Yes, recognize the Armenian Genocide

Washington Examiner

Saturday marks the 106th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide. Reportedly, President Joe Biden will recognize the genocide as such.

It would be a long-overdue action.

The massacre of an estimated 1.5 million ethnic Armenians by the Ottoman Empire between 1915 and 1923 has been recognized by both houses of Congress and 30 countries as a genocide. Armenians were forced into death marches, and many others were simply shot. During his campaign, Biden pledged "to support a resolution recognizing the Armenian Genocide and will make universal human rights a top priority for my administration."

Concerns that this American recognition would alienate Turkey, the modern successor state to the Ottoman Empire, which to this day has rejected the genocide label, are misguided. Recognizing history isn't an act of aggression, it's a witnessing of facts. Moreover, under President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Turkey is an authoritarian state that persecutes Kurds in Turkey and Syria, in addition to committing other human rights violations. This includes Turkey's inauspicious position as a world leader in jailing journalists.

Turkey also sympathizes with the Islamic Republic of Iran, the world’s leading state sponsor of terrorism and a regime that calls for the elimination of the Jewish state of Israel. In addition, Turkey also supports the Hamas terrorist group. Erdogan met last year with two leaders from the U.S.-designated terrorist group, which calls for Israel’s destruction.

Were Biden to go ahead with the recognition, it could prompt other countries to follow suit. This would exemplify that other countries follow the United States when it leads on the world stage. But more than that, the recognition would prove America's commitment to justice is uncoupled from the short-term interest in keeping difficult partners happy.

One of the biggest lessons of the Holocaust is "never forget." Well, we should never forget that what the Armenians suffered more than 100 years ago wasn't simply terrible. It was a genocide.

Jackson Richman is a journalist in Washington, D.C. Follow him @jacksonrichman.


  

Procession of Torches to Dzidzernagapert Emphasizes Justice for Genocide



A procession of torches to the Dzidzernagapert Memorial Complex on the eve of the anniversary of the Armenian Genocide has become a storied tradition in Armenia.

With last year’s event being cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic, this year, ARF Youth Organization of Armenia and the ARF Nikol Aghabalyan Student Association reclaimed the mantle and led the procession through the streets of Yerevan, from Freedom Square to Dzidzernagapert on Friday.

In remarks made at the square, Armenian Revolutionary Federation Bureau chairman Hagop Der Khachadourian said that April 24 is no longer a day of mourning, but rather call for justice in the spirit of our nation’s demands.

“Our people take to the streets around the world on April 24 to remind the world of its debt to Armenians and to remind the world that the Armenian people have one huge cause, from which they will never retreat—an ongoing fight until the establishment of a united Armenia,” said Der Khachadourian.

The ARF leader explained that for the past 60 to 70 years, April 24 has become a day of rebirth for the Armenian people. “In the 1960s our people, as if having been resurrected, took to the streets of Yerevan and around the world demanding the return of our lands. This was the first indication that we have advanced from commemorating our martyrs toward demanding justice,” said Der Khachadourian.

Thousands of youth taking part in the procession, raised the flags of all the nations that have recognized the Armenian Genocide, and while singing patriotic songs and chanting slogans ascended to the Dzidzernagapert Memorial Complex to commemorate the victims of the Genocide.

While at Dzidzernagapert, a moment of silence was observed in memory of the 1.5 million martyrs of the Armenian Genocide. They paid their respects to the countries that have recognized the Genocide in front of th eternal flame, where wreaths were placed a requiem service was held.

A similar procession of torches was held in Artsakh on Friday, organized by the ARF Youth Organization and the ARF Aram Manoukian Student Association, and with the motto of “We Remember. We Demand. and We Will Liberate.”

The procession began from the courtyard of Stepanakert’s St. John Church and headed toward the city’s memorial complex.

Pressure mounts for Biden to live up to promise to recognize Armenian genocide

KTLA Los Angeles
| KTLA

Pressure is growing on President Joe Biden to officially recognize the 1915 mass killings of some 1.5 million Armenians by the Ottoman Empire as a genocide, a promise he made as a presidential candidate but one which Turkey says will harm ties to the U.S. Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day, marked annually by the large Los Angeles-area Armenian community, is April 24. Ellina Abovian reports for the KTLA 5 News at Noon on . 

