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Playing Politics With History Is A Dangerous Game

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  • Playing Politics With History Is A Dangerous Game

    PLAYING POLITICS WITH HISTORY IS A DANGEROUS GAME

    Foreign Policy
    http://blog.foreignpolicy.com/node/6578
    Oct 9 2007

    This week, when the Armenian Genocide Resolution comes in front of
    the House Foreign Affairs Committee, members will be pulling out
    their primary sources and Ottoman history books to finally decide
    what happened between Armenians and Turks over 90 years ago. Why now?

    Rep. Adam Schiff, a co-sponsor of the bill, explained his motives
    this way:

    How can we take effective action against the genocide in Darfur if
    we lack the will to condemn genocide whenever and wherever it occurs?

    Tying this resolution to the United States' half-hearted response to
    the atrocities in Darfur is a stretch. This is not to say that the
    Turkish government doesn't need to confront its historical amnesia.

    The legal proceedings against authors Orhan Pamuk and Elif Shafak
    for "insulting Turkishness" and the recent murder of Armenian editor
    Hrant Dink show that the country has a lot of work to do.

    But the truth is, this resolution is not the way to go about it. It
    will only strengthen hardline Turkish nationalists and strain already
    tenuous relations between the United States and one of its most
    crucial allies in the Middle East, Turkey. If U.S. lawmakers are
    really adamant about assigning blame for the atrocities committed
    towards the Armenians in 1915 (estimates put the death toll at 1.5
    million), I suggest they take a closer look at the inaction of their
    own predecessors. Or perhaps pick up a copy of Samantha Power's A
    Problem From Hell to get an extensive account of congressional apathy
    towards genocide throughout the 20th century. But when it comes to
    resolutions like this one, they should leave history to the historians.
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