Columbia International Affairs Online: Working Papers

CIAO DATE: 02/2011

Israel's troubled relationship with Turkey and Iran: the "periphery" dimension

Yossi (Joseph) Alpher

December 2010

Norwegian Peacebuilding Resource Centre

Abstract

Israel’s approach to Turkey and Iran must be understood against the backdrop of its “periphery doctrine” of forming alliances with non-Arab and non-Muslim regional actors and its search for a Middle Eastern identity. The “periphery strategy” it pursued in the 1950s led to alliances with, among others, Turkey and Iran, who were viewed as natural allies against the hostile and powerful Arab “centre” spearheaded by Nasserism. In Israel’s eyes, “periphery” peoples also seemed to have broadly accepted the legitimacy of having a Jewish state in the heart of the Middle East. Though the Arab core may have begun to accommodate Israel, it has not become fully reconciled to the idea of Jewish self-determination. The current fragility of a number of states in the Arab world, and the loss of influence of Egypt and Saudi Arabia, leave Israel increasingly fearful of the regional ambitions of the Islamist regimes in Turkey and Iran. It sees Turkey as having betrayed the old alliance formed between the two countries in the face of a hostile Arab world and has thus been reluctant to respond positively to Turkey’s offers to mediate in Israel’s disputes with Islamists and Syria. Tentative efforts to do so were scuppered by the Israeli attack on Gaza in December 2009 and relations with Turkey have seriously deteriorated since the flotilla incident in May 2010.