Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Former Diplomat Reveals Secret State Dept. Attacks On 1980's Genocid

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

  • Former Diplomat Reveals Secret State Dept. Attacks On 1980's Genocid

    FORMER DIPLOMAT REVEALS SECRET STATE DEPT. ATTACKS ON 1980'S GENOCIDE RESOLUTIONS

    Armenian Weekly
    December 9, 2009

    WASHINGTON-A retired Foreign Service officer, U.S. Ambassador Arma
    Jane Karaer, recently revealed a series of shocking revelations about
    the State Department's behind-the-scenes efforts on behalf of Turkey
    during the 1980's to kill congressional initiatives commemorating
    the Armenian Genocide, according to now-public documents circulated
    today by the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA).

    The revelations are part of an oral history interview with Karaer,
    a foreign service officer who served, among other postings during
    her long diplomatic career, as a commercial officer in Ankara and
    as the State Department's senior Turkish desk officer. Excerpts from
    her lengthy interview concerning Armenian issues, including Armenian
    Genocide legislation before the U.S. Congress, are provided below.

    "We're circulating Ambassador Karaer's interview-a truly stunning
    example of undisguised cynicism in the face of genocide and denial-as
    a public service," said Aram Hamparian, the executive director of
    the ANCA. "As painful as her callous remarks are to read, they do, in
    their candor, provide powerful insights into the depths to which U.S.

    officials have sunk in enforcing Turkey's genocide denial dictates.

    Sadly, it would seem the pervasive attitude of expediency over morality
    characterized by her words remains, even today, much more the rule
    rather than the exception among the senior ranks of our nation's
    Foreign Service."

    ***

    >>From the Library of Congress, Historical Collections (American
    Memory) Manuscript Division, the Foreign Affairs Oral History
    Collection of the Association for Diplomatic Studies and Training.

    An interview with Ambassador Arma Jane Karaer by Charles Stuart
    Kennedy, April 19, 2004.

    [EXCERPTED]

    Q: Yes, absolutely. Anyway, I think we were all over the place, kind
    of rewriting the book on this and I had served in Yugoslavia for five
    years running the consular section and we'd had the same thing. I
    mean you learn to discriminate between the real communists and the
    ones who were kind of nominal or belong to the labor movement. If
    you've got a job you belong to a labor movement. Anyway, I mean it
    was a period of sort of revamping the rules.

    KARAER: One of the things that we were doing in that office was trying
    to wipe out the ineligibilities of cases that came to our attention
    for which there was no fundamental proof that the person was ever a
    communist or was, in any sense, dangerous to the United States.

    Another thing that made me sensitive to this problem was a task
    that I undertook when I was in Istanbul. In my office there were two
    three-drawer filing cabinets with big bars and padlocks on them. Upon
    inquiring I found out that they contained files of refugees from
    Eastern Europe who had been processed in Istanbul through the Refugee
    Relief Program. INS had taken whatever they wanted from those files and
    left years before, but my immigrant visa clerk, who was the world's
    greatest pack rat, didn't want to destroy them because she thought
    they might contain some original documents, like birth certificates.

    Of course this is now 20 years later. If they haven't missed their
    birth certificate by now, they're probably not going to need them,
    but I'm conscientious too. I went through every one of those doggone
    files, six drawers full, not a single original document in any of it,
    number one. Number two, I learned a lesson about refugees trying to
    get to the United States. Most of them claimed to have left their
    home countries because they were anti-communist.

    Anti-communist? These guys were taxi drivers. What did you do that was
    so anti-communist? Well, I just am, and that's why I left and that's
    why I have to go to the United States, to fight the communists. So
    much of it was so fluffy, but that's what they needed to say to get
    their visas for the U.S., so they said it. Of course we've got that
    still. When I was on the Turkish desk I was got routine inquiries sent
    to me by immigration courts about people who were Turks of Kurdish
    background who were illegal aliens here.

    They were being tried by the immigration court. Do they go back
    or do they stay? Every single one of them said they had to stay
    in the United States because their life would be in jeopardy if
    they returned to Turkey. Not true. They were economic refugees, not
    political refugees. There were even some Armenian Turks who had left
    Turkey just in the previous few years who were claiming that as an
    Armenian if they went back to Turkey they were in fear of their live,
    which was all a bunch of bunk.

    [ . . . ]

    Q: You were on the Turkish desk from '84 to?

    KARAER: '84 to '86, yes.

    Q: At the time you went there, in the first place, did you, was the
    southeast Europe thing, did it fall along the lines that happened
    between the Greeks and the Turks? I mean I'm talking about the American
    personnel there. Was there, did you find it a pretty objective bunch
    or did you see kind of that division within people who are looking
    at that area off of our side?

    KARAER: No, I think that they were objective. The Greek government
    truly was being difficult. At the time we had a real terrorism threat
    against our people.

    Q: November 17th group, but anyhow.

