By Adam Ellick
BUCHAREST, Romania (JTA) — At first
glance, it appeared a bit odd: An American Jewish leader addressing 10
Eastern European prime ministers at a military summit.
So odd that when Rabbi Andrew Baker, international director of the
American Jewish Committee, entered the NATO Aspirant Summit in
Bucharest, Romania, on Monday, he asked himself, Why am I here?
"We sometimes suggest Jews are the proverbial ‘canary in the
cage,' a litmus test of what's going on in society," Baker said.
"They play that role in this region, with their ability here to
revive, function and be accepted in society. It's useful for people
sitting in judgement of NATO enlargement if Jews feel comfortable. That
says something about the society. If Jews feel anxious, insecure and
have problems, that says something of those communities, too."
The NATO military alliance expects to add seven new member states in
November. Among the criteria for candidate countries is a free market
economy and various defense stipulations, but also a "high standard
in treatment of national ethnic and religious minorities" and
"shared values," according to NATO spokesman Robert Pszczel.
Enlargement is a political decision and requires approval by the
parliaments of all 19 NATO member states, including two-thirds of the
U.S. Senate.
The AJCommittee organized a roundtable discussion with Jewish leaders
from NATO aspirant nations this week, in the shadow of the summit. The
purpose, Baker said, was to put pressing Jewish issues — such as
anti-Semitism, Holocaust restitution, education and commemoration — on
the radar screen of political leaders who may be especially responsive
while their bids for NATO entry are under consideration.
"I really think the fact that Jewish leaders were included in
the summit with prime ministers indicates the seriousness of Holocaust
issues," said Bruce Jackson, president of the U.S. Committee for
NATO, a watchdog organization that monitors Jewish affairs among NATO
hopefuls. "If you don't get the past right, you aren't going to get
the future right."
Jewish issues are among the top five areas the U.S. State Department
checks when examining NATO aspirants, said Heather Conley, deputy
assistant secretary for European affairs.
"To say these countries will reach a state of perfection before
November is not realistic, but we can expect a commitment on educational
work, and restitution," she said.
Jewish leaders from aspirant nations Bulgaria, Croatia, Macedonia,
Latvia, Estonia, Lithuania, Slovenia and Romania issued status reports
on their governments' performance, as did leaders from the Czech
Republic, Poland and Hungary, which entered NATO in 1999.
No country stood out clearly as the best. Instead, Jackson said, each
country is like a teenager, maturing at its own pace.
Lithuania's lagging record on communal property restitution is the
most outstanding NATO issue in the Baltics, Jackson said, but he praised
its ambitious Holocaust education program.
Estonia, meanwhile, restituted Jewish property, but its textbooks
contain just three sentences on the Holocaust.
If recent history is any guide, action on issues of Jewish interest
may constitute more rhetoric than action. Promises by the Czech
Republic, Poland and Hungary to return certain properties have gone
unfilled since the countries joined NATO.
"When we were joining NATO there were important Jewish
declarations, but after they joined it was negligence in
restitution," said Ferenc Olti, vice president of the Association
of Hungarian Jewish Communities. "Practically nothing happened in
the last two years."
Tomas Kraus, from the Czech Republic, warned his colleagues to
"make appeals as quickly as possible, because in a couple of years
it won't be there."
Despite some unresolved issues, Hungary's cooperation is relatively
good, and "the problems there might be worse without them being
under this NATO umbrella," Baker said.
Nicholas Lane, chairman of the AJCommittee's international committee,
took a more skeptical view.
"It's a game of bluff," he said. "Americans insist
NATO requires shared values and they're right. The difficulty is that
once you're in NATO, there isn't a police force that goes around
checking if you still have the values. So we work on principle and argue
for what we want, and see if they're anxious enough or conscientious
enough to take action."
Perhaps expectations of NATO's effectiveness are a bit too high. The
alliance is not a police force, after all, and cannot be "the
solution to cultural, religious problems in Europe," Jackson said.
Still, "it does provide a hell of a lot of leverage," he
noted. "The question for NATO is, are these societies committed to
the first step? Eradicating anti-Semitism will take the better part of
the coming century, but NATO can give it a stab."
A baby step occurred on March 15 in the Latvian capital of Riga, when
the Latvian National Soldiers' Association decided to cancel its annual
procession commemorating Latvian legionnaires who fought alongside Nazi
troops against the Soviets in 1943. The group said it feared any
commotion would damage Latvia's bid to enter NATO.
In neighboring Lithuania, controversy over the Holocaust has raged
for years. In January the government ended a six-year debate by handing
over more than 300 Torah scrolls to world Jewry, a move that Jackson
says helped Lithuania's NATO bid.
The Torah exchange even was discussed when Lithuanian president
Valdas Adamkus visited U.S. President George Bush in January.
European leaders, for their part, often take offense when their
cooperation on Jewish matters is portrayed as appeasement to Western
leaders.
"All human rights and democratic issues, we are not doing for
NATO. We are doing them for ourselves," said Giedrius Cekuolis,
Lithuania's chief negotiator for NATO and vice foreign minister. "I
see human rights and Holocaust issues" as important "not
because they are asking us, but because it's a part of Lithuania's
history."
Still, the importance of joining NATO cannot be overstated in Eastern
Europe. The alliance offers a virtual insurance of security — a
precious gift to countries like Lithuania, which saw German, Polish and
Russian forces occupy its territory during the 20th century.