Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Israeli weapons supply to Azerbaijan is betrayal of memory of Holoca

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Israeli weapons supply to Azerbaijan is betrayal of memory of Holoca

    Haaretz: Israeli weapons supply to Azerbaijan is betrayal of memory of
    Holocaust and act of moral bankruptcy

    15:11 11/04/2015 >> SOCIETY


    ''Ever since I learned that I would be traveling to the
    Nagorno-Karabakh Republic, I thought I was traveling to a dangerous,
    sad, perhaps forlorn and hopeless place, a place where again people
    are being persecuted due to their ethnic Armenian identity. Now, after
    six extraordinary days in Nagorno-Karabakh, I think I know the answer
    to the question of why they don't run away from this small republic in
    the southern Caucasus: It is an incredibly beautiful place; legends
    say it is the entrance to paradise,'' Yair Auron, Israeli historian,
    who has for the past 30 years struggled on behalf of recognition of
    the Armenian Genocide by the State of Israel, writes. The article,
    titled "David and Goliath in the Caucasus," is published on the
    website of the Israeli outlet Haaretz.

    The author notes that about 51,000 people live in Stepanakert, all of
    them Armenian. It is a small but beautiful city, astonishingly clean
    and well designed. Stepanakert is the seat of an elected parliament,
    an elected president, a government and a cabinet. Nevertheless, not a
    single country in the world recognizes the Nagorno Karabakh Republic,
    established on May 12, 1994, following a cease-fire agreement between
    the sides of the conflict. Its total population is 140,000 - 98% of
    whom are ethnic Armenians. The cease-fire ended a bloody war that had
    begun in 1988, and that ended with the Azerbaijanis being driven out.
    At the time, military observers and experts assessed that Armenian
    Karabakh would not survive for long.

    The author highlights that Azerbaijan defines itself as a secular
    Muslim state although it has recently exhibited some extremist Islamic
    phenomena. The border between it and Nagorno Karabakh is 370
    kilometers long; along it, on the Karabakh side, are hundreds and
    perhaps thousands of bunkers.

    ''I was received by the president, Bako Sahakyan and the head of
    parliament; I toured the border zone and spent a few hours in an
    Armenian bunker, where I was able to speak with complete freedom with
    the soldiers.A sign at the entrance to the bunker read: 'If we lose
    Artsakh [the Armenian name for Karabakh], we will be sealing the fate
    of Armenian history.' This feeling is shared by many of the Armenians
    with whom I spoke,'' Auron writes noting that a "prolonged war" is now
    under way and this is the tensest and most difficult period since the
    cease-fire was declared, 21 years ago.

    Noting that not only soldiers are killed in the shootouts, but also
    farmers working their land along the border, the author highlights
    that the Armenian soldiers are forbidden to shoot without explicit
    orders. However, the Azerbaijanis fire indiscriminately, and also
    employ snipers. Auron was allowed to peer toward the Azerbaijani lines
    for only a few seconds.

    Auron also reminds that an Armenian helicopter was shot down in
    no-man's-land during a training flight. For 10 days, the Azerbaijanis
    refused to return the bodies of the three pilots. International
    mediation efforts failed. It was then decided at the highest levels of
    the officialdom of the Armenian side to bring them home for burial on
    their own. Two Azerbaijani soldiers were killed during the rescue
    operation. The Karabakh army was placed on high alert.

    A civilian airfield that was built in recent years near the capital
    city of Karabakh and that is ready to commence operations has been
    paralyzed, because Azerbaijan has openly declared that it will shoot
    down any civilian aircraft flying in proximity to it.

    ''The biblical story of David and Goliath stayed with me all through
    the week. The Karabakh David is certain of the justice of his ways and
    of his eventual victory. Everyone shares this feeling of certainty,
    from the president to the head of the parliament and senior army
    officers, down to the lowest-ranking soldiers. The prevailing
    sentiment is "We want and we seek peace, but we are ready for war and
    we will win it,'' the historian writes adding that the Armenians in
    Karabakh receive significant aid in the conflict from Armenia, but not
    from anywhere else. He heard more than once during his visit that they
    have no one to rely upon other than themselves.

    ''The Karabakhis exude determination, and confidence in their power
    and in the righteousness of their struggle. They speak proudly of the
    "Karabakhi spirit" as a significant factor in bolstering their
    military prowess,'' Auron writes.

