Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Passport: When genocide becomes a political football

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Passport: When genocide becomes a political football

    When genocide becomes a political football
    http://blog.foreignpolicy.com/node/5945
    T ue, 08/21/2007 - 10:22am.

    Alan Wolfe weighs in <http://www.tnr.com/blog/openuniversity?pid=3D1 35807>
    on
    the debate raging in Boston over the Anti-Defamation League's stance on
    whether there was, in fact, an Armenian genocide in Turkey during WWI. When
    the ADL's New England regional director recently said, yes, there was
    genocide, he was summarily
    fired<http://www.boston.com/news/loca l/articles/2007/08/21/jewish_groups_pressure_the_a dl/>.
    The national ADL holds no position official on the genocide or non-genocide
    itself, but the organization all but opposes a pending Congressional
    resolution that would label the deaths of some 1.5 million ethnic Armenians
    a genocide. Writes Wolfe:

    To say that the ADL's position is incomprehensible to most Bostonians,
    including many of its most prominent Jews, is an understatement. Wild
    speculation exists about its reasons, ranging from Turkey's support for
    Israel to a desire not to allow the term genocide to become overused.

    If it's the latter, then how does one explain the ADL's position on
    Darfur<http://www.adl.org/PresRele/Mise_00/5 016_00.htm>,
    which is probably an even murkier case for genocide than was the Armenian
    massacre? More likely, the ADL is being perfectly transparent about its
    motives, as expressed in its open
    letter<http://www.adl.org/ad_new_england.a sp>on the subject:

    We believe that legislative efforts outside of Turkey are counterproductive
    to the goal of having Turkey itself come to grips with its past. We take no
    position on what action Congress should take on House Resolution 106. The
    Jewish community in Turkey has clearly expressed to us and other major
    American Jewish organizations its concerns about the impact of Congressional
    action on them, and we cannot ignore those concerns. We are also keenly
    aware that Turkey is a key strategic ally and friend of the United States
    and a staunch friend of Israel, and that in the struggle between Islamic
    extremists and moderate Islam, Turkey is the most critical country in the
    world.

    Michael Crowley of the *New Republic *interprets this to
    mean<http://www.tnr.com/blog/the_plank?pid=3 D135885>that "the ADL, along
    with other leading Jewish-American groups, apparently
    considers friendly relations between Israel and Turkey ... more important
    than the underlying historical question."

    To which I would reply: The ADL is a political player, not some neutral
    arbiter of historical disputes. As much as we might like to see the legal
    term "genocide" be rigorously applied at all times, the real world simply
    doesn't work that way. And on the merits, I would say that the national ADL
    is justified in pointing out that such a resolution would have
    consequences - failing to achieve concrete results, needlessly provoking
    Turkey at a fragile time in its politics, and yes, risking blowback for
    Turkey's Jewish community. Whether the ADL should be in the business of
    protecting Israel's strategic allies from criticism is another question,
    however.
    Blake Hounshell <http://blog.foreignpolicy.com/bhounshell>

    ( filed under:History <http://blog.foreignpolicy.com/taxonomy/term/11 4> |North
    America <http://blog.foreignpolicy.com/taxonomy/term/27 > )
    <http://blog.foreignpolicy.com/taxonomy/term/ 27>


    Source: http://blog.foreignpolicy.com/node?from=3D10
Working...
X