Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Soccer Diplomacy And The Road Nnot Taken

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Soccer Diplomacy And The Road Nnot Taken

    SOCCER DIPLOMACY AND THE ROAD NNOT TAKEN
    KHATCHIG MOURADIAN

    Asbarez
    www.asbarez.com/index.html?show article=41812_4/23/2009_1
    Thursday, April 23, 2009

    An alternative perspective for building peace between Turkey and
    Armenians

    In this article[1], I examine the recent heightened diplomatic
    activity between Armenia and Turkey and the reasons behind the lack of
    progress in the negotiations despite the confidence with which they
    started. After providing the context and highlighting the inherent
    problems with the current state of affairs, I recommend accounting
    for power asymmetries and addressing the root causes of the problem
    during the dialogue between the two states.

    The context

    On Aug. 7, 2008, Georgian forces attacked South Ossetia's capital
    Tskhinvali triggering military intervention by Russia. By the time
    a ceasefire was reached on Aug. 12, Russia had made it clear that it
    would resort to all necessary measures to maintain the status quo in
    the region. Georgia's southern neighbor, Armenia, felt the effects
    of the confrontation. During the conflict, traffic was disrupted on
    an important highway connecting the two countries, stopping vital
    supplies from reaching Armenia.

    The standoff between Russia and Georgia gave a new urgency to a problem
    Armenia has been facing since its independence in 1991. Landlocked
    between four countries--two of which, Turkey and Azerbaijan, have
    imposed a de-facto blockade--Armenians had Georgia and Iran to rely
    on for exports and imports. And now, with the Georgia-Russia standoff
    unresolved, official Yerevan seems to have felt it had to give new
    impetus to dialogue with Turkey, aiming at establishing diplomatic
    relations and opening the border between the two countries.[2]

    There might have been another, less dignified, reason behind the
    urgency in which Turkey-Armenia dialogue was pushed forward by the
    Armenian authorities. Serge Sarkisian had been elected president only
    a few months before, and the elections were not only tainted with
    irregularities and fraud, but on March 1, the Armenian government's
    crackdown on the opposition had caused 10 deaths, including two
    security officers, and dozens of injuries. The international community
    was very critical of the presidential election[3] and its aftermath,
    and many experts argued that Sarkisian was hoping he would gain
    legitimacy abroad by giving impetus to dialogue with Turkey. After
    all, both Europe and the U.S. had been pushing for better relations
    between Turkey and Armenia for years.[4]

    An important development had preceded the Russia-Georgia conflict--and
    launched what was later called "Soccer Diplomacy." Armenian president
    Serge Sarkisian had invited his Turkish counterpart, Abdullah Gul,
    to visit Armenia and watch with him the Armenia-Turkey World Cup
    qualifier soccer match.

    After the Russia-Georgia conflict, both the Armenian and Turkish sides
    gave new impetus to behind-the-scenes meetings at the level of foreign
    ministry officials, which culminated in Gul accepting the invitation a
    few days before the match. On Sept. 6, Gul's plane landed in Yerevan,
    making him the first Turkish president to visit the Armenian Republic.

    I believe one word describes amply the reasons Turkey enthusiastically
    welcomed the initiative: genocide.

    For several decades now, Turkey has been struggling against
    resolutions in parliaments around the world recognizing the Armenian
    Genocide. Twenty countries, including Russia, France, Switzerland,
    the Netherlands, Canada, and Argentina, have already recognized
    the Armenian massacres and deportations as a genocide, citing the
    overwhelming consensus of historians and genocide scholars on this
    subject. On the other hand, official Ankara continues to vehemently
    deny that there was any genocidal intent towards the Armenians
    in the last years of the Ottoman Empire and it spends millions of
    dollars in its denial campaign, in which it lobbies politicians,
    entices support from journalists, funds academic denial efforts,
    suppresses education efforts on the Armenian Genocide, and presents
    denial assertions to the general public in North and South America,
    Europe, and the Middle East (Israel especially).

    The main battlefield for genocide recognition in recent years has
    been the United States, where a majority of Members of Congress
    support passing a resolution recognizing the Armenian Genocide, but
    at least twice in recent history, voting on such resolutions has been
    postponed/put on hold at the last minute.

    With a Democratic majority in Congress, and with the prospects of an
    Obama/Biden victory high, there seemed to be a growing realization
    in Turkey that it would only be a matter of time before the
    U.S. officially recognized the Armenian Genocide.[5]

    Under such conditions, a discussion about rethinking Turkey-Armenia
    relations started within the Turkish political and military
    establishment and was reflected also in the media. The hardliners
    argued that Ankara should not establish formal relations with Yerevan
    until the latter stops pursuing international recognition of the
    genocide and withdraws its forces from Nagorno-Karabagh.

