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  • Scholarship, Manufacturing Doubt, And Genocide Denial

    SCHOLARSHIP, MANUFACTURING DOUBT, AND GENOCIDE DENIAL
    By Marc Mamigonian

    http://www.armenianweekly.com/2013/05/02/scholarship-manufacturing-doubt-and-genocide-denial/
    May 2, 2013

    Scholarship, Manufacturing Doubt, and Genocide Denial (1) The Armenian
    Weekly April 2013 Magazine (Download in PDF)

    Doubt is our product since it is the best means of competing with the
    'body of fact' that exists in the mind of the general public.

    It is also the means of establishing a controversy...

    - Brown & Williamson tobacco company memorandum (1969) (2)

    Denial of the Armenian Genocide began concurrently with the execution
    of the Armenian Genocide. As the Ottoman-Armenian population was
    massacred and deported, the Ottoman leadership constructed a narrative
    that, with periodic revisions and refinements, remains in place today:
    Armenians were disloyal and rebellious, a threat to security and the
    war effort; it was therefore necessary to temporarily relocate them;
    and measures would be taken to protect them and safeguard their
    property and assets.

    Each element of this narrative, and each measure taken to give it
    substance, was a fabrication. What was important, however, was that
    each part of it could be made to appear true. The fabrications came
    to be accepted as truth in Turkey as Mustafa Kemal, the founder of
    the new Turkish Republic, institutionalized the official narrative
    about the Armenians that had already been drafted by the Committee
    of Union and Progress (CUP) leadership that planned and implemented
    the genocide. (3)

    This was all well and good for Turkey, but it was one thing to
    manufacture a fake history for the consumption of its own people,
    and quite another to export it to foreign markets such as the United
    States, where the genocide had been heavily reported in the press
    and public sentiment aroused to assist survivors. (4)

    Today, nearly 100 years on, there is a large and constantly growing
    body of research and documentation of the Armenian Genocide that
    increasingly draws on previously inaccessible Ottoman-Turkish archival
    sources. Even in Turkey, a growing number of people question the
    government-mandated version of events. An observer could be forgiven
    for supposing that denial of the Armenian Genocide must be nearly
    non-existent at this point.

    And yet denial of the Armenian Genocide is seeping into academia
    and mainstream discourse. In an earlier article, (5) I explored
    "how genocide denial has evolved a more effective model that seeks
    to establish itself as the legitimate 'other side of the story.'" I
    would like here to delve further back and look at the potential roots
    of some of the modern strategies used by the Turkish state and those
    who aid its efforts to "manufacture doubt" about the Armenian Genocide.

    This calls for an examination of the cigarette industry's 50-plus-year
    effort to create a permanent smokescreen of controversy around the
    "alleged" link between smoking and cancer, as Big Tobacco provided
    a paradigm for other large-scale efforts to deny unpleasant
    truths--including modern denial of the Armenian Genocide.

    ***

    How it came to pass that Armenian Americans began to raise the issue
    of recognition of and justice for the Armenian Genocide, particularly
    after 1965 and with increased intensity in the 1970's, is a complex
    story. (6) In brief, a generation of scholars and activists began
    an effort to educate the wider American public about the crime that
    had been committed decades before, and to work for recognition and
    ultimately justice.

    By the late 1970's and early 1980's, Turkey was on the defensive in
    this public relations war in the U.S. (7) Even though Turkey had, for
    decades, relied on state-to-state contact with the U.S. and called
    upon the U.S. Department of State to represent its interests (8)
    in the name of preserving good relations with an important trading
    partner and post-World War II military ally, this was no longer
    sufficient in the public realm. For Turkey, the solution was to try
    to win the public relations war. (9) This required expanding its
    range of responses to the problem.

    The renewed vigor and relative success of Armenian-American activism
    after 1965 must have taken Turkey by surprise. In this period, it was
    not until 1975 that Federal Foreign Agents Registration Act reports
    show Turkey engaging public relations firms for purposes other than
    travel and tourism promotion. (10) In 1975, Turkey began working
    with Manning, Selvage, & Lee, Inc., "a public relations firm [that]
    disseminates material on behalf of the Government of Turkey for the
    purpose of influencing 'the attitude of the public and the Congress
    toward Turkey.'" In the following years, other firms would be added:
    Edelman International Inc., Doremus, and most importantly, Gray & Co.,
    (11) and Hill & Knowlton.

