ISTANBUL: Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Saturday (Dec 2) pushed back against mounting United States pressure to cut Ankara’s historic ties with Hamas in the wake of the militants’ unprecedented attacks on Israel.
The US Treasury’s top terrorism financing official conveyed Washington’s “profound” alarm about Ankara’s past relations with Hamas during a visit to Türkiye this week.
Under Secretary Brian Nelson said Washington has not detected any money passing through Türkiye to Hamas since the Gaza war broke out eight weeks ago.
But he argued that Ankara had helped Hamas access funding in the past and should now use local laws to clamp down on potential future transfers.
Erdogan said on Saturday that Washington was well aware that Türkiye does not view Hamas as a terrorist organisation.
A week-long truce, over 100 hostages freed: The fragile Israel-Hamas deal that collapsed
“First of all, Hamas is a reality of Palestine, it is a political party there and it entered the elections as a political party and won,” he said in remarks released by his office.
“We form our foreign policy in Ankara and design it only according to Türkiye’s interests and the expectations of our people,” Erdogan said.
“I am sure that our interlocutors appreciate Türkiye’s consistent and balanced foreign policy steps in such humanitarian crises and conflicts.”
Israel on Friday resumed punishing air strikes after the sides failed to extend a seven-day truce that had seen 80 Israeli hostages released in exchange for 240 Palestinian prisoners.
Hamas fighters killed about 1,200 people – mostly civilians – and took around 240 Israelis and foreigners hostage, Israeli officials say, after breaking through the militarised border into southern Israel on Oct 7.
The Hamas authorities who run Gaza say Israel’s retaliatory air and ground campaign has killed more than 15,000 people – also mostly civilians.
– CNA