AKP READIES DIVERSION AS GENOCIDE ANNIVERSARY NEARS
Al monitor
April 16 2015
Author: Kadri Gursel
Posted April 16, 2015
Before the Justice and Development Party (AKP) came to power, Turkey
pretended it had no “Armenian problem.” Under the AKP, it finally
acknowledged the issue, but keeps avoiding genuinely facing it.
Before the AKP, Turkey had an “Armenian taboo.” Under the AKP, it
broke the taboo and let the genie out of the bottle, but then didn’t
know how to deal with it.
Turkey under the AKP had feigned a desire to normalize ties with
Armenia. As part of this policy — branded the “Armenian opening”
— a number of significant diplomatic steps were taken, but they,
too, came to naught. The Turkish-Armenian border remains sealed and
official bilateral relations are yet to be established.
Information from Ottoman and church sources indicate that some 1.5
million Armenians lived in what is today Turkey before 1915, making
up 10% of the population. By 1923, when the Republic of Turkey
was established, the Armenian population was gone, barring a tiny
community in Istanbul. On the 100th anniversary of 1915, Turkey’s
Armenians are estimated to number some 50,000 people.
A century later, Turkey’s Armenian issue is still about providing
accurate and convincing answers to several basic questions and an
overall international acceptance of their validity. What happened to
the Armenians in 1915? Who did what and why?
The only universally accepted answer seems to be the year. With no
consensus on any other questions, “the 1915 events” has become the most
widely used term in Turkey to denote this episode in history. So,
some “events” in 1915 led to the mass killings and deportations
of Armenians.
On April 24, 1915, 250 Armenian intellectuals were arrested in Istanbul
and deported to Cankiri and Ayas in central Anatolia.
Representing the elite of Istanbul’s Armenian population, few survived
the deportation. Armenia and the Armenian diaspora mark this episode
as the beginning of the Armenian genocide, commemorating April 24 as
a remembrance day.
April 24, 2015, marks the centenary of the events, and so Armenia
and diasporic Armenians attribute a special importance to this year’s
anniversary and plan to commemorate it more strongly than ever.
The AKP’s Turkey, for its part, is in a “twilight zone” — a state of
ambiguity in which it recognizes its Armenian problem but fails to
face up to it properly. The near perfect portrayal of this confused
state lies in President Recep Tayyip Erdogan himself, whose attitudes
represent a tangle of contradictions.
Two different Erdogans have emerged on the issue. The first went down
in history on April 24 last year as the first Turkish prime minister
to issue a condolence message to Armenians. The other Erdogan seems
to view the Armenian ethnicity as offensive or shameful. In memorable
comments on his ethnic roots in an Aug. 6, 2014, television interview,
he said, “Some have said I’m Georgian. Others, excuse me, have said
even uglier things — that I’m Armenian. But I am Turkish.” This
second Erdogan has not even felt the urge to correct his gaffe.
In his condolence message, the first Erdogan acknowledged, “April 24
carries a particular significance for our Armenian citizens and for
all Armenians around the world,” adding, “We wish that the Armenians
who lost their lives in the context of the early 20th century rest in
peace, and we convey our condolences to their grandchildren.” To what
Armenians view as genocide, the text referred as “the events of 1915”
several times, and mentioned “relocation” once.
The phrase “events of 1915” in Erdogan’s message is one of the
hallmarks of the “twilight zone.” We have here a political leader with
a much softer rhetoric who avoids hard-line and denialist expressions
such as the “so-called Armenian genocide” or “Armenian lies,” which
the leaders of old Turkey employed. Yet, he can’t even bring himself
to call the Armenian tragedy a “massacre.”
The fact that Erdogan spoke of “relocation” makes no difference,
either. An attitude inclined to see the tragic loss of human life as
the natural consequence of deportation offers no realistic prospect
of settling the Armenian problem on any discussion platform.
Still, compared with its predecessors, the AKP government has been
more tolerant of those who call the massacres “genocide” even though
it doesn’t recognize them as such itself. A good illustration of this
tolerance was Turkish-Armenian writer Etyen Mahcupyan’s appointment as
chief adviser to Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu in October. Mahcupyan
was given the post despite being well known for using the “genocide”
label, and continuing to use it after his appointment. Similarly,
since 2012, the government has allowed groups marking April 24 as
the Armenian genocide remembrance day to gather in Taksim, in the
heart of Istanbul, where police are normally quick to break up any
dissident demonstration.
