
| FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE |
CONTACT: GEORGIA ECONOMOU |
| February
25, 2005—No.15 |
(202)
785-8430 |
AHI Letter Congratulates The Wall Street
Journal and Senior Editorial Page Writer Robert L. Pollock
WASHINGTON, DC—On February 22, 2005, AHI President Gene Rossides
sent a letter to the editor of The Wall Street Journal congratulating
the Journal and senior editorial writer Robert L. Pollock for his
piece titled, "The Sick Man of Europe—Again" (February
16, 2005; Page A14; col. 3). The text of the letter appears below,
followed by The Wall Street Journal article to which the letter responds.
February 22, 2005
Letters to the Editor
The Wall Street Journal
200 Liberty Street
New York, NY 10281
Dear Editor:
Congratulations to The Wall Street Journal and Robert L.
Pollock for his revealing article on Turkey "The Sick Man of
Europe—Again" (2-16-05) which tells it as it is. Finally a mainstream
journalist, and a conservative one at that, has given us the real
picture of Turkey’s virulent anti-American and anti-Semitic attitudes.
The U.S. media has failed to cover adequately the situation
in Turkey for decades. They have taken handouts and statements from
U.S. officials without serious questioning or investigation. Mr.
Pollock’s detailed article will hopefully change the media’s complacency
and work habits. Hopefully Mr. Pollock’s article will also stimulate
the administration to reassess its policy towards Turkey.
I look forward to a future article by Mr. Pollock detailing
Turkey’s many instances of cooperation with the Soviet military during
the Cold War to the serious detriment of U.S. interests, its violations
of U.S. laws and the UN Charter in its invasion of Cyprus and its
horrendous human rights violations.
Sincerely,
Gene Rossides
President, American
Hellenic Institute
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
ANKARA DISPATCH
The Sick Man of Europe—Again
Islamism and leftism add up to anti-American madness in Turkey.
BY
ROBERT L. POLLOCK
Wednesday, February 16, 2005 12:01 a.m.
ANKARA, Turkey—Several years ago I attended an exhibition in Istanbul.
The theme was local art from the era of the country's last military
coup (1980). But the artists seemed a lot more concerned with the
injustices of global capitalism than the fate of Turkish democracy.
In fact, to call the works leftist caricatures—many featured fat
capitalists with Uncle Sam hats and emaciated workers—would have
been an understatement. As one astute local reviewer put it (I quote
from memory): "This shows that Turkish artists were willing
to abase themselves voluntarily in ways that Soviet artists refused
even at the height of Stalin's oppression."
That exhibition came to mind amid all the recent gnashing of teeth
in the U.S. over the question of "Who lost Turkey?" Because
it shows that a 50-year special relationship, between longtime NATO
allies who fought Soviet expansionism together starting in Korea,
has long had to weather the ideological hostility and intellectual
decadence of much of Istanbul's elite. And at the 2002 election,
the increasingly corrupt mainstream parties that had championed Turkish-American
ties self-destructed, leaving a vacuum that was filled by the subtle
yet insidious Islamism of the Justice and Development (AK) Party.
It's this combination of old leftism and new Islamism—much more
than any mutual pique over Turkey's refusal to side with us in the
Iraq war—that explains the collapse in relations.
And what a collapse it has been. On a brief visit to Ankara earlier
this month with Undersecretary of Defense Doug Feith, I found a poisonous
atmosphere—one in which just about every politician and media outlet
(secular and religious) preaches an extreme combination of America-
and Jew-hatred that (like the Turkish artists) voluntarily goes far
further than anything found in most of the Arab world's state-controlled
press. If I hesitate to call it Nazi-like, that's only because Goebbels
would probably have rejected much of it as too crude.
Consider the Islamist newspaper Yeni Safak, Prime Minister Recep
Tayyip Erdogan's favorite. A Jan. 9 story claimed that U.S. forces
were tossing so many Iraqi bodies into the Euphrates that mullahs
there had issued a fatwa prohibiting residents from eating its
fish. Yeni Safak has also repeatedly claimed that U.S. forces
used chemical weapons in Fallujah. One of its columnists has
alleged that U.S. soldiers raped women and children there and
left their bodies in the streets to be eaten by dogs. Among the
paper's "scoops" have
been the 1,000 Israeli soldiers deployed alongside U.S. forces
in Iraq, and that U.S. forces have been harvesting the innards
of dead Iraqis for sale on the U.S. "organ market."
