Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Turkey And The 100,000 Armenians

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

  • Turkey And The 100,000 Armenians

    TURKEY AND THE 100,000 ARMENIANS
    by David Pryce-Jones

    National Review Online
    http://pryce-jones.nationalreview.com/post/ ?q=NDgxMzE2MWI4OTUxMDU0ZmYwOTg3YzI1Y2VjMmZhN2Q=
    Ma rch 18 2010

    Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the Turkish prime minister, has been in London,
    with a photo-op next to Gordon Brown, his British opposite number,
    on the steps of Downing Street. The ceremony, the courtesy, goes with
    the job. In return, Erdogan did something extraordinary. He threatened
    to expel 100,000 Armenians from Turkey. "They are not my citizens. I am
    not obliged to keep them in my country." My citizens? My country? Mass
    expulsion? This is the mind-set and the language of a dictator.

    One of the mysteries of official Turkey is the point-blank refusal
    to discuss the deaths of probably 1.5 million Armenians as a result
    of the First World War. These unfortunates were faced with massacre
    or flight, which usually amounted to the same thing. Genocide is a
    valid description. Hitler, you remember, used the precedent of the
    Armenians to apply to the Jews.

    In contrast, Turkish intellectuals, including historians and the Nobel
    Prize winner Orhan Pamuk, do not flinch from examining what happened,
    even though they may be penalized by the state for it. What is this
    about? All the First War regimes involved are long since vanished.

    This should be a matter of the historical record. Yet official Turkey
    evidently feels that any admission of deliberate mass-murder would
    be the source of permanent shame.

    A Congressional Foreign Affairs Committee has just passed a
    resolution that the fate of the Armenians was indeed genocide. The
    Swedish parliament has passed a similar motion. Turkey has recalled
    its ambassadors to the capitals concerned. Erdogan doesn't seem to
    realize it, but the threat now to expel 100,000 Armenians is an open
    admission of a guilty conscience.

    This is another stage in Turkey's changing political stance, whereby it
    is dropping out of the West and moving over to Islamism. The Erdogan
    government has trumped up charges of conspiracy against the secular
    military, and is purging the judiciary and academia. In London now,
    Erdogan has said that to suspect Iran of developing a nuclear weapon
    is to fall for a fiction. A commentator in the Times points out that
    Turkey is a member of the U.N. Security Council and can do its bit
    for Iran in that forum.

    In the context, the threat of expelling 100,000 people is less a
    hang-over from the past than evidence of the kind of world already
    taking shape.
Working...
X