Erdogan and Israel (Part 2): Development of military relations between Ankara and Tel Aviv
In the first part of this series, “Erdogan and Israel: 17
years of forbidden love”, we reviewed how US and Israeli intelligence made
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan their puppet in the region to support
and realize their interests.
In this second part, we deal with the development of military
relations between Turkey and Israel, as well as how Turkey’s ruling Justice and
Development Party (AKP) conspired against the Palestinian issue.
Turkish-Israeli military cooperation exposes Erdogan's
betrayal of Palestine
Despite the Islamic slogans and statements that Erdogan
reiterates regarding Jerusalem and the Palestinian cause, reality reveals his
lies.
In 2002, after the AKP came to power, Turkey signed a
military contract with Israel worth $999 million, with the goal of increasing the
number of Turkey’s M-90 tanks to 270. In 2005, Turkey purchased 20 ground
stations, each with three or four drones, from the Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI)
at a cost of $294 million.
Also in 2005, Erdogan visited Israel and discussed with
officials the signing of a military deal amounting to half a billion dollars
providing for the modernization of four F4 Phantom warplanes. In March 2009,
the Turkish military concluded two defense deals with Israel, the first deal for
high-tech reconnaissance programs and the second for radar jamming systems.
In 2008, joint military and air exercises were held with
Israel and the United States, while intelligence cooperation continued between
Turkey and Israel over the Kurds, as the war between Turkey and the Kurds is
considered one of the main motives that prompted Ankara to side with Israel
militarily and request advanced equipment to monitor the Kurds in northern Iraq
and Syria.
Turkey also hosts the largest weapons factories of the
Israeli army. Military cooperation has continued to allow Israeli military
aircraft to fly over Turkish airspace, allowing Israeli pilots to fly over
Turkish territory to train and refine their capabilities to accurately kill
Palestinians, in confusing contrast to the position of the Turkish president
and his party on the Palestinian issue.
In July 2014, Israel launched Operation Protective Edge
against the Hamas movement, which forced Erdogan to come out with anti-Semitic
statements in support his clients in Gaza, saying that "the Israeli attack
on Gaza has exceeded Hitler's brutality."
But surprisingly, Erdogan's government at this time was
providing the IDF with food rations and various supplies during the war in Gaza,
which was disclosed by the Israeli Ministry of Defense after being annoyed by
Erdogan's anti-government statements. The ministry confirmed in a statement
that the food products used by the Israeli army are imported from Turkey, pointing
out that similar deals were concluded by Erdogan with the Israeli government of
Ariel Sharon in 2002, which will continue until 2022.
It was also discovered that Kurdish oil from northern Iraq was
sold to Israel via Turkey, which was used to fuel Israeli aircraft that bombed
the Gaza Strip in 2014. A report by the Energy Market Regulatory Authority
(EMRA) in August 2015 indicated a continuous increase in Israeli oil exports to
Turkey.
During the Israeli aggression against the Gaza Strip between
July 2014 and May 2015, Israeli oil exports to Turkey increased by 84.95%, from
118,000 tons to 218,000 tons.
Military cooperation between Turkey and Israel did not stop
there. Rather, it extended to Erdogan
using Israeli drones while supporting the militias of Fayez al-Sarraj, the head
of the Tripoli-based Libyan Government of National Accord (GNA), as the Libyan
National Army (LNA) shot down two Israeli-made Orbiter-3 drones.
Also, the Turkish press revealed one of the issues that were
not mentioned in the speeches of the ruling authority in Ankara. In December
2012, the spokesman for the Turkish community in Israel, Rafael Sadi, confirmed
that there are a large number of Turkish citizens serving within the Israeli
army due to Erdogan involving his country's army in useless wars and conflicts
with the PKK in the southeast of the country and in northern Iraq, which still
inflicts dozens of losses on the army day after day. This is in addition to the
armed conflicts with the Kurdish People's Protection Units (YPG) and Syrian
Democratic Forces (SDF), not to mention the Cyprus territorial waters dispute.
Erdogan's fierce attack on the Turkish army after the
scripted July 2016 coup attempt contributed to the reluctance of Turkish youths
to serve in the army, which can be seen as part of Erdogan's ambitious plan to
liquidate the Turkish military.