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Prospects Dim for Turkey's Ties With Israel

Semih Idiz reviews Turkish-Israeli ties and sees no incentive for Ankara to improve ties with Israel at this time.

Supporters of Hamas' Gaza leader Ismail Haniyeh shout slogans against Israel in front of the cruise liner Mavi Marmara in Istanbul January 2, 2012.  REUTERS/Osman Orsal (TURKEY - Tags: POLITICS)
Supporters of Hamas' Gaza leader, Ismail Haniyeh, shout slogans against Israel in front of the cruise liner Mavi Marmara in Istanbul, Jan. 2, 2012. — REUTERS/Osman Orsal

The current woeful state of the once mutually beneficial Turkish-Israel ties resembles Humpty Dumpty after his proverbial fall. None of the king’s horses or of the king’s men have been successful so far in putting these ties back together again. This has not, however, stopped Israel from trying to come up with formulas aimed at appeasing Turkey. Ankara’s position nevertheless remains firm, with its preconditions for normalized ties almost writ in stone.

Relations between the two countries, already strained over Israel’s “Operation Cast Lead” against Gaza in December 2008, plummeted after Israeli forces killed nine Turkish pro-Palestinian activists in May 2010.  The Turks — one of them a US citizen also — were shot in international waters in the eastern Mediterranean by Israeli soldiers raiding the Mavi Marmara, a Turkish aid ship that was part of an international flotilla trying to force the Israel blockade of Gaza.

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