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Parsing French FM's Code Language

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  • Parsing French FM's Code Language

    Parsing French FM's Code Language
    Editorial Board, 14 December 2012

    In mid-December, Laurent Fabius, the foreign minister of France, wrote
    an article in Istanbul's "Hurriyet Daily News" about the
    French-Turkish relations and made references to Armenians. The
    article, titled "France and Turkey: New horizons for a long-standing
    relationship", was a masterpiece of double-talk, coded language,
    waffling, Turkey stroking, diversion, and plain untruths. Let's try to
    translate what the long-time friend of Turkey wrote.

    1. "I hope that one day soon, we can achieve a calm, fair reading of
    history," writes Fabius.
    Translation: What we know is what Armenians claim happened. I hope one
    day we get the Turkish version, and decide for ourselves who is
    telling the truth. No mention that the Genocide has been established
    as a fact by historians of the period, including the International
    Association of Genocide Scholars.
    You've heard Charles Aznavour's weepy ballads. The Armenian version of
    the Genocide is compromised. We hope "one day soon", Turks will come
    up with their version so we can forget the whole thing and share a
    shish-kebab, a doner and Turkish Delight together.

    2. "The question of the Armenian genocide is a sensitive and difficult
    subject that has all too often cast a shadow over the French-Turkish
    bilateral relations."
    Translation: Those pesky, irritating French-Armenians are sabotaging
    amicable relations between France and Turkey.
    "Sensitive and difficult subject" to whom? For Turks who rather see
    the world forget? For Monsieur Fabius? The man who apparently would
    like to see Armenians forget, although he would be appalled if someone
    suggested that his co-religionists forget the Holocaust.

    3. "The tragedy that befell the ancestors of our compatriots of
    Armenian origin."
    Notice how the wily veteran diplomat waffles and refuses to say "genocide".

    4. "My colleague Ahmet Davutoglu has made encouraging statements. I
    quote, 'The Armenians have before them someone who is listening.'"
    Monsieur Fabius isn't lying: Davutoglu is his colleague: they are pair
    of foxes who hope Armenians can be lulled through pretend language and
    false promises.
    And pray tell, when did Davutoglu begin to listen to the Armenians?
    The Turkish foreign minister, a coward who hides his Karait Jewish
    origins, knows too well what Armenians want. There are enough Genocide
    of Armenians books, magazines, newspapers, testimonies from foreign
    and Armenian eyewitnesses, diplomatic and military dispatches, photos,
    movies, and TV documentaries to fill a whole wing of the Louvre. They
    tell chapter and verse what Turkey and Turks did to innocent Armenian
    civilians. These documents state exactly what Armenians want. Is Mr.
    Davutoglu "listening" to the Armenians or to the Turkish or
    Turkish-hired Western "scholars" who have made a career of Genocide
    denial? Is Davutoglu waiting for Armenians to amass documentation
    material to fill the Louvre before he concedes the truth?

    5. "This foreign minister doesn't say nothing happened in 1915."
    Ahem. Many things happened in 1915. The world was at war; four
    emperors lost their crowns; many colonies gained their independence;
    Frank Sinatra was born that year. What is Monsieur Fabius referring
    to? Surely not to the birth of Old Blue Eyes? Perhaps he means to say
    as the Ottoman Empire disappeared many Muslims also died. Perhaps
    Armenians killed these unidentified Muslims.

    6. "For myself, I am not unaware of Turkey's suffering during the
    gradual dismantlement of the Ottoman Empire, with its successions of
    massacres and exoduses."
    There you have it. As predicted in No. 5, Monsieur Fabius doesn't
    mention that Turkey's suffering was its own doing. It entered the war,
    hoping its ally, Germany, would win and Turks would be given the
    opportunity to ravish more lands and enslave more people. And what
    about Fabius' "massacres and exoduses"? Perhaps the unarmed Armenians
    massacred the Turks and then, in a mass exodus, left their ancestral
    homes for the green pastures of the Syrian Desert. Those crazy
    Armenians.

    7. "However,I do believe that the disappearance of the Armenian
    civilization from Anatolian soil warrants some thinking on Turkey's
    part."
    Ah, mendacity, ah, doubletalk. "Anatolian soil," says the minister,
    not Western Armenia, not Armenian Cilicia. "Warrants some thinking on
    Turkey's part"? SOME? For about 15 minutes? Then what?

    8. "As to what is needed to heal the open wounds opened in 1915."
    Fabius is asking the criminal--who has been denying its bloody deed
    for a century--to decide what is needed to heal the open wounds. Not
    Genocide, not theft of Armenian property, not the eviction of
    Armenians from their 4,000-year-old homeland, but "wounds" which
    Turkey might see fit to perhaps discuss, since Ahmetoglu is in a
    listening mode this week.

    Mon Dieu, ministre.

    http://www.keghart.com/Editorial-LFabius


    From: Baghdasarian
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