    The moderates, on the other hand, argued that the best strategy for
    Turkey would be to disrupt the harmony between the Armenian state,
    which has made genocide recognition one of its foreign relations goals,
    and the Armenian Diaspora--mostly comprised of the descendents of the
    victims and survivors of the Armenian Genocide--which has been pursuing
    genocide recognition worldwide for decades through lobbying and other
    forms of activism. By starting negotiations with the Armenian Republic
    and receiving concessions from it on the genocide recognition front,
    Turkey would create a schism between the diaspora and Armenia and
    undermine the passage of the Armenian Genocide Resolution in the U.S
    and other countries, they argued.

    It is in this context that negotiations between Turkey and Armenia
    gained new momentum.

    During the negotiations, one of the main issues Turkey was adamantly
    pursuing was the formation of a commission of historians to study
    the events of 1915-16 and decide whether or not they constituted
    genocide. In return, it offered the opening of the border and the
    establishment of diplomatic relations.

    The conceptual context of Soccer Diplomacy

    Here, it is important to highlight the fact that in general, Turkish
    diplomats and commentators do not view Armenians as a single monolithic
    block, but as three supposedly homogeneous blocks. The Armenians living
    in Turkey[6] (mainly in Istanbul) comprise the first group. These
    are, mostly, the descendents of the thousands of Armenians living in
    Istanbul during the genocide who were spared deportations and killings,
    because they lived in a metropolitan city, right under the nose of
    Western embassies, consulates, and missionaries. These Armenians today
    cannot even commemorate the genocide. In Turkey, these Armenians are
    regarded as "our Armenians" or the "good Armenians," as long as they
    do not speak out about the genocide and the continued discrimination
    they face. A prominent Turkish-Armenian journalist, Hrant Dink,
    was assassinated in 2007 because he was an outspoken critic of the
    Turkish establishment and called for the recognition of the suffering
    of the Armenians. The citizens of Armenia, the second group, are,
    according to the dominant rhetoric in Turkey, the "neighbors" who are
    under difficult economic conditions and do not mind forgetting the
    past and moving on, if the Armenian Diaspora leaves them alone. The
    Diaspora Armenians, the third group, are the "bad Armenians." They
    are Turkey's sworn enemies. They level accusations of genocide against
    Turks and try to undermine Turkey. These three stereotypes essentially
    describe the perception of most Turks. There is absolute ignorance
    and disregard to the plight of the genocide survivors and their
    descendents who were scattered around the world and rebuilt their
    communities after living in camps and in abject poverty, facing the
    threat of disease and death years after the genocide. In discussions
    in Turkey, the Diaspora Armenians--the descendents of genocide victims
    and survivors--need to be isolated and ignored. This is yet another
    example of official Turkey's reluctance to face the past and address
    the roots of the problem.

    Soccer diplomacy: a misnomer

    The exchange of ping-pong players in the early 70s between China and
    the U.S. that paved the way for President Richard Nixon's visit to
    Beijing in 1972 became known "Ping Pong Diplomacy." When the Armenian
    president in 2008 extended an invitation to his counterpart to visit
    Yerevan and attend the soccer match, the media started referring to
    the Turkey-Armenia dialogue as "Soccer Diplomacy." While such a term
    could be fitting to rapprochement between two powerful countries like
    the U.S. and China, a similar description for Turkey and Armenia is
    misleading, because it assumes that Turkey and Armenia are "competing"
    on a level playing field. In the latter case, not only is there a
    glaring power asymmetry, but that power asymmetry is largely a result
    of genocide perpetrated by one of the sides against the other.[7]

    Here is how Prof. Peter Balakian explains the power asymmetry during
    and in the aftermath of the Armenian Genocide:

    First, the asymmetry of power is a key element in the act of
    genocide. In 1915 the perpetrator used its military, its state
    bureaucracy, and an unequal social structure to enact a plan of
    extermination against a people who were a defenseless, Christian
    minority. The Turkish government's subsequent denial became a
    further manifestation of such radical asymmetry in which a large,
    strategically important nation-state uses all of its political and
    military means--including blackmail, coercion, and cajoling--to get
    third parties to cooperate with it in delegitimizing the history of
    the Armenian Genocide. The goal is to absolve Turkey of responsibility
    for the events of 1915 and to undermine its moral definition. The
    main power that the Armenians of the diaspora have is the truth of
    the ever-growing discourse about the history of 1915.[8]

