JTA
- 10.01.2002
Sharon
Visit to Moscow Shows Deepening Ties With the Kremlin
By
Lev Krichevsky
MOSCOW (JTA) — Israeli Prime Minister
Ariel Sharon’s visit this week shows the growing seriousness of
Israel-Russia relations, Jewish observers here said.
“After Sept. 11, and with Russia moving closer to G-8 membership, this
visit is less of a courtesy trip like before and more of a real
political visit,” said Mikhail Chlenov, president of a Jewish umbrella
group called the Va’ad. He was referring to the progress Moscow has
made over the last year toward acquiring full membership in a consortium
of industrialized nations.
Yevgeny Satanovsky, the president of the Russian Jewish Congress and a
leading analyst of Middle Eastern issues, went even further.
The scope of the issues Sharon discussed in Moscow allows one to talk of
a “real breakthrough” in bilateral relations, Satanovsky said.
“The Kremlin hears, understand and shares many of Israel’s concerns
about security and about Iraq,” Satanovsky said. “In that sense we
are allies without any doubt.”
Security concerns topped Sharon’s agenda during two days of talks with
Russian President Vladimir Putin and other Russian officials, including
Russian Prime Minister Mikhail Kasyanov and Russian Orthodox Patriarch
Alexei II.
Putin focused on Israel’s treatment of the Palestinians. Sharon played
up the issue of Islamic terrorism and extremism as major threats for
both Israel and Russia, which has been accused of brutality in its
long-running war with Muslim separatists in Chechnya.
In an attempt to hammer the point home, Sharon was accompanied to Moscow
by three Russian-born 16-year-olds who were among the victims of a June
2001 bombing at a Tel Aviv disco that killed 21 people, most of them
teen-agers born in the former Soviet Union.
Alex Nalimov lost two sisters in the attack. Faik Kuliev and Emma
Skalishevskaya were wounded.
They were included in the delegation to show the Russian public the
importance of fighting terrorism.
“People in Russia do not understand that if the Israeli army did not
conduct operations on the territory of the Palestinian Authority, we
would have 10 terrorist attacks every day,” Kuliev told
reporters.
The only surprise was that the talks lasted for three-and-a-half hours
— instead of the planned 90 minutes — and ended with Putin treating
his guest to a kosher lunch with Israeli wine, which Sharon said he hadn’t
expected.
Putin welcomed Israel’s decision to lift its siege of Palestinian
Authority President Yasser Arafat’s Ramallah headquarters and repeated
calls for Israeli troops to leave Palestinian cities.
“We condemn terrorism in all its forms, and we welcome your decision
to lift the siege,” Putin told Sharon in the Kremlin.
Putin said Russia supports the U.S.-led anti-terror coalition and views
Israel as an important member of the alliance.
Sharon emphasized that the two countries are natural allies against “the
serious threat of extremist Islam.”
Israeli officials tried to convince Moscow to approve a possible
U.S.-led attack on Iraq, with which Moscow has good relations.
Both Putin and Russian Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov restated their calls
for of the use of diplomacy and U.N. instruments to resolve the standoff
with Baghdad.
Sharon shared his concerns about alleged Iraqi and Iranian efforts to
acquire weapons of mass destruction. Israeli officials believe the
technology for such arms comes from Russia and other countries of the
former Soviet Union, with or without official sanction from
Moscow.
A Moscow daily reported that the Israeli delegation — which included
the outgoing head of the Mossad, Ephraim Halevy — brought files
allegedly proving links between Palestinian militants and Iraqi
President Saddam Hussein.
Speaking to leaders of the Russian Jewish community Monday night, Sharon
praised Putin for his understanding of Israel’s security concerns and
said Putin shows considerable concern for the welfare of Russian-born
Israelis.
Sharon said Putin has contacted him after terrorist attacks in Israel to
check if there were Russian-sounding names among the victims.
But despite a considerable improvement over the last decade in its
relations with Israel, the Kremlin has maintained its traditional
support for the Palestinian cause.
Russia still misses no opportunity to express its solidarity with
Palestinian Authority President Yasser Arafat, often releases
pro-Palestinian statements to the media and regularly backs anti-Israel
resolutions in the U.N. Security Council.
Arafat’s deputy, Mahmoud Abbas, was due to visit Moscow this week for
talks.
Some observers believe a subtext of Sharon’s trip was an appeal for
the votes of Russian Israelis — about one-sixth of Israel’s
population — whose electoral sympathies may decide the next election.
“Ariel Sharon Came For Russian Votes,” said a headline in the Monday
edition of Kommersant, a leading Moscow business daily newspaper.
Many Russian-speaking households in Israel watch Russia’s three
leading television channels via satellite.
A television executive told JTA that at least one of the channels
conducted “intense consultations” with Israelis in preparation for
Sharon’s visit.
On most previous trips to Moscow, Israeli prime ministers, including
Sharon himself, chose to address a larger Jewish crowd at the Choral
Synagogue. This time, because of security concerns and other reasons, he
spoke at the Marriott Grand Hotel, and the crowd was limited to a few
hundred Jewish activists and members of the business and cultural
elites.
Sharon spoke for about an hour of his talks with Putin. He concluded his
address with a traditional call to Russian Jews to emigrate to Israel
“without any delay” — though few are likely to do so, given the
security situation in Israel.
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