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ANKARA: Western Hypocrisy on Armenian Issue

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  • ANKARA: Western Hypocrisy on Armenian Issue

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Nov 29 2008


    Western Hypocrisy on Armenian Issue

    by Mehmet Kamis


    The Armenian issue has always been used by the West as a problem that
    is kept shelved and repeatedly brought to the agenda when the time is
    right for Western interests.

    The West treats this issue as a vehicle for cornering Turkey and
    making it do whatever they want it to do.

    After they obtain what they seek from Turkey, they shelve it again
    only to put it to use once again when it is needed. They do whatever
    is needed to prevent Turks and Armenians from becoming friendly
    again. Indeed, Armenians started to concentrate on Turkey's forced
    migration and make a blood feud out of it after they migrated to
    Western countries, didn't they? Those who have created animosity and
    hatred between Armenians and Turks, who had been living peacefully for
    a thousand years, have used this issue for their own interests. This
    is most successfully done by France. It uses the genocide claims like
    the sword of Damocles against Turkey. Recently, the US, too, has
    repeatedly used a bill on Armenian genocide as leverage while
    bargaining with Turkey.

    After President Abdullah Gul went to Yerevan to watch the match
    between the national teams of Armenia and Turkey, Turkish-Armenians
    relations entered a period of thawing, and the second stage of this
    period started when Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian came
    to Istanbul. While he came for another purpose, this visit has made
    significant contributions to the improvement of relations between the
    two countries. Speaking to Today's Zaman, Nalbandian even said they
    were optimistic about the commission of historians proposed by Turkey
    to investigate into the forced migration of Armenians. Now, it is said
    that Armenian President Serzh Sarksyan is expected to visit Turkey in
    response to Gul's visit. Most likely, Sarksyan will come to Turkey to
    watch the match between Turkish and Armenian national teams in 2009.

    In this process of rapprochement between Turkey and Armenia, a strange
    statement was made by the Vatican. The timing of the statement was
    considerably striking. Cardinal Walter Kasper, chairman of the Papal
    Council for the Promotion of Christian Unity, said that "the Armenian
    genocide was true" when Nalbandian was visiting Turkey. Speaking to
    the Vatican radio ahead of a visit by several Armenian clerics to Pope
    Benedict XVI, Kasper said, "Genocide is not an allegation, but is a
    reality." Moreover, he indicated that the pope had used the term
    genocide as well. What Kasper was trying to say was obvious. He was
    telling Armenians, "Do not forget 1915 and the hatred we
    manufactured."

    After 1915, we saw World War I and World War II. The Germans killed
    millions of Frenchmen while millions of Germans were killed by the
    French and the British. The various sides of World War II, in which
    about 40 million people died, soon forgot what had happened and became
    allies. On the other hand, our conflicts are growing in size each day
    and wearing ourselves out. Whenever we tend to forget about our past
    issues, some people pop out to remind us of them.

    One thing is certain: it is never the Armenian side which benefits
    from this hatred and animosity. Armenia is an Eastern Christian
    nation. They must be aware of the fact that big Christian states have
    been using them for 100 years. The countries that incited them against
    the Ottoman Empire in the 1900s are not reaping what they have sown
    against Turkey. But, Armenians gain nothing from this.

    So many things happened in the early 1900s. Armenians killed many
    civilian Turks seeing the recruitment of many male Turks into the army
    as an opportunity. In a rare measure, the Ottoman Empire forced them
    to migrate to other places. During this migration, many Armenians
    died. Such incidents had happened many times since the creation of the
    Earth. For example, hundreds of thousands of innocent people were
    killed in Iraq during the last several years. If a record of such
    events had been kept throughout history, no nation could remain
    unashamed towards another nation, and there would be nothing but
    hatred on earth. How many years can a nation live with feelings of
    revenge? Moreover, can revenge amend things? It will do nothing but
    produce new causes for revenge.
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