It's not much better in the secular press. The mainstream Hurriyet
has accused Israeli hit squads of assassinating Turkish security
personnel in Mosul, and the U.S. of starting an occupation of Indonesia
under the guise of humanitarian assistance. At Sabah, a columnist
last fall accused the U.S. ambassador to Turkey, Eric Edelman, of
letting his "ethnic origins"—guess what, he's Jewish—determine
his behavior. Mr. Edelman is indeed the all-too-rare foreign-service
officer who takes seriously his obligation to defend America's image
and interests abroad. The intellectual climate in which he's operating
has gone so mad that he actually felt compelled to organize a conference
call with scientists from the U.S. Geological Survey to explain that
secret U.S. nuclear testing did not cause the recent tsunami.
Never in an ostensibly friendly country have I had the impression
of embassy staff so besieged. Mr. Erdogan's office recently forbade
Turkish officials from attending a reception at the ambassador's
residence in honor of the "Ecumenical" Patriarch of the
Orthodox Church, who resides in Istanbul. Why? Because "ecumenical" means
universal, which somehow makes it all part of a plot to carve up
Turkey.
Perhaps the most bizarre anti-American story au courant in the
Turkish capital is the "eighth planet" theory, which holds
not only that the U.S. knows of an impending asteroid strike, but
that we know it's going to hit North America. Hence our desire to
colonize the Middle East.
It all sounds loony, I know. But such stories are told in all seriousness
at the most powerful dinner tables in Ankara. The common thread is
that almost everything the U.S. is doing in the world—even tsunami
relief—has malevolent motivations, usually with the implication
that we're acting as muscle for the Jews.
In the face of such slanders Turkish politicians have been utterly
silent. In fact, Turkish parliamentarians themselves have accused
the U.S. of "genocide" in Iraq, while Mr. Erdogan (who
we once hoped would set for the Muslim world an example of democracy)
was among the few world leaders to question the legitimacy of the
Iraqi elections. When confronted, Turkish pols claim they can't risk
going against "public opinion."
All of which makes Mr. Erdogan a prize hypocrite for protesting
to Condoleezza Rice the unflattering portrayal of Turkey in an episode
of the fictional TV show "The West Wing." The episode allegedly
depicts Turkey as having been taking over by a retrograde populist
government that threatens women's rights. (Sounds about right to
me.)
In the old days, Turkey would have had an opposition party strong
enough to bring such a government closer to sanity. But the
only opposition now is a moribund People's Republican Party,
or CHP, once the party of Ataturk. At a recent party congress,
its leader accused his main challenger of having been part of
a CIA plot against him. That's not to say there aren't a few
comparatively pro-U.S. officials left in the current government
and the state bureaucracies. But they're afraid to say anything
in public. In private, they whine endlessly about trivial things
the U.S. "could
have done differently."
Entirely forgotten is that President Bush was among the first world
leaders to recognize Prime Minister Erdogan, while Turkey's own legal
system was still weighing whether he was secular enough for the job.
Forgotten have been decades of U.S. military assistance. Forgotten
have been years of American efforts to secure a pipeline route for
Caspian oil that terminates at the Turkish port of Ceyhan. Forgotten
has been the fact that U.S. administrations continue to fight annual
attempts in Congress to pass a resolution condemning modern Turkey
for the long-ago Armenian genocide. Forgotten has been America's
persistent lobbying for Turkish membership in the European Union.
Forgotten, above all, has been America's help against the PKK.
Its now-imprisoned leader, Abdullah Ocalan, was expelled from Syria
in 1998 after the Turks threatened military action. He was then passed
like a hot potato between European governments, who refused to extradite
him to Turkey because—gasp!—he might face the death penalty. He
was eventually caught—with the help of U.S. intelligence—sheltered
in the Greek Embassy in Nairobi. "They gave us Ocalan. What
could be bigger than that?" says one of a handful of unapologetically
pro-U.S. Turks I still know.
I know that Mr. Feith (another Jew, the Turkish press didn't hesitate
to note), and Ms. Rice after him, pressed Turkish leaders on the
need to challenge some of the more dangerous rhetoric if they value
the Turkey-U.S. relationship. There is no evidence yet that they
got a satisfactory answer. Turkish leaders should understand that
the "public opinion" they cite is still reversible. But
after a few more years of riding the tiger, who knows? Much of Ataturk's
legacy risks being lost, and there won't be any of the old Ottoman
grandeur left, either. Turkey could easily become just another second-rate
country: small-minded, paranoid, marginal and—how could it be otherwise?—friendless
in America and unwelcome in Europe.
Mr. Pollock is a senior editorial page writer at the Journal.
###
For additional information, please contact Georgia
Economou at (202) 785-8430 or
at georgia@ahiworld.org.
For general information about the activities of AHI, please see
our Web site at http://www.ahiworld.org.
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