Armenia’s Caucus Replenished In US Congress

ARMENIA’S CAUCUS REPLENISHED IN US CONGRESS

Arka News Agency, Armenia
Feb 19 2007

YEREVAN, February 19. /ARKA/. Armenia’s support group in the
US Congress was replenished with another member of the House of
Representatives. The Armenian Assembly of America reported that
Representative Zack Space (D-OH) has joined the Congressional Caucus on
Armenian Issues, bringing the total Caucus membership to 147 members.

"There are so many critical issues facing the Armenian-American
community, from reaffirmation of the Armenian Genocide to securing
important technical and development funding for the Republic of
Armenia. We are looking forward to working with Congressman Space
to address these important matters," said AAA Executive Director
Bryan Ardouny.

The Armenian Caucus was formed in 1995 to provide a bipartisan forum
for legislators to discuss how the United States can better assist
the peoples of Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh.

Reconstruction of villages of RA & Artsakh to be discussed in Paris

DeFacto Agency, Armenia
Feb 15 2007

PROGRAM ON RECONSTRUCTION OF VILLAGES OF RA AND ARTSAKH TO BE
DISCUSSED IN PARIS

February 15 Hayastan All-Armenian Fund Executive Director Naira
Melkoumian will leave for Paris on a three-day working visit.
According to the information DE FACTO got at the Fund’s Public
Relations Department, February 15 Naira Melkoumian will meet with the
representatives of a number of local offices of Hayastan All-Armenian
Fund within the frames of the visit.
February 16-17 Fund Executive Director will meet with the
representatives of various benevolent organizations. In the course of
the meeting the parties will consider the details, mechanisms of
implementation and financial part of the program on reconstruction
and development of the villages of Armenia and Artsakh.

To The Shores Of Tripoli

TO THE SHORES OF TRIPOLI
By Judith Miller

BOOKS
URL:
February 14, 2007

It seems prophetic that America’s first foray into the Middle East
involved a bribe, and ended, ignominiously, in failure.

Seeking to rescue Americans taken hostage by Barbary pirates, John
Lamb, a Connecticut businessman who had once traded mules in the
Mediterranean but had no diplomatic experience, arrived in Algiers in
1785 with authorization from Congress to bribe the reigning potentate,
Hassan Dey. But instead of releasing the hostages, the dey demanded
additional ransom that included a portrait of George Washington,
whom he professed to admire.

The fiasco did not stop the United States from paying bribes to
secure treaties with other Barbary states, writes Michael Oren, in
his compelling new book on America’s involvement in the Middle East,
"Power, Faith, and Fantasy" (Norton, 604 pages, $35).

But such ignominious episodes prompted Thomas Jefferson, who had
helped negotiate a $20,000 "gift" to the king of Morocco, to argue
that his fellow Americans preferred "confrontation with Barbary
to blackmail." Ultimately, Mr. Oren observes, Jefferson used the
humiliation of continuing Barbary seizures of American cargo and
citizens to persuade a reluctant Congress to finance the nation’s
first Navy.

America’s pragmatic use of diplomacy and force to achieve its
objectives in the Middle East would become a hallmark of its approach
to the region. The Middle East, Mr. Oren argues persuasively,
was seminal in shaping American identity — from the drafting of a
constitution that, unlike the ineffectual Articles of Confederation,
enabled the fledging state to defend its own borders and economic
interests overseas, to the lyrics of "The Star Spangled Banner."

America, in turn, also helped shape Middle Eastern identity and
aspirations. The now common term for the region once known as the
Orient, or the Near East, Mr. Oren notes in one of his many asides,
was coined by an American admiral in 1902.

The Middle East was a series of "firsts" for America: the authorization
of its first police action Jefferson’s order to his new Navy in 1801
to sink, burn, and destroy any pirate ship that threatened American
vessels — and that same year, the first time America found itself
the target of a formally declared war — by the pasha in Tripoli.

>From the outset, Mr. Oren writes, the relationship was fraught with
tension leavened by cultural curiosity and fantasies about the exotic
Orient and more critically, by economic and religious opportunity.

Americans always considered themselves morally superior to the Arabs,
a conception that "landed with the Pilgrims at Plymouth," he asserts.