    ***

    In establishing a relationship with Hill & Knowlton, Turkey attached
    itself to one of the largest and most influential public relations
    firms in the world, with considerable experience in the kind of
    narrative re-framing that Turkey needed. It was Hill & Knowlton that
    in the 1950's had devised a PR strategy for Big Tobacco when it was
    confronted with mounting scientific evidence of the direct tie between
    smoking and lung cancer. (12) Articles had appeared in scientific
    journals and widely read popular pieces were spreading the news to a
    broader readership. The industry faced a public relations nightmare
    and falling stock prices. (13)

    On Dec. 15, 1953, the heads of the major tobacco companies held an
    unprecedented summit to address these developments which threatened
    their lucrative businesses. In attendance was John Hill of Hill &
    Knowlton, who formulated a plan that would allow the industry to
    stall for decades and to shape the discussion around a manufactured
    "controversy" rather than the emerging scientific consensus. In the
    words of author and cancer researcher Devra Davis, this plan:

    can be summed up very simply: create doubt. Be prepared to buy the
    best expertise available to insist that more research is needed
    before conclusions can be reached. [The tobacco industry] would
    marshal its own experts to magnify the appearance of a scientific
    debate long after the science was in fact unequivocal. John Hill's
    brilliant innovation remains a staple for those who would fight the
    conclusions of science even today. (14)

    One of Hill's immediate recommendations was "a public statement by
    cigarette makers" that would "clarify the problem and reassure the
    public that: (a) the industry's first and foremost interest is the
    public health; (b) there is no proof of the claims which link smoking
    and lung cancer; and (c) the industry is inaugurating a joint plan
    to deal with the situation." (15)

    Less than a month after the meeting, an ad appeared in the New
    York Times and more than 400 other newspapers over the names of the
    presidents of most of the major cigarette manufacturers and tobacco
    growers entitled, without apparent irony, "A Frank Statement to
    Cigarette Smokers." Admitting that recent reports "have given wide
    publicity to a theory that cigarette smoking is in some way linked
    with lung cancer in human beings," the statement cautioned that the
    recent findings "are not regarded as conclusive in the field of cancer
    research" and "eminent doctors and research scientists have publicly
    questioned the claimed significance of these experiments." Finally,
    they announced the creation of the Tobacco Industry Research Committee
    (TIRC), (16) headed by "a scientist of unimpeachable integrity and
    national repute" and guided by "an Advisory Board of scientists
    disinterested in the cigarette industry." (17)

    Historian of science Robert N. Proctor notes that the TIRC, later
    renamed the Council for Tobacco Research, for decades "was the world's
    leading sponsor of (what appeared to be) tobacco and health research."

    (18) However, "[t]he goal was really to look in such a way as not
    to find, and then to claim that despite the many millions spent on
    'smoking and health' no proof of harms had ever been uncovered." (19)

    Through a combination of its influence as a major American industry
    and the credibility by association generated by funding research
    at institutions of higher learning, "the industry was able to clog
    congressional hearings, to distort popular understanding, and to
    delay or weaken legislation designed to regulate smoking. ... Tobacco
    charlatans gained a voice before the U.S. Congress and were often
    able even to insinuate themselves into peer-reviewed literature." (20)

    A 1972 memo by Fred Panzer, vice president of public relations of
    the industry-run Tobacco Institute, offered qualified praise for the
    nearly 20-year-long strategy of "creating doubt about the health charge
    without actually denying it," but cautioned that this commitment "to
    an ill-defined middle ground which is articulated by variations on
    the theme that, 'the case is not proved'" has "always been a holding
    strategy." (21)

    "Manufacturing doubt" may have been only a "holding strategy," but it
    worked for over half a century. In the end it could not prevent the
    onslaught of costly legal actions, resulting, most notably, in the 1998
    Tobacco Master Settlement Agreement (22) and a 2006 court ruling that
    "found 11 of America's major Tobacco Companies and related entities
    guilty of nearly 150 counts of mail and wire fraud in a continuing
    'pattern of racketeering activity' with the 'specific intent to
    defraud' under the Racketeer Influence Corrupt Organizations (RICO)
    Act." (23) As part of the 1998 settlement, the Tobacco Institute and
    the Council for Tobacco Research were shut down.

