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ANKARA: The French Attitude Towards Armenian Claims

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  • ANKARA: The French Attitude Towards Armenian Claims

    THE FRENCH ATTITUDE TOWARDS ARMENIAN CLAIMS
    Recep Guvelioglu

    The New Anatolian, Turkey
    May 15 2006

    The French Parliament is set this Thursday to debate a bill to
    criminalize denial of the so-called Armenian genocide. The one-article
    bill aims to impose prison terms of up to one year and a 45,000 euro
    fine for deniers of the so-called genocide claims. In France it's
    already an offense to deny the Holocaust of World War II.

    France has been a haven for the Armenian diaspora for almost a
    century. That's why almost every French government, whether leftist
    or rightist, has tried to be sympathetic to the diaspora to get
    their votes. As a result, the French public has been influenced by
    Armenian propaganda without questioning the case. In 1920, when Aram
    Andonian published the so-called "Official Documents on the Armenian
    Massacres" (Documents Officiels Concernant les Massacres Armeniens,
    Imprimerie H. Turabian, Boulevard Raspall, 1920, Paris), the French
    public accepted them as real evidence of an Armenian "genocide." But
    in the 1980s it was proven that the letters which are the basis of
    the book's claims were false and mere fabrication.

    Even though French soldiers were eyewitnesses to the Mt. Musa incident,
    exaggerations in the book "The Forty Days of Musa Dagh" (Werfel
    Franz; Die vierzig Tage des Musa Dagh, Paul Zsolnay Verlag A.G.,
    1933, Berlin) were disregarded by the French. French administrations
    have been proud of themselves for erecting genocide monuments. French
    governments sometimes went too far, even supporting terrorists. They
    supported the Armenian Secret Army for the Liberation of Armenia
    (ASALA). But after an ASALA bomb blast in front of a Turkish Airlines
    (THY) office at Orly Airport which claimed eight lives (four of them
    French) and wounded 60 on July 15, 1983, and their occupation of the
    Turkish Consulate General in which they murdered the security officer
    and wounded the consul general, the French government realized that
    supporting terrorism doesn't help anything. There were many reasons
    at the root of all this, but I would like to address four of them.

    The first reason is classic Christian solidarity. The second was
    quite interesting: The French government, during World War I,
    like the Russians and British, provoked the Armenian quest for an
    independent state just to dissolve the Ottoman Empire. But the French
    didn't help the Armenians after their revolt. To a certain extent the
    French betrayed the Armenians. This isn't my own idea; it's found in
    pro-Armenian books. Armenian villagers died not for their own cause,
    but for the realization of the Alliance's plans. They squeezed the
    juice out of the orange and then threw it away. After the massive
    Armenian immigration to France, the French government started
    supporting them just to save face.

    The third reason behind the French governments' stance was and is to
    gain leverage against Turkey. The fourth is to seek Armenian votes as
    a part of domestic politics. I would like to make some comments on
    the last reason. Many people think that the Armenian lobby is solid
    and powerful in France. But it's not. There are many French citizens
    of Armenian origin who think that there have been falsifications in
    the thesis of the "genocide" story. Because of oppression from the
    diaspora's leaders, these poor people haven't been able to say anything
    or reject some claims. Some of them think that a continuation of the
    genocide claims won't help anyone, especially the Armenian state,
    where economic conditions are bad and the population is falling
    rapidly. Some of them believe that the diaspora's leaders are working
    for some Armenian families which for the most part live in the U.S.,
    and that their main cause is compensation from U.S. insurance companies
    if Turkey accepts the "genocide."

    Now I'd like to ask the French legislators some questions. Do you
    really believe that you're going to secure all the Armenian votes if
    you approve the bill?

    How will you implement the bill? Are you considering creating a
    sort of examination at the border gates to check at passport control
    whether Turkish citizens above all believe in the Armenian "genocide"
    or not? Do you believe that anti-Semitism is over because it's a
    crime to deny it in your law?

    Which massacre would be the next to criminalize? That of the
    Algerians? I'd like to take this opportunity to like to express my
    humble gratitude to the Bulgarian Parliament for last week rejecting
    a bill on "genocide" claims.
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