Israelis at
Non-Israeli Universities
Oxford - Avi Shlaim (Dept of
History) used as a source for Turkish Prime Minister
Erdogan's anti-Israel tirade at Davos
forum
http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/Read.aspx?GUID=492D76A0-3FD9-457C-89FA-626C54F05FAF
Talking Turkey
By Steven Plaut
Wednesday, February 04, 2009
Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
Erdogan had a temper tantrum at the Davos forum on world economics
recently. He foamed at the mouth about Israel's supposedly
"massacring innocent women and children" in its recent military
operations against the genocidal Hamas terrorists in the Gaza Strip.
He walked out in demonstrative contempt when Israel's own leftwing
president, Shimon Peres, arose to speak to the delegates. He
repeatedly accused Israel of "mass murder" in Gaza. Erdogan
ranted at length about how
Israel had turned the Gaza Strip into an "open-air prison."
Even more incredibly, as part of his
anti-Israel ravings, Erdogan cited two anti-Semitic ex-Israelis as
"authorities" for his claims. One "authority"
cited by the Turkish Prime Minister is the notorious deranged
Holocaust Denier Gilad Atzmon. A saxophone player in the UK
with ties to German Neo-Nazis and Holocaust Deniers in other
countries, Atzmon is so openly anti-Semitic that even the most
bigoted segments of the
Bash-Israel Lobby in the UK
usually will have nothing to do with him. He swings back and
forth
between denying altogether that there was any Holocaust of Jews by
the Germans and justifying it as something the Jews deserved. He
is on record
calling for synagogues to be burned down and
promotes the anti-Semitic czarist forgery, The Protocols of
the Elders of Zion. Erdogan cited Atzmon as saying, "Israeli
barbarity is far beyond even ordinary cruelty."
The other "scholar" cited by Erdogan is
the
Israel-hating professor Avi Shlaim, who is on the faculty of
Oxford University.
Shlaim is a pseudo-historian who
has made a career out of serving up
anti-Israel propaganda, including for the extremist Jew-hating
"The Nation" magazine. Shlaim gained notoriety when it turned out he
was one of the
two "academics" who prostituted themselves for Neo-Nazi Norman
Finkelstein. He served as accomplice in the attempts by
Finkelstein's supporters to maneuver
DePaul University into granting
Finkelstein tenure on the basis of his anti-Semitic rants.
At Istanbul's airport thousands of
people gathered to greet Erdogan when he returned, waving Turkish
and Palestinian flags and chanting "Turkey is proud of you." In
response to Erdogan's arrogant rant against Israel's defense
operations in Gaza, what can be said? Well, for one, in
Turkey, unlike in Israel, Islamists are routinely taken out back and
shot. Turkey also invaded the Kurdish areas of northern Iraq, mowing
down any Kurds who got in their way, for Kurdish provocations that
never came anywhere near those of the Hamas savages, who fired 8000
rockets into Israel from Gaza.
But what else is one to make of this
display of temper by the Prime Minister of a country attempting to
gain membership in the EU?
I would venture to respond to Erdogan
by offering the following summary of the conflict:
The occupation is entirely illegal and
is not recognized as legitimate by a single country on earth other
than the occupying power. The occupier carried out acts of mass
expulsion and ethnic cleansing when the illegal occupation was
imposed on its victims. It transferred thousands of its own citizens
illegally as settlers into the territories it continues to occupy.
Its human rights record in the occupied territories has been
atrocious. It continues to defy all world opinion, while imposing
military control and suppression on the hapless residents of the
illegally occupied territories. Moreover, its human rights record at
home is almost as atrocious. It is an apartheid regime in which
minorities are discriminated against and openly harassed. It is a
militarist entity that came into existence through perpetration of a
set of massive crimes against humanity, including ethnic cleansing
and mass murder. Indeed, it has often been accused of having
perpetrated genocide at the very moment of its creation. There are
serious doubts as to whether it even has any moral right to exist as
an independent state. Certainly its capital, a city considered holy
by many religions, may not rightfully even belong to it at all. That
city was seized from its rightful owners using military force, and
its religious shrines were looted and transformed to serve the
regime.
The above paragraph of course refers to
Turkey.
The occupied territories in which
ethnic cleansing was perpetrated by the Turkish occupying power
refer to northern Cyprus. Turkey illegally invaded Cyprus, an
independent state (now part of NATO and the EU), in 1974, and
militarily seized about a third of the island. It then expelled the
entire Greek population from those occupied territories. Hundreds of
thousands of innocent Greek Cypriots were made homeless refugees due
to the military aggression of Turkey. Not a single country on earth
recognizes the puppet "republic" Turkey still operates there. To
maintain its hold on northern Cyprus, Turkey transferred many
thousands of its own citizens to northern Cyprus as illegal
settlers.