American myths about Islam and the Muslims who practiced it, the
"ultimate other," he calls them, were as deep-seated as they were
occasionally inconsistent. The image of the "liberty-loving nomad,"
riding alone in the desert, "unencumbered by governments or borders"–
a Middle Eastern version of the colonial pioneers, and later the
cowboy — clashed with Americans’ perception of the region as backward,
brutal, corrupt, obsessed with hierarchy, and often savage enforcement
of tribal customs. While Americans fantasized about twisting alleys,
exotic bazaars, erotic belly dancers, and lustful Bedouin sheiks
at world fairs, in books and newspapers, and later in film, many
early American visitors to the region — even Southern slaveowners–
could not help but deplore the treatment of Muslim women, an enduring
challenge for the region. Before the Civil War, American missionaries
and other abolitionists — Horace Mann, Charles Wells Brown, and
Theodore Parker, among them — cited the barbarity of Middle Eastern
slavery in demanding that American blacks be freed.

Mr. Oren’s sweeping, highly textured history of the 230-year
interaction between America and the Middle East told me much I did
not know. I was unaware of the fact, for instance, that George Bush,
a biblical scholar and professor of Hebrew at New York University
— and a forebear of the two presidents — wrote an influential
treatise in 1844 on the need for Jews to recreate their ancient
state in Palestine. Nor did I know that one of President Lincoln’s
assassins was caught after escaping to Egypt, or that the Statue
of Liberty’s creator initially conceived of his work as an Egyptian
peasant woman who would hold the torch of liberty at the entrance of
the Suez Canal. How many Americans know that veterans of both sides
of the American Civil War wound up advising military campaigns for
the Egyptian khedive in Sudan and what was then Abyssinia? Or that
early diplomatic envoys to the region, unlike those sent after the
1920s when the State Department developed its professional corps of
Arabists, tended to be Jews?

Mr. Oren’s work is prodigious, drawing upon hundreds of original
and archival sources — letters, memoirs, books and government
documents, which he skillfully weaves into a finely drawn narrative
that alternates among cultural, political, and economic interactions.

One of the book’s major contributions is Mr. Oren’s meticulous
scholarship on the influence of American missionaries in the Middle
East and the extraordinary impact they had not only on the region,
but in Washington.

Missionaries — exemplars of "the American spirit at its best,"
as Henry Morgenthau, an adviser to President Wilson and ambassador
to Turkey, praised them — printed Bibles in Arabic, opened hundreds
of medical clinics, schools, and what ultimately became three of the
region’s most prestigious universities. Preaching not only Christian
precepts but what Morgenthau called the "gospel of Americanism,"
missionaries founded many of the institutions that helped give birth
to Arab nationalism.

The impact that other powers had achieved through war and plunder,
Mr. Oren argues, Americans secured largely through philanthropy and
religiously inspired educational missions. Such work had at least
one crucial economic payoff for America: Mr. Oren notes that Saudi
Arabia’s King ibn Saud offered oil exploration rights to American,
rather than British prospectors partly because he was impressed by
the missionary doctors’ reputation for honesty and good works.

But the missionaries failed in their main objective: spiritual
salvation. Henry Jessup, the "doyen of American evangelists," lamented
that despite the creation of more than 100 churches and the presence
of over 200 missionaries throughout the Ottoman Empire, the number
of converts from Islam remained "negligible."

As later generations of Americans would eventually discover, Islam’s
hold over the Arabs, Turks, and Persians repeatedly frustrated
the missionaries, partly because of their intense disdain for the
religion. Mr. Oren convincingly shows that antipathy toward Islam
was both profound and widespread in early America — echoes of which
are apparent today. Sarah Haight, a Long Island woman who toured the
Middle East in the 1830s, was typical in deploring the "Mohammedanism"
that "pulls down … every country in which it predominates." Walter
Colton, a liberal editor and naval chaplain, concluded in 1836 that
"Islamism" was "the grave of inspired truth and liberty."

The flip side of the early missionaries’ hostility toward Islam was
their enthusiastic embrace of the restoration of the Jews in the
Holy Land. Far more than early American Jews, who were fearful of
being labeled un-American, Christian missionaries embraced the goal
of returning Jews to Zion.

But Mr. Oren, an American-born Israeli scholar, is honest about what
motivated some of them. Like their modern evangelical counterparts
whose reverberations are heard in the words of the memorable figures
he describes in this often riveting book, "love for the Jewish people"
was often not an end in itself, but rather, a "means for hastening
Christ’s return."

