WASHINGTON,
Nov. 14 (JTA) — U.S. and Russian Jewish groups are pleased as a law
that helped ensure the emigration of tens of thousands of Soviet Jews
appears to be approaching its end.
Hosting Russian President Vladimir Putin this week, President Bush
announced his intention to work with Congress to adjust the Jackson-Vanik
Amendment, ending trade restrictions on Russia.
Russia has made "important strides on emigration and the
protection of religious and ethnic minorities, including Russia´s
Jewish community," Bush said at a press conference Tuesday.
Adopted in 1974, the amendment made it a goal of U.S. foreign policy
to persuade the Soviet Union to relax its restrictions on emigration.
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 reasons for removing the restrictions now 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. In addition, the
White House wants to entice Russia to support Bush´s missile defense
program.
U.S. Jewish groups say they understand the reasoning, but want
assurances that the Russian government will help its Jewish communities.
Russian Jewish groups take a slightly different line, urging the
United States to lift the trade restrictions unconditionally.
Visiting the United States this week, one of Russia´s chief rabbis
said he is convinced that Putin is serious about fighting anti-Semitism
at home, and intends to "eradicate it completely."
Rabbi Berel Lazar was one of a half-dozen Russian and American Jews
who met with Putin Tuesday night at the Russian Embassy in Washington.
They reportedly were impressed by Putin´s warmth and his resolve to
help the Jewish community in Russia. Putin also spoke about his personal
experience growing up near a Jewish family.
Before Rosh Hashanah this year, Putin sent a letter to the Jewish
community promising to stamp out anti-Semitism in Russia. This week´s
meeting proved Putin´s commitment to the well-being of Russian Jewry,
fighting anti-Semitism and letting Russian Jews travel freely and retain
their dual Russian-Israeli citizenship, Lazar said.
It is important to lift Jackson-Vanik so Russia can see that American
attitudes also have changed, Lazar told JTA.
It also helps their relations with the surrounding society that
Russian Jews are seen to support the change, Lazar said.
Since the collapse of the USSR, Russia has been granted normal trade
relations every year through annual presidential waivers.
Under Jackson-Vanik, to receive such a waiver Russia´s emigration
policies must pass an annual review. The waivers have allowed
Russian-American trade to continue unhindered over the past decade, but
Russia resents the review process and wants normal trade relations to be
permanent.
Since Jackson-Vanik is an amendment to trade legislation, a bill to
change the legislation would have to originate in the U.S. House of
Representatives´ Ways and Means Committee, which has jurisdiction over
trade agreements and revenue measures.
Rep. Tom Lantos (D-Calif.) met with the U.S. national security
adviser, Condoleezza Rice, and plans to introduce legislation this year,
spokesman Matt Gobush said, but Lantos doesn´t believe it will acted
upon until next year.
Lantos already has support from the committee chairman, its ranking
member and other leading lawmakers, Gobush said.
"We´ve yet to see any resistance to the idea," he said.
Lantos has insisted on certain commitments, which could be included
as "findings" in the legislation. They address the
continuation of free Jewish emigration, enforcement of hate crimes
legislation and restitution of Jewish communal property seized by the
Soviets in the 1920s and 1930s.
Some members of Congress do not agree that Putin should be rewarded
for the steps he has made to date. Rep. Benjamin Gilman (R-N.Y.) wrote a
letter to the U.S. 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.
Russia is providing assurances that it will not revert to its former
repression, according to Harold Luks, chairman of NCSJ: Advocates on
Behalf of Jews in Russia, Ukraine, the Baltic States and Eurasia.
A recent exchange of letters between U.S. Secretary of State Colin
Powell and Russian Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov, on the importance of
human rights and religious freedom, is a very positive step, Luks said.
Though he noted the different approaches of the American and Russian
Jewish communities, Luks said the United States must be involved in
ensuring the future of Jewish life in Russia.
"The Russian Jewish community is looking at 2001, and the
American Jewish community is looking at 2001 and beyond," Luks
said. "That´s the reason for the assurances."
Others at the meeting with Putin were not pressing for such
commitments.
"We don´t need more assurances than the last two years,"
said Rabbi Levi Shemtov, director of the Washington office of American
Friends of Lubavitch. He would be comfortable lifting Jackson-Vanik,
Shemtov said, because of reports from Russia about how vastly the
situation for Jews has improved.
"If someone´s making a gesture and commitment, it should be
answered with trust," Shemtov said. 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.
Other former Soviet republics that might be freed from trade
restrictions include Armenia, Azerbaijan, Kazakstan, Moldova,
Tajikistan, and Ukraine.
The three Baltic nations were released from the Jackson-Vanik
restrictions after the fall of communism in 1991.