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Resolution on Armenian genocide risks foreign policy

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  • Resolution on Armenian genocide risks foreign policy

    Chicago Sun-Times
    April 7 2007

    Resolution on Armenian genocide risks foreign policy

    Backlash could compromise Turkey's role as gateway for supply of U.S.
    forces in Iraq

    April 7, 2007
    BY JOEL J. SPRAYREGEN


    Congress is on the verge of inflicting a devastating blow to U.S.
    foreign policy. At issue is a resolution introduced in the House of
    Representatives that brands as genocide the deaths and deportations
    of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire during World War I.
    Turkey is the gateway for supply of U.S. forces in Iraq as well as
    supplier of basic necessities -- food, water, gas, electricity -- to
    Iraq. Turkey has been a staunch American ally in NATO; Turkish forces
    play an important role in Afghanistan.

    Passage of the resolution -- which Turks see as officially adjudging
    them to be a nation of barbarians -- will produce popular indignation
    that no Turkish government could ignore. As Professor Soner Cagaptay
    of Princeton University says, ''This backlash would inevitably
    cripple U.S.-Turkish military cooperation.''

    The modern Turkish Republic, successor to the Ottoman Empire within
    shrunken borders, is the only Muslim country in the Middle East that
    maintains a functioning democracy. Turkey borders Iran, Iraq, Syria
    and Russia. Passing a self-serving resolution condemning Turks for
    horrific things that occurred 90 years ago would alienate an
    important ally without achieving anything of substance for the United
    States. An American rebuff, added to recent European actions hostile
    to Turkey, would only strengthen malign anti-Western Islamist and
    nationalist minorities in Turkey.

    Armenians contend 1.5 million or more people were systematically
    killed between 1915 and 1923. Turks say a far smaller number of
    people died, not by deliberate extermination, but as a consequence of
    a brutal war in which Armenians were deported because they sided
    militarily with invading Russians. There is no doubt that large
    numbers of Armenians suffered terrible deaths and deportations;
    Muslim civilians were also ravaged.

    The weight of opinion outside Turkey has favored Armenian claims. But
    Chris Morris, British author of The New Turkey, says: ''Both sides
    produce stacks of documents to back up their arguments . . .''
    Respected historian Guenter Lewy concludes, ''The primary intent of
    the [Ottoman] deportation order was undoubtedly not to eradicate an
    entire people but to deny support for the Armenian guerrilla bands
    and to remove Armenians from war zones.'' The tragic consequences for
    Armenian civilians should be remembered. But politicians have no
    qualifications to judge Ottoman intentions nine decades ago.

    Similar congressional resolutions have failed to pass in recent
    years. The reason the current resolution is being pushed by more than
    160 House co-sponsors is that the November elections empowered
    California Democrats, and there are many Armenian Americans residing
    in California and elsewhere who are actively lobbying. They deserve
    respect for keeping alive the memory of what happened to their
    ancestors, but not at the price of rupturing relations with a key
    American ally.

    Turkish Americans are too few to lobby effectively. Speaker Nancy
    Pelosi, ignoring concerns persuasive to prior House leadership, has
    scheduled a rushed vote for this month. Pelosi should ask the
    Department of Defense what would happen if Turkey curtailed
    co-operation with U.S. forces in the Middle East and Afghanistan.

    There is much Turkey can do to prevent congressional resolutions from
    becoming a perennial irritant, e.g., tempering anti-American
    propaganda in media close to the ruling AKP party and increasing
    protection of human rights. Turkey is not improving its image by
    cozying up to Hamas terrorists.

    But passage of this resolution would inflict a major foreign policy
    disaster on America by rupturing relations with a country vital to
    execution of our foreign policy.


    CChicago lawyer Joel J. Sprayregen participates annually in a
    symposium in Istanbul to advance civil society in Turkey.
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