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Republic Of Turkey - The First Fascist State In History.

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  • Republic Of Turkey - The First Fascist State In History.

    REPUBLIC OF TURKEY - THE FIRST FASCIST STATE IN HISTORY.
    By Armen Ayvazyan

    http://www.soyarmenio.com.ar/2011/07/republica-de-turquia-el-primer-estado.html

    The Republics of Armenia and Turkey have been in a long-lasting
    conflict with no resolution in sight. Therefore a proper assessment
    of the political system and state ideology of Turkey is extremely
    important for the Armenian state to build a competent foreign policy
    and properly position itself in the international arena.

    The West has traditionally portrayed the Republic of Turkey which
    emerged on the ruins of the Ottoman Empire as a secular democratic
    Muslim state.

    Even though this cliche is being persistently circulated in the Western
    media and very often uttered by American and European officials,
    it is far from reality.

    Unfortunately, Armenia has not yet dared to offer its own assessment
    of modern Turkish statehood and tacitly put up with the aforementioned
    international narrative.

    In reality, one of the consequences of the Armenian Genocide was
    the creation of the first fascist state in Europe's periphery. The
    Republic of Turkey had all the core characteristics inherent to
    fascism and Nazism, which later emerged in Italy, Germany and some
    other European countries.

    1. Turkish chauvinism and genocidal policies. Mustafa Kemal (Ataturk)
    was formerly himself a member of the governing body of Committee of
    Union and Progress (CUP), the political organization of murderous Young
    Turks. Once in power, Ataturk and the Kemalists not only continued the
    Armenian Genocide, but directed their tested policies of extermination
    of an entire people against Greeks and other ethnic minorities. In
    Eastern Armenia alone, the Kemalists destroyed 200,000 Armenians
    (1920-1921), in Smyrna - 100,000 Greeks and Armenians (September
    1922), in the Black Sea regions - about 300,000 Pontian Greeks
    (1919-1923). They also continued the Genocide against the Assyrians,
    of whom about 500,000 were annihilated by the Turkish forces from
    1915 to 1923.

    Deportations, mass exterminations, political and cultural repressions
    against the Kurds, the second largest ethnic group in modern Turkey,
    began immediately after the Armenian Genocide and continue to this
    day. All Kurdish attempts to protect their basic national and human
    rights were brutally suppressed in 1925, 1927, and 1937. In 1980s
    and 1990s, more than a million Kurds were deported to large cities
    (during these deportations, according to various estimates, two to
    three thousand Kurdish villages were destroyed).Turkish chauvinism
    was legislatively approved in the Constitution of 1937 under the
    auspicious name of "nationalism" (Milliyetcilik ), openly aiming to
    assimilate non-Turkic ethnic groups and legally identifying them
    as Turks. Although later the concept of Turkish "nationalism" was
    interpreted in different ways, its chauvinistic nature and essence
    has remained unchanged.The modern discipline of Holocaust and Genocide
    Studies identifies the denial of genocide as an extension of genocidal
    policies.

    Gregory Stanton, former President of the International Association
    of Genocide Scholars, emphasizes that "Denial is the final stage
    of genocide. It is a continuing attempt to destroy the victim group
    psychologically and culturally, to deny its members even the memory
    of the murders of their relatives. That is what the Turkish government
    today is doing to Armenians around the world."

    Elie Wiesel, the famous Holocaust survivor and political activist,
    has repeatedly called Turkey's 90-year-old campaign to cover up the
    Armenian genocide a double killing, since it strives to kill the
    memory of the original atrocities.

    The Armenian government should have assessed Turkish denialism in
    similar and even graver terms, but to this date it has failed to do so
    for no apparent reason.In contemporary democratic Germany it is simply
    impossible to imagine a street or institution named in honor of any
    of the leaders of the Third Reich - indeed it is legally prohibited!

    Meanwhile, in "democratic" Turkey the leaders of CUP, ie the criminal
    organizers and perpetrators of the Armenian Genocide, are openly
    glorified.

    For example, a district in Istanbul, a few avenues and streets
    in different parts of Istanbul, boulevards in Ankara and Edirne,
    primary schools in Istanbul, Ankara and Izmir, and a high school in
    Konya are all named after Talat Pasha, Minister of the Interior and
    (in 1917-1918) Grand Vizier of the Ottoman Empire, who personally
    orchestrated the Armenian Genocide."Democratic" Turkey also actively
    uses the infamous Article 301 of its Criminal Code ("insulting
    Turkishness", in 2008 changed to "insulting the Turkish nation"). This
    law, among other things, makes the recognition of the Armenian Genocide
    a crime. About 50 trials have already been held based on this article.

    2. Totalitarianism. Up to the late 1940s Turkey was a one-party state.

    However, even today "democratic" Turkey periodically imposes a ban
    on one political party or another (even those elected to parliament),
    while its leaders are thrown in jail on trumped-up political charges.

