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Turkey: A Permanent Threat To Armenia

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  • Turkey: A Permanent Threat To Armenia

    TURKEY: A PERMANENT THREAT TO ARMENIA
    By David Boyajian

    http://www.mirrorspectator.com/2012/08/02/turkey-a-permanent-threat-to-armenia/
    August 2, 2012 11:46 am

    If Turkey were to open its border with Armenia and the two established
    diplomatic and trade relations, Turkey would still be a threat
    to Armenia.

    Turkey would be a threat even if it were to acknowledge the Armenian
    Genocide, pay reparations and return stolen Armenian property. And
    the threat to Armenia would remain even if it someday regains its
    homeland which now lies in eastern Turkey.

    Why? Because Turkey's belligerent policies towards Armenians,
    its pan-Turkic goals in the Caucasus and Central Asia and its neo-
    Ottoman ambitions pose essentially the same dangers today as at the
    time of the genocide. And they show no sign of ever changing.

    Aside from a general awareness of the genocide and present-day Turkish
    hostility, howev- er, many Armenians and others are unfamiliar with
    key details of past and present Turkish policies. Consequently,
    they underestimate the dangers that Armenia faces.

    Even the commonly held view that "in 1915 the Young Turk regime
    committed genocide against Armenians in Turkey" is dangerously
    misleading.

    The Genocide actually lasted through 1923, five years after Turkey's
    defeat in WWI. Two regimes conducted the Genocide: Ottoman Young Turk
    and Kemalist. The latter, of course, founded today's "modern" Turkey.

    And the Genocide took place not only in "Turkey" but also, ominously,
    on what was and is today the territory of the Republic of Armenia.

    Endless Genocide

    Turkifying and Islamizing the remnants of its empire was a key reason
    that Turkey destroyed its indigenous Armenian, Assyrian and Greek
    Christians during WWI (1914-18). But Armenians and Armenian soil also
    lay just across the border, in the Caucasus region of the Russian
    empire, directly in the path of Turkey's genocidal pan-Turkic jihad.

    Turkey committed genocide against those Armenians too and ripped
    large chunks of territory from the new Armenian Republic, which had
    just been reborn from Russian Armenia.

    Azeris - Turkey's blood brothers then and now - also conducted
    large-scale massacres of Armenians in the Caucasus in WWI and
    through 1920.

    After Turkey's defeat in 1918, Turkish forces under Kemal (known
    later as Ataturk) contin- ued the Genocide in the Armenian Republic
    through 1920 and in Turkey through 1923.

    Like Turkish leaders today who lie and deceive, Kemal publicly
    professed peaceful intentions toward Armenia. Secretly, however,
    he told his commanders that it is "of the utmost necessity that
    Armenia be both politically and physically eliminated." Kemal, too,
    lopped off chunks of Armenia. Though it resisted heroically, only a
    Soviet takeover in December of 1920 saved Armenia from annihilation.

    These facts are relevant to the perils that Armenia faces today
    because of Turkey's pan- Turkic and neo-Ottoman foreign policies.

    Pan-Turkism

    Since the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991, Turkey has
    established ongoing relationships with Azerbaijan and Central Asia's
    new "Turkic-speaking" countries: Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Turkmenistan
    and Uzbekistan. Turkey has invested billions of dollars and established
    Turkish schools and universities in these countries.

    Turkey's President Abdullah Gul declared that "Kyrgyzstan is our
    ancestral homeland" while visiting that country's International
    Ataturk-Alatoo University.

    Turkey hosts major gas and oil pipelines originating in Baku,
    co-produces weapons with Azerbaijan and trains Azeri troops. In
    Turkic solidarity with Azerbaijan, Turkey has injected itself into the
    Artsakh/Karabagh conflict by closing its border with Armenia for two

    decades. The Turkish-Azeri axis - termed "one nation, two states"
    - harks back to its assault on Armenia during the Genocide. One
    hundred years has changed nothing. Turkey remains enamored of Turkic
    blood bonds.

    In the former Armenian province of Nakhichevan - now part of Azerbaijan
    and emptied of its Armenians - Turkey, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan and
    Kyrgyzstan recently signed a treaty creating the Cooperation Council
    of Turkic Speaking States.

    Let's be clear. Only Soviet control of the Caucasus and Central Asia
    from the 1920s to 1991 and Russian and Chinese dominance since then
    have thwarted Turkey's pan-Turkic goals.

    For several decades, of course, Russia and China have possessed nuclear
    weapons; Turkey has not. Imagine what an arrogant, genocidal Turkey
    would have perpetrated by now had it possessed nuclear weapons.

    Turkey could still, unfortunately, acquire nuclear weapons or other
    WMDs.

    Turkey's dangerous imperial goals today also include "neo-Ottomanism."

    Neo-Ottomanism

    Turkey regards itself as the leader of not only its former colonies in
    the Middle East and Balkans but also the entire Muslim world. Turkey
    is investing heavily in those regions.

    Its Education Ministry recently released multi-media material that
    shows Armenia, Cyprus and parts of Bulgaria, Georgia, Greece, Iraq and
    Syria as being part of Turkey. Turkey claimed it was just a mistake.

