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Tulin Daloglu: Armenian debacle

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  • Tulin Daloglu: Armenian debacle

    Armenian debacle

    Washingtom Times
    October 16, 2007

    By Tulin Daloglu - House Speaker Nancy Pelosi says she believes that
    "the biggest ethical challenge facing our country is the war in Iraq."
    Therefore, she must believe that passing a resolution declaring the
    mass killings of Armenians at the end of World War I a genocide will
    restore America's moral authority. Rep. Tom Lantos, California
    Democrat, chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, said, "I
    feel that I have a tremendous opportunity as a survivor of the
    Holocaust to bring a moral dimension to our foreign policy." The
    resolution passed last week by a 27"21 vote.

    However, while Mr. Lantos speaks so forcefully about the resolution
    now, he has opposed similar measures in the past, arguing that what
    happened to Armenians is not technically a genocide. In fact, he
    argued this right up until Turkey refused to give the United States a
    northern front to invade Iraq in 2003. According to congressional
    sources, Mrs. Pelosi urged Mr. Lantos to support the resolution, or
    else risk his chairmanship. In addition, Mr. Lantos was seriously
    troubled when the Turkish government invited the newly elected Hamas
    leadership of the Palestinian Authority to Ankara, and by what appears
    to be Turkey's strengthening relationship with Iran.

    A delegation of Turkish Parliament members visiting Washington was
    disappointed by the vote. "What bothered me was that those [U.S.
    representatives] who supported the Turkish side, 21 of them said loud
    and clear that the events of 1915 amounted to genocide," said Gunduz
    Aktan, a former ambassador and member of the Turkish Parliament from
    the Nationalist Movement Party (MHP). "Despite this, because of
    Turkey's strategic importance, because of the national interest of the
    U.S., they are voting no. This was unbearable." Turks share Mr.
    Aktan's opinion. But they should also know who lobbies on Turkey's
    behalf. Former House Minority leader Richard Gephardt, hired by the
    Justice and Development Party (AKP) government to lobby for Turkey,
    actively worked in support of such resolutions in the past. When a
    last-minute intervention by President Bill Clinton stopped a similar
    resolution before a vote in 2000, Mr. Gephardt wrote to the then-House
    Speaker Dennis Hastert, Illinois Republican, to tell him that he was
    "committed to obtaining official U.S. government recognition of the
    Armenian genocide."

    Although Egemen Bagis, one of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's
    chief foreign policy advisers, said that Turkey has done everything in
    its power to avert the resolution's passage, it also made many
    mistakes. Not only did the Turkish government hire Mr. Gephardt, but
    it also placed too much stock in the perception that Turkey's
    geographically strategic position would ensure such a measure's
    defeat.

    Evidently, President Bush, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and
    Defense Secretary Robert Gates did all they could to try to defeat the
    bill in committee. Now Turkey must face this failure - it lost the
    propaganda war on this issue long ago. In fact, not only did the
    Turkish government fail, but Turkish Americans who did not take this
    issue as seriously as the Armenian Americans failed as well.

    Mrs. Pelosi may think that a House resolution will finally close the
    issue. But Turks are convinced that it will begin a new chapter and
    spur reparations claims. U.S. officials advise Turkey to deal with the
    issue as plain historical fact. That's easily said. But Turks wonder
    what the connection is - and why the United States has done nothing to
    prevent the Kurdish separatist PKK from gaining strength in northern
    Iraq and increasing its attacks on Turkey. They are convinced that
    America wants to enforce the Treaty of Sevres which would allow Kurds
    and Armenians to lay claim to Turkish land.

    Many in the United States believe the Kurds have a legitimate right to
    their own state. Recently the Senate passed a resolution calling the
    partition of Iraq into three self-governing regions for Shiites,
    Sunnis and Kurds. Turks are worried that such a plan will lead some of
    its Kurdish citizens to seek independence as well. However, Sevres did
    not promise Kurds an independent state; it promised "the formation of
    an autonomous region which would have the right to elect for complete
    independence one year after the formation of the autonomous area."

    David McDowell, in "A Modern History of the Kurds, " explains that
    "[t]he terms were flawed"by the failure to demarcate Kurdistan's
    boundary with Armenia. This was foreseeably bound to outrage either
    the Kurds or the Armenians, as President Wilson's pro-Armenian
    proposed boundary accompanying the treaty clearly showed." Wilson set
    the Armenian borders to include Kurdish areas of Turkey, but he was
    unable to finalize them.

    Turks look at their history and wonder why the president refuses to
    act against a Kurdish terrorist organization attacking them from
    northern Iraq, and why a Democratic Congress is considering an act
    that happened nearly 100 years ago. Ultimately, what everyone needs to
    do is move on - but the war in Iraq and the possibility of its breakup
    seem to haunt the present.

    Tulin Daloglu is a freelance writer.

    Source: http://www.washingtontimes.com/article/20071016/ED ITORIAL/110160008
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