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Guest Commentary: U.S. Ignores Genocide For Alliance's Sake

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  • Guest Commentary: U.S. Ignores Genocide For Alliance's Sake

    GUEST COMMENTARY: U.S. IGNORES GENOCIDE FOR ALLIANCE'S SAKE
    By Robert Deranian, Ph.D.
    Genocide Commemoration Committee of San Diego Member

    The UCSD Guardian Online, CA
    April 26 2007

    America's apathy over the Armenian genocide stems from a desire to
    appease it's ally, Turkey.

    April 26, 2007 - Most would agree that America's role in the world
    is, of late, a bit in doubt. Our young men and women are sacrificing
    their lives, and we believe, or at least hope, for good reasons.

    Is it just about oil prices or even to protect America from terrorism?

    Not quite.

    There is something more, having to do with moral standing, that is
    vitally important to America. Those of contrary opinion say that such
    thinking is of little practical value and could even be detrimental
    to America's foreign interests. This is in fact just the point of
    contention.

    What is best for America's interests is not always the immediate
    indulgence of self-interest but rather the implications of moral
    standard, what some call the high moral ground. Why is this
    important? America today faces threats from those who choose terror.

    They believe they are right, and by implication, America is wrong.

    Their frequent argument is that America makes the wrong moral choices,
    that we do not stand for what is right.

    Do we have examples that prove the contrary?

    One clear example of such a choice involves an issue that many have
    tried to keep under the radar for 92 years, the Armenian genocide. At
    first glance, the Armenian genocide seems to be just such an issue
    that is not important to America's self-interest and should therefore
    be dismissed without further notice. However, much to the dismay of
    those trying to keep the issue hidden, the Armenian genocide will
    just not go away.

    Why?

    To answer this question, go back to the time of World War I. The year
    is 1915, and the Ottoman Turkish Empire is fighting alongside Germany
    and Austria-Hungary and against Britain and its allies, including
    the United States in the later years of the war. Taking advantage of
    the chaos and confusion of the war, the Ottoman government decided
    to settle a long-standing problem occurring within its borders known
    in those days throughout the world as the "Armenian Question."

    It included human rights violations against the Armenians, a Christian
    minority within the Islamic majority of the Ottoman Turkish Empire. The
    method employed to settle the problem was a mass extermination of
    Armenian people - an Armenian genocide. Initiated on April 24, 1915,
    the Armenian genocide was implemented through forced march, burning
    of towns, starvation, rape and outright massacre.

    So brutal were the events, with estimates of 1.5 million Armenians
    killed, that despite the ongoing war, the world at large was horrified
    and demanded the perpetrators be brought to justice. At the forefront
    of this demand for justice was America, as personified by then-former
    President Theodore Roosevelt, calling what happened to the Armenians
    the worst crime of the war.

    With such a clear acknowledgment of what happened to the Armenian
    people, official recognition of the Armenian genocide seems to be the
    right choice. However, Turkey categorically denies that a genocide ever
    took place, even paying high-priced U.S. lobbyists to work fervently
    at denying the Armenian genocide. That Turkey receives significant
    foreign aid from the United States and so essentially pays for such
    lobbying through U.S. taxpayer money is sadly ironic and perhaps not
    so surprising.

    What is, however, surprising is the debate about recognition of the
    Armenian genocide that rages every year in the U.S. government. For
    those who oppose recognition, it's about not offending Turkey,
    a country of geopolitical significance.

    The logic goes that the United States cannot risk offending Turkey
    by recognizing the Armenian genocide. Those favoring recognition
    counter this argument by saying that the Cold War is over, and that
    Turkey performed poorly as a U.S. ally during the initial stages of
    the current Iraq war.

    While Turkey's geopolitical significance is debatable, what should
    not be debatable is America's position on issues of moral justice.

    >From its beginnings, America has strived for the ideal that there
    is something more than just self-interest, something that makes the
    world a better place - the existence of a high moral ground.

    Are we now to dismiss this high moral ground for reasons of
    short-term self-interest? This is the central question of debate
    within the U.S. government when it comes to recognizing the Armenian
    genocide. Case in point: Currently, there are resolutions making
    their way through both houses of Congress that would recognize the
    Armenian genocide.

    In response, Turkey has sent some of its top government and military
    leaders to persuade the U.S. Congress otherwise. Their efforts seem not
    to be wasted as was well demonstrated by Secretary of State Condoleezza
    Rice's recent congressional testimony. The following is an exchange
    of that testimony between Congressman Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) and Rice.

    SCHIFF: Is there any historic debate outside of Turkey? Is there any
    reputable historian you're aware of that takes issue with the fact
    that the murder of 1.5 million Armenians constituted genocide?

    RICE: Congressman, I come out of academia, but I'm secretary of
    state now and I think that the best way to have this proceed is for
    the United States not to be in the position of making this judgment,
    but rather for the Turks and the Armenians to come to their own terms
    about this.

    Rice completely dodges the very straightforward question concerning the
    historic reality of the Armenian genocide by asserting that the United
    States is not in the position to pass judgment. Put another way, the
    United States should not make judgments about issues of moral justice.

    What are the consequences of the United States not making these kinds
    of judgments? In Turkey at least, the lack of a strong message from
    America about the Armenian genocide emboldens those who would deny its
    existence, to the point of passing laws that make it illegal to say
    there was an Armenian genocide. This has resulted in trials and, in
    some cases, imprisonment of leading Turkish intellectuals, including
    Nobel laureate writer Orhan Pamuk. Sadly this law also resulted
    in the rousing of a 17-year-old Turkish boy to murder Hrant Dink,
    a Turkish Armenian journalist dedicated to reconciliation between
    Turks and Armenians.

    Making a judgment about moral issues like this one is rarely without
    cost. Throughout its history, America has had to make such choices.

    These choices are not without consequence, as exemplified by the
    firing of U.S. Ambassador to Armenia John Evans for just using the
    word "genocide" to describe what happened to the Armenians. This man's
    career was essentially ended because he made a stand to say what was
    right, to take the high moral ground. Without this high moral ground,
    can we as Americans claim that we are any different than our enemies,
    except that we have bigger guns?

    America's very credibility is on the line. It's our choice.

    http://ucsdguardian.org/viewarticle.php?s tory=opinion03&year=2007&month=04&day= 26
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