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  • Turkish Denialist Prime Minister Erdogan Exposes Turkey To Internati

    TURKISH DENIALIST PRIME MINISTER ERDOGAN EXPOSES TURKEY TO INTERNATIONAL CONDEMNATION
    By Appo Jabarian

    USA Armenian Life Magazine
    December 24, 2009

    During an official visit to Washington on December 6-8, Turkish
    Prime Minister Receb Tayyip Erdogan made derogatory statements on
    the Armenian Genocide. Erdogan' denialist remarks triggered a wave
    of international condemnation of Turkey.

    On December 11, The Coordinating Council of Armenian Organizations
    of France (CCAF) issued a timely press release strongly condemning
    Turkish Prime Minister Erdogan's denialist statement in Washington
    D.C. that his "ancestors have never committed genocide" against the
    Armenian people. The CCAF urged "the international community and in
    the first place, U.S. President Barack Obama to use his influence so
    that Turkey severs itself from denialism and confronts history in an
    irreversible way and with dignity and transparency. We also appeal
    the U.S. administration to reactivate the process of the adoption
    of the resolutions HR 252 and S252 introduced in the U.S. Congress"
    reaffirming the U.S. record on the recognition of the Armenian Genocide
    at the hands of Turkey.

    The CCAF also underlined the fact that it is even more troubled by
    the turn of events when Turkey resorted to setting preconditions on
    its Parliament's ratification of the Protocols with the process of
    the negotiations on Armenian Republic of Artsakh (Nagorno Karabagh
    Republic) between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

    Erdogan even had the gall to declare Artsakh's liberation an
    "occupation." First and foremost, Turkey should end its occupation of
    Northern Cyprus, Western Armenia and Cilicia; Greek Pontus and Smyrna.

    In a strongly-worded article titled "Denialist Erdogan in the White
    House: An Unworthy Guest," Harut Sassounian, the Publisher of The
    California Courier wrote: "Rather than hosting him in the White
    House, Pres. Obama should have declared him 'persona non grata' -- an
    undesirable person! Would Pres. Obama have welcomed Iran's President
    Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to the White House and sang his praises, given his
    revisionist views on the Holocaust? Inviting Erdogan to the U.S. is
    even more offensive, akin to receiving a German leader who denies
    the Holocaust!"

    Sassounian added: "During his December 8, hour-long PBS TV interview
    by Charlie Rose, Erdogan brought up the Armenian issue.... Erdogan's
    boastful comments led Charlie Rose to raise the Armenian Genocide
    issue in a passive manner by asking: 'What is necessary in order to --
    what more evidence does history need with respect to the genocide?'
    The question threw Erdogan into a rage, making him spew hateful
    statements about the Armenian Genocide: 'I can say very clearly
    that we do not accept genocide. This is completely a lie. I invite
    people to prove it.... Something like this is really not possible,
    and there is no truth to it.' These are the shameful words of the
    same man who claimed there was no genocide in Darfur, since he saw
    no trace of such a crime during his visit to Sudan!"

    Sassounian concluded: "It is a shame that Armenia's leaders, rather
    than repudiating Erdogan's offensive statements on the Armenian
    Genocide, continued to talk about normalizing relations with Turkey!

    Armenian Americans were equally negligent, failing to express their
    outrage. Erdogan should have been confronted in Washington with
    massive protests and demonstrations! Sadly, silence makes genocide
    denial an acceptable practice!"

    CCAF's public statement on behalf of key Armenian-French organizations
    protesting Erdogan's denialist remarks is a fresh example of worldwide
    Armenians' political combat-readiness.

    As for Sassounian's timely commentary, the article illustrates a new
    approach for the way Armenian-Americans and even world Armenians should
    adopt in the face of denialist Turkish leaders' visit to Washington,
    Brussels, Paris, London, Moscow, Berlin, Athens, Beirut, Buenos Aires,
    Ottawa and other important political power centers that have sizeable
    Armenian populations. Armenians should continue teaming up with
    Greeks, Kurds, and Cypriots speaking out against Turkey's denialism,
    occupation and mass killings.

