Shady
Ships and Turkish Lips
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Originally published under the title, "Who Can Attack
Turkish Ships?"
A
Turkish cargo ship suspected of supplying Islamist rebels was bombed by
Libyan government forces off the coast of Tobruk on May 10, killing
ship's third officer.
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"This is the first time in history that a foreign army has killed
civilian Turks in peacetime!"
This is how government-friendly media justified Turkey's reaction to
Israel when, in May 2010, the Israel Defense Forces raided the Mavi
Marmara, a ship in a Turkish-led flotilla off the Gazan coast, and
killed nine pro-Palestine activists aboard.
Any reader could be tempted to believe that Turkey was preparing to go
to war with Israel.
Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu, then foreign minister, insisted
that "This is Turkey's own 9/11."
Turkey asked the United Nations Security Council to summon an
emergency meeting. It knocked on other doors too: NATO, the European
Union (EU), the Arab League and the Organization for Islamic Cooperation
(OIC). Then Prime Minister (now President) Recep Tayyip Erdogan called to
discuss the Mavi Marmara crisis with U.S. President Barack Obama
and German Chancellor Angela Merkel.
Erdogan's portrayal
of the incident contained words such as "state terrorism,"
"an attack on world peace," "piracy," "thuggish
state," and "massacre." He said
that:
- Israel must
definitely be punished,
- Israel will pay a
very heavy price for this,
- Israel murdered
innocent people at sea, and
- [Addressing and
threatening Israeli citizens:] Israel is openly exposing your
security to great risk.
Since the incident, Turkey's relations
with Israel never normalized. Neither country has an ambassador in the
other's capital. Turkey has vowed to isolate Israel internationally until
Israel has apologized, paid compensation to the families of the victims,
and removed the naval blockade of the Gaza Strip (which a UN commission
probing the Mavi Marmara incident later declared
to be legal).
The
Turkish-owned ship Mavi Marmara, which took part in the 2010
"Gaza flotilla" that attempted to break Israel's navel
blockade of Gaza.
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One might, initially, understand the Turkish ire. After all, a foreign
country's military had targeted a civilian ship and killed people aboard,
with or without good legal reason. After all, again, the vessel that was
attacked was not a Turkish frigate intending to shell the Israeli coast.
So, Turkey's justified anger presumably had nothing to do with the
inherent anti-Semitism of its Islamist rulers. Really?
For Erdogan, Israel is a terrorist state. But apparently, he has had a
confused mind about another Mediterranean-basin country: Libya. In 2010,
Erdogan, with a happy and smiling face, received
Libya's "distinguished" Al-Gaddafi International Prize for
Human Rights. He returned the favor by eventually joining an allied force
that overthrew the Libyan dictator and led to his lynching. However,
shortly before Erdogan decided that Turkey should join
the allied forces, he had publicly said -- in criticism
of the planned NATO operation against Gaddafi -- "What business does
NATO have in Libya?"
As Turkey did in the Palestinian territories, or elsewhere where such
groups exist, it apparently has an obsession about supporting the
Islamists in Libya, too.
In response, Abdullah al-Thinni, the Prime Minister of the Libyan
interim government, has repeatedly accused Turkey of interfering in the
domestic affairs of Libya and earlier this year warned that Libya's
government could put an end to investments by Turkish companies in the
country.
On May 10, almost five years after "Turkey's own 9/11," a
Turkish cargo ship's third officer was killed and several other
crewmembers were wounded after the ship was shelled
off the Libyan coast and attacked from the air by Libyan forces.
The vessel, the Tuna-1, was approaching Tobruk, a coastal city
in Libya where the country's internationally-recognized government is
headquartered, to deliver sheetrock cargo loaded in Spain, when it was
shelled in international waters, 13 miles away from the Libyan port city.
The Tuna-1 was then attacked twice from the air as it tried to
leave the area. A Libyan military spokesman told Reuters that the Turkish
vessel was bombed "after it was warned not to approach the Libyan
city of Derna."
For Turkey's Islamists, what was
done does not matter much. Who did it does. |
But this time there was no request for an emergency meeting of the UN
Security Council; no talks with the EU, NATO, Arab League, OIC, Obama or
Merkel. No words flying in the air such as "terrorist state,"
"piracy," "massacre," "an attack on world
peace." No "murderers." No threats to Libyans that
"your security is being exposed to great risks." And,
naturally, this is not "Turkey's own 9/11."
Instead, the Turkish Foreign Ministry on May 11 issued a weak protest
note. It condemned the attack and demanded legal action. It called the
attack a violation of international law. All Turkey's Foreign Minister,
Mevlut Cavusoglu, could say was that Ankara had sent a frigate off the
Libyan coast to escort the Tuna-1 back to Turkish waters.
President Erdogan's reaction to the attack on a civilian Turkish
vessel by a foreign army was revealing. He
said: "Things would have been different had the Turkish ship
carried a Turkish flag." That would be Turkey's wrath on Libya, he
simply meant, were the Tuna-1, owned by a Turkish company, not registered
in the Cook Islands.
By the way, what flag did the Turkish ship Mavi Marmara carry?
Comoros.
Still wondering why Turkey's voice was so loud after the Mavi
Marmara incident? For Turkey's Islamists, what was done does not
matter much. Who did it does.
Burak Bekdil, based in Ankara, is
a columnist for the Turkish daily Hürriyet and a fellow at the Middle East
Forum.
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