Herzog in Ankara: What Türkiye and Israel seek to achieve

Ankara and Tel Aviv have had ups and downs in their ties since the 1950s. But the two countries have been able to find common ground despite their differences.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Israeli President Isaac Herzog will make a crucial meeting in Ankara to find a common ground on various issues troubling both countries for years.
AFP

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Israeli President Isaac Herzog will make a crucial meeting in Ankara to find a common ground on various issues troubling both countries for years.

Israeli President Isaac Herzog will pay a visit to Ankara on March 9 and meet Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

In a remarkable development for both states, whose ambassadors were withdrawn from their respective hosting states in 2018, the two presidents are likely to discuss the range of issues affecting the two states. 

Gallia Lindenstrauss, a senior research fellow at the Institute for National Security Studies (INSS), an Israeli think-tank, believes the Israel-Türkiye meeting is based on Türkiye’s normalisation efforts with several regional states, including the UAE, Egypt and Saudi Arabia. 

“In this respect, the rapprochement between Türkiye and the UAE paved the way for the other rapprochements and for the meeting of President Herzog and President Erdogan to happen,” Lindenstrauss, an Israeli academic and an expert on Turkish foreign policy, tells TRT World. 

“The mere fact that the visit is happening is a positive sign for the relations between Türkiye and Israel. The next step should be the return of ambassadors to Ankara and Tel Aviv, and then, at least at the formal level, we will be back to where we were after the 2016 normalisation agreement,” she says. 

The long-standing Palestinian conflict and the Arab-Israeli tensions have pushed the Ankara-Tel Aviv ties to difficult points. Still, realist diplomacy has almost always prevailed and opened the reconciliation process. 

From 2008 to 2016, Türkiye-Israel tensions escalated for various reasons, from Israel's blockade of Gaza to former Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s unfriendly approach toward Ankara. After a normalisation agreement in 2016, ties have gotten worse after the US recognition of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel in 2018. 

But as the anti-Netanyahu government came into power last year, Israel’s longest-serving prime minister was gone, creating a new opportunity for both states to start a new beginning. Also, different normalisation efforts between Türkiye and the UAE and Israel and Gulf states across the Middle East have recently created a positive atmosphere for reconciliation. 

“There is a need to use the current meeting between the presidents for the purpose of rebuilding trust between the sides,” says Lindenstrauss. 

AFP

Turkish President Erdogan has urged for calm in the Ukraine crisis, mediating between Russia and Ukraine. He will welcome the Israeli President Herzog part of his normalisation efforts in the Middle East.

Mustafa Fatih Yavuz, a Jerusalem-based political analyst, also sees the upcoming meeting as “a confidence-building measure,” which can pave the way for the instalment of a full normalisation process. 

“Even after their meetings, possibly, the two states can declare that they will send their ambassadors back to Türkiye and Israel,” Yavuz tells TRT World

Despite political differences, “Türkiye is a potential ally and a significant partner in our region,” says Yoram Schweitzer, a former member of the Israeli intelligence community who now heads the Program on Terrorism and Low-Intensity Conflict at the INSS, referring to Israel-Türkiye ties. 

Seeing Türkiye’s positive approach, “Israel tries to send political signals to Türkiye to re-coordinate the relationship,” Schweitzer tells TRT World. 

"There are a number of benefits for both sides to have a dialogue. Türkiye as an exceptional country continues to have a rare capability to talk to different sides," a prominent member of Türkiye's Jewish community, whose members will also meet Herzog during his meeting, tells TRT World

Ukraine crisis 

The sides also find each other on the same page regarding the ongoing Russia-Ukraine war. Both Türkiye and Israel are simultaneously mediating between Moscow and Kiev to address the bloody conflict. 

Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett went to Moscow last weekend, where he spoke directly to Putin. Türkiye will also host a meeting between Ukrainian and Russian foreign ministers on Thursday, with the aim of ceasing hostilities. 

“Both states are not acting like Western states currently do in regard to the Ukraine conflict. Türkiye and Israel want to have good terms with both Russia and Ukraine for their own reasons. In the meeting, they might talk about how the two states can work together to mediate between Moscow and Kiev,” Yavuz says. 

Their possible joint mediation on Ukraine can help them place their confidence-building measures on “a faster track,” according to Yavuz. 

Lindenstrauss also believes the Ukraine fight is a crucial point where both Israel and Türkiye can find common ground. 

AP

President Isaac Herzog made the first Israeli visit to the United Arab Emirates in January. Now he heads to Türkiye to meet President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

“The current events will translate I believe in a focus on developments in Ukraine in the meeting. Both Israel and Türkiye are trying to mediate in this conflict and bring about a cease in hostilities, and there should be some coordination between these mediation attempts,” Lindenstrauss views. 

Main issues

Both Israel and Türkiye will be careful to navigate their route to find a new understanding with each other, according to both experts. As a result, Yavuz says they don’t want to deal with core issues during meetings in the next two days. 

But the Palestinian issue will be on the agenda, he adds. “The Turkish side will definitely say something about that,” Yavuz says. 

Like much of the world, Türkiye has long protested Israel’s illegal settlements and occupation of Gaza and the West Bank, backing Palestinian aspirations and the two-state solution. 

However, Ankara will be careful while bringing up the Palestinian issue to Herzog and avoid putting the new president in a tough spot, Yavuz says, reminding that the Israeli president is a leftist Labor party politician, who also continues to advocate the two-state solution. 

When Turkish presidential spokesperson Ibrahim Kalin came to Israel last month for preliminary talks with Tel Aviv, he stressed the Palestinian issue, showing “Türkiye’s insistence” on resolving the conflict, Yavuz says. Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu also emphasised the same stance. 

AA

A Turkish delegation led by Ibrahim Kalin, presidential spokesperson and senior adviser to the president, held meetings with Foreign Ministry Director-General Alon Ushpiz and Eyal Shuiki, the Israeli president's director-general, in late February.

Yavuz says that top Turkish officials recently signalled their Israeli counterparts that Ankara would not remove the Palestinian issue from its agenda and that addressing it would help boost their bilateral ties. 

Another issue on the agenda is Iran, an anti-Israel country, which is currently trying to reach an agreement with the US to revitalise its JCPOA nuclear deal with the Western bloc – Russia and China. But the Ukraine crisis makes things difficult for Iran too. 

“Israelis want to hear positive stuff from Türkiye about their conflict with Iran, hoping Ankara will join the new axis of the Abraham Accords. But I don’t think Türkiye will do that,” Yavuz says. 

Gas reserves in the eastern Mediterranean

Türkiye has some disagreements with some Mediterranean states regarding how to designate the borders of newly discovered gas reserves in the eastern Mediterranean. Israel, Egypt and Greece reached an agreement to carry gas from the Mediterranean to Europe, bypassing Türkiye, but the US pulled out from the project, complicating its prospects. 

Now, Israeli and Turkish leaders might also discuss how to carry gas from the region to Europe with a new understanding. “The leaders will discuss this issue. But they have not reached an agreement on it,” Yavuz says. 

Lindenstrauss thinks that Herzog sees the issue related to the gas reserves in a climate change perception and wants to develop a process on “how the actors in the eastern Mediterranean have to cooperate to mitigate this challenge.” 

Both sides will talk about trade, energy and tourism, she adds. Despite tensions, Turkish and Israeli economic ties have been strong for many years. Also, cultural ties can improve, according to Yavuz. Like many other Middle Eastern countries, Israelis also love to watch Turkish soap operas, adds Yavuz. 

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