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  • Armenia-Israel: Will The New Ambassador Usher In New Stage In Armeni

    ARMENIA-ISRAEL: WILL THE NEW AMBASSADOR USHER IN NEW STAGE IN ARMENIAN-ISRAELI RELATIONS?
    By Aris Ghazinyan

    ArmeniaNow
    01.11.10 | 13:56

    Analysis

    Meirom (left) told Sargsyan Israel wants to raise bilateral relations
    with Armenia to an excellent level.

    Israel's new Ambassador to Armenia Shmuel Meirom submitted his
    credential to Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan last week. The
    submission of credentials, as a rule, is seen as a usual protocol
    event, but in this case, it was a bit more.

    The political accents of the appointment of a new Israeli ambassador
    to Armenia fit well into the context of fundamentally new regional
    realities, namely, sharp complications in Turkish-Israeli relations.

    At present, the situation in the region is such that Israel and
    Armenia have a common adversary - Turkey.

    In this sense, the relationship between the two states could
    theoretically reach a new perspective level. In particular, the
    powerful Jewish lobby in the United States could theoretically back
    the Armenian resolutions on genocide and thus undermine the Turkish
    positions in the international political arena.

    The Central Jewish Resource www.sem40.ru says: "Turkey may forever
    lose the support of the powerful Israeli lobby in the United States and
    its efforts to block the adoption of an Armenian Genocide resolution."

    In an article in The Washington Times under the headline "American
    Jewish community ends support of Turkish interests on [Capitol] Hill"
    Eli Lake wrote that it was impossible to expect a different result
    of the strong reaction from Ankara to Israeli actions against this
    spring's "Freedom Flotilla".

    He reminds that in 2008, leading Jewish organizations decided no
    longer to block the adoption of the Armenian Genocide resolution in
    Congress, which, in the opinion of the journalist, was a response to
    the worsening Israeli-Turkish relations.

    Meanwhile, still in 2002, Israel's Ambassador to Armenia Rivka
    Cohen stated in Yerevan that "nothing, including the tragedy of the
    Armenians, could be compared with the Holocaust." In that connection,
    Armenia's Foreign Ministry even sent a note of protest to the Israeli
    Foreign Ministry and said that Armenia considered any attempt to deny
    or diminish the fact of the Armenian Genocide, for whatever motivation
    it was made, to be unacceptable.

    The statement of Israel's official representative then elicited a
    wide response among Armenians. Harout Sassounian, the publisher of
    The California Courier, wrote then that "the denial of the Armenian
    Genocide by the Israeli ambassador was done within the position of
    his government. One thing is clear: Israel's leaders are ready to
    sacrifice historical truth for the sake of their strategic relations
    with Turkey."

    However, the situation today is different. This is due to the sharp
    complication of the Turkish-Israeli relations.

    October 30, in connection with the new appointment of the Israeli
    ambassador to Armenia, the Central Jewish Resource wrote that "for
    more than two decades before the eyes of the whole world, Turkey
    and Azerbaijan continue to maintain the blockade of the Republic
    of Armenia."

    The same web portal reminds that "the Armenian National Committee of
    America (ANCA) distributed a memo for the U.S. Congress, which accuses
    Turkey of applying double standards. ANCA stresses that Turkey is the
    last country that has the right to sermonize to other countries. The
    memo lists all acts of violence and aggression committed by Turkish
    leaders both at home and abroad for a hundred years."

    Another Israeli portal IzRus notes: "Perhaps for the first time an
    Israeli ambassador to a former Soviet country, who usually combines
    diplomatic activities in several states, is proposed to focus on
    Armenia."

    Meirom is a career diplomat with more than 30 years of experience. He
    is the former head of the Israeli Foreign Ministry department for
    CIS countries, and in recent years was Israel's ambassador to Croatia.

    In handing his credentials to the Armenian president the diplomat
    said that "cooperation between Armenia and Israel can contribute to
    peace and prosperity in the region" and for the first time assured the
    Armenian leadership that "Israel wants to raise bilateral relations
    to an excellent.




    From: A. Papazian
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