    Philosopher Henry Theriault has been at the forefront of the discussion
    on this power asymmetry.[9] He says:

    [T]he result of genocide is not a neutral disengagement of the
    perpetrator and victim groups, but the imposition of an extreme
    dominance of perpetrator group over victim group. If prior to the
    Armenian Genocide, Turks and other Muslims as a group were formally
    and practically dominant over Armenians as a group, the genocide
    maximized this, to give Turks and other Muslims absolute dominance
    to the level of life and death over Armenians. Often we mistake the
    end of a genocide for the end of the harm done to the victims. It
    is the end of the direct killing, perhaps, but the result of that
    killing and all other dimensions of a genocide is to raise the power
    and position of the perpetrator group high above that of victims, in
    material terms--political, economic, etc. Resolution of the Armenian
    Genocide requires reversing this domination.[10]

    It is this very requirement to eliminate this domination, and bring
    some amount of symmetry to the power relations, and address the
    core issues of the problem that is lacking in the current dialogue
    between Turkish and Armenian officials, facilitated and encouraged
    by the West. Not only does Turkey continue to vehemently deny the
    Armenian Genocide, it is also exerting pressure on Armenia to agree
    to the idea of a commission to examine what happened to the Armenians,
    disregarding the scholarly consensus on the matter. Acknowledgment of
    past horrors--let alone the readiness to engage in the long process
    of restitution--is not even on the table.

    Moreover, Turkey wants to stall the recognition of the genocide by
    countries worldwide by pushing for the formation of a historical
    commission, and hence be able to argue that the Armenian Genocide
    is far from being a historical fact, and that historians are still
    discussing what happened to the Ottoman Armenians from 1915-18.

    Where to go from here

    The Turkish-Armenian conflict cannot be transformed through traditional
    diplomacy. Instead, I recommend an alternative approach championed
    by John Paul Lederach[11] who highlights the importance of addressing
    the root causes of conflict and engaging all segments of the affected
    populations in the process. These premises have been ignored in the
    so-called "Soccer Diplomacy."

    Lederach argues that "the place called reconciliation" is the meeting
    point of Truth (which, he says, involves Acknowledgement, Transparency,
    Revelation, Clarity); Mercy (which involves Acceptance, Forgiveness,
    Support, Compassion, Healing); Justice (which involves Equality, Right
    Relationships, Restitution); and Peace (which involves Harmony, Unity,
    Well-being, Security, Respect). The current Turkey-Armenia dialogue
    stands in complete disregard of all these principles: The Truth is
    set aside. There is no readiness from the Turkish side to acknowledge
    the Armenian Genocide and be transparent in the evaluation of past
    and continued actions.

    There is no room for Mercy, because the Turkish side continues
    to assert there is nothing to forgive, because there was
    no genocide. Nowhere in the dialogue do Justice, Equality, and
    Restitution have a place--on the contrary, the dialogue is based on
    the very tenets of the power asymmetry and ignoring justice.[12] And,
    as a consequence, Peace is nowhere in sight.

    Theriault talks about the shortcomings of the theory of magically
    "resolving" the Turkish-Armenian problem: [T]here is;the assumption
    that there can be a single, decisive transition from "unresolved" to
    "resolved" through an act or set of acts. This assumption shared by
    antagonists from Turkish deniers to committed Armenian activists is
    curiously Christian, echoing the notion of instantaneous absolution for
    sins through supplicant entreaty and clerical pronouncement. Resolution
    is not an event or outcome; it is a process, a very long-term
    process. Armenian-Turkish relations are not a simple all-or-nothing
    proposition, either "in tension" or "worked out perfectly." They
    are better or worse along a continuum of fine gradations, with no
    bold line between "good" and "bad" relations. Likewise, they are not
    fixed, but can fluctuate through time in trajectories of improvement
    and deterioration.[13]

    Theriault also argues that "[i]n the case where there is no
    acknowledgment of the Armenian Genocide, it is trivially obvious that
    no resolution can occur." However, recognition alone is not enough. It
    has meaning only when it reflects the "material and social-structural
    changes" or causes them. Furthermore, according to Theriault, "positive
    relations between Turks and Armenians are not made permanent simply
    by being enacted at a given point in time. They must be reproduced
    and supported at every moment, or the relations will degenerate." The
    fact that after a very dynamic start in August, "Soccer Diplomacy"
    has, as of the writing of this paper, slowed down and is facing
    impediments is a testament to the fact that "traditional" diplomacy
    cannot go far in resolving protracted conflicts, because it ignores
    the root causes and the power dynamics. A new model is necessary.

