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US Jews May Be Ready To Step Into Armenian Genocide Debate

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  • US Jews May Be Ready To Step Into Armenian Genocide Debate

    US JEWS MAY BE READY TO STEP INTO ARMENIAN GENOCIDE DEBATE
    Herb Keinon And Haviv Rettig Gur

    Jerusalem Post
    http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=12 37727530953&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowF ull
    March 24 2009

    Despite a serious strain in relations with Turkey as a result of harsh
    Turkish criticism of Operation Cast Lead, Israel has not changed its
    policy on the question of whether the killing in the early 20th century
    of some 1.5 million Armenians should be characterized as genocide.

    This issue is once again on the agenda as US lawmakers introduced
    last week, as they do every spring, a resolution that would call the
    killings a "genocide."

    "Our position on this has not changed," one senior Israeli diplomatic
    official told The Jerusalem Post.

    Israel's position on this matter was last formally articulated in
    March 2007, when the Knesset shelved a proposal for a parliamentary
    discussion on the issue.

    Health Minister Ya'acov Ben-Yizri, speaking on behalf of Foreign
    Minister Tzipi Livni, said at the time: "As Jews and Israelis, we have
    special sympathy and a moral obligation to commemorate the massacres
    that were perpetrated against the Armenians in the last years of
    Ottoman rule. The state of Israel never denied these terrible acts. On
    the contrary, we understand fully the intense emotional feelings
    aroused by this, taking into consideration the number of victims,
    and the suffering of the Armenian people."

    At the same time, Ben-Yizri also said that Israel understood that
    this was a "loaded" issue between the Armenians and Turks, and that
    Israel hoped "both sides will reach an open dialogue that will enable
    them to heal the wounds that have been left open."

    The diplomatic official said that Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
    Erdogan's vicious criticism of the IDF's actions in Gaza had not
    altered Israel's position on the Armenian genocide issue.

    Israel's position on this is important, because it impacts the position
    of major American Jewish organizations which in the past have helped
    Turkey lobby against the legislation in Congress to declare the event
    a genocide.

    American Jewish leaders insist that "the relationships between Turkey,
    Israel and the United States remain very important," said Conference
    of Presidents executive vice chairman Malcolm Hoenlein.

    "Our position hasn't changed," added Jess Hordes, head of the
    Anti-Defamation League's Washington office. The position currently
    states that that a congressional resolution on the issue would be
    "counterproductive."

    While the ADL has labeled what happened to the Armenians a genocide,
    Hordes noted, "this issue is best handled by the parties themselves"
    rather than by Congress. He also noted that since the Gaza operation,
    the ADL had seen Turkey take steps to deal with anti-Semitism
    domestically.

    "Hopefully the differences that emerged in this operation will be
    behind us. Both countries recognize they have strategic relations
    that are important to maintain."

    But for all the assurances, some Jewish groups say they are beginning
    to see support for Turkey's positions decrease among American Jews.

    In February, shortly after the worst of the Israel-Turkey row over
    Gaza, a senior official in a major American Jewish organization
    admitted that "no Jew or Israeli in his right mind will insult Turkey,
    but next time they might not come to Turkey's aid or equivocate quite
    so much on the issue."

    Another senior official, speaking to the Post on Tuesday, suggested
    the shift may be more dramatic.

    "The grassroots membership of the major organizations has never been
    happy about looking the other way about the massacre of Armenians,
    even if it happened so long ago. After all, 'so long ago' was just
    25 years before the Holocaust," the official said. "But [supporting
    Turkey] was seen as a matter of life or death for Israelis."

    This has changed palpably, the official said. "Erdogan's behavior
    in Davos was disgraceful. He called Israelis 'baby-killers.' He told
    Turkey's parliament that the Jews control the media. He said things
    that, if he were a political leader in America, we'd be demonstrating
    outside his house. People are now asking themselves, 'Who are we
    going to bat for?' There's not a lot of support in the grassroots
    for bending over backwards to meet the needs of Turkey right now."

    Even before Erdogan's outburst, the issue was a point of contention
    among some American Jewish advocacy groups. In 2007, ADL National
    Director Abe Foxman triggered a storm when he reversed the traditional
    American Jewish organizational position on the issue and, while in
    a dispute in the Boston area over the matter, released a statement
    saying that had the word "genocide" existed in the early 20th century,
    it would have been used to describe events of 1915 perpetrated by
    the Ottoman Empire against the Armenians.

    The Turks were infuriated at the time, warning that Turkish-Israeli
    ties could be harmed if the American Jewish organizations did not
    work - as they had done in the past - to ensure that the US Congress
    did not pass a resolution characterizing the massacre a genocide.

    The legislation was eventually removed from the table after then-US
    president George W. Bush and numerous former secretaries of state and
    defense wrote letters saying that passing the legislation would harm
    American interests.

    The Los Angeles Times reported last week that US President Barack
    Obama was hesitating on a campaign pledge to designate the killings
    as genocide. Obama is scheduled to visit Turkey on April 5, and is
    looking to improve ties with Ankara and enlist its help in dealing
    with Iran, Iraq and Afghanistan, something that would be complicated
    by calling the events genocide.

    The paper reported that improved relations between Turkey and Armenia
    were among the reasons the Obama administration was using to explain
    postponing a presidential statement on the matter.
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