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Gallipoli Campaign: Act Two

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  • Gallipoli Campaign: Act Two

    GALLIPOLI CAMPAIGN: ACT TWO

    EDITORIAL | NOVEMBER 24, 2013 8:46 PM

    By Edmond Y. Azadian

    Ahmed Davutoglu, Turkey's foreign minister, has laid his campaign
    plans to drown Armenian voices in 2015. Indeed, as Armenians prepare
    with their scarce resources to make the Genocide Centennial a turning
    point in history, Turkey, using its vast resources, has already
    taken the proactive stand to dampen the impact of those Armenian
    initiatives. This, of course, within Ankara's "zero problem with
    neighbors" foreign policy. The Turkish foreign minister has already
    picked his topic to counter the Armenian onslaught: the centennial
    celebration of the Gallipoli campaign, which coincidentally began
    on April 25, 1915, exactly one day after the Armenian intelligentsia
    and leadership were arrested and marked for slaughter. The campaign
    had lasted until January 9, 1916. The Gallipoli campaign and Anzac
    Day are known better by name than by historic substance.

    During World War I, Allied Forces, headed by Britain, were fighting the
    Central Powers headed by Germany. The Australians' and New Zealanders'
    Army Corps (Anzac), as British colonial subjects, were drafted in the
    British Army, and Turkey had joined Germany against the Allies. One
    of the significant battles took place at the Dardanelles, with the
    Allies trying to open a route through the Straits of Bosphorus to
    connect with their Russian allies in the East.

    Today, Anzac Day is considered by the Australians as the dawn of their
    national consciousness, while for the Turks, the battle places Mustafa
    Kemal, then the head of Turkish forces, on a historic pedestal,
    having began the campaign for the Turkish "liberation movement"
    (in fact the continuation of the Young Turks' war and extermination
    policy) which eventually led to the foundation of the modern Turkish
    Republic in 1923.

    For Australia, which was a former penal colony and belittled as such
    for long, perhaps it should not be surprising to enshrine a military
    defeat as the beginning of "national consciousness." On Anzac Day,
    the most sacred holiday in Australia, people come to celebrate their
    defeat and honor the "power of the Turks," their murderers. Every
    year thousands of Australians and New Zealanders visit Constantinople,
    modern-day Istanbul, to celebrate the Anzac Day.

    This mentality is similar to the treatment of Turks by the Austrians.

    The Ottoman Armies tried to occupy Vienna twice, once during the 16th
    century under Soleiman the Magnificent and in 1683 under Kara Mustafa.

    They were routed twice, yet in 1983, the Austrian government decided
    to celebrate the tercentennial of its victory over the Ottomans and
    invited the Turks to turn the celebration into a Turkish-Austrian
    friendship celebration, never mind that in both wars the Turks
    massacred their Austrian prisoners.

    The Gallipoli Campaign remains one of the mysteries of history:
    the German-Turkish forces were being beaten on the Eastern front,
    they were being defeated in the Middle East (where volunteer Armenian
    Legionnaires were fighting along with the Allies), but they won the
    Battle of Gallipoli.

    At that time Winston Churchill was the first lord of the Admiralty
    and he proposed a naval attack on the Dardanelles, based on erroneous
    reports on the enemy troop strength. Some historians even believe that
    those reports were deliberately given to the admiralty, and there are
    even reports that Allied attack plans were leaked to the enemy. Why
    would such a "treacherous" act be permitted to cause one's own defeat?

    This does not sound plausible until we get to the heart of British
    foreign policy in the 19th and 20th centuries. Perennially the British
    have tried to - and succeeded - to bar Russians from reaching the warm
    waters of the Mediterranean. In fact, when the Russian forces reached
    and occupied Adrianapolis in Turkey and the San Stefano Treaty was
    signed in 1878, British Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli was alarmed
    and was able to convene a second congress to sign the Berlin Treaty
    that same year, which had tragic consequences for the Armenians living
    in the Ottoman Empire. Literally, Armenian subjects were left to the
    tender mercies of their tormentors.