    Armenian activists everywhere should ask for and receive the help
    that they need in order to mount swift and sizeable public protests;
    confronting the Turkish lies; and outright condemning Erdogan's
    ridiculous and derogatory statements on the Armenian Genocide.

    Armenian-Americans can and should move to turn the table on Turkey by
    countering the official Turkish propaganda devised by hired public
    relations and publicity experts that are paid handsomely by Turkish
    funds ironically financed by U.S. foreign aid which in turn is provided
    to Turkey by unwitting U.S. taxpayers.

    By heeding Sassounian's advice to actively confront visiting denialist
    Turkish leaders on U.S. soil and elsewhere in the free world, the
    Armenian-American and other Armenian communities can gain important
    political mileage for their Cause and can deal additional blows to
    denialist Turkey's already badly tarnished image.

    But Armenians should not stop there. They should think out of the box
    and speak out strongly against other manipulative powers from Moscow
    to Paris to Washington that try to exploit Turkey's auto-detrimental
    denialism and Armenia's passive position.

    In reaction to Sassounian's article, Masis Babajanian, MD of California
    wrote on www.ArmenianWeekly.com: "What I see happening is that Turkish
    and almost every other country's politicians meet behind closed doors
    and devise often unethical strategies for their gains.

    Since WWI, Turkey has been effective in marketing itself as a US
    ally, a Soviet ally, a Russian ally, a Muslim ally, an Iranian
    ally, a European ally, a Nazi ally, a Jewish ally, an Azeri ally,
    a Palestinian ally. They are even a Chechen ally and a de facto Al
    Qaeda ally. In the end they shortchange everyone but are conniving
    enough for none to notice. ... Our leaders (in Armenia) ... do not
    market their strategic location or capabilities nor make any threats.

    Such a passive stance will be destructive."

    Babajanian added: "Why doesn't the US feel compelled to support
    Armenia? Otherwise Armenia may support the Iranian nuclear program
    for example. Why doesn't Iran support Armenia, fearing it may
    allow US bases to use its soil? ... Just like the rest of the world,
    Armenia needs to approach any set of negotiations with a multi-faceted
    approach, sometimes siding with and defying the adversary or mediator
    at the same time."

    Gayane, another reader, wrote on www.ArmenianWeekly.com: "I just
    can't stand this matter-of-fact approach our government is taking
    toward Turkey and how they are conducting business in regards to the
    Protocols. Is there anyone alive in the Armenian government to snap
    Sarkissian out of his sleep? I don't understand how much evidence do
    they need to stop all this and just spit Turkey out of the equation
    all together? Silence does make the denier's job easy. I agree with
    you Harut."

    In order to effectively derail and neutralize Turkey's anti-Armenian
    policies, the world Armenians should make use of each and every
    political weapon that is available to them.

    For example, they should speak out against the ongoing bloody
    clashes in the streets of Kurdish populated cities, triggered by the
    Constitutional Court's banning of the Kurdish Democratic Society Party
    (DTP); and the fact the Turkish high Court expelled two DTP members
    from Turkey's Parliament.

    Back in the Soviet Union's heydays, some Diaspora Armenians mistakenly
    thought that "Kremlin did not care about the Diaspora Armenians'
    anti-Soviet demonstrations." But in reality, Moscow constantly feared
    having its international reputation exposed to negative publicity
    resulting from anti-Soviet demonstrations by the Diaspora Armenians.

    The same could be said even today for any nation, let alone Turkey. No
    nation would welcome the idea of being exposed to negative public
    opinion. All major powers like the United States, France, Germany,
    Russia, China, Canada, and Japan become uneasy about any kind of
    negative publicity "presented" to them in the form of public protests.

    The situation is even worse for Turkey -a pariah state. More than any
    nation in the world, Turkey is over-eager to rehabilitate its public
    image which is badly tarnished because of the Armenian Genocide,
    the Genocide of the Pontus-Smyrna Greeks, and of the Assyrians;
    the mass killings of the Kurds; and the occupation of Northern Cyprus.

    The world Armenians have to re-invent themselves as justice-seeking
    people.
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