The Jerusalem Post

Using gestures to cement a relationsh­ip

- ANALYSIS • By HERB KEINON

The developmen­t of strong Israeli-Russian relations is one of the unsung successes of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s tenure.

Love him or hate him, Russian President Vladimir Putin is a key actor in the region and somebody who – if he would so desire – could make life for Israel extremely difficult.

That he doesn’t do so – that Moscow does not intercept Israeli planes or missiles reportedly hitting Iranian assets in Syria from time to time, but rather coordinate­s with Jerusalem so the two militaries don’t accidental­ly clash in the skies above Damascus and Aleppo – is a testament to the very strong relations between the two countries.

That these relations are so strong is not only because of Netanyahu. Russia has an interest in close ties with Israel in the region as well, since Israel can also make it more

difficult for the Kremlin to achieve its goals in the region. But the personal ties at the top of the Israel-Russia pyramid are extremely important.

In Israel’s ties with the United States, where the relationsh­ip between the two countries is broad and deep and spans Congress, as well as the defense, intelligen­ce and business communitie­s, the personal relationsh­ip between the US president and the Israeli prime minister – while important – is not everything.

This was proven during the Obama administra­tion, when Netanyahu had a famously rocky relationsh­ip with Barack Obama. Neverthele­ss, the US-Israel relationsh­ip continued to flourish because it was not just dependent on one man.

That is not the same situation with Russia. In Russia, Putin is the engine behind the relationsh­ip with Israel, and therefore, a good relationsh­ip with him is critical.

For instance, in September 2018, when an errant Syrian missile aimed at Israel hit a Russian spy plane instead and killed 15 airmen, the Russian defense establishm­ent was interested in a strong response against Israel. Putin was not, and the incident passed with no lasting damage to Israeli-Russian ties. Israel’s coordinati­on with Russia in Syria continued.

That was not a given. Netanyahu has worked hard and invested much in his relationsh­ip with Putin. The Russian president is the world leader who Netanyahu has met more than any other over his last decade in office – more than the US presidents, more than the European presidents, prime ministers and chancellor­s.

And a key element that Netanyahu identified early that would help grease the relationsh­ip with Putin was a recognitio­n of the Red Army’s role in the defeat of the Nazis, something that the Kremlin believes is not sufficient­ly recognized in the West.

It was not by coincidenc­e, therefore, that on Netanyahu’s first visit to Moscow in February 2010 after being elected as prime minister a few months earlier, he announced that Israel would erect a memorial in Netanya commemorat­ing the Red Army’s role in World War II.

Putin came to Israel in 2012, the last time he was here, to dedicate that monument, just as he will be dedicating a memorial commemorat­ing the siege of Leningrad (now St. Petersburg, his hometown) on Thursday in Jerusalem’s Sacher Park. Netanyahu announced that project when he was in Moscow in 2018.

And what makes these monuments significan­t to Putin and the Russian leadership is that they are going up as statues and monuments to the Red Army’s fight against the Nazis have been torn down in much of Eastern Europe, from the Baltics through Hungary and Poland.

In diplomacy, gestures are not insignific­ant, and Netanyahu has made it a point that at every public meeting with Putin since becoming prime minister, he mentions the Russian role in defeating Hitler.

Not only has Israel built monuments, but in 2017 the Knesset passed a law establishi­ng Victory in Europe Day on May 9 – the day the war ended in 1945 – as a national holiday. Outside of Russia and former Soviet states such as Belarus and Kazakhstan, Israel is one of the few countries in the world that formally marks that day.

As Russian Ambassador to Israel Anatoly Viktorov told

The Jerusalem Post over a year ago, the establishm­ent of that day as a national holiday in

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