David Miller, the former
British ambassador to Armenia, was one of the distinguished speakers at
the
London School of Economics screening of "The Blue Book", a British
documentary
about the ongoing Turkish denial of the Armenian Genocide. The film and
discussion drew an audience of over 100 students and staff. Mr Miller was clearly disturbed by the documentary by
Gagik
Karageuzian and the levels at which denial still runs deep in modern day
Turkey.
He engaged the Blue Book issue (a 1916 British parliamentary publication
which
the Turkish government falsely calls a forgery) and summarised Turkish
tactics on
Armenian issues, including the Turkish stance on the recently
signed
Protocols between Yerevan and Ankara, as bullying.
Miller went on to state that he did not think the
British
Foreign Office would recognise the Armenian Genocide on its own
initiative. This
was not due to a lack of evidence because, as he suggested, the Foreign
Office
knew very well about the Armenian Genocide from its own archives. He saw
the
British non-recognition as part of the sad fact that Great Britain had a
record
of appeasing dictatorships and powerful states in its national
interests.
Miller then gave an example of what he meant. In
1940 over
20,000 Polish prisoners of war and civilians were murdered in cold blood
at
Katyn forest by Soviet troops on the orders of Joseph Stalin. The
Soviets hid
these killings, and then blamed the Germans who discovered the corpses
in 1943.
The British (and Americans), who knew the truth about the Katyn massacre
as
early as 1940, remained silent about it. It was not until 1990, when the Russian government
itself
recognised these mass executions by Soviet troops that the British
Foreign
Office also spoke up.
So, when did the speaker think the Foreign Office
might
recognise the Armenian Genocide? Only "when Turkey recognises it" was
the response.
The screening of "The Blue Book" at the London
School of
Economics was organised by the LSE SU Armenian Society. The
speakers
were Lord Avebury, David Miller and Ara Sarafian.