Wexler's Travels: South Florida's Bellicose Congressman Carves up the Middle East To really understand Wexler's motivations, though, you must know about Turkey's relationship with Israel. Any friend of the Jewish state is a friend of the 41-year-old Wexler's. Bob
Norman Robert
Wexler loves to talk Turkey. The congressman from Boca Raton gobbles
on and on about that troubled country, calling it a role model for all
Muslim nations to follow and praising its help in the so-called war on
terrorism. "Turkey is secular and democratic, and they are a
steadfast ally of the United States," he recently told me.
"They are leading the fight in Afghanistan, and I think America
has an obligation to help Turkey like they are helping us." It's
a stretch to call the Republic of Turkey a democracy, but everything
is a little exaggerated when it comes to Wexler and Turkey. He doesn't
just vote for the country's causes; he founded the Congressional
Turkey Caucus last year to help build a pro-Turk coalition in the
capital. He isn't just friendly with the powerful Turkish lobby; he
won a "leadership award" from the American-Turkish Council
this past March. Wexler doesn't just want to increase trade with
Turkey; at the behest of leading Turkish businessmen, he is working
hard in Congress to end tariffs on the country's exports to the United
States. All
this for a near-military state with a terrible history of human rights
abuses, illegal invasions, and genocide. The republic's
anti-democratic ways have kept it from membership in the European
Union, but the congressman, along with the Bush administration, hails
it as a shining light among nations. And Wexler, bless him, is doing
it all for war. The Democrat, whose district spreads from north
Broward County to parts north of West Palm Beach, has been one of the
strongest supporters in Congress for military action in Iraq. During
the past couple of years, he's tried to help secure allies in the
region, traveling to Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Oman, Qatar, Kuwait,
Kazakhstan, and Jordan, among other countries. And Wexler, who counts
the president of the Assembly of Turkish American Associations among
his campaign contributors, has made at least two trips to Turkey's
capital city, Ankara, since May 2001. No wonder: The country borders
northern Iraq, and the United States already uses the Turkish airbase
in Incirlik to patrol no-fly zones. No other nation is more important
strategically in the fight with Iraq. To
really understand Wexler's motivations, though, you must know about
Turkey's relationship with Israel. Any friend of the Jewish state is a
friend of the 41-year-old Wexler's. And during the past several years,
Turkey has become Israel's close friend, militarily and strategically.
The two countries aren't really natural allies. Though Jews were
welcomed in Istanbul in 1492 after they were expelled from Spain, the
relationship has had very rocky times. After World War I, for
instance, Hebrew language and culture was banned in Turkey for 20
years. During World War II, the predominantly Muslim country was
neutral and at times assisted Hitler's Germany. Turkey has, of course,
become a bit more moderate since then. It was the first Muslim country
to recognize Israel and establish diplomatic ties to it. Israel and
Turkey do have things, mostly negative things, in common. Both, for
instance, illegally occupy other people's lands, Turkey in Cyprus and
Israel in the Palestinian territories. Both have been accused of
massacring civilians. A strong sense of nationalism pervades both
countries, and both have militaries that are woven deeply into
civilian life. They share common enemies, like Syria and Iraq, and
possess seemingly insatiable appetites for armaments. But
Turkey's main arms supplier, the United States, at times has cut off
the flow of guns because of Ankara's pesky human rights problems.
Israel, which operates under no such silly moral constraints, came to
the rescue in 1996, signing a military pact with Turkey. And since
then, the Jewish state has helped Turkey procure billions of dollars'
worth of arms and modernize its military. Because of its own interests
in the region, principally oil and Israel, America has helped foster
the Ankara-Jerusalem alliance. And, lest our politicians lose
interest, Israel is pushing its key supporters in Congress -- like
Wexler -- to advocate for Turkish interests in the United States.
