JTA
- 11.06.2001
Jewish
Telegraphic Agency
Historic
Law That Spurred Emigration
for Soviet Jews Approaching its End
By
Sharon Samber
WASHINGTON, Nov. 5 — A historic law that helped ensure the
emigration of tens of thousands of Soviet Jews may become a casualty of
the war on terrorism.
In the 1970s and 1980s, the Jackson-Vanik Amendment helped pry open the
gates of the former Soviet Union for thousands of Soviet Jews by tying
U.S.-Russian trade to free emigration.
With America trying to shore up Russian support for its war in
Afghanistan, however, it appears that the law soon may become a thing of
the past.
Once instrumental in lobbying for the legislation, U.S. Jewish groups
have been consulted by the White House on the potential change, and say
they understand the reason for adjusting the landmark law.
But they also want assurances that the Russian government will help
Jewish communities in the former Soviet Union.
In doing so, the American Jewish groups are parting company with their
Russian Jewish counterparts, who are asking the United States to
consider lifting the trade regulations without any strings.
The amendment's goal — free Jewish emigration from Russia — has been
achieved, the Russian Jewish groups say.
Bush appears likely to offer a permanent change when he meets with
Russian President Vladimir Putin in the United States on Nov. 13 and 14.
White House reasons for repealing the amendment are twofold. Washington
wants to hold together its fragile international coalition against the
Taliban and Osama bin Laden's Al Qaida terrorist network, and is looking
for something to offer Putin for his support. The White House also
wants to entice Russia to support Bush's missile defense program.
Enter the Jackson-Vanik Amendment.
Adopted in 1974, the amendment made it a goal of U.S. foreign policy to
get the Soviet Union to relax its emigration restrictions.
Sponsored by Sen. Henry Jackson (D-Wash.) and Rep. Charles Vanik
(D-Ohio), the amendment prohibited the extension of U.S. government
credits and most-favored-nation trade status to any country with a
"nonmarket economy" that didn't allow its citizens to emigrate
freely.
The
amendment was prompted by congressional concern over the Soviet Union's
treatment of its Jews.
The White
House says it is receiving a "generally positive reaction" to
the repeal idea, but some concern is still palpable on Capitol Hill.
Rep.
Benjamin Gilman (R-N.Y.) wrote a letter to Deputy Secretary of State
Richard Armitage expressing concern that anti-Semitism is still
prevalent in Russia and that it is too early to change Jackson-Vanik.
Sen.
Gordon Smith (R-Ore.) is wary of any changes to the amendment and plans
some sort of legislation to address the issue — depending on the
changes actually made to Jackson-Vanik.
Smith
recently led the campaign for an amendment that would prevent Russia
from receiving foreign aid if it passes a law discriminating against
religious freedom.
If
changes are made to Jackson-Vanik, there still has to be "some
accountability of the Russian government, and the U.S. will review how
Russia treats its Jewish population," said Smith's press secretary,
Joe Sheffo.
The
United States is looking to allow Russia and six other former Soviet
republics a graduated way out of the restrictions, a Bush administration
spokesman said Monday.
In
addition, State Department spokesman Richard Boucher said that
"broader considerations apply" beyond emigration policies.
Jackson-Vanik
no longer applies to Georgia and Kyrgyzstan. Belarus, Turkmenistan and
Uzbekistan are unlikely to be considered for the step because of
continued restrictions on emigration, some say.
Besides
Russia, countries being considered include Armenia, Azerbaijan,
Kazakstan, Moldova, Tajikistan, and Ukraine.
The three
Baltic nations were graduated out of Jackson-Vanik after the fall of
communism in 1991.
Since the
collapse of the USSR, Russia has been granted normal trade relations
every year through annual presidential waivers.
According
to Jackson-Vanik, in order for Russia to receive such a waiver, its
emigration policies must pass an annual review. The waivers allowed
Russian trade with the United States to continue unhindered over the
past decade, but Russia resents the review process and wants normal
trade relations to be permanent.