    The last of a series of such cases occurred in December 2009, when
    the Turkish Constitutional Court banned the pro-Kurdish Democratic
    Society Party (DTP), which had 21 MPs. All the property of DTP was
    confiscated by the state. This even prompted the European Union,
    which by and large turns a blind eye to the racist repressions
    against 20 million Kurds in Turkey, to remind Ankara that "the
    dissolution of political parties is an exceptional measure that
    should be used with utmost restraint."Turkey's state propaganda,
    all-inclusive revision and falsification of the Ottoman and modern
    Turkish history through carefully controlled scholarship, school
    curricula, and legally enforced taboos, including severe restraints
    on free access to information and freedom of expression, resulted in
    effective brainwashing of its own population.

    3. Statism (etatism). The Turkish Constitution of 1937 strengthened
    the regulatory role of the state not only in the economy, but also
    in ideology.

    4. Anti-communism. Ataturk, despite his friendship with the Soviet
    Union, was a staunch anti-communist. The Communist Party of Turkey
    has been banned since 1923 and remained illegal throughout its
    whole history, having been routinely subjected to most brutal state
    repressions.

    5. Leaderism and the cult of personality. In Turkey, the cult of
    Ataturk is still in full bloom. Statues and monuments of Ataturk are
    installed in every city, his portraits are hung in all government and
    administrative institutions, as well as in school classrooms, and his
    portraits are on banknotes and coins of all denominations. Criticism
    of his life activities and biography are criminalized and carrying
    Ataturk as one's last name is banned.

    6. Militarism and aggression. Turkey is one of the most militarized
    countries on earth, with the eighth-largest army in the world and
    second only to the United States in NATO.

    The decisive sway of the Turkish military on domestic politics is
    well known: one only needs to recall the three coups d'etat carried
    out by the Turkish army in 1960, 1971 and 1980, as well as the
    harsh ousting of Islamist Prime Minister N. Erbakan from power in
    1997 (incidentally, his ruling "Welfare Party" was also banned).The
    Republic of Turkey has repeatedly resorted to military force or threat
    of force against neighboring countries, such as Syria, Cyprus, Iraq,
    Greece, and Armenia. The Northern part of Cyprus, Syria's district
    of Alexandretta, and the western part of Armenia still remain occupied.

    The Turkish army also regularly invades Northern Iraq.In 1920, the
    first Republic of Armenia fell under the blows of Kemalists. Indeed,
    the direct order that Karabekir-Pasha received from Mustafa Kemal
    literally specified "to destroy Armenia morally and physically."

    Immediately after the collapse of the Soviet Union, Turkey's policy
    towards the "third" Republic of Armenia became explicitly aggressive
    in nature once again, including an ongoing land-blockade, refusal to
    establish diplomatic relations, enduring Armenian Genocide denial,
    support and assistance to Azerbaijan in its preparations for a new
    military venture against Armenia, etc.The emergence and subsequent
    superstructural metamorphosis of fascism in Turkey was not adequately
    evaluated by Soviet/Russian or Western historiographies and neither
    was it reflected in international legal and political documents.

    However, this should not lead anyone astray.

    Generally, Turkophilia in political and academic circles in both
    the West and USSR/Russia, is a quite multi-faceted phenomenon and a
    separate topic for discussion.

    Here an incomplete explanation will suffice: the USSR was simply
    unable to call Ataturk a fascist, because "the leader of the
    world proletariat" Vladimir Lenin and Ataturk signed the infamous
    Moscow Treaty of "Friendship and Brotherhood" on March 16, 1921
    (incidentally, exactly 90 years ago). Meanwhile, the West avoided
    such an unfavorable evaluation, because Turkey has historically been
    considered - and actually was - a barrier against Russia/Soviet Union,
    and a key strategic ally. Turkey's alliance with the West was legally
    formalized by its accession to NATO in 1952.

    If the international community (alias "the great powers") does not
    adequately characterize the fascist essence of the modern Turkish
    state, this is simply because it has not been interested in such an
    expose. But independent Armenia, by failing to officially identify
    and denounce the fascist nature of Turkish state, not only refuses
    to clearly see and understand the true ideology, strategic goals and
    calculations of its age-old archenemy, but also deprives itself of
    the chance to present properly its own dire geostrategic situation
    to the world. After all, Armenia's present security predicaments are
    a direct result of crimes by Turkish fascism!Attempts to rehabilitate
    Turkey without having it incur its due responsibility - in particular,
    without the territorial restitutions and other compensations to
    Armenia - can lead to new and repeated genocides. This is the main
    conclusion that the international community has yet to draw.

    ARMEN AYVAZYAN ist Doctor of Political Sciences "Hayastani Zrucakic",
    N: 10 (173 ), 18 March, 2011 Palabras claves Turquia . Todas las
    opiniones son bienvenidas. El sitio se resguarda el derecho de
    editarlas y/o rechazarlas.

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