An Unfulfilled Opportunity for Reconciliation: Israel and Turkey during the Arab Spring

Author (Person)
Series Title
Series Details Vol.14, No.2, April 2012, p121-136
Publication Date April 2012
ISSN 1302-177X
Content Type

2011 brought an opportunity for Israel and Turkey to mend their bilateral relations. The re-election of Erdoğan in
June 2011, coupled with the dramatic events of the Arab Spring, provided a new political and regional context in
which the relations could be reevaluated. This context enabled Turkey and Israel, with US mediation, to make progress towards drafting an agreement between them – an agreement intended to enable the two countries to restore normal working relations following the 2010 flotilla incident.

However, the draft agreement was eventually rejected by the Israeli government in August 2011, leading to a new cycle of escalating tensions between the two countries. This article analyzes the Israeli decision-making process and discourse regarding the crisis with Turkey, and examines the changing circumstances of 2011, including the impact of the Arab Spring and the contrasting Israeli and Turkish reactions to it; the dynamics leading to the Israeli decision to reject the draft agreement; and the possible next phases in Israel-Turkey relations, including the conditions that can provide a new opportunity for the two former allies to become less alienated.

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