Henry Srebrnik, [Calgary] Jewish Free Press
When it comes to its foreign
policy towards Russia and Ukraine, Israel walks a diplomatic tightrope.
The Jewish state must take into
consideration all kinds of factors: its relationship with both countries, one
of them a great power; its alliance with the United States, which strongly
backs Kyiv in its struggle with Moscow; and the effect of its policies on the
situation of the still substantial Jewish communities in both of the former Soviet
states.
This has led to some
uncomfortable situations.
A Defense Ministry-approved deal
to sell drones to Ukraine was vetoed by a Foreign Ministry special panel amid
fears Russia would disapprove, Israel’s Channel 2 reported on Sept. 15.
Jerusalem was concerned a drone sale to Ukraine would anger Moscow.
When Russia annexed the Crimea in
March, Jews in the region were divided in their attitudes. Most Crimean Jews,
Russian speaking, supported the move, while those in Ukraine were opposed. Jews
in Russia on the whole supported the move.
The 193-member UN General
Assembly on March 27 passed Resolution 68/262 by a vote of 100 to 11
to denounce the Crimean referendum that paved the way
for the absorption of the peninsula into Russia. Another 58
countries abstained, while the remaining 24 did not vote.
Israel did not take part
in the vote, using a strike by staff at its Foreign
Ministry as a pretext for the abstention.
“Our basic position is that we
hope Russia and Ukraine will find a way as quickly as possible
to normalize relations, and find a way to talks,
and to solve all the problems peacefully,” remarked Israel’s Foreign
Minister Avigdor Lieberman at a Jerusalem news conference in April.
The United States was not happy
with Israel. “We were surprised Israel did not join the vast majority
of countries that vowed to support Ukraine’s territorial integrity
in the UN,” U.S. State Department spokesperson Jen Psaki said at a
briefing after the UN vote.
Historically, Jews have less than
fond memories of Ukraine, traditionally a hotbed of anti-Semitism. In 1648-1649
the Cossack Hetman Bogdan Chmielnicki led a peasant uprising against Polish
rule in the Ukraine which resulted in the destruction of hundreds of Jewish
communities and the deaths of at least 100,000 Jews.
After the First World War, Symon
Petliura’s Ukrainian nationalists, fighting the newly-formed Soviet armies,
were involved in pogroms that killed about 50,000 Jews. And during the
Holocaust, Nazi death squads, and their Ukrainian collaborators, murdered
900,000 Jews.
The radical elements
of Ukraine’s far-right nationalist politics, which rose to the fore
during Ukraine’s overthrow of President Viktor Yanukovych in February, are also
working in Russia’s favour.
Russian anti-Semitism was less
virulent. As well, those Israelis with long memories recall the Soviet Union’s
role during the struggle to establish the state.
Moscow voted for UN General
Assembly Resolution 181 in November 1947 to partition Palestine into Arab and
Jewish states, recognized Israel de jure almost immediately in May 1948, and
allowed its allies to provide arms to the new country.
As well, the Soviets in December
1948 voted against UN General Assembly Resolution 194 on the so-called “right
of return” of Palestinian refugees to their homes.
Foreign Minister Avigdor
Lieberman, a hawk, is himself Soviet-born. He comes from Chisinau (Kishinev),
in Moldova, and is the founder and leader of the Yisrael Beiteinu party, whose
electoral base consists of immigrants from the former USSR.
Lieberman, who immigrated to
Israel in 1978, lives in the West Bank settlement of Nokdim. He admires Russian
President Vladimir Putin, and in December 2011 appeared with him just days
after a contested legislative election in Russia. In turn, the Russian leader
visited Israel in June 2012.
“We are very happy that people from the Soviet
Union build such a brilliant political career,” said Putin in 2009, when
Lieberman was first appointed to the position by Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu.
Speaking to a group of rabbis
from Israel and Europe in July, during the latest Gaza war, Putin told them
that “I support Israel's struggle, which is intended to protect its citizens.”
(After all, Putin has his own terrorists to worry about, in Chechnya,
Dagestan, Ingushetia, and elsewhere.)
Of course America remains
Israel’s lifeline, its main economic, ideological, and political ally. Still,
in the final analysis, Israel, as a beleaguered state now surrounded on
virtually all sides by chaos and violence in neighbouring countries, must hedge
its bets.
In a Middle East that is
exploding, Israel can’t depend on just one great power ally. The recent Gaza
war, and the different approaches to Iran’s nuclear ambitions, has exposed
rifts between Netanyahu and U.S. President Barack Obama.
Meanwhile, on Sept. 16 Ukraine’s
parliament passed legislation to grant special status to the rebellious east as
part of a peace deal, hopefully a war with Russian-backed separatists that has
killed more than 3,000 people.
It grants three years of
self-rule, including the election of local councils, in parts of the war-torn
east and calls for local elections in November. It also allows for local
oversight on court and prosecutor appointments and local control of police
forces. And it gives the region the right to use Russian as an official
language.
Israeli diplomats may now have
less to worry about.
No comments:
Post a Comment