Dan Margalit
Turkish history is so strewn with corpses that the unfortunate killing of nine terrorists on board the Mavi Marmara in 2010 was not shocking enough to shatter relations with an ally like Israel. Rather, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan decided to build up his status in the Arab world on the backs of the Jews. This is classic anti-Semitism. There are Israelis who don't want to hear this. Just as their grandparents joined the Communist Yevsektsiya (the Jewish section of the Soviet Communist party) or the Yiddishist Bund (the Jewish socialist labor movement), wanting to believe that in the 20th century, if only they mended their ways, distanced themselves from Judaism, watched themselves and contributed to the Revolution, nothing bad would happen to them. Similarly, their grandchildren now believe that if only Israel would agree to establish Palestine in the 1967 borders, the Middle East will be infused with light and progress. While I support the establishment of a state of Palestine alongside Israel, it is clear to me that it is not a delay in the peace process that is causing the current wave of hostility. The conduct of former prime ministers Ehud Barak at Camp David and Ehud Olmert in Jerusalem proves this.
Our region is in the grip of a psychotic attack of the mental illness called anti-Semitism. It is a chronic malady and there is no cure. All we can do is try to lower the flames and alleviate the insanity for extended periods of time. Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan looks to Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad for inspiration, while newspapers in Cairo take a page from the Iranian and Turkish leaders. The burning hostile energy continues to feed itself.
Under such circumstances, Israel cannot return Israel-Turkish relations to their former glory. But it had the opportunity to slow down the process. With diseases like this one, the passage of time can serve as a temporary remedy. The effete, conditional apology that Dr. Yossi Ciechanover agreed to with the Turks could have done the trick. The idea was to stall for time in the hope that Turkey's possibly strained relations with Iran and Syria would have a “potential moderating effect on Israel's relations with Turkey even if it is hard to see it now,” as Dr. Galia Lindenstrauss wrote in a paper on Monday for the Institute for National Security Studies.
Ehud Barak and Dan Meridor weren't the only ones who pleaded with the government to accept the compromise apology, which, while it may not have been fair, was a wise course of action. Various ministers, and not just the usual suspects, supported the compromise apology, which would have postponed the deterioration in ties even though there was no guarantee it would have prevented it. The proposed apology would have been in keeping with the Jewish admonition (which does not apply under all circumstances) not to take the land by force. Don't seek out a war, be it military or diplomatic.
According to Lindenstrauss, the potential now exists for a deterioration to the point of “direct confrontation between both countries' navies.” She adds that if Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had chosen to apologize, “most of the public would have been against it.” So what? It would have been necessary.
Now for the insults. Israelis flying to Turkey on Monday were humiliated upon landing (Why did they go? They're like Israelis who won't be deterred from vacationing in the Sinai.) Israeli Arabs are rejoicing. This is what it's like for them when they fly out of Israel, they say, and they are partially right. I proposed in another column that rigorous security interrogations at Ben-Gurion airport be carried out on an equal number of Jews. But one can't compare the two situations. There have been a lot of Arab terrorists, but not a single Israeli terrorist in Istanbul.
Another stage has come to an end. It is too late to make a U-turn, but we definitely need to fix what has gone wrong.
Back to home page | Newsletters from:
No comments:
Post a Comment