Russia Has Reservations About Rapprochement Deal With Turkey

T. Belman. So there you have it. Israel is desperate to sell gas to Turkey to enable Laviathon to get going. But their raprochement is receiving great resistance from Egypt, aided and now abetted by Russia who is currying favour with Egypt. Egypt is also upset with Turkey’s support of Hamas. Saudi Arabia who has teamed with Turkey to bring down Assad is also a financial backer of Egypt and is dependent on its army. And the diplomatic wheel goes round and round.

Since the downing of a Russian jet over Syria, Moscow’s ties with Turkey have deteriorated, and the Kremlin is concerned by Turkish influence in Gaza and possible gas ties with Israel.

By Barak Ravid, HAARETZ

Russia is dissatisfied with Israel’s pending rapprochement agreement with Turkey, Haaretz has learned.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov submitted the reservations of President Vladimir Putin’s government during a meeting in Moscow on Thursday afternoon with Foreign Ministry director general Dore Gold.

Ministry spokesman Emanuel Nachshon refused to answer questions on the subject.
Also in Gold’s delegation were his bureau chief, Shimon Shapira, Political Bureau head Alon Ushpiz and the ministry’s Deputy Director General of Liaison Gilad Cohen.

The main items on the Israeli agenda were the situation in Syria and media reports about the arrival in Iran of the first shipment of S-300 missiles from Russia.

However, one of the central issues raised by the Russian side regarded the contacts between Israel and Turkey on a reconciliation agreement that would end a five-year crisis provoked by the Mavi Marmara incident in 2010.

The Russians, who have been locked in a severe dispute with Turkey since the downing of a Russian jet over Syria in November last year, are concerned about some of the benefits that the government of President Recep Tayyip Erdo?an will receive in the context of an agreement with Israel.

Even before Turkey’s downing of the Russian aircraft, Turkey-Russia relations were in deep crisis over Russia’s increased involvement in the Syrian civil war on the side of the Assad regime.
The government in Ankara supports many of the rebel groups and is accused by Russia of supporting the Islamic State (ISIS) in order to bring down Assad.

Turkey, for its part, accuses Russia of supporting Kurdish rebel groups carrying out attacks on Turkish targets from Syrian territory. Erdogan went as far as to say on Wednesday that the Russian bombing raids in Syria were aimed at civilians and could amount to war crimes.

Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu accused Russia of assisting the Assad regime in the ethnic cleansing of civilians in Aleppo.

An Israeli source knowledgeable about the Russian position regarding the Israel-Turkey contacts said that Moscow is not interested in having Turkey gain a substantial foothold in the Gaza Strip.

As part of the negotiations with Israel, Turkey has demanded free access to Gaza and special status with regard to the import of humanitarian equipment into the Strip and the construction of infrastructure, such as a power generator for electricity.

Turkey is not demanding the lifting of Israel’s blockade on the strip, believing that by gaining free access to Gaza it will be able to claim a significant achievement in softening the blockade.
Another Russian reservatrion regards the possibility of cooperation between Israel and Turkey on natural gas. Russia is currently Turkey’s main supplier of natural gas.

Russia’s negative attitude to the agreement with Turkey is shared by Egypt, which is also opposed to giving Turkey special status in Gaza – a move which it thinks will damage Egyptian interests in Gaza.

On the evening before the meeting with the Israeli delegation, Lavrov spoke on the phone with Egyptian Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry, though it is not known whether they discussed the contacts between Israel and Turkey.

The combined opposition of Russia and Egypt is likely to have significant impact on Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s decision on whether to sign an agreement with Turkey.
A senior Israeli official said a powerful group of defense officials, who were previously in favor of normalization with Turkey, are now of the opinion that Israel doesn’t need to be in a hurry to sign the reconciliation agreement.

Those senior defense officials, the most prominent of whom is Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon, believe that continued Hamas terror activity from Turkish territory, combined with concern about Israel’s ties with Russia and Egypt, call into question the degree to which signing the agreement with Turkey at the present time will contribute to Israel’s interests.

Ya’alon himself gave voice to that mood during a press conference in Switzerland last week, when he said that Turkey has greater interest than Israel in reaching true reconciliation.

Israel’s concerns over damage to its ties with Russia are based primarily on the Russian military involvement in Syria and the fear that tension with Russia at this time would do harm to Israeli interests, such as the air force’s freedom of action in Syria and Russian arms transfers to Iran and the Syrian army, from where they reach Hezbollah.

The current round of talks between Israel and Turkey in Geneva last week ended with tangible progress. Senior Turkish officials have made media statements recently to the effect that all the items on which there was disagreement have now been resolved and the sides are ready to sign an agreement.

