Syria crisis pushed Israel, Turkey to end rift

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Syria crisis pushed Israel, Turkey to end rift

Syria crisis pushed Israel, Turkey to end rift

Syria’s conflict was the key factor that pushed Israel and Turkey, with a little help from US President Barack Obama, to end a bitter rift — but restoring trust will take time, pundits said.
And despite the rapprochement, the once-close relationship is unlikely to return to what it was before a botched 2010 Israeli raid on a Gaza-bound flotilla left nine Turkish nationals dead, sparking a deep diplomatic rift.
Friday’s announcement that Benjamin Netanyahu and Turkey’s Recep Tayyip Erdogan had agreed to resume full diplomatic ties after the Israeli premier apologized over the flotilla debacle was an unexpected diplomatic coup pulled off by Obama at the end of a three-day visit to the Holy Land.
According to a lengthy analysis splashed across all of Israel’s Sunday papers, the deal had been worked on for years by Israeli and Turkish officials but was finally brought to fruition by developments in Syria and the intervention of US Secretary of State John Kerry.
“The fact that in Syria, the crisis is getting worse by the minute was a major consideration for me,” Netanyahu wrote on his Facebook page, saying the greatest danger was that Damascus’s chemical arsenal could fall into the hands of extremists. “It is important that Turkey and Israel, which both border Syria can communicate with each other,” he said.
Restoring some measure of stability to a region rocked by the bloody aftermath of the Arab Spring was also a central concern for Washington, Kerry said in Amman late on Saturday. “The reconciliation between Israel and Turkey is a very important development that will help advance the cause of peace and stability in the region,” he said.
And for Turkey itself — notwithstanding US pressure on both Netanyahu and Erdogan — Syria was also a decisive factor, top-selling Yediot Aharonot said.
“Erdogan softened his position, though not because of Kerry but because of Assad,” wrote columnist Nahum Barnea.
National Security Adviser Yaakov Amidror, who played a central role in Israeli efforts to mend the relationship, admitted on Saturday that the chemical weapons threat was a major element.
“We’re in a situation where between us and Turkey there is a country which has chemical weapons and is falling apart, and which probably used chemical weapons with very damaging abilities that could spread throughout the whole region,” he told Channel 2 television. “The more coordination there is between us and the Turks, the easier it will be to deal with a problem that could explode in our face tomorrow morning.”
He denied that the deal had come about as a result of American pressure, saying it had been an Israeli idea. “We approached the Americans with it, and the Americans helped us consolidate it with the Turks. There have been talks between us and the Turks for a long while,” he said.
As well as improving coordination on Syria, Israel was looking for “more freedom of activity” in the Middle East and elsewhere, he said. “Turkey is the main body preventing the tightening of cooperation with NATO, which we want,” he told the channel, saying that was set to change.
“This is the beginning. Now we’ll have to sit down together, draw up the understanding, and start implementing it in the field. Slowly but surely, we’ll see how it develops.”

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