New York Times quotes Turkish government officials as saying as many as 10 parliament members considered boarding Mavi Marmara. 'Mission to Gaza served both IHH and government by making both heroes at home and in Arab world,' terror expert says.
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Turkish diplomats and government officials told the New York Times that the Turkish organization that led the Gaza-bound flotilla in late May has extensive connections with Turkey’s political elite, and the group’s efforts to challenge Israel’sblockade of the Hamas-run territory received support at the top levels of the governing party.
Ercan Citlioglu, a terrorism expert at Bahcesehir University in Istanbul, told NYT that the government “could have stopped the ship if it wanted to, but the mission to Gaza served both the IHH and the government by making both heroes at home and in the Arab world.”
The Turkish government, for its part, said the group acted independently and that its leadership had refused to drop plans to break Israel’s naval blockade of Gaza, despite requests from the government. Government officials told NYT they had no legal authority to stop the work of a private charity.
Egemen Bagis, Turkey’s minister for European affairs, was quoted by NYT as saying that the organization and the Justice and Development Party, called the AK Party, had no substantive ties. “The IHH has nothing to do with the AK Party, and we have no hidden agenda,” Bagis said.
Semih Idiz, a columnist for the Hurriyet Daily News in Turkey, wrote, "How can such a large country as Turkey, with interests in four continents, and with an export- and investment-driven economy requiring extra caution all around the globe, be dragged to the brink of war by a nongovernmental organization?” The answer, he added, is that the IHH is a “GNGO” — a “governmental-nongovernmental-organization.”