    KARAER: Yes. So, that was their main focus as I recall. Turkey was
    the big, big issue, almost the whole time that I was there. About the
    time I arrived, then California Congressman Tony Coelho had introduced
    a bill in the Post Office Committee of the House of Representatives
    to declare April 25th or April something Genocide Day. The purpose,
    ostensibly, was to help the American people recall the people who
    were lost in the so-called Armenian genocide.

    Why the post office committee? Of course this is a foreign policy
    thing. If the U.S. Congress says that their government committed
    a genocide, it would enrage the Turks. However, there were a lot
    of Armenian Americans in Mr. Coelho's congressional district, and
    apparently whatever makes the Turks unhappy, makes them happy. He
    probably couldn't have even got it onto the schedule of the House
    Foreign Affairs Committee, but he thought he could slip this through
    the Post Office Committee, which is in charge of declaring national
    pickle day, national rose day, and things like that.

    Mr. Coelho is famous now, infamous, for his money raising abilities,
    so he had a lot of friends on the Hill. This thing had just popped
    up on the Department's screen when I arrived. The Turks had informed
    the secretary of state that if that bill got passed, something awful
    was going to happen in the bi-lateral relationship.

    They didn't know what, but something awful was going to happen. the
    secretary had told the assistant secretary who told my boss, "Stop
    it." Well, fortunately, we were able to find some members of the House
    who, although they didn't know very much about this piece of history,
    were peeved with Coelho for trying this end-run around the Foreign
    Affairs Committee. Whatever the justice of his claim it didn't belong
    in the Post Office Committee.

    I worked very closely with one of the senior aides to one of those
    congressmen. This man was a master of House procedure. This was my
    next great learning experience-how much of what happens or doesn't
    happen on the Hill depends on finessing procedure. What they wanted
    from us primarily were lots of short speeches. Three minute speeches,
    two minute speeches, that they could pass out on the subject on why
    this was a bad idea. Why this could not or should not be done. We,
    mostly me, spent hours writing these little speeches that could be
    given to members to use from the floor to speak against this proposal.

    The Turks had belatedly learned that they had to lobby Congress. They
    had for many years just sort of sat back with their typical chip on
    the shoulder attitude. "We know that we're great. We know that you
    need us. That should be good enough for everybody. Why should we go
    around hat in hand to your legislators?"

    It took them a long time to understand the power of members of Congress
    in this country. I think that they looked on our members of congress
    as equivalent to their members of parliament which is not the same
    thing. They thought that if they dealt with the administration that
    was all that should be necessary. By the time the Coelho bill came up,
    they had already been convinced that this wasn't the case.

    They had hired a lobbyist that was giving them advice on things that
    they could do-primarily not stick their feet in their mouths too
    often. There was an American professor who was a specialist in Turkish
    and Ottoman history who got together a bunch of other academics in
    the same line. They too were putting out public statements that the
    version of history supported by the Coelho bill was not as clear cut
    as it implied. One of the big problems with this issue is that so much
    of what has been written in English about the Armenian massacres in
    Turkey in the early 20th century was written by Armenians or Armenian
    Americans. Our main line of attack on this whole thing was that yes,
    something really horrible happened in Turkey in what was then the
    Ottoman Empire during the First World War, but whatever happened
    there was not a genocide.

    We did get a certain amount of support from the Jewish lobby. They
    don't particularly want to share the genocide label with other groups.

    The gratuitous killing of a lot of people is an ugly thing.

    You don't like to be picking nits over language. But the word genocide
    means a particular thing, and the history does not support the charge
    that the Turks were trying to wipe an ethnic group. From their point
    of view, they were trying to stop a minority group from breaking off
    another part of the country. While many people died in eastern Turkey,
    the Armenian communities in western Turkey, who were not engaged in
    rebellion, were not touched. The Turks had already lost a large portion
    of their empire to rebellion by the Greeks and the Bulgarians who had
    won their independence with the help of the Russians. The Armenians
    in northeastern Turkey, in their old homeland contiguous with Russia,
    tried the same thing.

    They formed militias and, with Russian help, attacked Turkish
    villages in the same area. This was all happening about the time that
    Turkey entered the First World War on the side of the Germans and
    Austro-Hungarian Empire. Russia, of course, was on the other side of
    the conflict. From the Ottoman government's point of view, not only
    were those Armenian groups rebelling, they were making common cause
    with the enemy. The army put down the rebellion and then rounded up
    all of the Armenian villagers, pointed them towards Syria and said,
    "Start walking." There was no attempt to provide any sort of food or
    even any real protection. There were Kurds and bandits who had preyed
    on these villages for centuries, just waiting in the hills. When
    these unprotected convoys came along, they did what they always did,
    they attacked these people and killed them and raped the women.

