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ANKARA: What Anti-Defamation League statements put at stake

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  • ANKARA: What Anti-Defamation League statements put at stake

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Aug 27 2007


    What Anti-Defamation League statements put at stake



    Searching through news articles published and aired by international
    media concerning Turkey and Israel would probably yield many results
    concerning government or military cooperation between the two
    countries, all emphasizing the fact that Turkey is one of the few
    Muslim countries with which Israel has diplomatic ties.

    Yet this fact changed as of last week when the New York-based
    Anti-Defamation League (ADL) decided to label the World War I
    killings of Anatolian Armenians as genocide, reversing its long-time
    policy of approaching the issue in a more balanced way.
    Elaborating on certain news articles found in Today's Zaman's
    archives can be helpful in focusing on what this article will humbly
    try to draw attention to: It was only last week that Turkey was the
    host country of a live, joint search-and-rescue exercise conducted by
    Israeli, Turkish and US naval and air forces in the international
    waters of the eastern Mediterranean Sea, south of the Turkish coast.

    "The objective of this exercise is to practice coordinated emergency
    search-and-rescue procedures and life safety measures at sea. By
    enhancing their interoperability, cooperation and coordination level
    during the exercise, elements of the three naval and air forces will
    be able to respond more efficiently and rapidly to potential maritime
    emergencies as well as to humanitarian assistance in the future," the
    Turkish General Staff said at the time.

    And it was only earlier this month when a veteran Middle East
    commentator's article posted from the Turkish capital and published
    in the influential Israeli daily Haaretz quoted hopeful remarks by
    Turkish diplomats who have been trying to jumpstart peace talks
    between Syria and Israel.

    Recent news articles reflect deep disappointment with the Turkish
    capital's beliefs that calling the 1915 incidents genocide has
    neither historical nor legal grounds. Statements made by Turkish
    diplomats, independent of the ADL's announcement in which it reversed
    its policy on the Armenian issue, provide strong clues on what kinds
    of concerns led the Turkish political leadership to voice such strong
    disappointment.

    "We consider this statement, which also constitutes fairness to the
    unique position of the Holocaust in history as well as to memories of
    its [the Holocaust's] victims, as a misfortune and expect it be
    corrected," Levent Bilman said in a written statement, while Turkey's
    Ambassador to Israel Namýk Tan said the ADL's change of policy is
    incompatible with Turkey's existing strategic relations with both
    Israel and the US.

    Armenians claim up to 1.5 million of their kinsmen died in a
    systematic genocide campaign by Ottoman Turks around the time of
    World War I, but Ankara categorically rejects the label, saying that
    both Armenians and Turks died in civil strife during World War I,
    when the Armenians took up arms for independence in eastern Anatolia
    and sided with Russian troops that were invading the crumbling
    Ottoman Empire.

    In a statement published on its Internet site on Thursday, following
    its first statement announcing change of policy, the ADL said it was
    ready to support reconciliation efforts between Turks and Armenians
    after it sent shockwaves through Ankara by recognizing Armenian
    allegations of genocide, referring to Turkey's proposal dating back
    to 2005.

    Ankara is well aware of the fact that the ADL is solely a
    nongovernmental organization based in the United States and has no
    official link to the Israeli state. Yet Turkish officials are also
    aware of the fact that Turkey's sensitive public opinion would not
    make this distinction between governmental and nongovernmental
    institutions, possibly leading to escalation of both anti-Israeli and
    anti-US sentiments in society. The ruling Justice and Development
    Party (AK Party) and its leader, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoðan,
    known for their firm stance against anti-Semitism, would not be
    strong enough to prevent such a reaction from the public given the
    fact that the g-word ("genocide") is a nonstarter if Turkey's friends
    are sincerely hoping for Turkey and its people to face bitter
    memories of their joint history with the Armenian people. Genocide is
    also a legal term and speaking about the tragic events that
    transpired in Anatolia during World War I is more than just a legal
    matter.

    Israel is also well aware of all of these facts given that its
    President Shimon Peres felt the need to assure Erdoðan that Israel
    has not changed its position on the Armenian issue. During a
    telephone conversation with Erdoðan last week, Peres reiterated the
    Israeli position that Turkey and Armenia should resolve the dispute
    on the nature of the killings of Anatolian Armenians through
    dialogue. According to the Israeli media, Peres, during the same
    conversation, also noted that Israel does not control US Jewish
    organizations, which pursue their own agendas.

    Nonetheless, the matter doesn't seem to be Ankara's lack of awareness
    of what Peres underlined concerning the US based-Jewish organizations
    as Ankara considers ADL-like statements to be "seeds of discord"
    being planted in strategic Turkish-Israeli relations which will
    ultimately have a poisoning effect.

    27.08.2007

    Emine Kart
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