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  • Genocide Vote strikes raw nerve with Turks, Armenians

    The Pueblo Chieftain, Colorado CO
    Oct 19 2007


    Genocide Vote strikes raw nerve with Turks, Armenians


    By PETER ROPER
    THE PUEBLO CHIEFTAIN

    When a House committee approved a nonbinding resolution this month
    denouncing Turkey for alleged genocide in the death of possibly 1.5
    million Armenians during World War I, lawmakers touched a raw nerve
    with both Turks and Armenians, who remain bitterly divided over what
    happened 90 years ago during the last years of the Ottoman Empire.

    "Turks understand that many Armenians died in this tragedy, but so
    did many Turks," said Huseyin Sarper, a Turkish engineering professor
    in Pueblo. "But to call this a genocide? There was no plan to
    exterminate the Armenians. I don't believe that. No one wants to be
    compared to the Nazis (in Germany). That's why we care about this
    resolution in Congress."

    Turkey is a key U.S. ally in the Middle East, allowing war supplies
    to be sent to U.S. troops in Iraq through air bases in Turkey. So
    that nation's anger over the congressional resolution drew the
    attention of House lawmakers this week.

    While House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has said she will bring the genocide
    measure to the floor for a vote, some key Democrats, such as Rep.
    John Murtha, D-Pa., have said it lacks the votes to pass and support
    is dwindling as Turkey's supporters urge the House to back away from
    the divisive measure.

    "Why Congress thinks that now is the time to address this, I don't
    know," said political science professor Robert Lee of Colorado
    College. "Certainly, Turkey still has to come to terms with what
    happened to the Armenians. Right now, anyone who talks about Armenian
    genocide in Turkey can be arrested."

    At issue is what took place in eastern Turkey between 1915-18, during
    World War I, when the Ottoman Empire was allied with Germany and
    Austro-Hungary in fighting Russia, France, Great Britain and later,
    the U.S.

    Historians agree that Sultan Hamid authorized the deportation of
    Armenians from their traditional home in eastern Turkey, afraid the
    Christian minority would join ranks with the Russians on that border.

    Armenian refugees and European observers said the deportations turned
    into massacres as refugees were driven from their homes toward the
    desert country of what would become Iraq.

    Henry Morganthau, the U.S. ambassador in Istanbul at the time, sent
    dispatches to the State Department in 1916, saying he was getting
    witness reports of thousands of Armenians being massacred in the
    east. Similar dispatches were received by the British government. An
    Internet search on the topic Armenian genocide will produce Web sites
    devoted to photographs and personal accounts of the victims, which
    Armenians have labeled the First Genocide of the 20th Century.

    Morganthau, in his autobiography, called it the "murder of a nation."

    Sarper said the West overlooks the fact that Turkey was engaged in
    fighting Russia in the east, and Britain on the Gallipoli coast and
    in Palestine. "The Armenians were not just helpless victims. They
    were armed and were in revolt. That's how Turks feel about what
    happened. It was a tragedy for both sides."

    President Woodrow Wilson wanted to establish a large Armenian nation
    in eastern Turkey following World War I, but the post-war national
    government of Mustafa Kemal did not allow it. The current Armenia, on
    Turkey's northeast border, has cold relations with Turkey and the
    border usually is closed. Small Armenian terrorist groups killed
    Turkish diplomats in the 1970s.

    Mark Gose, an associate professor of international relations at
    Colorado State University-Pueblo, was an Air Force political adviser
    in Europe in the months leading up to the invasion of Iraq in 2003.
    He said Turkey is extremely sensitive on the subject of Armenia.

    "Just look at what happened last year when France approved a
    resolution recognizing the genocide and making it a crime to deny
    it," Gose said. "Turkey cut off some major business relationships
    with France and a sizable number of Turks are now soured on the idea
    of joining the European Union."

    Gose said the U.S. depends on air bases in Incirlik and Izmir,
    Turkey, to provide support to forces in Iraq. To jeopardize that
    supply route with a congressional resolution on the Armenian genocide
    right now seems "asinine" to Gose.

    "You noticed the Turkish Parliament this week voted to authorize
    military attacks into northern Iraq against Kurdish rebel groups," he
    said. "We certainly don't want that to happen but I think the Turks
    are using this confrontation to get our attention."

    Earlier this year, an association of Turkish historians announced
    their intentions to meet with their Armenian counterparts in order to
    review the historical facts around what happened. Gose said the
    country is trying to come to terms with what was done to its Armenian
    minority during the first world war.

    Lee noted that Turkish author Orhan Pamuk, winner of the 2006 Nobel
    Prize for literature, was charged with insulting the nation when he
    told a Swiss interviewer that Turkey had killed 1 million Armenians.

    "Turkey is a society where this can't be discussed yet, but it is
    moving that way," he said.

    Sarper, who grew up in Instanbul, said Turks are not taught about the
    Armenian deportation in school.

    "Turks should be but we aren't," he said. "The U.S. did things that
    were terrible, too, such as slavery and how Indians were treated. But
    the difference is, Americans talk about that. We can do that in this
    country."

    Photo: A boy pauses in front of a wall-sized poster depicting the
    faces of 90 survivors of the mass killings of Armenians in the
    Ottoman Empire, in Yerevan, Armenia, in this April 20, 2005, photo.

    http://www.chieftain.com/metro/1192774687/ 2
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