Turkish anger at Swedish genocide vote

EuroNews, France
March 12 2010

Turkish anger at Swedish genocide vote

12/03 18:53 CET

There has been outrage in Turkey against Sweden after the country’s
parliament narrowly voted to describe as genocide the killing of
Armenians in the First World War. Turkish Labour Party supporters made
their anger known outside the Swedish consulate in Istanbul.

Turkey’s Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who has cancelled a
planned visit to Stockholm next week in protest, attacked the vote at
a public meeting.

`This subject should be left to the historians,’ he said. Turkey
resents the term genocide, arguing that those who died were victims of
civil war. It’s recalled its ambassador to Sweden in protest.

`The fact that the issue is used as a threat by different countries,’
said the prime minister, `I find that unjust and incomprehensible.’

The Swedish parliament passed the resolution by just one vote, despite
opposition from the ruling centre-right coalition. Other government
representatives have sought to play down the row.

`The decision in the Swedish parliament will in no way affect the very
strong support that Swedish government has exerted with regards to the
ascension of turkey to the EU’, said Christer Asp, Swedend’s
ambassador in Istanbul.

The Swedish vote comes less than a week after a US congressional
committee narrowly approved a similar resolution ` a move which also
sparked anger from Turkey.

Armenians happy with Swedish stance

EuroNews, France
March 12 2010

Armenians happy with Swedish stance

The Swedish vote describing the killings of Armenians during World War
I as genocide has been welcomed in Yerevan. Armenia says up to one and
a half million of its countrymen died when they were deported ` either
from starvation and disease or killed by Ottoman troops.

`Recognition of genocide and crimes against humanity is very
important, not only for Armenians but for mankind,’ said Deputy
Foreign Minister Arman Kirakosyan.

Armenians have campaigned for the killings to be recognised
internationally as genocide. Some 20 countries have done so ` others
hope more will follow suit.

`The Americans recognised that slavery existed in the United States,’
said economist Arthur Aghazhanyan, `the Germans have recognised the
Jewish holocaust on European territory. In the same way the Turkish
government should recognise the actions taken by their former rulers
that were not committed by themselves.’

The 1915 killings continue to poison Turkish-Armenian relations. This
is despite a historic accord the two countries signed last year,
establishing diplomatic ties and reopening their shared border.

Davutoglu Meets with Swedish Foreign Minister Carl Bildt in Lapland

Davutoglu Meets with Swedish Foreign Minister Carl Bildt in Lapland

11:41 – 13.03.10

Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu met with his Swedish
counterpart, Carl Bildt, at an informal gathering in Lapland, Finland,
yesterday, reports News.az.

Following the meeting, Davutoglu told reporters, "We regret that the
Swedish parliament decided to approve the [Armenian Genocide]
resolution. First of all, we think that parliaments should not
evaluate such historical events since most of parliamentarians do not
have adequate information about those events. Politicization of the
history leads to serious problems for our societies. We consider this
decision of the Swedish parliament as a big mistake. It is impossible
to accept it."

"Secondly, there were perfect relations between Turkey and Sweden.
Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan was scheduled to pay a visit to
Sweden next week to further improve our bilateral relations which we
described as a kind of strategic partnership. Under the light of
recent developments, we had to cancel Prime Minister Erdogan’s visit.
Also, we recalled our ambassador in Stockholm for consultations. We
did not expect such a decision from the parliament of a friendly
country," he said.

Davutoglu said, "I conveyed our views to Bildt. We hope that such
decisions which provoke developments in the region would not be made
in the future. Turkey will not allow anyone else to evaluate its
history."

Tert.am

Agreement on economic cooperation between Armenia and Poland signed

Agreement on economic cooperation between governments of Armenia and
Poland signed

YEREVAN, MARCH 12, NOYAN TAPAN. A delegation headed by Polish Prime
Minister Donald Tusk came on a one-day visit to Yerevan on March 12.
On the same say the Prime Minister of Armenia Tigran Sargsyan had a
tete-a-tete conversation with D. Tusk, followed by a meeting of the
delegations.

