, or the licenses that Cyprus
has awarded to foreign energy companies.
Driven by a bizarre sort of logic Turkey, having seized and occupied
northern Cyprus, is now claiming a share in the vast oil and liquefied natural
gas bonanza that has unexpectedly appeared off the coastline of its
unrecognized Republic. Having positioned
itself outside the international agreements, Turkey has been drilling for some
years in waters internationally recognized as being part of Cyprus’s EEZ. Turkey does, of course, have a Mediterranean
coastline, but it runs to the north of Cyprus, while the gas reserves are in
the so-called Energy Triangle south and east of the island.
Erdogan’s purpose is to
disrupt or undermine the pipeline agreement between Greece, Israel and
Cyprus. The EU has repeatedly said it
considers Turkey’s drilling offshore Cyprus as illegal and, together with the
US, has warned Turkey to halt its operations.
In November 2019 the EU imposed new sanctions on Turkey, saying they
would be lifted as soon as Turkey ceased its unauthorized drilling operations. Erdogan
of course did nothing of the kind, but sent a military drone to Cyprus to
protect his two ships drilling for oil and gas.
The drone was destroyed on its first mission.
Since then Erdogan has
made a point of welcoming leaders of Hamas, considered a terrorist organization
by many, and according them all the courtesy due to representatives of
sovereign states. This is the same
Erdogan who labels the Kurdish political parties seeking independence as
terrorists, invades their autonomous region and bombs Kurdish citizens.
Despite languishing
political relations, commercial dealings between Turkey and Israel have
continued to flourish. They achieved
more than $5 billion in bilateral trade in 2019, and business and government
leaders on both sides predict continuing growth. This is indeed a solid basis on which start a
genuine process of improving relations.
In an attempt to get on a good footing with the incoming US president, Joe Biden, Erdogan has just appointed Ufuk Ulutas as ambassador to Israel.
Ulutas is an alumnus, among other academic institutions, of the Hebrew University in Jerusalem. Strongly supportive of the Palestinian cause, in his writings he lays all the problems of the region at Israel’s door. Writing in 2010, he speaks of Turkey and Israel having inherently “divergent regional views” – an opinion clearly at variance with historical fact. Turkish-Israeli relations would continue to fluctuate, he says, “without Israel’s willingness to deal decisively with the key issues of peace in the Middle East, such as the settlements, status of Jerusalem, and Lebanese and Syrian tracks, and most urgently, the improvement of humanitarian conditions in Gaza.”
It has been demonstrated
more than once that great peace initiatives can be sponsored by hardline
right-wing politicians. Ulutus has been
despatched to Israel as part of an obvious political manoeuvre by Erdogan to
lure Israel into a course that would place the Abraham Accords in jeopardy. The wily Turkish leader may have ignored, or
discounted, the well-established principle of unintended consequences. Ulutus is no career diplomat. He may begin by speaking peace “with forked
tongue” to his Israeli counterparts in Tel Aviv or Jerusalem. But how might the exercise end?
Published in the Jewish Business News, 1 January 2021: https://jewishbusinessnews.com/2021/01/01/israel-seeks-reconciliation-with-turkey/
https://www.eurasiareview.com/02012021-israel-seeks-reconciliation-with-turkey-oped/
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