Analysis: Turkish perception versus reality – A VIEW TO ADVERTISED APOLOGY FROM ISRAEL

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Despite statements from Turkish PM Erdogan that Netanyahu’s apology over the ‘Mavi Marmara’ raid “satisfied Turkish expectations,” Israel only apologized for operational mistakes, not for boarding ship or soldiers’ actions.

There was something Hassan Nasrallah-like, Ismail Haniyeh-ish, in the way Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu stepped up to numerous microphones over the past two days and crowed that Israel acceded to all of Ankara’s demands in apologizing for the Mavi Marmara incident.

These claims bring to mind the Hezbollah and Hamas leaders because the Turkish leaders’ words created a perception not exactly in line with reality.

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Nasrallah boasted victory over Israel in the Second Lebanon War, but still does not venture out of his bunker. Nor, for that matter, has his organization fired on Israeli cities in the North for the past seven years.

Haniyeh claimed victory in November’s Operation Pillar of Defense, but the Gaza border, following Hamas’s “stunning victory,” has for years not been as quiet as it is now.

And Erdogan and Davutoglu’s words, claiming that Israel came almost on a bended knee with an apology, fall into the same category. A look at what was actually said in the apology – and what Erdogan initially demanded – paints a significantly different picture.

In July 2011, even as the UN’s Palmer Commission was about to issue its report on the 2010 Mavi Marmara incident, Erdogan told the Turkish parliament it was “unthinkable” to normalize ties with Israel unless it apologized for killing nine Turks aboard the ship, paid compensation to the families, and lifted the “siege” of Gaza.

Indeed, Erdogan repeated these conditions on numerous occasions since then.

A careful look at Friday’s statement agreed upon by Turkey and Israel of the Netanyahu-Erdogan conversation that put the relationship on the road to repair, however, shows it is far from the fulfillment of Erdogan’s “requirements.”

First of all the apology.

Erdogan, according to Israeli diplomatic officials familiar with the months-long negotiations over the formula, said Erdogan wanted a public apology to him for the raid on the ship and the killing of nine Turks.

What he got was a bit different.

Netanyahu regretted the loss of life, and issued an apology to the Turkish people, not to Erdogan, for operational mistakes – if they happened – that led to the loss of life. That is not exactly a full-throated, public apology. Furthermore, Netanyahu did not apologize for commandeering the ship, something the Turks wanted.

Here is the exact language of the apology: “In light of Israel’s investigation into the incident which pointed to a number of operational mistakes, the Prime Minister expressed Israel’s apology to the Turkish people for any mistakes that might have led to the loss of life or injury and agreed to conclude an agreement on compensation.”

That is not an apology for boarding the ship, that is not even an apology for the soldiers taking the acts that they did. It is an apology if – during the operation – mistakes were made that led to loss of life.

On the issue of compensation, Israel always said it would pay compensation and that was never a major sticking point.

And, finally, there is the issue of lifting the blockade of Gaza.

Erdogan has ridden the wave of appearing as the champion of Gaza to a position of leadership in the Sunni world, something he covets. The more he bashes Israel, the higher his stature rises; the more he champions Gaza, the more he is cheered in the Arab world.

But Israel did not accede to his demand to lift the blockade of Gaza, something it could never do because that would essentially turn over to a third country the determination of what it needs for its own security.

What did it do? The statement issued by the PMO and carefully crafted by both sides read: “Prime Minister Netanyahu also noted that Israel had substantially lifted the restrictions on the entry of civilian goods into the Palestinian territories, including Gaza, and that this would continue as long as calm prevailed. The two leaders agreed to continue to work to improve the humanitarian situation in the Palestinian territories.”

That in no way can be interpreted as “lifting the siege of Gaza.” But never mind, Erdogan declares his demands were met, and Haniyeh hails him as a hero.

It was clear from the beginning that Erdogan and Davutoglu would claim this as a major victory.

What is less immediately clear is why Israel has not filled the airwaves with its own interpretation of the apology.

Not Netanyahu, International Relations Minister Yuval Steinitz, Naftali Bennett, who is charged with public diplomacy, or even Tzipi Livni, the justice minister who has some competence on this issue, bothered to explain to the Israeli public why Israel said it was sorry, and what – indeed – it was sorry for.

The net result is that the Turks are defining the apology and what it means, and are spinning it to their benefit.

The reason for Israel’s silence? Netanyahu called Erdogan with the hope this would lead to an overall improvement in ties that will culminate in a normalization of relations. The call was about upgrading the ties, so important now with Syria disintegrating, not “scoring points.”

Ankara, over the past two days, is racking up points, while Jerusalem is standing silently on the sidelines, not even trying to respond with some points of its own.

For Israel this is about changing the atmosphere, not playing “gotcha” or embarrassing the Turks.

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Bennett: Erdogan making Israel regret its apology

By JPOST.COM STAFF, GIL HOFFMAN
03/27/2013 18:35

Trade Minister lashes out at Turkish PM for his actions since Netanyahu apologized for a May 2010 IDF raid on flotilla that killed nine Turkish activists.

Naftali Bennett at a Bayit Yehudi faction meeting, February 18, 2013.

Naftali Bennett at a Bayit Yehudi faction meeting, February 18, 2013. Photo: Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post

New Minister of Economy and Trade Naftali Bennett lashed out at Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Wednesday over his response to an apology delivered by Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu for a May 2010 IDF raid on a flotilla heading for Gaza, in which nine Turkish nationals died.

“It seems that since [Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu’s] apology, Erdogan is doing everything to make Israel regret it”, Bennett wrote in his official Facebook page. “He is running a personal and vitriolic campaign at the expense of Israeli-Turkish relations.”

Netanyahu apologized to Erdogan in a phone call last week, just as US President Barack Obama was leaving the country. During the conversation, Netanyahu voiced regret for the loss of life in the incident, and apologized for any mistakes that led to the death of the nine Turkish activists. Breaking a three-year deadlock, the two agreed to normalize relations.

Since then however, Erdogan appears to have backtracked on commitments he made during the conversation, announcing that he intends to visit Gaza, and saying that despite Israel’s apology, it is still too early to drop the case against IDF generals accused by Ankara of being responsible for the deaths.

Erdogan also said Netanyahu’s apology satisfied Turkish expectations when he used the word “apology” instead of “regret,” but that it was still too soon to fully restore diplomatic ties and appoint new ambassadors, Turkish daily Hurriyet reported.

“It must be clear to Erdogan that if Israel encounters any future terrorism, our response will be no less severe [than in May 2010]”, Bennett wrote Wednesday. “Let there be no doubt – no nation is doing Israel a favor by renewing ties.”

The minister also paid tribute to IDF soldiers, concluding his comment by saying, “The fighters of the IDF, we are always with you” and urging them to “do everything – and I mean everything – to protect the citizens of the state of Israel.”

Deputy Knesset Speaker Moshe Feiglin became the first Likud MK to criticize Netanyahu’s apology to Turkey, telling reporters near the Temple Mount on Wednesday that it would only lead to more conflicts with Muslims and Arabs.

“So we apologized to the Turks – did that bring peace?” he asked rhetorically. “It was a big mistake. The more you tell Arabs that they are the right side, the more violence will increase.”

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