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Turkey-Israel drifting apart

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Rehmat
(@rehmat)
Posts: 2097
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All eight Turkish military personnel including two high-ranking officers, allegedly involved in a plot to assassinate Turkish deputy prime minister Bulent Arinc – were arrested in Ankara but later released. They are suspected to be member of the secret underground subversive organization Ergenekon, with links to Israeli Mossad and some Crypto-Jew elites. The group have been plotting to unseat the Islamist party AKP government which came into power as result of its sweeping victory in parliamentary election 2002. A week earlier, Lt. Col. Ali Tatar committed suicide after police came to arrest him concerning assassination plot involving Ergenekon investigation. Some of the other military officers who took their lives instead of facing the music – include, Gen. Hursit Tolon, Col. Belgutay Varimli, Col. Tanju Unal, Col. Birol Atkan, Major Abdulkarim Kirca, Major Muzafar Tekin, Captain Olgan Ural, and so on.

Last year, a group of Jews and anti-Islam secularist thugs under the leadership of Turkish rabbi, Tuncay Guney, aka Daniel T. Guney and Daniel Levi and code-named “Ipek” or “Silk” – an agent for the Ergenekon – staged a failed coup against Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s government. While some of the traitors were arrested, Guney escaped to Canada, where he functions as a Rabbi at a Toronto Synagogue from where he preaches on post his website, Israeli propaganda filth against Muslims - as to Canadian prime minister Stephen Harper’s the only hate crime is: “Criticism of Israel is the old-fasioned anti-Semitism”.

In 1998, the Arab-hating Jewish ‘Islamophobe’ Daniel Pipes described the relationship between Turkey and Israel “as the ‘birth of a new Middle East alliance”.

Overall, the great majority of Turkey’s new generations have not forgotten the role of Crypto-Jews played in the dismantling of Ottoman Khilafat and Armenian genocide which they blamed on Muslim Turks. Muslims make 99.7% of total Turkey’s population.

The other day, Jeremy Salt published an article, titled 'Turkey’s Welcome Voice of Suppot', in which he wrote:

Is Turkey’s relationship with Israel going through a rocky patch or has it passed the point of no return?

The two decades between the military coup of 1980 and the electoral success of the AKP in 2002 marked the high point of the relationship between Turkey and Israel. Constitutional life in Turkey was not resumed until 1983, with some banned politicians prevented from returning to the political arena for several years after that. The continuing strength of the military in politics ensured the stability of the ‘defence’ relationship with Israel. From the late 1980s to the late 1990s all the centre-right governments in power endorsed the relationship with Israel. Between 1994 and 1997 the two countries signed 19 agreements, mostly dealing with ‘defence’ matters. Twelve of them were initialled during the Prime Ministership of the Islamist Necmettin Erbakan, who was finally squeezed out of power in 1997 at the tail end of a ’soft’ or ‘post modern’ coup by the military. It is certain that Erbakan, a strong Islamist and critic of Israel, would never have willingly gone along with these agreements. They were more or less imposed on him. Furthermore, they were signed by the chief of staff and not the Defence Minister and never ratified by parliament, because of a confidentiality clause signed by previous Prime Minister Tansu Çiller in 1994, which prevented parliamentarians from knowing the detail of what was in them. In the views of critics within the AKP party, the agreements are therefore unconstitutional.

In the context of the relationship with the US, in 2003 the Turkish parliament voted against allowing Turkish territory, ports and military bases to be used for the opening of a second front in Iraq. Colin Powell was visibly irritated. Signals were sent out that unless Turkey cooperated with the US against Iraq the Kurdish question would be activated. Indeed, the US and Britain had already created a difficult situation for Turkey by creating a ’safe haven’ for the Iraqi Kurds without taking the responsibility for policing it.

Since its first election the AK party has consolidated its hold as the governing party. It has brought substantial change to the country’s foreign policy profile. The close relationship with the US and the close relationship and the close if difficult relationship with the EU both continue, but Turkey is also striking out on its own. More confident of its place in the world, it seems no longer willing to play the western game in the Middle East. It has normalised its relationship with Syria to the point where it is now planning joint military exercises with Syria. As for Iran Turkey is not buying into the campaign of sanctions and exclusion orchestrated by the US for the benefit of Israel, Erdogan remarking recently that Iran was Turkey’s ‘friend’. On the question of Palestine Erdogan has spoken out forcefully and consistently. He says he has the people behind them and there is no doubt that he is right.

Turks have been disgusted by Israeli and western violence in the Middle East since the attack on Iraq in 1991 and the massive civilian toll caused by war and sanctions which followed. They were outraged by Israel’s attack on Lebanon in 2006, especially by the killing of hundreds of children, so it was no surprise that their anger boiled over again during the Israeli onslaught on Gaza from December 2008 to January 2009….”

http://rehmat1.wordpress.com/2009/12/31/turkey-israel-drifting-apart/


 
Posted : 31/12/2009 7:40 am
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