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ISTANBUL: `Genocide' fatigue: newest hurdle in normalization process

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  • ISTANBUL: `Genocide' fatigue: newest hurdle in normalization process

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    March 7 2010


    `Genocide' fatigue: newest hurdle in normalization process


    Could this spring be one of discourage-ment, even though the season is
    usually associated with feelings of hope?

    This seems to be the case among the public in Turkey, as people
    overwhelmingly feel exhausted from annually watching a foreign
    legislative panel attempting to call their ancestors perpetrators of
    genocide against Anatolian Armenians, with whom they lived for
    centuries. Whether or not it is scientifically accepted, maybe it is a
    kind of a `spring depression' that could be seen as linked to Seasonal
    Affective Disorder (SAD). Yet, this year's public anxiety is different
    than that of previous years, when similar resolutions recognizing
    claims of genocide against Anatolian Armenians under Ottoman rule
    during World War I were voted on in various US congressional
    committees -- thus it can't be defined as a seasonal disorder.

    This year's irritation stems from the fact that this year, for the
    first time, there has been an ongoing process of normalization of ties
    with estranged neighbor Armenia -- efforts which also include a
    framework for contemplating historical facts and facing whatever the
    reality was in Anatolia during World War I.

    As an opinion piece in The Wall Street Journal on Friday titled `But
    Who Needs Allies? Congress poisons US-Turkey relations' summarized:
    `The diplomats at the House Foreign Affairs Committee yesterday
    [Thursday] adopted a view on the urgent matter of world events that
    transpired 95 years ago. By a 23-22 margin, the committee declared
    that the mass deportations and serial massacres of Armenians by
    Ottoman forces during World War I ought to be called a genocide. The
    vote has sparked a full-blown diplomatic spat with Turkey -- with
    Ankara recalling its ambassador to Washington -- but that's really no
    big deal, says Foreign Affairs Chairman Howard Berman (D., Calif.).'

    Berman has a point in declaring that the vote's outcomes are `really
    no big deal' vis-Ã-vis US-Turkey bilateral relations. Yet, `a big
    deal' has apparently emerged regarding the future of the normalization
    process between Armenia and Turkey, though Turkish Foreign Minister
    Ahmet DavutoÄ?lu stated that Turkey would push on with efforts to
    normalize ties with Armenia despite the US vote.

    `We are determined to press ahead with the normalization of relations
    with Armenia,' DavutoÄ?lu told a news conference, while also
    emphasizing that the parliamentary ratification of the peace accords
    with Armenia was at risk, referring to the two protocols signed by
    Armenia and Turkey in Zurich on Oct. 10 -- the `Protocol on the
    Establishment of Diplomatic Relations' and the `Protocol on the
    Development of Bilateral Relations.'

    The deals, seen as crucial to obtaining long-term peace in the
    volatile Southern Caucasus, must be ratified by the parliaments in
    Ankara and Yerevan.

    Normalization is a process that will be carried out by a mutual
    exchange of views between the two nations, DavutoÄ?lu said, adding,
    `Further intervention by third parties will render this normalization
    impossible.'

    What about April 25?

    The fatigue observed among the public is best summed up with commonly
    encountered expressions -- the people are saying: `OK, what is the
    point? Let them pass this resolution so we can get rid of this tension
    forever.'

    These feelings, nonetheless, also carry a tone that hints at a
    tendency that victimizes the normalization process as well, since the
    feeling of US pressure on Turkey is acceptable neither for the public
    nor the government.

    Leaving aside what Armenia has or hasn't done to advance the
    normalization process, and given that the current issue seems to be an
    urgent bilateral matter between Ankara and Washington, it may be
    useful to examine what Turkey and the United States have and have not
    done, or what they have been promising to do or not do.

    Despite a strong expression of commitment from Ankara, it is still
    unclear how the normalization process can be dealt with under these
    circumstances, when Ankara will apparently have to exhaust much of its
    energy -- at least until April 24 -- on preventing US President Barack
    Obama from calling the Anatolian Armenians' killings `genocide' in an
    annual White House statement on the day marking Armenian remembrance.
    Ankara will also have to mount a significant campaign to keep the
    resolution from being brought to the House floor for a vote.

    As for April 25, Ankara hasn't given any clues about its plans for
    moving forward with the normalization process if both a resolution on
    the House floor and Obama's use of the g-word are avoided. The
    normalization process has already been crippled by Turkey's insistence
    on parallel progress on the Nagorno-Karabakh territorial dispute
    between Armenia and Azerbaijan as well as by a ruling by the Armenian
    Constitutional Court. In January, while upholding the legality of the
    protocols, the court underlined that they could not contradict
    Yerevan's official position that the alleged Armenian genocide must be
    internationally recognized.

    Now, Turkey is expecting a written document or assurance either by
    Armenia or a third party that would be acceptable to both Armenian and
    Turkish sides that would state that the protocols are valid.

    The fact that neither the US nor Switzerland -- which mediated
    closed-door talks between Armenia and Turkey that were held for more
    than a year on ways to restore diplomatic relations and open their
    mutual border before the two parties announced on April 22, 2009 that
    they had reached an agreement on a road map to normalize their
    relations -- are sympathetic to Ankara's demand for such assurance
    poses further ambiguity regarding the future of the process.

    And hypothetically assuming that such assurance is provided, how will
    Ankara fulfill its promise to push for the ratification of the
    protocols at the commission level when there is no improvement on the
    Nagorno-Karabakh issue?

    US `awareness'

    It would be naïve to believe that the US administration really
    reckoned that a last minute effort would be effective on the House
    committee members.

    While making clear that the Obama administration was against the
    resolution and noting that they called Berman on Wednesday to try to
    persuade him to shelve the vote, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton
    said on Thursday: `We think that [the protocols] is the appropriate
    way to manage the problems that have stood in the way of normalization
    between the two countries. Within the protocols, there was an
    agreed-upon approach to establishing a historical commission to look
    at events in the past.'

    The `Protocol on the Development of Bilateral Relations' says the two
    countries have agreed to `implement a dialogue on the historical
    dimension with the aim of restoring mutual confidence between the two
    nations, including an impartial scientific examination of historical
    records and archives to define existing problems and formulate
    recommendations.'

    That brings to mind another question: Wasn't the US administration
    aware of the content of the protocols when they let the US
    congressional committee go ahead with their plans since Berman first
    announced on Feb. 5 that he intended to call a committee vote on the
    non-binding resolution on March 4?

    It's hard to believe how the US administration failed to consider that
    the adoption of the vote would be seen as pressure on Turkey -- both
    on the public and the government -- over ratifying the protocols.

    This is not the first time that hopes for a long-awaited new spring
    coming to Turkey, this time freshened up by the normalization process,
    have been crushed.

    Back in October 2005, an Ä°stanbul court's conviction of
    Armenian-Turkish journalist Hrant Dink for insulting `Turkishness' --
    a conviction which indirectly led to his assassination in January 2007
    -- led to the same kind of feelings.

    Tens of thousands of people marched during his funeral with tears.
    Those thousands and more in Turkey now need to be persuaded that
    Dink's death will not be forgotten and that Turkey must continue its
    efforts to not let this country turn into a wasteland. Otherwise,
    bitterness among the public might yet turn into dangerous indifference
    to ties with their Armenian siblings.




    07 March 2010, Sunday
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