Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

The Armenian Weekly; Nov. 17, 2007; Commentary and Analysis

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

  • The Armenian Weekly; Nov. 17, 2007; Commentary and Analysis

    The Armenian Weekly On-Line
    80 Bigelow Avenue
    Watertown MA 02472 USA
    (617) 926-3974
    [email protected]
    http://www.ar menianweekly.com

    The Armenian Weekly; Volume 73, No. 46; Nov. 17, 2007

    Commentary and Analysis:

    1. When Will Phillips Learn?
    By Serouj Aprahamian

    2. Letter to the Editor

    ***

    1. When Will Phillips Learn?
    By Serouj Aprahamian

    David L. Phillips, the infamous architect behind the State Department's
    covert, ill-fated and ultimately discredited Turkish-Armenian Reconciliation
    Commission (TARC) has once again reared his head to tackle another one of
    the many chickens that seem to be coming home to roost for Turkey.

    I refer to the simultaneous resistance being waged against Turkish forces by
    the Kurdistan Worker's Party (PKK) and the increasing autonomy being
    established by Kurds in northern Iraq. These developments have aroused the
    Turkish establishment's fears of having to face the fact that Kurds are a
    distinct ethnic minority that make up 20 percent of their country's
    population. Can you imagine that? Kemalist Turkey actually admitting that
    Kurds are a significant minority that has its own cultural and political
    aspirations? Well, with the U.S. supporting the Kurdish Regional Government
    (KRG) in northern Iraq, Turkish nightmares of having to deal with this
    reality seem like they just may come true.

    And that's where Phillips comes in. On Nov. 8, he gave a talk at the
    American University in Washington, where he laid out a proposal for how
    Turkey can defeat the PKK. The two main pillars of his argument-based on a
    report he prepared on the topic for the National Committee on American
    Foreign Policy-are that Turkey should "drain the swamp" of PKK support by
    further democratizing and pouring in money to the Kurdish regions, while
    also realizing that the establishment of a Kurdish region in Iraq can
    actually be of benefit to Ankara. It is suggested that the two governments
    should embrace one another and ally for the sake of mutual prosperity. This
    latter suggestion is particularly peculiar given the fact that Turkey has
    not only refused to recognize the KRG, but has threatened to invade the area
    to prevent a referendum on the oil-rich city of Kirkuk, scheduled to take
    place later this year. Indeed, Iraqi Kurdish leader Massoud Barzani has
    repeatedly stated that he believes Turkey's real target is Iraqi Kurdistan,
    not the PKK.

    To propose that Turkey would go from this hostile state of affairs to
    exchanging roses and pleasantries with the Kurds in Iraq is a far-fetched
    vision, to say the least. It is all the more surprising to hear such
    recommendations coming from Phillips, a man who prides himself on being
    "practical" and "pragmatic" in his goals and assessments. In contrast,
    Phillips conspicuously fails to make much more basic and fundamental
    suggestions that would get at the root of the problem. This includes ending
    the Turkish military's brutal policy of repression against the Kurds,
    acknowledging their existence in the institutions and laws of society, and
    granting them full cultural and political freedom. Until these things
    happen, the chances of harmony between Turkey and the Kurds are
    slim-to-none.

    But for those who have followed Phillips throughout his adventures, we know
    that he operates on a much simpler plane of logic. For him, things like
    cultural expression, dignity, self-determination, justice and basic human
    rights are minor considerations that can be brushed aside in favor of what
    people really want: money. Thus, his incentive for both Kurds and Turks to
    mend their relations is the prosperity that can supposedly be achieved for
    both as a result of it.

    For Turkey, it means greater investment in the flourishing economy of Iraqi
    Kurdistan, hopes for entering the EU, and contracts for developing oil
    fields in northern Iraq. For Kurds, their incentive is continued trade and
    access to the West, which inevitably must run through Turkey. Phillips does
    warn, however, that the economic interest of some, such as the PKK, will be
    against stability and normalization. Such groups have allegedly turned the
    struggle of the Kurdish people into a big business and are motivated by
    continuing the money flow. As such, they must be neutralized.

    The line of thinking here is virtually identical to that underpinning TARC's
    earlier efforts to stifle international recognition of the Armenian
    genocide. Back then, we heard that this pesky genocide issue was simply
    getting in the way of more important matters like trade and economic
    integration between Armenia and Turkey. It was suggested that Armenia's
    economy would benefit from direct trade and regional projects, while the
    Turks would be offered a new export market in which to dump their goods. The
    only drawback: this little matter of genocide would have to be swept under
    the rug and relegated away in Orwell's "memory hole." Not to worry, though.
    After all, the only people who were bent on keeping the issue of justice for
    the Armenians alive, according to Phillips, were those extremist Dashnaks
    who "use genocide recognition to solicit money from the Armenian Diaspora"
    (from Phillips' book on TARC, Unsilencing the Past).

    Thus, for the mastermind behind TARC, Kurdish guerillas facing off against
    the Turkish juggernaut and scraping away in the Qandil mountains are nothing
    more than greedy, self-interested crooks who have turned Kurdish suffering
    into a business, just as the thousands of volunteers who have shed their
    blood, sweat and years fighting for the Armenian Cause are really just in it
    to extort the diaspora. In this delusional world, the solution lies in
    ignoring the core issues and supplanting cash for justice when addressing
    problems. Accepting Turkey's crimes and the injustice that it represents
    translate into being "practical."

    However, we know that quite the opposite is true. It is this illusionary
    approach that is truly hopeless and impractical. It has failed in its
    attempt to co-opt the Armenians and will fail again in the case of Turkey
    and the Kurds. One can't help but wonder: When will Phillips learn?
    ------------------------------------------- -------------

    2. Letters to the Editor

    Dear Editor,

    I read the interview with Gulnara Shahinian by Andy Turpin in the Oct. 27
    issue of the Armenian Weekly ("Human Trafficking in Armenia: An Interview
    with UN Human Trafficking Expert Gulnara Shahinian").

    The seriousness of the topic is so grave that the way Andy Turpin tackled it
    was very disappointing. Discussing such an important issue by relying on the
    simple fact that the U.S. State Department classified Armenia on its Tier 2
    Watch List cannot be acceptable to a reputable newspaper. There was not a
    single number or statistic mentioned by Ms. Shahinian or brought in by the
    paper itself, no comparison with other countries, no statistical comparisons
    over the years or between the rural and urban areas of Armenia, no
    differentiation between the various aspects of trafficking, and equally
    important-no second opinions on the issue.

    Ms. Shahinian should have backed her statements with factual details. The
    U.S. State Department is a political entity and the information it puts out
    is always driven by politics. Remember the chemical weapons' labs of Iraq?

    On the other hand, human trafficking issues were not first tackled in 1999
    as claimed by Ms. Shahinian. They were tackled as early as 1994 and 1995
    because some of the victims were being trafficked toward Middle Eastern
    countries with considerable Armenian communities. The uproar in those
    communities reduced trafficking towards those countries more than
    considerably.

    Zareh Guevshenian
    Atlanta, Ga.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X