A long-smoldering dispute between Turks and Armenians over
events nearly a century old has finally erupted into full flame in
the charged atmosphere of Washington politics in the shape of the
Armenian Genocide resolution. The nonbinding resolution passed the
House Committee on Foreign Affairs last week by a vote of 27-21,
following several unsuccessful attempts going back to 2000. House
Speaker Nancy Pelosi has pledged to make sure the resolution
reaches the floor of the House. If it passes, it will send shock
waves throughout American policy in the Middle East.
Maybe the problem is that the dead never really leave us. The
Armenian genocide by the Ottoman Turks took place almost a century
ago, but the ghosts of the estimated 1.5 million Armenians who lost
their lives in one of the most brutal ethnic-cleansing campaigns in
history will now haunt American efforts to create a stable and
viable Iraq.
It is deeply regrettable, but rather than help right a great
historic wrong, the Armenian genocide resolution will now stand as
an egregious example of special-interest politics distorting a
larger national-security issue.
During World War I, most of Turkey's Armenian population was
driven out of Anatolia and into the desert of Syria. There, most of
them perished from heat and thirst as they struggled to reach the
area of present-day Armenia.
What is wrong, one might ask, with officially acknowledging the
suffering and the destruction of these people? In one sense,
nothing. The history of the 20th century will not be complete until
Turkey recognizes, as Japan and Germany have, the horrors of past
regimes.
Indeed, had Turkey many years ago accepted responsibility for the
sins of the past, we would not be where we are today.
The historical evidence of the genocide is solid and documented by
contemporary eyewitness accounts of foreign diplomats - which in
fact at the time caused considerable international uproar. However,
Turks even today tend react violently to any discussion of the
Armenian genocide, disputing everything from the methods to the
numbers. Turks have not been good advocates for their own cause and
have created sympathy in Europe and in the United States for the
small, impoverished Armenian nation next door to the east.
Nor did Turkey do itself much good in the opinion of many
Americans, when its parliament denied the United States the use of
its airbases for the invasion of Iraq. In Congress in particular,
the argument that Turkey is too valuable an ally to offend was
severely undercut.
But the problem is that the Armenian genocide is the past -- and
this is the present. As Rep. Tom Lantos correctly stated,"We have
to weigh the desire to express our solidarity with the Armenian
people... against the risk that it could cause young men and women
in the uniform of the United States armed services to pay an even
heavier price."
In the present, the Armenian genocide resolution will affect U.S.
relations with Turkey, which, with all our ups and downs, remains a
vital strategic ally for the effort it Iraq.
It is through the Incirlik airbase in southeastern Turkey and
through supply routes via Turkey into northern Iraq that a majority
of American supplies and reinforcements flow.
At this point in time, stabilizing Iraq has to be the priority. In
addition to denying the United States the use of these bases,
Turkey is considering a military incursion into northern Iraq to
attack Kurdish extremist strongholds, a move the U.S. government
strongly opposes.
American Armenians have pressed for the recognition of past wrongs
for a long time. They are understandably elated, but must pause to
consider the potential harm this will cause to the country that is
now their home and which has enabled them to become one of its most
prosperous ethnic communities.
Meanwhile congressional liberals are shamefully taking advantage
of a historic tragedy to achieve what they could not do otherwise,
i.e. severely hamstring the Bush administration's efforts in Iraq -
using Turkey as the tool. California is home to the largest
Armenian community in the United States. The California
congressional delegation, including Mrs. Pelosi, has spearheaded
the effort to pass the genocide resolution.
Their strategy is clever, as well as totally unconscionable on so
many levels. Liberals of conscience, such as Mr. Lantos, ought to
distance themselves from this blow to the national interest. It
serves neither Armenians nor Americans.
Helle
Dale is director of the Douglas and Sarah Allison Center
for Foreign Policy Studies at the Heritage Foundation.
First appeared in the Washington Times