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Genocide wars; Turkey and the Armenians

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  • Genocide wars; Turkey and the Armenians

    The Economist
    February 17, 2007
    U.S. Edition

    Genocide wars; Turkey and the Armenians


    More disputes between Turkey and America


    A new dispute over the Armenians may sour Turkish-American relations

    TURKEY'S fraught relationship with America is heading into a new
    crisis. This may intensify anti-American feelings among millions of
    Turks. It could even hurt America's efforts to restore order in Iraq.


    The latest spat stems from a bill in America's Congress that would
    recognise the mass slaughter of Ottoman Armenians in 1915 as the
    first genocide of the 20th century. The fate of the Armenians remains
    Turkey's biggest taboo. Denying the official version, which says that
    Armenians killed Turks in larger numbers than they were killed
    themselves, has landed scores of Turkish academics and writers,
    including a Nobel prize-winning author, Orhan Pamuk, in court. Last
    month, a Turkish-Armenian editor, Hrant Dink, was murdered by an
    ultra-nationalist teenager, who accused Mr Dink of insulting Turkey.

    Successive American administrations have quashed genocide
    resolutions, arguing that Turkey is too precious an ally to lose.
    Jewish groups, grateful for Turkey's warm links to Israel, have
    helped. But the background landscape has changed.

    First came the Turkish parliament's refusal in March 2003 to let
    American troops cross its soil to invade Iraq. Next were the Turkish
    government's overtures to Iran, Syria and Hamas, which infuriated
    many in Washington, DC. Throw America's refusal to attack PKK Kurdish
    guerrillas in northern Iraq, and Turkish threats to do the job
    themselves, into this "bubbling noxious stew, and we're heading for a
    perfect storm," says one administration official.

    Nancy Pelosi, the new Democratic speaker of America's House of
    Representatives, whose Californian constituents include many rich
    Armenians, refused to meet Turkey's foreign minister, Abdullah Gul,
    in Washington last week. Mr Gul spoke of "lasting damage" if America
    joined 18 countries that term the Armenian massacres genocide.
    American officials agree that vital interests are at stake. Turkey
    has approved the overflight of 4,900 sorties to Iraq for unspecified
    "combat support" since the start of the war, as well as the treatment
    of wounded American soldiers in Turkish hospitals.

    Some worry that, if an Armenian-genocide bill is passed, Turkey's
    mildly Islamist prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, may end this
    co-operation, so as to woo nationalist votes in the run-up to
    Turkey's parliamentary election later this year. Hawks in the
    opposition are already baying for the expulsion of thousands of
    illegal migrant workers from Armenia and for a ban on flights between
    Armenia and Turkey. Fear is mounting among Turkey's own ethnic
    Armenians: racist graffiti have been scrawled on the walls of their
    churches, and threatening e-mails continue to flood the offices of
    Agos, the weekly newspaper Mr Dink founded and ran.

    What to do? Turkey could start by scrapping article 301 of the penal
    code, which makes it a crime to "insult Turkishness". As Mr Dink
    argued, recognition of Turkey's past misdeeds would best come from
    unfettered debate among Turks, not from vote-seeking foreign
    politicians. In a hopeful sign, Mr Gul has complained that "people
    outside Turkey think you can be thrown into jail for opening your
    mouth." Worse, as Mr Dink tragically discovered, you can be killed.
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