Not In Doubt
“They have focused on the idea of objectivity, the idea of ‘on the one hand and the other hand,’ ” he said. “That’s very attractive on campuses to say that you should hear both sides of the story.” While Payaslian is quick to add that he doesn’t favor censoring anyone or firing anyone for their views, he believes that it is irresponsible to pretend that the history of the period is uncertain. And he thinks it is important to expose “the collaboration between the Turkish Embassy and scholars cooperating to promote this denialist argument.”
To many scholars, an added irony is that all of these calls for debating whether a genocide took place are coming at a time when emerging new scholarship on the period — based on unprecedented access to Ottoman archives — provides even more solid evidence of the intent of the Turkish authorities to slaughter the Armenians [bold mine-DL]. This new scholarship is seen as the ultimate smoking gun as it is based on the records of those who committed the genocide — which counters the arguments of Turkey over the years that the genocide view relies too much on the views of Armenian survivors.
Even further, some of the most significant new scholarship is being done by scholars who are Turkish, not Armenian, directly refuting the claim by some denial scholars that only Armenian professors believe a genocide took place. In some cases, these scholars have faced death threats as well as indictments by prosecutors in Turkey. ~Inside Higher Ed
Via Cliopatria
Despicable
Well, there goes any respect I might have had for Bruce Fein (who works, it should be noted, for the Turkish Coalition of America, founded in that august, ancient time of February 2007):
Like Benito Mussolini, Armenians believe truth is an assertion at the head of a figurative bayonet.
Yes, don’t you see–the Armenians are deceitful and treacherous. You can’t trust them. Sound familiar? Note that any similarly gross overgeneralisation about another group of people would be met with fierce denunciations from all sides. The upshot of Fein’s article is that lots and lots of Turks died in the same period (true), there were atrocities carried out by Armenians in eastern Anatolia (also true) and there have been many Armenian terrorist attacks against Turkish targets in the 20th century (true again). The purpose of the article, of course, is to make light of the genocide and to equate the organising massacring and death march of over a million civilians by their own government (it is, of course, the intent and organised extermination, not the number, that ultimately matters) with the devastating consequences of near-total war between sovereign governments. Sounds curiously like arguments that go something like, “Lots and lots of Germans died fighting in WWII, so state-run genocide isn’t that big of a deal.”
My favourite bit is the accusation of religious bigotry (that would be bigotry against the Muslims, you see), the praise of the notorious genocide denier Shaw for his “academic courage,” and the immediate invocation of none other than Bernard Lewis. Of course, it was in no small part religious bigotry and supremacism on the part of the perpetrators that fueled the genocide, as Akcam has made clear, and I suspect that it has been the fact that the Turks are Muslim and the Armenians Christian that has kept the genocide from being more widely publicised and recognised for what it was.
Update: The Turkish Coalition of America takes mendacity to all new lows. Consider this description of H. Res. 106:
[it] targets Turkish history and heritage, hurts US-Turkish relations and the US national interest.
Impressive how they hardly ever mention anything about the substance of the resolution. That might make the “Turkish history and heritage” bit a little too hard for some folks to swallow. This “Action Alert” section is also quite hilarious in a depressing, sickening way:
Sadly, our voice has mostly been absent in this debate.
If you believe that, they have a bridge in Istanbul to sell you.
leave a comment
Typical
Query: what is the position (at the moment) of the magnificent dancing fraud (i.e., Romney) on the genocide resolution? This is, after all, someone who wants to indict Ahmadinejad under the Genocide Convention because of his menacing remarks towards Israel. Surely someone so deeply concerned about genocide as Romney would be a vocal proponent of the resolution’s passage. What’s that, you say? He’s never talked about it? He was “largely indifferent” to Armenian-American concerns when he was governor in Massachusetts? That’s strange. It’s almost as if he were taking his positions on a purely opportunistic basis!
leave a comment
Profiles In Courage
Almost a dozen lawmakers had shifted against the measure in a 24-hour period ending Tuesday night, accelerating a sudden exodus that has cast deep doubt over the measure’s prospects. Some made clear that they were heeding warnings from the White House, which has called the measure dangerously provocative, and from the Turkish government, which has said House passage would prompt Turkey to reconsider its ties to the United States, including logistical support for the Iraq war. ~The New York Times
Here’s a true champion of the moral high ground:
“We simply cannot allow the grievances of the past, as real as they may be, to in any way derail our efforts to prevent further atrocities for future history books,” said Representative Wally Herger, Republican of California.
That’s a good one. Acknowledging genocide is now just a matter of “grievances of the past.” This is what people are reduced to saying. What else can they possibly say?
