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Caveat Emptor...Buyer Beware!

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  • Caveat Emptor...Buyer Beware!

    CAVEAT EMPTOR...BUYER BEWARE!
    By Tatul Sonentz-Papazian

    http://www.keghart.com/op145.htm
    15 November 2008

    In the light of the present Turkish political and diplomatic foray
    into the Caucasus, with its benign facade and 'football diplomacy',
    one can't help but remember another planned incursion into the region,
    with ominous overtones. Indeed, in October 1993, Ankara, encouraged
    by the political instability resulting from a severe power struggle in
    Moscow -- pitting factions of the Glastnost Nomenclatura against each
    other -- had made all necessary preparations for a military assault on
    Armenia to achieve a Turkish imposed solution on the raging Nagorno
    Karabagh conflict which, at that time, was not going too well for
    the Azeri side.

    Heir to a multi-national empire, The relatively new Kemalist Turkish
    'nation state', has been trying very hard since its inception in the
    early'20-s, to assemble an exclusive "nationhood" on the historic
    patrimonies of indigenous nations, whose existence outdates recorded
    history. Faced with the inevitable irredentism of the original
    inhabitants of the territories on which the Turkish 'national' state
    has been grafted by a brutal, on-going process of ethnic cleansing
    through wholesale physical annihilation or cultural and religious
    assimilation of all minorities, Ankara has resorted to any and all
    methods to manufacture a 'national identity' at the expense of its
    minorities and hapless neigh­bors.

    This long-standing disregard for factual integrity -- at the genuine
    dismay and astonishment of legitimate scholars and intellectuals,
    both Turkish and foreign -- has visibly undermined the formation of
    a credible and secure Turkish self-image as well as the assessment
    of Turkey's rightful place and legitimacy in the modern world. Given
    these facts, a certain amount of insecurity -- and paranoia concerning
    chronically restive minorities and neighbors - have been instrumental
    in the shaping of both domestic and foreign policies pivoting around
    a stance of unyielding denial of the factual narrative of events as
    perceived and subscribed to by the rest of the civilized world.

    In 1921, after pushing the Sevres Treaty off the docket of world
    diplomacy with the collusion of major powers and international oil
    cartels, Ataturk -- who, with the active support of the Soviets, had
    already grabbed Western Armenian lands -- in anticipation of future
    litigations resulting from a possible revival of the Armenian Case,
    insisted on the inclusion of the Armenian provinces of Nakhijevan
    and Karabagh in the newly formed Azerbaijani Republic as "autonomous"
    regions ruled by Baku. This far-reaching diplomatic maneuver pushed
    the boundaries and the immediacy of future Armenian irredentism from
    Western Armenia to the heart of t he Caucasus, creating a long range
    "buffer" confined within the domain of the newly created Tatar republic
    of Soviet "Azerbaijan", while giving Turkey ample time to 'digest'
    Western Armenia.

    Eighty-seven years after these events, on a recent visit to Washington,
    Ahmet Davutoglu, the chief schemer of Turkish foreign policy in recent
    years, tried to warn, then Democratic Party presidential candidate Sen.

    Barack Obama, against any revision of the existing American policy
    of denial concerning the recognition of the Armenian Genocide, at the
    same time emphasizing the present Turkish administration's readiness
    to improve relations with Armenia. Furthermore, In remarks made at a
    Brookings institute event on October 28, the Turkish diplomat stated,
    that Ankara wishes "to have best relations with Armenia," and "good
    relations" with Armenians of the diaspora, and that Ankara "does not
    see Armenia as a threat..."

    Then, responding to a question of the Armenian Reporter, Mr. Davutoglu
    stated, that President Gul's recent visit to Yerevan had been made for
    "...the purpose of improving relations, and not as a reaction to the
    crisis in Georgia..." and as a response to the question put to him
    by a senior staff member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee as
    to Ankara's thus far entrenched stand on the Nagorno Karabagh issue,
    he clearly intimated, t hat unlike its firm position on the Armenian
    Genocide, Ankara may consider dispensing with its preconditions on
    a settlement of the Karabagh conflict...

    After more than eight decades, the very same aggressor who, with
    the blessings of the Soviets, had planted the seeds of inter-ethnic
    clashes, wants to reap the harvest, playing the role of a pacifier and
    "arbiter" in the Nagorno-Karabagh conflict, by offering the Armenians
    what de facto is already theirs, in exchange for their de jure rights,
    imbedded in the Treaty of Sevres, hoping, that the renascent Armenian
    irredentism will thus be silenced once and for all at the expense of
    Azerbaijan's 'territorial integrity'...A cynical example of Kemalist
    Turkey's foreign policy towards its neighbors.

    A brief review of related events of the past century may throw light
    on the emergence of 'modern' Turkey and its modus operandi In crisis
    management.

