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Did Putin apologize for Lavrov?

JERUSALEM — Russian President Vladimir Putin apologized on May 5 to Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett for comments Putin’s foreign minister, Sergei Lavrov, made comparing Ukraine’s Jewish president to Adolf Hitler, according to Bennett’s office’s account of a phone call between the two leaders.

Russian Minister of Foreign Affairs Sergei Lavrov speaking at the Conference on Disarmament, March 14, 2022. (UN photo by Emmanuel Hungrecker)

The Kremlin’s own account of the phone call made no mention of an apology, or of Lavrov’s comments. 

The purported apology came four days after Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov stated that it was possible for Nazi ideologies to flourish in Ukraine because “in my opinion even Hitler had Jewish origins,” and “the biggest anti-Semites are Jewish themselves,” in reference to Ukrainian President Volodomyr Zelensky, who is Jewish. 

Lavrov had made the comments as part of a justification for his country’s invasion of Ukraine, which Russia maintains is for the purposes of “de-Nazifying” it.

Lavrov provoked international outrage with his comments, which he made to Italian television. US Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, who is Jewish, called the Zelensky-Hitler comparison “sickening” and anti-Semitic. 

Russia’s own chief rabbi, Berel Lazar, told JTA, “it would be nice if [Lavrov] apologized to the Jews” — a rare direct critique of the country’s top officials from the head of its Jewish community.

Israel was also displeased with the comments. Foreign Minister Yair Lapid calling them “unforgivable.” Undaunted, Lavrov then accused Lapid of being “anti-historical” and Israel of supporting a Ukrainian “neo-Nazi regime.”

Bennett’s office said he had accepted Putin’s apology over comments that had appeared to widen a growing rift between Israel and Russia.

“The Prime Minister accepted President Putin’s apology for Lavrov’s remarks and thanked him for clarifying his attitude toward the Jewish people and the memory of the Holocaust,” Bennett’s office said in a release about the call.

Both parties said they had discussed the evacuation of civilians from the Azovstal steel plant in the Ukrainian city of Mariupol, which had been under deadly siege from Russian forces amid its war with Ukraine. 

Putin also expressed best wishes to Bennett on the occasion of Israel’s 74th Independence Day, Yom Ha’aatzmaut, according to both parties.

Zelensky, meanwhile, spoke to Bennett on May 4, a conversation that Bennett’s office said had prompted the prime minister’s request to Putin for humanitarian evacuation corridors. 

Zelensky also gave an interview to Fox News in which he reacted to Lavrov’s Hitler comments by comparing Russia to Nazi propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels. 

“They are following the same concept of Goebbels and using the same methodology. And the reaction, I think, is still weak in the world to these phrases of Lavrov,” Zelensky told Fox News via a translator.

Israel has been playing negotiator between Russia and Ukraine as one of the few Western nations with good ties to both, and Bennett has been reluctant to heavily criticize Russian actions during its protracted invasion.



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