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JOHN EVANS IS THE U.S. ambassador to Armenia, as of this writing.
But he probably won't be for long. Evans, a career diplomat who was
selected to receive an American Foreign Service Assn. award last year
for his frank public speaking, irked his superiors at the State Department
by uttering the following words at UC Berkeley in February 2005: "I
will today call it the Armenian genocide." For that bit of truth-telling,
Evans was forced to issue a clarification, then a correction, then
to endure having his award rescinded under pressure from his bosses,
and finally to face losing his job altogether.
What happened in Armenia in 1915 is well known. The Ottoman Empire
attempted to exterminate the Armenian population through slaughter
and mass deportation. It finished half the job, killing about 1.2
million people. Yet the State Department has long avoided the word
"genocide," not out of any dispute over history but out
of deference to Turkey, whose membership in NATO and location between
Europe and Asia make it a strategic ally.
It is time to stop tiptoeing around this issue and to accept settled
history. Genocide, according to accepted U.N. definition, means
"the intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical,
racial or religious group." Armenia is not even a borderline
case. Punishing an ambassador for speaking honestly about a 90-year-old
crime befits a cynical, double-dealing monarchy, not the leader
of the free world.
Turks point out that their Ottoman ancestors considered it treason
to side with Russia at the outbreak of World War I, as many Armenians
did. But the massacres were also fueled by Muslim animosity toward
a Christian minority. When then-U.S. Ambassador to the Ottoman Empire
Henry Morganthau protested the bloodletting, he received a telling
response from Mehmed Talaat, the interior minister in charge of
the anti-Armenian campaign. "Why are you so interested in Armenians
anyway? You are a Jew, these people are Christians," Talaat
said. "Why can't you let us do with these Christians as we
please?"
For Armenians who escaped the killing and came to this country,
inadequate recognition of their history is crazy-making. Rep. Adam
B. Schiff (D-Burbank), whose district includes the heart of the
Armenian diaspora, keeps introducing a bill to officially recognize
the genocide, only to see congressional leadership quash it each
year, under pressure from the State Department.
Some nations, thankfully, are stepping where Congress fears to
tread. The European Parliament last year passed a nonbinding resolution
asking that Turkey acknowledge the genocide as a precondition for
joining the European Union. The Turkish government, typically, was
infuriated, yet it still desperately wants to join the EU.
One day, the country that was founded as a direct repudiation of
its Ottoman past will face its history squarely, as part of a long-overdue
maturing process. Some day before then, we hope, the State Department
will too.
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