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Robert Fisk: You're talking nonsense, Mr. Ambassador

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  • Robert Fisk: You're talking nonsense, Mr. Ambassador

    Robert Fisk: You're talking nonsense, Mr Ambassador

    All the while, new diplomatic archives are opening to reveal the
    smell of death - Armenian death

    The Independent
    Published: 20 May 2006

    A letter from the Turkish Ambassador to the Court of Saint James
    arrived for me a few days ago, one of those missives that send a
    shudder through the human soul. "You allege that an 'Armenian
    genocide' took place in Eastern Anatolia in 1915," His Excellency Mr
    Akin Alptuna told me. "I believe you have some misconceptions about
    those events ..."

    Oh indeedy doody, I have. I am under the totally mistaken conception
    that one and a half million Armenians were cruelly and deliberately
    done to death by their Turkish Ottoman masters in 1915, that the men
    were shot and knifed while their womenfolk were raped and eviscerated
    and cremated and starved on death marches and their children
    butchered. I have met a few of the survivors - liars to a man and
    woman, if the Turkish ambassador to Britain is to be believed - and I
    have seen the photographs taken of the victims by a brave German
    photographer called Armen Wegner whose pictures must now, I suppose,
    be consigned to the waste bins. So must the archives of all those
    diplomats who courageously catalogued the mass murders inflicted upon
    Turkey's Christian population on the orders of the gang of
    nationalists who ran the Ottoman government in 1915.

    What would have been our reaction if the ambassador of Germany had
    written a note to the same effect? "You allege that a 'Jewish
    genocide' took place in Eastern Europe between 1939 and 1945 ... I
    believe you have some misconceptions about those events ...' Of
    course, the moment such a letter became public, the ambassador of
    Germany would be condemned by the Foreign Office, our man in Berlin
    would - even the pusillanimous Blair might rise to the occasion - be
    withdrawn for consultations and the European Union would debate
    whether sanctions should be placed upon Germany.

    But Mr Alptuna need have no such worries. His country is not a member
    of the European Union - it merely wishes to be - and it was Mr
    Blair's craven administration that for many months tried to prevent
    Armenian participation in Britain's Holocaust Day.

    Amid this chicanery, there are a few shining bright lights and I
    should say at once that Mr Alptuna's letter is a grotesque
    representation of the views of a growing number of Turkish citizens,
    a few of whom I have the honour to know, who are convinced that the
    story of the great evil visited upon the Armenians must be told in
    their country. So why, oh why, I ask myself, are Mr Alptuna and his
    colleagues in Paris and Beirut and other cities still peddling this
    nonsense?

    In Lebanon, for example, the Turkish embassy has sent a "communiqué"
    to the local French-language L'Orient Le Jour newspaper, referring to
    the "soi-disant (so-called) Armenian genocide" and asking why the
    modern state of Armenia will not respond to the Turkish call for a
    joint historical study to "examine the events" of 1915.

    In fact, the Armenian president, Robert Kotcharian, will not respond
    to such an invitation for the same reason that the world's Jewish
    community would not respond to the call for a similar examination of
    the Jewish Holocaust from the Iranian president - because an
    unprecedented international crime was committed, the mere questioning
    of which would be an insult to the millions of victims who perished.

    But the Turkish appeals are artfully concocted. In Beirut, they
    recall the Allied catastrophe at Gallipoli in 1915 when British,
    French, Australian and New Zealand troops suffered massive casualties
    at the hands of the Turkish army. In all - including Turkish soldiers
    - up to a quarter of a million men perished in the Dardanelles. The
    Turkish embassy in Beirut rightly states that the belligerent nations
    of Gallipoli have transformed these hostilities into gestures of
    reconciliation, friendship and mutual respect. A good try. But the
    bloodbath of Gallipoli did not involve the planned murder of hundreds
    of thousands of British, French, Australian, New Zealand - and
    Turkish - women and children.

    But now for the bright lights. A group of "righteous Turks" are
    challenging their government's dishonest account of the 1915
    genocide: Ahmet Insel, Baskin Oran, Halil Berktay, Hrant Dink, Ragip
    Zarakolu and others claim that the "democratic process" in Turkey
    will "chip away at the darkness" and they seek help from Armenians in
    doing so. Yet even they will refer only to the 1915 "disaster", the
    "tragedy", and the "agony" of the Armenians. Dr Fatma Gocek of the
    University of Michigan is among the bravest of those Turkish-born
    academics who are fighting to confront the Ottoman Empire's terror
    against the Armenians. Yet she, too, objects to the use of the word
    genocide - though she acknowledges its accuracy - on the grounds that
    it has become "politicised" and thus hinders research.

    I have some sympathy with this argument. Why make the job of honest
    Turks more difficult when these good men and women are taking on the
    might of Turkish nationalism? The problem is that other, more
    disreputable folk are demanding the same deletion. Mr Alputuna writes
    to me - with awesome disingenuousness - that Armenians "have failed
    to submit any irrefutable evidence to support their allegations of
    genocide". And he goes on to say that "genocide, as you are well
    aware, has a quite specific legal definition" in the UN's 1948
    Convention. But Mr Alputuna is himself well aware - though he does
    not say so, of course - that the definition of genocide was set out
    by Raphael Lemkin, a Jew, in specific reference to the wholesale mass
    slaughter of the Armenians.

    And all the while, new diplomatic archives are opening in the West
    which reveal the smell of death - Armenian death - in their pages. I
    quote here, for example, from the newly discovered account of
    Denmark's minister in Turkey during the First World War. "The Turks
    are vigorously carrying through their cruel intention, to exterminate
    the Armenian people," Carl Wandel wrote on 3 July 1915. The Bishop of
    Harput was ordered to leave for Aleppo within 48 hours "and it has later
    been learned that this Bishop and all the clergy that accompanied him
    have been ... killed between Diyarbekir and Urfa at a place where
    approximately 1,700 Armenian families have suffered the same fate ...
    In Angora ... approximately 6,000 men ... have been shot on the
    road ... even here in Constantinople (Istanbul), Armenians are being
    abducted and sent to Asia ..."

    There is much, much more. Yet now here is Mr Alptuna in his letter to
    me: "In fact, the Armenians living outside Eastern Armenia including
    Istanbul ... were excluded from deportation." Somebody here is not
    telling the truth. The late Mr Wandel of Copenhagen? Or the Turkish
    Ambassador to the Court of St James?
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