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ISTANBUL: French Bill Again

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  • ISTANBUL: French Bill Again

    FRENCH BILL AGAIN

    Today's Zaman
    Jan 24 2012
    Turkey

    While I was writing this article, I joined a live discussion on the
    BBC world service.

    The topic, of course, was the French genocide denial bill. For a while
    I listened to the discussion between a Turkish academic and a British
    lady. The Turkish gentleman was repeating all those well-known axioms:
    "This discussion should be left to historians, no one denies in Turkey
    that tragic things happened in 1915, but these events cannot be labeled
    as genocide," so on and so forth. The British lady was well-prepared
    for this defensive denialist attitude and advanced strong arguments
    showing that 1915 events were indeed genocide, and she was beating
    the Turkish guy with her well-tuned "civilized manner." The Turkish
    guy may not be aware of it, but his remarks had no meaning for anyone
    outside of Turkey.

    Then I joined the discussion, and I tried to make my point. I said:
    "It is not relevant to discuss whether the 1915 events were genocide
    or not, but rather we should discuss if this French genocide bill
    will help Turkey to confront its past. There are people in Turkey,
    including myself, who believe what happened in Turkey in 1915 was
    indeed a genocide and who try to bring this subject to the attention
    of the Turkish public. This French bill, however, took hostage all
    these discussions, giving strength to Turkish nationalists only,
    and nowadays, we cannot discuss anything but this genocide bill."

    Then the British lady took the floor once again and stated quite
    confidently that what I was saying "is another way of blackmailing."

    At this exact moment, I lost my temper, and I said something like,
    "Look, I have been defending human rights in Turkey for the last 20
    years and fighting against this nationalist mentality, which carried
    out all these massacres, it is very easy for you speaking like that
    sitting there..." And all of a sudden, we came to the end of the
    program. I did not have a chance to share all my thoughts.

    After the discussion, I found myself pondering different things.

    Everyone may be right about his or her respective positions.

    Armenians, for example, may ask how long they should wait for Turkey
    to come to terms with recognizing what happened in 1915. Some Europeans
    may think that without this kind of outside pressure, Turkey will never
    discuss what happened in the past. However, I strongly believe the
    French move and others like it are only delaying Turkey's inevitable
    confrontation with its past; this is the only purpose they serve.

    Does France really want Turkey to confront its past, to see a more
    democratic Turkey, to see Turkey as a good neighbor to Armenia? Why
    then it is so strongly against Turkey's accession to the EU? Why
    then does it try to push Turkey off the European map? Perhaps French
    President Nicolas Sarkozy is trying to kill a few birds with one stone:
    He will get more votes from Armenians; he will advance his agenda
    of killing Turkey's chances to join the EU by provoking Turkey into
    giving these primitive reactions to this French bill and showing all
    the world that Turkey has not taken any step toward democratization,
    but rather it repeats its past, etc.

    I repeat in this column many times, Sarkozy and like-minded people in
    Europe share the same agenda with some Turkish nationalists and with
    the Turkish deep state. They all want to end Turkey's progress toward
    becoming a member of the EU. They want to see an isolated Turkey. To
    whose benefit would such a Turkey be? The Greeks? The Cypriots? The
    Armenians? The Muslim world? Whom?

    Some Armenians may think Sarkozy is trying to help them force Turkey to
    recognize the Armenian genocide, and thus, they will protect Armenia
    and so on. However, if they pay more attention, they could easily see
    that Sarkozy's mind works in exactly the same manner as the people
    who did terrible things to Armenians in 1915 in Anatolia. They are all
    nationalist, they are all short-sighted and they are all Machiavelists,
    who believe they could do anything to advance their political agenda!

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