New Trouble From Old Events
by
Charley
Reese
by Charley Reese
DIGG THIS
House Speaker
Nancy Pelosi has apparently promised some wealthy Armenian-American
backers in her district that she would bring to a vote a resolution
condemning the massacres of Armenians by the Ottoman Empire in 1915
as genocide.
It was that.
You don't kill 1.2 million people out of a population of only 1.6
million by accident. In addition to mass executions, Armenians were
forcibly deported to the deserts of modern-day Syria, where thousands
more died of starvation and dehydration. There is a voluminous record
of the horrors of that time.
There is a
hitch, however. The modern Turks, our NATO allies, strenuously and
vehemently oppose any labeling of what happened to the Armenians
as genocide. When the French did so, Turkey permanently ended all
military cooperation with France. The Turks are threatening similar
measures if Congress votes on the resolution and have already recalled
their ambassador to the U.S. They claim the deaths were the result
of wartime starvation and a civil war.
Consequently,
the president, the Cabinet, former secretaries of state and defense,
not to mention the war supporters in the media, are all decrying
the resolution and pleading with Pelosi not to bring it to a vote.
They fear the Turks will kick the U.S. military out of Turkey, including
at the Incirlik Air Base. About 70 percent of the supplies to American
troops in Iraq flow through Turkey. The base was officially opened
in 1955.
Both strategically
and tactically, it doesn't make a lot of sense to alienate a current
ally because of a historical event that occurred 92 years ago. The
Ottoman government didn't survive much longer than the Armenians.
Defeated in World War I, it was replaced in a revolution led by
Kemal Ataturk. Thus, modern Turks and the present Turkish government
are as innocent as lambs of having played any part at all in the
genocide.
I've heard
some very naïve statements by some supporters of the resolution.
One congressman asserted that Turkey needs us as much as we need
Turkey. That's not true. Turkey became an ally because of its traditional
enmity with the Soviet Union. The Soviet Union no longer exists.
Years ago,
during an interview with a visiting Turkish colonel, I naïvely ask
if he thought the U.S. and Turkey would remain friends. The grim-faced
colonel replied: "Turkey and the U.S. are not friends. We just
happen to have the same enemy." Well, today we don't.
To further
complicate matters, the Turks have massed troops on the border with
northern Iraq and are threatening to invade in order to get at the
Kurdish faction that commits acts of terror against Turkey. I have
no sympathy for the U.S. or the Kurds. If they didn't want the Turks
to act, they should have put a tight grip on the PKK faction and
stopped its attacks in Turkey. They failed to do so despite promises.
Another congressman
said the U.S. would actually be doing Turkey a favor by passing
the genocide resolution. That is so stupid, it's not worthy of comment.
I'm sure Armenian-Americans have a jillion lawsuits and demands
for reparations all ready to go.
As
an American opposed to the American Empire, I fervently hope Ms.
Pelosi doesn't lose her nerve and lets the House vote on the genocide
resolution. I would be pleased as punch if the Turks kicked us out
of Turkey, moved us out of Incirlik and moved in their own air force.
Given President
Bush's determination to keep American troops in Iraq apparently
forever, if the Turks made it harder to do that, they would be doing
us a favor.
October
22, 2007
Charley
Reese [send
him mail] has been a journalist for 49 years.
©
2007 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
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