Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Erdogan's Lack Of Statesmanship

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Erdogan's Lack Of Statesmanship

    ERDOGAN'S LACK OF STATESMANSHIP

    The Weekly Standard
    http://www.weeklystandard.com/weblogs/TWS FP/2008/12/erdogans_lack_of_statesmanship.asp
    Dec 29 2008
    Washington, DC

    Several days ago, about 200 hundred prominent Turkish intellectuals
    launched a first-ever online petition apologizing for the "Great
    Catastrophe" in connection with the massacres of up to 1.5 million
    Armenians in Turkey during 1915-1917. Titled "I apologize", the brief
    statement reads as follows:

    "My conscience cannot accept the ignorance and denial of the Great
    Catastrophe that the Ottoman Armenians were subjected to in 1915. I
    reject this injustice and -- on my own behalf -- I share the feelings
    and pain of my Armenian brothers - and I apologize to them."

    The authors of the statement, among them Cem Oezdemir, the new leader
    of the German Green Party, deliberately opted for the term "Great
    Catastrophe" in an effort to stay clear of the ultra-explosive term
    "genocide". While genocide scholars widely agree that the killings
    of the Armenians constituted the first genocide of the 21st century,
    Turkey strongly rejects such accusations to this very day, arguing
    instead that those killed were simply the victims of civil war. So far,
    about 22,000 people have signed the online petition, not that many
    for a country of more than 71 million inhabitants. Several Turkish
    nationalist counter-websites with titles such as "I Expect An Armenian
    Apology" or "I Do Not Apologize" have already garnered more than five
    times as many votes as the initial "I Apologize" petition.

    Turkey's top leadership, too, has begun a strong push-back to
    counter the apology campaign. The powerful army, for instance,
    has warned ominously that the petition could "bring about harmful
    results". Finally, Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan came up with his
    own rationale for why he opposes the online petition, saying that
    "I did not commit any crimes, so why should I apologize?". As
    a private individual, for sure, Mr. Erdogan was not involved in
    any of the Armenian massacres. But coming from a Turkish statesman
    eager to join the European Union, Erdogan's statement and cavalier
    attitude regarding a very dark chapter in Turkish history is simply
    not acceptable in the 21st century.

    In contrast to Erdogan's remark, I am reminded of how then-German
    Chancellor Helmut Kohl dealt with the issues of personal guilt and
    collective moral and political responsibility in his historic January
    1984 speech to the Knesset in Israel. He said: "I speak to you as
    someone who could not get caught up in guilt during the Nazi period
    because he had the grace of a late birth." At the same time, however,
    Helmut Kohl (born in 1930) never left any doubt that as the German
    Chancellor, he was willing to assume collective moral and political
    responsibility for the atrocities perpetrated by Nazi Germany during
    the 1933-1945 period. Prime Minister Erdogan's stubborn refusal to
    assume collective moral and political responsibility for the "Great
    Catastrophe" displays a lack of statesmanship and casts a long shadow
    on Turkey's aspirations of joining the European Union any time soon.
Working...
X