    "You are the grandchildren of the Ottomans. It will be the Ottomans
    who will make the world tremble again. If the Ottomans do not come
    back, the unbelievers will never be brought down to their knees." A
    Turkish clergyman thundered those words to a frenzied Turkish rally
    in Belgium two decades ago.

    In attendance were his admirers: Necmettin Erbakan, soon to be Turkey's
    prime minister and the latter's proteges, Recep Tayyip Erdogan
    and Abdullah Gul, Turkey's current prime minister and president,
    respectively.

    Far from renouncing its bloody Ottoman past, such examples illustrate
    that Turkey embraces and wants to recreate it. Consequently, its
    threats against Armenia must never be taken lightly.

    Turkish Threats

    During the Artsakh/Karabagh war, then- Turkish President Turgut Ozal
    repeatedly threatened Armenia. Armenians, he warned, "had not learned
    the lessons" of WWI - that is, the Genocide.

    According to Leonidas Chrysanthopoulos, former Greek ambassador to
    Armenia, US and French intelligence sources confirm that Turkey was
    poised to invade Armenia in 1993. Ruslan Khasbulatov, a Chechen who
    was speaker of the Russian Supreme Soviet and an opponent of Russian
    President Boris Yeltsin, had secretly given Turkey the go-ahead to
    invade Armenia if he toppled Yelstin. Fortunately, Yelstin survived
    the challenge.

    If not for the Armenian-Russian alliance of these past two decades,
    Turkey and Azerbaijan would have jointly attacked Armenia, with
    catastrophic consequences.

    Despite Turkey's hostile record, some Armenians have fallen victim
    to the constant drumbeat of propaganda that Turkey is "reforming."

    Turkish non-Reforms

    Some even believe that acknowledgement of the Armenian Genocide would
    be tantamount to Turkey's having "reformed." That's absurd and a
    serious mistake.

    An acknowledgment, which would almost certainly be incomplete,
    insincere or reversible, could psychologically disarm Armenians into
    letting down their guard. By not owning up to the Genocide, therefore,
    Turkey may unwittingly be doing Armenians a favor.

    Turkey's actual record is one of repression, followed by mass violence,
    interspersed with so-called "reforms."

    In the 19th century, large-scale massacres of Armenians, particularly
    those of the 1890s, followed Ottoman "reforms" such as the Tanzimat
    (anti-discrimination decrees). The Young Turk "reform" revolution
    of 1908 - cheered in the beginning by Armenians, Greeks and other
    national groups - was followed by the 1909 Adana massacres, the
    1915-23 extermination and genocidal attacks on Russian Armenia and
    the Republic of Armenia.

    Then along came the new "reformed, modern" Turkey of 1923. It
    confiscated Armenian property, destroyed Armenian churches and
    Turkified Armenian city and village names. In 1943, Turkey unleashed
    its malicious Capital Tax program against Armenians, Greeks and Jews.

    Later came the devastating Istanbul riots of 1955. Did we mention
    Turkey's massacre of Greek Cypriot civilians and ongoing occupation of
    northern Cyprus? The death squads and torture chambers? The repression,
    deportation and massacre of Kurds and other minorities and the jailing
    of dissidents and journalists?

    All the while, we are told that Turkey is "reforming."

    Turkish Syndrome

    In addition to Turkey's policies, its political leaders pose a danger
    because of what one may term Turkish Political Personality Syndrome.

    This syndrome is on full display today in "modern" Turkey's constant
    threats, chest-beat- ing, belligerence, malignant narcissism,
    hypocrisy, extortion, despotism, cruelty, crude- ness, lies, broken
    pledges and, of course, the use of violence.

    The countless victims of Turkish violence down through the centuries
    are proof of Turkish leaders' disordered state of mind.

    There is little indication that either Turkey's policies toward
    Armenians or their leaders' disorder will ever change. Indeed, they
    may grow more threatening.

    Yet, Armenians still hope that Turkey will change. How to make them
    aware that the Turkish threat is here to stay? Education.

    Young people will, of course, become the adults who conduct the
    political, economic, cultural and military affairs of Armenia. They
    must be equipped intellectually and psychologically to deal with
    Turkey.

    >From a young age, Armenian students must study - but not in Turkish
    schools - Turkish history, geopolitics and language and their
    application to present-day Armenian-Turkish relations.

    The Turkish political personality and its violent and deceitful
    tendencies must be dissected and understood.

    This is not easy, for two reasons. First, Armenians are bombarded by
    pro-Turkish and "reconciliation" propaganda from around the world
    and even by some Armenians. Second, we Armenians are unlike Turks
    and often have difficulty understanding their political culture.

    Ultimately, future generations of Armenians will have to choose whom
    to believe. Will it be the allegedly "reformed, modern" Turkey? The
    international media that kowtows to Turkey? Countries that historically
    have betrayed Armenia?

    Or will Armenians learn from the past and the hard-earned wisdom of
    their forebears?

    Their decision may determine whether Armenia lives or dies.

    (David Boyajian is a freelance journalist. Many of his articles are
    archived on Armeniapedia.org.)

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