Key U.S. air base in Turkey sits on property stolen from Armenians during the genocide

APRIL 19, 2021 10:03 AM, 

UPDATED APRIL 19, 2021 01:46 PM
U.S. Air Force personnel walk past an entry at Incirlik Air Base in Turkey.  U.S. AIR FORCE

Suppose the U.S. built and operated a military base in Germany on property confiscated from Jews during the Holocaust. America, Jewish Americans, Germany, and Israel would have reached a principled resolution years ago.

Now consider Incirlik (EEN-jeer-leek) Air Base in Turkey. American taxpayers and the Army Corps of Engineers built it 67 years ago. Its 3,320 acres are home to the U.S. Air Force’s 39th Air Base Wing, B-61 nuclear weapons, thousands of American military personnel, and American businesses.

Turkey stole many of those acres from Christian Armenian families during the 1915-23 Armenian Genocide. Relatives of such Armenian families fled to the U.S. and settled in cities like Fresno.

Yet the U.S. State Department has habitually shielded Turkey from accountability in this and related instances.

The air base knows its past, though. In 2007, then base commander, Col. Murrell Stinnette, held a “Town Hall meeting [on Congress’s] Armenian Genocide Resolution.” The base encourages visits to Levonkla, a nearby 12th century Armenian castle.

Turkey committed genocide against 1.5 million Armenians and seized nearly everything they owned in cities and towns such as Incirlik: homes, businesses, ancient churches and monasteries, farms, schools, personal property, valuables, antiquities, and bank accounts.

In Los Angeles Federal Court in 2010, Americans Alex Bakalian, Anais Haroutunian, and Rita Mahdessian sued Turkey, its Central Bank, and Ziraat Bank for confiscating their relatives’ Incirlik property (122 acres) during the genocide.

The plaintiffs sought over $65 million based on the land’s market value, plus a portion of Incirlik rent that Turkey had collected from the U.S. as of 2010.

Days earlier, the U.S. Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals had upheld California Law 354.4. Modeled after California’s Holocaust claims statutes, the law extended through 2016 the period during which Turkey could be sued.

In 2019, however, the same court decided against the plaintiffs: the lawsuit was “time-barred” due to statute of limitations guidelines.

Similar lawsuits have yielded mixed results.

Many Armenians bought life insurance from New York Life, AXA France, and Germany’s Victoria Versicherung AG before the genocide. But the companies shamefully avoided paying surviving family members. In 2004-5, NY Life and AXA France settled out of court for $40 million.

The German firm evaded responsibility even though Germany — Turkey’s WWI ally — facilitated the Genocide.

In 2006, Armenian Americans sued Germany’s Deutsche and Dresdner banks. Each had seized Armenian accounts and assets post-Genocide. These institutions, too, dodged accountability.

Congress, particularly the House’s bipartisan, 126-member Armenian Caucus, could help the foregoing cases with legislation similar to the California law, but which courts couldn’t override.

Recall that Congress recognized the Armenian Genocide in 2019 with near unanimity.

Congress has often facilitated recovery of property stolen during the Holocaust, including $1.25 billion in Jewish assets appropriated by Swiss banks.

American relations with Turkey have deteriorated due to President Erdogan’s 17-year record of bellicose conduct against the U.S., NATO, and Israel.

Turkey’s internal repression, corruption, support for ISIS, threats against Greece, Cyprus, and Armenia, far-fetched claims over Mediterranean Sea resources, aggressive neo-Ottoman/pan-Turkic policies, purchase of Russian S-400 missiles, and threats over Incirlik haven’t helped relations.

In 2016, demonstrators burned American flags and demanded that the U.S. leave the base. In 2017 and 2019, Turkey threatened to cut off American access to Incirlik.

In 2018, Turkish lawyers wanted to raid the base and arrest U.S. Air Force officers.

Alarmed and appalled, the U.S. has explored moving some Incirlik assets to Greece.

The U.S. could use the Armenian American Incirlik facts to achieve additional leverage over Turkey while also gaining a measure of justice. Resolute diplomacy would be required.

American companies such as Starbucks and Colorado-based Vectrus Systems Corp., as well as the University of Maryland Global Campus, are air base tenants. They must be informed that they occupy stolen property.

Incirlik’s restless ghosts may yet rise to obtain redress and advance American interests and values.

