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The Protocols: Turkey's Fourth Line of Defense

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  • The Protocols: Turkey's Fourth Line of Defense

    The Protocols: Turkey's Fourth Line of Defense

    Asbarez
    Jan 15th, 2010

    BY ARAM SUREN HAMPARIAN


    The Protocols are the most recent obstacle in our century-long quest
    for truth, justice, and security for the Armenian nation, for, let
    there be no mistake, Turkey's denial of the truth of the Armenian
    Genocide, represents, at its heart, the obstruction of both the
    justice that is deserved, and the long-term security that is required
    by all Armenians.

    For us, as Armenian Americans, the Protocols represent our last hurdle
    to U.S. recognition of the Armenian Genocide.

    These accords are Turkey's desperate last stand to block its
    international isolation as a denier of this universally acknowledged
    atrocity.

    More broadly, the fact that Turkey has needed to resort to the
    Protocols marks the beginning of the end of Ankara's failed attempts
    to consolidate the fruits of its crime; its merciless drive to cement
    in place the dominance it so brutally imposed during the Genocide.

    The battle over the Protocols is also the end of the beginning of the
    Armenian struggle to restore the core elements of viability stolen
    from us through genocide; to roll back the injustices visited upon our
    nation and, in so doing, secure a safe and enduring future for the
    Armenian nation.
    Winning this battle - defeating the Protocols - as we must and will,
    will mark a major step forward in this long quest.

    Placing the Protocols in the context of this longstanding struggle
    helps us to better understand the reasons behind Turkey's creation of
    these accords and its ongoing reliance upon them to advance its denial
    agenda. We can do this by looking back upon just how far we have
    traveled on the path toward the realization of the Armenian Cause:

    Forty-two U.S. States, 12 NATO allies, and the European Parliament
    have recognized the Armenian Genocide.
    All the top leaders of the Executive and Legislative branches of the
    U.S. government are on record recognizing the Armenian Genocide, and
    are coming under increasing moral and political pressure to honor
    their pledges to deliver official U.S. recognition of this crime.
    Despite decades of Turkish government-funded academic onslaughts, a
    rock-solid consensus has emerged among genocide scholars and the
    academic community about the urgent need for Turkey to abandon its
    denial campaign.
    The New York Times, Associated Press, and many other major media
    outlets have, despite millions spent by Turkey on public relations,
    adopted the practice of accurately reporting the Armenian Genocide.
    Public school systems and universities throughout America are teaching
    the Armenian Genocide, and a broad-based coalition of human rights,
    ethnic, and faith-based groups have taken a stand against Turkey's
    denials.
    At the civil society level, the American people and the nations of
    Europe have accepted the fact of the Armenian Genocide, even if all
    their leaders are not yet ready to reflect this consensus in their
    governmental decision-making. The process of aligning the official
    policies of these countries with the views and values held by their
    populations takes time, but is moving forward at a steady pace.
    It's clear that the very viability of Turkey's denial strategy is
    today rightfully under attack from all sides. Its foundations are
    failing. The wall of lies it has built has started to crumble.

    Most of Turkey's allies, much like those of South Africa in the 1980s,
    are running for cover. A small handful, such as the Sudan's genocidal
    regime, embrace Turkey, bound, as they are, by a common thread of
    death and denial.
    Ankara is today cornered and alone, having run up against a determined
    Armenian nation, and isolating itself by pursuing an ultimately
    untenable campaign to impose upon the international community a
    morally offensive and profoundly anti-Armenian policy of genocide
    denial.

    Our progress in this struggle - the Hai Tahd (Armenian Cause) movement
    - has been marked by our ability to force three major retreats by
    Turkey over the past several decades.

    We have, as a nation, overtaken Ankara's first three lines of defense:
    silence, lies, and threats. We face today, its fourth, the Protocols.

    How did we reach this point?

    We overcame Turkey's silence, its first line of defense - a strategy
    that worked for the better part of the first five decades after the
    genocide - through a rebirth, in 1965, of activism and protests.
    We overcame Turkey's lies, its second line of defense, by fostering,
    through independent historical research and honest intellectual
    inquiry during the 1970s and 1980s, the growth of an academic
    consensus that has fatally undermined, in any serious setting,
    Ankara's ability to rewrite the history of the Armenian Genocide.
    We then overcame Turkey's threats, its third line of defense, in part
    through our own growing political power over the past two decades, but
    also as a result of Ankara's loss of the leverage over U.S.
    decision-makers due to its increasingly independent policies on
    Israel, Iran, and the region. Together, these factors have combined
    to diminish Turkey's ability to simply bank on a strategy of strategic
    blackmail to block U.S. recognition of the Armenian Genocide.
    As these lines of defense have collapsed, Turkey has fallen back to a
    fourth line of defense: The Protocols.
    Instead of remaining silent, outright lying, or leveling threats,
    Ankara is today forced to make the shaky case that an American moral
    stand - along the lines of President Obama's repeated pledges - would
    somehow harm Turkey-Armenia relations.
    It's their same strategy of denial, but using a different and desperate tactic.
    This is their last stand, one that they are taking directly in
    response to the progress of our long struggle for truth, justice, and
    security.

    Viewed in this light, the Protocols are not a sign of Armenian
    weakness, but rather proof of our growing political strength. They
    are not a marker of Turkish success, but instead a symbol of their
    three successive failures to bury the Armenian Cause.

    As Armenians, rather than focusing on our frustration with the
    weakness displayed by the Armenian government and its diaspora allies,
    we should move forward aggressively, inspired by the knowledge that it
    has been our willpower and activism that has driven Turkey's back
    against the wall; that has forced Ankara into three major retreats.
    We will, in the end, overcome these Protocols and breach Turkey's last
    line of defense against the truth, justice, and security owed to the
    Armenian nation.

    Now is the moment for all Armenian Americans to work as a team in
    pressing our advantage and breaking down the last barriers to U.S.
    recognition - by both the U.S. Congress and President Obama.

    With developments moving so quickly, it's vital that you join with us
    today on the front lines of this great struggle for the honor, the
    security, and the future of the Armenian nation.

    Here's how:

    If haven't already written your U.S. legislators, please send your
    letters today. If you've already written, follow up with a phone
    call. If you've already called, urge friends and relatives to get
    involved, and then get in touch with your local ANCA chapter to learn
    how you can do more (write [email protected] for contact information).
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