    In 1915, before the Ottoman Empire entered the war on the side of the
    Central Powers, declaring war on the Allies of the Entente Cordiale,
    and starting the Armenian "deportations" as the first stage of a
    carefully planned and executed genocide, the Armenians, the Kurds
    and the Greeks in Asia Minor together, constituted the majority of
    the population.

    Six years later, the defeated Ottoman Empire signed the Treaty of
    Sevres, which=2 0assigned Eastern Thrace and the Smyrna district to
    Greece, while discussing a separate and independent Greek state in the
    Pontus. The Allied Powers took these steps based on a conclusion best
    formulated earlier, in 1920, by the president of the Supreme Allied
    Council, Alexander Millerand, who stated: "The Turkish government not
    only failed in its duty to protect its non-Turkish citizens from the
    looting, violence and murders, but there are many indications that the
    Turkish government itself was responsible for directing and organizing
    the most cruel attacks against the populations, which it was supposed
    to protect." Indeed, the Young Turks had sought to rid themselves of
    troublesome non-Muslim ethnic groups in order to build an exclusively
    Islamic-Turkic "super nation" on the territories of the crumbling,
    once multi-national Ottoman Empire.

    The endemic persecution of non-Muslims had intensified earlier, during
    the Balkan Wars of 1912 - 1913, in the form of repeated lootings,
    expulsions and murderous pogroms, and the harassment of the peaceful
    civilian population intensified after the wars to such a degree,
    that on May 25, 1914, the Ecumenical Patriarchate found it necessary
    to sound the alarm by publicly declaring that "the Orthodox Church
    was under attack!"

    At the conclusion of World War I, after 40 long months of war, with
    considerable overt and covert foreign assistance and intrigue, the
    Kemalist forces secured the collapse of the Greek military front in
    Anatolia and reoccupied Asia Minor. They entered Smyrna on September
    8, 1922 and set the city on fire, completing the genocidal cycle by
    savagely decimating the helpless population of both the Greek and
    Armenian communities of the city, in plain view of Allied warships
    anchored around the harbor, whose crews, by and large, limited their
    "rescue" operations to photographing and filming the unfolding drama
    of that historic holocaust....

    On 24 July, 1923, the Treaty of Lausanne ended the Greek-Turkish
    war and imposed the arbitrary exchange of 300,000 ethnic Turks from
    Greece for the 1,400,000 Greeks who had survived the murderous course
    of the Kemalist ethnic cleansing. Thus, the native Greek inhabitants
    of Asia Minor had to give up their ancestral homes to the Turks after
    more than 3,000 years of maintaining a civilization that had laid the
    intellectual and humanistic foundations of democracy and the modern
    Western World, as we know it.

    Another bastion of Hellenic culture, the historic island of Cyprus,
    which after centuries of Ottoman misrule and foreign dependency had
    finally achieved sovereignty in 1960, barely fourteen years later,
    on July 20, 1974, was invaded by the Turkish armed forces, in blatant
    violation of the UN Charter and all relevant principles and norms
    of international law. The Turks tried to ju stify their high-handed
    action by the July 15, 1974 coup d'état instigated by the Greek
    military junta in Athens against the Cyprus Government, a regime
    against which, through active collusion with the Turkish minority of
    the island, Ankara itself had been plotting since the very start of
    Cypriot independence, trying to discredit and destabilize the Greek
    majority administration in its attempts to establish ethnic harmony
    through democratic methods.

    Today, while knocking on the doors of Europe, begging to be admitted
    in the EU, the Turks still keep one third of Cyprus under occupation,
    having set up a puppet "Turkish republic" recognized only by
    Ankara. In a move reminiscent of their exploits in the Caucasus 52
    years earlier, they have managed to move the historic boundaries of
    Greek irredentism away from the Kemalist state's borders, into the
    confines of a historically recognized Hellenic island nation.

    To conclude, let us get back to South Eastern Anatolia where the
    Kurds of Turkey are still denied basic human and civil rights. After
    numerous bloody uprisings since the end of World War I, and the
    arrest and incarceration of Ocalan, the leader of the latest and
    longest lasting insurgency, Turkey has managed - at least for the
    time being -- to push its native Kurdish problem into Iraq, making
    sporadic punitive armed intrusions - like the one planned for Armenia
    on=2 0October 1993 -- into Iraqi Kurdistan, trying to make sure that
    Kurdish irredentism remains a purely Iraqi -- perhaps even Iranian
    and Syrian - problem. After all, there are no Kurds in Turkey, only
    misguided 'Mountain Turks...'

    The fact is, behind the benign mask of present Turkish diplomacy,
    seethes the murderous face of the Grey Wolf. In response to the
    latest Turkish sales-pitch in the Caucasus, we can only respond:
    Caveat emptor... Buyer beware!

    --Boundary_(ID_kjVTmxF9Qc/iZi3C8VFiKg)--
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