Become a Member
Opinion

Israel needs to do more to help Ukraine

If it continues its appeasement of Russia, it will be siding with a tyranny over the West

March 1, 2022 16:34
GettyImages-1162746706 Zelensky babyn yar
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky delivers a speech at The Babyn Yar Holocaust Memorial Centre, a place of a mass execution of Jews by Nazis in World War II, during a memorial ceremony in Kiev on August 19, 2019. - Some 34,000 Jews were murdered over two days in September 1941 at Babiy Yar, a ravine in Kiev rendering it a symbol of the Holocaust where Nazis shot more than 100,000 people (Photo by Genya SAVILOV / AFP) (Photo credit should read GENYA SAVILOV/AFP via Getty Images)
3 min read

As a state that understands first-hand the need to protect one’s sovereignty, it should have been a given that Israel would do all it could to support Ukraine following the Russian invasion. Ukrainian Prime Minister Volodymyr Zelensky has commented on the shared struggles between Israel and Ukraine, when he noted in December 2021 that “We know what it’s like not to have an own state. We know what it means to defend one’s own state and land with weapons in hand, at the cost of our own lives. Both Ukrainians and Jews value freedom, and they work equally for the future of our states to become to our liking, and not the future which others want for us. Israel is often an example for Ukraine.”

And yet in recent days Israel has not always lived up to the mark. On the one hand, Israel has made valiant efforts to send 100 tonnes of humanitarian aid to Ukraine, including medical equipment, tents, and blankets. On the other hand, Israel has thus far failed to provide any military support, which has been a source of deep disappointment for Ukrainian politicians, according to Ukrainian Ambassador to Israel Yevgen Korniychuk. On top of this, Israel has taken the position of a “middle man” in the crisis, at times failing to condemn the Russian state for its unjustified assault on Ukrainian territory and sovereignty. 

For example, although the Israeli state’s first official statement last week supported Ukrainian territorial integrity and sovereignty, it failed to name the perpetrator destroying Ukraine’s territorial integrity and sovereignty: Russia. Then on Friday, Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett refused to offer the military aid requested Ukrainian Prime Minister Volodymyr Zelensky. The history of close Russo-Israeli relations has eclipsed the diplomatic need to promote solidarity with Ukraine. 

Israel is now walking a morally-dubious tightrope, shamefully trying to maintain a low profile amidst one of the greatest catastrophes to rock the European continent since World War II.