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Genocide - The Armenian Saga Continues

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  • Genocide - The Armenian Saga Continues

    GENOCIDE - THE ARMENIAN SAGA CONTINUES
    By Harry Hagopian

    Ekklesia
    http://www.ekklesia.co.uk/node/ 11526
    March 16 2010

    If we do act, in however small a way, we don't have to wait for some
    grand Utopian future. The future is an infinite succession of presents,
    and to live now as we think human beings should live, in defiance of
    all that is bad around us, is itself a marvellous victory - Professor
    Howard Zinn, 1922-2010.

    Is the cost in spoilt relations with Turkey outweighed by respect
    for the memory of well over one million Armenian victims?

    This was probably an over-riding question in the minds of the 45
    members of the House Foreign Affairs Committee on 4 March 2010. Should
    they adopt a non-binding resolution urging President Obama to use
    the G-word on 24th April during his annual address to the Armenian
    American communities in Massachusetts, New York, California, and
    across the whole USA?

    But let me first look at the dynamics of this exercise, and whether,
    or how, 2010 differed from those attempts in previous years" Unlike
    previous US Administration heavyweights, President Barack Obama, as
    well as his top two aides, Vice President Joseph Biden and Secretary
    of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, have all supported labelling those
    massacres as genocide when they served in the Senate.

    During the presidential campaign, President Obama boldly stated, "I
    believe that the Armenian Genocide is not an allegation, a personal
    opinion, or a point of view, but rather a widely-documented fact
    supported by an overwhelming body of historical evidence ... As
    President, I will recognise the Armenian Genocide." Yet, last week,
    in the face of such a resolution, all three key politicians faced a
    quandary and laboured quite hard to dissuade the Committee members
    of the House from voting in its favour.

    In 2007, the chairman of the panel, the late Tom Lantos of California,
    did not sponsor the bill although he ended up voting for it after
    agonising over the decision in his opening remarks. This time, Lantos'
    successor as chairman, Howard Berman of California, not only did not
    agonise over his position, he even co-sponsored the bill alongside
    Adam Schiff of California. Yet, despite the proactive attitude of the
    chairman, H. Res. 252 passed narrowly in 2010 by 23 votes against 22,
    whereas the difference in 2007 was a more spacious 27 votes to 21.

    Will the resolution - as adopted by the Committee - proceed to a vote
    in the full House? Highly unlikely, would be my opinion. Not unlike
    2007, it is almost safe to assume that House speaker Nancy Pelosi
    (Democrat, California) would decide to keep it from the floor of the
    House although she too has been a vocal supporter of recognition in
    the past.

    Turkish lobbying in the USA is becoming increasingly more professional
    and aggressive. Ironically enough, its main lobbying engine is
    led by former House majority leader, Richard A Gephardt (Democrat,
    Missouri) who had urged recognition of the Armenian genocide when he
    was in Congress. According to the records, the public-relations firm
    Fleishman Hillard also holds a contract with Turkey that is worth over
    $100,000 a month. The Turkish government has ostensibly spent millions
    on lobbying in Washington over the past decade and the Gephardt Group
    collects some $70,000 a month for lobbying services from Ankara.

    Another group is the Turkish Coalition of America that has also
    targeted the districts of committee members who are deemed potential
    swing votes.

    Conversely, the Armenian government, which had previously enlisted
    BKSH & Associates and Burson-Marsteller, is now focusing its lobbying
    efforts more specifically on the Armenian National Committee (ANC)
    and the Armenian Assembly of America (AAA), which together spent
    roughly $380,000 on lobbying last year.

    In 2007, seven out of eight Jews on the committee voted for the then
    resolution - albeit with heavy hearts - with the sole exception being
    Robert Wexler of Florida who was a supporter of the Turkish position.

    In 2010, all the Jewish votes were in favour of the resolution. This
    statistic might help diminish the magnified hype over the fact that
    American Jews - and Israel - were together punishing Turkey for its
    criticism of Israeli actions during the Gaza war.

    Let me now touch upon a number of related issues that also flow out
    of this resolution.

    The first issue centres on the two Turkey-Armenia protocols. Signed in
    the midst of much fanfare in Zurich on 10 October 2009, and including
    a planned commission on historical issues, they are now bogged
    down by Turkish objections and ploys that are forestalling their
    parliamentary ratification. This resolution will not directly impact
    the future of those protocols, since Turkish intentions toward them
    are, alas, questionable anyway, and Turkey is using them as a way of
    pressuring Armenia into ceding some of its vital strategic interests -
    particularly over the enclave of Nagorny-Karabakh.

    However, notwithstanding the separateness of both those issues ad
    abstractum, I would add that the US is sending Turkey a coded message
    that it had better proceed with the ratification of those protocols
    - which it, alongside Russia, the EU and even OSCE, supported quite
    strenuously. It is in their geo-strategic interests for the Southern
    Caucasus - or else America would let go of its political sword of
    Damocles and recognise officially this first genocide of the 20th
    century.

