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S. Boyadjian: Mr. Fein's Turkish Adventure

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  • S. Boyadjian: Mr. Fein's Turkish Adventure

    S. BOYADJIAN: MR. FEIN'S TURKISH ADVENTURE
    Seto Boyadjian

    http://www.hairenik.com/weekly/2009/05/ 19/s-boyadjian-mr-fein%e2%80%99s-turkish-adventure /
    May 19, 2009

    On May 8, Bruce Fein posted an article titled "Recommendations for
    the Armenian Diaspora" on the Huffington Post. Fein is concerned
    that unless the Armenian Diaspora heeds his "recommendations," it
    will torpedo the ongoing talks between Turkey and Armenia.

    To set the record straight, it should be noted that according to his
    biographic information, Fein, a lawyer, is the resident scholar for
    the Turkish Coalition of America. Prior to this position, he was also
    resident scholar at the Assembly of Turkish American Associations and
    a columnist for the Turkish Times. He has served as a consultant to
    the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus, and has appeared regularly on
    Voice of America and Turkish television to discuss current political
    events and their implications for Turkish-American relations.

    Therefore, it is irrefutable that he his acting as the spokesperson
    of the Turkish side. It would indeed be most appropriate to call this
    endeavor "Fein's Turkish adventure."

    His so-called "recommendations" simply constitute unsubstantiated
    accusations and defamatory remarks against the Armenian Diaspora. As
    such, he deserves a response, which I posted on Huffington Post along
    the following lines:

    Bruce Fein, the mouthpiece of the Republic of Turkey, has spoken
    again. This time, he has the audacity of making "recommendations"
    to Armenia and U.S. citizens of Armenian extraction without making
    any reference to his continued gainful employment by the government
    of Turkey and by a garden variety of Turkish "associations."

    Fein is out to "get" the Armenian Diaspora in general, and the
    U.S. Armenian Americans in particular. The reason for his attempt is
    obvious: Silence the diaspora and especially the Armenian American
    community, and the Turkish genocide of the Armenian people and
    usurpation of the Armenian homeland shall wither away. This seems to
    not be an easy task for Fein. Yet, he seems to be an adamant fellow. He
    desperately needs to tame the diaspora and the Armenian Americans.

    To this end, he resorts to tactics of baseless accusations, falsehood,
    misrepresentation, and even bombastic threats.

    First, Fein threatens that the "boisterous" diaspora will cause
    the eventual failure of Turkey's efforts to normalize relations
    with Armenia. According to Fein, Turkey, at the cost of damaging its
    strategic interests, is doing Armenia a favor by opening its borders,
    which would save Armenia economically. Should the diaspora resume its
    untamed conduct, the borders will remain sealed and Armenia will be
    the loser.

    Fein, of course, unabashedly overlooks the geopolitical fact that
    Turkey is the one that is in dire need of Armenia in order to have
    access to the southern Caucasus and beyond. This is the old Pan-Turanic
    strategic thinking once employed by the Ottoman Young Turks that led
    to the extermination of the Armenians. Now, this strategic thinking is
    being employed by the current government of Turkey under the guidance
    of Ahmet Davutoglu, the former foreign policy adviser and current
    foreign minister of Turkey.

    Next, Fein lodges false accusations against the Armenian Diaspora,
    claiming that it has turned the genocide recognition into a campaign of
    hate against Turkey and Turks. This gentleman in the service of Turkish
    "associations" should familiarize himself with Armenian traditions
    and culture that inspire and teach the Armenian individual-whether in
    Armenia or the diaspora-love, friendship, brotherhood, and peace. Not
    a single Armenian person sees an enemy in a Turkish person. As for
    genocide recognition, it is only anchored on one principle, objective,
    and feeling: Justice. When in 1944, jurist Raphael Lemkin, in an effort
    to bring justice for the Jewish Holocaust by the Nazis, coined the word
    "genocide" based on the precedent of the Armenian massacres, he was
    not motivated by hate against the Germans. Lemkin sought justice and
    defined the annihilation of Armenians at the hands of the Ottomans
    and of European Jews at the hands of Nazis as genocide.

    Third, Fein develops an artistic penchant to spread falsehood. He
    blatantly claims that the Armenian Diaspora intimidates and harasses
    the academia, and vilifies those scholars who do not agree with the
    fact of genocide. What's worse, he claims that the Armenian Diaspora
    engages in the "buy-out" of scholars to corroborate the fact of the
    genocide. These claims against the Armenian Diaspora are immersed in
    utter falsehood.

    Interestingly, the same claims verily apply to the Republic of Turkey
    and the Turkish "associations" operating in the U.S., who have become
    experts in the business and have notoriously earned the reputation of
    regularly harassing academia, vilifying scholars, and "buying out"
    professors and department chairs to distort history and deny the
    Armenian Genocide.

    Fourth, Fein comes forth with the misrepresentation that Armenian
    Diaspora groups are engaged in foul play in violation of U.S. laws
    and regulations. His lone substantiation in this respect is his
    claim that the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) is
    under investigation by the U.S. Department of Justice. Now, Fein
    is a lawyer. As a lawyer, he should be able to differentiate an
    investigation from indictment. The deliberate lack of knowledge is
    the source of his misrepresentation. He is well advised to check the
    status of this investigation.

    Fein's so-called "recommendations" boil down to a single directive
    to the Armenian Diaspora. He is effectively telling the Armenians
    to stop exercising their rights as citizens of their respective
    countries. This directive is more alarming in the case of Armenian
    Americans. He is telling American citizens of Armenian descent to
    halt exercising their rights under the U.S. Constitution.

    Fein should learn to accept that Armenian Americans are doing
    what Indian Americans, Jewish Americans, and other Americans are
    doing-nothing more, nothing less.
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