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For US, Ottoman History Comes Dangerously Alive

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  • For US, Ottoman History Comes Dangerously Alive

    FOR US, OTTOMAN HISTORY COMES DANGEROUSLY ALIVE
    By Jitendra Joshi

    Kuwait Times, Kuwait
    Oct 17 2007

    The fallout from a massacre in the dying days of the Ottoman Empire has
    hit the United States, as ancient enmities fuse with modern political
    theater to infuriate a crucial ally and imperil the Iraq war. Caught
    between a hostile Congress and an implacable Turkey outraged at
    being accused of "genocide," the White House is scrambling to head
    off diplomatic fallout that could radiate far and wide. US Defense
    Secretary Robert Gates said 70 percent of air cargo, 30 percent of
    fuel shipments and 95 percent of ne w mine-resistant vehicles destined
    for US forces in Iraq go through Turkey.

    The Turks have been quite clear about some of the measures they would
    have to take if this resolution passes," he said, citing the example
    of Turkish military sanctions against France. But some observers said
    Turkey could be overreacting to a non-binding resolution in the House
    of Representatives, and US Democrats eager to give President George W
    Bush a bloody nose. George Harris, a former State Department expert
    on Turkey, said the country's decision Thursday to recall its US
    ambassador for consultations shows a certain amount of seriousness.

    But the Middle East Institute analyst added: "There's a lot of
    politicking going on. They have tied their hands a little bit by
    stirring up such a hornet's nest in Turkish public opinion." Defying
    an unprecedented level of lobbying from both the US and Turkish
    governments, the House Foreign Affairs Committee voted Wednesday to
    label the World War I massacre of up to 1.5 million Ottoman Armenians
    as "genocide.

    This resolution was passed by the committee (in 2005) but it didn't
    go anywhere as the Republicans were in charge and they didn't want
    to embarrass President Bush," Harris said. "(House Speaker) Nancy
    Pelosi has no such qualms about embarrassing the president," he
    said. Pelosi and several Democratic members of the House committee
    have sizeable communities of ethnic Armenians concentrated in their
    California districts.

    The question now exercising the US administration is whether Turkey
    will carry through on veiled threats of reprisals, such as shutting
    off or restricting access to the sprawling Incirlik airbase. "Those
    who claim Turkey is bluffing should not mock Turkey on live TV,"
    Egemen Bagis, vice chairman of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's
    AKP party, warned in Washington.

    He noted that French military planes are no longer allowed to fly over
    Turkish airspace, since France's parliament last year declared the
    Armenians' post-1915 suffering to be a genocide. If Turkey withdraws
    US access to Incirlik, "just imagine what this will do to the United
    States," Bagis said. Those consequences must not be underestimated,
    according to Steven Cook of the Council on Foreign Relations in New
    York, who believes the Turks are in deadly earnest.

    I don't think this is a diplomatic pas de deux. What the resolution
    has done is inflame Turkish public opinion," he said. "The Turks
    have been saying for a long time that there are going to be tangible
    consequences of this." For Michael Rubin, a Turkey expert at the
    American Enterprise Institute, the genocide dispute represents a
    "perfect storm" coming as the Erdogan government agitates to go after
    Kurdish rebels in northern Iraq.

    An anti-US firestorm in Turkey risks drowning out the Bush
    administration's vocal misgivings about a cross-border incursion
    against rebels of the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK). "We're in
    election season right now," Rubin added, reflecting on the White
    House's failure to head off the vote Wednesday. "Unfortunately,
    many people in Congress are more concerned with posturing than
    consequences."
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