Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Armenia and reality

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Armenia and reality

    Jewish Telegraphic Agency
    March 5 2010


    Armenia and reality

    By Ron Kampeas · March 5, 2010


    M.J. Rosenberg at the Huffington Post sees the vote yesterday in the
    House Foreign Affairs Committee recognizing the Armenian genocide as a
    genocide as typical of Israel lobby machinations:

    The lobby has always opposed deeming the Armenian slaughter a genocide
    largely because Turkey has (or had) good relations with Israel. And
    the lobby, and its Congressional acolytes, did not want to harm those
    relations.

    But, since the Gaza war, Turkish-Israeli relations have deteriorated.
    The Turks, like pretty much every other nation on the planet, were
    appalled by the Israeli onslaught against the Gazans. And said so.

    Ever since, the Netanyahu government has made a point to stick it to the Turks.

    (snip)

    That battle is now being carried to Washington. The Israelis are
    trying to teach the Turks a lesson. If the Armenian resolution passes
    both houses and goes into effect, it will not be out of some newfound
    compassion for the victims of the Armenian genocide and their
    descendants, but to send a message to Turkey: if you mess with Israel,
    its lobby will make Turkey pay a price in Washington.

    And, just maybe, the United States will pay it too.

    I think this assessment is wrong, but I first have to admit a degree
    of culpability; M.J. bases this assessment on a parsing of a brief I
    wrote on the vote, and his parsing is fair enough; there's just so
    much I could pack into the brief, and stuff I left out might have led
    him to different conclusions.

    First, let me make clear: I don't think Israel or the pro-Israel lobby
    is behind this vote. What I was trying to report in the brief is that
    while Israel and the pro-Israel lobby helped squelch previous efforts
    to pass this non-binding resolution, this year -- based on a bunch of
    conversations I've had over the past year -- I can safely say that the
    pro-Israel community is hanging back and telling the lawmakers, "Do
    what you feel is right. We're not spending political capital on the
    Turks this season."

    I honestly did not get the sense that anyone in the pro-Israel lobby
    is eager for this resolution to pass; just that they did not feel
    motivated to burn themselves by helping to kill it.

    In fact, this resolution carried in committee at least once before --
    in 2007 -- and it carried because seven out of eight Jews on committee
    voted for it. (The single Jew who voted against was Robert Wexler of
    Florida, who was a friend of the Turkish lobby.)

    So if the Jewish members favored the "genocide" label in the past, why
    did I choose to make a news item of yesterday's vote? Because there
    was a subtle -- but significant -- difference this time. Last time,
    the chairman of the panel, the late Tom Lantos of California, did not
    sponsor the bill -- but he ended up voting for it, after agonizing
    about it in his opening remarks. So too did the other six Jews who
    voted to call the massacres a genocide. And some of them explicitly
    agonized because of Turkey's good relations (at least then) with
    Israel. "This has been tough for me," Gary Ackerman of New York said
    then. Eliot Engel of New York voted "with a heavy heart."

    This time, Lantos' successor as chairman, Howard Berman of California,
    did not dither at all and, in fact, co-sponsored the bill. And despite
    his urgings, it passed by a much tighter margin than in 2007: 23-22
    yesterday as opposed to 27-21 in 2007. (It never reached the full
    House in that session.) This year, Wexler's out of Congress, and all
    seven Jews on the panel were in the "aye" column.

    So what does this really tell us about the Israel lobby? It says,
    first of all, that its frontline -- Congress' Jewish members (and
    please, this is not unusual, Hispanic groups look to Hispanic members
    as their frontline, etc.) -- will at times defy the lobby's wishes.
    They did so in 2007, when pro-Israel groups lobbied very, very hard
    against the resolution. That they felt freer to vote in favor
    yesterday is significant, but the bigger picture underscores that they
    are not the lobby's pawns.

    It also means that lobbies align themselves with existing interests.
    Previous defeats of the bill -- whether in committee, or by keeping
    the resolution from reaching the House floor -- were not the Israel
    lobby's alone. As M.J. notes, the Obama administration, like its
    predecessors, lobbied hard against the bill. Notably, Republicans on
    the committee who are seen as stalwarts of the pro-Israel lobby voted
    nay both times, including Ileana Ros-Lehtinen of Florida and Mike
    Pence of Indiana, and presumably for the same reason: They have close
    ties to the Pentagon, which, because of Turkey's NATO membership, does
    not want it to pass.

    It also means that there are other, competing, lobbies. Adam Schiff of
    California, the perennial sponsor of this resolution, happens to be
    Jewish -- and also happens to represent an Armenia-heavy constituency
    in California. Berman is and Lantos was, not coincidentally, also
    Californians.

    But finally, it means that American foreign policy -- and this is
    something we wonks forget -- is driven, perhaps to a greater degree
    than in any other country, by conscience. By moral choice.

    I'm not saying yesterday's vote is the correct moral choice. The
    doctrine of "realism" in foreign policy implies legitimate moral
    choices of self-interest -- and this vote may not be in Amerca's
    self-interest. And I don't know whether the resolution will go farther
    than the committee -- Nancy Pelosi, the House speaker, kept it from
    the House floor in 2007, and may do so again.

    But there's no question what recent Jewish theory teaches out about
    the Armenian genocide: That it was, indeed, a genocide. In 1986, I
    took Yad Vashem's 3-week intensive study course on the Shoah, and I'll
    never forget what Yehuda Bauer -- the preeminent Shoah scholar --
    taught us: The Armenian genocide was the Holocaust's "cousin if not
    its brother." What persuaded him, he said, was evidence that the
    Ottomans looked to physicians to facilitate the massacres -- a
    precursor of the science the Germans used to speed up their genocide
    just decades later.

    Yesterday's vote might not have been in U.S. interests, according to a
    "realist" foreign policy read. It probably was not in Israel's
    interests, despite the recent coolness between Israel and Turkey.
    (Notably, one Israeli voice who has consistently defied his country's
    "realist" approach and advocated for recognizing the Armenian genocide
    as such is Yossi Sarid -- also a father of the peace movement.)

    American support for Israel has never had a purely "realist," or
    self-interested, cast -- and via Goldblog, Walter Russell Mead at the
    American Realist makes this case better than I ever could. The support
    has been, mostly. a moral choice, whatever you make of the morality.

    And whatever one makes of the wisdom of the vote yesterday -- or in
    2007 -- I remember feeling immensely moved as seven Jewish members
    voted not in the "realist" interests of the State Department or the
    Pentagon or of Israel; but in the interests of never again denying
    that a genocide occurred.


    http://blogs.jta.org/politics/article/ 2010/03/05/1010945/armenia-and-reality
Working...
X