Video Of The Week – Bennett Visits Putin - https://tinyurl.com/32p9t9yt
For the full article by Pesach Benson go to- https://tinyurl.com/565yyatf
Prime
Minister Naftali Bennett returned to Israel on Sunday morning after making a
surprise visit to Moscow to discuss the Russia-Ukraine crisis with Russian
President Vladimir Putin.
From
Moscow, Bennett headed to Berlin where he updated German chancellor Olaf Scholz
before flying back to Israel in time to lead Sunday’s weekly cabinet meeting.
Israel
has historically kept a low diplomatic profile in international power games. So
despite days of buzz about possible Israeli mediation — Ukrainian President Volodymyr
Zelensky had been calling for it — Saturday night’s news still stunned
Israelis.
An Israeli premier
was the first Western leader to meet with Putin since Russia invaded Ukraine.
The mission had American and European blessings. Underscoring the gravity of
the gravity of the situation, the Sabbath-observant Prime Minister departed for
Moscow on Saturday morning.
It’s
too soon to know if Bennett’s trip will bear any fruit. Certain aspects of his
three-hour meeting at the Kremlin may not be known for years, if ever.
But
the talks clearly have significant implications for Israel and the Jewish
people. Here are four takeaways.
1. Israeli
diplomacy is on the map.
No European country is suited to mediate.
Russia is their neighbor. The European Union’s decision to send arms to Ukraine
is the first time it has ever sent weapons to a conflict zone. Finnish public
opinion suddenly supports joining NATO — which prompted menacing comments from
Moscow to Helsinki.
Even ever-neutral Switzerland is freezing the
assets of Russian individuals and organizations on the EU blacklist.
Spearheading an effort to end the war in
Ukraine carries great rewards and great risks. Israel has opened the door on a
new level of international diplomacy, which reflects three particular changes.
• Buoyed by the Abraham Accords, Israel has
more secure standing in the Mideast.
• American and European trust in Israeli
mediation seems to reflect that Washington, Paris and Berlin don’t believe that
so many world problems will disappear if Israel would just make peace with the
Palestinians.
• Israel’s insistence on striking Iranian
targets in Syria — despite Moscow’s occasional objections — has apparently
earned Putin’s grudging respect.
Those are all reasons to be optimistic.
2. Israel
will be better poised to evacuate Jews from the Ukraine.
The biggest perk of being mediator is the extra
access and leverage it provides.
If Russia is trying to extricate itself from
the conflict, what better goodwill gesture than to create humanitarian
corridors and safe zones for refugees — including Jews?
And if Russia proves to be insincere, having
Putin’s ear will be all the more important if an emergency evacuation of Jews
proves necessary. According to Haaretz, Israel had contingency
plans in the late 1980s for an emergency airlift of large numbers of Jews from
the Soviet Union. Those plans are being dusted off and updated now.
Israel’s last major airlift was Operation
Solomon, a covert operation in which 14,000 Ethiopian Jews were evacuated within 36 hours amid
a civil war in 1991.
3. Israel
will be better poised to influence Iran nuclear deal.
Israel’s concerns about Iran’s
nuclear program were never taken seriously by the West. That could change.
That’s because Moscow created a new linkage between the Iranian nuclear
deal and its own interests. Specifically, Russia wants written guarantees that
its own trade and military cooperation with Iran won’t be impacted by sanctions
the West is levying in response to the Russian invasion. Washington and Tehran
panned Moscow’s demand as “unrelated” and “not helpful.”
But the U.S. is relying on Russian help to finalize the nuclear agreement. That
could give Israel room to exploit improvements in the deal.
Putin also has leverage over Iran’s
presence in Syria — when it chooses to exercise it. Once upon a time, in 2018,
Russian officials talked of keeping Iran and its proxies at 85 km (53 miles)
from the Israeli border.
Iran has also endangered Russians
by smuggling weapons through the Syrian port of Latakia. Perhaps
Putin will take Tehran’s recklessness more seriously now that Israel has his
attention.
4. This is
Bennett’s chance to shine.
When news broke from the Kremlin, plenty of
Israelis imagined Benjamin Netanyahu eating his heart out. After all, It wasn’t
so long ago that Netanyahu’s re-election campaign prominently featured him with
Putin and then-President Donald Trump.
The campaign’s message was powerful. Netanyahu
was the only heavyweight Israeli capable of standing up for Israel’s interests
with the world’s super powers.
Yes, Naftali Bennett and Foreign Minister Yair
Lapid have paid historic visits to the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and
Morocco. But they were building on the Abraham accords which were finalized on
Netanyahu’s watch.
Bennett put himself in this position by
navigating between U.S. and popular Israeli demands for stronger criticism of
Russia with sensitivity to Jerusalem and Moscow’s security coordination in Syria. Whether or not Netanyahu
could’ve done it too is beside the point. Bennett pulled it off.
Mediating the Ukraine crisis is Bennett’s
accomplishment and his opportunity to put a unique stamp on Israeli and
international diplomacy.
What will that look like? Will he succeed?
Only time will tell.
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