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State Of Denial: Turkey Spends Millions To Cover Up Armenian Genocid

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  • State Of Denial: Turkey Spends Millions To Cover Up Armenian Genocid

    STATE OF DENIAL: TURKEY SPENDS MILLIONS TO COVER UP ARMENIAN GENOCIDE
    By David Holthouse

    Intelligence Report
    http://www.splcenter.org/intel/intelreport/ article.jsp?aid=935
    June 3 2008
    AL

    Early this year, the Toronto District School Board voted to require all
    public high school students in Canada's largest city to complete a new
    course titled "Genocide: Historical and Contemporary Implications." It
    includes a unit on the Armenian genocide, in which more than a
    million Armenians perished in a methodical and premeditated scheme
    of annihilation orchestrated by the rulers of Turkey during and just
    after World War I.

    The school board members each soon received a letter from Guenter
    Lewy, a professor emeritus of political science at the University of
    Massachusetts, rebuking them for classifying the Armenian genocide in
    the same category as the Holocaust. "The tragic fate of the Armenian
    community during World War I," Lewy wrote, is best understood as "a
    badly mismanaged war-time security measure," rather than a carefully
    plotted genocide.

    Lewy is one of the most active members of a network of American
    scholars, influence peddlers and website operators, financed by
    hundreds of thousands of dollars each year from the government of
    Turkey, who promote the denial of the Armenian genocide -- a network
    so influential that it was able last fall to defy both historical
    truth and enormous political pressure to convince America's lawmakers
    and even its president to reverse long-held policy positions.

    Lewy makes similar revisionist claims in his 2005 book The Armenian
    Massacres in Ottoman Turkey: A Disputed Genocide and in frequent
    lectures at university campuses across the country. Speaking at Harvard
    University in March 2007, he chalked up the ghastly Armenian death toll
    to "bungling misrule," and stressed that "it is important to bear in
    mind the enormous difference between ineptness, even ineptness that
    had tragic consequences" and deliberate mass murder.

    "Armenians call the calamitous events of 1915-1916 in the Ottoman
    Empire the first genocide of the twentieth century," he said. "Most
    Turks refer to this episode as war time relocation made necessary by
    the treasonous conduct of the Armenian minority. The debate on what
    actually happened has been going on for almost 100 years and shows
    no signs of resolution."

    But it's not only Armenians calling the slaughter a genocide, and
    there is no real debate about its essential details, according to
    the vast majority of credible historians. Although Lewy's brand of
    genocide denial is subtler than that of Holocaust deniers who declare
    there were no gas chambers at Auschwitz, it's no less an attempt to
    rewrite history.

    "The overwhelming opinion of scholars who study genocide -- hundreds
    of independent scholars, who have no affiliations with governments,
    and whose work spans many countries and nationalities and the course
    of decades -- is consistent," the International Association of Genocide
    Scholars stated in a 2005 letter to the Turkish government.

    "The scholarly evidence reveals the following: On April 24, 1915,
    under cover of World War I, the Young Turk government of the Ottoman
    Empire began a systematic genocide of its Armenian citizens -- an
    unarmed Christian minority population. More than a million Armenians
    were exterminated through direct killing, starvation, torture, and
    forced death marches. The rest of the Armenian population fled into
    permanent exile. Thus an ancient civilization was expunged from its
    homeland of 2,500 years."

    Double Killing Despite this clear consensus of experts, Turkey exerts
    political leverage and spends millions of dollars in the United States
    to obfuscate the Armenian genocide, with alarming success even at
    the highest levels of government. Lobbyists on the Turkish payroll
    stymied a Congressional resolution commemorating the genocide last
    fall by convincing lawmakers to reverse their stated positions. Even
    President Bush flip-flopped.

    Revisionist historians who conjure doubt about the Armenian genocide
    and are paid by the Turkish government provided the politicians
    with the intellectual cover they needed to claim they were refusing
    to dictate history rather than caving in to a foreign government's
    present-day interests.

