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Our allies the Turks are gravely insulted by pending bill

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  • Our allies the Turks are gravely insulted by pending bill

    Charleston Gazette, WV
    Oct 19 2007


    Our allies the Turks are gravely insulted by pending bill

    John Warner

    DON'T ASK me why he lives there. Even if I understood, which I do
    not, I could not explain why my `little' brother and his wife retired
    in Turkey and built their dream home in the southern coastal
    mountains overlooking a beautiful Mediterranean harbor.

    They have long had family ties and personal interests in the
    Mediterranean culture and to the world of Islam.

    My brother spends about a week in Buckhannon with us every summer,
    and we communicate almost daily by e-mail. Recently he has been very
    concerned with the movement in the U.S. Congress to make another
    enemy in the Middle East - namely, the determination of the
    Democratic majority to label events in Turkey back in the early years
    of the 20th century as genocide.

    It is his belief, based on lots of time spent in southern Europe and
    in Turkey, that America has done just about everything possible to
    convert our friends into enemies, and this latest move is simply
    beyond belief.

    Yes, there was a terrible war in the second decade of the past
    century. Yes, many things happened that were cruel beyond measure.
    Yes, many Armenians were killed, horribly and needlessly. But to go
    back and put an unnecessary label on those events, events for which
    no living Turk is now responsible, is an absolutely foolish and
    self-destructive plan on the part of my beloved Democrats in
    Congress. Stop, you guys! Don't do it! Nancy Pelosi, please redirect
    your fellow members.

    My brother's recent e-mails relate a visit with Rep. Steve Solarz, an
    18-year Democratic member of Congress - representing Brooklyn - who
    has also built a villa in a little harbor town in Turkey. Here are my
    brother's comments:

    Oct. 11: `Just back from another late lunch. On Euronews, I saw two
    Turks asked if they were surprised by the vote yesterday and both
    (who were not together and were interviewed separately) answered
    almost identically. No, they were not surprised. America was not a
    country anyone could ever count on as a friend. The only difference
    between the two answers is that one referred to America as an
    `imperialist' country. Very sad. In what has now been my rather
    extensive reading about Turkey, and my experience living here for
    four years, one particular thing I have read comes to mind: You can
    fight a Turk and still be his friend, but never insult a Turk. You
    will never be forgiven. Turks are now absolutely furious at America.
    `Hell hath no fury like a Turk insulted.' If the Armenian resolution
    passes in the House, it will surprise me if Turkey does not do
    everything in its power to make America pay for it.'

    Oct. 12: `Unfortunately, I think it will be all over if it passes in
    the House. The Turks are already furious it has passed in committee.
    If it passes in the House, I do not think there will be any consoling
    them. They will have been insulted beyond their ability to endure
    insult. Steve Solarz is pretty sure the bill would never get through
    the Senate; but the damage will have been done if it passes in the
    House. Turkey will react on that and the rest will have little
    meaning to them. A Turk interviewed this evening pointed out that
    going back to the Korean War, more Turks have died fighting with
    Americans than have soldiers of any other country. This `thank you'
    is virtually impossible for the Turks to understand and accept.'

    Oct. 13: `Steve tells me that the overwhelming majority of Americans
    know nothing about the resolution, and less about what happened to
    the Armenians in 1915, but that if they knew all the facts about what
    happened then, and the consequences of adopting the resolution now,
    they would be against it by large margins. More and more news
    articles I read point out that this vote is the result of a very
    well-organized Armenian lobby in the U.S.

    `With his permission, I add this final comment from Solarz: `If the
    resolution passes the House, there is sure to be a tremendous
    backlash. The Turkish government will feel obligated to respond in a
    way that, without the pressure of public opinion, they would never
    do. The consequences will be extreme and long-lasting. If the Turks
    decide to restrict our use of Incirlik, the air base from which we
    support and supply our troops in Iraq, it could put our forces there
    in greater jeopardy than they are at present.''

    Warner, professor emeritus at West Virginia Wesleyan College, is a
    Gazette contributing columnist.

    http://wvgazette.com/section/Opinion/2 007101814
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