Perhaps because Mr. Oren is an Israeli, and therefore keenly aware
that his every line is likely to be scrutinized by Muslims and Jews
alike for pro-Israeli sympathies or anti-Arab and anti-Muslim bias,
he strives to be detached from the historic hatreds and resentments
that have long roiled the region, not to mention American departments
of Middle Eastern studies.

Only occasionally do strong feelings arise. For example, in his
description of the Armenian "holocaust" at the hands of the Turks.

His recounting of the slaughter is harrowing, but he barely mentions
the larger historical context — such as Russia’s repeated invasions
of Turkey in the name of liberating Armenian and other Ottoman
Christians. While such factors can never justify massacres, they help
explain why they occurred.

For the most part, Mr. Oren remains neutral in his discussion of the
Jewish and Arab claims to Palestine and other bitter disputes. At
times, the reader yearns for slightly more passion and/or outrage —
and a tad more skepticism — from this careful scholar.

While America, unlike its European counterparts, never sought to
colonize the region, Mr. Oren seems to accept naïvely the alleged
purity of American motives and actions in the region.

Nor is it always clear what Mr. Oren means in his references to the
importance of "faith" in shaping political views about the region.

Yes, President Eisenhower used the word 14 times in his first inaugural
address, but as even Mr. Oren acknowledges, in the most secular
way. "For the new president," he writes, faith meant "confidence in
America’s ability to protect freedom worldwide" while "respecting the
‘special heritage of each nation.’"

Only in his discussion of the rise of Islamism in the last 50 pages
of the book and in his epilogue does Mr. Oren openly disclose his
personal conclusions about America’s protracted engagement in the
Middle East. Yes, he writes, successive administrations have backed
oppressive regimes that advanced American interests and conspired to
overthrow popular leaders. And American oil companies have pumped
billions of barrels of Arabian oil "not for the betterment of the
indigenous population but for their own enrichment."

Yet for all of its shortcomings, he concludes, America has been
"unrivaled in introducing modern education and health care to the
region, in extending emergency relief and building infrastructure,
in obtaining the freedom of colonized nations, and in attempting to
achieve security and peace."

On balance, he asserts, America has brought "more beneficence than
avarice to the Middle East and caused significantly less harm than
good." But this optimistic grace note is contradicted by much of what
he outlines in this impressive book. For as his own scholarship has
shown, the Middle East has repeatedly demonstrated an infuriating
ability to surprise, confound, and ultimately frustrate usually
self-interested and often insensitive American plans and intentions.

Ms. Miller, a journalist living in NewYork, is the author of "God
Has Ninety Nine Names: Reporting from a Militant Middle East" (Simon
& Schuster).

–Boundary_(ID_2EvGXz64KVYdNxm4N7m/dw) —

http://www.nysun.com/article/48622

Pamuk Believed To Be In Exile In US

PAMUK BELIEVED TO BE IN EXILE IN US
Michelle Pauli

The Guardian Unlimited, UK
Feb 14 2007

The Turkish author Orhan Pamuk has reportedly left his home country
to live in America amid fears for his life. The Nobel laureate is
believed to be at risk of assassination in Turkey following the murder
of Turkish-Armenian editor Hrant Dink last month. Threats appeared to
have been made against Pamuk by the man who confessed to orchestrating
the murder.

The International Herald Tribune reported on Thursday February 1 that
Pamuk had boarded a plane for New York to begin a lecture tour of
American universities and, according to Fatih Altayli, a prominent
columnist writing for the Turkish daily newspaper Sabah, he has no
plans to return to Turkey. The writer had already cancelled a tour
of Germany, which has a sizeable Turkish community, at the end of
last month.

"What I was told was more than mere rumour: Pamuk recently withdrew
$400,000 from his bank account and said he would leave Turkey and
would not be returning to his country anytime soon," wrote Altayli.

According to the Daily Telegraph, those close to Pamuk have declined
to comment publicly on the report because of the "sensitivity of Mr
Pamuk’s position".

Pamuk’s work, of which the best known are his recent novels My Name
is Red and Snow, explores Turkey as a country poised between east
and west, tradition and modernity. He is the fastest selling author
in Turkish history, as well as commanding international acclaim.

He became a lightning rod for controversy in Turkey after talking
openly about the mass killing of Armenians in the early 20th century,
and is reviled by the country’s nationalists who regard him as
a traitor.

In 2005 he was tried in an Istanbul court for the crime of "insulting
Turkishness" under the controversial Article 301 of the Turkish penal
code, but was acquitted on a technicality a month later. This week,
Turkey’s foreign minister backed calls to amend the article, but not
to repeal it.

