Murat Yetkin: Is Turkey really worried about an Israeli attack?

While it may not attract any attention in the international media, Turkish administration and experts of all political stripes are touting a potential Israeli attack on Turkish targets, even land claims. Why Ankara suddenly turned so paranoid about Israel is unclear, given the geographical distance, Turkey’s formidable economic power and her strong military assets. It could all be PR for domestic consumption.
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Murat Yetkin[/caption]
One of the few impartial Ankara watchers in Turkey, Murat Yetkin wrote about Ankara’s new found pet peeve:
A statement similar to the President’s declaration in the Grand National Assembly of Türkiye about Israel targeting Türkiye had been made by the Speaker of the Parliament, Numan Kurtulmus, at his press conference on September 30. From this, it is possible to infer that the Turkish state may possess information along these lines, possibly communicated to top officials by the National Intelligence Organization (MIT).
The caption reads: Israel's war plans for Turkey[/caption]
We don’t know at this stage what the military-political intelligence is about this, but a development just before the start of the land operation in Lebanon indicated that this intention exists in Israeli government circles. On September 25, The Jerusalem Post, known for its proximity to the Netanyahu government, removed an article titled “Is Lebanon part of Israel’s promised territory?” from its website due to international reactions.
The promised lands discourse in Ankara has only started to be expressed by the highest state officials in the last few days.

The claim of Promised Lands
[embed]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gL2FGaNZ3j4[/embed] Both Erdogan and Kurtulmus associate this with the “Promised Lands” mentioned in the Torah. According to this, Israel’s goal is to establish a “Greater Israel” in the region from the Nile River to the Euphrates River, which includes all of Jordan and Lebanon, the northeastern part of Egypt including Sinai, the west of Syria, and a part of Türkiye’s southern territories. At the parliament opening ceremony, Kurtulmus’s reference to Israel’s “messianic” claim in English, looking at diplomatic representatives, and Erdogan’s mention of Israel’s “religious fanaticism” also allude to the theopolitical strategy of Benjamin Netanyahu’s government based on Jewish law. [caption id="attachment_17129" align="aligncenter" width="875"]