Rep. Sherman, a resolution supporter, took the words right out of my mouth:
Since when has it become fashionable for friends to threaten friends?
leave a comment
Ts’eghaspanut’yun
Alex Massie is right on the mark again:
But of course Lemkin himself deliberately cited the suffering of the Armenians when he first wrote about genocide. He didn’t seem to share Mr Cohen’s belief that there is only one kind of genocide.
I appreciate Mr. Massie picking up on this point. After all, if someone confronted with the horrors of the Holocaust had been looking for precedents of coordinated state extermination of its own population the Armenian genocide would have been an obvious example in the 1940s.
What strikes me as so strange about all this is that virtually no one in the Washington political or media establishment has ever applied this same level of skepticism to talk about genocide in Darfur, to say nothing of the much more dubious case of Kosovo. I expect that I will look in vain for Cohen’s citations of Lemkin from the spring of 1999. All that needed to be said in 1999 was the word “Balkan” and suddenly everyone who was anyone was convinced that genocide was about to happen again (not that any of the people who wanted to “crush Serb skulls” ever gave a second thought to the genocide of Serbs during WWII at the hands of the forerunners of our good friends and allies in Zagreb).
Pundits and pols are very free with the word when the regime being accused is one that they don’t much like, which is why I have tended to be very skeptical about people who describe something as genocide in the present. It has frequently become a one-sided and tendentious political weapon that seems to be deployed for other reasons. Yet in this case, when the evidence is clear, the government responsible is long gone and all that is being asked of anyone is to recognise the obvious, everyone becomes terribly anxious and reticent.
Massie also notes a ridiculous Hiatt op-ed:
Then there’s Fred Hiatt, the WaPo’s editorial page editor who thinks the resolution should be spiked because, well, modern Armenia isn’t properly democratic. Or something like that.
I had seen Hiatt’s op-ed, and my first response was simply to move on to something else. Then it occurred to me that Hiatt’s column quite unintentionally helps explain why the resolution is necessary. Hiatt’s argument, such as it is, is that the Armenian Diaspora could have used their time and resources for much better purposes than lobbying for this resolution. Think of what all that money and attention could for Armenia, Hiatt exulted! Armenia is a poor and corrupt state with a dysfunctional government, and the Diaspora could work to change that.
Not that Fred Hiatt has ever, to my knowledge, given a fig for what happened to the Republic of Armenia, mind you, but his tiresome lecture did make me think of something important. It was, as some of us will remember, Hrant Dink’s argument that the Diasporans should stop fixating on the genocide and work to build a better Armenia. Dink, a great man, argued that the preoccupation with the genocide would become “poison in the blood” for the people who continued to focus on it so intently. Dink was actually arguing for the Armenians to move on and try to build a better future for the independent Armenian state that Armenians finally did have–the very thing that Hiatt has suddenly discovered as the right answer–and for his wise counsel he was indicted by the Turkish government for “insulting Turkishness.” How could that be? Well, his remarks about “poison in the blood” were taken entirely out of context and turned into an attack on Turks. When he was talking about poison, according to the government, he was referring to Turks. This was a malicious and obvious lie, as the government there must have known, but the hysteria in the press that the charges generated led in short order to Dink’s assassination by a Turkish nationalist.
Dink was right–the genocide should not be an all-consuming passion, and Armenians should work to improve Armenia. For his efforts to de-emphasise the focus on the genocide (while also insisting on the reality of the genocide), he was prosecuted and then murdered. His son has since been indicted under the same charge and sentenced to a year in prison. That is the government for whom the apologists are carrying water.
Yet here is another reason why recognition of the genocide is important–without widespread recognition and pressure on Ankara to acknowledge the reality of the genocide, the Diasporans will never be able to let go and start the necessary work of building up Armenia. Not, of course, that Turkey has had any interest in aiding the improvement or reform of Armenia, since they have kept the border sealed in solidarity with the Azeris. The poverty, corruption and bad government of the Republic have more than a little to do with that situation, which Washington tacitly endorses with its alliances with Turkey and Azerbaijan. Hiatt has quite unwittingly helped the argument for the resolution, by making clear that Armenia’s development depends in part on the Diasporans’ being able to turn their attention to other things besides this.
leave a comment
Plenty Bad
Richard Cohen started out all right, but then goes into the ditch:
Of even that, I have some doubt. The congressional resolution repeatedly employs the word “genocide,” a term used by many scholars. But Raphael Lemkin, the Polish-Jewish emigre who coined the term in 1943, clearly had in mind what the Nazis were doing to the Jews. If that is the standard — and it need not be — then what happened in the collapsing Ottoman Empire was something short of genocide. It was plenty bad — maybe as many as 1.5 million Armenians perished, many of them outright murdered — but not all Armenians everywhere in what was then Turkey were as calamitously affected. The substantial Armenian communities in Constantinople, Smyrna and Aleppo were largely spared.