    ***

    The Turkish state did not learn denial from the American tobacco
    industry or American public relations firms. But by the early 1980's,
    it had reached a moment of crisis analogous to that of the tobacco
    industry ca. 1953-54, and new conditions required new methods of
    obfuscating the truth. Some of these new methods were old hat for
    Turkey's PR advisors.

    Speros Vryonis has written of the impact of the appointment of
    Å~^ukru Elekdag as Turkish ambassador to the United States in 1980,
    of the "profuse" and "organized" public relations and propaganda
    output during his tenure, and in particular of his inauguration of
    "a new policy in the vast world of American academe." (24) The public
    relations push was multifaceted. (25) An immediate need was to become
    more effective in countering Armenian-American efforts to secure U.S.

    recognition of the genocide, and here the expertise and connections
    of Turkey's new PR and lobbying partners would prove invaluable in
    defeating Congressional resolutions, most dramatically in 1990, as
    well as preventing any recurrence of a sitting president publicly
    uttering the words, "Armenian Genocide." (26)

    Another component was to present a more appealing image of Turkey
    in order to counter the reality of the genocide, ongoing abuses of
    human rights, the invasion of Cyprus in 1974, the brutality of the
    1980 military coup, and the violent repression of the Kurds. A major
    effort on this front was the 1987 "Age of Suleyman the Magnificent"
    exhibition at the National Gallery of Art, the Art Institute of
    Chicago, and Metropolitan Museum of Art--an exhibition underwritten by
    American tobacco giant Philip Morris at a cost of close to $1 million.

    (27)

    Of particular interest to Turkey was "to rectify substantial factual
    errors about contemporary Turkey and Turkish history contained
    in secondary school social science textbooks...[and] standard
    reference encyclopedias." (28) Just as the tobacco companies viewed
    children as potential future customers, Turkey understood the value
    of exposing students to their version of history. Such an effort
    would be facilitated by having work at hand by credentialed Western
    scholars presenting a version of history sympathetic to Turkey's
    official narrative.

    Thus a key element of Turkey's long-range plan was to expand upon the
    small group of American scholars producing work that emphasized in a
    positive sense Turkey's role in the world. By funding and encouraging
    further scholarship, it would be possible to cultivate academics
    who could produce a credible-looking body of Turkey-friendly and,
    in some cases, genocide-denying scholarship.

    It may be that with its increased influence in the world, the Turkish
    state wanted more than simply to get its way by asserting its will: It
    wanted its narrative to be believed and legitimized. Bobelian writes
    that "[a]fter the 1990 confrontation in the Senate, the tide turned
    against Turkey's distortions of history. ... As time went on, fewer and
    fewer elected officials maintained their faith in Turkey's position,"
    (29) even if they continued to vote for it. In 2000, Å~^ukru Elekdag
    observed that a Congressional genocide resolution failed "mainly
    because the winds of war began to blow in the Middle East." (30) In
    2007, after the House Foreign Relations Committee voted on another
    resolution, the late Turkish commentator, diplomat, and Member of
    Parliament Gunduz Aktan understood that even those "supporting the
    Turkish case...said loud and clear that the events of 1915 amounted
    to genocide," and only "because of the strategic importance of Turkey,
    because of the national interest of the U.S., they are voting no." For
    Aktan, this realization was "unbearable." (31) Once, it might have
    been sufficient simply to prevail, but no longer. Genocide denial
    needed to be made respectable, pedigreed, and not simply something
    one voted for while holding one's nose.

