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JTA: Turkey: Genocide flap could hurt Israel

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  • JTA: Turkey: Genocide flap could hurt Israel

    Turkey: Genocide flap could hurt Israel

    Ben Harris

    The Anti-Defamation League's reversal last week of its position on the
    Armenian genocide has set off a flurry of diplomatic activity in
    Turkey and Israel.

    Published: 08/28/2007

    NEW YORK (JTA) -- The Anti-Defamation League's reversal last week of
    its position on the Armenian genocide has set off a flurry of
    diplomatic activity in Turkey and Israel.

    Officials in Ankara and Jerusalem, in coordination with American
    Jewish leaders, were working this week to contain the fallout from the
    ADL's statement, which recognized the World War I massacres of
    Armenians by Ottoman Turks as "tantamount to genocide."

    The ADL was forced to reverse its longstanding position -- shared by
    other major American Jewish organizations -- of neutrality on the
    genocide question amid growing dissension within its own ranks.

    Jewish leaders warned that recognizing the genocide, as Congress is
    now considering, could undermine American strategic interests in the
    Middle East and Turkey's robust military and economic partnership with
    Israel. Also deemed at risk was the security of Turkish Jewry, which
    sent a letter earlier this year opposing a congressional resolution on
    the matter.

    Nabi Sensoy, Turkey's ambassador in Washington, told JTA that his
    government was strongly opposed to any congressional action, but that
    the Turkish Jewish community had nothing to fear in any case. Sensoy
    was less sure that Turkey's relations with Israel and the United
    States would survive a resolution unscathed.

    "I cannot really dismiss that if this resolution does pass that there
    will be certain impacts on certain relationships," Sensoy said. "There
    is no doubt about it."

    Of those raising the specter of reprisals against Turkish Jewry,
    Sensoy said, "I'm very disturbed to hear this kind of remark coming
    from anywhere. They seem to be forgetting the history of Turks and
    Jews, which goes back at least 500 years. We've always had the best of
    relations between Turks and Jews and the Turkish Jewish community is
    part and parcel, and an integral part, of the Turkish community."

    What began more than a month ago as a small local protest against an
    ADL-sponsored program in the Boston suburbs has escalated into an
    international crisis with a nation deemed central to American
    interests and Israeli security.

    Turkey is Israel's closest -- and arguably its only -- regional ally
    and is central to American policy in the Middle East.

    Mindful of Turkey's importance, the Conference of Presidents of Major
    American Jewish Organizations began a series of discussions on the
    matter last week. Malcolm Hoenlein, the group's executive vice
    chairman, told JTA that the conference had not yet decided how or
    whether to respond.

    "As wiser heads have prevailed, people are looking for us to play a
    role in trying to control and calm down the situation so there are no
    ramifications and repercussions that have nothing to do with the
    substance" of the issue, Hoenlein said.

    Though Jewish groups have toed a careful line on the genocide question
    for years, the issue exploded last month after the town council of
    Watertown, Mass., home to one of the country's largest Armenian
    communities, voted to sever ties with an ADL anti-bigotry program in
    protest of the organization's refusal to acknowledge the genocide.

    After the vote, the ADL's regional director in Boston, Andrew Tarsy,
    switched gears and condemned his organization's position. Tarsy was
    promptly fired by Foxman.

    The Boston ADL leadership rebelled and with pressure mounting, Foxman
    reversed himself last week, acknowledging that the "consequences" of
    Ottoman massacres of Armenians were "tantamount to genocide." Tarsy
    was reinstated Monday as Boston director.

    An outraged Turkey communicated its dismay to Israeli and Jewish
    leaders, with some Turkish officials suggesting that Israel had to
    "deliver" American Jewish groups on this issue.

    Namik Tan, Turkey's ambassador, reportedly said that his country
    believed its strategic relationship with Israel also involved the
    whole Jewish world.

    The Turkish people "cannot make that differentiation" between Israel
    and American Jewish organizations, Nan told The Jerusalem Post.

    "On some issues there is no such thing as 'Israel cannot deliver?'" he
    continued, adding that this was one of those issues.

    According to an unofficial translation, the Turkish Foreign Ministry
    issued a statement saying use of the genocide label is "historically
    and legally baseless" and accusing the ADL of trying to "rewrite the
    history" of the period.

    "We consider the statement of the ADL as an injustice to the unique
    character of the Holocaust, as well as to the memories of its
    victims," the statement said. "We expect it to be rectified."

    On Sunday, the ADL released a second statement reiterating its support
    for a joint Turkish-Armenian commission to investigate the matter -- a
    move Turkey supports -- and its opposition to a resolution in
    Congress. Foxman also wrote to Turkey's prime minister, Recep Tayyip
    Erdogan, "to express regret for any pain we have caused to you and the
    Turkish people in these past few days."

    In Turkey, those steps were seen as backtracking. Erdogan said the ADL
    had rectified its "mistake," according to the Turkish Daily News.
    Sensoy said he felt the ADL had reversed itself again and that its
    current position reflected a more "balanced situation."

    "We are expecting the American Jewish organizations to be neutral
    about this," Sensoy said. "Although we're aware of the fact that this
    is a very sensitive issue for the Israeli people and the Jewish
    community, what we have to seek is the truth."

    Source: http://www.jta.org/cgi-bin/iowa/news/article/20070 828turkeyadl.html

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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