Yet, in a surprise development April 16, Mahcupyan was sent into
retirement on age-limit grounds, a move that came shortly after Pope
Francis and the European Parliament drew Turkey’s ire by calling the
events a genocide. Despite the retirement explanation, Mahcupyan was
widely believed to have lost his post for being too outspoken on this
issue and that of corruption in government ranks.
So, on the centenary of 1915, a Turkey stuck in such a “twilight
zone” can hardly be expected to do more than hope to weather the
anniversary unscathed. All of Ankara’s diplomatic and political
preparations for April 24 have been focused on this objective,
including some sly tactics. In one intriguing move, for instance,
the March 18 commemoration of the Ottoman victory in the Battle of
Gallipoli was rescheduled to April 24.
The oddity of the timing stems from the sequence of events during the
battle. March 18, 1915, was the day when the Allied fleet entered
the Dardanelles Strait before being forced to retreat in a battle
involving layers of mines the Ottomans deployed in the sea. Erdogan’s
novel Gallipoli commemoration, meanwhile, comes on the eve of April 25,
the day that marks the pre-dawn landing of British and French troops
on the Gallipoli Peninsula, an event that could hardly be interpreted
as any kind of victory.
On April 8, journalists accompanying Erdogan on a flight back from
Tehran asked the president about Ankara’s strategy for the centenary.
He gave the following answer: “God willing, this year we’ll issue our
message from the Peace Summit in Istanbul on April 23. Then we’ll all
go to [Gallipoli] the next day and pay our respects at the martyrs’
cemetery.”
A written message like last year’s will hardly suffice for the 100th
anniversary. Erdogan is expected to go a step further by reading out
the message himself.
Ankara has invited 102 heads of state to the ceremony, including
Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan. Rejecting the invitation, Sargsyan
slammed the timing of the Gallipoli commemoration, saying that Turkey
was pursuing “a primitive goal of deflecting the international
community’s attention from events that will mark the centenary of
the Armenian genocide.” Let’s recall here that Sargsyan had invited
Erdogan to the April 24 ceremonies in Yerevan long before Ankara
extended its own invitation.
Erdogan’s tactics aim to force world leaders to make a choice between
Turkey and Armenia, two countries incomparable in any aspect, based
on realpolitik considerations. According to the logic of the game,
a foreign leader invited to both ceremonies will tend to favor Turkey
because of its bigger international weight and significance. And if a
leader is unable to attend the Turkish ceremony, his or her attendance
of the Armenian one will be even more unlikely.
Squandered opportunity
In his condolence message last year, Erdogan said, “We, as the Turkish
Republic, have called for the establishment of a joint historical
commission in order to study the events of 1915 in a scholarly manner.
This call remains valid.” That was not true, as the call had long
become invalid.
The reconciliation protocols Turkey and Armenia signed in 2009
envisaged the creation of a joint history commission, along with
the establishment of diplomatic relations and the mutual reopening
of border crossings. According to the protocols, the commission was
meant “to implement a dialogue on the historical dimension with the
aim of restoring mutual confidence between the two nations, including
an impartial scientific examination of the historical records and
archives to define existing problems and formulate recommendations.”
Then-President Abdullah Gul was actively involved in the fence-mending
process, but Erdogan — prime minister at the time — made sure the
protocols were politically stillborn. In a May 13, 2009, speech in
Baku, Azerbaijan several weeks after the protocols were drafted,
he declared the settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict between
Azerbaijan and Armenia as a precondition for the normalization of
Turkish-Armenian ties. The protocols were nevertheless signed on Oct.
10, 2009, but they never made it to the two countries’ parliaments
for ratification, lingering in the deep-freeze before being officially
proclaimed dead.
The reason Turkey remains in a “twilight zone” today is because the
Erdogan government used the 2008-2009 reconciliation process with
Armenia not as an opportunity to resolve the Armenian question but as
a tool to enlist European and US support in its power struggle with
the Kemalist military and judiciary. For the AKP government at the
time, the objective of becoming the West’s favored partner in Turkey
and having Western support on any issue was much more important than
normalizing ties with Yerevan. And it pulled it off.
The Islamist AKP’s immunity to the nation-state ideology was good
enough to break the Armenian taboo of the old Kemalist Turkey, but its
political capacity fell short of getting Turkey to face its Armenian
issue in earnest.
Normalizing ties with Armenia could indeed serve as a catalyst for
Turkey to face up to history, but this requires a stronger driving
force to propel action, and it lies in Turkey’s European Union
membership process. But the chance of reviving the EU process under
Erdogan’s leadership is close to zero, meaning that Turkey is bound
to stay in the “twilight zone” for the foreseeable future.
From: A. Papazian