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  • Genocide battleground

    Genocide battleground

    The Washington Times
    October 19, 2007

    Austin Bay - It's an old phenomenon: When the dispossessed get clout,
    the past becomes a battleground. Often the stakes in the present are
    extraordinarily high.

    An exemplary skirmish over very bad history is taking place in the
    U.S. Congress - in this case, the World War I slaughter of Armenians
    by Ottoman Turkey.

    Whether or not the Ottomans' mass deportation and murder of Armenians
    in 1915 and 1916 reaches the formulaic, industrial magnitude of the
    Nazis' genocide or Josef Stalin's decimation of Ukraine is a debating
    point for lawyers and apologists. The Ottoman "Young Turk" government
    took a systematic approach that stinks of classic tribal "ethnic
    cleansing." The Ottomans disarmed Armenian soldiers and removed them
    from the ranks of the Turkish army. Suspect loyalty and connivance
    with the Orthodox Christian enemy, Russia, was the ostensible
    rationale.

    After confiscating Armenian guns, Ottoman knives appeared. Mobs
    murdered Armenian intellectuals and leaders - killing communicators
    silences a community. Then the deportations began, featuring long
    marches where starvation and sunstroke killed as many as the attacks
    of "thieves and raiders." One-and-a-half million Armenians (out of a
    population of about 2.5 million) died in this directed chaos. Darfur
    and the Congo are contemporary examples of this hideous technique.

    World War I ended. After a bout of internal chaos and a war with
    Greece, republican Turkey emerged from the Ottoman wreckage. Its
    political architect, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, launched political and
    cultural revolutions, creating a secular Turkey and with it a possible
    Islamic bridge to modernity. Turkey adopted Latin script, a visual,
    literary break with the Ottoman Empire and caliphate. It's one reason
    al Qaeda fanatics despise Ataturk more than they do George Bush.

    Modern Turks can make a case they aren't the Ottomans. Diaspora
    Armenians, however, now have influence and a voice. The once
    dispossessed have earned it. Armenians have had extraordinary
    political and economic success in Western Europe and the United
    States.

    Only the heartless would dismiss their desire to recognize the great
    wrong. Yet historical verification and vindication aren't the only
    goals - the U.S. House resolution backed by Armenian-Americans demands
    punishment of the perpetrators.

    The perpetrators, however, are long dead. The Turkish government thus
    sees the resolution as a political attack on Turkey - one that could
    open a Pandora's box of land restitution issues.

    At a less volatile moment one can imagine Congress passing the
    nonbinding resolution. I would support it, particularly if it promoted
    Turkish and Armenian reconciliation.

    But find the less volatile moment. The Clinton administration judged
    the year 2000 as too volatile to pass the House resolution. President
    Clinton valued U.S.-Turkish relations, and the United States needed
    access to Turkish airbases to enforce the U.N.-mandated northern
    no-fly zone that helped protect Iraqi Kurds from Saddam. Mr. Clinton
    got then-House Speaker Dennis Hastert to kill the resolution.

    Those Turkish bases now supply and support U.S. troops in Iraq. No
    matter one's opinion on Iraq, antagonizing Turkey when it provides air
    and logistical bases supporting U.S. troops actively deployed in a
    combat zone is foolish and craven. A Turkish decision to shut down
    these facilities would cut a major coalition supply line. U.S. troops
    in Iraq would face increased risks.

    This is reason enough to delay passing the resolution. There are
    others. For two years, Turkey has threatened to invade northern Iraq
    in order to destroy Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) bases. The Iraqi
    government and Washington have both promised Turkey they will "act
    against the PKK." Turkey says it is tired of waiting - and has an army
    on the Iraqi border prepped for action.

    Cynics suggest Turkey has been waiting for an opportunity to slip U.S.
    calls for military restraint and launch a decisive attack to finish
    off the PKK. The resolution provides Ankara with just this
    opportunity. Conceivably, Washington could "trade" a deferred
    resolution for a Turkish promise to restrict its operations in Iraq to
    "hot pursuit" situations, special-forces actions and surveillance.
    Diplomats on both sides might structure such a transparent but useful
    give and take.

    Note I said deferred resolution: 2015 may be as volatile as 2007.
    Historical horrors like the Armenian genocide really don't have
    anniversaries or centennials, or at least they shouldn't. They do
    deserve recognition and remembrance as instructive history, but
    recognition should not do damage to the present. The year 2015 - or
    100 years after the Armenian massacre - strikes me as the perfect time
    to pass the resolution.

    Austin Bay is a nationally syndicated columnist.

    Source: http://www.washingtontimes.com/article/20071019/CO MMENTARY/110190014
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