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ANKARA: Orgs in US send letter to Obama over Armenian lobbying

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  • ANKARA: Orgs in US send letter to Obama over Armenian lobbying

    www.worldbulletin.net, Turkey
    Feb 14 2009



    Turkish organizations in US send letter to Obama over Armenian lobbying


    Turkish organizations in US have sent a letter to Obama to express
    their concerns over pressure put by Armenians on U.S. administration
    to label the incidents of 1915 as the crime of genocide.

    Saturday, 14 February 2009 09:35

    Turkish organizations in the United States have sent a letter to
    U.S. President Barack Obama to express their concerns over pressure
    put by Armenians on U.S. administration to label the incidents of 1915
    as the crime of genocide.

    "It would be stating the obvious to observe that Armenian special
    interest lobbies are pressuring your administration and Congress to
    label the tragic events in the waning hours of the Ottoman Empire
    during World War I as the crime of genocide," Turkish Coalition of
    America (TCA), a roof of 53 Turkish organizations in the United
    States, said in its letter to Obama.

    "To accept this one-sided characterization unilaterally by ignoring
    independent and impartial assessments by Middle East historians and
    scholars would be both grossly unfair and potentially incendiary to
    Southeast Europe, the Caucasus and the Middle East," it said.

    TCA said the Armenian claim of "passive victimhood" stood on such
    shaky historical footing, adding that the question of whether to apply
    the term genocide or not divided the scholarly community.

    "Many reputable scholars, mainly historians of the Ottoman Empire,
    World War I and the Middle East have refrained from applying the term
    to describe the tragic civilian losses suffered in the early 20th
    century in the Ottoman Empire. Their work also diverges from, in many
    cases contradicts, the historical narrative from which descends the
    charge of genocide," it said.

    "To quarrel with a genocide characterization?the crime of crimes,
    which requires exacting standards of proof as required by solemn
    treaty obligations and constitutional due process?is not to deny
    lesser crimes or atrocities. In fact, the Ottoman government itself
    prosecuted and convicted nearly 1,400 individuals, executing scores,
    including a provincial governor, for crimes committed against
    Armenians. On the other hand, the equally well documented massacres
    and ethnic cleansing of Ottoman Muslims in Eastern Anatolia committed
    directly or assisted by Armenian rebels, which were acknowledged by
    independent observers, are routinely ignored or denied today," the
    letter said.

    Scholars in Ottoman history generally agree that the Armenian deaths
    resulted from a multiplicity of causes, the letter said and listed
    these causes as inter-communal warfare, the conditions of the forced
    relocations, murder, famine, disease, deficient medical care and
    austere conditions of life during wartime.

    "The fact remains that there is no reliable assessment of the Armenian
    death toll or its categorization according to causation," it said.

    TCA said scholars in Ottoman history would also generally agree that
    there was no record of Ottoman Muslim animosity towards Armenians
    based on religion or ethnicity.

    "Many Armenians in fact served at the highest echelons of the Ottoman
    government and the Ottoman parliament. Few people throughout history,
    separated by ethnicity and religion, have shared such peaceful
    co-existence and developed such cultural affinity, as Turks and
    Armenians have for over 900 years under the Seljuk and Ottoman
    administrations. Nothing we argue in this letter should be construed
    as an effort to diminish the loss of innocent Armenian lives. We mourn
    their losses as ours and hope they, too, will find it in their hearts
    to mourn for our ancestors," TCA said.

    TCA recalled that Turkey voiced willingness to accept the findings by
    an international commission of scholars and experts with access to all
    relevant archives, including those of Armenian organizations that
    remain closed today.

    "Armenia should be urged equally to accept the formation and
    conclusions of such a commission. We see such an effort as the fairest
    method for assessing the truth, which will pave the way for
    reconciliation, in lieu of politically charged legislative or
    executive decisions by third parties," TCA concluded in its letter.

    Anadolu Agency
    http://www.worldbulletin.net/news_detail.ph p?id=36583

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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