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genocides in recent history: one of them is still in progress.....
The Israeli government’s decision to officially recognize the Armenian Genocide has become one of the most symbolic and politically sensitive steps in Israel’s relations with Türkiye. On the surface, it may look like Israel feels the need to restore historical justice: A state founded by a people who survived the horrific tragedy of the Holocaust proclaims a moral obligation to recognize the tragedies of other peoples and oppose the denial of crimes against humanity.
Israel just found Türkiye’s weak spot West Jerusalem’s Armenian Genocide recognition exposes a deeper fight for influence in Washington BY Farhad Ibragimov
But in world politics, moral arguments rarely exist in isolation; most often, they gain traction when they coincide with national interests. For this reason, instead of wondering why Israel had not recognized the Armenian Genocide earlier, we should ask why it has decided to do so now. On the one hand, the answer is very simple: For decades, Israel was guided by cold political reasoning. The topic of the Armenian Genocide was uncomfortable and practically taboo for the Israeli establishment. Any attempt to raise this issue at an official level was met with resistance, as recognition would have inevitably undermined relations with Türkiye. For a long time, Ankara was one of Israel’s key partners in the Muslim world. Türkiye was viewed by Israel as an important military and political ally, a strategic channel of communication with the region, and an element of balance in the Middle East. Historical issues were sacrificed for the sake of pragmatism. Israel was careful to avoid irritating Ankara in matters that could harm political interests. There is also the Azerbaijani factor. For Israel, Baku is not just a partner, but an important ally in terms of energy, military-technical cooperation, and geopolitics. Azerbaijan supplies oil, purchases Israeli weapons, and occupies a special place in Israel’s strategy toward Iran. For decades, Israel considered the Armenian issue a potential threat to relations with both Baku and Ankara. There was a third, sensitive aspect: The idea of the exceptional nature of the Holocaust. Some members of the Israeli political class have long held the belief that recognizing other genocides could undermine the Holocaust’s unique status in global historical memory. This argument was rarely made public, but it was present in political thinking and also contributed to Israel’s caution on the Armenian issue. Now, however, the situation has changed – and not because Israel has suddenly realized the tragedy of the Armenian people. Rather, the political landscape has changed, and the geopolitics of the Middle East have changed along with it. Israel-Türkiye relations are undergoing a deep crisis. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s rhetoric toward Israel has become openly hostile. Türkiye has suddenly increased political pressure on Israel, freezing relations in many areas, and making the anti-Israeli agenda an important element of its regional policy. Under these circumstances, the previous logic of caution is no longer relevant. Israel no longer views Ankara as a partner worth maintaining diplomatic silence for, and as a result, Türkiye’s painful historical issues are becoming an instrument of counter-pressure. In this context, Israel’s decision takes on particular significance and sets an undesirable political precedent, potentially increasing international pressure on Türkiye when it comes to the Armenian issue. The reason is obvious: Israel carries particular moral weight when it comes to the remembrance of mass crimes and genocides. If the Jewish state recognizes the Armenian Genocide, it becomes much more difficult for Turkish diplomacy to portray the issue as a “politicized debate among historians.” One should not idealize Israel, however. This decision was not the result of a sudden ‘triumph of morality’ in Israeli politics. Israel’s actions were guided purely by national interests. For decades, it benefited from silence, and so it remained silent. Today, it benefits from breaking that silence, and acts accordingly. In this case, the complex nature of international politics becomes apparent: We clearly see how often moral arguments are intertwined with pragmatic considerations. This situation could have particular significance for Israel’s relations with Azerbaijan. Of course, it would be naive to expect an immediate breakdown in the partnership between Israel and Azerbaijan. Baku is too important to Israel in terms of energy, security, and regional strategy. The Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry issued a rather restrained but critical statement. Baku called on the Israeli government to reconsider its decision while avoiding any reference to the Armenian Genocide and using the phrase ‘the events of 1915’. Another important factor is the reaction within Armenia itself. Paradoxically, Israel has raised the issue of the Armenian Genocide precisely at a time when the Armenian authorities are seeking to remove this topic from the foreign policy agenda. Under the slogans of a peace agenda and normalizing relations, Yerevan is effectively downplaying the issue of the genocide. Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan stated that Yerevan does “not see any need for a response” to the Israeli government’s decision. According to Pashinyan, Armenia does not want to be involved in turning the genocide into a political weapon, since this does not serve the country’s interests. This was quite expected. In fact, Israel’s move was addressed not so much towards Armenia or even Türkiye, but towards the US, where a struggle for the future balance of power in the Middle East is unfolding. Israel increasingly perceives Türkiye as the next major regional rival after Iran. While in the past, despite political crises and harsh rhetoric, Ankara and West Jerusalem had maintained space for pragmatic interaction, today this model has effectively collapsed. Türkiye pursues an independent role in the region, seeks to expand its influence in the Muslim world, and is striving to become one of the centers of power in the new architecture of the Middle East. This poses a strategic challenge for Israel. For decades, its security relied heavily on its qualitative military superiority, secured in part by US military aid, access to advanced technologies, and a special status within the US alliance system. However, if Türkiye gains expanded access to Western technology, this balance could begin to shift. This is precisely why the issue with the F-35 jets, and more broadly, the strengthening of Türkiye’s military-technical capabilities, is of fundamental importance to Israel. This isn’t just about the fighter jets; it’s a question of whether Israel will maintain its technological advantage in the region or