    A %u218welcome' initiative

    While "Soccer Diplomacy" was already in progress, an important
    initiative was launched by intellectuals in Turkey, who signed a
    petition apologizing to Armenians for the "Great Catastrophe that
    the Armenians were subjected to."[14] The apology, together with the
    list of initial signatories, was posted online on Dec. 15, 2008, and
    already within a few days, thousands of other citizens of Turkey had
    signed it. Despite the fact that it fell short of properly referring
    to 1915-16 as "genocide," and did not even mention who exactly
    "subjected" the Armenians to the "Catastrophe," this initiative by
    Turkish intellectuals created a cautiously positive response among
    Armenians both in Armenia and the diaspora, where it was generally
    welcomed as a good first step.[15] Gul's visit, on the other hand,
    had received mixed reactions, and was not welcomed as warmly by many
    Armenians exactly because it did not involve any attempt, however
    meager, to acknowledge the root causes of the problem.

    Official Ankara's position regarding the apology campaign initiated
    by 200 intellectuals was clear from the very beginning: The apology
    campaign for the Armenian Genocide is bad for Turkey and will also
    harm Turkey-Armenia dialogue, which has been making strides recently.

    Statements to this effect were made by Turkish Prime Minister Recep
    Tayyip Erdogan, Turkish Foreign Minister Ali Babacan, and Turkish
    army generals.

    When the apology campaign was launched, Erdogan said it amounted to
    "stirring up trouble, disturbing our peace and undoing the steps
    which have been taken." He added, "If there is a crime, then those
    who committed it can offer an apology. My nation, my country has no
    such issue."

    Babacan, in turn, said, "This is a sensitive issue for Turkey. There
    is a negotiation process going on [with Armenia]; This kind of debate
    is of no use to anyone especially at a time talks continue and it
    may harm the negotiation process."

    "We definitely think that what is done is not right. Apologizing is
    wrong and can yield harmful consequences," said General Metin Gurak,
    the spokesperson for the General Staff, during a press conference.

    Gul first spoke in defense of the initiative when it was first
    launched, saying that it was proof that democracy was thriving in
    Turkey. Yet, this simple statement was harshly criticized by the
    opposition in Turkey, and accusations flew from left and right. One
    parliament member "accused" Gul of having an Armenian mother. The
    president was quick to deny the allegation and start legal action
    against the person who threw it.

    He didn't bother to say, "My mother is not Armenian, but what if
    she were?" By taking the accusation as an insult, he essentially
    reinforced the racist prejudice in Turkey against Armenians.

    Apparently, Gul could not hold his good-cop routine for more than
    two weeks. In early January, during an interview on the Turkish
    television channel ATV, Gul said the apology campaign would have a
    negative effect on the diplomatic efforts between the two countries.

    According to Gul, "When we examine the latest debates in terms of
    their results, I do not think they make a positive contribution."

    He also said his previous statements were presented in a distorted way.

    So within a few weeks of the launching of the apology campaign, there
    was consensus among the ruling party, the opposition, and the army in
    Turkey that the apology campaign will have negative consequences on
    Turkey-Armenia dialogue. This might be an indication that Ankara has no
    intention to address some of the core issues anytime soon. Moreover,
    it is opposed to any civil society initiative to address--even in
    part--these issues. Instead, Ankara wants to put heavy make-up on
    its face, hoping to hide its century-old scars. The calls by Turkish
    intellectuals for official Ankara to wash its face and get plastic
    surgery are yet to be heard.

    Conclusion

    True transformation of Turkish-Armenian relations cannot take
    place without involving all sectors and levels of the affected
    population. "Soccer Diplomacy" was not Turkish-Armenian dialogue--as
    it was portrayed in the Western media. It was Turkey-Armenia dialogue
    and ignored the diaspora, which has been a major source of support
    for Armenia since its independence. Also, a great amount of creativity
    is necessary to address the power asymmetries that are so inherent to
    this conflict--especially since these asymmetries are the product of
    the genocide perpetrated by one side, followed by denial and continued
    hostile attitudes towards the victims and their descendents.

    Notes:

    [1] This article is based on the text of several lectures I have
    given in late 2008 and early 2009, as well as several opinion pieces
    I have written during the same period, including "The Genie is Our
    of the Bottle," ZNet, Dec. 27, 2008; "Ankara Interested in Make-up,
    not Plastic Surgery," The Armenian Weekly, Jan. 10, 2009; and %u218?z?r
    diliyorum' futbol diplomasisinden daha ?nemli bir ad?m" (English title:
    Soccer Diplomacy vs. I Apologize), Radikal, Jan. 26, 2009.

