Turkey set to sign military pact with Egypt

Turkey set to sign military pact with Egypt

A military and economic alliance with Egypt is set to be signed by  Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan. The deal should be clinched  when Erdogan visits Cairo next Monday – the first such visit paid by a  Turkish prime minister in 15 years.

Under former President Hosni Mubarak, Egypt rejected Turkish  overtures; Mubarak viewed Erdogan as an interloper in regions that were  under Egypt’s, and Saudi Arabia’s, influence. The new Egyptian  government, however, seems eager to develop economic and strategic ties  with Turkey.

After keeping mum on the subject of  sanctions on Israel for three days, Erdogan has made his position clear:  He believes that Israel-Turkey relations are not a personal matter  between himself and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, but rather a  Turkish national interest.

Erdogan decided on Tuesday to reap the  political profit from his stand against Israel, and announced to  reporters that Turkey is suspending military and commercial relations  with it. Additional sanctions, he suggested, could be implemented, and  Turkish warships will be seen “more frequently” in Mediterranean waters. “If steps taken up to now were part of plan B  [designed to force Israel to apologize for its actions in last year's  Gaza flotilla incident, and pay compensation], there will also be plan  C,” declared Erdogan. “Israel has always acted as a spoiled child in  response to UN resolutions pertaining to it. Israel assumes that it can  continue to act like a spoiled child, and evade punishment.”

Subsequently Erdogan’s office clarified that  private trade relations are not subsumed by the sanctions; these  commercial ties are valued at three billion dollars a year. Instead,  military agreements are being suspended. This clarification was issued  after Turkish businessmen demanded to know whether they are being  required to cut off ties with Israel, lest they face legal punishment.

The alacrity with which Turkey reached its  decision to impose sanctions derives partly from the fact that it  believes Israel is responsible for leaking the UN’s report on the  flotilla to Gaza. Turkish sources insist that Israel made a U-turn  regarding the UN investigation, since it originally demanded that the  report’s release be deferred.

“We agreed to defer release of the report  for a few weeks, but not for six months, as Netanyahu wanted,” one  senior Turkish official explained. “We could have discussed issues  regarding the text’s formulation, and even forged an agreement, but  Israel’s leak of the document broke all the rules.”

This demonstration of strength against  Israel is backed by the senior leadership of Erdogan’s Justice and  Development Party. However, some members of the party have doubts about  specific steps taken by Erdogan.

 


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