Wexler has performed dutifully in that respect, sponsoring and
cosponsoring numerous pro-Turkey bills. The American Jewish
establishment is also doing its part: Just this past December 18, nine
major Jewish groups -- including the American Jewish Congress, B'nai
B'rith International, and the Anti-Defamation League -- wrote
President Bush a letter asking that the administration provide Turkey
"debt forgiveness, trade concessions, and/or further
International Monetary Fund relief." In July, Congress authorized
Bush to give the country $228 million in aid. Money is one thing;
propaganda is another. In July, Deputy Defense Secretary Paul
Wolfowitz, another devout backer of Israel, traveled to Ankara and
made this amazing declaration: "I think a real test of whether a
country is a democracy is how it treats its minorities. And actually
it's one of the things that impresses me about Turkish history, the
way Turkey treats its own minorities." Here Wolfowitz proves he's
not willing to let the truth get in the way of a good war. He must be
familiar with Turkey's early-20th-century oppression of the Jews. And
for the past 80 years, Turkey has repressed its 15 million Kurds in
horrendous ways, not the least of which has been to ban their language
and culture. When Kurdish rebels rose against the military in 1984,
the Turks beat down the uprising during the next 15 years, killing
30,000 Kurds, destroying more than 3,000 Kurdish villages, and leaving
3 million Kurds homeless, according to generally accepted figures. Even
more damning is the genocide of 1.5 million Armenians between 1915 and
1924, an atrocity Turkey has yet to own up to. For the past several
years, Turkey has blockaded the border of Armenia to keep goods --
including humanitarian aid like food and medicine -- from reaching
that impoverished nation. If you have the stomach to ignore all of
that, Turkey is still far from being a real democracy. Though it is a
secular nation of Muslims, which is certainly a worthy attribute, it
also has a troublesome history of banning Islamists from running for
office. Turkey, in fact, is brutally oppressive to all dissidents,
including journalists and political activists. It still employs
torture and beatings in its "justice" system, according to
numerous human rights groups. They don't call them Turkish prisons for
nothing. The Turkey-Israel dynamo strikes fear in the heart of the
Arab world, the region inhabited by 30 million Kurds, Greece, and, of
course, Armenia. An article at a popular Greek website (greeksunited.com)
conveys some of the consternation felt in the area: "The crude
power games played by Turkey and Israel in the Middle East constitute
an enormous inflammatory danger to regional peace and to vital
American interests in that part of the world." Human
Rights Watch put it this way in its recently released 2002 report:
"Turkey's persistent problems relating to torture, free
expression, and minority rights kept it as a case apart." Wexler,
in his bullish bid to help Israel and the West dominate the Middle
East, seems oblivious to such realities. In May 2001, when the
congressman traveled to Turkey on a diplomatic mission, he had war on
his mind. "As Iraq's northern neighbor," he said,
"there cannot be an anti-Saddam Hussein strategy without the full
involvement of Turkey." This past February, Wexler led a
delegation of six members of Congress to Turkey and Israel, where he
praised the two countries for their "critical assistance in the
war on terrorism... The relationship between Israel and Turkey, which
has improved dramatically in recent years, has led to increased
stability and security in the region and has improved cooperation on
economic, military, cultural, and strategic matters." In
July, the House International Relations Subcommittee on Europe passed
a Wexler-sponsored resolution to commend Turkey and Israel. Wexler
hailed it in a press release, in which he called upon the Middle East
"to follow the example set by these two nations in promoting
democracy, peace, and tolerance." Even as Wexler and the Bush
administration have praised the stuffing out of Turkey, the republic
has yet to sign on to an Iraq invasion. The issues run deep. During
the first Gulf War, Turkey was swamped with Kurdish immigrants -- the
last thing that government wants. Today, Turkish leaders fear a repeat
of that, and they're afraid that if Iraqi Kurds are liberated, Kurds
living in their country will clamor for the same. The Turkish
government especially loathes the mention of one particular word, says
Kani Xulam, a Turkish Kurd who runs the Washington, D.C.-based
American Kurdish Information Network. "In Turkey, just saying
'Kurdistan' in a political context can get you ten years in prison if
you have a zealous prosecutor," he says. "Men like Wolfowitz
and Wexler are wrong that it is a model state. Hearing that makes me
sick to my stomach. They are pumping up Turkey with what it is not. It
has massive problems. It is a dysfunctional, racist state, and its
democratic façade is very, very, very thin." Iraq under Saddam
Hussein is even worse, Xulam acknowledges. But he says Kurdish leaders
are concerned that America will abandon them when the dictator is
gone, just as it did after the first Gulf War. He opposes a U.S.
invasion and holds out hope that the anti-Hussein forces in northern
Iraq can do the job themselves within the next couple of years.
"The idea of the United States attacking Iraq fills me with great
trepidation," Xulam says. "Call me cynical, but I believe
the [administration's] wish is that another strong dictator will take
over there, only the new top guy will listen to Washington. If I had
the ear of Bush, I would tell him that the land is saturated with
blood, and adding American blood to it will not make the problem any
better. If anything, it will make it worse." Such concerns don't keep pro-war politicians like Bush and Wexler from constantly referring to the plight of Iraqi Kurds in their pitch for war. In America, Kurds in northern Iraq are deemed freedom fighters while their Turkish brethren are regarded as terrorists. Xulam decries this contradiction and complains that the United States' coddling of Turkey amounts to sheer hypocrisy. "This world we live in can't be home to both tyranny and freedom side by side," he says simply. It's a bit of wisdom Wexler has yet to acquire. Broward-Palm Beach New Times
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