Middle East Brief with Avi Kaner
For nearly eighty years, Israel stopped short of officially recognizing the Armenian Genocide, despite broad historical consensus that approximately 1.5 million Armenians were systematically murdered by the Ottoman Empire during World War I. In this episode of Middle East Brief with Avi Kaner, Avi explores the history of the Armenian Genocide, why Israel delayed recognition for decades, and what has changed politically and strategically. He examines Israel's past relationships with Turkey and Azerbaijan, the growing deterioration in Israel-Turkey relations, and why Foreign Minister Gideon Sa'ar now calls recognition a moral and historical duty. The episode also explores which countries have recognized the Armenian Genocide, which have not, and how geopolitics has often influenced historical recognition. Finally, Avi discusses why the word "genocide" carries extraordinary legal and moral weight, why precision in its use matters, and how remembering one genocide strengthens, rather than diminishes, the universal promise of "Never Again." Middle East Brief with Avi Kaner provides thoughtful analysis of Israel, the Middle East, history, diplomacy, and current events.
58 episodes
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