    Taking a page from Big Tobacco's playbook, Turkey created its own
    version of the Council for Tobacco Research--the Institute of Turkish
    Studies, directed by Ottoman scholar Heath Lowry--to boost Turkey's
    scholarly bona fides. Established in 1982 through an initial grant
    of $3 million from the Turkish government, ITS generated prestige
    by association, disbursing funds to scholars associated with many
    illustrious American colleges and universities.

    Vryonis, as well as, most vividly, Roger W. Smith, Eric Markusen, and
    Robert J. Lifton (32) have shown that ITS also served the interests
    of the Turkish Embassy (the Turkish ambassador serves as "honorary
    chairman" of its board of governors); and, as the late Donald
    Quataert would learn, breaking with Turkey's official line carried
    with it serious consequences, as he was forced out as chairman after
    acknowledging the Armenian Genocide. (33)

    Like the Tobacco Industry Research Committee/Council for Tobacco
    Research, ITS has funded many entirely legitimate scholars and
    projects. But just as the TIRC "didn't pay a lot of attention to
    tobacco and tended not to fund research that might cast cigarettes
    in a bad light," (34) so, too, ITS-supported scholarship has not paid
    much attention to the Armenians, much less the Armenian Genocide. (35)
    Surely, this is what Quataert had in mind when he wrote (in the review
    that sealed his fate at ITS) that a "heavy aura of self-censorship"
    prevails among Ottoman scholars, who "fall into a camp of either
    silence or denial--both of which are forms of complicity." (36)

    By the year 2000, Å~^ukru Elekdag would complain that ITS had "lost
    its function and its effectiveness," from which one infers that he
    conceived of its function being something more than funding scholarly
    research. Instead, he urged the creation of a "project to make it quite
    clear that [Turkey] is not at all afraid to confront the realities of
    its past, a project aimed at shedding light on the historical facts
    in the course of academic research." (37)

    Turkey's version of Big Tobacco's "Frank Statement" took the form of
    the notorious 1985 advertisement in the New York Times and Washington
    Post urging the U.S. Congress not to pass a resolution recognizing
    the genocide as such--with the names of 69 scholars who questioned
    the appropriateness of using the word "genocide" to refer to "Armenian
    suffering" during World War I.

    The ad, taken out by the Assembly of Turkish American Associations
    (ATAA) but co-authored by Heath Lowry, (38) argued that "the weight
    of evidence so far uncovered points in the direction of inter-communal
    warfare. ... But much more remains to be discovered before historians
    will be able to sort out precisely responsibility between warring
    and innocent, and to identify the causes for the events..." (39)

    As Proctor writes of Big Tobacco, for decades it "urged the need
    for 'more research,' with the claim sometimes even made that it was
    dangerous to jump to conclusions, given that the case was not yet
    closed. And that, of course, is how the industry wanted the health
    'question' kept: forever open." (40)

    Turkey deployed the "69 scholars statement" in much the same manner as
    the tobacco companies used the "Frank Statement" and similar documents:
    "to clog congressional hearings, to distort popular understanding,
    and to delay or weaken legislation." But it, too, eventually exhausted
    its usefulness; and Elekdag would complain that "[u]nfortunately
    this document cannot be used effectively now. Many of the people who
    signed it are now hesitant or afraid to come out and declare their
    continuing support for it. ... With the exception of Justin McCarthy
    none of them is prepared to sign a similar communique today." (41)

    Since 2000, when Elekdag voiced his discontent with what might be
    called the "holding strategy" employed up to that time, the Turkish
    state and those who support it have ratcheted up their efforts. (42)
    When the creation of the "Turkish Studies Project" (funded not by the
    Turkish government but by the Turkish Coalition of America) at the
    University of Utah was announced, (43) it was hardly surprising that
    Å~^ukru Elekdag was on its advisory board, since the effort could be
    seen as the fulfillment of his vision.

    In future articles, I will take a closer look at the rhetoric and
    techniques of this ongoing and evolving academic campaign to roll
    out a "counter-genocide narrative" for the purpose of creating a
    permanent haze of doubt around the Armenian Genocide, and normalizing
    and legitimizing the Turkish state's narrative of genocide denial.

    Doubt is Turkey's product, too, and the factory is humming.

