Turkey Says Israel Ties at 'Lowest Level' amid Gaza Conflict
Relations between Turkey and Israel have hit their "lowest level" amid the Israeli assault on the Gaza Strip, and may not be able to improve for some time, Turkish Deputy Prime Minister Bulent Arinc said.
Arinc, one of the founding members of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's Islamist-influenced AKP party, said Turkey had always calibrated its relations with Israel according to Israel's behavior towards the Palestinians.
"Our relations have always been reduced to a minimum whenever Israel continued occupation, dropped bombs in Palestine and carried out massacres," he told Agence France-Presse in an interview in Ankara on Thursday.
Israel has withdrawn most of its diplomatic staff from Turkey after violent protests against its missions while Erdogan has enraged Israeli leaders by describing the Gaza assault as a genocide.
"The lowest level (in relations) right now will maybe continue for a while," said Arinc.
Before Israel began the Gaza assault to stop Hamas rocket attacks, Arinc was leading talks on normalizing ties between the two countries after the deadly storming by Israel commandos of the Mavi Marmara ship carrying Turkish activists and humanitarian aid to Gaza in 2010. Nine Turks died in the raid.
The ensuing outcry in Turkey led to a degrading of diplomatic relations between the former allies to below ambassador level.
Arinc said Israel had been holding up the signing of the final deal. Then came the Gaza offensive, which according to Erdogan has now put normalizing ties off the agenda.
"Gaza is being bombarded, it is a big tragedy. In these circumstances the normalization of relations between Turkey and Israel at the level of ambassador does not seem possible," said Arinc.
Arinc added that relations between Turkey and Israel ebbed and flowed according to Israel's treatment of the Palestinians, ever since Turkey recognized Israel in 1949.
"Turkey has always displayed a principled stance towards Israel," he said.