David Boyajian writes about Caucasus issues. His work can be found at http://www.armeniapedia.org/wiki/ David_Boyajian[email protected]

The National Interest magazine draws parallels between Ilham Aliyev and Saddam Hussein

The National Interest magazine draws parallels between Ilham Aliyev and Saddam Hussein

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 21:40,

YEREVAN, APRIL 16, ARMENPRESS. The National Interest magazine has published an article about Azerbaijani president Olham Aliyev and the ''park-museum'' opened in Baku at his initiative. ARMENPRESS reports the author of the article Michael Rubin compared Ilahm Aliyev with former Iraqi President Saddam Hussein and the ''park-museum'' of Baku with Baghdad's “Victory Arch,” known to locals as the Swords of Qadisiyah.

''Aliyev, who never served in the military even as his peers fought in the first Nagorno-Karabakh War, strolls around in military fatigues showing off captured Armenian equipment and wax models of Armenian soldiers before addressing assembled troops. The centerpiece of the “Park of Trophies” is an arch made from the helmets of killed and captured Armenian soldiers. That Azerbaijan continues to hold illegally 260 prisoners of war (POWs) and kidnapped civilians, some of whom it might have killed in captivity, underscores the tastelessness of the display'', reads the article.

Commissioned in 1985 and opened four years later, Swords of Qadisiyah, which stands taller than the Arc de Triomphe in Paris, consisted of forearms molded from Saddam Hussein’s own and fists holding crossed swords made from steel derived from the melted weaponry of fallen Iraqi soldiers. Five thousand Iranian helmets taken off the battlefield completed the monument. Hussein’s speech initiating its construction was little different from Aliyev’s: “Brave Iraqis have recorded the most legendary exploits in defense of their land and holy beliefs,” Hussein declared on April 22, 1985. “We have chosen that Iraqis will pass under their fluttering flag protected by their swords which have cut through the necks of the aggressors.” Aliyev, for his part, declared at the park's inaguration on Monday, “Everyone who visits the park of military trophies will see the strength of our army, will see our willpower, and how hard it was to achieve victory.”

Armenia PM to step down at end of April to clear way for early elections – Ifax

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said on Wednesday he would step down from his post in the last ten days of April to clear the way for early parliamentary elections, the Interfax news agency reported.

Pashinyan has faced calls to resign since last November when he agreed to a Russian-brokered ceasefire that halted six weeks of fighting in which ethnic Armenians lost territory to Azeri forces in and around the Nagorno-Karabakh region. (Writing by Tom Balmforth; editing by Polina Ivanova)

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

Return of POWs a priority for Russian side, Ambassador says

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 12:51,

YEREVAN, APRIL 12, ARMENPRESS. The return of the prisoners of war captured during the recent Nagorno Karabakh war is among the priorities of the Russian leadership and the Russian peacekeeping contingent, Russian Ambassador to Armenia Sergei Kopyrkin told reporters, adding that the work on this direction continues.

“The issue of the return of prisoners of war is one of the priorities of the Russian side. Consistent work is underway on this path. You know that prisoners of war have been returned more than once. I am sure that Mr. Muradov will continue the work on this direction”, the Ambassador said, meaning the commander of the Russian peacekeeping contingent in Nagorno Karabakh Rustam Muradov.

The Ambassador didn’t comment on the statement of the Azerbaijani side according to which “all Armenian prisoners of war have been returned”. “As far as I know, the work on this direction continues, and it is among the priorities of the Russian side”.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Azerbaijan’s president poses with helmets taken from fallen Armenian soldiers at opening of museum to bloody Nagorno-Karabakh war

RT – Russia Today
<img src=”"https://cdni.rt.com/files/2021.04/xxs/6074863a85f54002c175c51b.jpg" class="media__item " alt="" />
Azerbaijan’s long-time leader, Ilham Aliyev, has officially opened a museum dedicated to the country’s victory over neighboring Armenia in a series of bloody battles that claimed the lives of thousands of soldiers on both sides.

On Monday, the presidential press service released a series of photographs showing the leader inspecting captured hardware and equipment, and a video of him addressing troops decorated for their service in the Nagorno-Karabakh war. The features of the Military Trophy Park, located in the capital of Baku, include Armenian tanks, trucks, weapons and even helmets gathered up from the battlefields.

<img src=”"https://cdni.rt.com/files/2021.04/original/6074ae24203027506e6d00ff.jpg" alt="RT" />

Among the attractions is a supposed reconstruction of a barracks used by Armenian troops, featuring hook-nosed, bearded and dead-eyed waxwork caricatures of enemy soldiers. The figures are portrayed as bereft, hopelessly staring at their paperwork in despair. Others are shown climbing out of armored vehicles wounded, or slumped in the driver's seat of trucks.

