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    No More Games
    Editorial, 15 March 2014


    When Armenians and Turks meet to talk of their differences, the
    attitude of the Turks, unless they are enlightened, is at best "we
    both suffered during the First World War. Let's forget the past and
    become friends" or at worst "there was no Genocide. Armenians died
    because of war conditions. Besides, Armenians were also out to
    dismantle the Ottoman Empire with the help of the Russians."

    Being factual, the Armenian narrative of 1915-'23 differs from the
    Turkish version. As well, when Armenians think of the conflict, they
    inevitably recall the centuries of oppression they suffered under the
    Ottoman Turks. They remember the 1895 Hamidian massacres when more
    than 200,000 innocent Armenians were slain by Sultan Abdul Hamid II's
    soldiers and the Hamidiyeh irregulars. Armenians also recall the 1909
    massacre of 30,000 Armenians in Adana, when the so-called progressive
    Young Turks were at the helm of the Ottoman government. Armenians also
    remember a century of Turkish government Genocide denial, the
    wealth-tax imposed on Armenians during the Second World War and the
    September 1955 pogroms in Istanbul. Finally, Armenians sitting down
    with Turks are only too aware of Turkey's blockade of Armenia and its
    support of the warmongering Baku regime.

    Despite the overpowering presence in the Armenian psyche of Turkey's
    long history of crimes against the Armenians, the latter have the will
    to overcome their woes so as to seek a just peace between the two
    peoples. However, their Turkish interlocutors should be aware of
    "where Armenians are coming from" and the dilemma Armenians face when
    they contemplate peace talks with the Turks.

    In turn, Armenians should know how Turks perceives the First World
    War. It's the war which saw the demise of the Ottoman Empire and the
    loss of all Turkish-occupied lands outside Asia Minor. To Turks this
    is a far more important episode than the Genocide of Armenians. Many
    Turks grieve, to this day, the death of the Sick Man of Europe. While
    the loss that empire was the result of miscalculation, greed (Turkey
    expected to occupy even more lands, thanks to the hoped-for victories
    of its German and Austrian allies), and military incompetence, many
    Turks mourn the loss of lands they had occupied through the sword and
    had controlled through the exercise of a hideous military.

    Having been promised justice by Turkish authorities and then being
    betrayed many times, starting in the 1830s, Armenians have reason to
    be cautious about Turkish honeyed words. Armenians are cognizant of
    Turkish diplomatic léger de main. Many Armenians wonder whether recent
    Turkish government baubles (allowing the repairing of Armenian
    churches) are intended to deflate Armenian efforts to obtain justice
    during the centennial of the Genocide next year. Once the centennial
    is history, Turkey would revert to square one, some Armenian fear.

    There's no doubt that hundreds of thousands of Turks are sincere in
    their desire to see justice done to the Armenians. The human rights
    advocates, the various Turkish NGOs, the intellectuals, the
    journalists and authors, who have backed the Armenian cause, are
    undoubtedly honest. However, Armenians wonder how representative of
    Turkey are these mostly Istanbul Turks. Armenians also wonder whether
    righteous Turks are being used by Ankara to burnish its international
    image, and that once they have served their purpose, they would be
    discarded like a wet rag. The primordial xenophobia, which novelist
    Elif Shafak mentioned in her "New York Times" (Feb. 23, 2014) article,
    is another justified Armenian fear.

    Finally, an Armenian sitting down with a Turk to exchange views have
    to consider the future of a turbulent, unpredictable Turkey. Will
    Turkey become, as a political analyst recently said, another Pakistan
    hamstrung by religious dogma? And where is Turkey headed as the
    permanently irate and not obnoxious Prime Minister Recep Erdogan and
    Fathullah Gulen of the Hizmet religo-political group continue their
    bloodletting? Will the Gulen feud or the recent Erdogan corruption
    scandals be an invitation to the military to step in to "save the
    nation"? Will the Kemalists and the White Turks get back into the
    saddle? As well, Erdogan's recent repressive measures (tightening of
    his control over the judiciary, the jailing of writers, intellectuals,
    and journalists, the censorship of print and digital media) don't bode
    well for a civilized exchange between the Armenians and Turkey.
    Turkey's rejection of the rightful demands of the Kurds is another
    sore point. Will the Kurdish struggle push Turkey into renewed
    military heavy handedness? To say Turkey is in a flux is to say the
    obvious.

    Armenians are eager to resolve the conflict with Turkey, but Turks
    should respect Armenian reservations, if not cynicism. Armenians also
    remain particularly cautious in light of reports that Turkish officers
    were, as recently as a few months ago, advising Al-Qaida and similar
    terrorists to attack Aleppo's Armenian Quarter. Armenians question
    Ankara's goodwill when Turkey has renewed its Genocide-denying
    campaign with increased vigor. It's also no secret that Turkey is the
    guiding hand behind recent Azeri global efforts to have the Khojali
    battle during the Nagorno-Karabakh War recognized as genocide.

    To gain the confidence of Armenians Ankara should come forward with
    significant confidence-building measures. Sly gestures, cheap
    propaganda, empty words, Davutoglu-style double talk will not do.
    Football diplomacy does not run into overtime.


    http://www.keghart.com/Editorial-NoMoreGames#comments



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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