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Turkish Threats Shouldn't Derail Genocide Resolution

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  • Turkish Threats Shouldn't Derail Genocide Resolution

    TURKISH THREATS SHOULDN'T DERAIL GENOCIDE RESOLUTION
    Will Volet

    Hartford Courant, CT
    http://www.courant.com/news/opinion/op_ed/hc-fres hvolet1026.artoct26,0,4349812.story
    Oct 26 2007

    After years of searching for the elusive right time, the U.S. House
    and Senate should adopt the resolution - approved by the House Foreign
    Affairs Committee on Oct. 10 - to officially recognize that the 1915
    massacre of 1.5 million Turkish Armenians was genocide. This horrible
    tragedy was real and those who deny its significance are advocates of
    politically based policy, not reality. The truth needs to be recognized
    for the sake of Armenians and the American image. In 1913, a political
    group known as the Young Turks succeeded in a coup that gave it control
    of what is modern Turkey. Under this regime, which ended after World
    War I, Turkish Armenians were systematically annihilated. The Young
    Turks tried to eradicate any record of the Armenians, sometimes by
    destroying entire cities. Although the Turkish government claims
    that the Armenian genocide occurred because of political turmoil
    following a revolution, historians have largely refuted this idea,
    saying that Armenians were mostly peaceful, and the killings were
    part of an established government policy. Many U.S politicians argue
    that now is not an appropriate time to accept the House resolution
    because Turkey has threatened to move forces into northern Iraq to
    fight Kurdish rebels along with denying the American military access
    to the region. This is an example of how military action in Iraq and
    Afghanistan has paralyzed U.S. policy abroad.

    Passing the resolution would exemplify America's role as a peacekeeper
    in a diplomatic setting. There will never be a good time for the
    U.S. - in terms of U.S.-Turkish relations - to recognize the Armenian
    genocide. The massacres of Armenians took place at the dawn of what is
    modern Turkey. If Turkish officials recognize the Armenian genocide,
    they are essentially agreeing that the country's forefathers were
    guilty of war crimes. Turkey has and will always do what it can to
    avoid this implication. This debate reveals a less than moderate
    Turkey. For example, Orhan Pamuk, a Turkish Nobel Prize winner for
    literature in 2006, was brought to court on charges of insulting the
    Turkish Republic after commenting in an interview on the deaths of
    Turkish Kurds and Armenians during the genocide. The case was later
    thrown out of court, but only after an international outcry pressured
    the Turkish court system. The significance of this trial should not
    be ignored. As Pamuk said, "What happened to the Ottoman Armenians
    in 1915 was a major thing that was hidden from the Turkish nation; it
    was a taboo. But we have to be able to talk about the past." Pamuk's
    triumph shows how important it is to recognize this issue and move
    forward. World opinion kept Pamuk from being incarcerated. So, too,
    should the global community look to recognize this genocide to pressure
    Turkey, as it did in Pamuk's case, to adopt more liberal policy. If
    the United States were to recognize the genocide, it would surely
    help to influence the global community.

    Military and political failure in Iraq should not keep America from
    speaking out on civil rights issues abroad. Recognizing the Armenian
    genocide could help the international image of the United States as
    a country against oppression, not a perpetrator of it. Rep. John
    Boehner, R-Ohio, called the measure to recognize the genocide
    "irresponsible." He went on to say, "What happened 90 years ago ought
    to be subject for historians to sort out, not politicians." What Mr.

    Boehner failed to realize is that historians have sorted it out.

    There is very little doubt that Turkey sanctioned killing squads to
    perpetrate the Armenian genocide. Sadly, Boehner is not the first
    politician to suggest that forgetting the genocide is important. In
    1939, before Hitler deployed his killing squads upon innocent
    citizens of Poland he said, "Only in such a way will we win the
    vital space that we need. Who, after all, speaks today of the
    annihilation of the Armenians?" Pamuk, one of Turkey's greatest
    contemporary writers, thinks it's important to discuss the past
    in order to move forward. But, as is the trend, Middle Eastern
    foreign policy is decided on what politicians think is best and
    how it will affect the military stability in Iraq. History and the
    voice of the people are largely ignored.

    Will Volet, 24, of New Canaan is a senior at the University of
    Hartford, where he majors in history. He is currently an intern with
    The Courant's editorial board.
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