    "This all happened a long time ago, and I don't know if we can know
    whether it was a massacre or a genocide or what," said U.S. Rep. John
    Murtha (D-Penn.) after changing his vote.

    "The last thing Congress should be doing is deciding the history of
    an empire [the Ottoman empire] that doesn't even exist any more,"
    said President Bush.

    But experts in genocide saw things quite differently.

    "Denial is the final stage of genocide," says Gregory Stanton,
    president of the International Association of Genocide Scholars. "It
    is a continuing attempt to destroy the victim group psychologically
    and culturally, to deny its members even the memory of the murders of
    their relatives. That is what the Turkish government today is doing
    to Armenians around the world."

    Last year, the Elie Wiesel Foundation for Humanity issued a letter
    condemning Armenian genocide denial that was signed by 53 Nobel
    laureates including Wiesel, the famous Holocaust survivor and political
    activist. Wiesel has repeatedly called Turkey's 90-year-old campaign
    to cover up the Armenian genocide a double killing, since it strives
    to kill the memory of the original atrocities.

    He was hardly the first. As long ago as 1943, law professor Raphael
    Lemkin, who would later serve as an advisor to Nuremburg chief counsel
    Robert Jackson, coined the term "genocide" with the Armenians in mind.

    Stanton, a former U.S. State Department official who drafted the United
    Nations Security Council resolutions that created the International
    Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda, spoke this April at a United States
    Capitol ceremony honoring victims of the Armenian genocide -- a
    ceremony held four months after the bill to commemorate the slaughter
    was shot down.

    "The U.S. government should not be party to efforts to kill the
    memory of a historical fact as profound and important as the genocide
    of the Armenians, which Hitler used as an example in his plan for
    the Holocaust," Stanton said before an audience that included three
    survivors of the Armenian genocide and more than 100 representatives
    and senators.

    Infiltrating the Academy Efforts to kill the memory of the Armenian
    genocide began while carrion birds were still picking over corpses in
    their desert boneyards, with Turkey issuing a first official statement
    assuring the world at large that no atrocities had occurred. Turkey's
    primary strategy for denying the Armenian genocide since then has
    shifted from blanket denial to disputing the death toll to blaming
    the massacres on Kurdish bandits and a few rogue officials to claiming
    the Armenians who died were enemy combatants in a civil war.

    Turkey began intervening in the U.S. on behalf of denying the
    genocide in the 1930s, when Turkish leaders convinced the U.S. State
    Department to prevent MGM studios from making a movie based on the
    book The Forty Days of the Musa Dagh because it depicted aspects of
    the Armenian genocide.

    In 1982, the government of Turkey donated $3 million to create the
    Institute for Turkish Studies, a nonprofit organization housed at
    Georgetown University that pushes a pro-Turkey agenda, including
    denial of the Armenian genocide. Three years later, in 1985, Turkey
    bought full-page advertisements in The New York Times, The Washington
    Post and The Washington Times to publish a letter questioning the
    Armenian genocide that was signed by 69 American scholars. All 69 had
    received funding that year from the Institute for Turkish Studies or
    another of Turkey's surrogates like the Ankara Chamber of Commerce,
    a quasi-governmental agency in Turkey's capital city.

    The Institute for Turkish Studies has since received sizable donations
    from American defense contractors that sell arms to Turkey, including
    General Dynamics and Westinghouse. Turkey continues to provide an
    annual subsidy to support the institute. In 2006, the most recent year
    for which tax records are available, the institute awarded $85,000
    in grants to scholars. Its chairman is the current Turkish ambassador
    to the U.S., Nabi Sensoy.

    The first unassailable evidence of the extent of the Armenian genocide
    denial industry's reach in academic circles arrived in 1990 in an
    envelope addressed to Robert Jay Lifton, a professor of psychology and
    psychiatry at the City University of New York's Graduate Center and
    John Jay College. It contained a letter signed by Nuzhet Kandemir,
    who was then Turkey's ambassador to the United States, protesting
    Lifton's inclusion of several passing references to the Armenian
    genocide in his prize-winning book The Nazi Doctors: Medical Killing
    and the Psychology of Genocide.

