Armenian genocide and international relations
By HAROUT HARRY SEMERDJIAN
04/23/2012 23:34
Over 20 countries have officially recognized the Armenian genocide, often with high costs and difficult political battles.
MONUMENT commemorating the Armenian genocide Photo: Reuters
While the modern-day Republic of Turkey was founded in 1923, eight years after
its Ottoman predecessors embarked on a massive and systematic undertaking to rid
the empire of its Armenian population, the country today often finds itself in
diplomatic spats with various Western nations over its history. Outside the
periphery of geopolitics, it would be perplexing to most as to why an event that
occurred nearly 100 years ago would impact relations between Turkey and the
United States and various European countries. The answer lies in the annals of
history.
During the First World War, while the Islamic Ottoman Empire was
fighting the Allied Powers on the side of Germany, its native Christian Armenian
population became a target of organized deportations and massacres. Long having
suffered from discrimination and second-class citizenship, WWI provided the
Young Turk government a cover to reach a “final solution” to the prevailing
Armenian question.
Starting April 24, 1915, with the arrest and killing
of the Armenian intelligentsia, an entire civilization was uprooted from its
many-millennia-old homeland and outright massacred or driven to a slow death in
the deserts of Syria. The material and cultural loss of the Armenians has also
been enormous, with some 3,000 churches destroyed alone. It is estimated that
out of a population of two million Armenians, one-and-a-half million were killed
while another half a million survived and dispersed to nearly every continent,
thus resulting in the creation of a large and dynamic Armenian
diaspora.
This is where global power-politics unfolds. As offspring of
survivors of the genocide, Armenians throughout the world developed an ingrown
sense of patriotism and strong national identity over the years. With the
Cold War over and with a tiny, but nevertheless independent, Republic of Armenia
in existence, the past two decades have seen a renewal of the international
drive for recognition of the genocide in light of persistent Turkish
denial.
The Armenian refugees of 1915 who eventually found themselves
integrated and well-established into their host societies, and frustrated with a
lack of justice for the genocide, often succeeded in bringing their families’
plight to the attention of world leaders and onto the agendas of global
parliaments and the US Congress. It is this very Armenian diaspora that
is so feared and vilified by the Turkish government, which regrettably fails to
comprehend and accept the realities, needs and anguish of these communities
spread all across the world. An eerie reminder of the policy of exile still in
effect, visiting diaspora scholars who have written on the genocide have also
been deported from the country.
To date, over 20 countries and 43 US
states have officially recognized the Armenian genocide, often with high costs
and difficult political battles. In 2001, when the French parliament officially
passed a resolution formally recognizing the Armenian genocide, Turkey recalled
its ambassador and threatened to cut off economic and military ties with France.
The two countries narrowly escaped yet another political fallout earlier this
year over a proposed bill that would have criminalized the denial of the
Armenian genocide in France. The French Constitutional Court, however,
found the bill unconstitutional and the measure eventually fell
through.
Arguably the most influential Armenian diaspora is that of the
United States, where powerful Armenian lobby groups often influence members of
Congress to pass pro-Armenian legislation and secure large amounts of foreign
aid to Armenia every year. While successful on a number of issues, the
Armenian Genocide Resolution is yet to be passed by both the House and the
Senate – a measure that consistently fails due to Turkey’s heavy pressure on the
White House and threats to close down a US military base on its
territory.
President Barack Obama, while a firm supporter of Armenian
genocide legislation as senator and later as presidential candidate, has also
not come through on his campaign promise to recognize the 1915 events as
genocide despite a strongly-worded statement in acknowledgement of “Armenian
Remembrance Day.”
With the one-hundredth anniversary of the Armenian
genocide fast approaching, Turkey increasingly finds itself isolated on this
issue and under international pressure to finally recognize the wrongs of its
predecessors. Its official policy of denial has been a total failure over the
decades. Turkey has long relied on its military strength and geopolitical
location to get its way on this and other issues including Cyprus and the
Kurdish question; if its leadership wants to seriously advance the country’s
democratization and “Europeanization” processes, as well as to set the stage for
its rise as a regional power, it ought to think along the lines of peace and
reconciliation with its neighbors, starting with an honest acknowledgment of its
own history.
The writer is a PhD candidate at the University of
Oxford. He holds advanced graduate degrees from The Fletcher School of
Diplomacy at Tufts University and the University of California, Los Angeles.