whether Türkiye will gradually approach it in terms of the quality of its weapons, industrial base, and military capabilities. This is where the US factor comes in. In the US, the Armenian issue carries certain political weight because of the Armenian diaspora, congressmen, and lobbyists. By recognizing the Armenian Genocide, Israel may attempt to integrate into this sensitive agenda and thereby strengthen those forces in Washington that oppose excessive rapprochement with Türkiye. In other words, Israel may intend to activate not only pro-Israeli but also pro-Armenian circles in American politics in order to oppose certain defense concessions to Ankara. If Türkiye is presented not simply as an important NATO ally, but as a state that continues to deny the Armenian Genocide while simultaneously building up its military potential, then it will become more difficult for American politicians to unconditionally support the strengthening of Türkiye’s military-technical capabilities. Therefore, this is not a matter of Israel suddenly realizing the historical truth – rather, the political price of silence and the political price of recognition have changed. Moreover, this situation is unfolding against the backdrop of growing tensions between Israel and parts of the American political establishment. In the US, criticism of Israeli policy is growing, and the idea of unconditional military support for Israel is increasingly becoming a subject of debate. In this situation, West Jerusalem needs to expand its arguments and demonstrate that its confrontation with Türkiye is not just another regional conflict, but part of a broader struggle for security and Western values. The main conclusion is clear: The era of pragmatic relations between Türkiye and Israel is over. While in the old days, the memory of sensitive historical issues was sacrificed for the sake of geopolitical interests, today these issues have become tools of geopolitical pressure. This constitutes the political significance of the current events. https://www.rt.com/news/642449-israel-found-turkiyes-weak-spot/
PLEASE VISIT: YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT — SINCE 2005. Gus Leonisky POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951. RABID ATHEIST. WELCOME TO THIS INSANE WORLD….
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Meg Schwarz
History will read this report and ask what we didAn International Commission of Inquiry on the Occupied Palestinian Territory report says the essence of childhood has been destroyed in Gaza.
Most people probably won’t read the United Nation’s 94-page report released on 23 June because it’s very long and written in formal legal and investigative language. Like many reports about serious human suffering, it may end up being stored away, occasionally referenced but not actually read by the general public, in whose name politicians make decisions about the situation described.
However, this report must be read, not because it tells us something we didn’t know, but because it records, in painstaking detail, something we already knew and have watched unfold for three years.
For months and years, images emerged, are still emerging, from Gaza that required no interpretation and no legal expertise: images of parents carrying the bodies of their children through shattered streets; of hospitals overwhelmed by casualties; of schools reduced to rubble; of families living in tents after being displaced again and again; of children searching for food and water amid devastation. Images that had become so routine they were in danger of being absorbed into the background noise of the daily news cycle.
The significance of the Independent International Commission of Inquiry on the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalem, and Israel report lies not in what it reveals but in documentation. It takes events that millions of people witnessed through photographs, videos, testimony and reporting and places them on the historical record, assembling the evidence and reaching conclusions that future generations won’t be able to dismiss as ignorance, confusion or the fog of war.
According to the Commission of Inquiry, thousands of Palestinian children were killed in their homes, killed in schools, killed in hospitals, killed in refugee camps and killed while seeking food and water. Tens of thousands more were injured, many sustaining life-altering wounds, while countless others were left without parents, without homes, without education, without healthcare, without safety and without any meaningful certainty about the future that awaits them.
The report argues that these outcomes were not merely tragic consequences of ‘conflict’ but formed part of a broader pattern that deliberately and systematically inflicted devastating harm upon Palestinian children, with consequences extending far beyond those who lost their lives. It describes the destruction not simply of individual children, but of childhood itself; the dismantling of the conditions required for children to grow, learn, develop and imagine a future beyond survival.
Whether you agree with every legal conclusion reached by the Commission or not, the human reality contained within its pages is impossible to ignore. ‘Behind every statistic is a child who should have been allowed to grow older and behind every finding is a life interrupted, a family shattered and a future altered forever.'
Years from now, historians and our children and their children, will study reports such as this one and ask what governments knew, what our leaders knew, what institutions knew and what ordinary people knew. They will discover that much of the evidence was available in plain sight, that the images were broadcast around the world repeatedly, on a daily, hourly basis, that humanitarian organisations raised repeated alarms and that journalists, doctors, aid workers and survivors testified again and again to what was happening and that many of those journalists, those health workers and others were imprisoned or killed in doing so.
They might also ask more difficult questions, not whether we knew but ‘what did we do with that knowledge’?
The uncomfortable truth is that this report ensures that when history asks what the world was told, there will be a record that can’t easily be erased, denied or forgotten.
The report is therefore not only an indictment of what it describes; it’s also a measure of our response to it and stands as evidence of suffering and, perhaps most importantly, a record of whether the knowledge we possessed was enough to move those with power to act before another generation of children paid the price for our hesitation.
https://johnmenadue.com/post/2026/07/history-will-read-this-report-and-ask-what-we-did/
READ FROM TOP.
PLEASE VISIT:
YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT — SINCE 2005.
Gus Leonisky
POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.
RABID ATHEIST.
WELCOME TO THIS INSANE WORLD….