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  • Testing Israel's Diplomacy

    TESTING ISRAEL'S DIPLOMACY

    Ynetnews, Israel
    http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3 443592,00.html
    Aug 29 2007

    The ADL's recognition of the Armenian genocide raises questions on
    relations between Israel and Diaspora Jewish organizations

    Yaakov Lappin Published: 08.29.07, 20:06 / Israel Jewish Scene

    Turkey was, predictably, infuriated by the Anti-Defamation League's
    (ADL) 180 degree turn-around on the ultra-sensitive issue of the
    Armenian genocide because Ankara , Israel's closest Muslim ally in
    the region, relies heavily on Israel and Jewish organizations to
    support its claim that no genocide took place.

    Israeli diplomats were flooded with angry messages from the Turkish
    capital, calling on Jerusalem to 'reign in' the ADL.

    Jewish organization makes dramatic U-turn four days after sacking
    regional director Full Story

    Despite attempts by Jerusalem to explain that it did not control
    American Jewish organizations, Turkey's Ambassador to Israel, Namig
    Tan, told the Azeri Press Agency this week: "Turkey has always
    approached positively the Jewish lobby of America and Israel.

    However, in the aftermath the statement of Anti-Defamation League,
    the approach towards Israel is going to change, and it is not going to
    be positive. I think in this situation the Israeli Foreign Ministry
    should address this diplomatic crisis and demonstrate its power and
    influence to the Jewish lobby in the US, so that such events between
    the two friendly peoples and states are not repeated in the future."

    The crisis was only partially defused after President Shimon Peres
    telephoned the Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan to calm
    the storm, and a statement was released by the Israeli embassy in
    Turkey, urging Jews not to take sides between Turkey and Armenia,
    while acknowledging the "horrible events" and "terrible suffering"
    of the Armenians.

    The diplomatic incident has raised a question mark over Israel's
    relationship with high-profile American Jewish political organizations
    - what happens when Jerusalem and Diaspora Jewish organizations find
    themselves on different sides of the fence?

    According to a source in a well - known Jewish American organization,
    such situations are not new in Israeli history. "This incident with
    Turkey is not the first time this has happened," the source said.

    "Jewish organizations have been involved in the State of Israel since
    before it was set up. They didn't always see eye to eye with Israel.

    Sometimes, Jewish organizations like AIPAC go against the wishes of the
    country. For example, when George Bush Senior wanted to sell weapons
    to Saudi Arabia, AIPAC went against that, not necessarily with the
    Israeli government's approval, and that caused friction," he added.

    According to the source, "Israel sometimes uses world Jewish
    organizations for roles that it couldn't do. It didn't want to
    criticize another country with (good) relations, but it will get
    Jewish organizations to criticize the country. You can have your cake
    and eat it too."

    When it comes to the ADL, however, an independent stance is a
    top priority, the organization's spokesman, Ar i eh O'Sullivan,
    told Ynetnews. "There is a very close relationship between the ADL
    leadership and the leadership of Israel. We've worked together on
    various topics. But the ADL is an independent organization. Everyone
    from the ADL will tell you we have our own positions. Most of the
    time they jive with Israel, and sometimes they don't," O'Sullivan said.

    Can such an independent voice - however legitimate, cause serious
    damage to Israel's diplomatic relations with other nations?

    "It is strange for the action of a US Jewish group stating that
    Turkey committed genocide against the Armenians during World War One
    to damage Turkey - Israel relations. After all, there are many groups
    which take the opposite stance and Israel is hardly responsible for
    the ADL's decision," said Professor Barry Rubin, an expert on Turkey
    and the Middle East.

    "However, there are two reasons why it is damaging," Rubin,
    the director of the Global Research for International Affairs at
    the Interdisciplinary Center in Herzliya, explained. "First, the
    issue is an incredibly sensitive one in Turkey. Aside from pride
    and patriotism, there are also real material reasons for Turkey to
    feel so strongly. Historically, Armenian groups have claimed parts
    of Turkey. If Turkey were to admit guilt it would face demands for
    massive reparations and perhaps territorial concessions," Rubin said.