T. Sargsyan expressed confidence that the reached agreements would
form a new basis for further development of Armenian-Polish relations.
"The agreement to be signed today, as well as the establishment of an
intergovernmental commission will enable to discuss in detail all
business projects of mutual interest. The brotherly ties that have
formed between our nations over the centuries are a pledge of
strengthening Armenian-Polish relations. The textbooks on history of
the Armenian people contain a description of Armenian-Polish relations
since the 11th century, the favorable attitute of Polish kings to the
Armenian community which formed in Poland, in the 14th century the
legislative stipulation of the rights of the Armenian community by the
Polish Sejm, as well as the unique opportunity to administer justice
based on the work "Code of Law" by Mkhitar Gosh, which remains modern
until now and shows that our relations have deep roots," T. Sargsyan
stated.

In the words of D. Tusk, this is his first visit to Armenia, but the
very first meeting with the Armenian prime minister bears evidence of
centuries-old history of friendly relations between Armenian and
Polish peoples. D. Tusk expressed a high opinion about Armenia’s
active contribution to the Eastern Partnership project.

According to the RA Government Information and PR Department, the
Agreement on Economic Cooperation between the Governments of Armenia
and Poland was signed after the meeting.

The signing ceremony was followed by a press conference given by the
two prime ministers at the press center of the Armenian government.

"The visit of the Polish prime minister is especially pleasant to us
because on the one hand we discuss the strengthening of our economic
cooperation, while on the other hand we speak about traditionally
friendly ties between Armenia and Poland," T. Sargsyan noted. He said
that the agreement on economic cooperation would create a favorable
environment to promote bilateral economic relations, encourage
investments, ensure their protection, and assit the private sector.

He announced that an agreement was reached to establish a bilateral
intergovernmental commission which will examine all economic,
political, financial and cultural problems on the agenda of the two
countries.

D. Tusk said: "I am glad that during our talk we identified a number
of fields of mutually beneficial cooperation. In addition to creating
a commission, we will start cooperating, particularly in chemical and
industrial sectors. Perhaps we will use Armenia’s experience in
nuclear energy. The signing of this agreement is the start of close
economic cooperation between our countries".

BAKU; Serzh Sargsyan appoints new press secretary

APA, Azerbaijan
March 13 2010

Serzh Sargsyan appoints new press secretary

[ 13 Mar 2010 19:46 ]

Baku ` APA. President of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan appointed Armen
Arzumanyan his new press secretary, APA reports quoting News Armenia.

Samvel Farmanyan was relieved from the post of presidential press
secretary due his appointment to the post of analytical-information
program director of the Armenian Public Television.

The new press secretary was working as the executive director of the
Armenian Public Television.

BAKU: Eldar Mammadyarov: The Resolution On The So-Called Armenian Ge

ELMAR MAMMADYAROV: THE RESOLUTION ON THE SO-CALLED ARMENIAN GENOCIDE PASSED BY THE HOUSE COMMITTEE ON FOREIGN AFFAIRS HAS NEGATIVE INFLUENCE ON THE SETTLEMENT OF NAGORNO KARABAKH CONFLICT

Azerbaijan.az
March 12 2010

"If the members of the U.S. Congress discuss the events that happened
100 years ago, then they should also assess Khojaly genocide that
was committed 20 years ago," Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov
told journalists.

Minister does not believe that the decision passed by the House
Committee on Foreign Affairs will cause peace and stability between
Azerbaijan and Armenia, or generally in the South Caucasus.

"Such decisions have negative influence on the settlement of Nagorno
Karabakh conflict. Occupation of 20 percent of the Azerbaijani
territories by Armenia, displacement of about one million people pose
great threat to the security in the region. Therefore, we consider
that if the Congress holds any discussions on the South Caucasus,
it should not be from historical aspect, but should be connected with
the present situation," he said.

Sweden Recognizes Assyrian, Greek And Armenian Genocide

SWEDEN RECOGNIZES ASSYRIAN, GREEK AND ARMENIAN GENOCIDE
By Abdulmesih BarAbrahem

Assyrian International News Agency AINA

M arch 12 2010

Stockholm (AINA) — In a resolution adopted today, the Swedish
parliament (the Riksdagen) referered to the World War I-era killings
of 2.75 million Armenians, Assyrians (also known as Chaldeans and
Syriacs) and Pontic Greeks by the Ottomans as a genocide. Turkey is
regarded legally and politically as the successor state of the Ottoman
Empire but vehemently rejects calling the killing genocide according
to the U.N. definition adopted in 1948, insisting that those killed
were victims of war and uprising.