Not every Tutsi in Rwanda was “affected,” either, but we don’t quibble about that. Of course, the Armenian elite in Constantinople was not spared, and tens of thousands of members of the Armenian community in Smyrna was massacred when Kemal’s forces took the city in 1922. Frankly, this line of argument is a bit like saying, “Well, since there were some Jews left at the end of the war, it wasn’t that bad.”
Cohen is trying hard to reach moral equivalency:
Among them were the Armenians, an ancient people who had been among the first to adopt Christianity. By the end of the 19th century, they were engaged in guerrilla activity.
How nice it must be to sit back and talk about what “they,” the Armenians, all did. Some Armenians were involved in guerrilla activity, but virtually the entire Armenian population of eastern Anatolia was “punished.” The actions of a relative few neither explain nor justify the murderous response of the CUP.
Cohen says:
Within Turkey, Armenians were feared as a fifth column.
Set aside the obnoxious dismissal of the Armenians’ reputation as the “loyal millet.” Unlike many members of the Rum millet, the Armenians typically did not engage in separatist or subversive activities. Of all the Christian subjects of the Ottomans, the Armenians had given the least cause for offense, yet they were the ones who suffered the full wrath of the empire to whom the overwhelming majority remained loyal. Sound familiar? Need I point out the obvious problem with talking about the nationalist delusions about minorities as if they were mitigating or justifying? Nationalists and genocidaires routinely treat their victims as collaborators with an enemy, whether real or imagined. Collaboration is often not happening in any form, but it is assumed by the ideologues for whom “those people” are all inherently treacherous and disloyal. Sound familiar?
Cohen:
So contemporary Turkey is entitled to insist that things are not so simple. If you use the word genocide, it suggests the Holocaust — and that is not what happened in the Ottoman Empire.
Yes, the past is so very complicated! Especially when the people who were butchered don’t have anything to do with you. It’s much easier to talk about context and ambiguity when the humanity of the victims doesn’t really matter as much to you. If you use the word genocide, it also suggests Rwanda, Cambodia, the Ukraine in the ’30s. None of these is directly identifiable with the methods employed in the Holocaust, but each is a genocide. It need not be done in organised camps with gas to count as the same crime.
Cohen then goes deeper into apologist mode:
Its modern leaders, beginning with the truly remarkable Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, have done a Herculean job of bringing the country from medievalism to modernity without, it should be noted, the usual bloodbath.
Except for the bloodbaths that made a more homogenous Turkish state possible, and except for the ongoing repression of the Kurds. By all means, give Kemal his due for modernising Turkey, but let’s not pretend that it was all done through some pleasant and humane process. It was brutal, coercive and, more often than his admirers like to recall, quite violent.
Cohen finally comes around, after all of this, to declare Turkey’s threats over the resolution and its efforts to suppress the truth to be unacceptable, but he took such an appalling route to get there I’m not sure that it matters.
leave a comment
A Strange Generation
A Sullivan reader writes about “Gen-X Conservatives”:
I’m a young, newly-minted assistant professor here at a large state school in Mississippi and I’ve got to say I’ve had just had an interesting conversation with one of my more conservative students. As far as I can tell he’s a pretty ‘die hard’ Republican. He’s really big into state and local politics and is even participating in a big way in a statewide campaign – and not for the first time. He is bright, sophisticated, and probably a future power in state and local politics here in Mississippi.
What surprised me was both his anti-war attitude and, moreover, his positive view of Obama versus Hillary. Though I did not ask, as it was not my place, who he intended to vote for, it seemed clear to me that he recognizes that 2008 is going to be a disaster for the GOP outside of the deep south and that Obama was probably the best the Democrats had to offer in terms of leadership potential. What most impressed him, he said, was that Obama was against the war from the beginning – giving credence to the effectiveness of the ‘Obama has superior judgement’ meme that is being put out by Obama’s campaign.
The meme may be effective, but, like many memes, its ability to reproduce itself has nothing to do with its actual merit. In memetics, as it’s called, the race is not to the good or the wise, but simply to the trendy and the catchy. I heard Dennett lecture to this effect at a philosophy conference once. The meme that Obama has superior judgement is catchy because the country is desperate to have somebody, anybody with good judgement in a position of power. It has been so long since we’ve had such a thing that most of us have literally forgotten what it looks like, which is why it seems remotely plausible that Obama might just possess such good judgement. The meme, however, does not contain that little something I like to call “truth.”
As has been shown in his fantastical foreign policy speeches, his blunders on Pakistan policy, his appalling position on the war in Lebanon and his support for anti-Iranian policies, Obama’s judgement is hardly superior, if by superior we mean “likely to reach sensible and intelligent conclusions.” It is certainly far from unconventional. Antiwar conservatives, especially younger antiwar conservatives, should not be fooled by Obama’s rhetoric of “change” and his use of his Iraq war opposition.
