Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Angry Turkish PM recalls ambassador over genocide classification

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Angry Turkish PM recalls ambassador over genocide classification

    DigitalJournal.com
    March 5 2010

    Angry Turkish PM recalls ambassador over genocide classification

    By R. C. Camphausen.

    Minutes after US lawmakers voted to define the mass killings of
    Armenians by Ottoman Turks in 1915 as genocide, the angry Turkish PM
    recalled his ambassador and warned this could potentially harm
    relations between the two NATO allies.
    "Denial is the final stage of genocide" is a quote by Gregory Stenton,
    president of the International Association of Genocide Scholars. The
    quote has been published in an excellent article called State of
    Denial from 2008, to be found on the association's website. Then as
    now, Turkey perceived a classification as genocide for what happened
    in Armenia as a threat to its identity. In 2008, the country lobbied
    extensively in order to influence the outcome, and it succeeded. The
    committee then, and president Bush as well, hid their thoughts behind
    public statements saying that one could not correctly judge the
    situation as it was then.
    Turkey was appeased. Yet this time around, in 2010, Turkey is angry
    because a similar committee of US lawmakers has voted 23 to 22 for a
    classification as genocide, saying that Turkey has to live up to its
    history just as Germany has done.
    According to France 24 quoting Reuters, what has happened now is this:
    NATO member Turkey recalled its ambassador to the United States for
    consultations after a vote in a U.S. congressional committee on
    Thursday branded the mass killings of Armenians by Ottoman Turks
    genocide.
    In a statement, Turkey's Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan also said he
    was seriously concerned that the non-binding resolution would harm
    Turkish-U.S. ties.
    This although the vote is more or less symbolic, as it is non-binding,
    but Turkey does fear that president Obama may make good on his
    campaign promise: "As President I will recognize the Armenian
    Genocide." As candidate he said this on Jan. 19, 2008, and the waiting
    is now for what he will say in 2010 as the president.
    The above cited article State of Denial makes for very good reading,
    as it exposes that Turkey has spent significant amounts of money on
    lobbyists and dissident scholars to promote his own version of the
    events, which denies that the 1915 massacres and deportations were
    genocidal ethnic cleansing. In the Turkish view, it simply a war in
    which errors were sometimes made.
    However, most scholars and historians are in full agreement that more
    than a million Armenians were exterminated, others forced to flee into
    permanent exile. And that is exactly what the recent committee agreed
    with.
    At present, there are a mere 20 nations in the world who also
    recognize the Armenian genocide. Israel is not one of these, yet it
    seems that public and official opinion are presently changing on the
    question.
Working...
X