Those statements were denied in Jerusalem, where officials said that several disagreements still need to be resolved, despite the progress. Senior officials said in response that Russia “never reached out to Israel to reject the deal with Turkey.”

February 19, 2016 | 5 Comments »

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  1. Israel must outsource its gas outside the ME (friendly European countries) and only to “”friendly”” Muslim countries (if they ever existed!!!). Turkey will never hesitate to back-stab Israel if the opportunity presents itself.
    As far as Greece is concerned, it is high time for her people to get rid of their crass, visceral and historical antisemitism. But probably this may take for ever.

  2. Bear Klein Said:

    “The defensive and strategic agreement I have signed with Minister Ya’alon,” Kammenos said of the new defense agreements between the two nations, “is like no other that Israel has, except that with the United States.

    Interesting, if true.

  3. Israel must get what it wants of a deal with Turkey or there will be no deal.

    One Turkey must truly kick out Hamas out Turkey (they can not try and fake this like they are at the moment).

    Gaza blockade will need to remain in Place.

    Turkey is starting to figure out at the moment that Israel actually has the leverage. This is hard for the Turks to stomach. If they want Israeli gas (which why Russia is opposed to the deal $$$$$$$$) they will have to cave. Probably way too hard for the Erodgan to stomach. That is why they are starting to hint maybe there will be no deal. Maybe Turkey will buy the “Art of the Deal” from Trump (need an autographed copy) to help them out. Oh yeah they do not like Trump, oh well NO DEAL then.

    Greek defense minister: Turkey won’t be Israel’s friend
    Ankara wants to lead Islamic world, says Panos Kammenos, adds that Jerusalem-Athens defense alliance second only to that with US

    There is little chance that Israel will be able to rehabilitate its ties with Turkey, Greece’s defense minister told Israeli journalists on Thursday.

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    “The fact the Turkey trades with Daesh [Islamic State], as Israel’s Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon has described, funds Daesh, and allows its fighters to enter and leave Syria raises questions in both Israel and Greece,” Panos Kammenos told Israel Radio in an interview while on a visit to Israel.

    “A state that behaves this way,” he added, “I don’t believe you have much chance to rehabilitate your ties with Turkey. Turkey’s isolation is growing, and its stance toward Israel remains as hostile as in the past.

    Kammenos noted that Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu last year said he longed to see the Palestinian flag flying over Jerusalem.

    “Turkey’s behavior as an Islamist state that seeks to lead the Muslim world doesn’t fit its alleged desire to restore relations with Israel,” he added.
    Kammenos’s harsh rhetoric comes as Greece seeks to strengthen its alliance with Israel, considered a regional military superpower, as both countries face an activist and often hostile Turkish government led by President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s Muslim-oriented AKP party.

    “The defensive and strategic agreement I have signed with Minister Ya’alon,” Kammenos said of the new defense agreements between the two nations, “is like no other that Israel has, except that with the United States. The agreement is a defensive barrier that begins in Israel, continues through Cyprus and ends in Greece.”

    This week’s visit to Israel was Kammenos’s third in recent weeks, while Greece’s prime minister Alexis Tsipras has also visited twice, together with other ministers. Last month, a trilateral summit of the leaders of Israel, Greece and Cyprus met in the island nation to discuss security and energy cooperation.

    Greece, too, was being mistreated by Ankara, Kammenos told Israel Radio.

    “In the past two days, the rate of refugees fleeing to Greece [through Turkey] grew five-fold,” the defense minister said, insisting that Turkey could control the number of people passing through its territory. “It uses them as hostages, as negotiating chips with the European Union,” he charged.

    Turkey has also recently increased its unauthorized overflights of Greek territory, he said.

    Israel’s relatively new status as a regional energy power following the discovery of massive offshore natural gas reserves also played a role in the alliance, Kammenos indicated. On both energy and counterterrorism, Israel and Greece stood to benefit greatly from working together, he said.

    “The joint battle against terror is important also for our cooperation on gas. Our shared success in the energy field constitutes a counterweight to the oil that today comes from Daesh [IS]. Energy cooperation will certainly help in the battle against terror.” http://www.timesofisrael.com/greek-defense-minister-turkey-wont-be-israels-friend/

  4. “An Israeli source knowledgeable about the Russian position regarding the Israel-Turkey contacts said that Moscow is not interested in having Turkey gain a substantial foothold in the Gaza Strip.”

    Since Israel should not want the Islamonazi Erdogan to have a foothold in the Gaza Strip, what is the problem?

    Better to keep el-Sisi and Putin happy than to try and please a psychotic Jew-hater like Erdogan.