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  • Let Turkey And Armenia Work Out Their Differences

    LET TURKEY AND ARMENIA WORK OUT THEIR DIFFERENCES

    The Washington Note
    March 18, 2009 Wednesday 7:54 PM EST

    Armenian President Serzh Sargsian and Turkish Prime Minister Recep
    Tayyip Erdogan at Davos.

    The Los Angeles Times reported yesterday that the administration
    is reconsidering President Obama's campaign promise to declare that
    the Armenians were victims of a genocide during the collapse of the
    Ottoman Empire nearly one hundred years ago.

    Also yesterday, the House of Representatives introducedH. Res 252,
    which declares the killings genocide.

    To understand these recent announcements, it is important to understand
    the underlying politics.

    To paraphrase Brent Scowcroft, the issue of whether to declare the
    killings genocide is not a foreign policy issue, but a domestic
    political issue. Similar to our policies toward Israel and Cuba,
    a well-mobilized and well-funded minority - in this case led by the
    Armenian National Committee of America and the Armenian Assembly of
    America - wields disproportionate influence.

    President Obama's decision to "postpone" his genocide declaration
    should not come as a surprise. Former Presidents George W. Bush and
    Clinton each also refrained from using the word as president after
    pledging to do so as candidates.

    The reason for this is simple.

    A genocide declaration would be deeply harmful to our relationship with
    Turkey, a relationship that has already suffered in recent years -
    due primarily to disagreements about the Iraq war, but also because
    of Turkey's increasingly independent foreign policy and prominent
    regional role under the moderately Islamist Justice and Development
    Party (AKP) that assumed power in 2002.

    Washington needs Turkish cooperation on a wide range of issues -
    Iraq, Afghanistan, energy security, and Iran to name a few - and is
    in no position to alienate the Turks.

    Those who doubt the likely severity of the Turkish response should
    note the uproar that the "I apologize" campaign - an initiative by
    Turkish intellectuals and journalists to apologize for the "Great
    Massacre" of Armenians - has caused.

    Furthermore, this year there is another, perhaps even more compelling
    reason to leave history to the historians.

    Turkey and Armenia are closer to normalizing relations than at
    any point since Turkey closed the border in 1993. But a genocide
    declaration by Washington would likley undo more than a year of
    diplomatic progress.

    As part of the ongoing dialogue between Ankara and Yerevan, Turkish
    officials have offered to compose a joint commission of historians to
    determine whether a genocide occurred or not - and Armenian president
    Serzh Sargsian has left the door open to this possibility.

    If Turkey and Armenia can let the historians decide, then so too
    should the United States.

    As Sameer Lalwani has written on this blog, we have skeletons in our
    own past - including what might be considered the genocide of Native
    Americans and more than 75 years of racial slavery.

    Supporters of the resolution tend to make arguments like Scott Paul's
    (from October 2007) - "that setting an example by doing the right thing
    might build some goodwill and encourage others to behave similarly,
    which would advance our interests in the long run."

    While I agree that setting examples that lead to genuine norm creation
    and that raise the global moral bar are important, it would make more
    sense for us to confront our own historical memory than to meddle in
    the historical memories of others.

    We also need to abide by the Geneva Conventions, outlaw torture,
    and honor civil liberties. Those are the kinds of examples that we
    need to set.
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