Erdogan wants to be everything — Khan, Caliph, Emperor. Khan of all Turkic peoples (the "-stan" countries), Emperor of the Balkan states once ruled by the Ottoman Empire, and Caliph of the entire Muslim world.
Suddenly, a reversal: Instead of Israel begging for information,
offering concessions, and shouting "everyone now!" about the hostages in
Gaza, Hamas is the one demanding proof of life and the immediate
release of its members, who are of course vile murderers, not innocent
civilians. The real number is apparently below 200 — much lower. Life in
tunnels under the boots of the IDF is not exactly a recipe for
longevity.
The Rafah story is a critical test — a turning point in Israel's
relationship with its enemies. For decades, Israel normalized a
"protection racket" culture — paying the bully so that he won't bully.
Hamas and Hezbollah invented countless forms of extortion — border
marches, balloons, Qassam rockets, tunnels, tents — and Israel was
willing to pay dearly, just for quiet.
That equation flipped on October 7. From that moment, and for the
past two years, Israel was the one saying, "hold me back." We remember
the campaigns: "just not a ground maneuver," then "just don't enter
Lebanon," "just don't strike the Dahieh," and "just don't enter Rafah."
Every time Israel initiated an attack, the world had to pay to make it
stop.
So it was too with the strike in Qatar. The mediators, Hamas, and the
entire axis were sure Israel had lost control. They were ready to
pressure Hamas in ways they hadn't for two years — just to calm down
"the Zionists." That's how the deal bringing 20 hostages home was cooked
up.
Now, with the ceasefire, the whole world is trying to push Israel
back into a defensive stance. The same country that once adopted a
doctrine of keeping wars within its borders fought on seven fronts
simultaneously. The world doesn't like that. Jews, after all, are
expected to defend, not attack.
And so we arrive at the 200 terrorists in Rafah. The mediators demand
Israel releases them in exchange for quiet, for some grand peace plan.
And this is the test: will Israel revert to what it was two years ago,
or has the lesson been learned? Will the world pay Israel to calm down,
or will it be the other way around?
Khan, Caliph, Emperor
The Israeli embassy in Ankara has been closed and gathering dust
since October 7, while our consulate in Istanbul opens only rarely, when
two brave diplomats risk their lives and go there for a few days each
month.
The Turks, on the other hand — take note — have no fewer than 50
diplomats here: 30 in Tel Aviv and 20 in Jerusalem. They're not
cultivating ties with Israel — they're working to undermine it from
within. When Ismail Haniyeh was assassinated in Tehran some 15 months
ago, the Turkish flag at the embassy in Tel Aviv was lowered to
half-mast in mourning.
The ayatollah regime in Tehran has not yet fallen, but one can
already see on the horizon the prophecy of the legendary Middle East
scholar Bernard Lewis — that Iran would become Turkey, and Turkey would
become Iran. 37 percent of Turks see Israel as an existential threat.
Last year, Israel was added to the famous "Red Book" — Turkey's national
security threat list.
Is Israel aware of the danger? Absolutely. Is it acting against it? Not nearly enough.
A well-informed Israeli explained that Turkey accuses us of what it
wants to do. When Erdogan claims that Netanyahu desires "Greater
Israel," it's because Turkey itself has not abandoned dreams of imperial
expansion. When it accuses Israel of genocide — this comes from a state
that itself committed a monstrous genocide, second only to the
Holocaust.
We clash with them in Syria yet fail to grasp the magnitude of the threat.
Erdogan wants to be everything — Khan, Caliph, Emperor. Khan of all
Turkic peoples (the "-stan" countries), Emperor of the Balkan states
once ruled by the Ottoman Empire, and Caliph of the entire Muslim world.
That's why Turkey builds military bases in Sri Lanka, supplies air
defense systems to Bangladesh, and aids Pakistan against India.
Israel is stuck like a bone in the throat. There was a brief thaw in
2023, climaxing with a Netanyahu-Erdogan meeting just before October 7.
Back then, people in the President's Office jokingly called him "Erdogan
Don't Answer." Back then, he was in distress, facing a hostile
Democratic administration in Washington. Now he's a dear friend of
Trump, and if another Democratic administration takes power — Israel
will not exactly find an open door. And so, the antisemitic genie won't
be returning to its bottle anytime soon.
There is something Israel can do: close the Turkish cultural
institute in East Jerusalem, a hub of incitement in and of itself;
reduce the size of the Turkish diplomatic mission; fight relentlessly
against any Turkish presence in Gaza; and cooperate with India against
the shared threat from Ankara.
But this is a dangerous and complex threat — no less than the Iranian
one, and much harder to handle. A few weeks ago, after the attempted
assassination in Doha, a senior American official told their Israeli
counterpart: "You know they're NATO members — if you'd attacked in
Istanbul, we'd have been obligated to defend them." He pretended to
joke, but the Israelis didn't laugh.
Two presidents, two proposals
Two presidents presented two proposals this week to end Benjamin
Netanyahu's trial. Former Supreme Court President Aharon Barak suggested
that Netanyahu should confess, express remorse, retire from political
life — and in return, face no punishment. Donald Trump proposed that
Netanyahu not confess, not express remorse, and not be punished — all so
that he can remain prime minister full-time and without having to ask
the court's permission to make phone calls. What will Netanyahu choose?
