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Israeli Spokesman to Turkey: “You Cannot Forget the Facts”

Israeli Foreign Affairs Ministry spokesman Yigal Palmor comments on Israel’s relations with Turkey on Holocaust Remembrance Day, Tulin Daloglu reports from Jerusalem.
World War Two veterans return to their seats after laying a wreath during a ceremony marking Israel's annual day of Holocaust remembrance, at Yad Vashem in Jerusalem April 8, 2013. Israel on Monday commemorates the six million Jews killed by the Nazis in the Holocaust during World War Two. REUTERS/Ronen Zvulun (JERUSALEM - Tags: POLITICS ANNIVERSARY CONFLICT) - RTXYD5G

JERUSALEM - Minutes after I walked into the Israeli Foreign Affairs Ministry at about 10 a.m. today [April 8], the sirens sounded in remembrance of the 6 million Jewish souls who had brutally vanished by the end of World War II. Although there is no Holocaust denial in Turkey, there is a growing and deepening perception that Israel has become just like its Nazi perpetrators — cruel and merciless in the way it treats the Palestinians. From the Islamist-based Justice and Development Party (AKP) members to the ordinary Ahmet, Mehmet, Leyla and Fatma on the street, Turks by and large consider Israel a “genocidal state.” While there may be room to educate the Turkish people on what the Holocaust really means for Israelis and the Jewish people, their current views of Israeli treatment of Palestinians makes this tragic chapter in history less important for their consideration. I have even heard from the Turkish diplomatic corps that Israel should overcome this traumatic experience in its societal psyche and stop thinking about everything from a security prism, which they see as the true cause of horrible mistakes Israel makes with its recent Gaza offensives. The more Palestinians get killed, the more support Israel loses from the Turkish public and international community, they say. To them, Israeli actions are the root of the debates challenging its legitimacy.

Although it gave me no pleasure after that two-minute silence, I nevertheless asked Yigal Palmor, the spokesman of the Israeli Foreign Affairs Ministry, what he makes of those criticisms of Israel that it has become equally or worse than its Nazi perpetrators when it comes to its treatment of Palestinians. With Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's apology over the May 2010 Mavi Marmara incident, there is an expectation that Turkey and Israel will finally find a way to normalize their relations. But it is no secret that the Erdogan government has boldly sided with the Palestinians and specifically with Hamas, and their perception of the dynamics of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is very much impacted through the prism of such questions. And the way they decide to resolve their differences on these sensitive issues will actually determine as to how this new relationship between Turkey and Israel will be formed.

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