    "It is particularly disturbing to see a major scholar on the
    holocaust, a tragedy whose enormity and barbarity must never be
    forgotten, so careless in his references to a field outside his own
    area of expertise," Kandemir wrote. "To compare a tragic civil war
    perpetrated by misguided Armenian nationalists, and the human suffering
    it wrought on both Muslim and Christian populations, with the horrors
    of a premeditated attempt to systematically eradicate a people is,
    to anyone familiar with the history in question, simply ludicrous."

    There was nothing out of the ordinary about Kandemir's
    letter. Academics who write about the Armenian genocide were then
    and still are routinely castigated by Turkish authorities.

    What Lifton found intriguing, however, was a second letter in
    the envelope, which the Turkish ambassador had included quite by
    accident. It was a memo to Kandemir from Near East historian Heath
    Lowry, in which Lowry provided Kandemir with a point-by-point cheat
    sheet on how to attack Lifton's book, which Lowry chummily referred
    to as "our problem."

    Lowry at the time was the founding director of the Institute for
    Turkish Studies. He resigned that position in 1996 when he was selected
    from a field of 20 candidates to fill the Ataturk Chair of Turkish
    Studies at Princeton University, a new position in the Near Eastern
    Studies department that was created with a $750,000 matching grant
    from the government of Turkey.

    Prior to joining the Princeton faculty, Lowry had never held a
    full-time teaching position and had not published a single work of
    scholarship through a major publishing house. As a result of that and
    of what The Boston Globe described in 1995 as his work as "a long-time
    lobbyist for the Turkish government," his appointment sparked a
    firestorm of controversy. A protest group called Princeton Alumni for
    Credibility published a petition decrying Lowry's appointment that
    was signed by more than 80 leading scholars and writers, including
    Kurt Vonnegut, Arthur Miller, Cornel West, Joyce Carol Oates and many
    historians and experts in genocide.

    Peter Balakian, the director of Colgate University's Center for the
    Study of Ethics and World Societies and the author of The Burning
    Tigris: The Armenian Genocide and America's Response, called Lowry
    "a propagandist for a foreign government."

    Speaking at a 2005 symposium at Princeton commemorating the 90th
    anniversary of the Armenian genocide, Balakian posed a rhetorical
    question: "Would a university want someone who worked with a neo-Nazi
    group to cover up the Holocaust on their faculty?"

    The relationship of Turkey to U.S. scholars promoting Armenian
    genocide denial is similar to that of the oil industry to fringe
    climatologists who dispute the reality of global warming. The cause
    and effect relationship is murky. It's impossible to know for sure
    if they're making the claims to get the money or getting the money
    because they make the claims. And many of those who receive money from
    the Institute of Turkish Studies do little or nothing to support the
    government's version of what happened to its Armenian minority.

    But a number of them certainly seem to, including Justin A. McCarthy,
    a professor of history at the University of Louisville. McCarthy claims
    that death tolls attributed to what he calls "this imaginary Turkish
    plan" are grossly exaggerated and resulted from justifiable wartime
    self-defense actions triggered by traitorous Armenians conspiring
    with Turkey's enemies.

    McCarthy also points out that Armenians massacred Turks on at least
    one occasion before the "so-called Armenian genocide." In other words,
    they had it coming. "The question of who started the conflicts is
    important, both historically and morally important," McCarthy declared
    in a 2005 speech before the Turkish Grand National Assembly. "In more
    than 100 years of warfare, Turks and Armenians killed each other. The
    question of who began the killing must be understood, because it is
    seldom justifiable to be the aggressor, but is always justifiable to
    defend yourself."

