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  • Poland Pro-Israeli, But Less So

    POLAND PRO-ISRAELI, BUT LESS SO
    by Jerzy Haszczynski

    Rzeczpospolita
    Jan 13 2012
    Poland

    Understanding for Israel's security concerns remains unshaken in
    Poland. But the Polish Government no longer behaves every time the
    way Benjamin Netanyahu's cabinet would like it to.

    On Sunday [ 22 Jan], Poland is meant to be visited by the most
    controversial politician in that cabinet, Avigdor Lieberman, the
    interior minister - known for his drastic ideas for resolving Israel's
    problems, such as incorporating into Israel the part of the occupied
    West Bank of Jordan where there are numerous Jewish settlements,
    and separating out the part where 450,000 Muslim Arabs live. And also
    taking away the rights of Arabs who refuse to take an oath of loyalty
    to Israel and do not serve military duty or an alternative thereof.

    During a time particularly difficult for Israel, when the threat
    of Iran producing an atomic bomb is growing ever closer and it
    remains uncertain how the revolutions in the Arab countries will
    end, such views are particularly problematic for diplomacy. And they
    make it harder to support Israel, even for a country considered to
    be pro-Israeli.

    One can still hear Israeli politicians and experts saying that Poland
    is such a country, and moreover one of Israel's few allies.

    Palestinian politicians say similar things, and reproachfully at that.

    Poland still is pro-Israeli given the standards of the EU. Israel
    is supported similarly or more strongly by the Czech Republic, the
    Netherlands, Germany, and Italy (at least under Silvio Berlusconi).

    Poland continues to boycott the international meetings called Durbans,
    at which countries like Iran organize anti-Israeli hate-fests,
    pointing to the Jewish state as the source of everything evil in the
    world. Several weeks ago Poland also blocked an EU report initiated
    by the United Kingdom, which spoke of the persecution of Israeli Arabs
    and urged the EU member states to take patronage over Arab villages.

    However, on other issues Poland has become more cautious than it
    was just a few years ago. It did not want to promise Israel that it
    would vote against a motion to recognize Palestine's independence,
    if one appeared at the UN General Assembly. At the same time it
    promised, as Donald Tusk said distinctly, that it would not support
    any resolution threatening Israel's security. There continues to be
    a strong understanding that Israel has to have the right to defend
    itself from the enemies surrounding it.

    On another important issue, Palestine's acceptance into UNESCO, the
    first serious international organization in which it conclusively
    gained membership at the end of October, our country abstained from
    voting (of the EU countries, Germany, the Netherlands, and Sweden
    voted against, whereas France, Belgium, and other countries were in
    favour). That vote pushed Poland into the group of moderate allies,
    those not understanding the policies of the Netanyahu government,
    which in times so difficult for the country has even been capable of
    irritating the US President.

    It was not just politicians and political analysts who noticed
    that Poland has supported Israel over the past 20 years. That fact
    reached ordinary Israelis. As I was told by a venerable Israeli
    columnist, there are also a lot fewer comments being made that Poles
    are anti-Semites, and a lot more sympathy to the old homeland of a
    significant segment of citizens. This has also been contributed to
    by cultural events, the renewal of Jewish festivals in Poland.

    However, Poland has not gained the kind of good image in Israel
    that Germany has, for instance, which seems unfair considering the
    significance of the tragic heritage of WWII for the history of the
    Jewish state.

    And important Israeli politicians can do a lot on the image issue.

    When Israel was anxious to gain Bulgaria's support, Prime Minister
    Netanyahu in Sofia delivered a speech in praise of the Bulgarians'
    stance during WWII. Although they were allies of Hitler, they behaved
    the best during the Holocaust - he said.

    The debate now underway within Israel about the genocide of Ar menians
    carried out by Turkey shows that even on such a touchy issue for a
    state that treats the Holocaust as a one-of-a-kind event in history,
    it is possible for wrongs committed against another nation to be
    recognized. That has happened because the Israelis have seen the
    Armenians, and the Armenian lobby that is strong in the West, as
    allies in their clash against their former ally, Turkey.

    Things are different as regards Poland. Several weeks after meeting
    Prime Minister Donald Tusk, Benjamin Netanyahu appeared in an
    advertisement intended to exert pressure concerning the issue of the
    reinstatement of Jewish assets and the payment of compensation.

    Irrespective of how one views the problem of reprivatization, which
    remains unsolved in our country (and after all does not just pertain
    to Jews), that was not a friendly gesture to Poland. It also came
    as a considerable surprise to an ally whose diplomatic support is
    frequently expected.

    [translated from Polish]

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