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Turkey and Israel’s deep trade ties

Arabi

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More than a decade ago, Turkey set out to rebrand itself as an international tourism and trade hub. A crucial part of this transformation was Turkish Airlines. The national flag carrier now flies to more destinations than any other airline in the world and has remade Istanbul into a global city. Given the airline’s reach, it is surprising that one of its most popular and lucrative routes is Tel Aviv to Istanbul. Turkish Airlines is the second most popular carrier out of Tel Aviv after Israel’s national carrier El Al.

With more than 12 flights a day from Tel Aviv to Istanbul, divided between Turkish Airlines and the low-cost carrier Pegasus, Turkey is a dominant force in the Israeli aviation market. But this is only one aspect of a deep economic partnership between Turkey and Israel. Despite fiery rhetoric in support of Palestinians from Turkey’s president Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the country stands alone in the Muslim world as one of Tel Aviv’s dependable partners.

In the fallout following US president Donald Trump’s designation of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel there have been condemnations across the Arab world. Turkey has been a loud voice in this process. Mr Erdogan hosted an emergency summit of the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation in Istanbul. At the end of the conference, Turkey announced it would recognise East Jerusalem as the capital of Palestine and open an embassy there. Mr Erdogan’s attempts to lead the defence of Jerusalem have caused tension with Arab leaders over broader regional affairs.

There was, however, something missing from Turkey’s verbose proclamations of support for the Palestinian people: a plan to cut economic ties with Israel. Beyond the popularity of the Tel Aviv-Istanbul flight route, Turkey enjoys a vibrant economic relationship with Israel crowned by shared attempts to upend the European natural gas market.

In 2009, Israel discovered large reserves of natural gas off its Mediterranean coast. While the exact size of the gas fields is unknown, they are rumoured to contain at least 150 years’ worth of reserves. The problem is how best to export the gas to European markets keen to wean themselves off Russia’s supply. Instead of working with Cyprus and Greece or investing in liquefaction units, Tel Aviv has been partnering closely with Ankara to create a pipeline into Turkey. The prospect of this energy partnership has helped smooth the political tensions between the two countries that had bubbled to the surface in the past seven years.

As part of its attempts to make itself an international energy trading hub, Turkey has worked closely with Israel and Iraqi Kurdistan to create pipelines that bring hydrocarbon resources into Turkey and then export them to European markets. In July, Bloomberg reported Turkey was pushing Israel to lean on Cyprus in the hopes of persuading the Cypriots to allow a pipeline connecting Israel and Turkey to pass through their territory. The economic partnership is not limited to natural gas. As a result of the Syrian civil war, Turkey has been using Israel’s Haifa port as an important gateway to landlocked countries such as Jordan. Turkish goods used to flow through Syria but now they go through Israel.

The economic relationship aside, Mr Erdogan has made support of Palestinians a key part of his domestic populist appeal. With his fervent support of the Muslim Brotherhood and its offshoot in Gaza, Hamas, Mr Erdogan has used the issue of Palestine to maintain relevance after the Arab Spring. Turkey used its stable position at the outset of the uprisings to push for a complete transformation of the Middle East. Ankara had hoped the Muslim Brotherhood would come to power and Turkey would emerge as a neo-Ottoman regional superpower.

This strategy failed. Mr Erdogan found himself under attack at home from protesters of all stripes and fighting to solidify his regional power after betting on the wrong side in the Arab Spring. As a result, the logical solution for Mr Erdogan was to wholeheartedly embrace the Palestinian struggle.

Mr Erdogan saw himself as the leader who would liberate Palestine and succeed where the Arab world had failed before him. While this persona played well for the home crowd, the economic relationship between Israel and Turkey was never in danger, even at the height of the diplomatic impasse following Israel’s attack on a Turkish aid ship to Gaza in 2010. Political relations strained but, through it all, Israelis kept flying Turkish Airlines and the natural gas partnership advanced. Without a shift in Turkey’s deep economic connections to Israel, fiery words about Israel’s treatment of the Palestinians amount to little more than hollow rhetoric.

It is hardly surprising that Mr Erdogan would use the US decision on Jerusalem to drape himself in the Palestinian colours and proclaim himself a true friend of the Palestinians. The words uttered by Mr Erdogan are ultimately a sad reminder of regional division, which Israel has used to its own advantage.

TheNational
 
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Huh.... I don't find anything wrong here. What's the issue exactly?

Turkey is rightly following its national interests like it has for the past decades. Turkey has been a pragmatic country for decades and they have always adopted policies that serves their country's interests OVERALL. Reason they joined NATO, strived to join the E. U(though our leaders have not been keen on them joining), signed several business, investment and free trade preferential deals with Europe, close military ties and arms cooperation with western powers, having full diplomatic/trade and even military ties with Israel etc etc.

As long as it serves the country's interests I don't see anything wrong in that. That's how sane countries with competent leaders carry out their foreign policy. Why go against the West/Israel or harm your economy/country just to please some naive mullahs/islamists?leaders can't carry out their foreign policies based on feelings of some people, that's not how geopolitics work at state level.

I know that Turkey is a secular country so it was easier for their leaders to adopt all this measures without fearing a national uprising from their people/public, unlike other more Islamic countries whose leaders never had this luxury.
However, even so, I think Erdoğan has been quite smart in his public stance on this issue. It's also good to pander to some of the more Islamic elements in the country and in the wider region if Turkey wants to assert itself as a regional player/power and find its own place as a leader in this troubled region. So I think Erdoğan is doing a good job in this regard while at the same time carrying on with its trade ties with Israel. That's what it means to be a real leader, you have to know how to navigate the different feelings/interests of the country while looking at the bigger picture of your country's national interests.
 
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Why ? Because the Arab Media exposed mr.abu bakr al istanbuli erdogan and his Business with Daesh! Jealous?

@waz @The Eagle deal with this troll please.

Turkey has relations with Israel due to at the time having 0 relations with Arab countries, and most of them being hostile to Turkey.

Turkey is also most probably now one of the biggest supporters of Palestine.

Who cares anyway, whatever is in Turkeys best interests it should do. At least Turkey wasn’t lying all these years about relations with Israel.
 
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UAE newspaper....


@waz @The Eagle deal with this troll please.

Turkey has relations with Israel due to at the time having 0 relations with Arab countries, and most of them being hostile to Turkey.

Turkey is also most probably now one of the biggest supporters of Palestine.

Who cares anyway, whatever is in Turkeys best interests it should do. At least Turkey wasn’t lying all these years about relations with Israel.


Well they are not capable to gather muslim countries and bring it on UN to vote. What they done is condemn:-). GCC a totally failure states.
 
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Oh yeah 4 weeks since Jerusalem is the capital of israel.... where is Mrs.Pasha he can just bark and Hide in his 1 billion dollar palace
he used his bark just for the viewing figures nothing else


Well thats the fact, and go bark yourself i didn't quote you. The palace costed 350 million dollar and is in Turkey. It is used for foreigner visitors like diplomats or President. Like your king spent on a ugly paint half billion dollar and buy a palace in france to bang kardashians.

Ther will be a lot of hookers and alcohol for your king in france:-).
 
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Turkey and Israel have official relations between each other and a nicely going trade between the countries too that nobody tries to hide. You can do much more for the Palestinians by working with both sides of the conflict.

I prefer that instead of pretending to hate someone and to not have any relations with him but run under his sheets in any given opportunity... like some others do all the time like a bunch of you know what.
 
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