Turkey's intel severs ties with Mossad
ANKARA, Turkey, Oct. 26 (UPI) -- Turkey's intelligence establishment  has severed working ties with Israel's Mossad, further proof of strained  relations between the countries, officials said.
A report in the Sabah newspaper quoted officials as saying the two  agencies that once enjoyed close cooperation have stopped exchanging  intelligence and conducting joint operations.
High-ranking Israeli officials privy to the matter neither confirmed  nor denied the Turkish report and Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu's  office refused to comment, Haaretz reported Tuesday.
In June, Israeli security officials expressed concern on the  appointment of Hakan Fidan to lead Turkey's National Intelligence  Organization. Fidan, a close associate of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip  Erdogan, is viewed as a proponent of closer relations between Turkey and  Iran, the Israeli daily said.
Turkey has also conditioned its consent to stationing a NATO  missile-defense system in its territory on a guarantee no information  collected by the system be transferred to Israel, the Israeli daily  said. 
Relations between Israel and Turkey began deteriorating last year  following Israeli's three week military offensive in the Gaza Strip.  Ties worsened after Israel raided a Turkish boat carrying aid to Gaza in  May, in which nine Turkish activists were killed.
 
 
 
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