ISRAEL MAY RECOGNISE OTTOMAN ARMENIAN GENOCIDE
Vita Bekker
The National
June 2 2011
UAE
Members of the Jerusalem Armenian community hold placards as they march
during commemorations for the 96th anniversary of mass killings of
their ancestors under the Ottoman Empire, at Jaffa Gate in Jerusalem’s
Old City. Gali Tibbon / AFP Photo
TEL AVIV // A plan by Israel’s parliamentary speaker to move the
country closer to recognising the 1915 killing of Armenians by Ottoman
forces as genocide worries foreign ministry officials because it
threatens to worsen ties with Turkey.
The decision by Reuven Rivlin, a member of prime minister Benjamin
Netanyahu’s ruling Likud party, is a break with the years-long Israeli
policy to take no stance on the massacre.
On Monday, Mr Rivlin said that the 120-member parliament will begin
holding an annual session to mark the massacre.
“It’s my duty as a Jew and an Israeli to recognise the tragedies
of other nations,” said Mr Rivlin, in an indirect reference to the
Holocaust. “Diplomatic considerations, as considerable as they are,
will not allow us to deny the catastrophe of others.”
Israel, like the US, has never acknowledged that the massacre of up to
1.5 million Armenians by the Ottoman Turks was genocide, saying that
the historical dispute should be settled between Turkey and Armenia.
Its long-held view, however, is widely attributed to its desire to
maintain good relations with Turkey, which has vehemently denied that
genocide had taken place.
The Israeli stance has been supported for years by pro-Israel Jewish
organisations in the US, which have pressured the US Congress and
successive presidents to defeat congressional resolutions marking
the killing of the Armenians. Turkey is a key ally that has supported
the US in confrontations from Afghanistan to Iran.
Mr Rivlin’s move to conduct an event that would publicly question
Turkey’s denial is probably a result of the deteriorating ties between
Israel and Turkey.
The allies’ relations have suffered amid Turkey’s growing condemnation
of the Jewish state’s approach towards the Palestinians and after
Israeli commandos’ killing of nine Turkish activists aboard a
Gaza-bound flotilla last year.
Yossi Sarid, a former education minister, said the parliament’s
approval of Mr Rivlin’s initiative was due to Israel’s anger at
Turkey’s support of an upcoming international aid flotilla that aims
to break Israel’s blockade of Gaza’s airspace, territorial waters
and all but one of its border crossings.
“The Israelis no longer favour the Turks and are willing to give
up the charms and temptations of Antalya,” he wrote in the Haaretz
newspaper yesterday, referring to the Turkish resort city that in
the past was a major tourism destination for Israelis.
Mr Rivlin’s announcement has also stirred speculation in the Israeli
and Turkish press that Israel intended to pressure Turkey to stop
the Gaza-bound flotilla expected as soon as this month.
On Monday, a coalition of 22 activist groups aiming to take part in
the new flotilla said at a news conference aboard the Turkish-flagged
Mavi Marmara, the ship on which last year’s confrontation took place,
that 15 ships would be in the new convoy.
Their briefing came a day after Turkey’s foreign minister, Ahmet
Davutoglu, warned Israel against launching another raid of the aid
flotilla. “We are sending a clear message to all those concerned:
the same tragedy should not be repeated again,” he told the Reuters
news agency.
Muslim Turkey accepts that as many as 1.5 million Christian
Armenians were killed by Ottoman forces but denies the act amounted
to genocide, a term employed by many Western historians and some
foreign parliaments.
The Israeli government has expressed opposition to Mr Rivlin’s
initiative, with Danny Ayalon, deputy foreign minister and a member
of the ultranationalist Yisrael Beitenu party, saying this week it was
“impossible” for Israel to officially recognise the genocide.
Mr Rivlin’s announcement comes after the parliament’s vote last week
to hold an open, public debate on the Armenians’ massacre.