Turk demands for meeting not acceptable: Peres
UNITED NATIONS A planned meeting between Israeli President Shimon Peres and his Turkish counterpart was scrapped because of the Israeli leaders refusal to apologize for the deadly commando raid on a Turkish-led flotilla that tried to breach Israels blockade of the Gaza Strip, Israeli officials said on Monday.
Classic sucker punch. Offer a meeting then put conditions on it after the other guy says okay. | In the latest bid to repair Israels relations with its only Muslim ally in the region, Peres told reporters he had agreed to join Turkish President Abdullah Gul at the Clinton Global Initiative in New York, then accepted Guls invitation to meet on the sidelines. But Israeli officials said Gul then set unacceptable conditions for the meeting.
Gul on Monday denied that any such meeting had ever been planned. That is not true, the Turkish president said. There was never a meeting scheduled between us.
Then deny it all ever happened. | A report by Turkeys state-run Anatolia news agency quoted Gul as telling reporters in New York on Sunday that he would not meet with Peres because of a scheduling problem. Some reports had suggested that the two men would meet in a sign of a thaw in strained relations between the two formerly close allies.
Peres told reporters that he found Turkeys conditions for a meeting with Gul to be unacceptable. I got some conditions which made this meeting in my judgment not a positive one, Peres told reporters as the UN General Assemblys Millennium Development Goals summit was getting under way.
Now we didnt change our attitude to Turkey. We were friends, we remain friends. Maybe Turkey changed her mind, and thats for the Turks to decide, Peres said. We dont intend to worsen the situation. Neither can we submit to preconditions which are totally unacceptable.
Peres did not elaborate on the preconditions. But senior Israeli officials confirmed that Gul wanted Israel to publicly apologize for the flotilla raid.
The Turks came with the demands that could not be met ..., said Israels UN Ambassador Meron Reuben. The demands included that we apologize for the flotilla incident, he said.
Posted by: Steve White 2010-09-22 |