Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Pelosi and the Turkey problem

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Pelosi and the Turkey problem

    Houston Chronicle, TX
    Oct 18-24 2007


    Pelosi and the Turkey problem


    By CHARLES KRAUTHAMMER
    Copyright 2007 Houston Chronicle

    There are three relevant questions concerning the Armenian genocide.

    (a) Did it happen?

    (b) Should the U.S. House of Representatives be expressing itself on
    this now?

    (c) Was House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's determination to bring this to a
    vote, knowing that it risked provoking Turkey into withdrawing
    crucial assistance to American soldiers in Iraq, a conscious
    (columnist Thomas Sowell) or unconscious (blogger Mickey Kaus)
    attempt to sabotage the U.S. war effort?

    The answers are:

    (a) Yes, unequivocally.

    (b) No, unequivocally.

    (c) God only knows.

    That between 1 million and 1.5 million Armenians were brutally and
    systematically massacred starting in 1915 in a deliberate genocidal
    campaign is a matter of simple historical record. If you really want
    to deepen and broaden awareness of that historical record, you should
    support the establishment of the Armenian Genocide Museum and
    Memorial in Washington, D.C. But to pass a declarative resolution in
    the House of Representatives in the middle of a war in which we are
    inordinately dependent on Turkey is the height of irresponsibility.

    The atrocities happened 90 years ago. Not a single living Turk under
    the age of 102 is in any way culpable. Even Mesrob Mutafyan,
    patriarch of the Armenian community in Turkey, has stated that his
    community is opposed to the resolution, correctly calling it the
    result of domestic American politics.

    Turkey is already massing troops near the Iraq border, threatening a
    campaign against Kurdish rebels that could destabilize the one stable
    front in Iraq. The same House of Representatives that has been
    complaining loudly about the lack of armored vehicles for our troops
    is blithely jeopardizing relations with the country through which 95
    percent of the new heavily armored vehicles are now transiting on the
    way to saving American lives in Iraq.

    And for what? To feel morally clean?

    How does this work? Pelosi says: "Genocide still exists, and we saw
    it in Rwanda; we see it now in Darfur." Precisely. And what exactly
    is she doing about Darfur? Nothing. Pronouncing yourself on a
    genocide committed 90 years ago by an empire that no longer exists is
    Pelosi's demonstration of seriousness about existing, ongoing
    genocide?

    Indeed, the Democratic Party she's leading in the House has been
    trying for months to force a precipitous withdrawal from Iraq that
    could very well lead to genocidal civil war. This prospect has
    apparently not deterred her in the least.

    "Friends don't let friends commit crimes against humanity," explained
    Rep. Chris Smith, R-N.J., a member of the House Foreign Affairs
    Committee that passed the Armenian genocide resolution. This must
    rank among the most stupid statements ever uttered by a member of
    Congress, admittedly a very high bar.

    Does Smith know anything about the history of the Armenian genocide?
    Of the role played by Henry Morgenthau? As U.S. ambassador to the
    Ottoman Empire, Morgenthau tried desperately to intervene on behalf
    of the Armenians. It was his consular officials deep within Turkey
    who (together with missionaries) brought out news of the genocide.
    And it was Morgenthau who helped tell the world about it in his
    writings. Near East Relief, the U.S. charity strongly backed by
    President Wilson and the Congress, raised and distributed an
    astonishing $117 million in food, clothing and other vital assistance
    that, wrote historian Howard Sachar, "quite literally kept an entire
    nation alive."

    So much for the U.S. letting friends commit crimes against humanity.
    And at the time, the Ottomans were not friends. They were an enemy
    power in World War I, allied with Germany. Now the Turks are indeed
    friends, giving us indispensable logistical help in our war against
    today's premier perpetrators of crimes against humanity - al-Qaida in
    Iraq and Afghanistan. Friends don't gratuitously antagonize friends
    who are helping fight the world's foremost war criminals.

    So why has Pelosi been so committed to bringing this resolution to
    the floor? (At least until a revolt within her party and the prospect
    of defeat caused her to waver.) Because she is deeply unserious about
    foreign policy. This little stunt gets added to the ledger: first,
    her visit to Syria, which did nothing but give legitimacy to Bashar
    al-Assad, who continues to be engaged in the systematic murder of
    pro-Western Lebanese members of parliament; then, her letter to Costa
    Rica's ambassador, just nine days before a national referendum,
    aiding and abetting opponents of a very important free-trade
    agreement with the United States.

    Is the Armenian resolution her way of unconsciously sabotaging the
    U.S. war effort, after she had failed to stop it by more direct
    means? I leave that question to psychiatry.

    Instead, I fall back on Krauthammer's razor (with apologies to
    Occam): In explaining any puzzling Washington phenomenon, always
    choose stupidity over conspiracy, incompetence over cunning. Anything
    else gives them too much credit.

    Krauthammer is a Pulitzer Prize-winning syndicated columnist based in
    Washington, D.C. ([email protected] )

    http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/editorial/ou tlook/5226331.html
Working...
X