    He continued: "If those who defend themselves go beyond defense and
    exact revenge, as always happens in war, they should be identified
    and criticized. But those who should be most blamed are those who
    began the wars, those who committed the first evil deeds, and those
    who caused the bloodshed. Those who began the conflict were the
    Armenian nationalists, the Armenian revolutionaries. The guilt is on
    their heads."

    Enforcing the Turkish View

    In France and Switzerland, it's a crime to deny the Armenian
    genocide. In Turkey, it's a crime to affirm it.

    Enacted in 2005, Article 301 of the Turkish penal code makes it illegal
    for any citizen or resident of Turkey to give credence to the Armenian
    genocide. Numerous journalists and scholars have been prosecuted for
    "denigrating Turkishness" under that statute, beginning with Nobel
    laureate Orhan Pamuk, who was charged for stating, "A million Armenians
    were killed in these lands." Turkish-Armenian newspaper editor
    Hrant Dink was prosecuted three times for criticizing the Turkish
    government's longstanding policy of denying the Armenian genocide.

    Where the law failed to silence Dink, bullets succeeded. He was gunned
    down in front of his central Istanbul office last January by a Turkish
    ultranationalist. Footage and photos later surfaced of the assassin
    celebrating in front of a Turkish flag with grinning policemen.

    Dink's friend and ideological ally Tanner Ackam, a distinguished
    Turkish historian and sociologist on the faculty of the University
    of Minnesota's Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies, attended
    Dink's funeral in Turkey, despite the considerable risk to his
    own life. Ackam, a leading international authority on the Armenian
    genocide, was marked for death by Turkish ultranationalists following
    the November 2006 publication of his book, A Shameful Act: The Armenian
    Genocide and The Question of Turkish Responsibility. The book is a
    definitive history based in large part on official documents from
    Turkish government archives.

    "It would be better for world peace and truth if sewer germs like you
    were taken off the planet," went one of the dozens of anonymous threats
    Ackam continues to receive in Minnesota. "Pray that the devil takes you
    away soon because otherwise you'll be living a hell on earth. ... Who
    am I? You're going to find out, Tanner, you're going to find out."

    Turkish ultranationalists have, in effect, targeted many other people
    who, like Ackam, affirm the genocide. Several of their websites
    include home addresses, phone numbers and photos of these scholars.

    Genocide deniers often disrupt Ackam's lectures. In November 2006,
    a gang of Turkish ultranationalists attacked him at a book signing
    at City University of New York.

    "Denial of the Armenian genocide has developed over the decades to
    become a complex and far-reaching machine that rivals the Nazi Germany
    propaganda ministry," says Ackam. "This machine runs on academic
    dishonesty, fabricated information, political pressure, intimidation
    and threats, all funded or supported, directly or indirectly, by the
    Turkish state. It has become a huge industry."

    Convincing Congress Academia is one of two major American fronts in
    Turkey's campaign to kill the memory of the Armenian genocide. The
    other is Congress.

    As the only Muslim-dominated country in a troubled region to call
    the U.S. and Israel its allies, Turkey wields significant political
    influence that it uses to prevent the U.S. from joining 22 other
    nations in officially recognizing the Armenian genocide as a historical
    fact.

    In 1989, the U.S. State Department released archived eyewitness
    accounts that, according to State Department officials, showed
    that "thousands and thousands of Armenians, mostly innocent and
    helpless women and children, were butchered." That same year, a bill
    commemorating the genocide was introduced in the U.S. Senate. But
    Turkey responded by blocking U.S. Navy ships from entering
    strategically important Turkish waters and by declaring a ban on
    all U.S. military training operations on Turkish territory. The bill
    quickly evaporated.

    Last September, the matter came up again. The U.S. House Foreign
    Relations Committee voted to bring a nonbinding resolution to the floor
    of Congress condemning the mass murder of Armenians by Ottoman Turks,
    placing the death toll at 1.5 million, and labeling the killing a
    "genocide."

    This time, Turkey responded by recalling its ambassador to the United
    States and forecasting dire repercussions. "In the case that Armenian
    allegations are accepted, there will be problems in the relations
    between the two countries," warned Turkish President Abdullah Gul.