    Notes

    (1) The author wishes to thank Armenian Weekly Editor Khatchig
    Mouradian, Michael Bobelian, Ayda Erbal, Richard Hovannisian, and
    Roger Smith for their helpful comments, and Lou Ann Matossian for
    her important research and contributions.

    (2) Quoted in, inter alia, David Michaels, Doubt Is Their Product: How
    Industry's Assault on Science Threatens Your Health (New York: Oxford
    University Press, 2008), x. For original document, see Legacy Tobacco
    Documents Library at http://legacy.library.ucsf.edu/tid/nvs40f00.

    (3) Cf. Taner Akcam, A Shameful Act: The Armenian Genocide and the
    Question of Turkish Responsibility (New York: Metropolitan Books,
    2006), p. 184; Fatma Ulgen, "Reading Mustafa Kemal Ataturk on the
    Armenian Genocide of 1915," Patterns of Prejudice, vol. 44, no. 4
    (2010), p. 390, and see also Ulgen, Sabiha Gökcen's 80-Year-Old
    Secret: Kemalist Nation Formation and the Ottoman Armenians (unpubl.

    Ph.D. thesis, University of California, San Diego, 2010), pp. 290ff.

    (4) See Richard D. Kloian, The Armenian Genocide: News Accounts
    from the American Press, 1915-1922, 4th ed. (Richmond, CA: Heritage
    Publishing, 2007).

    (5) "Tlön, Turkey, and the Armenian Genocide," Armenian Weekly,
    April 2012

    (6) See Michael Bobelian, Children of Armenia: A Forgotten Genocide
    and the Century-Long Struggle for Justice (New York: Simon & Schuster,
    2009), for an in-depth account.

    (7) For example, Congressional resolutions were passed in 1975
    (House Joint Resolution 148) and 1984 (House Joint Resolution 247),
    and President Ronald Reagan referred to "the genocide of the Armenians"
    in a proclamation of April 22, 1981.

    (8) Most famously in the 1930's when MGM's plans to film Franz Werfel's
    The Forty Days of Musa Dagh were quashed. See Edward Minasian, Musa
    Dagh (Cold River Studio, 2007).

    (9) This was not an entirely new concept for Turkey. In the 1920's
    and 1930's Turkey worked to create a favorable image of itself in
    the United States, especially through the efforts of Admiral Mark
    Bristol and the American Friends of Turkey. See Bobelian, p. 77; Levon
    Marashlian, The Armenian Question from Sevres to Lausanne (unpubl.

    Ph.D. thesis, UCLA, 1992); Roger R. Trask,American Response to Turkish
    Nationalism and Reform 1914-1939 (Minneapolis: Univ. of Minn. Press,
    1971), p. 244.

    (10) See www.fara.gov/annualrpts.html.

    (11) On Robert K. Gray and Gray and Co., see Susan Trento, The Power
    House: Robert Keith Gray and the Selling of Access and Influence in
    Washington (New York: St. Martin's Press, 1992). Gray was an executive
    at Hill & Knowlton from the early 1960's until spinning off his own
    firm, Gray & Co., in 1981; and in 1986 Gray & Co. merged with Hill
    & Knowlton.

    (12) See "The Hill & Knowlton Documents: How the Tobacco
    Industry Launched Its Disinformation Campaign," a Staff
    Report, Majority Staff Subcommittee on Health and the
    Environment, U.S. House of Representatives, May 26, 1994, at
    http://legacy.library.ucsf.edu/tid/ehb20d00; Stanton A. Glantz,
    John Slade, Lisa A. Bero, and Deborah E. Barnes, eds., The Cigarette
    Papers(Berkeley & Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1998);
    Naomi Oreskes and Erik Conway,Merchants of Doubt: How a Handful of
    Scientists Obscured the Truth on Issues from Tobacco Smoke to Global
    Warming (New York: Bloomsbury Press, 2005); David Michaels, Doubt
    is Their Product: How Industry's Assault on Science Threatens Your
    Health (New York: Oxford University Press, 2008); Robert N. Proctor,
    Golden Holocaust: Origins of the Cigarette Catastrophe and the Case
    for Abolition (Berkeley & Los Angeles: University of California Press,
    2012), etc.