    Therefore, the British wished to demonstrate to their Russian allies
    that they put an honest effort toward occupying Istanbul but they
    failed there by denying once more to their Russian allies access to
    warm waters.

    On the Turkish side, Mustafa Kemal was one of five Turkish commanders.

    At that time, the Ottoman Fifth Army was under the command of German
    Otto Liman von Sanders. Germany had armed the Turks with military
    hardware and battleships. In fact, Germany gifted the victory to
    Mustafa Kemal. And today, as Mr. Davutoglu prepares to celebrate
    the Gallipoli victory, the credit will be jealously guarded by the
    Turks and no one will mention that Ataturk played second fiddle to
    von Sanders during the battle.

    But before the Turks face the Armenians in 2015, they have met some
    unexpected turbulence from the Australians themselves.

    Davutoglu has already begun his celebratory campaign on the wrong foot
    by banning the participation of a New South Wales delegation from
    the Gallipoli ceremonies in Turkey because that Australian province
    happens to have adopted a resolution to recognize the Armenian
    Genocide. Australians are irate and fresh battle lines have been drawn.

    Every action by the Turkish government to deny the Genocide blows
    up in the faces of their leaders. Turkey's action is countered in
    Australia with calls for the Federal Parliament to recognize the
    Armenian Genocide.

    Mr. Davutoglu is planning his second blunder by sending discredited
    historian Justin McCarthy to "educate" the Austrailians about
    Armenian-Turkish historic relations. Many historians compare Justin
    McCarthy to British Holocaust denier David Irving. McCarthy is not
    too embarrassed as a scholar and as a decent human being to campaign
    against the recognition of the Armenian Genocide, countering the
    line advocated by the globally-respected International Association
    of Genocide Scholars.

    The Australian parliamentarian Laurie Ferguson has managed to invite
    Professor McCarthy for a lecture in the Canberra parliament house,
    with a topic titled, "What Happened During 1915-1923."

    When the Turks try to derail any attempt by the legislatures of
    different countries by suggesting that the case be assigned to the
    judgment of historians, they are banking on hacks-for-hire such as
    McCarthy and his ilk, who are offered all-expenses-paid junkets by
    the Turkish government.

    Prof. McCarthy's long trip has already been overshadowed by a public
    debate; President of the Turkish Parliament Cemil Cicek has called for
    a repeal of Genocide recognition by the NSW parliament and has further
    threatened that Turkey's relation with Australia may deteriorate to
    which Prime Minister of New South Wales Barry O'Farrell has declared
    that the threats of Turkey's parliamentary president are inconceivable
    and reprehensible. In a written statement, he has also asked Turkish
    officials not to use the celebrations of the centennial of the Battle
    of Gallipoli for political purposes.

    Politicians are astute. They are certainly aware of the weight of
    Turkish threats. Ankara has threatened before France and Switzerland,
    only returning to the routine of business as usual.

    McCarthy will take advantage of the tolerance of freedom of speech
    and make his point, although had he tried to reverse his argument in
    his beloved Turkey, he would have found himself in jail for violating
    Article 301 of Turkish penal code. Freedom of speech, of course,
    works both ways. We hope Armenians in Australia will also use their
    voices to give appropriate treatment to the guest speaker who may
    earn his honorarium without necessarily convincing too many people.

    Forensic psychiatrist and historian at Wollongong University NSW Prof.

    Robert Kaplan stated in his blog in the "Australian" newspaper: "In
    Australia there is tolerance of free speech and the Turkish bullying
    will only bring it closer to the day there is federal recognition
    of the first genocide of the 20th century. Hopefully this will occur
    before the first centenary of Anzac Day." [From his mouth to God's ear.

    Now the battle lines are drawn for the second Gallipoli campaign. In
    the first act the Turks had Otto van Sanders and German battleships
    on their side to win the battle.

    In the second act they don't have the truth on their side.

    - See more at:
    http://www.mirrorspectator.com/2013/11/24/gallipoli-campaign-act-two/#sthash.fauKKt9c.dpuf


    From: Baghdasarian
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