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Hamparian: Turkey's Bait And Switch

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  • Hamparian: Turkey's Bait And Switch

    HAMPARIAN: TURKEY'S BAIT AND SWITCH
    By Aram Hamparian

    http://www.hairenik.com/weekly/2009/06/ 07/turkey%e2%80%99s-bait-and-switch/
    June 7, 2009

    This April, Turkey's leaders succeeded in preventing President Barack
    Obama from honoring his promise to recognize the Armenian Genocide
    on the false premise that Ankara would normalize its relations with
    Armenia, but only if the U.S. president broke this high-profile human
    rights pledge.

    A classic example of bait and switch.

    First the bait: In the weeks leading up to April 24, Turkey lured the
    Obama Administration with the prospect of a win-win Armenia-Turkey
    "road map" that would, without preconditions, lead quickly to the
    opening of the last closed border in Europe. Ankara's price tag for
    ending its illegal blockade: the president's refusal to recognize
    the Armenian Genocide.

    Once the hook was set, Turkey kept the U.S. government on the line
    long enough to accomplish its main aim of securing the complicity
    of yet another U.S. administration in their longstanding campaign of
    genocide denial.

    The State Department publicly welcomed Turkey's stated willingness to
    normalize its bilateral relations with Armenia without preconditions
    and within a reasonable timeframe.Â"

    On April 24, as has been widely reported, the president broke his
    pledge.

    Then came the switch: Within hours after April 24, Turkey, having
    dodged the most serious threat it had faced of U.S. recognition
    in years, moved the goalposts down the field, claiming that the
    normalization of ties with Armenia, which it once held out as being
    only days away, now required Azerbaijan's approval and the resolution
    of the longstanding Nagorno-Karabagh conflict.

    Today, more than a month and a half after April 24, it's painfully
    clear that Turkey's preconditions are just a pretext for maintaining
    the status quo, and equally obvious that Ankara has no intention of
    honoring its commitments, now or in the near future.

    The facts bear this out, at the cost, sadly, of U.S. credibility:

    Despite the repeatedly stated U.S. position of no preconditions,
    Ankara has, very publicly, set preconditions--namely a third country's
    approval and the settlement of a longstanding regional conflict
    between Azerbaijan and Karabagh.

    Despite the U.S. position that Turkey should move within a reasonable
    timeframe to normalize relations and lifts its blockade of Armenia,
    Ankara has yet to take even a single meaningful step in this direction.

    Let's look at the balance sheet.

    For Turkey

    Turkey's leaders, through clever manipulations of U.S. expectations,
    accomplished their primary goal of blocking American recognition of
    the Armenian Genocide, and, in the process, fostered the artificial
    appearance of flexibility without, in reality, having made any
    concessions at all.

    It's a win as well for Turkey's Washington, D.C.-based lobbyists, who
    make millions by delaying, derailing, and defeating U.S. recognition
    of the Armenian Genocide.

    For the United States

    President Obama, at the expense of his reputation and America's
    moral standing, broke his crystal-clear public pledge to recognize
    the Armenian Genocide.

    The State Department, at the cost of American diplomatic credibility,
    supported Armenia-Turkey normalization without preconditions and
    within a reasonable time frame, only to have Turkey set preconditions
    and entirely ignore the urgent need for timely action.

    For Armenia

    Armenia's leaders banked on Turkey's sincerity in seeking normalized
    ties and the lifting of Ankara's blockade, only to have the diplomatic
    tables turned by Ankara against Armenian Genocide recognition efforts
    and the prospect of a durable resolution of the Karabagh conflict.

    For Armenian Americans

    Armenian Americans worked hard as citizens to help elect Barack Obama
    based, in large part, on his clearly stated and oft-repeated pledge
    to recognize the Armenian Genocide, only to have him, under pressure
    from a foreign government, break this solemn pledge as president.

    *** This April, Turkey clearly succeeded in manipulating U.S. policy
    on the Armenian Genocide. Its leaders have made no secret of the
    success of their bait and switch diplomacy, even boasting to their
    electorate about having used this clever tactic to once again block
    American recognition.

    Turkey has made its choice; now as Americans we must make ours.

    Get America back on the right side of this human rights issue. Join
    with the ANCA in urging President Obama to restore American credibility
    as the leader of the genocide-prevention movement by:

    1) Immediately honoring his solemn pledge to recognize the Armenian
    Genocide, and 2) Actively supporting legislation before Congress to
    properly condemn and commemorate this crime against humanity.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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