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Media Chutzpah And Propaganda

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  • Media Chutzpah And Propaganda

    MEDIA CHUTZPAH AND PROPAGANDA
    by Kim Petersen

    Dissident Voice, CA
    Jews Fear Islamic Republic
    http://www.dissidentvoice.org/2007/07/med ia-chutzpah-and-propaganda/
    July 20 2007

    The article published by the Jewish Telegraph Agency was brazen
    in its headline: Fears of an Islamic Turkey push Jews to vote for
    secularists.¡(1)

    Parliamentary elections are scheduled for 22 July in Turkey. The JTA
    writes of no good options at the ballot box¡because the incumbent
    liberal-Islamic¡(2) Justice and Development Party (AKP) might form a
    second successive government. The JTA notes that the AKP has improved
    the economy and positioned Turkey for inclusion within the European
    Union, but the AKP is suspected of Islamic tendencies that, ostensibly,
    threaten Turkey¡¯s state secularism.

    The opposition right-wing Republican People's Party (CHP), while
    secular, is portrayed by JTA as increasingly hostile to the United
    States and the European Union with a poor track record on minority
    rights and economic liberalization. Given the choices, many Jews,
    according to JTA, will opt for CHP on Election Day.

    I don't like them, but I don't have a choice, Nisim Cohen, a textile
    manufacturer in Turkey, is quoted as saying. The AKP shows a nice
    face, but in their hearts I fear they want to make this an Islamic
    country. They will not keep the republic as it is.¡±

    Jews hope their vote will help create a stronger opposition to check
    the government's powers.

    Viktor Kuzu, an advertising executive, expressed a fear that an
    unbridled AKP could change Turkey in ways to interrupt the way we live.

    The Jewish stance toward the AKP must be regarded with much
    bemusement. By aligning themselves against the AKP, Jews are aligning
    themselves with the Kemalist military, which, although secularist, was
    behind the Armenian Holocaust. (3) Since the World War 2 Holocaust is
    the focal point of Jewish historiography, any alignment with Kemalist
    forces is, on its face, deeply paradoxical.

    JTA acknowledges that there is little substance to fears of Islamism
    springing from AKP, but at the same time it paints a dire picture of
    creeping Islamism.

    Denis Ojalvo, an Istanbul businessman involved in Jewish communal
    affairs complained about small changes: They [AKP] appoint people
    of the wrong ilk to key positions, and then one day you wake up and
    everything has changed.¡±

    People of the wrong ilk!? One wonders how AKP politicians stack up
    against the ilk of Jewish Israeli politicians such as Avigdor Lieberman
    (4) and Ariel Sharon (5)?

    JTA creates a scenario whereby Jews in Turkey appear caught in the
    proverbial pinch between a rock and hard place: between Islamists and
    xenophobic secularists with their°anti-European, anti-American and,
    lately, anti-Israel¡rhetoric. Nearly lost in all the JTA caterwauling
    is that the thrust of the article could easily be dismissed as
    anti-Islamic. Imagine Israel being criticized for becoming a Jewish
    republic where other ethnic minorities suffer second class status or
    worse but, then, this is already a fact-of life in Israel.

    I want a strong opposition that will block the insertion of
    fundamentalist cadres into government,¡said Ojalvo. This would de
    facto change Turkey.¡±

    The JTA finds:

    Jews who support the secularist CHP find themselves at odds with
    Turkey's two other visible religious minorities, the Greeks and the
    Armenians. They appear to be backing AKP, which portrays itself as
    the party of human rights and democracy.

    This is mendacious. First, Greeks and Armenians are not a religious
    minority, but rather a national or ethnic minority. Second, JTA feigns
    concern for minority rights, but it's coverage of human rights for
    national minorities morally fails when it comes to the indigenous
    Palestinians within Israel and elsewhere. Thus, the recalcitrance
    at acknowledging the nationals in Turkey mirrors that of denying the
    existence of Palestinian nationals.

    1. Yigal Schleifer, Fears of an Islamic Turkey push Jews to vote for
    secularists,¡JTA, 17 July 2007.

    2. While the JTA sees the AKP as liberal-Islamic,¡Wikipedia describes
    it as a right-wing, conservative Turkish political party,¡often
    referred to as being moderate¡Ca term preferred by the AKP.

    3. The Armenian National Institute: dedicated to the study, research,
    and affirmation of the Armenian Genocide describes Mustafa Kemal
    Ataturk as the consummator of the Armenian Genocide¡committed by
    his forces.

    4. Justin Raimondo, A Jewish Hitler? The rise of Avigdor Lieberman¡±
    Anti-war.com, 27 October 2006.

    5. Return of the Terrorist: The Crimes of Ariel Sharon,¡± Counterpunch,
    7 February 2001.

    --Boundary_(ID_bwShsjIsqO6Wicw8uMDxhw)--
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