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  • Tawdry genocide tale

    Tawdry genocide tale
    By Bruce Fein

    The Washington Times
    September 2, 2007

    On Tuesday, Aug. 21, the national director of the Anti-Defamation
    League (ADL), Abraham H. Foxman, somersaulted from a longstanding ADL
    policy. The ADL had declined to characterize as genocide the killings
    of Armenians during World War I by Ottoman Muslims. In Mr. Foxman's
    change of position hangs a tawdry tale of intellectual dishonor.

    On the Friday before, the national director had fired ADL's New
    England regional director, Andrew H. Tarsy, for defying the national
    policy of nonendorsement of the genocide. Yet four days later, Mr.
    Foxman was parroting the regional director whom he had just fired.

    Four days is not much time to study an issue as complex as the
    Armenian genocide narrative - especially when proper deductions are
    made for the ordinary inclination to devote the lion's share of
    weekends more to leisure than to lucubration.

    Mr. Foxman, moreover, did not claim to have perused the works of
    impressive scholars who dispute the Armenian genocide claim. The list
    would include Bernard Lewis and Heath Lowry of Princeton, Guenther
    Lewy of the University of Massachusetts-Amherst, Justin McCarthy of
    the University of Louisville, and Professor Norman Stone, who taught
    at Cambridge and Oxford in Great Britain for 30 years before retiring
    early from the chair of modern history.

    Mr. Foxman also did not assert even a passing acquaintance with the
    meaning of genocide as recently expounded by the International Court
    of Justice in Bosnia and Herzogovina v. Serbia and Montenegro (Feb.
    26, 2007). There the court declared: "It is not enough to establish...
    that deliberate unlawful killings of members of a group have
    occurred.... It is not enough that the members of the group are
    targeted because they belong to that group, that is because the
    perpetrator has a discriminatory intent. The acts listed in [the
    Genocide Convention] must be done with intent to destroy the group in
    whole or in part."

    Mr. Foxman voiced no rebuttal to the credible evidence undermining an
    Armenian genocide. During World War I, many Armenians were killed
    because they had defected to the enemy and were slaughtering Ottoman
    Muslims. Others were suspected of treason or disloyalty. The vast
    majority of Armenian casualties were occasioned by wretchedly executed
    deportations undertaken by the Ottoman government for war purposes. In
    1916, the Ottomans themselves prosecuted about 1,300 soldiers and
    civilians for crimes against the Armenian deportees. One governor was
    executed. Tens of thousands of Armenians in Istanbul, Izmir and Aleppo
    were left undisturbed.

    As Bernard Lewis has observed, an analogy would have been if Adolf
    Hitler had left Jews in Berlin, Frankfurt and Vienna exempt from the
    Final Solution. For more than three centuries, under the Ottoman
    millet system, Armenians enjoyed religious, cultural and social
    harmony. Conflict with the Ottoman Empire was largely provoked by
    Armenian terrorism and plotting secession comparable to the
    Confederate States of America, not by a late-blooming desire to
    destroy Armenians as a group.

    It seems self-evident something other than the truth about the
    Armenian genocide claim was at work with Mr. Foxman. That suspicion
    was reinforced in an Aug. 22 interview with the Boston Globe. He
    unconvincingly asserted that for an unstated time he had held a
    private conviction that Armenians had suffered genocide, but thought
    characterizing their mass killings by the Ottoman Empire as atrocities
    or massacres was a sufficient description.

    But he was provoked to go public with his true belief because the
    Jewish community was fracturing over endorsing the Armenian genocide.
    As reported in the Globe, he elaborated: "So if that word [genocide]
    brings the community together, that's fine.... In this time, for us to
    be split apart on an issue, which, as important as it is, is not
    foremost on the agenda of our safety and security, I found very
    troubling. I therefore did what I did to bring the community
    together."

    Mr. Foxman's explanation is dubious. He is to ADL what Moses was to
    the Jews. It strains credulity to believe ADL would have balked at any
    time over his desire to officially acknowledge an Armenian genocide.
    Indeed, when Mr. Foxman did so on Aug. 21, there was no audible ADL
    protest.

    The national director declared he had suppressed his opinion over the
    Armenian genocide because he believed an open ADL endorsement would
    anger Turkey and jeopardize both Jews living there and Israeli-Turkish
    relations. But when nonendorsement began to divide the Jewish
    community, Mr. Foxman believed its splintering was more dangerous to
    Jewish safety or security than any rift with Turkey. Accordingly, the
    ADL altered its longstanding position.

    This gets to the crux of the matter. The Armenian genocide question
    should be settled by truth, not by the political calculations of Mr.
    Foxman or any other influential figure. The strength of the Armenian
    lobby or the geostrategic importance of Turkey to the United States
    should also be irrelevant.

    The government of Turkey has opened its archives for more research and
    has supported further examination of the genocide question through
    debate and evaluation before an impartial body. Armenians have not
    reciprocated with either archival openness or willingness to debate as
    opposed to denigrate or intimidate scholars who question the genocide.
    Mr. Foxman should be exerting his energies to convince the Armenians
    to join the debate in lieu of jumping on their bandwagon and endorsing
    their conclusion for ulterior motives.

    Bruce Fein is a resident scholar at the Turkish Coalition of America.

    Source: http://washingtontimes.com/article/20070902/COMMEN TARY02/109020014/1012/COMMENTARY
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