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Who Made The U.S. Judge And Jury Of Armenian Genocide?

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  • Who Made The U.S. Judge And Jury Of Armenian Genocide?

    WHO MADE THE U.S. JUDGE AND JURY OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE?

    examiner.com
    http://www.examiner.com/x- 4454-Geopolitics-Examiner~y2010m3d7-Who-made-the-U S-judge-and-jury-of-Armenian-Genocide
    March 7 2010

    The U.S. House Foreign Affairs Committee, brazenly displaying a
    combination of meretricious arrogance, political expediency and
    historical amnesia, voted to recognize Ottoman Turkey's 1915 ruthless
    massacre of over one million ethnic Armenians as "genocide".

    Categorizing these acts as such is certainly justifiable, but it is
    also fair to wonder why the U.S. gets to determine this, considering
    America is guilty of its own genocidal crimes that have evaded proper
    classification.

    Resolution based on politics not morality. Although the end result is
    just, please do not for a second believe the resolution was based on
    anything but political survival and greed. Members of this committee
    passed the bill not because they believe in the Armenian cause,
    but because they want to get re-elected. And though I do believe the
    Armenian lobby is fighting for the truth, there's no doubt they are
    quite a potent and influential lot as pointed out by former U.S.
    diplomat Lincoln McCurdy who is now the President of the Turkish
    Coalition of America:

    In the United States there are nearly one million Armenian Americans,
    concentrated in a number of congressional districts, who support a
    lobby that spends an estimated $40 million annually on furthering its
    agenda, which revolves around recognition of an 'Armenian Genocide.'"

    Meanwhile, President Barack Obama is doing everything in his power
    to halt the bill in its tracks. But it's not as if Obama has some
    moral clarity the others lack considering in 2008 candidate Obama
    said: "as President I will recognize the Armenian genocide.". The
    only difference being that Obama is looking at the situation through
    a prism of geopolitical realism, and the reality is the U.S. needs
    Turkey's help in containing Iran's nuclear ambitions and needs Turkey's
    Incirlik military base for the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.

    Race murder by any other name... Back in Turkey, Prime Minister
    Recep Tayyip Erdogan called the entire process a parody. Erodgan's
    assessment is spot-on, yet Turkey's knee-jerk defensiveness does
    not help their cause, especially when the world now knows the Turks
    underreported the actual number of Armenians slaughtered during
    deportation by at least half a million. What's even more impressive
    is how the Turkish government was able to keep the real figures
    hidden for generations. Putting aside the ulterior motives of U.S.
    politicians for a minute - let's be clear: it was genocide.

    At surface it may appear to be a semantics pissing contest, yet the
    word "genocide" does carry a more heinous connotation than "slaughter"
    or "mass killing", for it signifies that much more flagitious
    underlying motives and objectives are at play. Attempting to rid
    the earth of an entire ethnicity is more psychologically twisted
    than standard warfare. Eliminating a population based on racist
    ideology is much worse than simply killing folks based on, say,
    imperialistic expansion or the protection of oil interests. About a
    year ago Christopher Hitchens wrote an article that could have been
    written yesterday about the wordsmithing game with respect to this
    slaying of countless Armenians:

    Genocide had not been coined in 1915, but the U.S. ambassador in
    Constantinople, Henry Morgenthau, employed a term that was in some
    ways more graphic. In his urgent reports to the State Department,
    conveying on-the-spot dispatches from his consuls, especially in the
    provinces of Van and Harput, he described the systematic slaughter
    of the Armenians as "race murder." A vast archive of evidence exists
    to support this claim. But every year, the deniers and euphemists
    set to work again, and there are usually enough military-industrial
    votes to tip the scale in favor of our Turkish client."

    American hypocrisy. The only thing more detestable than Turkey's
    persistent and immoral disavowals is America's self-righteousness. As
    said, there is no denying the atrocities certainly qualify as genocide,
    but anyone with the faintest appreciation of history should raise a
    brow at the American utter lack of self-perspective.

    If the U.S. is going to raise such a ruckus and chastise a nation for
    crimes committed nearly a century ago, what about American crimes
    within the last 60 years? What about Hiroshima and Nagasaki? The
    dropping of two atomic bombs that wiped out a quarter of a million
    people may not meet the textbook definition of genocide but it
    exemplifies evil nonetheless.

    What about the pacification campaign launched by the U.S. on the heels
    of the Philippine-American War (1899-1902) which claimed the lives
    of 1.4 million Filipinos? In November 1901, the Manila correspondent
    of the Philadelphia Ledger reported:

    The present war is no bloodless, opera bouffe engagement; our men have
    been relentless, have killed to exterminate men, women, children,
    prisoners and captives, active insurgents and suspected people from
    lads of ten up, the idea prevailing that the Filipino as such was
    little better than a dog...."

    According to a U.S. General's report, American troops were responsible
    for over 600,000 dead men, women and children on the island of Luzon
    alone, of which Gore Vidal wrote:

    If this is not a policy of genocide (no dumb letters on the dictionary
    meaning of the word), it will do until the real thing comes along."

    How can the U.S., as well as Europeans, condemn Turkey when the
    North American Indian population had been reduced from an estimated
    12 million in 1500 to just over 200,000 in 1900? Professor of ethnic
    studies at the University of Colorado Ward Churchill described it as
    "vast genocide . . . the most sustained on record." Historian David E.
    Stannard wrote that Native Americans had undergone the "worst human
    holocaust the world had ever witnessed, roaring across two continents
    non-stop for four centuries and consuming the lives of countless tens
    of millions of people."

    Many will argue that most Native American deaths were caused by
    disease, yet there is no question the U.S. government set in motion
    policies aimed at eradicating entire tribes. At a minimum, the U.S. is
    certainly guilty of cultural genocide. There is hard evidence that
    suggests there was a deep-rooted ideological motivation behind
    these policies. Euro-Americans saw themselves as the torchbearers
    of civilization and saw Native Americans as obstacles who failed to
    cultivate the vast wilderness, thus their extinction was inevitable.

    The prevailing thought was that natives needed to adjust to
    Euro-American society in order to survive, and this philosophy of
    assimilation resulted in the destruction of Native American culture.

    When assimilation failed, the U.S. passed legislation such as the
    Indian Removal Act of 1830 as a solution, which directly led to the
    infamous humanitarian disaster referred to by the Cherokee as the
    Trail of Tears, a forced death march that killed thousands.

    This destruction of Native-American communities and culture was not by
    chance nor mandated by fate, but was a direct result of governmental
    policies and actions. Not unlike what the Turks did to the Armenians.

    There's nothing wrong with calling the Armenian massacre genocide,
    so long as we apply the same standard to our own historical sins.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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