Tuesday, September 6, 2011

The detonator is being set ...

With so much noise about debt, the Middle East, European banks and the euro, 9/11, etc, etc, the article I paste in below will easily go unnoticed or even read. I select it for, as I have said on these pages before, I believe the posture of Israel in relation to the Middle East holds great sway in the politics and economics of the world but also potential cataclysmic implication as described in the Bible.

Turkey, as mysterious and much misunderstood and oft disrespected force is, in my opinion, the strategic rock that is holding a degree of balance between Europe and the fiery elements of the Middle East.  With the third or fourth largest standing Army in the world, a strong economy and solid government since finally wrestling the evils of hyperinflation under control, she is a force to be reckoned with. Strategic location, educated population, solid civil and women's rights thanks to Ataturk, when Turkey cuts off relations with Israel, it is a cymbal clanging that must be heard and moved toward by the powers of this planet.

As I have said, it has been very interesting to me to see Israel's very, unprecedented, low profile in the Arab Spring and now Libya and even with Palestine's rocketing her southern border, still Israel remains seemingly undeterred and resilient. Hum, me thinks?  And then I see this today with Turkey cutting off economic, defense and diplomatic relations with Israel when for years Turkey has been the only  major Middle Eastern power that has aligned with Israel thus aiding in stabilizing the anarchy-driven region. 

I have many great Turkish friends from my Goodyear days and some excellent former Turkish students that I enlist, please, to comment to this blog and my thesis on this situation which I find very troubling; even more troubling than the Dow, gold, etc.  This carries tremendous global implication that can explode in one bombing sortie in Iran, Syria, etc, etc.  Hum, me thinks?  Why has Israel remained so quiet and below the radar?  Me thinks the US diplomats have provided great wealth and support to pay for this low profile and if so, there is a price yet to be paid; a price that could be a bounced check with the financial resource the US now does not have.

I learned a great theory once about the bear and the jelly beans /// a man is driving through the park and always wanted to see a bear. He saw one, stopped his car and rolled down his window offering the bear a jelly bean. The bear comes over, paws on car and the bear and the man develop a friendship / bearship, as long as the jelly beans last.  When the man feeds the bear that last jelly bean, we can imagine what happens with the still hungry bear, right?  I cannot escape the application of the illustration with Israel being the bear and the US doling out the jelly beans.  I am only speculating but ...!

An alarmist I am not! A concerned man that watched the horizon, absolutely!  This man is concerned and this is the genesis of my latest increased level of concern:

The Wall Street Journal

Turkey Suspends Defense Trade With Israel


ISTANBUL—Turkey's prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, said Tuesday that his country was suspending defense trade with Israel and that Turkish naval vessels would be seen in the eastern Mediterranean more often, as Ankara ratcheted up pressure in a rising dispute with its former ally.
Speaking to reporters in Ankara after giving a speech at the Ankara Chamber of Commerce, Mr. Erdogan repeated plans announced Friday to downgrade diplomatic relations with the Jewish state and suspend military agreements, specifying that the suspension would include trade in defense goods.
Reuters
Turkey's Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
"Trade relations, military relations, defense industry—these we will suspend. These will be completely frozen and that process will be followed also by very different sanctions," Mr. Erdogan said.

Those measures still to come would be a "Plan C" to the "Plan B" already announced, he added.
So far, Turkey has announced no general trade sanctions against Israel. A spokesman for Mr. Erdogan said the prime minister had been referring in his remarks only to trade in defense goods, and not to trade in general. On Monday, Turkey's economy minister had said there would be no broader trade sanctions "for now."

The office of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu declined to comment Tuesday. Other Israeli officials contacted said privately that they don't wish to engage Mr. Erdogan in a public debate so as not to be seen as further aggravating political ties.

Turkey has said it is responding to Israel's continued refusal to apologize for the killing by Israeli commandos of eight Turkish citizens and one Turkish-American on board the Mavi Marmara aid ship, as it sought to break Israel's blockade of the Gaza Strip in May last year.

Zalman Shoval, a former Israeli ambassador to the U.S. who works with the Israeli government, called Mr. Erdogan's comments part of Turkey's "childish'' reaction to the United Nations report released last week that stated the blockade was justified, but that Israel's use of force was "excessive and unreasonable."

Turkey and Israel did nearly $3.5 billion of trade in 2010, according to official Turkish figures, a record reached during a sharp downturn in the political relationship. Moreover, trade rose more than 25% in the first half of this year, compared with the same period last year, Israeli and Turkish figures show.

Separate data for defense-related trade weren't available. Past major deals, however, included a $600 million-$700 million agreement under which Israel modernized Turkey's aging Phantom F-4 jets, and a $668 million pact to upgrade its M-60 tanks. Last year, Turkey took delivery of 10 Israeli-built Heron unmanned aerial vehicles, a $183 million deal.

Officials and analysts say those contracts are complete and no new large agreements have been signed for several years as political relations soured. Now, the main potential loss is the purchase of spare parts from Israel, should Turkey strictly enforce its own embargo. Turkey's defense exports to Israel tend to be lower-end equipment, such as uniforms, analysts said.

A report released last month by Tepav, an Ankara-based think tank, said past Turkish threats to cut off trade with Israel haven't hit trade as a whole, which has seen a healthy expansion. Most of the business is in the private sector and the two economies complement each other, the report said. Turkey is strong in construction, chemicals and textiles, while Israel offers software and other technology products from industries that are weak elsewhere in the region.

"Business has become an area immune from political upheavals," the report said. "The threats of canceling large infrastructure projects and other joint ventures have not gone beyond words. As a matter of fact, most of the projects involve private companies. Furthermore, boycotting of member nations is against OECD rules."

Both Turkey and Israel are members of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.
Responding to a question about reports that Turkey would begin patrolling waters off Israel and whether that risked conflict, Prime Minister Erdogan said Turkey had a right to do so. "The eastern Mediterranean is not a foreign place to us. … Of course, our vessels will be seen from now on very often in these waters," he said.

He also confirmed he would be traveling to Egypt soon, and said he "might" visit Gaza. A spokesman for Mr. Erdogan said the visit to Cairo would take place between Sept. 12 and 14.

—Joshua Mitnik in Tel Aviv
contributed to this aritcle.
Write to Marc Champion at marc.champion@wsj.com

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