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ANKARA: The coming storm with Washington

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  • ANKARA: The coming storm with Washington

    Today's Zaman
    Omer Taspinar

    The coming storm with Washington

    Last year, shortly after the US Congress decided at the last minute
    not to push forward with the Armenian genocide recognition I wrote in
    this column that this was a "pyrrhic victory" for Turkey. There was
    indeed no reason to celebrate.


    Of course, I had no idea that the next US president would be a firm
    supporter of recognizing the genocide. Instead, my gloomy article had
    much more to do with the fact no one in Washington -- except those
    with a vested financial or political interest to the Turkish
    government -- believed Turkey's side of the story. Whether "the events
    of 1915" amounted to "genocide" was not even debated in America.

    So why didn't the US Congress pass the resolution? Charles
    Krauthammer, a Washington columnist, summarized it best last year in
    his Washington Post column. With characteristic poignancy, he wrote:
    "There are three relevant questions concerning the Armenian
    genocide. (a) Did it happen? (b) Should the House of Representatives
    be expressing itself on this now? (c) Was House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's
    determination to bring this to a vote, knowing that it risked
    provoking Turkey into withdrawing crucial assistance to American
    soldiers in Iraq, a conscious or unconscious attempt to sabotage the
    US war effort?"

    And here is how Krauthammer answered these questions: "(a) Yes,
    unequivocally. (b) No, unequivocally. (c) God only knows." He went on:
    "That between 1 million and 1.5 million Armenians were brutally and
    systematically massacred starting in 1915 in a deliberate genocidal
    campaign is a matter of simple historical record. If you really want
    to deepen and broaden awareness of that historical record, you should
    support the establishment of the Armenian Genocide Museum and Memorial
    in Washington. But to pass a declarative resolution in the House of
    Representatives in the middle of a war in which we are inordinately
    dependent on Turkey would be the height of irresponsibility."

    Now do you understand why last year was a pyrrhic victory? The reason
    Ankara won the battle was because important newspapers such as The
    Washington Post and The New York Times picked up the "genocide" story
    and humiliated the House of Representatives with columns and
    editorials such as the one written by Krauthammer. Yet, this was not a
    sight any believer in Turkey's version enjoyed. Yes, these articles
    opposed the Armenian resolution. But none of them believed Turkey's
    version of history about "the events of 1915."

    Turkey won an important battle but ended up losing the war. Just like
    Krauthammer's, most of these articles argued that what happened in
    1915 was genocide. But Turkey was geo-strategically too important an
    ally to offend in the middle of mayhem in the Middle East. In other
    words, the opposition to the genocide resolution had nothing to do
    with the sudden discovery of new historical facts proving correct the
    Turkish version of history. The discussion was only about Turkey's
    geo-strategic importance and bad timing.

    This year we will probably witness the same charade with more
    intensity. President-elect Barack Obama, Vice President-elect Joe
    Biden, Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi and Secretary of State
    Hillary Clinton and, of course, a large majority of Congress are all
    in favor of Armenian genocide recognition. The first critical test
    will be the US president's annual letter of April 24, which
    traditionally defines what happened to Ottoman Armenians as
    "massacres." Will this year's letter refer to "genocide"?

    This first and very critical test in Turkish-American relations comes
    within the early months of the Obama administration. There are only
    four months between the inauguration in late January and April 24. And
    Obama's presidential agenda will be overloaded with the global
    financial crisis and all the very crucial foreign policy issues,
    ranging from Iraq to Afghanistan and Iran to a possible India-Pakistan
    war. Relations with Turkey will not be an urgent issue.

    In such a busy agenda, it is also highly unlikely that the American
    media will pick up the story of a potential crisis with Turkey. This
    is why even a pyrrhic victory may not be in the cards this time. There
    is still a chance Obama will opt for realism in relations with Turkey.
    But this means he will have to break his campaign promises. Surely,
    this will not be a first for a politician. But what if Obama is really
    committed to "change"? Soon, perhaps too soon, we will know.

    15 December 2008, Monday

    http://www.todayszaman.com/tz-web/yazarDet ay.do?haberno=161240
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