The genocide claimed the lives of 750,000 Assyrians (75%), 500,000
Greeks and 1.5 million Armenians.

The resolution passed by a single vote after some members of Prime
Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt’s ruling centre-right coalition broke
ranks and voted with the red-green opposition.

Swedish Foreign Minister Carl Bildt is cited by Swedish radio news
saying that he regretted the Parliament’s decision and feared it could
"be used" by reform critics in Turkey and that it "will unfortunately
not have a positive effect on the ongoing normalization process
between Turkey and Armenia."

In contrast the Left Party’s foreign policy spokesperson Hans Linde
told The Local newspaper on Thursday that the time had come for Sweden
to take a stand on the issue. "First, to learn from history and stop it
from repeating and second, to encourage the development of democracy
in Turkey, which includes dealing with its own history. The third
reason," added Linde, "is to redress the wrongs committed against
the victims and their relatives."

The Washington Post cites Gulan Avci saying that, "after 95 years it is
time for people who have suffered so long to obtain redress." Gulan
Avci is a Liberal Party lawmaker who broke with her party’s line
and voted to recognize the resolution. Avci is a Kurdish immigrant
from Turkey.

The uniqueness of Sweden’s genocide adoption is that it refers also
to Assyrians and Pontic Greeks. Their suffering during the World
War I has been mostly forgotten for decades, but in December 2007
the International Association of Genocide Scholars (IAGS) did vote
overwhelmingly and recognized the genocides of the Assyrian and Greek
populations of the Ottoman Empire between 1914 and 1923. For the
Assyrians in Sweden, the recognition of the genocide, called Seyfo
(sword) in Assyrian, is a milestone in their effort for political
acknowledgment. More than 80,000 Assyrians live in Sweden, and they
closely followed the debate in the parliament.

As expected, Turkey condemned the decision of the Swedish Parliament.

A strong condemnation was voiced in a press release from the Prime
Minister’s office. Turkey recalled its ambassador to Sweden for
consultations and said Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has
cancelled his planned visit to Sweden on the 17th of this month.

Last week a U.S. a congressional committee approved a similar
resolution that would send the measure to the full House of
Representatives. Minutes after the vote, Turkey withdrew its ambassador
to the U.S. Also last year, Turkey also recalled its ambassador to
Canada after Prime Minister Stephen Harper referred to the killings
as genocide.

http://www.aina.org/news/20100311192620.htm

ANKARA: Secretariat-General For Witch-Hunting

SECRETARIAT-GENERAL FOR WITCH-HUNTING

Hurriyet
March 11 2010
Turkey

Allow me to begin with a correction irrelevant to this column’s
further contents. The person who needs to be corrected happens to
be the prime minister of Turkey. His remarks on the March 4 vote at
Congress’ Foreign Affairs Committee for the passage of Resolution 252
that recognizes the Armenian genocide were as follows: "The Jewish
lobby in the United States supported the Armenians in this voting.

They had not done so before…"

Recep Tayyip Erdogan may be thinking that there is a monolithic
structure that walks around in Washington’s official quarters with
a tag that reads "The Jewish lobby." In fact the Jewish lobby can
only be the sum of several – and sometimes disagreeing – independent
groups whose common purpose is the well-being of the state of Israel.

More importantly, Mr. Erdogan’s advisors should have reminded him that
in the 2007 voting at the same committee, chaired at the time by a Tom
Lantos instead of a Howard Berman, seven out of eight Jewish members
had voted in favor of the genocide resolution. The prime minister’s
anti-Jewish rhetoric has reached a point where even simple facts are
being distorted.

But let’s talk about a government office that surely does not go
with the name in this article’s title, but instead with the name
"Secretariat-General for the European Union," or ABGS in its Turkish
acronym.

