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ANKARA: France-Turkey: What Went Wrong?

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  • ANKARA: France-Turkey: What Went Wrong?

    FRANCE-TURKEY: WHAT WENT WRONG?

    Hurriyet Daily News
    Jan 14 2012
    Turkey

    The Orwellian bill punishing the "denial" of the unsubstantiated
    "Armenian genocide" claims will be discussed at the end of January
    in the French Senate.

    France is alone in such a case. However, France has the longest
    tradition of alliance with Turkey. It was the first major power to
    understand what Armenian nationalism really is, and as a result,
    to break its alliance with the Armenian committees after WWI and
    sign peace with the Kemalists, who even received weapons against
    the Greek invaders whose crimes were publicly denounced by French
    diplomacy in 1922, by order of the President of the Ministers Council
    Raymond Poincare.

    So, beyond the sui generis case of Nicolas Sarkozy, what went wrong?

    Having arrived en masse in France as soon as the 1920s, the Armenian
    nationalists secured, through a long-term effort, the unconditional
    support of a few dozen MPs. But this is not the main problem: The
    overwhelming majority of the deputies did not attend the vote of Dec.

    22, 2011, chiefly because they did not dare to express their opposition
    to the bill.

    The main problem is the Turkish immigrants in France are, as a whole,
    the less educated and the less organized in the West. For years, this
    community was rather neglected and received too little encouragement
    to organize itself. There are definitely improvements, but they are
    still ongoing and too recent to prevent the vote in the National
    Assembly or the principle of a discussion in the Senate.

    Regarding the Armenian issue, virtually no scholarly book rejecting
    the "Armenian genocide" label was translated into French since 1991.

    In contrast, Kāmuran Gurun's "Armenian File" was published in French
    in 1984, one year after the original Turkish edition and two years
    before the English edition. The resources of the anti-defamation French
    legislation, more protective than the U.S. one, were very rarely used
    against the hate propaganda of Armenian and Kurdish nationalists.

    Regardless, the U.S. case can provide a certain inspiration. There was
    an absurd crisis between Ankara and Washington in 1974, when Congress
    decided, because of the Greek and Armenian lobbies, to forbid the
    sale of military weapons to Turkey. In large part because of that,
    the Assembly of Turkish American Associations was eventually created
    in 1979. The serious problems which took place at the beginning of
    the 2000s (Armenian resolution in 2000, Iraq War and its aftermath)
    led to the creation of the Turkish Coalition of America, Turkish
    Cultural Foundation and Turkish American Legal Defense Fund.

    What the shared Franco-Turkish interests need, as does the value of
    free speech, are a similar and coherent strategy of organization,
    education and legal defense. That means a quick conclusion of
    the preliminary work to establish the Coordination Committee
    of Franco-Turkish Associations; an effort to diffuse widely the
    Turkish culture in France by stressing the old, historical ties;
    permanent structures of big business, politicians and others to
    fight anti-Turkish propaganda and bills; and a permanent structure
    of legal defense.

    An opportunity to crush the Armenian nationalism in France was missed
    because the anti-ASALA legal cases from December 1984 to November
    1986, remarkably managed, were incomplete; Jean-Marc "Ara" Toranian
    in particular, spokesman of ASALA from 1976 to 1983, now co-chairman
    of the Coordination Council of France's Armenian Associations, was
    never sued for the glorification of crime and contempt of court. The
    current opportunity should not be missed: There is an exceptionally
    widespread exasperation, in the country of Voltaire and Diderot,
    against the special ethnic interests which advocate a drastic
    limitation of free speech and are damaging the relations of France
    with a rising regional power.

    Maxime Gauin is a researcher at the International Strategic Research
    Organization (USAK-ISRO) and a Ph.D. candidate at the Middle East
    Technical University Department of History.




    From: A. Papazian
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