Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

A Moral And Political Dilemma

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

  • A Moral And Political Dilemma

    A MORAL AND POLITICAL DILEMMA
    By Edmond Y. Azadian

    http://www.mirrorspectator.com/2013/01/24/a-moral-and-political-dilemma/
    EDITORIAL | JANUARY 24, 2013 1:12 PM

    Upon the nomination of Republican Sen. Chuck Hagel as the next
    secretary of defense, a political firestorm broke out involving gays,
    the Israeli lobby in Washington and the Armenians. The nominee being a
    straight talker has offended the above groups, and perhaps many others
    throughout his political career. Now, as he faces the uphill battle
    for his confirmation before the Armed Services Committee and later
    the full Senate, he has to answer all those groups in a satisfactory
    manner to win the confirmation.

    On the other hand the nominee for the position of secretary of state,
    former presidential candidate and current senator, John Kerry, does
    not anticipate hurdles.

    Before we draw our battle lines, we need to postulate the offenses
    of which the Republican maverick Hagel is accused.

    First, the gays have an axe to grind with Mr. Hagel who had remarked
    in 1998 that James Hormel, a philanthropist and later, an ambassador to
    Luxembourg, was "openly, aggressively gay," the inference being that he
    was not a suitable candidate for an ambasadorial post in that country.

    Next in line is the Jewish lobby with the "neo-cons" in the background
    because of Hagel's remark that "the Jewish lobby in the United States
    intimidates a lot of people."

    Now all the political weapons in the arsenal of the Israeli lobbyists
    are directed against Mr. Hagel, calling him anti-Israel, anti-Semitic,
    soft on Israel's enemies and so on. A crusade has already been mounted
    against him. There is a Kaf kaesque irony in standing up to deny
    the obvious, just for the sake of political expediency. And indeed,
    Hagel has tried to accommodate his critics in an interview given on
    January 7, 2013, to the Lincoln Journal Star where he stated that
    his record demonstrates his "unequivocal, total support for Israel
    [...] There is not one shred of evidence that I'm anti-Israel, not
    one vote that matters hurt Israel."

    This kind of categorical denial, to save his career, only confirms
    rather than denies his earlier statement that the "Jewish lobby
    intimidates a lot of people."

    Mr. Hagel tried to come clean with the gay community stating that
    he had demonstrated "insensitivity" towards gays, meaning that his
    views have evolved since over the issue.

    These are powerful interest groups in America which any aspirant
    for a political position can ignore at his or her own risk. In order
    for any campaign to succeed, it must be aligned with the interests of
    other powerful groups. This time around, Armenians are in good company,
    because not only have they been handling the firing line but also many
    human rights groups and prominent Jewish leaders have joined the fray.

    Hagel's statements are unfortunate and abominably wrong. "What happened
    in 1915 happened in 1915," Hagel said during a 2005 trip to Armenia
    when he was serving in the senate. "As a United States senator,
    I think the better way to deal with this is to leave it open to
    historians and others to decide what happened and why."

    This is a vintage Genocide-denial recipe concocted in Ankara and
    delivered hot to Mr. Hagel. The former senator compounded his
    insensitivity by voting against the Armenian Genocide bill in the
    Senate.

    Now, as a result, a powerful ally has rushed to the rescue of the
    Armenians: "What Chuck Hagel said in his press conference in Armenia
    in 2005 regarding the Genocide of the Armenians by Turks is shameful,"
    said Walter Reich, a former director of the US Holocaust Memorial
    Museum. "In his forthcoming confirmation hearings, senators should
    confront him with what he said and should expect him to address
    it. It is a disgrace and a disservice to the memory of the victims
    to say that their murder should be forgotten in the service of the
    peace process, as if a real peace process is possible if one hides
    or ignores or mischaracterizes what actually happened," Reich said

    It is better said than any Armenian could have formulated it. It is
    a very happy coincidence that Jewish leaders have taken up our cause,
    of course not without self-interest. But that's the nature of politics
    and we can only be thankful to them for articulating so forcefully
    the Cause of the Armenian Genocide.

