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Israel lobby switch on Armenian genocide

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  • Israel lobby switch on Armenian genocide

    Palestine Note
    March 6 2010

    Israel lobby switch on Armenian genocide


    Ha'aretz reports that Israel's ultra-right foreign minister, Avigdor
    Lieberman, believes the US embargo on Cuba is a good model for dealing
    with Iran.

    Lieberman said Thursday that he doubted the United Nations would
    follow through with Western demands for harsher sanctions over Iran's
    contentious nuclear program, and urged the United States to impose its
    own embargo similar to the one it has held on Cuba for the last 50
    years.

    The 50-years part is quite telling. The United States embargo on Cuba
    has utterly failed in every conceivable way, unless its goal was
    harming the people of Cuba and not the Castro government. In fact,
    the news out of Havana this week was that Fidel Castro himself -- who
    has survived the embargo and 11 American Presidents -- is back in
    charge again, more than three years after supposedly relinquishing
    power to his brother Raul.

    So the Cuba model is unlikely to scare the Iranian government much.
    If a tiny and poor island 90 miles from Florida can survive US
    sanctions for 50 years, the huge and oil rich Iran, 6,000 miles away,
    should do even better.

    Tom Garofalo, a consultant to the New America Foundation's U.S.-Cuba
    Policy Initiative, writes in the blog Havana Note, that Lieberman's
    position is utterly hypocritical.

    For starters, Lieberman believes that the Cuban model works best if it
    includes an international aspect, such that the United States would
    'shun foreign firms that continue to do business with Iran.' That
    extraterritorial component was added to our Cuban Embargo in 1996 with
    the passage of the Helms Burton act. But, perhaps unbeknownst to
    Lieberman, it has been dutifully waived every six months since, at the
    behest of our allies.

    Lieberman may also be surprised to know that one of the first
    countries to suffer the consequences of such a shunning would be
    Israel, a leading investor in Cuban agriculture. The USDA reports that
    Israeli capital has driven a reinvigoration of Cuba's citrus sector,
    to such an extent that an Israeli-Cuban joint venture now produces a
    third of the total citrus grown on the island. (Well, if they can make
    the desert bloom, why not Cuba?)"

    No doubt, Lieberman does not know any of this. He is basically
    illiterate on foreign policy matters. And, even if he did, it
    wouldn't change his views. Besides, he spends most of his time not on
    foreign policy but on avoiding indictment. And that is the good news.
    His tenure is likely to be short.

    Of course, when it comes to foreign policy, hypocrisy is more the norm
    than the exception.

    For example, yesterday the House Foreign Affairs Committee passed the
    Armenian genocide resolution. That is the bill, kicking around for
    years, that recognizes the Armenian genocide as precisely that --
    genocide. The Turkish government has always strongly opposed the
    resolution, arguing -- unconvincingly, in my opinion -- that the
    slaughter of the Armenians occurred in the context of war and was not
    an attempt at their intentional eradication.

    I never understood why the Turks care so much. The current democratic
    Turkish Republic was not even in existence during the Armenian
    slaughter. It is the successor state to the Ottoman Empire under which
    the killing took place. The current Turkish government is no more
    responsible for the Armenian genocide than the current German
    government is responsible for the Holocaust.

    Nonetheless, the Turks vehemently oppose using the term "genocide" to
    describe the events of 1915.

    And successive American administrations have deferred to the Turks by
    opposing Congressional bills "commemorating" the "Armenian genocide."

    It is no different this year. The Obama administration lobbied
    against the resolution because it believed that enacting it would
    disrupt our relations with Turkey, a fellow NATO member and one of our
    most important allies in the Middle East. It also argued that passing
    the bill now would disrupt negotiations now underway between Turkey
    and Armenia.

    It passed anyway and the Turks immediately called its ambassador home.

    But here is where it gets really interesting. The following comes
    from the Jewish Telegraphic Agency, the Associated Press of the Jewish
    world. JTA writes:

    In the past, the pro-Israel community [i.e. the lobby], has lobbied
    hard against previous attempts to pass similar resolutions, citing
    warnings from Turkish officials that it could harm the alliance not
    only with the United States but with Israel -- although Israel has
    always tried to avoid mentioning the World War I-era genocide.

    In the last year or so, however, officials of American pro-Israel
    groups have said that while they will not support new resolutions,
    they will no longer oppose them, citing Turkey's heightened rhetorical
    attacks on Israel and a flourishing of outright anti-Semitism the
    government has done little to stem.

    That has lifted the fetters for lawmakers like Berman (Chairman Howard
    Berman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee), who had been loath to
    abet in the denial of a genocide; Berman and a host of other members
    of the House's unofficial Jewish caucus have signed on as co-sponsors.

    Get that. 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. Most famously, Deputy Foreign Minister Danny Ayalon seated
    the Turkish ambassador in a kindergarten chair during a meeting, and
    "forgot" to put a Turkish flag on the table alongside the Israeli
    flag. He then called the Israeli photographers in and said to them in
    Hebrew (so the Turkish ambassador wouldn't understand), "The important
    thing is that they see he's sitting lower and we're up high and that
    there's only one flag, and you see we're not smiling."

    News of that episode so enraged the Turks and humiliated the Israelis
    that Ayalon had to apologize three times, in progressively more abject
    terms, or face a rupture in Israeli-Turkish relations.

    That battle is now being carried to Washington. The Israelis are
    trying to teach the Turks a lesson. If the Armenian resolution passes
    the House, it will not be for purely compassionate reasons, but
    rather, 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.

    http://palestinenote.com/cs/blogs/blogs/arch ive/2010/03/05/israel-lobby-switch-on-armenian-gen ocide.aspx
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