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  • Armenia And Politics Of The Word 'Genocide'

    ARMENIA AND POLITICS OF THE WORD 'GENOCIDE'

    Voice of America
    April 22 2015

    Sharon Behn

    Last updated on: April 23, 2015 10:44 PM

    Most historians agree that the massacre, deportation and death of
    more than 1 million Armenians in the Turkish Ottoman Empire that
    began 100 years ago this month was a genocide. But mention the word
    "genocide" in Washington, in the context of Armenia, and the level
    of discomfort is palpable.

    Administration officials decline to comment, pro-Armenia politicians
    rush to the podium, scholars refer to books, Armenians tell
    heartbreaking stories of trauma, and the Turkish government rejects
    the issue altogether.

    Hope Harrison, a history professor at George Washington University,
    said Washington has avoided using the word "genocide" in order to
    keep its strategic relations with Turkey as smooth as possible.

    It is, Harrison said, "one of many debates in the U.S. government of
    principles and beliefs versus realpolitik and security."

    >From 1915 to 1923, Armenians of the Ottoman empire - from which
    rose today's Turkey - were deported or massacred in the hundreds of
    thousands, and their culture was almost erased from the land where
    they had lived for thousands of years. It was a trauma that many
    Armenians have never forgotten.

    'Part of their identity'

    "It's something that's absolutely part of their nature and part
    of their identity," explained Ronald Suny, professor of social and
    political history at the University of Michigan, referring to the
    Armenian diaspora. "I think it's unavoidable."

    But Thomas de Waal, senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for
    International Peace, said 100 years later, all those involved in the
    debate have become hostage to the word "genocide" itself.

    "As a result of that, people have lost sight of the bigger issue,
    which is: what justice is owed to the Armenians in 1915? How do we
    promote normalization between Armenia and Turkey? How do we persuade
    Turkey to open up to its past and look at these issues?" de Waal asked.

    The word genocide was invented in 1944, almost 30 years after the
    massacres happened. In 1948, the United Nations passed the Convention
    on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, and the
    word entered the world's political vocabulary.

    Armenians believe it defined the experience of their people.

    The U.S. government has recognized that more than 1 million Armenians
    died, but State Department spokeswoman Marie Harf this April again
    stopped short of using the word "genocide."

    "The president and other senior administration officials have
    repeatedly acknowledged as historical fact and mourned the fact that
    1.5 million Armenians were massacred or marched to their deaths in
    the final days of the Ottoman Empire," Harf said.

    President Barack Obama called the centennial "a solemn moment,"
    in a statement released by the White House late Wednesday.

    "It calls on us to reflect on the importance of historical remembrance,
    and the difficult but necessary work of reckoning with the past. I
    have consistently stated my own view of what occurred in 1915,
    and my view has not changed," Obama said. "A full, frank, and just
    acknowledgement of the facts is in all our interests. Peoples and
    nations grow stronger, and build a foundation for a more just and
    tolerant future, by acknowledging and reckoning with painful elements
    of the past.

    "We welcome the expression of views by Pope Francis, Turkish and
    Armenian historians, and the many others who have sought to shed
    light on this dark chapter of history," his statement continued.

    Diplomatic spat

    In contrast, Pope Francis this year became the first leader of
    the Roman Catholic Church to publicly declare what happened as a
    "genocide," sparking a diplomatic spat with Turkey.

    As de Waal points out, the word itself has become so problematic
    and so politicized, it has aggravated Armenian-Turkish relations and
    other nations' relations with both.

    The United States at one time did use the word genocide in reference to
    the Armenian experience. That changed under President Ronald Reagan,
    when a Turkish consul to the United States was killed by an Armenian
    terrorist in Reagan's home state of California in 1982.

    >From then on, de Waal said, as far as Reagan was concerned, the
    Turks were on America's side on the three issues that he cared about:
    terrorism, the Soviet Union and Israel.

    "Ronald Reagan, therefore, embraced the Turks on those issues and
    pushed away the idea of an Armenian genocide, and that I think has set
    U.S. policy ever since," he said. "Even though many, many people call
    it a genocide, that line was drawn back in 1982, and the United States
    has found it very difficult to reset the policy ever since then."

    For Armenians in the diaspora, the 1915 experience is a key issue
    and an essential political question. For Armenians in the newly
    independent Republic of Armenia, the perception is different.

    'Bit of a rift'

    "I think that what we may see already is a bit of a rift, or at least a
    distinction between what the government of the country of Armenia would
    like to see on the one hand, and what the Armenia diaspora would like
    to see on the other hand, because there is some significant impulse
    in the region to normalize relations between the country of Turkey
    and the country of Armenia," said David Pollock of The Washington
    Institute of Near East Policy.

    Turkey recently has become much more open to admitting that a terrible
    thing happened to the Armenians.

    And compromise is emerging in Washington, too: While Republican
    Representative Robert Dold has called for a full recognition of the
    Armenian masacres as genocide, his colleague, Representative Curt
    Clawson, has reached out to fellow lawmakers to support a resolution
    that would promote "peace and understanding" between the nations.

    De Waal, who has written extensively on Armenia, said the focus should
    be less on how the United States describes the historical facts,
    and more on restoring relations between Turkey and Armenia.

    "The focus should really be on facilitating that, and if you want
    to do that, I don't think you start with the word genocide. You
    start by discussing the histories, the massacres, maybe you come
    round eventually to the word genocide, but at the moment, the word
    genocide is so toxic that it shuts down the conversation. You can't
    really start a conversation with the word genocide," he said.

    More than 20 nations around the world have recognized the mass killings
    as genocide.

    Vivian Chakarian contributed to this report.

    http://www.voanews.com/content/armenia-and-politics-of-word-genocide/2729180.html

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