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Israel And The Armenian Genocide

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  • Israel And The Armenian Genocide

    ISRAEL AND THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

    Osservatorio Balcani e Caucaso, Italy
    June 27 2014

    Simone Zoppellaro | Yerevan

    Next year the centennial of the Armenian genocide will be remembered.

    In the international debate on recognition, a special position is
    that of Israel

    For a long time the issue of the Armenian Genocide has been
    considered taboo by the Israeli parliament, the Knesset. Over the
    years, attempts to obtain its public recognition have been vetoed by
    different governments, worried that the move would jeopardize relations
    with the main strategic ally of Israel in the region at that time,
    Turkey. And this regardless of the fact that, since the very first
    years following the events, several in the Jewish world and in the
    Zionist movement itself raised voices of sympathy and condolence for
    a tragedy that in many ways heralded the horrors of the Holocaust.

    Mavi Marmara

    Things started to move only in the aftermath of the Freedom Flotilla
    incident on May 31, 2010, when six ships of activists flying American,
    Swedish, Turkish and Greek flags attempted to break the Gaza Strip
    blockade imposed by Israel to bring humanitarian aid to the civilian
    population. On that occasion, the largest ship, the MV Mavi Marmara,
    was stormed by Israeli special forces, with an operation that cost life
    to nine Turkish activists and caused the suspension of diplomatic
    relations between the two countries. A crisis that, despite the
    American mediation, hasn't been mended yet.

    Less than a year after the events, in May 2011, the Knesset addressed
    the issue of the Armenian genocide for the first time in a public
    session, following the proposal of Zehava Gal-On, an MP from the
    leftist Meretz. For years, proposals like the one of Gal-On had been
    scuppered by successive governments, with the idea that the issue
    should be addressed "through an open debate based on data and facts,
    and not on political decisions or declarations," according to the
    words used in 2009 by Likud Minister Gilad Erdan. Or, to put it in a
    nutshell: outside of the parliament. However, this time no veto came,
    and the issue was discussed openly.

    The Azeri factor

    Still, a new strategic factor of Israeli foreign policy derailed
    once more the recognition of the Armenian Genocide by the Knesset:
    the increasingly close relationship - in political, economic and
    military terms - between Israel and Azerbaijan. A relationship,
    quoting the words of the Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev made
    public by Wikileaks, which is like an iceberg: "nine-tenths of it is
    below the surface."

    The Azerbaijani government, opposed to Armenia cause of the unresolved
    issue of Nagorno-Karabakh, claimed by Baku as part of its national
    territory, adverses any international recognition of the Armenian
    genocide. For this purpose, it uses lobbying and diplomatic pressure
    against countries willing to do so. In the case of Israel, Azerbaijan
    found a great ally in the far-right nationalist party Yisrael Beiteinu.

    The following are the words pronounced on May 18, 2011 by the Deputy
    Minister of Foreign Affairs and member of Yisrael Beiteinu, Danny
    Ayalon: "There is no chance that the Knesset would recognize the
    Armenian Genocide. It is impossible. We cannot afford ourselves to
    deface relations with our main strategic partner in the Muslim world
    - Azerbaijan - for some vexed historical questions concerning events
    that took place hundred years ago." Thus, also in 2011 the question
    of genocide was archived.

    The Erdogan speech

    However, a more significant change of course occurred in recent months,
    when the issue of the Israeli recognition of the Armenian genocide
    came back into the international limelight, raising new hopes in
    Yerevan and among the Armenian diaspora. A decisive contribution,
    according to what reported by the Israeli journalist Akiva Eldar in
    Al-Monitor, was given by the speech delivered by the Turkish Prime
    Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan on the eve of the 99th anniversary of
    the Armenian Genocide, on April 23.

    The speech, though far from recognizing a genocidal will in the
    massacres that took place in the Ottoman Empire starting from 1915,
    represented a significant - and in many ways unexpected - step forward
    in the issue. For the first time, in fact, a Turkish Prime Minister
    addressed his condolences to "our Armenian citizens and all Armenians
    around the world".

    This, apparently, would have produced a certain embarrassment in Tel
    Aviv, in a political establishment still torn between the desire not
    to jeopardize relations with the old and new allies mentioned above,
    and the need to take a stand on an issue that becomes more and more
    hardly avoidable. This, in particular, with the centenary celebration
    of the Armenian genocide just round the corner, in 2015.

    Some steps taken recently by the influential American Jewish
    community were of great importance in the direction of a change. Thus,
    Anti-Defamation League National Director Abraham Foxman, after years
    of denial, finally admitted last May that what happened at the expense
    of the Armenians during WWI can be defined as genocide. Or, just a
    few days before, the publication of a "tribute to memories of the
    victims of the Metz Yeghern" signed by the American Jewish Committee,
    which has provoked a strong protest from the Turkish Ambassador in
    Washington, Serdar Kılıc.

    Reuven Rivlin

    But, most of all, what arouse significant hopes was the election to
    Presidency of Republic of Reuven Rivlin, on June 10. Greeted with
    jubilation by the representatives of the ancient Armenian community
    of Israel and by the Armenian press in general, the fact raised
    great expectations as Rivlin has proven, over the years, to be one
    of the politicians in Israel more involved in the recognition of the
    Armenian genocide.

    Important, in this regard, was the declaration issued last month by
    the same Rivlin. Words that seem to echo the famous statement that,
    according to Louis Lochner of the Associated Press, Adolph Hiltler
    would have pronounced in 1939 ("Who speaks today of the extermination
    of the Armenians?"): "Whoever thought of the Final Solution got
    the impression that, when the day comes, the world will be silent,
    like it was about the Armenians. It is hard for me to forgive other
    nations for ignoring our tragedy and we cannot ignore another nation's
    tragedy. That is our moral obligation as people and Jews."

    Over the last few days, there was a visit to Yerevan by a delegation
    of the Israeli Foreign Affairs Ministry for a series of consultations
    having as objective to expand the cooperation between the two countries
    in the economic and political spheres. On the occasion, the delegation
    visited the Memorial of the Armenian Genocide.

    Hard to say if, in the end, conciliatory positions like that of Rivlin
    will prevail, or instead those of the ones who think "offensive, and
    even blasphemous" (thus Yosef Shagal of Yisrael Beiteinu, in 2008)
    to compare the Armenian genocide and the Holocaust of the Jews.

    Certainly, what remains is the unease towards those willing to
    sacrifice the memory of thousands of victims on the altar of political
    interest.

    http://www.balcanicaucaso.org/eng/Regions-and-countries/Armenia/Israel-and-the-Armenian-Genocide-153540

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