    "Second, the current government - which has an Islamist past and some
    Islamist elements despite being relatively centrist - is not friendly
    toward Israel and welcomes an excuse to reduce relations. It will use
    the issue in a demagogic way to promote antagonism toward Israel in
    Turkey," he added.

    "Can American Jewish pressure groups damage Israeli relations with
    other countries? Perhaps but this is an unusual case. One also
    remembers how American Jewish pressure groups helped press Israel
    toward a greater activism to free Soviet Jewry in a very beneficial
    way," Rubin said. "What can the Israeli government do? Only point
    out that this is not its stand and that it is not responsible for
    the ADL's actions," he added.

    And that is precisely what the government is doing. Speaking to
    Ynetnews, Mark Regev, the Foreign Ministry's spokesman, said: "We
    work very closely with American Jewish organizations, but ultimately
    they are independent actors." Regev preferred to focus on the "strong
    relationship with American Jewish communities," which he described as
    "unique."

    AIPAC's role

    The American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) proudly displays
    a quote from the New York Times on its website, describing AIPAC as
    "the most important organization affecting America's relationship
    with Israel."

    Could the main pro-Israel lobby group ever find itself at odds with
    Israel? According to David Kreizelman, a foreign policy associate at
    AIPAC's Jerusalem office, the question is not relevant.

    "Most American Jewish organizations are dedicated to some sort of
    ideas. They have clear opinions on subjects, certainly on a subject
    on like this (the Armenian genocide)," Kreizelman explained. "AIPAC,
    unlike other organizations, is totally non-ideological. There are
    a lot of moral and ethical issues that Jews are concerned about in
    the US. The100,000 members of AIPAC are only asked to be part of an
    agenda with one issue, and that is the strengthening of the Israel
    - American relationship, or more specifically the strengthening of
    relations between the democratically elected governments of America
    and Israel," he said.

    "Translating that on the issue of Turkish - Armenian issue, AIPAC is
    not - and I can say this unequivocally - not lobbying on this issue
    at all... Unlike the ADL which has a very clear message on interracial
    inter-ethnic issues," Kreizelman said.

    Debunking Walt and Mearsheimer

    Next week, American Jewish organizations will be attacked in a book
    published by John Mearsheimer and Stephen Walt, in which the American
    academics will expand on their essay, "The Israel Lobby," published
    in the London Review of Books earlier this year. According to Walt and
    Mearsheimer, the Jewish lobby in the US has hijacked American foreign
    policy to benefit Israel, to the detriment of American interests.

    The ADL - Turkey incident serves as an excellent example of why Walt
    and Mearsheimer's conspirational claims of a Jewish cabal are false,
    the ADL's O'Sullivan explained. "There is no such thing as a Jewish
    cabal. The raison d'etre of the ADL is to show that this theory is
    just bigotry. The events involving the ADL and Turkey only goes to
    show that we don't always see eye to eye, and is proof in itself that
    there is no cabal," O'Sullivan said.

    AIPAC's David Krazelman said his organization did not view the book as
    a new development, and drew parallels between Mearsheimer and Walt's
    claims to rhetoric espoused by Charles Lindbergh in the 1930s.

    Lindbergh, the first pilot to fly solo across the Atlantic, was an
    anti-Semitic political activist, who forms a central character in
    Philip Roth's recent novel, The Plot Against America, which offers
    an alternative scenario where Lindbergh becoming president and leads
    America to a pro-Nazi administration.

    Krazelman said he was struck by the similarity of Lindbergh's letters
    to the claims of Mearsheimer and Walt, adding: "There is a core group,
    a small group of people, who say that Jewish influence is detrimental
    to the US. You can see that the vast majority of Americans do not
    feel this way. AIPAC looks at this type of situation and says, look,
    we're talking about steadfast group of people always talking about
    the same kind of thing. Why should we be sidetracked?"

    Speaking to Ynetnews, an Israeli government source, who asked to
    remain anonymous, agreed. "By making a lot of noise over the book,
    we would play into the hands of the authors," he said.
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