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OP-ED: GW's Shameful Affiliations

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  • OP-ED: GW's Shameful Affiliations

    OP-ED: GW'S SHAMEFUL AFFILIATIONS
    By Alison Tahmizian Meuse

    Daily Colonial, DC
    George Washington University
    April 25 2007

    Have you ever wondered what goes on behind the scenes at GW? Have
    you ever taken the time to look into our university's political and
    financial commitments? Well I have, and I am distressed to report
    that the hands of our administration are filthy.

    My individual awareness to such matters began when it came to the
    attention of the Armenian Students Network that GW holds a membership
    in the American Turkish Council (ATC). While the ATC has many positive
    goals in regards to promoting Turkish interests in the US, one of its
    more touchy objectives is to block the Armenian Genocide resolution
    in the United States Congress. As an Armenian whose grandparents
    were forced to flee Turkey in the face of systematic massacres
    and deportations, it was rather revolting to discover that my own
    university is a party to such an objective. President Trachtenberg is
    to be commended for his straightforward affirmation of the genocide;
    nevertheless, the university's affiliation with the ATC derogates his
    individual candor. By attaching the university's name to such a lobby,
    the GW administration is implicitly agreeing with all of the policies
    and viewpoints adopted by that council. I encourage all students,
    campus organizations, and faculty members to further investigate the
    broader issue at hand. There is no doubt that the ATC is simply one
    lobby group among many supported by our university.

    Living in our nation's capital has shown me the sway that Turkish
    lobby groups exert in America. Indeed, it is groups like the ATC that
    keep the Armenian Genocide out of our textbooks, despite the fact
    that it was not the current Turkish government which perpetrated the
    massacres. Even on April 24, when Armenians from around the world
    gather to remember the deaths of loved ones, the Turks mobilize to
    protest our commemoration observances. And they have that right. We
    are all blessed to live in a country that permits free speech; a free
    land where journalists do not fear for their lives and intellectuals
    are not jailed for insulting the state. We do not have a penal code
    whereby individuals are imprisoned for insulting "Americanness,"
    as is the case in Turkey.

    I was not compelled to write this article because I am against
    Turkey. I have a dear friend who is Turkish, and I am in favor of
    Turkey's ascension to the European Union - an ongoing process that
    is reforming both the government and society as a whole. Perhaps the
    Turkish government will never accept the term "genocide" to describe
    the events of the early twentieth century, but that seems unlikely
    given that both the European Parliament and the Council of Europe
    recognized the Armenian genocide years ago. The obstruction of genocide
    recognition in the United States cannot be attributed to a historical
    quandary on the veracity of the event; rather, it is a political
    dilemma. Turkey is a crucial ally in the region; the combination of
    its NATO membership, useful military bases, and positive relationship
    with Israel has long forced our government to skirt the issue.

    The author, a sophomore in the Elliott School, is an intern at the
    Embassy of Jordan and Social Coordinator of the International Affairs
    Society.

    Editor's Note: The article this story references can be found here.
    http://www.dailycolonial.com/go.dc?p=3&s =4231
    http://www.dailycolonial.com/go.dc?p=3&s =4276
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