Israel Palestine Infos
16.1.10
“Kill Another Turk…”
I TRIED to resist the
temptation to tell the same classical Jewish joke a second time, but
circumstances delivered a plausible excuse.
Almost every Jew knows the
sentence “Kill a Turk and rest.” The whole story goes like this:
His tearful mother takes
leave of him at the railway station and implores him: “Don’t overexert yourself!
Kill a Turk and rest. Kill another Turk and rest again…”
“Kills you?!” the mother
exclaims in sheer disbelief, “But why? What have you done to him?”
Turkish television aired a
rather primitive series, in which Mossad operatives kidnap Turkish children and
hide them in the Israeli embassy. Valiant Turkish agents free the children and
kill the evil ambassador.
One can ignore such an
obnoxious story altogether or protest mildly. But our illustrious Foreign
Minister thought that this was the right occasion to demonstrate to all and
sundry that we are no longer abject ghetto Jews who take everything lying down,
but proud, upright Jews of a new breed.
So the Deputy Foreign
Minister, Danny Ayalon, summoned the Turkish ambassador to the Foreign Office in
When the ambassador
arrived, he was surprised to see the place crawling with TV crews and
journalists. He was left waiting for a considerable time and then shown into a
room where three solemn officials, including Ayalon, were perched on high
chairs. He was seated on a low sofa without arms, and had no choice but sit in a
reclining position.
Not satisfied with this,
Ayalon expressly requested the media people (in Hebrew) to pay attention to the
difference in height between the chairs and the sofa, to the absence of the
Turkish flag on the table, as well as to the fact that the Israelis did not
smile and did not shake hands.
Perhaps Ayalon drew his
inspiration from a memorable scene in Charlie Chaplin’s movie The Great
Dictator, in which Hitler and Mussolini sit on barber’s chairs, each of them
jacking his chair up so as to tower above the other, until both chairs topple
over.
Ayalon then delivered
(again in Hebrew) a sharp rebuke - all Israeli media used this word rather than
the diplomatic term “protest”.
Well satisfied with his
work, Ayalon saw to it that it got maximum exposure in the media, especially on
television.
The Turkish reaction was,
of course, violent. Turks are more sensitive about their national dignity then
most (witness their reactions to allegations about the Armenian massacre almost
a hundred years ago), so they were foreseeably upset.
Ayalon got, of course, the
unreserved backing of his minister, mentor and party boss, Avigdor Lieberman,
who was full of praise.
A few weeks before,
Lieberman had assembled all the Israeli ambassadors from around the world, some
150 of them, for a pep talk. He rebuked them for not properly defending the
honor of Israel and announced a radical new policy: from now on, the main duty
of an Israeli ambassador is to stand up for the dignity of his country, attack
anyone who criticizes Israel and leave no insult unanswered, be it big or small.
This should take precedence over all other diplomatic duties.
No one in the audience,
which was mainly composed of long-standing career diplomats, dared to get up and
point out that there may be more important Israeli interests, such as good
relations with foreign governments, military and intelligence ties and economic
matters. Except for one ambassador - who smiled and was soundly rebuked - nobody
demurred.
In less that a year in
office, Lieberman has already broken a lot of diplomatic china. He has insulted
several friendly governments. In one noteworthy case, he publicly rebuked the
Norwegians for celebrating the anniversary of their national writer, Knut
Hamsun, who had sympathized with the Nazis. In another case, he attacked the
Swedish government for not protesting publicly against an article by a minor
scribbler in a Swedish newspaper, in which he made the ridiculous accusation
that Israeli soldiers kill Palestinians in order to sell their organs for
transplants. Lieberman’s exaggerated reaction turned this into world news.
His tendency to insult
foreign governments – a rather original trait for a foreign minister – may have
been exacerbated by the refusal of many of his foreign colleagues to meet with
him, considering him a racist or an outright fascist - as, indeed, do most
Israelis.
When Netanyahu set up his
government and appointed Lieberman as his foreign minister, the news was at
first met with incredulity. A more absurd appointment could hardly be imagined.
But Netanyahu needed him, and could offer him neither the Treasury, which he
wanted to lead himself by proxy, nor the defense ministry, which is the private
domain of Ehud Barak. The foreign ministry, which few people in
Therefore, Netanyahu could
not criticize these two Neanderthals, Lieberman and Ayalon, and their antics.
But Barak was hopping mad.
As it so happens, Barak is
due to visit
Lately, some dispute has
arisen about drones supplied by
Be that as is may, the
whole Israeli establishment realized that Ayalon’s stupid charade has done great
damage. He was obliged to retract, and did so in a graceless, half-hearted
manner, without first finding out whether this would satisfy the Turks. It did
not – and the Turks, becoming more and more furious, demanded a clear and abject
apology. This demand was presented as an ultimatum – until midnight on
Wednesday, or else. Else meant the recall of the ambassador and the downgrading
of relations.
Netanyahu caved in. Ayalon
apologized again, this time unequivocally, and the Turks graciously accepted.
Barak will be going to
Behind this childish
episode lurks the more serious problem of Turkish-Israeli relations.
The Turkish Prime Minister,
Recep Tayyip Erdogan, reminded
These historic memories
were, alas, erased during the short period of Zionist relations with the Turkish
administration in
Cordial relations were
resumed only when masses of Israeli tourists started to arrive at Turkish
resorts and were surprised by the warmth of their reception. The tourists love
it.
SO WHAT is happening now?
Turks, like all Muslims, were upset by last year’s
After being shown the cold
shoulder by the European Union,
The relationship between
So what about the joke?
Well, it serves as a reminder that provoking the Turks is not necessarily a good
idea.