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Armenian Genocide Crisis Tests Tight Ties Between Turkey And Israel

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  • Armenian Genocide Crisis Tests Tight Ties Between Turkey And Israel

    ARMENIAN GENOCIDE CRISIS TESTS TIGHT TIES BETWEEN TURKEY AND ISRAEL
    Marc Perelman

    Forward, NY
    http://www.forward.com/articles/11509/
    Aug 29 2007

    ADL to Ankara: 'Deep Regret'

    Turkish, Israeli and American Jewish officials held frantic
    consultations in the past week in an effort to defuse a diplomatic
    crisis prompted by the Anti-Defamation League's recent description of
    the Ottoman massacre of Armenians during World War I as "tantamount
    to genocide."

    Senior Israeli and American Jewish officials went out of their way
    to restate Jerusalem's long-held view that the historical dispute
    should be resolved between Turkey and Armenia, a position shared by
    Washington as well as most major American Jewish organizations. The
    ADL itself tried to calm tensions by issuing a statement opposing a
    congressional resolution recognizing that a genocide took place and
    by sending a letter to Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan
    expressing "deep regret" and the desire to "deepen our friendship."

    And after initially warning Israeli diplomats and American Jewish
    leaders that the ADL's use of the word "genocide" could jeopardize
    years of efforts to forge close ties between Jerusalem and Ankara,
    the Turkish government also sounded a conciliatory note.

    "Everybody wants a period of calm," Nabi Sensoy, Turkey's ambassador
    to the United States, told the Forward after holding talks with key
    Jewish communal leaders. "We have to avoid at all costs the derailment
    of good relations between Turks and Jews."

    Both the extent of those good relations and their vulnerability to
    disagreement over the massacre of Armenians were put on stark display
    by the flare-up.

    Israel and its supporters in the United States have been nurturing
    ties with the Turkish government for years, maintaining close relations
    even after Erdogan's Islamist party took office in 2002.

    Turkey, for its part, has cultivated Jewish support in Washington in
    an effort to secure American diplomatic and military support and to
    prevent Congress from involving itself in the Armenian issue.

    The decades-long ties between Turkey and Israel's supporters in
    the United States strengthened considerably during the 1990s, when
    Jerusalem and Ankara reached a number of business and military
    agreements. In recent years former congressmen Richard Gephardt,
    Bob Livingston and Steve Solarz joined the American Israel Political
    Affairs Committee in lobbying Washington to give military aid to
    Ankara and to fight off congressional efforts to pass a resolution
    recognizing the Armenian genocide, according to several sources
    familiar with the issue.

    Most Jewish organizations are quick to underscore that Turkey became
    the first Muslim country to recognize Israel, praising it as a rare
    Muslim ally of Israel and the United States. Jewish communal officials
    have hailed Ankara's commitment to fighting antisemitism and terrorism,
    its support for Magen David Adom's candidacy for membership in the
    International Committee of the Red Cross and its willingness to
    mediate between Israel and both the Palestinians and the Syrians.

    While tensions have surfaced over Ankara's refusal to allow American
    troops to use Turkish territory to invade Iraq in 2003 and over
    meetings between Turkish officials and Hamas leaders, last week's
    flare-up was notable for revolving around an issue considered to be
    tangential to Jewish and Israeli interests. As Ankara continued to
    make clear this week, Turkish cooperation is dependent in no small
    part on the understanding that the topic of Armenian genocide is not
    one for public debate.

    Sensoy told the Forward that Turkey was "very disappointed" by the
    ADL's statement "because it changed the premise of everything we had
    achieved with the U.S. Jewish community."

    The ADL described the massacres of Armenians by Ottoman Turks as
    "tantamount to genocide" last week, after declining for years to
    take a position on the question. Two days later, the group issued a
    second statement stating that a congressional resolution would be a
    "counterproductive diversion" that may "put at risk the Turkish Jewish
    community and the important multilateral relationship between Turkey,
    Israel and the United States."

    Other major Jewish groups have been mostly mum on the issue. In
    a blog post, the American Jewish Committee's executive director,
    David Harris, wrote that while he could not escape the conclusions
    of credible experts that the 1915 events were in fact "genocide," he
    argued, as Ankara does, that Turkish and Armenian historians should
    review the record and seek common ground.

    While several European countries have passed laws referring to the
    massacres as genocide, both the Israeli and American governments
    have refused to make such a determination, and efforts to have their
    legislative branches adopt such language have so far failed. In March
    the Knesset shelved a proposal for a parliamentary discussion on
    the Armenian genocide, but on Capitol Hill a nonbinding resolution
    recognizing that a genocide took place has picked up some support
    since Democrats regained a majority in last year's midterm elections.

    Foxman told the Forward that he has had numerous conversations about
    the issue in recent days and stressed that the ADL had not changed its
    position on the congressional resolution. The ADL did, however, rehire
    its New England regional director, Andrew Tarsy, after firing him
    for publicly breaking with the national leadership and acknowledging
    the Armenian genocide. Foxman said he had made the decision after a
    series of conversations and that this effectively meant Tarsy agreed
    with the ADL's opposition to the passage of a congressional resolution.

    "We want to make sure the Turkish government understands that the use
    of the word 'genocide' doesn't change our position on what Congress
    needs to do," Foxman told the Forward. "Some people don't understand
    it. Some people understand it, and the Turkish prime minister is
    among them."

    Foxman was referring to remarks Erdogan made to reporters Sunday, in
    which he said that "the wrong step that has been taken is corrected."

    Prior to Erdogan's response, Ankara had lashed out both to express
    disappointment and to prevent other Jewish groups from following
    suit. Turkey's foreign minister, Abdullah Gul, complained bitterly to
    Israel's ambassador in Ankara, Pinhas Avivi, that Israel could have
    done more to prevent the ADL's shift during a tense meeting last
    Thursday, Ha'aretz reported. Israeli President Shimon Peres spoke
    last week with Erdogan to explain that Israel had no intention of
    changing its neutral policy on the issue.

    Turkey's ambassador to Israel, Namik Tan, made clear to The Jerusalem
    Post on Sunday that Ankara expects at least as much from Israel,
    demanding that Jerusalem "deliver" American Jewish organizations and
    ensure that Congress does not pass the genocide resolution.

    "Israel should not let the Jewish community change its position,"
    Tan reportedly said. "This is our expectation, and this is highly
    important, highly important."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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