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Wall Street Journal: Politics And Genocide

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  • Wall Street Journal: Politics And Genocide

    POLITICS AND GENOCIDE

    Wall Street Journal
    Oct 4 2007

    Wall Street Journal. (Eastern edition). New York, N.Y.: Oct 4,
    2007. pg. A.18

    Most Members of Congress don't know enough about U.S. history,
    much less anyone else's. But that isn't stopping the House of
    Representatives from trying to weigh in on a painful chapter of
    Ottoman history -- and hurting U.S. interests in the bargain.

    A pending resolution, co-sponsored by 226 Members, calls on President
    Bush to ensure that U.S. foreign policy "reflects appropriate
    understanding and sensitivity concerning . . . the Armenian Genocide"
    in 1915, when Turks carried out "the systematic and deliberate
    annihilation of 1,500,000 Armenians." The resolution isn't binding,
    but Turkey can be forgiven for seeing an absence of "understanding
    and sensitivity" in that broadside.

    As a general rule, legislatures in far-off countries ought to think
    carefully before judging another people's history. It's a fair bet
    that points are being scored with domestic lobbies, and playing with
    history often complicates current foreign policy. In this case, all
    of the above apply. The sponsor is Adam Schiff, a California Democrat
    whose district has a lot of Armenian-American voters. His adoption
    of the genocide cause helped him get elected in 2000 and made his
    "name in foreign affairs," as the Los Angeles Times put it in 2005.

    This Congressional free-lancing would put a strain on U.S. ties with
    a key Muslim ally in a tough neighborhood. If the resolution passes,
    the backlash in Turkey will be more than symbolic. In urging Speaker
    Nancy Pelosi to stop the resolution from reaching the floor for a
    vote, eight former U.S. Secretaries of State wrote last week that
    it "could endanger our national security interests in the region,
    including our troops in Iraq and Afghanistan, and damage efforts to
    promote reconciliation between Armenia and Turkey."

    Horrible massacres certainly took place during World War I in the
    Ottoman Empire, and the Turkish government has never been eager to
    discuss the Armenian question in good faith. But this history is
    more complex than either the genocide crusaders or official Turkish
    deniers are willing to concede.

    To briefly recap: On April 24, 1915, the nationalist Young Turk
    government ordered the Armenians of eastern Anatolia deported en masse
    to Syria and Iraq. The Turks feared the Armenians were in cahoots
    with their enemy, Czarist Russia, and fighting to carve their own
    state out of a collapsing Ottoman Empire. Hundreds of thousands of
    Armenians died on their trek, murdered by Turkish or Kurdish fighters
    and marauders, or falling to disease, hunger and cold. The Ottoman
    War Crimes Tribunal, set up by the victorious allies after the war,
    estimated that 800,000 Armenians perished. Armenians put the toll
    at 1.5 million, which was about the entire Armenian population of
    Anatolia at the time.

    In October 1984, when Congress considered a similar resolution,
    we wrote: "There can be little doubt that the Armenian repression
    was a terrible chapter in history and perhaps the Turks have been
    too insistent on denying guilt. But it was only one part of a global
    tragedy that claimed nearly 15 million lives. Dredging it up now in
    Congress, some 70 years after the event, may be a generous gesture
    toward Americans of Armenian descent but is hardly an appropriate
    signal to U.S. enemies." Or to our Turkish friends.
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