,, 2012979,00.html?gusrc=rss&feed=10

http://books.guardian.co.uk/news/articles/0

Inhuman Conditions In Prisons

INHUMAN CONDITIONS IN PRISONS

A1+
[04:32 pm] 12 February, 2007

Prisoners are kept in the Vanadzor Criminal penitentiary institution
in inhuman conditions. There is no normal heating, and food is barely
enough not to starve.

During the last six months the representatives of non-governmental
observers mission have visited Criminal penitentiary institutions and
prisons in the northern part of the country in order to investigate
the conditions there.

The results are not comforting.

Investigation of the personal journals of prisoners showed that they
are often subjected to physical violence the results of which are
often attributed to chance. Let us remind you that as member of the
European Convention on tortures, our country has to investigate each
case which it does not do.

As a result of the investigations, the Tashir police isolator has
been closed and is currently under construction. The building was not
heated and the cells did not have proper electricity. According to the
head of the Vanadzor office of the Helsinki Citizens’ Assembly Arthur
Sakunts, there are prisons were the cells do not even have windows.

Another problem is that of food. According to the Government decision,
the prisoners are to be given not only bread, but also fish and meat
on a daily basis. Nevertheless, each prisoner is allotted 450AMD a
day which is not enough for proper feeding.

ANKARA: Erdogan Meets With Representatives Of NGOs In Trabzon

ERDOGAN MEETS WITH REPRESENTATIVES OF NGOs IN TRABZON

Anatolian Times, Turkey
Turkish Press
Milliyet
Feb 12 2007

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan yesterday met with representatives
of non-governmental organizations in Trabzon in the wake of the
murder last month of Hrant Dink, a Turkish journalist of Armenian
descent. Ogun Samast, Dink’s confessed murderer, came from the Black
Sea city. During the meeting, Erdogan said that people should guard
against provocations, adding that rather than brandishing guns,
he wants to see young people shaping humanity with pencils and pens
in hand. Commenting on arguments that Trabzon doesn’t deserve to be
linked to Dink’s violent death, Erdogan said that a person from any
province could have committed the murder. "We shouldn’t allow those who
want to shatter our unique structure and the hopes of our children,"
stressed Erdogan.

Setting The Record Straight

SETTING THE RECORD STRAIGHT
By Jason Freeman Correspondent

Chicago Daily Southtown, IL
Feb 12 2007

>From 1915 to 1917, in a period that many scholars feel the first
great genocide of the 20th century occurred, hundreds of thousands
of Armenians were forcibly removed and massacred by the Turkish
government during what is now referred to as the Armenian Holocaust.

But it’s not quite as cut and dry as the history books might tell.

According to Turkish historian, sociologist and author Taner Akcam,
who gave a lecture Sunday afternoon at Saints Joachim and Anne
Armenian Church in Palos Heights, many in the Turkish government
deny responsibility for the deaths and claim they were a result of
deportation movements during the first World War.

That’s why Akcam — who recently published a book on the subject called
"A Shameful Act" — feels it is necessary to bring the truth to light.

>From 1 to 1:30 p.m. in the church’s fellowship hall, Akcam spoke to
the dozens in attendance about the Armenian Holocaust and offered
proof that the Turkish government was indeed responsible for the acts.

Akcam focused his discussion on the Ottoman Archives, a collection of
historical sources related to the Ottoman Empire that he said sheds
light on the Armenian Holocaust.

"Two factions have formed around different assessments of the Ottoman
Archive materials," he said. "Those who argue that the events of
1915 were not (an) intentionally planned destruction of the Armenian
population but unexpected consequences of the deportation due to
the war, rely exclusively on the Ottoman documents … in order to
support their claim."

In using the same documents that the Turkish government has used to
deny the events, Akcam said he hoped to show the hypocrisy inherent
in that system of thought.

"At the beginning of 1913, there were already official agreements
between Greece and Bulgaria and the Ottoman Empire to exchange the
population," he said. "It was legal ethnic cleansing."

But although Akcam stressed that the Turkish government should take
responsibility for the massacres, he also helped mend the ill feelings
many Armenians have toward Turkish people, said church pastor and
Armenian Father Tavit Boyajian.

After a meeting with a Chicago Turkish organization a few weeks ago,
Boyajian realized something about himself.