There was a hilarious story on Hurriyet’s front page just the other
day. According to the story, an anonymous informer, who had apparently
intercepted the private email messages of some ABGS personnel, wrote
a letter to the ABGS to complain about these civil servants because,
as the informer informed, (a) these ABGS officials had the habit
of sending each other newspaper articles which our informer deemed
"anti-Justice and Development Party [AKP]," (b) the same people
sent each other a newspaper article reporting amputation as a means
of legal punishment in Iran, therefore revealed their anti-Shariah
worldview, and (c) they celebrated the New Year’s Eve at a party where
alcohol was served. So, the informer concluded, all these people were
"Ergenekoncu," or supporters of the Ergenekon gang.

The news story, not the original story, apparently angered our
minister for the EU, Egemen BagıÅ~_, who objected on two grounds:
a) all that had happened before he took charge, and b) "such news
stories do not serve our common goal of EU membership." So now we have
a new journalistic jurisprudence: Check your story first and see it
serves our common purpose of EU membership; if it does not, scrap it
(e.g. no corruption stories please as they would not be serving our
common purpose).

Immediately afterwards, the ABGS issued a "correction" which looked
more like a "confession." The statement said a) the events mentioned in
the story had in fact happened in 2006-8, b) a commission was set up to
investigate the claims and a technical examination was carried out, and
c) the news story aimed at battering Minister BagıÅ~_ and the ABGS.

I personally found both Minister BagıÅ~_’s and the ABGS’s statements
even more entertaining than the contents of the story. Here is why.

If an informer had sent the same letter with the same accusations to
any government agency in any one of the countries that make the EU,
what would the recipient authority do? We are basically talking about
three allegations against named government officials: circulating
articles critical of the government; having an anti-Shariah worldview;
and partying with alcohol for the New Year.

Put it in reverse reasoning, the ABGS personnel would not have been
investigated if they had been pro-government, had not consumed alcohol
and had approved amputations in Iran. Ironically, that was happening
only a few years ago, and at the Turkish government agency tasked
with making Turkey a member of the EU!

The "correction" is funny because it admits that a "special commission"
was set up to investigate these accusations. It also admits technical
examinations were carried out to support the "investigation." That
means the ABGS took the accusations "seriously."

How could it not? The informer was talking about dangerous criminals
who even consumed alcohol!

This is the transformation Turkey is going through – from one
tyranny to another, as one reader recently put it. In the past,
informers informed government agencies accusing civil servants whose
wives wore the Islamic headscarf to be members of secret Islamist
organizations, or of being crypto-Shariah supporters – the headscarf
was the unmistaken evidence of crime. Today the evidence of crime worth
of investigating is alcohol or standing against amputations in Iran.

What did the honorable AKP deputy say only a couple of weeks ago? "For
40 years they card-indexed us, and now it’s our turn to card-index
them." He was absolutely right!

But hats off to the informer! He possibly could not have chosen a
better agency to inform…

ANKARA: Is Turkey Declaring Its Independence From America?

IS TURKEY DECLARING ITS INDEPENDENCE FROM AMERICA?
Semih Idiz

Hurriyet
March 11 2010
Turkey

It’s that time of the year again, the time when we turn the clock back
to 1915. Once again everyone is trying to force something down someone
else’s proverbial throat by invoking "morality" and "historic facts."

To say "Listen to our side of the story" has yet again been turned into
a synonym for "denial" or "propaganda," depending on where you stand.

History and politics are again intertwined. Thus to even suggest that
a broad panel of contemporary historians should look at the events
of nearly a century ago in light of newly available documents is
seen as an attempt to "obfuscate historic facts" and "dodge moral
responsibility."

In the meantime, the moralizing of certain U.S. congressmen at
the expense of Turks has thrown the usual wrench in the works
of Turkish-U.S. ties. Most Turks believe, of course, that these
congressmen are only serving their own political interests, since
they overlook the fact that it is their own country that is "the
most hated" today for the "crimes against humanity" it is believed –
by a large portion of the world population – to have committed or be
committing. Research by the Pew Center shows this clearly.

Thus Turkey’s ambassador to Washington has yet again been recalled
to Ankara and everyone is now focused once again on U.S. President
Barack Obama’s upcoming April 24 message. There is a sad and almost
tragicomic predictability in all of this since Turks have seen this
film over and over again. And yet it is clear that all of this is
beginning to seriously grate on the national nerve, and because
of this, there is something noticeably new this time around in the
attitude of the Turkish government.