He opposed the Iraq war in a district and a state where it was exceedingly easy to oppose it. No one will confuse Hyde Park and South Side Chicago with the jingo capital of the world, to put it mildly. (Ours is a neighbourhood where you can readily find the fairly amusing bumper sticker, “I’d rather be smashing imperialism.”) He happened to be right about Iraq, but there is little or no evidence that he has applied the same sober judgement to other foreign policy matters, and there is really not much evidence that he would retain his previously good judgement under intense political pressure. There is no evidence because, until this campaign, he has never really been under intense political pressure.
Goodness knows that I, too, look forward to a day when the clapped-out, wasteful politics of the Boomers disappears from the scene. I believe that 2008 probably represents the last hurrah of that generation’s own preoccupations and their continual refighting of the same dreary fights, at least as far as foreign policy and cultural debates are concerned. (Obviously, the inter-generational political fight that is brewing over entitlements and pensions is just getting started.) I was born in 1979, so I believe this entitles me (not that I want the dubious honour) to some claim to belong to Generation X or the “13th Generation” as it has sometimes been called. For my part I do not see the leadership potential in Obama that everyone keeps raving about. Clinton and Obama are both quite dangerous and have terrible policy ideas, and it is not at all clear to me that Obama is necessarily the better of the two. People of “my” generation should not buy into the Obama hype simply because they are tired of Boomers screwing things up.
leave a comment
Prescience
Jeffrey Goldberg, as some may recall, was the enterprising New Yorker writer who wrote up Kurdish propaganda a report on Ansar al-Islam and its alleged ties to Iraqi intelligence. These claims were naturally entirely bogus, and this ought to have been obvious at the time.
As noted by A Tiny Revolution, Goldberg also made some amazingly foolish statements five years ago this month, such as:
The administration is planning today to launch what many people would undoubtedly call a short-sighted and inexcusable act of aggression. In five years, however, I believe that the coming invasion of Iraq will be remembered as an act of profound morality [bold added].
At least he didn’t say six months! That last line is remarkable, but this was my favourite one:
Their [i.e., opponents of the war] lack of experience causes them to reach the naive conclusion that an invasion of Iraq will cause America to be loathed in the Middle East, rather than respected.
Those silly, inexperienced cretins! They’ve certainly learned their lesson.
Wolcott has additional comments.
leave a comment
Ts’eghaspanut’yun
Alex Massie gets it:
Ultimately it’s pretty simple: you either treat genocide as genocide or you don’t. But if you don’t at least have the decency to stay quiet about it rather than offering weasel excuses about the national interest and all the rest of it.
Besides it is humiliating to give in to Turkish bullying. To wit:
A top Turkish official warned Thursday that consequences “won’t be pleasant” if the full House approves the resolution.
“Yesterday some in Congress wanted to play hardball,” said Egemen Bagis, foreign policy adviser to Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan. “I can assure you Turkey knows how to play hardball.”
Screw them.
Spengler also has a number of good points, including this one:
The sorry spectacle of an American president begging Congress not to affirm what the whole civilized world knows to be true underlines the overall stupidity of US policy towards the Middle East. It is particularly despicable for a Western nation to avert its eyes from a Muslim genocide against a Christian population.
Thanks to commenter tcowan for the link to Spengler’s article.
leave a comment
Ron Paul Radio
Ron Paul’s campaign has started running radio ads, and intriguingly the first ad focuses on popular, “mainstream” themes. The ad script says:
Anncr: Who is Ron Paul, the candidate for President? He served his country as a flight surgeon after the Cuban Missile crisis.
As a young doctor, Ron Paul worked nights in the emergency room of an inner city hospital, taking care of everyone, whether they could pay or not.
As an OB-GYN, he has delivered over 4000 babies. As a doctor, Ron Paul knows our health care system needs real change— where patients and doctors are in charge, not big corporations or government bureaucrats.
As a Congressman— for over twenty years, Ron Paul knows our Constitution is there to protect our freedom and limit government in our lives.
Ron Paul has refused his congressional pension. He has never voted to increase the power of the executive branch. He has never voted for a tax increase or an unbalanced budget. People who know him call him the taxpayers’ best friend.
To learn more about this remarkable man, go to RonPaul2008.com. That’s Ron Paul 2008.com
RP: I’m Ron Paul and I approve this message.
The ad has some nice populist flourishes. It manages to tie in Rep. Paul’s medical career with health care and allude to his pro-life stance without dwelling on it and it pitches a constitutionalist, libertarian message without talking about the war. It seems pretty intelligently crafted to me. This ad makes me think that Paul is now really trying to expand his base of support. The days of the symbolic protest campaign definitely seem to be over.
leave a comment