    Now comes the moment of truth; Mr. Hagel has apologized to the Jewish
    and gay lobbies, he has yet to make a statement about his scathing
    remarks on the Armenian Genocide. We can easily extrapolate the reason
    why he has been silent so far on the Armenian issue, after so much
    outcry. The answer is simple; those lobbies are powerful enough that
    every politician has to reckon with. What clout do the Armenians wield
    in the US and the Caucasus region? The answer to that question alone
    will determine Mr. Hagel's actions and behavior.

    Armenian lobbying groups are not entirely in harmony - the scandal
    about the Genocide Museum is the hallmark of our weakness. Besides,
    large contingents of Armenians have been voting with their pocket
    books, with little or no regard about this country's problems and
    exigencies in Armenia. President Obama won the election for his second
    term by empowering a coalition of Latinos, blacks, gays, immigrants
    and the dispossessed, while Tea Party zealots and unelected neo-cons
    took for granted that they owned the country.Where were the Armenians
    in the election shuffle? Some were trapped in "single issue syndrome,"
    others were out of sync with the political currents and crying needs
    of Armenia and the Genocide recognition. This situation can only teach
    one lesson; unless we mobilize the masses for political action, Mr.

    Hagel, and for that matter, any other politicians will never oblige.

    On the other side of the equation is Turkey's growing political
    clout in the world scene and Azerbaijan's dangerous escalation of
    militarization, while Armenia's work force abandons the country in
    droves and Diasporan armchair politicians have only criticism to
    direct at their homeland, without any actual input. But there is a
    silver lining in Chuck Hagel's nomination yet that cannot be viewed
    as an isolated issue. It has to be analyzed within the context of
    broader political developments.

    When the first President George Bush was elected, he promised a
    "gentler, kinder America." But all we witnessed was a series of wars
    and bloodbaths around the world, especially with the election of the
    younger Bush, who became a hostage to the neo-con cabal, and fell into
    the trap which President Eisenhower had warned against: the takeover
    of the country by the military-industrial complex. Economic collapse,
    insecurity and instability around the world became the standard and
    pessimism reigned.

    President Obama was elected with the promise of improving the economy,
    overhauling the healthcare system and winding down the senseless wars
    abroad. His opponent, Mitt. Romney, was promising $15 billion more to
    the Army, which did not know what to do with it. That was, of course,
    in line with the neo-con policies of supplying cannon fodder for the
    growing military-industrial complex.

    Chuck Hagel was chosen first as a Republican, to deflect criticism
    against the administration when it takes up the task of sizing down
    the Armed Forces, to become leaner yet more efficient and affordable.

    In his inaugural speech, President Obama stated: "We, the people,
    still believe that enduring security and lasting peace do not require
    perpetual war [...] We are also the heirs of those who won peace and
    not just the war, who turned sworn enemies into the surest friends."

    These statements introduce monumental strategic changes to the
    White House world views. Mr. Hagel fits in the perspective of the
    president's policies. Plus, as Bill Keller stated in his op-ed piece
    in the January 20 issue of the New York Times, Obama's foreign and
    defense policies are directed from the White House.

    President Obama seems to have subscribed to Moshe Dayan's statement,
    "If you want to make peace, you don't talk to your friends; you talk
    to your enemies."

    If this peaceful policy is implemented, we can see a relaxation in
    the intensifying Cold War with Russia over the plans to use Turkish
    territory to install new missile systems aimed at Moscow. We can also
    anticipate further diplomacy with Iran, rather than threats whose
    fallout could be disastrous for Armenia.

    Currently Washington has taken a neutral position between Japan and
    China over the dispute of coastal islands.

    Since Mr. Hagel is amenable to develop his views, and since he can only
    implement the president's policies, we may expect some light at the
    end of the tunnel. The secretary of defense can no longer be a loose
    canon; he has to implement the president's policies. While it is true
    that Mr. Obama still hesitates to use the word "genocide" with regard
    to Armenian history, his views thus far are closer to the historical
    truth uttered by any US president, with the exception of Ronald Reagan.

    Hagel's nomination still remains a moral and political dilemma until
    he makes good on our expectations.

Working...
X