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Calgary: Turkey needs to admit a genocide happened

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  • Calgary: Turkey needs to admit a genocide happened

    Turkey needs to admit a genocide happened

    Calgary Herald

    Sunday, October 14, 2007

    Turkish protests which erupted last week over a vote in a United
    States congressional committee only prove that Turkey must come to
    terms with its history before it can join the European Union and win
    anything more than respect born of geopolitical necessity.

    Public and governmental outrage in Turkey was sparked when the House
    Foreign Affairs Committee passed by 27 votes to 21 a resolution
    condemning as genocide the 1915-1917 slaughter of an estimated 1.5
    million Armenians and forced deportation of many more by a
    revolutionary Turkish government anxious to rid the country of what it
    considered to be subversive non-Muslim elements. At least 20 foreign
    nations, including Canada, have over the years recognized the killing
    as a genocide. It is refreshing to see a small part of Congress add
    its voice to the chorus, even if the resolution is non-binding and
    likely to fail when it comes before the House of Representatives.

    There is not a shred of doubt that the genocide happened. The Turkish
    interior minister at the time, Talat Pasha, even told a German
    reporter that they had to get rid of all the Armenians regardless of
    guilt because "those who were innocent today might be guilty
    tomorrow." News and evidence of the killings were leaked by foreign
    observers to Western governments, but -- as with the genocide in
    Rwanda nearly 80 years later -- nothing was done.

    Famously prickly and nationalist, Turkey has always denied that a
    genocide took place and claims that many Turks died, too. Turkey has
    gone to absurd lengths to discredit dissenting opinions to the point
    of disrupting foreign academic conferences, limiting ties with
    governments that recognize the genocide and stifling domestic
    discussion by prosecuting people under a law which prohibits
    "insulting Turkishness."

    This latest hue and cry is echoed by the White House, which strongly
    opposes the resolution out of political expediency. Turkey is an
    important NATO ally and the site of the Incirlik air base, a crucial
    supply and transit hub for American forces stationed in Iraq. Worse,
    Turkey's government has been making noises about entering the
    heretofore relatively peaceful northern part of Iraq in pursuit of
    troublesome Kurdish rebels who use the area as a refuge in an
    intermittent campaign of guerrilla warfare against Turkey. This would
    be a disaster for American efforts to stabilize Iraq and the Bush
    administration is eager to head things off at the pass.

    While the logic of this position is understandable, the morality is
    not. This is not an age prepared to mix blood with water under the
    bridge. If Turkey is ever to stand unencumbered on the global stage,
    it must accept its grisly past and make amends.

    Time heals all wounds, but only if those who inflicted the injuries will let it.

    (c) The Calgary Herald 2007

    Source: http://www.canada.com/calgaryherald/news/theeditor ialpage/story.html?id=2dd45f8b-64e7-428c-b4e0-b4a3 4af889f2

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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