Northern Cyprus is not even the only
set of occupied territories seized and held by modern Turkey. In the
year 1939, Turkey simply marched into the Alexandretta area of
Syria, then a French protectorate, and annexed it. The ethnic Turks
in the area were a minority of the population. The Turkish conquest
was based on nothing more than Turkey's desire to take charge of the
excellent port facilities there. Syria still considers this area as
its own (of course, it also considers Israel, Jordan, Lebanon, and
Cyprus also to be its own). Turkey has shown no interest in removing
its settlers from Alexandretta. Its control of other areas, such as
the area around Kars near the Armenian border or swaths of
Thrace, is also based on dubious legitimacy and questionable claims.
Turkey is a semi-democracy in which the
military exercises enormous amounts of political power. The respect
for human rights in Turkey is notable for its absence. Kurdish,
Armenian, and other ethnic minorities have been forcibly Turkified.
Religious minorities, such as the Alevi, are persecuted. Censorship
is common. Kurdish areas have been subjected to martial rule.
Brutal force has been used against
Kurdish separatists and other political groups. Indeed, the
operations of the Turkish military against the Kurds make Israel's
recent incursion into the Gaza Strip (in Operation "Cast Lead") look
like a May Day picnic. Until 2003, it was forbidden to speak Kurdish
on the radio or television; the Kurdish alphabet still cannot be
used. The state of human rights in Turkey, according to numerous
human rights NGOs, continues to be atrocious. Women in Turkey are
mistreated; until very recently women students applying to
universities
had to pass a virginity test. The Turkish military police
routinely kill civilians. Journalists have been assassinated.
Open-air prison, indeed.
But today's abuses in Turkey pail into
insignificance when placed in the context of the mass murders and
ethnic cleansings that accompanied the birth of modern Turkey
itself. As the Ottoman Empire collapsed during World War I, ethnic
Turks led by Ataturk seized control of most of Anatolia. The
infamous mass murders, considered by some to have been genocidal, of
ethnic Armenians accompanied the Turkish campaign for independence.
Somewhat less well known in the West is
the fact that Turkey's creation was also accompanied by the mass
expulsion of almost the entire Greek population of
Anatolia. The Greeks had been living in
Anatolia for thousands of years before the first Turk even stepped
foot in the place. Homer was an Anatolian. Western Anatolia at the beginning of the twentieth century held large areas with Greek
ethnic majorities. As the Ottoman
Empire fell apart, the large Greek populations declared their own
independence from Turkey and their union with Greece. The areas
around Smyrna and parts of Thrace, with their large Greek
population, were supposed to come under Greek sovereignty in the
name of self-determination. Britain's Lloyd George was among those
who had made the promise.
Between 1919 and 1922, Greece and
Turkey fought a bloody war for Western Anatolia. No one knows how many Greeks were butchered by the Turks during the
war. But the Greeks lost and virtually the entire Greek population,
many hundreds of thousands of people, were expelled en masse
by Turkey from their ancestral
homelands. Almost four times as many Greeks were expelled from
Anatolia than the number of "Palestinians" who became refugees as a
result of their fleeing the territory that became independent Israel
in 1948. The Anatolian Greeks would never be granted any "right of
return."
Then there is the little matter of
Constantinople. The Greek claims to Istanbul are at least a hundred
times more legitimate than are any Arab claims to Jerusalem.
Constantinople was always a Greek city, conquered by the Turks only
in 1453. Its Greek churches were turned into mosques, and some today
are Turkish museums. Turkey has never offered to internationalize
the city nor turn half of it over to the disenfranchised Greeks.
Meanwhile, an entire section of Athens
consists of the Greek families expelled from Smyrna (Izmir). Other
residents of Athens are ethnic Greeks expelled from illegally
occupied northern Cyprus.
After his tantrum, Prime Minister
Erdogan told the press, "My anger over Gaza directed at Israeli
government, not Jews." Well, the whole world's disgust with this
hypocrisy is directed against Erdogan and not against the Turkish
people. After all, the Turkish people deserve better.
Steven Plaut is a
professor at the
Graduate School of the Business
Administration at the University of Haifa and is a columnist for the
Jewish Press. A collection of his commentaries on the current events
in Israel can be found on his "blog" at
www.stevenplaut.blogspot.com.
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