The Jewish Chronicle

Let Germany buy arms for the sake of world peace, says Israeli ambassador

- BY TOBY AXELROD

BERLIN

OFFICE BELONGING to Israel’s ambassador to Germany is looking both spare and chaotic.

After four years in the role, which Jeremy Issacharof­f considers “one of the most incredibly interestin­g jobs any diplomat can have, period”, he is packing up and moving back to Israel.

Mr Issacharof­f, 67, is leaving at a deeply symbolic moment for Jews in Germany.

In a historic break with the country’s post-war history, Chancellor Olaf Scholz recently announced that it would double its defence spending to €100billion (£85billion) in response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

How should Jews feel? Mr Issacharof­f will not be tied down by Germany’s horrific past. As an Israeli and a Jew, he says, he knows that “you can want peace and you can want stability but you need to be militarily capable [of defending] that peace and deterring war and instabilit­y”.

There even is speculatio­n that Germany is looking into procuring the Iron Dome from Israel.

None of this was “an easy step for the Germans themselves”, Mr Issacharof­f observed.

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz and his administra­tion are “part of that generation that wanted to distance itself” from Germany’s bellicose past, he says, adding: “But I don’t necessaril­y see this as Germany becoming militarise­d again.”

As well as leaving Berlin, the Londonborn diplomat is also concluding more than 40 years in Israel’s foreign service, which started in 1981 with his involvemen­t as a legal adviser to Israel’s negotiatio­ns over normalisat­ion with Egypt.

Much of his most important diplomacy has been done behind the scenes, says Mr Issacharof­f, who has three adult children with his wife, Laura Kam.

To his successor, Ron Prosor — former ambassador to the United Nations and the UK — he says: “Always look to have a very strong, open and, if necessary, discreet dialogue with your German counterpar­ts. You can get a lot done quietly.”

Mr Issacharof­f was born in London to Israeli parents with roots in Syria and Bulgaria. He attended the Orthodox Hasmonean High School for Boys and later earned a law degree at the London School of Economics. At the age of 22, he moved to Israel.

“England gave me a very important grounding,” he said. “That sense of having tolerant conversati­ons and exchange of views [is] something that is not always prevalent in the Middle East, also in Israel.

“Meeting Arabs and Palestinia­ns in the 70s in LSE, we listened and disagreed and talked. In Israel it was much more difficult to have conversati­ons like that, even among Israelis; they were so emotionall­y charged. That is something I valued very much.”

The last four years have been among the most turbulent in his career. Both Israel and Germany saw transition­s in government; a pandemic continues to rage; and now there is war in Europe.

“The Europe and Germany I came to in 2017 is different from the one that I leave now,” he said. “I was a student of the Cold War at the LSE, and I see a lot of echoes from the past coming back… It is incredibly saddening.”

Germany recently eased the way to citizenshi­p for Jews coming from Ukraine, even those who have been in Israel first. Germany also has a substantia­l population of Israelis, estimated at 20-30,000, though there are no hard figures.

Mr Issacharof­f doesn’t judge them for choosing Germany. He tries to engage with the Israelis here, in the hopes that one day the children might go back to Israel, just as he did. “These decisions can be very intensely personal,” he said. When he decided to move to Israel, he also felt pressure to “stay in England, make a lot of money… I made a different decision. It was something much deeper in me: Israel is where I wanted to live.”

He also recalls an incident in his school days in London, when skinheads attacked members of his Jewish football team.

“I was beaten up and called a ‘bloody Jew’ after a football match that we made the mistake of winning,” he said. “I felt different because I was Jewish and to be honest I was different. I didn’t feel like I was English. And to some extent [that was] because my parents were Israeli.”

So it was natural for him to move to Israel, he said, “because that is where I felt most at home”.

He considers exchange programmes between German and Israeli youth to be key in preserving what some call the “special relationsh­ip” between the two countries.

That connection has huge benefits, from deep academic and business ties to intelligen­ce exchange. “If we provide informatio­n that stops a terrorist attack, you will have no idea about it,” Mr Issacharof­f said.

Mr Issacharof­f is already receiving queries about potential career opportunit­ies. “I’m keeping an open mind,” he said. “I’m going back to Jerusalem and family and it’s going to be a bit of a new beginning for me.”

You need to be militarily capable of deterring war and instabilit­y

 ?? ?? Outgoing envoy: Jeremy Issacharof­f
Outgoing envoy: Jeremy Issacharof­f

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