Ankara distanced itself further from the West last week by signing a pact with Iran for the exchange of intelligence in real time in their offensives against Kurdish separatists. Tehran will maintain a permanent intelligence officers' mission at the Turkish general command's operations department, while admitting Turkish officers to its own high command operations center. debkafile's intelligence sources report that while the exchanges are formally limited to the war on Kurdish insurgents, they are certain to spread to other spheres. Israel is deeply concerned over this and other developments in the wake of the defection of Turkey, its erstwhile strategic partner and long trusted repository of shared military secrets. Sunday, Aug. 1, defense minister Ehud Barak told the army radio: "… the nomination in recent weeks of a new chief of the Turkish secret services who is a supporter of Iran worries us." It could result, he said "in the Iranians having access to secret information." Two months ago, debkafile reported that Turkish prime minister had appointed an avid admirer of Iran Hakan Fidan as new chief of MIT central intelligence agency. Fidan made friends with Iranian officials during his stint as Turkish delegate to the International Atomic Energy Commission in Vienna and took their side consistently in controversies over Tehran's nuclear program. It was he who came up with the plan earlier this year for a Turkish-Brazilian initiative to bypass big power diplomacy over Iran and scuttle their plans to place Iran under tough sanctions. The intelligence exchange pact Ankara signed with Tehran last week added a fresh element to Israel's worries over Turkey's next steps.
by Maayana Miskin August 1, 2010
Fidan “supports Iran,” Barak said in a private Labor party conference. “There are quite a few [Israeli] secrets in their hands,” he said of the Turkish intelligence organization. “The thought that they may now be open to Iran is disturbing.”
During the conference Barak referred to Turkey as “a strategic ally.”
Ties between Israel and Turkey have been strained for some time. Relations were frozen following the flotilla incident, in which armed Turkish activists attacked IDF soldiers who boarded a Gaza-bound boat, sparking a battle in which nine Turkish citizens were killed.
Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has demanded that Israel apologize for the incident and cooperate with an international investigative committee.
Erdogan decided to appoint Fidan at approximately the same time as the flotilla incident. Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman was quoted in Israeli media as saying that Fidan was chosen more for his religious affiliation than his background.
Fidan previously served as Turkey's undersecretary for foreign affairs and represented Turkey in the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)
DEBKAfile Exclusive Report August 1, 2010
Monday, 2 August 2010
Israeli Military Secrets in Iranian Hands? Barak Concerned
The appointment of Turkey's new National Intelligence Organization head, Hakan Fidan, could end with classified Israeli information in the hands of Iran, a worried Defense Minister Ehud Barak said in a conversation broadcast by Army Radio.
Israel suspects Turkey is betraying its military secrets to Iran
Posted by Britannia Radio at 05:26