    What we know about what actually happened comes a great deal from the
    oral histories that were collected of people who lived through that
    period and ended up in the United States. A lot of them were young
    children at the time that this happened and some of them were still
    alive at the time that I was the desk officer. There are at least
    three Armenian newspapers in the United States. I think two of them
    in English and one of them in Armenian. We used to get all of these
    papers and read this stuff. Every issue would have an interview with
    some grandmother or grandfather who remembered what happened to them
    when they were a child. Now, how did they survive?

    Almost all of them survived because a Turkish family had taken them
    in and taken care of them until Christian missionaries arrived looking
    for these kids and then they gave them to the missionaries.

    A lot of the information that was published in the United States at
    the time of this event was provided by American missionaries who were
    working in that area. The history of Christian missions in Turkey is
    rather a strange one in my view, because while everybody was out there
    to try to convert someone to their particular brand of Christianity,
    they had very little luck with the Muslims. Almost none whatsoever.

    So, then what did they do? They proceeded to try to convert the
    Armenian Catholics to their particular Protestant denomination. Of
    course many missionaries had a very biased view of who was right, who
    was worthy of saving, who was worthy of having their freedom and so on.

    I found some books in the Department library written by a man who
    was our consul in Izmir. He was there at the end of the Turkish
    independence war where Izmir is burned. Reading what he wrote in the
    mid-1980s was shocking. According to him whatever the Muslims said
    or did was wrong and they were all liars, and whatever a Christian
    said was good and whatever they said was the absolute truth. This
    was the kind of stuff that was being fed to the U.S. public.

    Q: In a certain respect, I've looked into this a little bit, only from
    a consular point of view, I think this was the consul I can't think
    of his name, did quite a heroic deed when the Greeks were pushed out
    and he saved a lot of lives.

    KARAER: Well, there's no question that these people did the job that
    they were sent to do, but the fact is that he and others like him
    were so incredibly partial to one religion and so anti-Turk.

    This is one of the reasons why the Turks, Ataturk and others, felt
    that the whole world was against them, and this remained the theme in
    Turkish diplomacy right up until the time that I was working there...

    Our issue with the Coelho gambit was not to try to say that the
    Ottoman government hadn't done something awful. They had. What we were
    focusing on was the genocide language. I remember once my boss and I
    went to call on the man who was the vice president's chief political
    advisor. They didn't want to get in trouble with Coelho, but they
    didn't want to rock the boat with the Turks either. He said, "Now,
    why is this so important?" I said, "It's the genocide thing. These
    people want their own state. Armenian territory right now is a part
    of the Soviet Union. The rest of what the Armenians claim as their
    homeland would have to come from Turkey, and they will never ever
    agree to that. We need their cooperation in NATO and elsewhere and
    that's why we're siding with them. If the Armenian group can get
    respectable organizations like the Congress of the United States to
    say, in effect, that the Turks committed a genocide, then they can
    get others in Europe and so on to do the same thing and their next
    step is going to be pressure to compensate. See that's territory
    so we can have our own homeland and this will never happen to us
    again." The man we were talking to said, "Oh, that's ridiculous." I
    said, "Why? It happened before, didn't it?"

    Q: Well, you know, speaking about the word genocide, I was watching
    public broadcasting yesterday, last evening, the Lehrer Report,
    which is the sort of the preeminent public broadcast in TV. They were
    talking about problems in the western province of the Sudan called
    Darfur and there was a discussion of "I know that you're not using the
    word genocide." I can't remember what, it got sort of esoteric about
    why they weren't using genocide, but were using ethnic cleansing and
    I think it's the same thing. Genocide is a term that everybody is
    very careful about because all sorts of things get kicked in if you
    use genocide.

    KARAER: Yes, that's right.

    Q: You know, it strikes me that one of the problems in Congress
    has happened in the last 30 or 40 years or so, is there's no adult
    minding the store there anymore. It used to be that you'd have the
    speaker of the house or something to take a look and say, look this
    is affecting our military ability to resist the Soviet Union. It
    doesn't get anywhere. Kids knock it off. But there's nobody to do
    that at this point I take it.

    KARAER: In fact it came to the floor of the House for a vote, and I'm
    telling you this was one of the most exciting days of my life. We were
    sitting in the Department in somebody's office who had a nice big
    television watching CSPAN and our guys stood up and said what they
    had to say and they did, and we got Steven Solarz to speak against
    the bill. He was great because he got up and said, speaking as a Jew,
    that he had great sympathy for peoples who had suffered in this way,
    but there was a serious question as to whether this could accurately
    a) be called a genocide and b) about the effect such an action would
    have on our foreign policy. Anyway, they took a vote on an amendment
    to the bill, which was a stalking horse to see how many votes they
    had that might be for or against this resolution. When they saw how
    it was going, the person in charge of the floor called it off and
    removed it from consideration. There never was an up and down vote
    on that resolution, but we did manage to stop it for the time being.

    They got another one through a few years later.
Working...
X