    [2] The border was closed by Turkey in complicity with Azerbaijan
    when the Karabagh conflict erupted. For a detailed treatment of the
    Turkey-Armenia border issue, see for example the study for the Foreign
    Affairs Committee of the European Parliament entitled "The Case for
    Opening the Turkish-Armenian Border" (2007), available online at
    www.insideeurope.org/fileadmin/user_upload/Pdf_ files/Turkish_Armenian_Border.pdf.

    [3] Initial reports on the election evaluated the overall process
    positively. See "Republic Of Armenia Presidential Election (Feb. 19,
    2008) OSCE/ODIHR Election Observation Mission Report," available online
    at www.osce.org/item/31397.html. However, many Armenian citizens have,
    over the years, lost their faith in most of the reports prepared
    by foreign observers. Moreover, the crackdown on protesters and the
    arrest of dozens of opposition figures--several of whom are still in
    prison as of the writing of this paper--resulted in a tougher stance
    from the West. President Bush, for one, did not congratulate Sarkisian
    on his election.

    [4] Europe has wanted the establishment of diplomatic ties and the
    opening of the border between Turkey and Armenia in the context of
    Turkey's integration into the EU, while the U.S. has wanted an Armenia
    that is, among other things, less dependent on Iran and Russia.

    [5] During his campaign, and on several occasions, Obama promised
    that if elected president, he would acknowledge the genocide. Also,
    Biden has a track record of staunchly supporting Armenian Genocide
    resolutions in Congress. Armenian lobby groups in the U.S. have
    continuously given Biden an "A" in their grading system for Members
    of Congress.

    [6] The number of Christian Armenians in Turkey today is estimated
    to be somewhere between 50,000-70,000.

    [7] The Armenian Genocide resulted not only in the decimation of
    two-thirds of Armenians living in the Ottoman Empire, but also in
    total dispossession. Armenians were driven out of their ancestral
    lands, and their assets and possessions were confiscated. As German
    genocide scholar Hilmar Kaiser says, "The Armenian Genocide is the
    Ottoman government's answer to the Armenian Question: Deportations can
    only be analyzed in terms of expropriation. It was grand theft. It
    was the surgical separation of Armenians from their movable and
    immovable property. The Ottoman government was very careful of
    not wasting any assets while being not concerned about the fate
    of the Armenians. To make the expropriation permanent, you have to
    replace the Armenians. The expropriation was part of a settlement
    program; this process created a surplus population and this surplus
    population was taken care of. The Armenians were mathematically a
    surplus population. Killing or, in the case of children and women,
    assimilating them solved that problem." (See "An Interview with Hilmar
    Kaiser" by Khatchig Mouradian, Aztag Daily newspaper, Sept. 24, 2005.

    [8] See Peter Balakian, "Progress, Obstacles, Hope, 92 Years Later:
    Some Reflections," The Armenian Weekly, April 21, 2007.

    [9] Henry Theriault's first presentation on the topic, "Toward a New
    Conceptual Framework for Resolution: The Necessity of Recognizing the
    Perpetrator-Victim Dominance Relation in the Aftermath of Genocide,"
    was at the 7th Biennial Conference of the International Association
    of Genocide Scholars (Boca Raton, Fla.) on June 7, 2005.

    [10] See Theriault, "From Past Genocide to Present Perpetrator--Victim
    Group Relations and Long-Term Resolution: A Philosophical Critique"
    in "Commemorating Genocide: Images, Perspectives, Research," The
    Armenian Weekly, April 26, 2008.

    [11] See Lederach, John Jaul, Building Peace: Sustainable
    Reconciliation in Divided Societies (United States Institute of Peace
    Press, 1997)

    [12] The current dialogue tries to make a case based on mutual,
    largely economic, interests. According to the Turkish side, the
    Armenians are behaving irrationally. [13] Theriault, 2008.

    [14] The apology reads as follows: "My conscience does not accept
    the insensitivity showed to and the denial of the Great Catastrophe
    that the Ottoman Armenians were subjected to in 1915. I reject this
    injustice and for my share, I empathize with the feelings and pain of
    my Armenian brothers and sisters. I apologize to them." The campaign
    to collect signatures continues at http://www.ozurdiliyoruz.com.

    [15] Armenian newspapers worldwide as well as the two major Armenian
    lobby groups that pursue genocide recognition in the U.S.--the ANCA and
    the Armenian Assembly--welcomed the initiative as a good "first step."

    Later, some statements made by the initiators of the campaign made many
    Armenians and progressive Turks more cautious about the initiative.
Working...
X