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  • Blaming Turkey, Does It Help?

    BLAMING TURKEY, DOES IT HELP?
    By George Gregoriou

    Greek News
    http://www.greeknewsonline.com/modules.php?na me=News&file=article&sid=7485
    Oct 15 2007
    New York

    Maybe we are doing it for our own consolation. Ankara has not changed
    its policy on Cyprus for more than half-a-century, nor its claim on
    the Aegean Sea and Air Space. With more violations, the Greeks become
    more defensive, and the more we shout at each other and appeal to the
    powers that be to put a leash on Ankara. The Turks have the military
    power to carry on the occupation in Cyprus and the violations in
    the Aegean. This policy has the support of Washington and London,
    both powers being critical in the Aegean confrontation and a Cyprus
    settlement. This support is in the form of billions of dollars
    in economic aid and weapons, to make Turkey a strategic regional
    power/ally to control the oil resources in the Middle East and the
    Cold War (II) to encircle Russia.

    Criticism is fine when dealing with a civilized people who readily
    respond to criticism because the insults become more insulting when
    they are repeated. The ruling circles in Ankara show no such signs.

    They are not troubled by criticism nor insulted by the insults. Take
    the genocide of the Armenians in 1915. The response of Ankara to
    any Turkish intellectual referring to the genocide in 1915 as a
    historical fact is criminal charges and imprisonment for insulting
    Turkishness. In the case of the Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, not
    only he was charged with committing a crime, he was assassinated by
    a young Turk, who in his words: "I killed a non-Muslim." The new
    president and foreign minister of Turkey want a new makeover for
    Turkey, to improve her image for the EU. I will not hold my breath,
    even if there are changes in Article 301. The silencing of critics
    and threats to foreign governments will go on for a long time.

    Anyway, why limit the charges of genocide against the Armenians
    in 1915? For the first time The New York Times referred to the
    Armenian genocide from 1915 to 1918, not just 1915, on October 4,
    2007. How about from the 1870s to 1918? This genocide includes not
    only Armenians, but Greeks, Assyrians, and other Christians, since
    the beginning of the 19th Century. The genocide was intensified
    when the Empire was on the verge of collapse, from the 1870s to the
    1920s. At Lausanne, the Allies gave the Turks general amnesty for the
    political and criminal crimes committed from 1914 to 1922. Why? The
    Allies were interested in securing the territorial plundering of
    the Ottoman Empire, have Turkey on their side against the new enemy,
    the Bolsheviks, and the smell of oil in the Middle East.

    A research on the genocide of the Greeks is being assembled for
    publication in Europe. Why is this research important? It is part
    of a larger movement to force Ankara to recognize the butchering of
    these subjects and pay reparations for loss of life and property, to
    the descendants, or stay out of Europe. What makes this issue even
    more important is that the political winds in the European Union
    are against Turkish membership, for a variety of reasons, include
    the genocide of the Armenians. The genocide of Greeks, Assyrians,
    and Kurds will be added to the list.

    The solution to the Cyprus problem is part of this struggle. There
    is only one message that needs to be conveyed to Ankara, from Nicosia
    and Athens. This message has to be conveyed, loud and clear. Without
    a Cyprus settlement, there will be no membership in the EU. I would
    go a step further. There will be no naval bases for the United States
    in Greece. Let Ankara and its enablers in Washington and Europe worry
    about the effects of shutting the door to Turkey¹s membership in the
    EU. Turkey will be in trouble. So would Washington, its geopolitical
    strategy to control the oil in the Middle East. Turkey, with the soft
    Islamists in power could easily turn on into a hard-core Islamist
    country. This would be a big headache for Washington, already in
    trouble in Iraq, Syria, Iran, and the Middle East. Washington can
    understand where the nail pinches in the shoe.

    Thirty-three years of occupation in Cyprus is more than enough. The
    daily violations of the Greece¹s airspace and territorial waters in
    the Aegean has to end, or at least settle it according to the existing
    international legalities and practice. The denial that genocide was
    committed against Christians (Greeks, Armenians, Assyrians, Slavs,
    and other Christian groups) for over 100 years will not make it go
    away. It requires recognition and closure, for the descendants of
    those deported and/or massacred, 33% of the Ottoman population in
    1900. Over 100,000 of these Christians are in Turkey today. Not only
    the Europeans do not want Turkey in the EU, Cyprus and Greece have
    the veto as a last resort.

    Being nice and toeing the Washington line by holding the hand of Ankara
    to the EU doorsteps at Brussels did very little for the Greeks. Even
    the koumparato of Costas Karamanlis with Erdogan or changing the
    history books to be more Muslim-friendly on the deportation and
    massacre of Greeks at the turn of the last century and the burning
    of Smyrna did not modify Turkish behavior.

    Turkish government behavior is friendly until the ink on the signature
    dries. It happened at Lausanne in 1923 and the rapprochement between
    Venizelos and Ataturk in 1931. The 100,000 Greeks in Istanbul,
    unaffected by the forced exchange of population after the defeat in
    Asia Minor, are now 2,500-3,000. The tax law in 1942, the pogroms,
    and the expulsions in the 1950s and 1960s forced these Greeks (plus
    Armenians, and Jews) to pack up and leave with their suitcases. Enough
    is enough!

    --Boundary_(ID_LR0kpxGS+H/957OXwh4dmw)--
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