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  • Turkish-American relations strained by mention of genocide

    NRC International, Netherlands
    March 5 2010


    Turkish-American relations strained by mention of genocide


    Published: 5 March 2010 17:09 | Changed: 5 March 2010 17:18

    A US House of Representatives committee resolution containing a much
    maligned word has set off a row between Washington and Ankara. By Bram
    Vermeulen in Istanbul

    It is not like it is the first time the United States has let its
    loyal Nato ally in the Muslim world down. But that is how indignant
    the Turkish response to the decision by the American House of
    Representatives' foreign affairs committee was.


    On Thursday, the committee passed a resolution condemning the mass
    killings of Armenians in 1915 as `genocide'. Immediately, the Turkish
    ambassador in Washington was ordered to return. Prime minister Recep
    Tayyip Erdogan condemned the resolution in the harshest terms: `We are
    being accused of a crime we did not commit'. And analysts were quick
    to point out Turkish-American relations could suffer at a time the
    Americans need Turkey's help the most, in Afghanistan, Iraq, and Iran.


    Live broadcast


    For hours on end, Turkish TV offered a live broadcast of the House
    committee as it counted votes. It was reported with the same vigour as
    an important football match would, only here history was at stake. For
    a long time, the vote seemed to be turning out `in our favour', as
    Turkish TV hosts, viewers calling in, and parliamentarians put it. But
    finally, the resolution [link] stating `the Armenian Genocide was
    conceived and carried out by the Ottoman Empire from 1915 to 1923,'
    passed with a narrow 23 to 22 majority. Pressure from the Obama
    administration to reject the resolution proved in vain.

    The foreign affairs committee has passed similar resolutions on to the
    House seven times before. The last time was in 2007, when it was
    shelved under pressure from the Bush administration.

    `Have we forgotten people have been at this game since 1975?' the
    former Turkish foreign affairs minister Ilter Türkmen wondered out
    loud as he was following the voting on Turkish TV on Thursday night.
    `Apparently the Armenian lobby feels it is necessary to refresh our
    memory repeatedly.'

    But the Armenians could yet become the resolution's biggest victims,
    Turkish minister of foreign affairs Ahmet Davutoglu warned on Friday.
    In October, Davutoglu signed a protocol promising to establish
    diplomatic ties, open the border dividing the two nations, and instate
    an historical commission composed of experts from both countries to
    study the events of 1915. `It not fair to blame Turkey for the fact
    these protocols haven't been ratified yet,' Davutoglu said. Resistance
    has been coming from the Armenian side as well, including the
    Armenian-American lobby that was so successful in pushing for the
    House resolution in recent weeks.

    In the past, the pro-Israel lobby US opposed similar resolutions, but
    it has been loath to come to Turkey's defence since its criticism of
    Israel attack on the Gaza strip last winter. Turkish minister of
    foreign affairs said, adding that foreign pressure could only serve to
    damage the peace process between his country and its Christian
    neighbour.


    Turkey against the world


    On the Turkish streets, far removed from international diplomacy, one
    message was heard loud and clear: the world is against us, and it has
    been since the Ottoman Empire fell. `An old friend will never become
    an enemy, an old enemy never a friend,' shoemaker Ismet Cahmak mumbled
    on Friday morning. `This vote proves the Christian community is
    unified in its struggle against us Muslims.'

    Genocide denial strikes at the heart and soul of the Turkish Republic,
    as it was formed at the beginning of the last century. The Turks do
    not deny that Armenians were killed en masse in 1915, even if their
    official estimates (300,000) are far lower than most historians' (1 to
    1.5 million). The Turks argue that the Armenians were fighting with
    the Russians when the Ottoman Empire was torn apart by the West on one
    side and Russia on the other, in this particularly bloody episode of
    the First World War.

    `The truth is, the Armenians revolted against us,' said former
    minister Türkmen. `This is a matter of pride and an affront to the
    true nature of history. It is also an attack on the integrity of our
    borders. In a recent ruling, an Armenian court upheld the country's
    claim to West-Armenia [eastern Turkey],' he added.

    Admitting to genocide would be paramount to denying the Turkish
    Republic's right to exist. The modern republic was founded on the
    smouldering remains of the Ottoman Empire. According to historian
    Taner Akcam, the Turkish national identity is defined by the
    humiliation of the empire's downfall. This has endowed Turks with a
    strong sense that it is them against the world, he said.

    In his book From Empire to Republic, Akcam described how Turkish
    writers and journalists in the 1920s dedicated themselves to writing
    exclusively positive stories about their compatriots, responding to
    the inferiority complex the loss of an empire had caused. Listening to
    Turkish reporters' `us against them' narrative broadcast from
    Washington DC on Thursday night, one might think little had changed.


    On Friday, Istanbul's Armenian neighbourhoods also proved wary of the
    American resolution. `The people who took this decision didn't do so
    because they care for Armenians and their fate,' refrigerator
    repairman Anton Sasmaz said. `It is all about their own interests. The
    world will come to see Turkey in an even more negative light. Our
    membership of the European Union will be further away than ever. What
    good does that do us?'

    http://www.nrc.nl/international/article24980 52.ece/Turkish-American_relations_strained_by_ment ion_of_genocide
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