Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

CU Experts Watch U.S.-Turkish Relations

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

  • CU Experts Watch U.S.-Turkish Relations

    CU EXPERTS WATCH U.S.-TURKISH RELATIONS
    By Paula Pant Colorado Daily Staff Writer

    Colorado Daily, CO
    Oct 12 2007

    International affairs experts at CU are keeping close tabs on
    U.S.-Turkey relations, which were threatened Wednesday when the
    U.S. House Foreign Affairs Committee passed a bill recognizing
    the Ottoman Turkish government's treatment of Armenians in 1915 as
    "genocide."

    Turkey, which borders Iraq to its north and is the easternmost flank
    of NATO, is a key ally in the U.S. conflict in Iraq. The U.S. depends
    on Turkish ground and airspace as it maneuvers around the Middle East,
    and it lauds Turkey - a secular Islamic state - as a beacon for the
    rest of the region.

    But that relationship has come into question with the Congressional
    committee's vote, which has infuriated Turks.

    On Thursday the Turkish ambassador to the U.S. responded to the House
    declaration by returning to Turkey for at least seven to ten days.

    "It's an issue of nationalism," said CU professor of history and
    international affairs Robert Schulzinger. "For the Turks, this is
    an absolutely forbidden subject, and people suffer very seriously if
    they're charged with genocide."

    It is illegal to "insult Turkishness" in Turkey, and many scholars and
    journalists have been jailed for even posing the academic question
    as to whether or not the Ottoman government - the precursor to the
    modern-day Turkish republic - committed genocide against ethnic
    Armenians living in eastern Anatolia in 1915.

    Earlier this year Hrant Dink, a Turkish-Armenian newspaper editor
    openly critical of Turkey's genocide denial, was assassinated in
    broad daylight in Istanbul by a 17-year-old Turkish nationalist.

    CU scholars say factual evidence leaves no question that 1915's
    tragedy was, indeed, genocide, and not - as Turks argue - an act of
    civil war pitted against a World War I backdrop.

    "As a matter of historical fact, it was genocide," Schulzinger said.

    But Turkey's "genocide denial is not uncommon," said CU anthropology
    professor Paul Shankman. "You even have Holocaust deniers today who
    have large audiences in parts of the world."

    U.S. politicians "on both sides of the aisle ~J recognize that this
    event ~J wasn't a civil war, it was a genocide," Shankman said. The
    House Foreign Affairs Committee has considered non-binding resolutions
    to declare it a genocide for more than 20 years, but pressure from the
    Clinton and the first George Bush White Houses, which were worried
    about straining relations with Turkey, has historically kept the
    "genocide" label at bay - until now.

    CU scholars say the committee's decision to recognize it as genocide
    wasn't partisan and wasn't intended to undermine President George
    W. Bush, who strongly urged Congress not to pass it.

    "This is just a straight moral issue," Shankman said.

    But it could have broad current-events implications - particularly
    considering that Turkish military and warplanes have recently been
    situated along the Turkey-Iraq border. The Turks have grown weary of
    Iraq's Kurdish rebels, who Turks claim have been crossing the border
    to attack Turkish troops.

    "There are people who are arguing that if this resolution goes all
    the way through [Congress], it will alienate Turkey from the United
    States and allow them to pursue a unilateral move against the Kurds,"
    Shankman said. "But I'm not convinced."

    Turkey severed military and economic ties with France last year
    after it declared the 1915 tragedy a "genocide." The two nations
    re-established economic ties after six months.

    A spokesperson for Mark Udall, the congressman who represents
    Colorado's 2nd Congressional District which includes Boulder and
    Eldorado Springs, could not reach Udall by the Daily's deadline to
    report his stance on the issue.

    http://www.coloradodaily.com/articles/2007 /10/11/news/c_u_and_boulder/news1.txt
Working...
X