Quite the dilemma.
Both deals are problematic. Children born the day the first
investigation against Netanyahu was opened will celebrate their tenth
birthday next month. Most key witnesses have already testified,
including the prime minister himself. The panel of judges has already
suggested shelving the bribery charge. Cleaning house, especially in
light of what was revealed during the trial, demands that justice be
served. Then we will know whether the "house" in question belongs to
Netanyahu and his court, or to the judicial system and its extensions.
Barak's proposal revives an old suspicion: that Netanyahu's ouster
was the goal of the process, not its result. Not to put him in prison,
but to get him out of Balfour Street, his residence when the
investigations began. Trump's proposal, too, is disconcerting, carrying a
whiff of foreign interference in domestic Israeli affairs. Of course,
it would be surprising to discover that it wasn't coordinated in advance
with Jerusalem.
Different though they are, the question — just as in the war against
Iran — is which of the two, Netanyahu or Trump, will take the final
step. It's inconceivable that this whole operation from Washington was
launched only to end with a polite refusal from Israel's president. Will
Trump push for sanctions against judges and prosecutors, as he did in
Brazil and threatened to do elsewhere when former president Jair
Bolsonaro was put on trial? His polite letter to President Herzog
emphasizing respect for judicial independence does not suggest that.
Rather, it is more likely to have been laying the groundwork for
Netanyahu, for the day a letter will be sent from the Prime Minister's
Office to the President's Residence requesting a pardon. Netanyahu could
adopt the approach once used by the Shin Bet heads in the 1984 Bus 300
affair: they admitted the facts, but not guilt. Then-Shin Bet chief
Avraham Shalom even inserted a blatant lie in his letter, claiming Prime
Minister Yitzhak Shamir had ordered him to kill the terrorists.
In our case, most of the facts are not disputed — only the
interpretation is. Netanyahu doesn't deny contacting senior Walla
editors; he just claims everyone does that. He doesn't deny receiving
cigars as gifts; he merely argues that such gestures are allowed between
friends.
So what will President Herzog do? And what will the Supreme Court judges do?
My impression is that there is a strong desire to end the nightmare
of Netanyahu's trial, but also a great fear of how opposition protesters
would respond to any move that might reignite — yes, it's odd to write
this — Netanyahu's political career, this time without the legal
baggage. In plain Hebrew: it's a question of to what extent Herzog will
follow in his father's footsteps — and to what extent the Supreme Court
justices will not follow in Barak's.
Let Hamas have a state, but feel like it didn't
In their statement this week outside their home, the Goldin family
surprised many by pointing an accusatory finger at a long-forgotten
decision — one that, in their view, expressed the abandonment of their
son Hadar. "They could have conditioned the Covid vaccines on Hadar's
return," said his mother, Leah.
Few remember that debate from February 2021. The Knesset's Foreign
Affairs and Defense Committee convened — plexiglass dividers between
members, masks on their faces. On the table: a plan to transfer 500
vaccines to Hamas leaders.
"Anyone who prevents medical staff and civilians from being
vaccinated is responsible for the illness or deaths of those people,"
said MK Ahmad Tibi.
"I don't see Yahya Sinwar taking his vaccine and giving it to the kind nurse in Gaza," replied committee chair Zvi Hauser.
Hauser demanded that the government clarify whether it intended "to
condition this on the return of the soldiers' bodies and the hostages,
or at least to request a Red Cross visit or some information about
them." The answer, needless to say, was negative. No one except Hauser
emerges unscathed from that throwback — neither Netanyahu nor the
opposition.
At the time, Haaretz erupted in outrage. "Zvika Hauser held
one of the most disgraceful committee discussions ever," wrote Zehava
Galon. "When we deny vaccination to a Gaza resident who did us no harm,
we lose part of our humanity," she said. Yariv Oppenheimer added: "Wait a
second — what's the difference between electricity, water, and
vaccines? By his logic we should cut off everything."
"This discussion is shameful, and in 20 years your children will be ashamed of your stance," concluded Tibi.
Five years later, indeed, the discussion seems shameful — but not for the reasons they thought.
The core failure the Goldin family identified in real time was
Israel's decision to let Hamas have a state but feel like it didn't.
Sinwar outsourced governance: he built tunnels, not shelters; collected
taxes, but provided no services. Whenever the citizens of Gaza needed
anything, Israel was the one expected to provide or at least enable it.
Thus came Qatari cash. Thus came the vaccines.
Israel fought Hamas (supposedly) as if it didn't care about Gaza —
and cared for Gaza as if Hamas weren't ruling it. There was always
someone pressing Jerusalem to "separate the population from its rulers,"
and always someone at the top who gave in.
There was also a tragic side effect that led to that fateful night of
October 6-7: those who think they face a terror organization prepare
for a raid — not for an army preparing a full-scale cross-border
assault.
So the kidnappers got vaccines, and from the hostages we heard nothing.
Let's hope this sickness finally finds a cure — though it's far from
certain that it will.
1 comment:
Turkey is thought by many to be semi-respectable while Iran was acknowledged by pretty much everybody to be batshit crazy. Semi-respectable people can often get closer than crazy people before they go off on you.
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