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Is Another French Betrayal In The Offing?

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  • Is Another French Betrayal In The Offing?

    IS ANOTHER FRENCH BETRAYAL IN THE OFFING?

    Opinion | September 26, 2012 2:01 pm

    http://www.mirrorspectator.com/2012/09/26/is-another-french-betrayal-in-the-offing/
    By Edmond Y. Azadian

    Armenian culture has been favorably impacted by French culture,
    especially in the West. Armenians have recognized that fact and have
    been appreciative of the influence, which dates back many centuries.

    There is an inherent affinity between the two nations, as far as
    culture is concerned. But when it comes to politics, that special
    relationship disappears. Armenians have incorrectly assumed that
    the cultural affinity is a substitute for political support or
    cooperation, and they have been disappointed bitterly time and again.

    The Armenian-French relations go back to the Middle Ages when French
    conquerors invaded the Middle East with the Crusaders to wrench the
    Holy Land away from Muslims and claim it in the name of Christianity.

    The Armenian principalities in Cilicia became accessories to those
    European imperialistic invasions, ultimately to their own detriment;
    when the Crusades failed or faded, the Armenians were left to their
    own devices, unable to defend their kingdom.

    Indeed, when the Egyptian Mamluk rulers overran Cilicia in 1315 and
    kidnapped its King Leo VI, ending a 300-year-old kingdom, neither
    the Crusaders nor the French came to defend their Armenian allies.

    Granted, France belatedly obliged to pay a ransom to the Mamluks to
    buy the king's freedom, hosting him in France until his death, mainly
    because they considered King Leo VI Lousignan to be of French lineage.

    The most blatant betrayal was in the 20th century, again in Cilicia.

    The Allies - especially the French - during World War I recruited
    some 5,000 Armenian volunteers as part of the Eastern Legion, to fight
    the most crucial battles of Arara, in Palestine, promising home rule
    in Cilicia to the Armenians under a French protectorate. But when
    the Ottoman army collapsed and Cilicia was liberated, the Armenian
    volunteers were disarmed and the French government brokered a deal
    with the emerging Kemalist movement behind the back of the Cilician
    Armenians who had returned to their homes after the deportations of
    1915. The French abandoned Cilicia and its population - literally
    in the middle of the night in November 1921 - and retreated in a
    cowardly manner.

    When former French President Nicholas Sarkozy moved through the French
    Senate the law criminalizing the denial of the Armenian Genocide,
    almost identical to the Gaysot law criminalizing the denial of the
    Jewish Holocaust, Armenians were tempted to believe that finally
    the French were making amends for their monumental betrayal of the
    Armenians in Cilicia. But that turned out to be another deception,
    since Mr. Sarkozy was slow to sign the resolution into law, while
    the opposition was recruiting members of the parliament to take the
    resolution to the Constitutional Court.

    Having full knowledge of the gathering storm, he failed to use his
    prerogative before the measure was brought to the Constitutional Court,
    which rendered an unfavorable decision. Mr. Sarkozy did not put his
    money where his mouth was.

    Enter candidate Francois Hollande - the prospect seemed more promising
    because he had pledged to use such a tight legal framework that the
    resolution would become fail proof.

    The pledge is still on the table but there are already ominous signs
    that his pledge may not go beyond election rhetoric. This column had
    already made reference to an interview in the French magazine Express
    by the new French Foreign Minister Laurant Fabius who stated that the
    newly-elected Hollande was searching for a way to balance a policy
    of accommodating Turkey while keeping his pledge to the large and
    loud French-Armenian community.

    These days Mr. Hollande and his prime minister are busy dedicating
    museums and monuments throughout France. On September 21, he was in
    Drancy, a city north of Paris, which was the site of the major transit
    camp for Jews being deported to death camps. "Our work is no longer
    about establishing the truth," said Mr. Hollande at the Drancy Shoah
    memorial. "Today, our work is to transmit. That is the spirit of this
    memorial. Transmission - there resides the future of remembrance."

    In 2005, a larger Holocaust Museum had opened in 2005 in central
    Paris. A new memorial is being inaugurated at the center of the Cite
    de la Muette. Prime Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault inaugurated a similar
    memorial in Aix-en-Provence last month.

    All these memorials demonstrate that the new French president and his
    government are sensitive to human suffering and loss of life through
    the organized actions of brutal rulers. The only thing remains to be
    seen if the Armenian losses are also counted as human suffering.

    Mr. Hollande went further than his predecessors in defending the
    dignity of human life; former President Francois Mitterrand had
    acknowledged a general French role in the detentions and deportations
    of the Jews during World War II, whereas President Jacques Chirac had
    taken a step further in a speech in 1995 acknowledging "collective
    wrongdoing." Mr. Hollande went all the way by admitting "a crime
    committed by France."

    Most French attribute that crime to Marshall Petin, whose government
    in Vichy collaborated with the occupying Nazi forces.

    (Incidentally, several French-Armenians were leaders and/or fearless
    members of the French Underground battling the Vichy government and
    Nazis. The most famous in that group is Missak Manouchian, who led
    the legendary eponymous group.)

    Besides commemorating Jewish losses in France, Mr. Hollande has
    also demonstrated moral courage to take positive action; indeed,
    last August he stripped the British fashion designer and former
    creative director of Dior, John Galliano, of the Legion of Honor he
    had received in 2009. Mr. Galliano was found guilty in 2011 of making
    anti-Semitic remarks.

    All these actions indicate that we are dealing with a statesman
    of solid moral fiber when it comes to upholding human dignity. The
    question remains if those qualities are applied selectively to one
    group only.

    A recent roundtable discussion in Paris casts some doubt, whether
    those principles are impacted by political tides or considerations.

    The discussions were held in Paris by Bosphorous University to analyze
    the law criminalizing the Armenian Genocide.

    Participants of the roundtable included Elizabeth Guigou, president
    of the Foreign Relations Committee of the French Parliament; Jacques
    Lang, former education culture minister of France, and former foreign
    minister of Turkey, Yasar Yakis.

    Any symposium or roundtable discussion may be confined to the level of
    academic discourse, but when the participants are current legislators
    or former statesmen, the format takes a different dimension, with
    serious political ramifications. Ms. Guigou has stated that the
    Constitutional Court has considered the law criminalizing the Genocide
    denial without legal foundation. She continued her statement by adding:
    "Although President Hollande is very sensitive to the issue of this
    draft law, it is very improbable that he may take a new initiative
    since the Constitutional Court has refuted its legal premise." Mr. Lang
    also endorsed the same view. The Turkish representative cautioned
    against the deterioration of French-Turkish relations. Then, he
    magnanimously added that the law not only damages French-Turkish
    relations, but will also jeopardize Armenian-Turkish relations.

    Turkologist Hagop Chakerian, reporting about the above roundtable
    discussion, in the daily Azg of Yerevan concluded by stating:
    "The law may damage French-Turkish relations, but it cannot damage
    Armenian-Turkish relations, because there are none."

    Since his election, Mr. Hollande has yet to address his pledge on the
    Genocide law. But all these developments and statements do not augur
    well for the prospects of adopting the law. If it is a crime to deny
    the Holocaust in France there is no easy way to reason in any other
    fashion, that it is a crime to deny the Armenian Genocide.

    Only political expediency, rather than any legal premise can derail
    the law against denying the Armenian Genocide.

    Only time will tell how extensive Mr. Hollande's moral fortitude is.

    Perhaps it is not fair to jump to early conclusions, but all
    indications point to a French betrayal in the making, once again.

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