Israel has issued its first official statement on the crisis between Kyiv and Moscow, saying they support Ukraine's territorial integrity and sovereignty.
Israel also announced they are prepared to transfer immediate
humanitarian assistance to Ukraine, the Foreign Ministry statement
added, and it is engaged in dialogue with its partners on ways to
restore the diplomatic path.
The statement, however, did not address Russia by name, reflecting the
complicated position Israel has found itself in over the crisis
unfolding 3,000 kilometers away. An Israeli diplomatic official who
asked to remain anonymous said, "We did the minimum required so now we
can go back to sitting on the sidelines."
While the Ukrainians declined to comment on the Israeli statement officially, a diplomatic source, who asked to remain anonymous because he was not authorized to discuss the matter publicly, indicated that it did not go far enough to suit his government.
“This is better than nothing but this isn’t the statement we expected,” the source told Haaretz.
Speaking by phone from the western Ukrainian city of Lviv, Israeli Ambassador to Ukraine Michael Brodsky told Haaretz that while Wednesday’s statement did not constitute an outright condemnation of Russia, it was “far stronger than our usual position.”
“The main thing is that we explicitly mentioned the territorial
integrity and sovereignty of Ukraine, which has never been said before
by us officially. We used to say we recognized the territorial integrity
of Ukraine, but I don't think we ever said it in an official statement
of the foreign ministry.”
According to a political source, the statement "reflects the balance
between Israel's political and security interests." Referencing Israel's
relationship with both Syria and Putin, he added "The United States and
the world understand the complexity of our situation. "
Prime Minister Naftali Bennett had initially pushed his cabinet to
maintain strict public neutrality on the developments in eastern Ukraine
in recent weeks, distributing a set of talking points that ministers
were expected to stick to judiciously.
But on Monday, one of the senior Israeli officials changed their tune and said that, should the Ukraine crisis escalate into a diplomatic and economic clash between Washington and Moscow, Israel would back the United States.
In its statement on the conflict, Israel's government said it shares the
concern of the international community regarding the steps taken in
eastern Ukraine and that it is continuing to engage in dialogue with its
partners on ways to get the diplomatic efforts back on track.
Israel is also concerned about the welfare of the thousands of Israeli
citizens and the large Jewish community living in Ukraine, the statement
read.
Transportation Minister Merav Michaeli, chair of the Labor Party, said Monday that “there is no question that the special relationship that Israel has with the United States, that this government is working to rehabilitate and rebuild, is not the same relationship that Israel has with Russia.” Michaeli is a member of Israel’s ministerial security cabinet.
“Our heart is in the direction of the United States,” weighed in
Diaspora Affairs Minister Nachman Shai, telling Channel 12 on Israeli TV
that Israel was working hard not to “take a clear public position, with
the great hope that this crisis will end without fire, without
casualties and without a military confrontation.” However, he added, “we
know where we stand on the international map.”
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