Why Israel does not recognize the Armenian genocide..
Here's one instance where Israel is on the same
side as many other countries in the Middle East.
On
Friday, April 24, Armenians around the world will mark the centennial
of what they call the "Great Catastrophe,"
when an unraveling Ottoman Empire ordered the forced deportation of ethnic
Armenians. Estimates vary, but between 300,000 and 1.5 million Armenians
perished in 1915 and 1916 -- victims of hideous abuse and systematic
slaughters that WorldViews detailed here.
The
Armenian government and diaspora are insistent about what this was: a genocide.
But many other countries, including Israel and the United States, don't
recognize what happened a century ago as a
"genocide." Instead, official statements refer to the "Events of 1915,"
massacres, "terrible carnage"
and a "humanitarian tragedy."
The reason for this skittishness is nationalist
politics. Successive Turkish governments have roundly rejected the idea of
genocide, and argue -- somewhat against the historical consensus -- that the
Armenian suffering should be seen in the wider context of the implosion of the
empire.
Current
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan made a
significant departure from previous Turkish leaders last year when he
offered condolences for the "inhumane" treatment of Armenians by the
Ottomans. But last week, after Pope Francis invoked the "g-word," the
Turkish government responded angrily to the Vatican. Prime Minsiter Ahmet
Davutoglu even suggested that the pontiff had joined "an
evil front" against Turkey.
"Ankara
continues to consider the use of the word genocide a
hostile act,"writes Negar
Goksel, of the International Crisis Group. "That reflex runs counter to
the tone of empathy, freer debate, and an expressed eagerness for an unbiased
examination of history that has crept into the government’s statements in
recent years."
For
decades, the stubborn Turkish position compelled the United States, a
staunch ally, to avoid ruffling Ankara's feathers. The same was true for
Israel, which, ironically until Erdogan's rise, had close political and
military ties to Turkey.
Recently, a host of Western governments have passed
resolutions recognizing the genocide. And the voices within Israel for a
shift in its position are also getting louder -- not least given Israel's
unique history as a state created in the wake of the 20th century's most
well-documented genocide.
"In foreign policy, there are interests and
there are values," said Nachman Shai, an Israeli lawmaker who is part of
delegation attending the centennial commemoration in Armenia, in an interview
with the Associated Press. "In this case I think values should
trump interests. As Jews, we must recognize it."
That's an argument echoed by Aris Shirvanian, the
archbishop of the Jerusalem Armenian Patriarchate. "We, the Armenians
and the Jewish people, have suffered the same fate, and the Armenian genocide
has served as a predecessor to the Jewish Holocaust," Shirvanian told the AP. "So Israel should have been actually one of the
first countries to support and recognize the Armenian genocide."
That's not about to happen, given Israel's
careful stance on the matter.
There's also another curious geopolitical wrinkle, reports Al-Monitor. Israel has a conspicuously close relationship to Azerbaijan, a
Muslim-majority state that, like Armenia, emerged after the collapse of
the Soviet Union. Israel imports 40
percent of its oil from Azerbaijan and exports a considerable
supply of weapons and defense systems to Baku.
Armenia and Azerbaijan do not get along, and still
feud over the disputed territory of Nagorno-Karabakh, a largely
Armenian enclave inside Azerbaijan that the two countries battled over shortly
after winning independence in 1991.
Last week, after the European Parliament passed a
resolution calling on Turkey to recognize the Armenian genocide, Azerbaijan's
foreign ministry spokesman said it
was an example of European double-standards -- since Armenia has yet to atone
for its alleged role in deadly massacres in the 1990s.
There are multiple, complicated layers of history
here, but Israel knows what's clearly in its interest. Azerbaijan, petro-rich
and perched on Iran's border, is a useful friend --
at least more so than tiny, land-locked Armenia.
Source: Ishaan Tharoor -Washington Post.
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