Turkey finally paying for its actions
Turkey is finally paying the price for distancing
itself with the West and for rising authoritarianism under the leadership of
President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan in the form
of U.S. sanctions, the Jerusalem Post said in an editorial published on
Thursday.
“After years in which Turkey’s leadership has
threatened the region, invaded countries and attacked minority groups while
working with Iran and Russia, the United States has finally slapped sanctions
on Ankara over its purchase of Russia’s S-400 air defence system,” it said.
On Monday, the United States imposed sanctions on
NATO ally Turkey over its acquisition of the S-400 in July 2019. The NATO
alliance has said the missile system, which Turkey tested in October, threatens
to compromise its defence network.
The punitive measures include a prohibition on
granting specific U.S. export licenses for certain military goods and
technology, as well as full sanctions and visa restrictions on four officials
from Turkey’s defence procurement agency, including chairman İsmail
Demir.
“The S-400 is a symbol of Turkey’s general trend to
become an authoritarian anti-American country,” the Jerusalem Post said. The
United States should “keep up the sanctions and isolate Turkey until it
changes", it said.
Turkey has recently appointed a new ambassador to
Israel who is “an anti-Israel extremist” and accuses the Israeli government of
“massacres and displacing people”, the Jerusalem Post said. “Turkey’s new envoy
should look in the mirror … While Israel is a state of diversity and tolerance,
Turkey is a state of prisons.”
Turkey expelled Israel’s ambassador and recalled its
own envoy in May 2018 over Israeli attacks on the Palestinian enclave of Gaza
and the United States’ decision to move its embassy to Jerusalem from Tel Aviv.
Turkey has also fostered relations with Hamas, a group fighting against Israel
and designated as a terrorist organisation by the West.
However, there are now reports that Ankara wants to
reconcile with Israel and has appointed Ufuk Ulutaş,
chairman for the Centre for Strategic Research at the Turkish Foreign Ministry
and a political appointee who studied Hebrew and Middle Eastern politics at the
Hebrew University in Jerusalem, as its new ambassador to the country.



