Turkey-Israeli ties fragile under the shadow of Hamas
Amid Israeli claims that Turkey has given passports
and identity cards to around a dozen Hamas members in Istanbul, ties between
Tel Aviv and Ankara have become loaded with accusations of supporting terror
groups.
A senior Israeli diplomat said on Aug. 26 the move
was a “very unfriendly step.”
Enduring contacts between Ankara and Hamas leaders
are not a secret. Despite strong objections from Washington, Turkish President
Recep Tayyip Erdogan met Hamas leaders, including its political bureau chief,
Ismail Haniyeh, who is on the US terror list, in Istanbul on Aug. 22. Hamas is
considered a terror group by the US, Israel and EU.
In retaliation, Israel gives support to the alliance
of states that oppose Turkey’s moves in the Eastern Mediterranean, especially
Greece and Cyprus, over the maritime delimitation issues and drilling
activities in the region.
Israeli Charge d’Affaires Roey Gilad said Israel had
already warned Turkey last year that Hamas was conducting “terror-related
activities” in Istanbul, and added that Turkey had not taken any action. These
Hamas members allegedly came to Turkey in 2011 in exchange for a captured
Israeli soldier.
On Tuesday, Unal Cevikoz, a retired diplomat and
deputy from the main opposition Republican People’s Party, also suggested that
12 Hamas members had been offered Turkish citizenship, and brought these
allegations to the Turkish Parliament by directing an inquiry to Vice President
Fuat Oktay.
Cevikoz claimed that Hakan Fidan, Turkey’s spy
chief, was also present at the meeting between Erdogan and Haniye.
“These developments pose a serious obstacle to the
potential of a two-state solution on the Palestine-Israel issue. Such
developments, which will further increase regional tension, prevents Turkey
from taking an active role for the Palestinian issue,” Cevikoz said in his
statement.
Cevikoz also claimed that the government’s policies
isolated the country, and asked the vice president whether Erdogan’s talks with
Haniye coincided with Turkey’s interests in maintaining security in the Eastern
Mediterranean, considering that Hamas is recognized as a terror group by many
countries.
“Ankara’s continued support for Hamas, including
rolling out a red carpet for two senior Hamas leaders that the US and others
view as wanted terrorists, once against shows the unprecedented way in which
Turkey’s current rulers flagrantly ignore international norms. Ankara treats Hamas
as if it is an equal government, hosting it at the highest levels,” Seth J.
Frantzman, executive director of the Middle East Center for Reporting and
Analysis, told Arab News.
According to Frantzman, Turkey appears to prize
Hamas members more than other groups.
“Israel is finally making these facts public because
of Ankara’s continued threats and hosting of leading terror figures, and
because Ankara sought to derail the Israel-UAE agreement,” he said.
Frantzman thinks that Ankara’s goal in cultivating Hamas
is to make it part of the government’s web of Muslim Brotherhood-linked
organizations and backers in the region, including in Qatar, elements of the
Government of National Accord (GNA) in Libya, as well as the group in Egypt
which was a key Ankara ally, prior to its 2013 ousting from power.
“Ankara’s Hamas hosting is designed to balance the
Israel-UAE agreement and it goes hand-in-hand with Qatar sending an envoy to
Gaza. However, whereas Qatar is seen by Israel as more constructive, the recent
statements by Ankara’s leaders, claiming they will ‘liberate Al-Aqsa’ are seen
as hostile. That is why Israel now backs Greece in the Mediterranean,” he said.
Once allies, Israel and Turkey have taken some steps
since 2015 to restore ties after the Mavi Marmara flotilla crisis that severed
diplomatic ties in 2009. But, according to Frantzman: “The reconciliation does
not progress because Ankara views Israel as one of its main enemies in the
world.
“Turkey has sidelined the Palestinian Authority, the
legitimate government of the Palestinians, in its attempt to give Hamas
legitimacy. This is inevitably heading in the wrong direction in Israel-Turkey
ties and Ankara’s push to have influence in the West Bank, Jerusalem and
throughout Gaza is part of the overall goal by Ankara to have leverage over
Israel and create the kind of crisis it has stoked in the Mediterranean, Libya,
Iraq and Syria and the Gulf,” he added.



