Month: July 2010

  • WHY IS TURKEY ONLY NOW THE VILLAIN OF THE PIECE?

    WHY IS TURKEY ONLY NOW THE VILLAIN OF THE PIECE?

    Jewish Chronicle
    July 1 2010

    Israel’s protests — in the wake of the flotilla crisis — at Turkish
    misdeeds are cynical in the extreme

    By Keith Kahn-Harris, July 1, 2010

    In the wake of the flotilla crisis, Israel’s relations with Turkey
    have taken a dramatic turn for the worse. Once Israel’s closest ally
    in the region, both countries fearing Islamism together with Iranian
    and Arab expansionism, the alliance now hangs by a thread.

    As the geopolitical tectonic plates shift, so does the rhetoric of
    Israel’s defenders. Into the crosshairs of Hasbara-niks and pro-Israel
    campaigners comes the Turkish state. Turkey certainly has many
    deeply disturbing features that can and should be highlighted. To say
    nothing of its recent Islamist turn, this is a country that continues
    to oppress the Kurdish people and of course in 1917 carried out a
    genocide in its slaughter of over one million Armenians. Not only has
    Turkey never apologised for the genocide, it has vigorously denied it,
    protesting against commemorations of the slaughter and persecuting
    Turkish writers who have tried to come to terms with the past.

    In recent Israeli demonstrations against Turkey and in vigils outside
    its embassy, placards have been prominently displayed reminding the
    world of the Armenian genocide. But until very recently not only were
    Turkish human rights abuses – past and present – ignored by Israel
    and its supporters, they were among the most active in perpetuating
    the denial of the Armenian genocide.

    In his book The Banality of Denial: Israel and the Armenian Genocide,
    Yair Auron recounts the shameful history of Israel’s complicity
    in Armenian genocide denial. Driven by short-term political
    considerations, Israeli governments have resisted recognising the
    genocide and in 1982 tried to pressure Israeli scholars from taking
    part in an international conference on the subject.

    In the diaspora, the record of most Jewish and pro-Israel organisations
    has been equally woeful. There was pressure on the Holocaust Memorial
    Museum in Washington DC not to mention the Armenian genocide. In
    2007, the Anti-Defamation League’s Abraham Foxman was central to the
    successful suppression of a renewed attempt at commemoration.

    And now? With the war of words between Turkey and Israel growing
    ever more virulent and with grassroots pro-Israel groups taking
    every opportunity to remind the world of Turkish atrocities, Jewish
    and Israeli complicity in Armenian genocide denial looks likely to
    end. As Morris Amitay, a former executive director of AIPAC has said:
    “If someone asked me now if I would try to protect Turkey in Congress,
    my response would be, ‘You’ve got to be kidding.’”

    But if cynically denying genocide was bad then cynically affirming
    it is almost as repellent. It undermines moral credibility and –
    most dangerously given the spread of Holocaust denial in the Muslim
    world – risks tarring Shoah commemoration with the same cynicism.

    It may be tempting to put consideration for Israel’s strategic
    interests above respect for history and human rights, but it should be
    resisted. If Turkey is now too morally tainted to be worthy of having
    Israel as an ally, then it never was a worthy ally. When the next
    dodgy alliance rears its head (China? Russia?) Israel and its friends
    should remember the Turkish example and put moral survival first.

    Keith Kahn-Harris is honorary research fellow at the Centre for
    Religion and Society, Birkbeck College. His book (co-authored with
    Ben Gidley) ‘Turbulent Times; The British Jewish Community Today’
    will be published this month.

  • Turkey, Iraq: Oil Pipeline Explodes

    Turkey, Iraq: Oil Pipeline Explodes

    July 3, 2010
    An explosion ripped through a pipeline carrying oil from Iraq to southern Turkey on July 3, sparking a fire, AFP reported. The blast hit a section of the pipeline near Midyat town in the southeastern province of Mardin. The origins of the blast are unknown, but Kurdish insurgents active in the region have targeted the pipeline in the past. An investigation is currently under way. The 970-kilometer (600-mile) pipeline runs from Kirkuk to the port of Ceyhan on Turkey’s Mediterranean coast.

  • Explosion hits Turkish-Iraqi pipeline: report

    Explosion hits Turkish-Iraqi pipeline: report

    (AFP) – 10 hours ago
    ANKARA — An explosion ripped through a pipeline carrying oil from Iraq to southern Turkey on Saturday, sparking a fire, the Anatolia news agency reported.
    The blast, whose origin remains unknown, hit a section of the pipeline near Midyat town in the southeastern province of Mardin, the agency said.
    The pipeline has in the past been targeted by Kurdish insurgents active in the region.
    Firefighters were called to douse the flames, Anatolia said. An investigation was under way.
    The 970-kilometre (600-mile) pipeline runs from Iraq’s northern oil hub of Kirkuk to the port of Ceyhan on Turkey’s Mediterranean coast, from where the crude is shipped to world markets by tanker.
    The twin conduit, first inaugurated in 1976, carried 167.6 million barrels of oil last year, according to Turkish statistics.
    Rebels from the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) fighting a 26-year-campaign for self-rule in Turkey’s mainly Kurdish southeast, have in the past bombed the pipeline several times.
    The PKK has significantly stepped up attacks against Turkish targets since May after jailed rebel leader Abdullah Ocalan said he was abandoning efforts for peace with Turkey and the rebels called off a unilateral truce.
    Some 45,000 people have been killed since the PKK picked up arms in 1984.