"As I sat there, I became aware … that in my heart, I carry a
prejudice against Turkish people," he said. "I have been raised in a
society where there is a lot of resentment, there’s a lot of anger,
and I don’t really think I realized how much I have internalized that
until I was sitting across the table from some Turkish people."

It was a feeling that Boyajian said Akcam helped him overcome.

"This man is a tremendous honest, thoughtful, caring human being,"
he said. "He has done more to help me get over those feelings than
anything else."

Damascus: Clergymen Have Human Message, Information Minister Says

CLERGYMEN HAVE HUMAN MESSAGE, INFORMATION MINISTER SAYS

SANA – Syrian Arab News Agency, Syria
Feb 13 2007

DAMASCUS, (SANA)-Minister of Information Mohsen Bilal on Monday said
that scholars and clergymen have a human message based on spreading
amity, tolerance and consolidating good values of the human soul.

"Syria has precious treasures…and it also has rich spiritual values,"
the Minister added in a meeting with Archbishop of Damascus and Homs
Apostolic for the Orthodox Armenian Armash Nalbandian, stressing the
importance of conveying Damascus image and its historic role to the
whole world.

For his part, Archbishop Nalbandian said that the duty of clergymen is
to preserve the religious and spiritual values in society, referring
to coexistence and tolerance Syria enjoys among its people.

Works For Upgrading Of "Shirak" Airport To Be Completed By Spring

WORKS FOR UPGRADING OF "SHIRAK" AIRPORT TO BE COMPLETED BY SPRING

Gyumri, February 12. ArmInfo. The second largest airport in Armenia,
the "Gyumri", will shortly receive the 1 class category in line with
the requirements of the International Civil Aviation Organization
(ICAO), the spokesman of the Central Department of Civil Aviation of
Armenia (CDCA), Gayane Davtyan, told ArmInfo.

According to her, reconstruction works of the Gyumri airport’s strip
and installation of a modern signal-light equipment on it will start
in March. This will allow to enhance the quality of the airport’s
runway, thus, assuring a service of any type of airplanes. 67 mln
drams were allocated from the state budget, 2006, within the frames
of upgrading the "Shirak" airport. The means were also aimed at
installing a new P3D air-navigation system of Czech production, which
allows to estimate the flight height with great accuracy. According to
G. Davtyan, after completion of all the upgrading works, the "Shirak"
airport will not be considered only as an alternative to "Zvartnots"
airport. In case of bad weather conditions, the Gyumri airport will
increase the regular flights which are rare today.

Presently, the airport serves the regular flights to Sochi, Anapa
and Mineralnye Vody.

ANKARA: ‘Turkey has to consider cross-border op’s consequences’

New Anatolian, Turkey
Feb 9 2007

‘Turkey has to consider cross-border op’s consequences’

The New Anatolian / Ankara
09 February 2007

While Turkish Foreign Ministry Abdullah Gul continued his meetings in
Washington expressing Ankara’s uneasiness at the continuing Kurdistan
Workers’ Party (PKK) terrorist presence in northern Iraq, a top U.S.
official cautioned yesterday about a possible military action, "The
responsibility for the consequences is something that Turkey has to
think about."

Assistant Secretary of State for European and Eurasian Affairs Daniel
Fried, in a teleconference with Turkish journalists in Ankara, stated
that the presence of the terrorists in northern Iraq is a problem,
adding that they are discussing the problem to eliminate them.
Calling Turkey’s frustration understandable, he said the
responsibility for the consequences of possible military action is
something Turkey has to think about.

He added that Washington believes Turkey should cooperate with the
central Iraqi and Kurdish regional government.

Fried also talked about Turkish Foreign Minister Gul’s current visit
to the U.S., characterizing it as successful. He added that U.S. and
Turkish officials talked about the Middle East, Lebanon, Israel,
Iraq, Afghanistan, Central Asian, Afghanistan, the Caucasus,
diversification of energy projects, the terrorist PKK, and the
so-called Armenian genocide resolution.

He described relations between Turkey and the U.S. as very deep and
broad, stating both countries share common interests. Recalling
previous disagreements in Iraq before the 2003 invasion of Iraq,
which Turkey refused to join, he stressed, "We put any disagreements
behind us."

He said that so-called Armenian genocide resolution could damage
Turkish-U.S. relations, adding that the U.S. administration opposes
the measure and continues to work to block it.

"Turkey needs to look honestly at its own history," he added. "It is
a process of deep democracy. We need to encourage Turkey, but not
through pressure from outside"