Cold
Turkey
Neocon Ignorance Reaps Another Disaster
by
Christopher Manion
by Christopher Manion
DIGG THIS
As usual, the
left-right neocon sites are full of self-righteous puffing again.
This time around, they’re blaming Nancy Pelosi for losing our "good
ally" Turkey in the middle of their little war to export democracy.
Pelosi, it appears, is prepared to allow a House vote condemning
Turkey for the "Armenian genocide" that wiped out countless Armenians
about a century ago. And Turkey is decidedly unhappy about it.
As usual, the
neocons are outraged that foreign countries might actually act based
on their assessment of how the U.S. government has acted towards
them. This simple fact of human reality was famously denied by debater
Rudy Giuliani when he feigned amazement when Ron Paul made reference
to it. Giuliani bristled at Paul’s observation that the behavior
of Islamic countries might indeed be influenced by the way the U.S.
government has acted towards them.
Giuliani, like
Bush, is ignorant of foreign affairs (unless one considers the Upper
East Side to be foreign territory). That should constitute a mortal
wound to any serious candidacy. In today’s world of spin, alas,
it threatens instead a mortal wound to our country’s well-being,
if Giuliani’s ignorance is catapulted into the White House after
the 2008 elections. Sadly, Giuliani’s ignorance of the world is
shared by most of the candidates of both parties (naturally, with
the exception of Congressman Ron Paul).
Twenty years
ago I was in Turkey, observing an election as a senate foreign policy
staffer. Instead of staying in major cities, I asked my hosts to
head out to the middle of nowhere, asking them to turn here, then
there, as we drove for hours visiting random towns and villages
in the middle of the Anatolian plain. After driving for a while
on the afternoon of election day, on a whim, I directed the driver
(who spoke excellent German: he had worked as a foreign worker in
Germany for several years) to turn up a dirt road to a village I
could see in the distance.
Clearly, the
villagers did not know we were coming. Their village was a clutch
of huts and one-story brick buildings that might have comprised
a population of perhaps five hundred people. The villagers gathered
around our car, all smiles, and someone ran to get the mayor. He
arrived quickly, and escorted us into a room with a long, rough-cut
table. Twenty or thirty men crowded into the room, and perhaps half
of them sat on hand-hewn benches, while the others stood along the
wall. They gave me and my government escort-interpreter the only
chairs.
Tea was served
– strong stuff. Courtesy and elegance abounded in these country
farmers, who were a lot like the ones I grew up with in the Midwest.
We were given a genuine welcome.
The mayor gave
a little speech of welcome. "We welcome our American friend,"
he said. "We love America. America is a good friend and ally
of Turkey."
I smiled diplomatically,
trying to conjure up a proper response – but I didn’t have a chance
to deliver it. One of the elders sitting near the mayor broke into
his speech. He brought his fist down sharply on the wooden table,
shaking the small teacups all around. "But what’s this about
the Armenian Resolution in your Congress," he roared.
So much for
my travels. But it was clear to me that this sentiment was genuine,
and evidently quite strongly held not only by these men, but by
other Turks as well, in thousands of other villages I might have
visited at random.
The Turks then
are like the Turks now. They are not ignorant, and they are not
idiots. Nancy Pelosi should be well aware of how deeply those sentiments
run, twenty years after I saw them first-hand. And undoubtedly they
will run deep twenty years from now.
Pelosi’s maneuver
is deft and calculated, all too true. But when the neocons blame
Pelosi for threatening to "alienate Turkey," they are
wrong. President Bush and Proconsul Dick Cheney have already alienated
the Turks – major league, big time.
The Turks have
long memories. Turkey is a democracy. And in 2003, Bush fatuously
assumed he could bribe these proud, independent people with dollars
– admittedly, a lot of them $35 BILLION to be exact. After all,
the neocons at DoD convinced Cheney that they could "handle"
Turkey. But Bush failed. Rumsfeld failed. Turkey’s democratic government
would not allow US forces to invade Iraq from the north. They were
not bribed by the U.S. government’s $35 billion; they were offended,
even outraged. (By the way, $35 billion was a lot of money back
then.)
The neocons
were incensed. After all, hadn’t Richard Perle’s firm once "represented"
Turkey? Hadn’t Perle gotten Israel to help Turkey get their number-one
most-wanted terrorist, Ocalan? Hadn’t Israel tracked Ocalan down
in Kenya so he could be captured? And wasn’t Ocalan the founder
of the Turkish Workers Party (PKK)? And isn’t the PKK the very "terrorist
organization" that today harasses the Turkish army from its
hideout in Iraqi "Kurdistan"?
In short, wasn’t
Turkey safely "bought" back when Ocalan was captured in
1999? And yet these ignorant, ungrateful Turks actually turned down
a $35-billion-dollar bribe in 2003! Ingrates! And now they’re mad
as blazes that Pelosi might pass the Armenian resolution (which,
by the way, never passed back in 1987). There is no justice! Those
barbarians!
Naturally, when Turkey refused to be bought in 2003, the Cheney
crowd heaped abuse on it while championing "democracy" for
Iraq (war war war). Bush wouldn't know Anatolia from Anacostia,
of course, but the Turks were well aware of the daggers drawn to
"tame" it in return for its entry into the EU (truly a dead letter
today – but not so in 2003). Their outrage at a "simple harmless
congressional resolution" is real and far from harmless. Symbols
speak volumes to civilized peoples.
In 2003 the Cheney-neocon "pro-democracy" crowd tried to overturn
the decision of Turkey's democratic government and failed; now they
are faced with the reality on the ground, and, naturally, they tremble
at the disaster they have wrought: an increasingly anti-American
Turkey that won't buy the neocon palaver of Bush, Perle, or of the
neocons who are desperate to find another scapegoat whom they can
blame for their own bungling.
Ron Paul is
right, of course: foreign countries and foreign people are not barbarians,
nor are they simpletons who "hate us because we are free."
There are millions of intelligent and cultured people in the world
who watch what our government does. And they act accordingly. In
seven years of occupying the Oval Office, Mr. Bush has not yet learned
this simple lesson that any high-school kid who didn’t go to Andover
could teach you in ten minutes on the playground.
The U.S. government,
speaking in our name, has slapped Turkey around so much that the
Turks are fed up. What the Turks will do is up to them: but watch
the neocons play their dialectical games, as they transform our
"solid NATO ally" into just another bunch of barbarian
boobs who "hate us because we are free," and thus actually
react when we insult, demean, and try to bribe them.
Yes, the ignoramuses
running this war have unwrapped one Pandora's box after another.
Turkey is just the latest. They have been consistently startled
when the natural consequences have followed. How to cover up their
mistakes? Blame Pelosi. Blame the Turks. And, of course, there’s
always that neocon face-card: start another war.
On to Iran! For Bush, that's the real "Way Forward."
October
16, 2007
Christopher
Manion [send him mail] is
president of Manion Music,
LLC, which produces copyrighted, royalty-free music collections
for telecommunications media and commercial and hospitality sites
that use background music or music-on-hold. He writes from the Shenandoah
Valley.
Copyright
© Christopher Manion 2007. All Rights reserved.
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