  • Syria Jails 400 in Crackdown on PKK

    Syria Jails 400 in Crackdown on PKK

    by Avi Yellin

    Turkey’s state news agency Anatolian reported on Thursday that Syrian security forces have detained 400 people in five cities as part of an extensive operation against the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK).

    Turkey has sought the support of its neighbors in the region and of the United States in its attempts to suppress Kurdish guerrillas [(sic.) terrorists in UK, EU and USA] , who have succeeded in killing more than 50 Turkish occupation soldiers in the last two months of escalating resistance. (For US position, click here).

    […]

    , 02.07.2010

  • Missteps on Turkey weaken Netanyahu before talks with Obama

    Missteps on Turkey weaken Netanyahu before talks with Obama

    Whispers no cure for voluble Turkish assaults

    DEBKAfile Exclusive Analysis

    The “Turkish flotilla effect” continues to plague Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu, leading him into one misstep after another with the result that he arrives in Washington on July 6 for talks with President Barack Obama with a divided government.

    DEBKAfile’s Jerusalem sources report that Thursday, July 1 finds Netanyahu scrambling to stabilize his cabinet lineup and recover from the fallout of his disastrous decision to let infrastructure minister Binyamin Ben-Eliezer meet Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmed Davutoglu for supposedly secret talks in Brussels to try and narrow the widening rift between Ankara and Jerusalem.
    It was leaked that same day, causing a huge uproar in Jerusalem – both because the initiative which failed was seen to be a crass error at a time that the Turkish prime minister Recep Erdogan’s anti-Israel campaign was in full flight, and because the prime minister neglected to update foreign minister Avigdor Lieberman of the event.

    Lieberman, who heads the right-wing Israel Beitenu, publicly accused Netanyahu of breach of trust. All day Thursday, he refused to answer the prime minister’s phone calls. The result: total disconnect between the head of government and his foreign minister less than a week before the Israeli prime minister meets the US president.

    Another key member of the Netanyahu cabinet, defense minister Ehud Barak, leader of the Labor party, is suspected by broad political circles of engineering the Israeli minister’s rendezvous with Davutoglu – not just for a reckless bid to melt the Turkish wall of hostility, but to edge the foreign minister and his party out of the government coalition.

    He has denied this charge – according to DEBKAfile’s sources, to avoid being associated with a second fiasco after the fumbled Israeli commando raid of the Turkish Mavi Marmara ship heading for Gaza on May 31.

    The defense minister understands that his complicity in the Brussels encounter could weigh against him when he testifies before the public inquiry commission Israel established to find out how the flotilla incident came to end with nine Turkish activists dead and six Israeli soldiers injured.
    Its findings could damage Barak’s career irretrievably.

    The panel, headed by ex-justice Jacob Turkel with two foreign observers, is to be given a broader mandate and real teeth.

    Instead of preparing calmly for a hardheaded discussion with the US president on a long list of tough issues, Netanyahu must now concentrate all his efforts on hauling his government coalition out of a morass. It is hard to see him managing this uphill job in the four days left before he boards a flight to Washington. He will therefore arrive at the White House with his government in disarray and his personal standing uncertain.

    In Ankara, DEBKAfile reports, the Turkish prime minister is gleefully capitalizing on Netanyahu’s embarrassment to pour salt in his wounds. He has issued “a clarification” of his comment on June 20, when he said, “Everyone knows who is behind the (Kurdish rebel) PKK’s terror attacks.”

    This comment was taken as a heavy hint referring to Israeli intelligence.
    However, ten days later, on Wednesday, June 30, the Turkish prime minister “clarified” this comment by explaining he had been referring to a group of right-wing Turkish military officers and politicians, known as Ergenekon, who are facing trial for attempting to overthrow the government by means of armed and terrorist attacks.

    On the face of it, the Turkish prime minister backtracked on his aspersions of Israeli involvement in PKK attacks – or so it sounded to some Western circles. However, seasoned Turkey watchers point out that the prime minister’s aides have for months been spreading rumors that Israel’s Mossad intelligence agency was behind Ergenekon, fed the anti-government generals intelligence and supplied them with weapons for their planned coup.

    In other words, Erdogan has stepped up his smear campaign against Israel from vague insinuations of its complicity in Kurdish terrorism to snide allegations of Jerusalem’s involvement in a subversive conspiracy to overthrow the Muslim-led government in Ankara.

    , July 1, 2010

  • TURKISH FORUM INTELLIGANCE:  Turkey: No Apology Will Come From Israel – Official

    TURKISH FORUM INTELLIGANCE: Turkey: No Apology Will Come From Israel – Official

    July 2, 2010
    Israel will not apologize to Turkey for the killing of nine Turkish nationals on a Gaza-bound aid flotilla, because Israel was defending itself, DPA reported July 2, citing an unnamed Israeli official. The source told Israel Radio that passengers had attacked the Israeli naval commandos with weapons like knives and sticks.