Successive governments have, in the past, recalled the Turkish
ambassador when previous "Armenian genocide" resolutions have come
to Congress. However, this time there is a clear "this affair has
gone too far" attitude discernible in Ankara. There is an intensity
in the anger emanating from Ankara that we have not seen before. It
is as if the government is telling Washington: "Sort out this affair
once and for all, or the future of our supposedly strategic ties will
go down a slippery slope."

One might liken this to a kind of "declaration of independence" on
the part of Ankara from Washington. Thus Turkish Prime Minister Recep
Tayyip Erdogan has said that Ambassador Namik Tan will not return to
the U.S. until Turkey is convinced about the reassurances Washington
has given it over this Armenian issue.

That means Tan could stay in Ankara at least until the end of
April, and even beyond, depending on what Obama says April 24. In
the meantime, State Minister Zafer Caglayan has cancelled a planned
visit to Washington.

This was to be an important visit since Caglayan was appointed as a
"special representative" to develop economic ties with the U.S. under
the "Model Partnership" formula put forward by President Obama. Now
Caglayan has said it is "out of the question that this ‘Model
Partnership’ can be developed until the U.S. corrects its mistake."

He was, of course, referring to the Armenian resolution that passed
the Foreign Affairs Committee of the U.S. House of Representatives
last week. What seems to have angered the Justice and Development,
or AKP, government to no end this time is the fact that the Obama
administration also tried to use this resolution to put pressure on
the Turkish Parliament to endorse the Zurich Protocols, which aim to
normalize ties with Armenia.

That effort has now resulted in exactly what the Obama administration
did not want. In other words, the passage of the Zurich Protocols
is even less likely now. As Laura Rozen from Politico magazine,
which follows the U.S. Congress closely, suggested in an item she
wrote last week, based on the remarks of Democratic Party staffers,
the Obama administration appears to have "fallen asleep at the wheel"
on this one.

All of this ties in with the general picture that indicates that
Turkey, under the AKP, has started to act more freely from its
traditional allies and partners, and is veering toward other parts
of the world in search of new partners, even if not new allies, at
this time. Whether this is the result of more "Islamism" in Turkish
politics, which many in the West would conveniently like to believe,
or the product of the roughshod manner in which Turkey has been
treated in Europe and America, is of course a wide-open question.

Looked at from the perspective of the Turkish man or woman on the
street, it makes a lot of sense for Turkey to veer toward countries
that are welcoming and friendly, and away from those that are not.

Thus, the more the Turkish government challenges Washington, the more
the AKP is likely to increase its political popularity at home.

Another indication of this "declaration of independence" came this week
when Ankara decided, in effect, that it did not need an International
Monetary Fund, or IMF, standby agreement after all, because it can
stand on its own two feet. Turks, especially left-wing ones, have
a long history of seeing the IMF as an "American tool," so it is no
surprise that this development has also generated pleasure at home.

Such national pride was, of course, also apparent in the most visible
expression of Turkey’s desire to be an independent actor free of
Western encumbrances: Prime Minister Erdogan’s breaking ranks with
previous Turkish governments and going all out against Israel. This
attitude is also apparent in the AKP government’s desire to develop
relations with Iran and Syria, countries about which Washington is
highly sensitive.

How far the AKP government can sustain this attitude against the U.S.

remains to be seen. It is a fact, however, that both Erdogan and
Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu appear very serious this time.

Erdogan will be in Washington in a few weeks and it remains to be
seen how that visit goes as well.

It is also a fact that Ankara is opening new international doors of
economic and political opportunity for itself and has a rising profile
in its own region, and in the world at large, from South America to
Africa, from the Middle East to the Far East and the Subcontinent.

All of this goes to show that Turkish-American relations cannot
be taken for granted. These relations have to be seriously,
and continually worked on if the "Model Partnership" proposed by
President Obama is to ever be realized. Currently, the prospects do
not look great.

ANKARA: Was This Mess Avoidable?

