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Pan-Turkism Anew: Aliyev Voices The "Great Turkic World" Idea In Kaz

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  • Pan-Turkism Anew: Aliyev Voices The "Great Turkic World" Idea In Kaz

    PAN-TURKISM ANEW: ALIYEV VOICES THE "GREAT TURKIC WORLD" IDEA IN KAZAKHSTAN SUMMIT
    By Aris Ghazinyan

    ArmeniaNow
    25.10.11 | 13:09

    Photo: www.president.kz

    The Cooperation Council of Turkic Language Speaking States held a
    summit last week in the capital of Kazakhstan. This institute of
    Turkic solidarity was established by the decision made two years ago
    during the 9th Summit of leaders of Turkic language speaking states
    in Nakhijevan.

    It was an outstanding summit when in the presence of leaders of Turkey,
    Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and high-ranking officials from a number of
    other Turkic language speaking states, Azeri president Ilham Aliyev
    stated: "Nachijevan is an ancient Azeri land. The separation of
    Zangezur- a historically authentic Azeri land - from Azerbaijan and
    its annexation to Armenia at the time geographically dismembered the
    great Turkic world."

    Armenia viewed this statement as a potential threat, and as an
    expression of pan-Turkism only under new political circumstances.

    And so now the first summit of the Cooperation Council of Turkic
    Language Speaking States was held in Almaty, during which the Azeri
    president declared: "Turkic world is a great world! We have to make
    it become even more united. We have all the means for that. First of
    all, there is a strong political will."

    This might seem like an innocent statement. However, from the
    perspective of the Armenian perception of the very concept of "Turkic
    world" is quite unequivocally associated with "the Great Turan"
    (Turan is the Persian word for Central Asia) - the very idea by
    which the Armenian nation has been victimized. In the beginning of
    last century two innocent scientific concepts (Turkic and Aryan) were
    used by Pan-Turkism followers and Nazis in a way that the contemporary
    usage of these terms can't help but objectively sound ominous.

    During the summit Aliyev also stressed: "The main issue Azerbaijan is
    facing is the Armenian-Azeri one, the Nagorno-Karabakh problem. It
    is a source of the biggest threat and injustice not only towards
    us, but the whole region. Armenia committed ethnic purges against
    Azeris. As a result of that policy around one million Azeris have
    become refugees and migrants in their own motherland; 20 percent of
    our lands are occupied."

    Obviously, such statements cannot be purely viewed in the context
    organizers of such summits commonly voice: "strengthening economic
    and cultural ties with brother republics". Quite the opposite, it
    perfectly fits into the historic context.

    Back in 1933, during the period of drastic cooling of relations between
    Moscow and Ankara, Turkish leader Mustafa Kemal stated: "One day
    Russia will lose control over the nations it is keeping tightly in its
    hands today. The world then would reach a new level. And at that very
    moment Turkey has to know exactly what to do. Our brothers by blood,
    faith and language are under Russia's reign. We have to be ready to
    support them. Our common language is our bridge, our common faith
    is our bridge, our common history is our bridge. We have to remember
    our roots. We should not wait for them to reach out for us; we have
    to draw nearer to them ourselves. One fine day Russia will fall."

    This "eastern vector" specified by the founder of the republican
    Turkey has remained the most important guideline for the country's
    political elite for the following several decades.

    Leader of modern Turkey Abdulla Gul's speech at the Nakhijevan
    summit is exemplary: "Nakhijevan is native and precious not only to
    Azerbaijan, but to Turkey as well. The border between Azerbaijan and
    Turkey in the Nakhijevani region is physically small, but politically
    this 10-12-kilometer-long border has huge significance. This border
    of ours is a symbolic transition geographically linking Turkey with
    Turkic republics."

    If today's use of the term "Aryan" is under strict "international
    control" (and is practically impossible from high international
    rostrums), things are different with the "Turkic" concept. To a
    certain extent, it is a consequence of who has, and when, condemned
    the crimes committed by Nazis and Pan-Turkism supporters.

    It is the lack of the total international condemnation of the crime
    of the Armenian Genocide that has allowed the concept of "Turkic"
    to return into the scientific ethno-linguistic arena, and conditions
    the world community's indifference to the application of that ominous
    term today.

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