    Another issue much closer to home for me addresses the position of
    the British government. Whilst the US grapples with this question
    year-in-year-out, successive British governments - Labour and Tory -
    have constantly fudged over the genocide. Despite the clear assertions
    of the most eminent British and international historians that Armenians
    suffered genocide, let alone the opinion of Geoffrey Robertson, QC,
    that the Armenian experience fulfilled the legal requirements of
    the UN Convention on Genocide 1948, our government has constantly
    denied this fact for fear of upsetting Turkey - going so far as to
    refuse to include the Armenian genocide in Holocaust Memorial Day -
    although Wales has valiantly bucked the system.

    Overall, US policy toward the genocide oscillates between an approach
    based on conscience and morality versus one of political realism and
    foreign policy prerogatives. American conscience and Armenian-American
    votes would tend to support recognition, but an acknowledgement of
    the 'political consequences' of such recognition always interferes
    at the last minute.

    However, I would argue that the US, not unlike the UK, is puffing up
    the Turkish riposte. Whilst it is true that Turkey would inevitably
    recall its Ambassador for a while and threaten to sever all political,
    military and trade relations with the US (including use of the
    Incirlik airbase), it is clear to me that a lot of bluff and bluster
    lie in its sempiternal démarches. I recall the doomsday scenarios
    Turkey drew when France recognised the genocide and passed a law
    criminalising its denial, or the hubbub with Switzerland and a number
    of EU countries. Yet things always quietened down after the initial
    outburst due to the inescapable realisation by Turkey that it needs
    the US and Europe irrespective of its dramatic [petulant] brinkmanship.

    I am also heartened by the increasing outspokenness of intellectuals,
    academics and journalists in Turkey over the fact that Turkish denials
    are spurious falsehoods that need to be addressed directly sooner
    or later. Although there is a blackout on any education about this
    genocide in modern-day Turkey, there are now a number of Turks who
    are challenging the legal taboos (particularly Article 301 of the
    Turkish Penal Code) by questioning the horrors perpetrated by Ottoman
    Turkey during WWI. An example is a powerful article entitled Genocide
    by Ahmet Altan in Taraf on 6th March (excerpted):

    Amongst this entire hullabaloo, my favourite comment comes from a
    Turkish speaker who denounces this decision: "Turkey is no longer a
    country that can easily be humiliated." When a commission of the US
    Congress votes for "genocide", we are "humiliated". Do you know what
    humiliation is?

    Turkey is not humiliated because that commission approved that
    resolution with a difference of one vote. Turkey is humiliated because
    it itself cannot shed light on its own history, has to delegate this
    matter into other hands, is frightened like hell from its own past,
    has to squirm like mad in order to cover up truths.

    The real issue is this: Why is the "Armenian Genocide" a matter of
    discussion in American, French and Swiss parliaments and not in the
    parliament of the Turkish Republic? Why can we, ourselves, not discuss
    a matter that we deem so vital that we perceive the difference of
    one vote as a source of humiliation?

    If you cannot discuss your own problems, you deserve to be humiliated.

    If you keep silent in a matter that you find so important, you deserve
    to be humiliated. If you try to shut others up, you are humiliated even
    more. The whole world interprets the killing of so many Armenians - a
    number we cannot even estimate properly - as "genocide". The history
    of every society is tainted with crime and blood. We cannot undo
    what has been done but we can show the courage to face the truths,
    to discuss the reality. We can give up trying to silence the world
    out of concern for incriminating the founders of the republic.

    We can ask questions. No one dares humiliate brave people who are
    not afraid of the truth. If you feel humiliated, you should take a
    hard look at yourself and what you hide.

    George W Bush called the Armenian genocide "historic mass killings".

    Bill Clinton settled on "deportations and massacres". Last year,
    Barack Obama used the chapter of Armenian-Turkish football diplomacy
    that preceded the signing of the two protocols as justification
    for the neutered use of the Armenian term Medz Yeghern (or great
    catastrophe). But as Robert Fisk wondered in his article of 6 March,
    what would happen today if Germany suddenly decided that the Jewish
    Holocaust was not genocide: would America lobby that Germany should
    be allowed to get away with such a travesty?

    24 April 2010 is six weeks away: will the truth [not] come out? After
    all, did the Swedish Parliament not speak it last week?

    --------- © Harry Hagopian is a former executive secretary for the
    Middle East Council of Churches (MECC). He is now an ecumenical,
    legal and political consultant for the Armenian Church. As well
    as advising the Catholic Bishops' Conference of England and
    Wales on Middle East and inter-faith questions, Dr Hagopian is
    involved with ACEP, the Paris-based Christians in Political Action
    (http://www.chretiensenpolitique.eu/). His own website is Epektasis
    (http://www.epektasis.net/) Dr Hagopian has written extensively on
    the Armenian Genocide for Ekklesia and many other global news and
    analysis sources.
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