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Anshel Pfeffer

ByAnshel Pfeffer, Anshel Pfeffer

Analysis

Israel-Asia ties growing rapidly

September 22, 2015 14:48
The warm reception accorded Burma’s military chief, Min Aung Hlaing, when he visited Israel last week, raised some eyebrows.
1 min read

The warm reception accorded Burma's military chief, Min Aung Hlaing, when he visited Israel last week, raised some eyebrows.

Burma is only slowly coming out of its long international isolation, and its problematic human rights record means it is still subject to a Western arms embargo. As several human rights groups noted, General Hlaing toured a number of Israeli security companies during his visit.

But relations with Burma are only one part of Israel's bullish policy on Asia, which has seen the Netanyahu government seek to balance its increasingly damaged Western alliances with stronger ties in the east.

"It's not that we are about to replace our strategic alliance with the US, and Europe will probably remain our main trading partner for the foreseeable future," says one senior Israeli diplomat, "but there is massive untapped potential in the east. When things are rocky with the Obama administration and the EU is planning to label settlement products, it's a big change for Israeli ministers to have meetings with their Asian colleagues where all the talk is about co-operation, and the settlements simply do not come up."