    He notes that often, during his visit, he thought of his own country,
    Israel, which ships weapons to Azerbaijan, valued at billions of
    dollars, and the denial over the years by the State of Israel of the
    Armenian genocide have recently been supplemented by new developments
    in the complex relationship between Israel and the Armenians. Rafael
    Harpaz, Israel's ambassador in Baku, Azerbaijan, told a press
    conference there in January that Israel would not recognize as
    "genocide" the killings of Armenians perpetrated by the Ottoman Empire
    100 years ago. No Israeli diplomatic representative has ever said such
    a thing. Asked who gave him the authority to make this statement, the
    envoy replied that he was not saying anything new for the Foreign
    Minister of Israel Avigdor Lieberman had said the same thing. However,
    Auron found no evidence of that claim.

    The author resents: Israel, a country of many Holocaust survivors, not
    only fails to recognize the Armenian Genocide, but also denies it.
    "Without a doubt, the prime minister, defense minister and president
    all know that the sophisticated Israeli arms sold to Azerbaijan are
    intended to achieve a single goal: that of defeating and occupying
    Karabakh. Of banishing the Armenians from there," the historian writes
    stressing that Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev has publicly
    reiterated this objective in nearly every speech he has made in recent
    months.

    The author reminds that in 2012, there were published reports that
    Israel had agreed to a colossal arms deal, valued at $1.6 billion, by
    which it would supply drones to Azerbaijan. The author highlights that
    when Aliyev, in one of his speeches, declared that they had the most
    advanced weapons in the world, he was referring to the weapons sold by
    Israel as well.

    Auron also stresses that the territories, which the Armenian side
    seized during the war, historically belong to Karabakh, and the
    ancient Armenian churches, some dating back to the 10th century and
    even earlier, serve as evidence to this claim. In the 1920's, during
    the rule of Lenin and Stalin, these territories were wrested from them
    and annexed to Azerbaijan, against the will of the Karabakhis, who
    were ethnically Armenian, and the region was severed from the Armenian
    Soviet Socialist Republic. "Soviet Karabakh," however, was not
    identical in terms of its territory to historic Karabakh. During the
    years of Soviet rule, the Azerbaijanis adopted a variety of methods to
    augment the proportion of their compatriots in Karabakh and to reduce
    the number of Armenians, who in the early 1920's numbered about 95
    percent of the residents.

    The author highlights that in all of the villages close to the border
    the mosques were left intact. "We are not barbarians," one Armenian
    soldier told him. Meanwhile, the Ottoman Empire, Turkey in its wake,
    and then Soviet Azerbaijan demolished hundreds of churches -
    converting some of them into mosques, the article reads.

    Auron also writes about his meeting with Bako Sahayan, the President
    of the NKR. In a wide-ranging and informal conversation President
    Sahakyan refused to say a bad word about the Azerbaijanis. He said
    repeatedly that his country seeks peace, but is certain of victory in
    the event of an all-out war. The President emphasized that their
    long-term vision is to gain independence and peace, and to take their
    place in the family of the democratic peoples.

    "The days I spent in Karabakh were formative ones for me, and I intend
    to return. I identify with the struggle of the Karabakhis for freedom
    and independence, and as much as possible will endeavor to take part
    in that effort. I am doing so, first and foremost as a human being,
    but also as a Jew and an Israeli," Auron states.

    It is noted in the article that if out-and-out war breaks out in
    Nagorno Karabakh during the centenary year of the Armenian Genocide,
    the Karabakhis will have only Armenia to rely on. The world was silent
    in 1915, was silent during the Holocaust, was silent during the
    genocide in Rwanda, and has been silent in the face of many other
    similar events.

    "The thought of Israeli weapons going to Azerbaijan makes me lose
    sleep at night. This is a betrayal of the memory of the Holocaust and
    the memory of its victims; it is an act of moral bankruptcy," the
    author writes adding that he and his friend, Itai Mack, an Israeli
    lawyer, for the past few months, have been raising the call to end
    widespread arms shipments to Azerbaijan.

    In response to a Haaretz request to address the subject of defense
    industry sales to Azerbaijan, a Ministry of Defense spokesman said:
    "The ministry is not in the habit of relating to issues of subjects
    related to security exports."

    Related:

    Haaretz: Israel should not sell arms to Azerbaijan, in order to avoid
    repetition of Armenian Genocide

    Argentinian media: Immersed in cozy landscape around Gandzasar it is
    hard to believe that contact line is within hour's drive

    TV channel BBC tells about Armenians' lives in NKR under Azerbaijan's
    permanent threats

    The National Interest: Strategic advantage and favorable defensible
    terrain in Nagorno Karabakh are under Armenian control

    HAARETZ: Western leaders are happy to trade with Aliyev, but less keen
    to be seen with him in public


    http://www.panorama.am/en/miscellaneous/2015/04/11/haaretz/


    From: Baghdasarian
Working...
X