www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/203858#.VlQ4pXYrKj0
www.rt.com/news/323215-warplane-crash-syria-turkey
#SONDAKİKA!
SURİYE SINIRINDA UÇAK DÜŞTÜ
BÖLDEGEKİ KAYNAKLAR: SINIR İHLALİ YAPAN UÇAĞI TÜRK JETLERİ DÜŞÜRDÜ pic.twitter.com/G4brsWSY1P
— Habertürk TV (@HaberturkTV) נובמבר 24, 2015
Yosef Hartuv: The announcement of the restoration of Israel-Turkish relations should be seen in the context of Turkey having nowhere else to go. The basis for increased trade, including gas sales, is there, and Israel has weighed the price and found it acceptable. Israel will pay Turkey $20 million; Turkey will expel the Hamas leadership from Istanbul and will purchase Israeli gas.
It’s not as if Turkish-Israel relations were ever entirely severed. Turkey-Israel trade doubled in the past five years, to $5.6 billion. Turkish businesses have been shipping goods to Israel by sea, then trucking them across the country to Jordan and beyond, in order to avoid having to ship overland through Syria.
Turkey was and remains a conduit for arms and money for various parties to the Syrian civil war. Turkey also has bombed Kurdish fighters; deployed its forces to Iraqi territory and declined to remove them; and sold ISIS oil on the black market. There are allegations that the Turkish government knew sarin gas was transferred to ISIS across Turkish territory.
In November, Turkey shot down a Russian military jet, in the biggest move down the current slide of Turkish-Russian relations, which began when Vladimir Putin stepped in to prevent the collapse of Syria. [This is on top of historical animosity between Turkey, the successor to Muslim Ottoman rule, and Russia, the self-proclaimed defender of the Christian Orthodox Church.] Russia, furious at the downing of its plane, instituted a series of economic sanctions against Turkey, the most important of which is suspension of the TurkStream project, designed to boost Russian gas exports to Turkey. Turkey is the second-largest importer of Russian gas, after Germany.
Alon Liel, former Director General of the Israeli Foreign Ministry said, "Turkey needs friends." That is an understatement.

