    "Yesterday, some in Congress wanted to play hardball," said Egmen
    Bagis, foreign policy advisor to Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
    Erdogan. "I can assure you, Turkey knows how to play hardball."

    The next day, State Department spokesman Sean McCormack apologized
    to Turkey on behalf of the United States by issuing a statement
    expressing "regret" for the committee's actions, which, he cautioned,
    "may do grave harm to U.S.-Turkish relations and to U.S. interests
    in Europe and the Middle East."

    Defense Secretary Robert Gates added his opposition to the resolution
    and pointed out that 70% of the air cargo sent to U.S. forces in
    Iraq and 30% of the fuel consumed by those forces is delivered via
    Turkey. President Bush, perhaps forgetting his campaign promise in
    2000 to push for official recognition of the Armenian genocide if
    elected president, also came out against the resolution.

    While Turkish officials made threats, lobbyists paid by Turkey
    delivered money to congressmen in the form of campaign and political
    action committee donations. Louisiana representative Bobby Jindal
    (a Republican who's now Louisiana's governor) and Mississippi
    representative Roger Wicker (now a Republican senator representing
    that state) both dropped their sponsorship of the resolution and began
    speaking against it -- but only after receiving around $20,000 each
    from former congressmen Bob Livingston, a Republican, and Richard
    Gephardt, a Democrat, who now work for lobbying firms contracted by
    Turkey to oppose any recognition of the Armenian genocide.

    In 2000, while still in office, Gephardt had declared that he was
    "committed to obtaining official U.S. government recognition of the
    Armenian genocide." In 2003, he co-sponsored a resolution placing
    "the Armenian genocide" in the company of the World War II Holocaust
    and mass deaths in Cambodia and Rwanda that was voted down after a
    Turkish lobbying blitzkrieg.

    Since leaving office and accepting a $1.2 million-a-year contract to
    lobby for Turkey, the former House majority leader has experienced
    a profound change of heart. "Alienating Turkey through the passage
    of the resolution could undermine our efforts to promote stability
    in the theater of [Middle East] operations, if not exacerbate the
    situation further," he wrote in an E-mail to the International Herald
    Tribune. Last fall, as part of his efforts to help torpedo the symbolic
    Armenian genocide resolution, Gephardt escorted Turkish Ambassador
    Nabi Sensoy to meetings with Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi and
    other Democratic leaders.

    Bob Livingston, whose firm has been paid more than $12 million by
    the Turkish government since 1999, also pitched in. As part of the
    lobbying effort last fall that U.S. Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.),
    one of the sponsors of the resolution, called "the most intense I've
    ever seen," Livingston shepherded Turkish dignitaries from office to
    office on Capitol Hill.

    As another part of that campaign, the government of Turkey took
    out full-page advertisements in major American newspapers calling
    upon the members of Congress to "support efforts to examine history,
    not legislate it." The ads featured a testimonial from Secretary of
    State Condoleeza Rice -- "These historical circumstances require a
    very detailed and sober look from historians" -- that implied that
    historians have yet to seriously study the Armenian genocide.

    More than 100 supporters of the resolution reversed their positions,
    and H.R. 106 was voted down.

    The government of Turkey has since continued to call for a "historian's
    commission" of scholars to "study the facts of what happened in
    1915-1923." The proposed committee is marketed as a high-minded quest
    for truth and reconciliation, a long overdue arbitration of disputed
    history, and a chance to finally give equal weight to both sides of
    the story.

    But as the saying goes, a lie isn't the other side of any story. It's
    just a lie.

    "When it comes to the historical reality of the Armenian genocide,
    there is no 'Armenian' or 'Turkish' side of the question, any more
    than there is a 'Jewish' or 'German' side of the historical reality
    of the Holocaust," writes Torben Jorgensen, of the Danish Center for
    Holocaust and Genocide Studies. "There is a scientific side and an
    unscientific side -- acknowledgement or denial."
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