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Turkish Pride In The Armenian Genocide

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  • Turkish Pride In The Armenian Genocide

    TURKISH PRIDE IN THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

    Breitbart
    April 24 2015

    by James Zumwalt24 Apr 201512

    As if on safari, the hunters proudly display their dead prey. But
    the circa 1915 photograph depicts an undeniable horror. The hunters
    flank a dozen or so human bodies, laid out upon a dirt mound. The
    distinctive hunters' uniforms identify them as Turkish soldiers of
    the Ottoman Empire; their victims are Armenian Christians.

    This photograph captured for eternity the 20th century's first
    genocide.

    April 24, 2015 marks the 100th anniversary of the beginning of
    an onslaught that, to this day, Turkey claims never happened. But
    photographs of genocide don't lie.

    These photographs are eerily similar to others, that would appear
    three decades later, of another human atrocity against victims only
    persecuted due to their faith. The 1945 photographs show stacks of
    emaciated Jewish bodies--victims of Nazi tormentors.

    A telling difference exists as to why both sets of photographs
    were taken.

    The photographs of Nazi concentration camp horrors were the product
    of victors seeking to document a vanquished enemy's evils, lest future
    generations doubt what had occurred there.

    The photographs of the Armenian genocide were the product of Turkish
    victors, not to record evil, but as a trophy glorifying kills made
    in the name of Allah.

    Turkey's genocidal tendencies towards Armenians are historical.

    The Armenians adopted Christianity in 301 A.D., prospering long as a
    people and an independent nation--until Ottoman aggression absorbed
    it in the 15th century. They became second-class citizens, forced
    to pay an "infidel" tax Muslims demanded of all non-Muslims under
    their control.

    But when Armenians pushed for equality in the late 1890s, the sultan
    ordered his army into action. Between 1894-1896, an estimated 200,000
    Armenians died in what was known as the Hamidian Massacres.

    With the turn of the century, the loss of parts of the Ottoman Empire
    fed a wave of nationalism. Sensing a re-building opportunity with
    the outbreak of World War I, the Ottomans allied with Germany against
    Russia. Devastating losses trying to invade Russia caused the Turks
    to blame Armenians, who had assisted the Russians.

    On April 19, 1915, the Turkish governor of the city of Van trumped up
    a claim to charge Armenians with rebellion and lay siege to the city.

    After Russian forces intervened to save the Armenians, the Turks used
    the Russian rescue to claim the Armenians were traitors. The genocide
    began April 24th, when the Turks rounded up 250 Armenian community
    leaders and executed them.

    By year's end, 75% of the Armenian population (1.5 million people)
    had been killed.

    Turkish hatred fueled a killing machine against the Armenians that
    escalated from massacre to genocide speed in less than a generation.

    Turkish inhumanity towards the Armenians was limitless. Young girls
    were raped or crucified. Forced marches, in endless circles over
    mountain trails, of the very old and very young--denied food and
    water--sought but one final destination: death. As an ultimate slap
    in the face, Armenians transported by train to death camps were even
    required to purchase their own tickets.

    A Turkish government that saw no evil by its actions against the
    Armenians in 1915 still sees no evil in them today.

    One would like to believe a century-long evolution of Turkish
    leadership from dictatorship to democracy might have opened the
    government's eyes to admitting its role in this savagery. It has not.

    This is unsurprising, based on the leadership of Turkey's current
    President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. Over the past several years, he has
    belied a desire to return to the days of the Ottoman Empire, rolling
    back domestic freedoms to get there.

    In Erdogan's Turkey, it remains a crime to mention the word "genocide."

    This denial by the Turkish leadership is not motivated by concerns of
    possibly having to pay reparations by accepting responsibility for its
    genocidal actions. It is fed by the belief today--just in 1915--that
    any Muslim slaughter of Christians is a divine right granted by Allah.

    Turkish intolerance for Christians continues today. As one critic
    observes, "Sadly, Turkey, a NATO member since 1952 and supposedly a
    candidate for membership in the European Union, has largely succeeded
    in destroying the entire Christian cultural heritage of Asia Minor."

    Apparently, the Turkish government won't allow what happened to the
    Armenians to be given the negative connotation of "genocide," for
    such would insult Turkey, but will allow Turks to proudly celebrate
    the genocide's end result, to insult the minority Armenian community
    victimized.

    Turkish intolerance has already manifested itself with the approach of
    this important anniversary date in Armenian history as banners have
    been unfurled in several Turkish cities proclaiming, "We celebrate
    the 100th anniversary of our country being cleansed of [Christian]
    Armenians."

    Of course, it is difficult to criticize Erdogan when Western political
    and Christian leaders have either refused or been slow to call the
    Armenian genocide what it really was.

    Just such a call was recently made by Pope Francis. "In the past
    century, our human family has lived through three massive and
    unprecedented tragedies," the Pope said. "The first, which is widely
    considered 'the first genocide of the 20th century,' struck your own
    Armenian people." Francis became the first leader of the Catholic
    Church to call Turkey out on the genocide.

    Presidential candidate Barack Obama, critical of then-President Bush,
    stated in 2008 America "deserves a president who speaks truthfully
    about the Armenian genocide." President Obama has yet to deliver on
    this promise, and few expect him to tomorrow.

    He is not alone among presidents; only Ronald Reagan, in a 1981
    proclamation observing the Holocaust, dared call the slaughter a
    "genocide."

    Reportedly both the U.S. Department of State (DOS) and Department of
    Defense (DOD) again recommended against attaching the genocidal tag
    due to concerns of impacting negatively on U.S.-Turkey relations.

    DOD's concern obviously stems from not wanting to upset a supposed
    NATO ally who potentially can play an important role in Middle East
    hostilities, although Turkey balks at doing so. DOS's concern stems
    from Obama's inexplicably close friendship with Erdogan, regardless
    of how far back the would-be dictator sets democracy in his country.

    Most shockingly, Israel too has yet to make the call, unwilling to
    damage an already strained relationship with Turkey.

    The absence of Western voices aids and abets Turkey's denial. It has
    only encouraged Erdogan to threaten the few voices heard, warning
    Pope Francis not to "repeat this mistake."

    On the 100th anniversary of the Armenian genocide, we would do well
    to reflect upon Holocaust scholar Deborah Lipstadt's words: "Denial
    of genocide... is not an act of historical reinterpretation... but
    an insidious form of intellectual and moral degradation."

    It is time for Western leaders to re-calibrate their moral compass.

    Lt. Colonel James G. Zumwalt, USMC (Ret.), is a retired Marine
    infantry officer who served in the Vietnam war, the U.S. invasion
    of Panama and the first Gulf war. He is the author of "Bare Feet,
    Iron Will-Stories from the Other Side of Vietnam's Battlefields,"
    "Living the Juche Lie: North Korea's Kim Dynasty" and "Doomsday:
    Iran-The Clock is Ticking." He frequently writes on foreign policy
    and defense issues.

    http://www.breitbart.com/national-security/2015/04/24/turkish-pride-in-the-armenian-genocide/

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