25-11-2024 12:01 AM Jerusalem Timing

Israeli Minister Says Turkey Deal Near Completion

Israeli Minister Says Turkey Deal Near Completion

An Israeli minister close to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Thursday that nearly all outstanding issues for a reconciliation agreement with Turkey had been finalized by both sides.

An Israeli minister close to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Thursday that nearly all outstanding issues for a reconciliation agreement with Turkey had been finalized by both sides.

"I'd say we've successfully finished dealing with 90 percent of the topics," Energy Minister Yuval Steinitz said in a radio interview.

Israeli Energy Minister Yuval Steinitz Steinitz's remarks were the latest in a long series of iterations from both sides implying a deal was imminent to end the rift between the former allies.

Turkey was a key regional backer of the Zionist entity until the two countries cut ties in 2010 over the deadly storming by Israeli commandos of a Turkish aid ship bound for Gaza, which left 10 Turkish activists dead.

Tel Aviv apologized to Ankara in 2013, in what many thought would trigger a warming in ties, but tensions soared again the following year when the Israeli occupation launched a military offensive in Gaza.

The two sides held secret talks in December to seek a rapprochement, with another round taking place in February in Geneva.

Pressed by 103FM radio to say when he thought a deal might be completed, Steinitz said he hoped "in the coming weeks."

"There is a huge interest on both sides -- a strategic interest and an energy-related and economic one," he said.

The minister added that the passing in the Zionist entity of a long-debated agreement aimed at enabling the export of some of the country's natural gas to Turkey and Europe would help speed up a deal.

On Tuesday, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said that they had "made some proposals" on ways to ease the shortage of electricity and water in Gaza.

"The developments look like they are going positively," he said.