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  • Disappearing History Doc Raises Questions

    Disappearing History Doc Raises Questions
    By Anne Becker

    Broadcasting & Cable
    7/10/2006

    Did the History Channel pull a documentary because of political
    pressure?

    History Channel says no, but that hasn't mooted the question after
    Ottoman Empire: The War Machine mysteriously vanished from the
    network's schedule June 22, the day it was to premiere.

    The program recounts the six-century reign of the Ottomans, the
    precursors to the modern republic of Turkey.

    When the special did not premiere-even after History had run promos
    just days before and pre-sold DVDs on its Web site-message boards at
    HistoryChannel.com and Armenian-American blogs erupted with allegations
    the network caved to pressure from the Turkish government or other
    groups.

    Although none have seen the documentary, the critics suspect it likely
    covers the death of more than a million Armenians at the hands of
    Ottoman Turks from 1915 to 1923. Armenians regard the killings as
    genocide, but the Turkish government disputes the characterization
    and is notoriously strident in advocating its version of history.

    The History Channel says that it pulled the program because it was
    "incomplete and did not meet our broadcast standards," and that it
    received no calls from any political groups regarding the special
    before its scheduled run date. "The History Channel never bows to
    political pressure from any interest group," a network representative
    says. But critics of the Turkish government aren't convinced.

    "This has been a pattern of this government's behavior in countries
    outside of its own," says Peter Balakian, Chair in the Humanities
    at Colgate University and author of The Burning Tigris: The Armenian
    Genocide and America's Response.

    Balakian says the Turkish government's efforts to stop media coverage
    of the Armenian issue dates back to 1935, when it pressured the
    U.S. State Department to shut down a Hollywood movie about the
    killings. "They have a history of working at intimidation, and I
    would hate to think this happened in this case," he says.

    Doris V. Cross, a vice president at Media Watch Armenia, a
    clearinghouse for historical and scholarly documentation on the
    killings, says she had not heard of any pressure from the Armenian
    side, but notes that complaints from Turkish officials to what they
    consider unfavorable media coverage are "not uncommon."

    "The title-Ottoman Empire: The War Machine-that could've been enough"
    to prompt protests, Cross says. "The official government policy is
    that there was no Armenian genocide. This could be one of those cases
    where it stays on the shelf."

    The situation echoes the controversy last April over The Armenian
    Genocide, a PBS documentary about the killings. In that instance,
    Armenian groups and members of Congress protested a planned follow-up
    program that featured panelists who deny the genocide occurred. Several
    PBS stations declined to air it.

    Producers from Digital Ranch, the production company behind Ottoman
    Empire, did not return repeated calls for comment.

    For their part, representatives of the Turkish-American community
    deny that they seek to censor content about the Armenian killings.

    "The Turkish-American community doesn't believe in viewpoint
    suppression at all-quite the opposite, it wants multiple viewpoints
    represented," says David Saltzman, a Washington-based attorney
    who represents the Turkish Embassy as well as the Assembly of
    Turkish-American Associations. "To suppress viewpoints, especially
    under pressure from politicians and lobby groups, is incorrect and
    not the American way."

    The History Channel says it has rescheduled the program for an
    unspecified date in the fall.
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