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  • Inflaming the Turks

    Boston Globe, MA
    Oct 13 2007

    Inflaming the Turks
    October 13, 2007


    THE HISTORICAL evidence shows that the 1915-1917 massacres of
    Armenians in eastern Turkey constituted what the world now knows as
    genocide, and Turkey ought to acknowledge this reality. But a
    resolution before Congress has provoked an upsurge of nationalism
    that threatens US interests and would do nothing to lift Turkey's
    willful amnesia. It should not be pursued at this time.

    "There's never a good time," said Speaker Nancy Pelosi this week.
    She supports the resolution, which was approved by the Foreign
    Affairs Committee Wednesday and is now before the full House. That
    committee vote, just one step in the legislative process, prompted
    protests in Turkey and caused the government to summon its ambassador
    home. Also this week, unrelated to the vote, the Turkish government
    sought parliamentary approval for raids into Iraq to pursue Kurdish
    guerrillas there. And as they have done for over four years, US
    supply planes shuttled across Turkish air space, via the base at
    Incirlik, to supply US forces in Iraq.

    Approval of the resolution by the House would threaten use of the
    base and make it harder for US diplomats to persuade the Turkish
    government to stay out of Iraq. Eight former secretaries of state
    have warned that its passage would harm US security interests.

    This page recognizes the truth of the Armenian genocide, but with the
    nation embroiled in Iraq, we agree that Congress should not
    inadvertently complicate the mission of American forces.

    The Armenian Assembly of America is right to contend that Turkish
    denial of the genocide "seeks to rehabilitate the perpetrators and
    demonize the victims." After the defeat of the Ottoman Empire in
    World War I, the Turkish government created a nationalist history
    that made the Turkish sections of the empire the victims of allied
    aggression, abetted by the Armenians. Acknowledging the genocide
    today would tarnish that national image. To discourage revisionist
    inquiries and control dissent, Turkey enforces a law against
    insulting "Turkishness." This week, two editors were convicted of
    violating that law because they reprinted articles stating that the
    massacres of Armenians constituted genocide. Those articles had been
    written by another editor, Hrant Dink, who was murdered in January
    for speaking the truth.

    The Turks need to begin an honest dialogue about the birth of their
    nation and repeal the "Turkishness" laws. Others can help by
    reminding Turkey, in nongovernmental settings, about the reality of
    the genocide and by supporting Turks willing to examine their past.
    Europeans are positioned to take the lead because of Turkey's
    aspirations to join the European Union. The House resolution, by
    inciting the worst aspects of Turkish nationalism and creating
    government-to-government friction, would delay a reckoning with
    history.
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