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Turkey blackmails U.S. to ignore its sins

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  • Turkey blackmails U.S. to ignore its sins

    Waco Tribune Herald, TX
    Oct 28 2007


    Turkey blackmails U.S. to ignore its sins
    Art Tonoyan, guest columnist

    Sunday, October 28, 2007

    Some 90 years ago the Ottoman Turkish government set out in the most
    thorough fashion to destroy its Christian minorities. But the brunt
    of the Turkish ire fell on Armenian Christians.

    Death came in many guises. As a result, some 1.5 million Armenian
    men, women and children were killed - nearly two-thirds of all
    Armenians in Turkey.

    You might ask why I care.

    By chance or providence, my grandparents managed to survive the
    massacres.

    Actually, considerable credit went to the combined relief efforts of
    American Protestant missionaries, philanthropists such as John D.
    Rockefeller and statesmen such as William Jennings Bryan.

    The U.S. Congress is debating a non-binding resolution recognizing
    that the Ottoman government's efforts to destroy Armenians indeed
    constituted a genocide. That's the position of the International
    Association of Genocide Scholars.

    This initiative, backed by self-evident facts, has brought shameless
    Turkish tantrums combined with political blackmail, and meddling into
    U.S. internal affairs.

    So doing, Turkey indirectly has threatened the lives of U.S. service
    personnel in Iraq.

    As the saying goes, `With friends like these . . .'

    The Bush administration has urged Congress not to follow through with
    the resolution.

    Who would have thought that the United States could be so bullied?

    The timing of the resolution? I would argue it is 90 years too late.
    But similar resolutions have come up year after year in Congress.
    Year after year the proposal is shot down for fear of offending the
    Turks.

    Always, say the opponents, the time is not right.

    Either it's the Cold War, or the first Gulf War, or this Gulf War or
    the war on terrorism.

    We're told that Turkey is a reliable ally ad infinitum. Reliable to a
    point. And why?

    Turkey has been on the receiving end of U.S. favors for the past 50
    or so years without much positive change in its cultural outlook.

    Regardless, this Turkish government, while allowing the shipment of
    supplies, refused to allow the staging of coalition troops in opening
    of the northern front into Iraq. Turkey did so in hopes of scoring
    political points with the European Union.

    This ended up costing time, U.S. lives and U.S. tax dollars.

    That's not all. Turkey's Islamist government has courted the
    Palestinian terrorist group Hamas, called the Israeli treatment of
    the Palestinians a `genocide' (a dose of inescapable irony) and has
    signed lucrative business deals with the regime of Iranian mullahs by
    effectively sidestepping U.S. calls to isolate Iran.

    But these facts are not the only ones that put Turkey's democratic
    credentials in doubt. The Turkish state spares no effort to silence,
    intimidate, imprison or even kill anybody who dares to challenge the
    official narrative on the Armenian genocide.

    Nobel laureate Orhan Pamuk was tried for `insulting Turkishness' when
    he mentioned it in a Swiss interview.

    Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink was murdered in front of his
    offices for an article he wrote about the genocide in his newspaper.

    Then his son was convicted for `insulting Turkishness' for reprinting
    his father's original article. He may well end up in a prison ward
    somewhere in Istanbul, if he doesn't end up with a bullet in his
    forehead.

    The symbolic resolution in question before Congress is a simple act
    of affirmation of history. It is not by any stretch of the
    imagination directed at the current Turkish government, although
    Turkey perceives it as such.

    Some 23 nations have passed similar resolutions in the past decade.

    The fault for the current debacle should not therefore be located in
    partisan politics, as the cynics at the Fox News and the likes of
    Rush Limbaugh would have us believe.

    It's in the fact that Turkey is yet to take an honest look at a past
    it tries so hard to deny. The tantrums it now throws are more worthy
    of my 2-year-old than a modern state aspiring to join the family of
    European nations.

    Art Tonoyan is a Ph.D. candidate at Baylor University's J.M. Dawson
    Institute of Church-State Studies.

    http://www.wacotrib.com/opin/content/new s/opinion/stories/2007/10/28/10282007wactonoyan.ht ml

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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