Πηγή: The Guardian
Thursday 18 August
2011 09.58 BST
UN report into Gaza ship killings had been delayed to allow for possible Israel-Turkey talks
Israel will stick to its refusal to apologize to Turkey for killing nine of its citizens on a Gaza-bound ship, officials have said, a position Ankara said would sink any prospects for reconciliation.
The decision, which officials said the prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, conveyed to the US secretary of state, Hillary Clinton, in a telephone call, was made days before the anticipated publication of the findings of a UN inquiry into the seizure of the Mavi Marmara last year.
The so-called Palmer report was repeatedly delayed to allow for Israeli-Turkish rapprochement talks amid concern in Washington at the rift between two countries that had been strategic partners in an increasingly stormy Middle East.
"We're firm on not apologizing," the Israeli official said in comments later confirmed by the foreign minister, Avigdor Lieberman, in an interview with an Israeli television network, in which he called it "a wise and correct decision".
Pointing at uprisings in the Arab world since January which Israel has been watching warily, Lieberman added that any "message of weakness today would be the most dangerous from Israel's standpoint".
The Turkish prime minister, Tayyip Erdogan, asked by reporters about Israel's comments, replied that "as long as Israel does not apologize, does not pay compensation and does not lift the embargo on Palestine, it is not possible for Turkey-Israeli ties to improve".
The Turkish foreign minister, Ahmet Davutoglu, said in separate comments that "Israel is facing a choice: deeper relations with Turkey or open a gap with the Turkish state that will not be overcome very easily".
The Mavi Marmara was part of an activist flotilla bringing humanitarian aid to Gaza when it was boarded by Israeli marines on the Mediterranean high seas on 31 May 2010. The marines shot dead nine Turks, including a dual US citizen, during fierce deck brawls.
Netanyahu had voiced regret over the killings, and the defense minister Ehud Barak, a centrist in his conservative coalition government, has since stirred debate inside the cabinet by proposing Israel offer a diluted apology in hope of restoring ties with what was once a rare Muslim ally of the Jewish state.
Barak had also thought such a step would help indemnify Israel's navy personnel against lawsuits abroad.
Israeli officials, citing advance copies of the report by a UN panel headed by the former New Zealand prime minister Geoffrey Palmer, have said the document would vindicate Israel's blockade on the Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip.
Israel calls its Gaza blockade a precaution against arms reaching Hamas and other Palestinian guerrillas by sea. Palestinians and their supporters describe the blockade as illegal collective punishment.
Lieberman said the report, which he said would be published on 23 August, was "very positive toward Israel".
In his remarks at a news conference in Istanbul, Davutoglu suggested Turkey would not accept such an outcome. "If the Palmer report does not contain an apology, both sides and the United States know what we will do," he said.
In Washington, the state department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland confirmed that Netanyahu and Clinton had spoken but denied that the US had asked Israel for any apology. "That report is inaccurate," she said.
Kurt Hoyer, spokesman for the US embassy in Tel Aviv, said Washington wanted Israel and Turkey "to look for opportunities to get past the current strains in their bilateral relations".
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