September 15, 2015 | Quote

Turkey’s Flirtation With Terrorists is Falling Apart

A key Hamas official who operated out of Turkey for years was sanctioned by last week by the US Treasury Department for his role in organizing and inciting terrorism in the West Bank and Israel.

And given Ankara's history for working with US-designated terrorists — and some of the disastrous implications by those connections — the most recent designation shows how Turkey's quiet dance with terrorism finance is falling apart.

Saleh Al-Arouri, commander of a powerful arm of Hamas known as the West Bank Qassem Brigades, found refuge in Turkey after Hamas abandoned its Damascus branch due to the Syrian civil war.

Al-Arouri built an infrastructure for his operations in Turkey, finding sympathy from Turkish President Recep Erdogan who has long advocated that the international community recognize Hamas as a legitimate political entity.

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As Dr. Jonathan Schanzer, vice president for the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, has pointed out, Arouri's diplomatic ties to high-level Turkish officials beginning in 2012 was well documented, and the US expressed “concerns about Turkey’s relationship with Hamas” as far back as 2013.

“Because of the way this unfolded, Erdogan is off the hook for allowing al-Arouri to operate from within Turkey all those years,” Schanzer, a former terrorism finance analyst at the US Treasury, said.

“What it does indicate, however, is that Erdogan’s Hamas policy — this idea that Turkey could be an external headquarters for senior Hamas figures — has collapsed.”

While the designation likely won't have a significant negative impact on Hamas, which will stay based out of Gaza and maintain an external headquarters in Qatar, the sanctions against al-Arouri have “hamstrung” Erdogan, Schanzer noted.

“Internally, for those who are aware of it, the sanctions do appear to be a blow,” Schanzer noted.

The US Treasury's decision to sanction al-Arouri now might have something to do with the administration's desire to appease Israel in the wake of the Iran nuclear deal, Schanzer said, and demonstrate to Congress that officials are taking the threat of Iran-sponsored terrorism seriously.

“Still, I'm not sure that the Israelis will say, 'This is wonderful,'” Schanzer said. “Al-Arouri may be out of Turkey, but he's been moved to another country, and the sanctions likely won't have a significant impact on his finances.”

“When [al-Qadi] was first designated, his front companies were all based in Turkey … and he had quite a bit of operations on Turkish soil,” Schanzer told Business Insider in January 2014.

“We don't know exactly what the relationship is with al-Qadi, but we know that his problems started in Turkey,” Schanzer added at the time. “It's very hard to look at this right now without remembering that and asking the question: Has he remained active in Turkey through this time?”

“Nobody really wanted to acknowledge that a senior Hamas military figure was based in a NATO country,” Schanzer said.

“But a few weeks ago, we started to see reports that Arouri had fled Turkey, so Erodgan must have been given warning to get him off Turkish soil.”

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Read the full article here.

 

Issues:

Turkey