    (13) Proctor, p. 222.

    (14) Devra Davis, The Secret History of the War on Cancer (New York:
    Basic Books, 2007), pp. 150-151.

    (15) See http://legacy.library.ucsf.edu/tid/brd30f00/pdf.

    (16) Hill himself suggested that the word "research" to appear in the
    name, presumably to bolster the appearance of scientific objectivity.

    (17) For the full "Frank Statement,"
    seewww.tobacco.neu.edu/litigation/cases/supportdocs/frank_ad.htm.

    (18) Proctor, p. 260.

    (19) Ibid., p. 261.

    (20) Ibid., pp. 278-279.

    (21) See http://legacy.library.ucsf.edu/tid/quo14e00.

    (22) See http://oag.ca.gov/tobacco/msa.

    (23) Ronald Goodbread, "RICO Convictions of Major Tobacco Companies
    Affirmed," in The Daily Washington Law Reporter, May 12, 2011; see
    www.dwlr.com/blog/2011-05-12/rico-convictions-major-tobacco-companies-affirmed.

    (24) Speros Vryonis, Jr., The Turkish State and History: Clio Meets
    the Grey Wolf, 2nd edition (Thessalonike: Institute for Balkan Studies,
    1993), p. 86.

    (25) See Vryonis, pp. 115-116.

    (26) See Bobelian, esp. chapter "Legislating History."

    (27) Ibid., p. 87, and see exhibition book The Age of Sultan Suleyman
    the Magnificent (National Gallery of Art, Washington, and Harry N.

    Abrams, Inc., New York, 1987). Philip Morris International is a member
    of the American Turkish Council and reportedly lobbied against the
    2007 Congressional genocide recognition resolution; see Kate Ackley,
    "Companies Line Up With Turkey: Many Fear Impact of Resolution on
    1915 Killing of Armenians," Roll Call, March 28, 2007.

    (28) Vryonis, p. 116.

    (29) Bobelian, p. 206.

    (30) Turkish Daily News, Oct. 24, 2000.

    (31) Quoted in "Turkish MPs: Bush Administration Must Make
    Goodwill Gesture to Compensate for US House Committee Vote,"
    www.eurasianet.org/departments/insight/articles/eav101107a.shtml.

    (32) "Professional Ethics and Denial of the Armenian Genocide," in
    Richard G. Hovannisian, ed.,Remembrance and Denial: The Case of the
    Armenian Genocide (Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 1999).

    (33) See Lou Ann Matossian, "Institute of Turkish Studies Chair was
    Ousted for Acknowledging Genocide," Armenian Reporter, May 31, 2008.

    (34) Proctor, p. 260.

    (35) A review of ITS grants on its website, which covers 1993 to the
    present, supports this.

    (36) Donald Quataert, "The Massacres of Ottoman Armenians and the
    Writing of Ottoman History," Journal of Interdisciplinary History,
    vol. 37, no. 2 (Autumn 2006), pp. 249, 258.

    (37)Turkish Daily News, Oct. 24, 2000.

    (38) Vryonis, pp. 110-111.

    (39) For a great deal more information, Vryonis's lengthy discussion
    of the advertisement in The Turkish State and History and "U.S.

    Academicians and Lobbying: Turkey Uses Advertisement as a Political
    Tool" (Journal of the Armenian Assembly of America, vol. 14, no. 1
    [Spring 1987]) are recommended.

    (40) Proctor, pp. 262-263.

    (41) Turkish Daily News, Oct. 24, 2000.

    (42) To date, the most detailed examination of this is Jennifer Dixon,
    "Defending the Nation? Maintaining Turkey's Narrative of the Armenian
    Genocide," South European Society and Politics, vol. 15, no. 3,
    September 2010, pp. 467-485.

    (43) See http://unews.utah.edu/old/p/031009-1.html. The formal name of
    the project is "The Origins of Modern Ethnic Cleansing: The Collapse of
    the Ottoman Empire and the Emergence of Nation States in the Balkans
    and Caucasus."




    From: A. Papazian
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