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Fareed Zakaria's Foreign Exchange Prgm: The Armenian Genocide

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  • Fareed Zakaria's Foreign Exchange Prgm: The Armenian Genocide

    FAREED ZAKARIA'S FOREIGN EXCHANGE PRGM: THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

    Source: EurasiaNet.org

    Foreign Exchange
    April 14 2006

    Show 215 Transcript - April 14, 2006

    Americans are talking about immigration; we'll get the international
    perspective.

    Hundreds of thousands died--was it genocide? Armenia says yes,
    Turkey says no; we'll take a look at a new film that tries to answer
    the question.

    And finally, will AIDS derail India's economic future?

    All this and more on Foreign Exchange...

    [parts omitted]

    In Focus: Genocide?

    Fareed Zakaria: The word genocide did not exist until World War II
    when it was used to describe Nazi atrocities toward the Jews. But
    can something that took place well before the Nazis in a different
    historical context still be called a genocide? For Armenia and Turkey
    use of the word has been a source of deep debate. Historians have
    established that hundreds of thousands of Armenians died due to
    Turkey's actions in the events during World War I; however Turkish
    officials strongly reject the assertion that this was a genocide.

    They argue that it was a tragedy of war in a war with many such
    tragedies. A new film explores this complex history. Tune into PBS
    stations this week to see more and now here's a clip.

    Speaker: As war broke out in August 1914 between Germany and Russia the
    Turkish Empire had to decide what to do and [inaudible] particularly
    wanted to join Germany and use the German alliance to expand the Empire
    to the East. The major enemy for Turkey at that point was Russia and
    their dream was to conquer the caucuses and Russia and Central Asia and
    unite all the Turkey peoples of those lands in a grand Turkic Empire.

    Speaker: In December 1914 led by their Minister of War, [Inaudible]
    the Ottomans attacked Russia at Sarikamish along the Russian Border.

    It was a strategic blunder; the Ottomans were overwhelmingly
    defeated. Their hopes for a united empire were smashed. A few months
    later as over 120,000 Russian troops advanced into the Empire their
    ranks included a contingent of between 5,000 and 6,000 Armenian
    soldiers; this Armenian contingent consisted of both Russian
    Armenian conscripts and a smaller number of Ottoman Armenians who
    had defected. Seeing their own Armenian subjects volunteering and
    fighting for the enemy enraged the Turkish leaders; fearing that
    still more of their subjects might join the enemy, they now saw the
    Armenians of the Empire as a threat to the state.

    Speaker: It was now in the wake of the disastrous loss at Sarikamish
    that the CUP decided to disarm all the Armenian soldiers in the Ottoman
    Army. They had decided that the Armenians were an unreliable group;
    and Enver was blaming the Armenians for his loss at Sarikamish. And
    then from disarming them they were thrown into labor battalions--that
    is grunt work forces by which they were building roads, cleaning
    latrines, and so forth, and were easily segregated, rounded up and
    just massacred on mass.

    Speaker: The massacres of the Armenian soldiers were the first stage
    of the Armenian genocide but it was still just a beginning. The
    International Association of Genocide Scholars affirms that over
    1,000,000 Armenians died during the Armenian genocide. Other scholars
    put the numbers as high as 1,500,000. The Turkish government today
    denies that a genocide took place and has denied this historical fact
    for nearly a century.

    Speaker: In 1923 a new Turkish state, a new Turkish Republic was
    created which really disconnected itself comprehensively from the
    young Turks of 1915.

    [Video Clip--News Clip] News Anchor: ...impatient with former
    methods, Anaturk banished ancient ways. Under Anaturk's 15 year rule,
    Constantinople was renamed Istanbul and became a westernized city
    of modern well-planned buildings. Under his one-party government,
    factories increased as the he industrialized Turkey. The social
    revolution he accomplished was widespread. In everyway he emphasized
    the change from the old Turkey to the new.

    Speaker: What this new Turkish state then did was, it embarked on
    an all-out program of westernization, adopting your western style
    constitution, adopting secularism, dropping the old Arabic inspired
    alphabet in favor of the Latin script, adopting western style
    dress--costume, the civil code, everything; as a result Britain,
    France, Germany--everybody else, they were now out to court this new
    Turkey to try to become friends with it and the great powers did not
    have any interest in pursuing the dirty matter of what had happened
    in 1915. And all kinds of reasons like this made it undesirable for
    the young republic to maintain an--an honest memory of what had been
    done in 1915, and as a result you have an enormously constructed,
    fabricated, manipulated national memory.

    The "Dark Years" Armenians get 40% of their power from the Metsamor
    nuclear power plant. The plant shut down for 8 years after a 1988
    earthquake.

    During this period "residents stripped the capital Yerevan of virtually
    everything made of wood" to heat their homes.

    http://foreignexchange.tv/?q=node/1204&amp ;PHPSESSID=e4544675e99a6b12ad234131fef8346c

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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