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  • A difficult task

    Arab News, Saudi Arabia
    March 6 2010

    A difficult task


    It is a serious matter to accuse any country of genocide, as Turkey
    continues to be in relation to the killing of Armenians before and
    during World War I.

    Genocide is prompted by racial hatred. The Nazis were consumed by
    gross anti-Semitism. The Serbs of Bosnia despised their Muslim
    neighbors and the Hutus of Rwanda hated the Tutsi people.

    The Ottoman Turks never had a policy of racial hatred toward the
    Armenians. Indeed, you can visit a cemetery today in the heart of
    Istanbul where you will find splendid graves to Armenians who gave
    honorable service to the Ottoman Navy and civil service. The Ottoman
    Empire certainly discriminated against their non-Muslim minorities but
    in that era such discrimination was common throughout Europe.

    In the dying days of the Ottoman Empire, when Sultan Mehmed V was
    reduced to a figurehead by the `Young Turk' movement led by Enver
    Pasha, Turkey unwisely sided with Germany and Austria and quickly saw
    its empire being rolled up by the Allies. Armenian nationalists raised
    the standard of rebellion in their heartland in Eastern Turkey around
    the city of Van. There was initial killing of Turks and Kurds followed
    inevitably by swingeing reprisals, as the Enver government struggled
    against military defeat elsewhere. None of this can excuse the
    bloodletting that took place. Nor has modern Turkey ever chosen to
    point out that many of the massacres of Armenians were carried out by
    local Kurds, in part because historically there had always been bad
    blood between the two communities.

    Horrific though this terrible time was and though the Enver government
    was ultimately responsible for what happened, it was almost certainly
    not a crime motivated by race hate and therefore not genocide.

    Sadly Turkey has been consistently blinkered in its denials, even
    sometimes denying that the extensive killings took place. The wealthy
    and well-connected members of the Armenian diaspora have done a far
    better job of their propaganda against the Turks. The killings
    provided a rallying point for a proud and very individual people. A
    common salutation among them has been `Next year in Van'.

    However, with the collapse of the Soviet Union and the emergence of an
    independent Armenia, the need to sustain their national identity in
    exile has disappeared. While this tragic period of history will not be
    forgotten, it is time it was removed from the modern political agenda.
    Under Premier Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Turkey has set about normalizing
    relations with its Armenian neighbor. It will be a long task, dogged
    by suspicions on both sides but it must succeed. Struggling Armenia
    desperately needs economic relations with Turkey and Turkey seeks
    regional stability as well as new markets.

    In this light, the latest vote by the US House of Representatives
    Foreign Affairs Committee once again condemning the Turks for an
    Armenian genocide is distinctly unhelpful outside interference. The
    Armenians and the Turks must resolve their own differences, on their
    own terms.

    http://arabnews.com/opinion/editorial/arti cle26313.ece

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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