ISTANBUL: Turkey must accept that it needs Israel,
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said on Saturday, as the two countries
seek to thrash out a deal on normalising ties.
Nato member Turkey
was a key regional ally of Israel until the two countries fell out over
the deadly storming by Israeli commandos in 2010 of a Turkish aid ship,
the Mavi Marmara, bound for Gaza.
Erdogan further raised hackles
in Israel with his sometimes inflammatory rhetoric towards the Jewish
State. But the atmosphere was transformed following the revelation last
month the two sides were making progress in secret talks to seek a
rapprochement.
“Israel is in need of a country like Turkey in the
region,” Erdogan said in remarks to Turkish reporters published in
leading dailies Saturday.
“And we too must accept that we need Israel. This is a reality in the region,” said Erdogan.
“If
mutual steps are implemented based on sincerity, then normalisation
will follow. “Ambassadors were withdrawn in the wake of the 2010 crisis
and Erdogan said Turkey's three conditions for a normalisation were
clear — a lifting of the Gaza blockade, compensation for the Mavi
Marmara victims and an apology for the incident.
Israel has
already apologised and negotiations appear to have made progress on
compensation, leaving the blockade on the Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip the
main hurdle.
Indicating possible progress on the blockade,
Erdogan said Israel had suggested it would allow goods and construction
materials into Gaza if they came via Turkey.
“We need to see a written text to ensure there is no deviation from the agreement,” he said.
Analysts
have suggested that Turkey's rapprochement with Israel has been
accelerated by the need for Ankara to make up for its crisis in ties
with Moscow after the shooting down of a Russian warplane.
Erdogan
last month held closed-door talks with Hamas chief Khaled Meshaal but
it was never disclosed what the president discussed with the leader of
the the Palestinian Islamist movement.
Israel also wants Turkey
to prevent senior Hamas operative Salah Aruri from entering its
territory and acting from there. Ankara has never confirmed his presence
in Turkey.
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