Turkey's
Love Affair with Hamas
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Then-Prime
Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan warmly greets Hamas chief Khaled Meshaal
in Ankara, March 2012.
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"The Palestinian cause" is a unique charm that brings
together Turks from different ideologies. Turkish Islamists view it as an
indispensable part of "jihad;" the conservatives feel attached
to it because it has a religious connotation; for the leftists it is part
of an "anti-imperialist" struggle; the nationalists embrace it
just because most Turks embrace it. In the 1970s, when a dozen Turks a
day on average were killed in street violence, the "Palestinian
cause" was the only issue that otherwise warring fractions of the
Turkish left, right and Islamists could agree on.
But it was the Islamists who, in the 2000s, made the biggest gains
from the concept. Since 2002, when they came to power, they have reaped
enormous political gains from the "Palestine-fetish," to which
they also love to be ideologically attached. For the Turks, it has been
like abusing alcohol and wanting to have a healthier life. It still is.
Turkey's leaders ... are probably
the loudest supporters of the Palestinian cause in world politics
today.
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Turkey's leaders, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Prime Minister
Ahmet Davutoglu, are probably the loudest supporters of the Palestinian
cause in world politics today. Only one flag, other than the Turkish, is
sported at their party's election rallies: that of "Palestine."
It was because of the "Palestinian case" that Erdogan and
Davutoglu premeditatedly chose to move from friendly relations with
Israel to a "cold war." Votes and ideological satisfaction
followed.
But the Turkish rhetoric on "solidarity with our Palestinian
brothers" often seems askew to how solidarity should be.
In 2012, the Turks' "Palestinian brothers" sounded an alarm
when they found out that they were incapable of paying salaries to
160,000 government employees on time. The shortfall was considered the
biggest crisis in Palestinian history, and the authorities said they
heavily relied on the availability of Arab and international aid.
Davutoglu, then foreign minister, said of the "Mavi Marmara"
incident -- the raid by the Israeli Defense Forces on the Turkish
flotilla that killed 10 pro-Palestine activists who wanted to "break
the naval siege of Gaza" -- that it was "Turkey's 9/11."
He further said that more Turkish-led flotillas would be on their way to
break the Israeli blockade of Gaza, that Turkish military planes and
ships would protect these "aid vessels," and that "Israel
would eventually be entirely isolated."
That was when Erdogan and Davutoglu often boasted that "We are
the world's 17th biggest economy and we are running fast to become one of
the top 10." Yet, at an international donors' conference for Gaza in
March 2009, the Turkish pledges stood at a mere $93 million. That pledge
accounted for only 2.1% of all international pledges made there, which
totaled $4.257 billion.
As of 2012, of all 216 approved projects for Gaza, 180 were run by
international aid organizations, three by the World Bank, three by the
Red Crescent, 13 by Germany, two by France, and one by each of Belgium,
Egypt, Holland and Sweden. Turkish projects? Zero. In 2010, the Turks
purchased $270,000 worth of Palestinian goods – 0.00000033 percent of the
Turkish economy.
Hamas's loudest cheerleaders remain Messrs Erdogan and Davutoglu. But
their government had to keep a low profile at the donor conference for the
reconstruction of the Gaza Strip, hosted by Egypt on Oct. 12, with only a
general director from the Foreign Ministry participating. It seems Turkey
has had a "feud" with Egypt ever since the ousting of the
Muslim Brotherhood leadership in Cairo in 2013. At the UN General
Assembly in September, Erdogan questioned "whether the global summit
was a place where those who 'plot coups' are allowed to speak,"
slamming Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah El-Sisi's appearance. His
comments prompted Egypt's Foreign Minister, Sameh Shukri, to cancel a
planned meeting with Turkey's Foreign Minister, Mevlut Cavusoglu, on the
sidelines of the General Assembly.
Instead of sending its foreign minister, Turkey sent to Cairo the
ministry's director general for the Middle East and North Africa, Can
Dizdar. Speaking at the conference, Dizdar revealed how generous is the
world's 17th biggest economy and the staunchest benefactor of the
Palestinians: $32 million for Gaza had been collected in Turkey for
humanitarian aid, including fuel, electricity, power generators and
relief equipment. Thirty-two million dollars makes up 0.00004% of the
world's 17th biggest economy.
At the donor conference, Qatar, Turkey's only ally in the region --
its pro-Hamas, pro-Muslim Brotherhood, Islamist brother -- pledged $1
billion for the reconstruction of Gaza. Tiny Gulf states Kuwait and the
United Arab Emirates each pledged $200 million. And so did Turkey,
Hamas's savior and loudest cheerleader -- over a period of four years
(2014-2017). This makes $50 million annually, or 0.00006% of its economy.
That is a generous gift to Hamas, with love from the Crescent and
Star.
Burak Bekdil, based in Ankara, is a Turkish columnist for the
Hürriyet Daily and a Fellow at the Middle East Forum.
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