Aliyev, himself the son of former Azerbaijani President Heydar Aliyev, was educated at the prestigious Moscow State Institute of International Relations before becoming a lecturer in history. He then embarked on a series of business ventures before taking on the country's top job in 2003. However, for his photocall on Monday, he posed in full combat camouflage as he inspected captured artillery guns and burned out Armenian tanks. 

<img src=”"https://cdni.rt.com/files/2021.04/original/6074ae4a2030274fff467297.jpg" alt="RT" />

In November, officials in Yerevan signed a Russian-brokered ceasefire with Azerbaijan, effectively putting an end to the fighting that had raged through the disputed territory. Nagorno-Karabakh, while considered a de jure part of Azerbaijan, had been controlled by ethnic Armenian officials and operated largely autonomously as the so-called Republic of Artsakh.

The deal relinquished swatches of territory to Aliyev’s government, handing him a personal victory back home, with large parades attended by Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

<img src=”"https://cdni.rt.com/files/2021.04/original/6074ae55203027500205f1ad.jpg" alt="RT" />

However, in February, Azerbaijan accused Armenia of violating the truce “by firing 20 machine guns at the border checkpoint.” Armenia’s Defense Ministry branded the allegations “an absolute lie.” Russian peacekeepers have been deployed to the region under the terms of the ceasefire, with the hope that they will be able to protect civilian settlements and prevent the territorial demarcation lines from shifting still further.

Both sides have accused each other of pursuing a policy of ethnic cleansing in Nagorno-Karabakh. In December, footage emerged that was said to show an Azerbaijani soldier cutting the throat of an ethnic Armenian. Another purported to capture one of Baku's troops boasting of killing and mutilating a civilian. A third grisly video claimed to capture an Armenian enlisted man cutting an ear off the corpse of a fallen Azeri. 

Еvents in Maragha the logical continuation of regular genocidal actions committed by Azerbaijan against Armenians

Public Radio of Armenia

The Foreign Ministry of the Republic of Artsakh remembers and condemns the Massacre of the Armenian Population of Maragha Settlement

29 years ago, on April 10 the armed forces of Azerbaijan committed Genocide of the Armenian civilian population of Maragha settlement of the Republic of Artsakh.

The Azerbaijani troops invaded Maragha, tortured and killed the local civilian population, including women, children, and the elderly. Azeri soldiers beheaded 45 villagers, burnt others, took more than 100 women and children away as hostages.

Azerbaijani authorities awarded the perpetrators with high state awards. Their commander was conferred the title of National Hero of Azerbaijan. All it testifies that the Armenophobic and genocidal policy in Azerbaijan is encouraged at the highest state level.

The events in Maragha became the logical continuation of regular, systematic persecutions and genocidal actions committed by Azerbaijan against the Armenians.

Crimes against humanity have no statute of limitations and must be prosecuted and punished.

United States provides additional $1,000,000 to support vaccination efforts in Armenia

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 10:07, 7 April, 2021

YEREVAN, APRIL 7, ARMENPRESS. The United States government, through the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), is providing an additional $1,000,000 to support the efforts of the Government of Armenia to respond to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, bringing USAID’s total funding to date to combat COVID-19 to more than $11 million, the USAID told Armenpress.  

This includes emergency funding to address immediate health needs and efforts to address the secondary and tertiary impacts of the pandemic on democratic development and economic growth. USAID is awarding the funds to UNICEF to provide targeted technical assistance to support and ensure effective implementation of COVID-19 vaccination efforts in Armenia, in accordance with the National Deployment Vaccination Plan.

Lynne M. Tracy, U.S. Ambassador to Armenia, stated: “Throughout the pandemic, the United States has partnered with Armenia in its fight against COVID-19. Through this new assistance, we will continue working together to overcome COVID-19 and prepare for future public health threats.”

The United States has worked closely with Armenia throughout the duration of the pandemic to protect public health and strengthen the response to COVID-19. This cooperation includes: providing funding to strengthen laboratory capacity and management of severe cases; securing essential equipment; supporting vulnerable households and children; bolstering the Government of Armenia’s crisis communications; enhancing emergency preparedness and response; and promoting resilience and economic stability through grants to small businesses, civil society, and media.

The United States continues to demonstrate its global leadership in public health and humanitarian assistance in the face of the COVID-19 pandemic, building on the more than $140 billion in U.S. Government support for global health programs and increasing the capacity of local healthcare systems since 2001.