WAS THIS MESS AVOIDABLE?
Jason Epstein

Hurriyet
March 11 2010
Turkey

Did a lack of decisiveness at the White House result in a missed
opportunity to end the near-regular Congressional charade of judging
the horrific events in Eastern Anatolia of nearly 100 years ago?

Not surprisingly, last week’s passage of the "Armenian genocide"
resolution by a panel in the House of Representatives caused Turks
across the political spectrum to express their outrage. The Foreign
Ministry recalled envoy Namık Tan for consultations, less than two
weeks after he arrived in Washington as the new ambassador. A senior
ministry official predicted that any hope of near-term progress on
the Turkey-Armenia Protocols was gone.

"So much for the new era of U.S. appreciation for the sensitivities
and cultural nuances of America’s allies," a Wall Street Journal
editorial quipped.

Interestingly, the resolution passed the House Foreign Affairs
Committee by only a single vote, 23-22. Not only was the outcome
closer than an identical one from two years ago (27-21), but Chairman
Howard Berman (D-California) held the vote open for an astonishing
90 minutes in order to ensure that he had just enough votes to keep
the measure from going down in flames.

As both a senator and presidential candidate, Barack Obama repeatedly
called the events of 1915 a "genocide." However, President Obama has
not uttered the offending term, even when addressing the Turkish
Parliament 11 months ago. Moreover, in his presidential message
of April 24, the date that the American government recognizes the
Armenian deaths, the President again demurred. All indications now
are that his message next month will also not include the phrase. For
acting with such restraint, he deserves significant credit.

However, neither he nor his advisors immediately commented on the
resolution, which had been re-introduced in both houses of Congress
one year ago.

One week before the scheduled vote, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton
hinted that the State Department still opposed to the resolution,
although she did not use explicit language.

Two days before the vote, the National Security Council spokesman
had no comment as to whether the White House would issue a statement,
let alone actively lobby against the resolution.

The night before the vote, Clinton telephoned Chairman Berman, urging
him to call it off, to no avail.

One day after the vote, a senior unnamed White House official told
a Washington Post reporter that an agreement had been reached with
Congressional leaders to ensure that the full body will not vote on
the resolution.

No wonder that an American journalist covering the issue described
the administration’s position as "addled."

A defeat of the resolution, which the Washington Post editorial board
once described as "worse than irrelevant," would have been nothing
short of devastating for the Armenian-American activists pushing hard
on this issue. Additionally, it would have made clear that Congress
was not interested in peddling a measure that unabashedly seeks to
undermine, not just the strategic relationship between the United
States and Turkey, but eviscerate any possibility of reconciliation
between Turkey and Armenia.

Furthermore, Washington has not addressed one of the principal barriers
to the successful implementation of the Turkey-Armenia Protocols:
Azerbaijan’s concern that the Armenian seizure of its territory is
being ignored. After all, the closing of the border between Turkey
and Armenia in 1993 was a result of the conflict over the Armenian
occupation of Karabakh and surrounding territory, not the genocide
claims.

Azerbaijan is a pro-Western country, despite being sandwiched
between Russia and Iran, and has sent soldiers to Iraq, Afghanistan,
and Kosovo at the request of the United States and NATO. A major
hydrocarbon producer, Azerbaijan may one day end Europe’s addiction
to the current Russian energy monopoly with the Nabucco natural gas
pipeline project. Incredibly, the White House has not appeared too
interested in Azerbaijan’s strategic importance: on the one hand, it
has reportedly pressured Ankara to pursue parliamentary ratification;
on the other, it has not even bothered to send up the name of its
next ambassador to Baku to the Senate for confirmation, eight months
after the previous envoy departed.

Since man has yet to figure out a way to turn back time, we will
never know if a more strident effort from the White House against the
Armenian resolution would have persuaded a single Foreign Affairs
Committee member to switch their vote from "aye" to "nay," thereby
frightening its supporters, both in Congress and the grassroots,
from pushing another such vote for a decade or more.

What is known is that the committee’s action did additional harm
to America’s image in Turkey and Azerbaijan, an outcome that surely
was not desired by an administration looking to repair Washington’s
relations in Muslim capitals.

* Jason Epstein is President of Southfive Strategies, LLC, in
Washington, D.C. He may be reached via e-mail at [email protected]