Israel Recognizes Armenian Genocide in Historic Rebuke to Turkey’s Century of Denial

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The eternal flame at the Tsitsernakaberd Memorial in Yerevan, Armenia, on Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day 2014 via Wikimedia CommonsIsrael’s government today unanimously approved formal recognition of the Armenian Genocide on Sunday, marking a historic break with decades of diplomatic caution and delivering a direct rebuke to Turkey’s long campaign of denial.The cabinet backed a proposal brought by Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar to recognize the mass killing, imprisonment and forced deportation of Armenians during the final years of the Ottoman Empire as genocide, according to a report from the Jerusalem Post. The decision must still be ratified by the Knesset before becoming Israel’s formal parliamentary position.“A historic decision: the Israeli government has unanimously approved Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar’s proposal to recognize the Armenian genocide,” the Foreign Ministry said after the vote. For Armenians and their supporters, the move represents long-overdue moral clarity from the state of the Jewish people.Sa’ar hailed the decision in direct and unapologetic terms. “It is never too late to do the right thing,” he said.\“This horrifying genocide, which took place more than 100 years ago and about whose historical facts there is truly no dispute, involved the murder of one and a half million people and the destruction of an ancient cultural and historical heritage,” Sa’ar said.The foreign minister framed the recognition as a Jewish and Israeli moral obligation. “In my view, it is our moral duty as Jews—and certainly as the state of the Jewish people—to make the decision we made today,” he said.Sa’ar also thanked Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for backing the move, along with his fellow ministers for supporting it. The result was a rare unanimous decision on an issue Israel had avoided for generations.For decades, successive Israeli governments refused to formally recognize the Armenian Genocide, largely to preserve relations with Turkey. Ankara was once one of Israel’s closest strategic partners in the Muslim world, and Israeli leaders were reluctant to provoke a diplomatic spat.That old calculus appears to have now collapsed. Turkey under President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has moved steadily away from strategic partnership with Israel and toward an Islamist, anti-Israel posture that has made the old silence harder to justify.Relations deteriorated sharply after the Hamas-led massacre in Israel on October 7, 2023, and the war in Gaza that followed. Erdoğan has repeatedly accused Israel of genocide in Gaza, a charge Israel strongly denies, and has compared Israeli leaders to Nazi officials.Netanyahu has responded with force. Earlier this month, he called Erdoğan an “antisemitic dictator” who is “committing genocide against the Kurds,” supports Hamas, oppresses his own people and imprisons political opponents.Turkey has also suspended most trade with Israel and has become one of Hamas’s most aggressive diplomatic defenders.The Armenian people have sought international recognition for more than a century. Their case rests on the mass deportations, death marches, massacres and destruction of Armenian communities under Ottoman rule between 1915 and 1917.Armenians say around 1.5 million people were killed. Turkey rejects the genocide label, arguing that both Armenians and Turks died amid civil war, famine and the broader violence of World War I, and placing the death toll in the hundreds of thousands.But the historical consensus outside Turkish officialdom is clear. Scholars widely regard the mass killing of Armenians as the first genocide of the 20th century.More than 30 UN member states now recognize the Armenian Genocide, including the United States, France, Germany, Canada and Russia. The Holy See and the European Parliament have also formally recognized it.The Israeli Foreign Ministry said the genocide remains subject to an “institutionalized campaign of denial and minimization.” That campaign, according to the ministry, has been led primarily by Turkey.Sa’ar made the same point before the vote, saying recognition of the genocide committed against Armenians in the final years of the Ottoman Empire is “both a moral and historical duty.” He also called for firm condemnation of “denial, minimization, or distortion of the historical truth.”The move also arrives at a moment when the Middle East is being reshaped by the failures of globalist diplomacy. For years, Western governments have pretended that Islamist political movements, Turkish neo-Ottoman ambition and jihadist proxy networks could be managed through polite statements and trade arrangements.The decision will almost certainly provoke Turkey, whose government has spent decades lobbying against genocide recognition abroad. Ankara has not only rejected the term, but has treated recognition efforts as hostile acts.That posture has strained Turkey’s relations with Armenia, which has no formal diplomatic ties with Ankara. Although the two countries have occasionally signaled interest in normalization, the genocide question remains central to Armenian national memory.The post Israel Recognizes Armenian Genocide in Historic Rebuke to Turkey’s Century of Denial appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.