The
Russia government, which calls the Jackson-Vanik amendment
"notorious," would like to get rid of the Cold War relic
entirely.
"The
Jackson-Vanik Amendment has blocked the granting to Russia of most
favored nation status in trade with the USA on a permanent and
unconditional basis over many years, inflicting harm upon the spirit of
constructive and equal cooperation between our countries. It is rightly
considered one of the last anachronisms of the era of confrontation and
distrust," the Russian Foreign Ministry said in an Oct. 29
statement.
The Bush
administration recently approached Jewish groups to gauge their reaction
if the United States rescinded the amendment for Russia and the other
former Soviet republics.
A
consensus to back the Bush initiative is emerging among Jewish groups,
but pressure still will be needed to ensure that Russia adheres to human
rights standards, said Malcolm Hoenlein, executive vice chairman of the
Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations.
The sense
from Jewish organizations is that Russia may have followed the letter of
the law, but not its spirit.
"We
want to know for sure that the government is committed to getting out of
the way and allowing the Jewish communities to re-emerge," said
Harold Luks, chairman of NCSJ: Advocates on behalf of Jews in Russia,
Ukraine, the Baltic States and Eurasia.
Luks
wants assurances that Jewish communities, particularly in Russia and
Ukraine, have the right to organize without state interference and to
maintain contact with other Jewish communities around the world.
Also
important are restitution of communal property and preservation of
cemeteries and Holocaust sites, he said.
His group
also will voice its concern over the Russian transfer of technology that
could allow Iran to develop weapons of mass destruction, Luks said.
The
change to Jackson-Vanik is inevitable, according to Micah Naftalin,
national director of the Union of Councils for Jews in the Former Soviet
Union.
Already
in the 1970s, Naftalin was discussing with Leningrad and Moscow
refuseniks the idea of linking trade normalization to free emigration
from Communist countries. He supports maintaining some quid pro quo
arrangement in which trade with Russia is linked to concrete steps to
combat anti-Semitism and reform civil society.
Not
everyone agrees with Naftalin, however.
The
amendment long ceased to be necessary for Russia, according to Richard
Perle, a legislative aide to Jackson who helped draft the legislation.
To add other things to the amendment "corrupts the intention of the
law," he said.
In
contrast to their U.S. counterparts, the two main umbrella groups
representing Russian Jewry said last week that they support the change.
The
Russian Jewish Congress, which only a year ago was highly critical of
Putin's policies, now has adopted a pro-Putin stance, appealing to the
U.S. Congress and to major U.S. Jewish organizations to encourage the
Bush administration to seek a complete legislative repeal of the
amendment.
"The
time has come to repeal this law. There is no state-sponsored
anti-Semitism in Russia and there is free emigration," Alexander
Osovtsov, RJC s executive vice president, told JTA.
Berel
Lazar, one of Russia's chief rabbis, sent a letter to Bush on Oct. 31,
urging him to consider granting Russia normal trade status.
According
to Lazar, under Putin anti-Semitism in Russia has declined dramatically,
all restrictions on emigration have been removed and the quality of life
for Jews in Russia has vastly improved.
Alexander
Axelrod, director of the Moscow office of the Anti-Defamation League, is
less optimistic and has strong reservations about how human rights are
observed in Russia. Yet he too told JTA that Jackson-Vanik should be
abolished because times have changed.
Political
pressure, not trade sanctions, should be used to enhance democracy in
Russia, he said.
On the
Russian street, Jews have mixed feelings about the proposed step,
primarily for psychological reasons.
For many
of them, the Jackson-Vanik Amendment symbolized the U.S. commitment to
improving the quality of life in the former Soviet Union.
"It
was comforting to know that if something is not OK, the U.S. has got an
effective instrument to force the Russian government to alter it,"
said Tanya Liberman, a 44-year-old Moscow-based programmer. "Now
the emigration is really free, but I am not really sure that everything
is OK — and going to be OK."
(JTA
correspondent Lev Gorodetsky in Moscow contributed to this report.)