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Rome: If Washington asks Ankara to take stock of its past

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  • Rome: If Washington asks Ankara to take stock of its past

    Corriere della Sera, Italia
    March 5 2010


    If Washington asks Ankara to take stock of its past

    by Antonio Ferrari

    History, which is almost always written by the winners, can sometimes
    cause embarrassment and spark a desire to revise it. Sometimes history
    really does inspire fear, particularly when it clashes with the
    interests of realpolitik. The US Congress's Foreign Affairs Committee
    approved a resolution yesterday recognizing the genocide of the
    Armenian people in the early part of the last century. A crisis so
    serious has broken out between age-old allies Turkey and the United
    States that Ankara has even recalled its ambassador.

    The fact that the motion was put forward by the committee chairman, a
    Democrat who belongs to the same party as Barack Obama, is fuelling
    tension in Washington, anger in Ankara, and satisfaction in Yerevan.
    The problem is quite simple in its complexity: Turkey, which has set
    in motion negotiations with Armenia with a view to normalizing
    bilateral ties, is also the United States' most important ally in an
    area stretching from the Balkans, to the Middle East, and to the
    Caucasus. Now Congress's vote is in danger of triggering a diplomatic
    and political earthquake. While Ankara has taken a few timid steps
    towards overcoming what it considers to be a taboo - the genocide of
    1.5 million Armenians - it has already warned that the resolution is
    going to freeze the normalization process with its neighbouring
    country and cast a shadow over its alliance with the United States.
    The effort made by Hillary Clinton to urge prudence on Congress, and a
    phone call between Obama and his Turkish counterpart Abdullah Gul have
    not managed to prevent the crisis, which looks set to be a
    particularly thorny one.

    Of course it is bizarre, as a Republican Party member said, that
    Germany has acknowledged its responsibility for the Sho'ah, that South
    Africa is probing the crimes of apartheid, and that the United States
    accepts its guilt in connection with what the native Americans
    suffered, while Turkey obstinately continues not to want to come to
    terms with its past. Sarkozy's France, which recognized the Armenian
    genocide, paid a high price in contracts that went up in smoke, but
    now with the United States the consequences are unpredictable.

    [translated from Italian]
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