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BAKU: Genocide And Armenian Propaganda

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  • BAKU: Genocide And Armenian Propaganda

    GENOCIDE AND ARMENIAN PROPAGANDA

    news.az, Azerbaijan
    Oct 14 2011

    by Cem Oguz, head of the Turkish Center for Strategic and International
    Studies.

    The diaspora of Armenian scholars is very eager to present the Armenian
    deportation of 1915 as the first "holocaust" of the 20th century. They
    go further and say that it was used by the Nazi leadership as the
    model for their own genocidal program. The world's presumed lack of
    reaction to the so-called "forgotten genocide," as they describe it
    in their own literature, is alleged to have served as a justification
    for Adolf Hitler's planned extermination of European Jewry. In their
    arguments, Hitler is frequently quoted as having said in a speech to
    his generals about his plans to wage a ruthless war against Poland in
    1939, "Who, after all, speaks today of the annihilation of Armenians?"

    The Armenian motive behind efforts at establishing a connection
    between their own history and the tragic fate of European Jewry during
    World War II is highly obvious. It stands as the greatest single
    human tragedy the world has ever seen and any would-be relationship
    between the Holocaust and the Armenian allegations would serve as
    an important tool to justify their arguments. In order to proceed,
    however, the essential enigma we should focus on is whether there
    really exists such a relationship.

    It was US historian Heath W. Lowry who demonstrated that there is no
    historical basis for attributing such a statement to Hitler. In his
    article titled "The US Congress and Adolf Hitler on the Armenians,"
    published in 1985 in the Journal of Political Communication and
    Persuasion, Professor Lowry proved that the source of the purported
    Hitler quote is an article ("Nazi Germany's Road to War") which
    appeared in the Times of London on Nov. 24, 1945. The said Times
    article was written by an anonymous author and in fact, was not the
    earliest mention of Hitler's alleged statement on the Armenians.

    Rather, as Professor Lowry has pointed out, "this quotation and indeed
    an entire text" of Hitler's speech purportedly made at Obersalzberg
    was first published in a book entitled What About Germany authored
    by Louis Lochner, a former bureau chief of the Associated Press in
    Berlin. Lochner wrote that he obtained it from an unnamed informant
    as well and since then, its provenance has never been disclosed or
    investigated. What is more important, says Mr. Lowry, is the fact
    that in even Lochner's version of Hitler's quote there is no direct
    or implied reference to the Jewish people. At length he concludes
    that Hitler's alleged reference to the Armenian case was merely a
    piece of wartime propaganda.

    Years later, Professor Lowry was unable to escape the severe
    consequences that objectors to the Armenian allegations eventually
    face. In September 1990, upon the request of the then Turkish
    ambassador to Washington, Nuzhet Kandemir, Professor Lowry wrote
    a memorandum regarding Robert Jay Lifton's book The Nazi Doctors,
    Medical Killings and the Psychology of Genocide (published in 1986).

    Mr. Lifton, a recognized authority in his own field as Professor
    Lowry himself indicated, used in the book remarks like, "But I found
    that Nazi doctors differed significantly from these other groups,
    not so much in their human experimentation but in their central
    role in genocidal projects... (Perhaps Turkish doctors, in their
    participation in the genocide against the Armenians, come closest,
    as I shall later suggest)..." I won't get into the argument as to
    whether the few Ottoman doctors of the time were that competent due
    to war-time conditions, but totally agree with Professor Lowry's
    conclusion that Mr. Lifton indeed "knows absolutely nothing about
    the so-called Armenian genocide." His entire work was based on the
    articles by Vahakn N. Dadrian, together with references to the work
    of Helen Fein and Leo Cuper, none of whom are historians.

    In October the same year, Ambassador Kandemir sent a reproachful
    letter to Mr. Lifton, together with Professor Lowry's memorandum. It
    was subsequent to this action that the concerted personal attacks
    on Professor Lowry began. He was accused of being paid as well as
    academically promoted by the Turkish state and being engaged in the
    "denial" of a known genocide. Since then, any counter-argument to
    Armenian allegations, scientific ones included, have been put forward
    as evidence of "denial."

    Denial in genocide terminology refers to claims that the Holocaust
    did not occur as it is defined by mainstream historiography. In
    this assertion, the key word we have to focus on is the mainstream
    historiography. What does it mean and who represents it?

    History is a science of facts rather than an art of distorted data. In
    the case of the Holocaust, it is almost impossible to challenge the
    existent evidence and truth. Holocaust deniers such as David Irving
    or Ernst Zundel, in turn, have a common pattern of either falsifying
    historical documents or deliberately misrepresenting historical data.

    As can be seen in Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmedinejad's attitude,
    denial is basically motivated by either an anti-semitic conspiracy
    theory or hatred. This politically motivated bias necessitates moral
    and legal protection that will help humanity save new victims.

    In contrast to the Holocaust, the mainstream historiography on the
    "Armenian genocide" is highly disputable. Facts our Armenian friends
    claim to be sufficient to conclude that the tragedy of 1915 is a
    genocide are distorted. As put in Professor Lowry's memorandum,
    the basic problem Turkey has been facing is "with authors such as
    Dadrian, Fein and Kuper, each of whom are now serving as sources for
    authors such as Lifton" and "Lifton's book is simply the end result
    of the Turkish failure to respond in a prompt fashion to the Dadrian
    articles and the Fein and Kuper book."

    In the atmosphere of intellectual terror which our Armenian friends
    have successfully built up, they resort to using the sad memory of
    the Holocaust and stubbornly oppose any challenge to their version
    of mainstream historiography. Turkey's relatively puny efforts at
    self-defense are frequently portrayed as attempts at denial, and
    history is sadly being politicized.

    Let me wrap up by repeating the question that I posed in my last
    week's piece: Do you really think Western politicians like French
    President Nicholas Sarkozy who support Armenian genocide bills are
    even aware of realities such as these?

    C. Cem Oguz [email protected]



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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