Artsakh Public TV says Karabakh shocked by Azeri editor’s murder

Artsakh Public TV says Karabakh shocked by Azeri editor’s murder

Artsakh Public TV, Stepanakert
4 Mar 05

[Presenter over video of journalists and public figures] Nagornyy
Karabakh journalists and public are shocked by the assassination of an
Azerbaijani journalist and the editor-in-chief of Monitor magazine,
Elmar Huseynov.

Artsakh Public TV has interviewed some journalists and public figures
and they said the following:

[Karen Ogadzhanyan, head of Karabakh Helsinki Initiative-92] I
personally knew Elmar Huseynov. He was a man with a broad and
democratic outlook. I want to offer my condolences to Elmar’s
relatives. I think that his assassination is a step towards the return
of terror in Azerbaijan, which can also spread to other countries in
the South Caucasus. I think that democratic forces in Azerbaijan and
abroad should unite and stop the spread of terror. The spread of
terror will affect Azerbaijan’s democratic development and the
Nagornyy Karabakh conflict settlement. It will be much more difficult
or even impossible to settle the conflict with undemocratic
Azerbaijan.

[Gegam Bagdasaryan, president of Stepanakert (Xankandi) press club]
The assassination of Elmar Huseynov shows that something is wrong in
Azerbaijan. It shows that the authorities put their own interests
above those of the public. The assassination also has a direct impact
on the Nagornyy Karabakh conflict settlement. If the Azerbaijani
authorities kill people of the same nationality, what will they do to
people of other nationalities? Anyway, it is also a tragedy for the
family of Elmar Huseynov and I offer my condolences to Elmar’s family.

Paris Peace Talks of 1919, The End of the Ottomans

Maknews.com
March 04, 2005
Paris Peace Talks of 1919
Part 2 – The End of the Ottomans
by Risto Stefov
[email protected]
February 2005
Read Part I

The following text (pages 366 to 380) was taken from the book “Paris 1919”
by Margaret MacMillan.
Part 2 (chapter 26 of MacMillan’s book) deals with the peace talks of 1919
with respect to the destruction of the Ottoman empire and the birth of
modern Turkeys.
Part 3, (the last part) will provide excerpts from the minutes of the
committee on new states and for the protection of minorities at the Paris
Peace Conference. Part 3 will also contain proposals that were tabled for
the formation of a Macedonian State.
Margaret MacMillan, the author of the book from which this article was
taken, is the great-great granddaughter of David Lloyd George. David Lloyd
George (1863-1945) was British Prime Minister of the Liberal party during
the 1919 peace talks and was responsible for drafting the Treaty of
Versailles.
Margaret MacMillan received her Ph.D. from Oxford University and is provost
of Trinity College and professor of history at the University of Toronto.
This is an important article for those who are interested in learning about
the wheeling and dealing that went on in the1919 peace talks as well as the
charismatic Mustafa Kemal better known as Ataturk. They say, Ataturk had
startling blue eyes and was born in Solun. He had a peasant mother who could
barely read and write and his father was an unsuccessful merchant. Show me a
Turk from Solun with blue eyes and I will show you a Macedonian. Enjoy
reading the article.
FAR AWAY FROM PARIS, at the southeast tip of Europe, another great city had
been lamenting the past and thinking uneasily about the future. Byzantium to
the Greeks and Romans, Constantinople to the peacemakers, Istanbul, as it
was to the Turks, had once been the capital of the glorious Byzantine empire
and then, after 1453, of the victorious Ottoman Turks. Now the Ottoman
empire in its turn was on a downward path. The city was crammed with
refugees and soldiers from the defeated armies, short of fuel, food and
hope. Their fate-indeed, that of the whole empire-appeared to depend on the
Peace Conference.
Layers of history had fallen over Constantinople, leaving churches, mosques,
frescoes, mosaics, palaces, covered markets and fishing villages. The
massive city walls had seen invaders from Europe and the East, Persians,
Crusaders, Arabs and finally the Turks. The last Byzantine emperor had
chosen death there in 1453, as the Ottoman Turks completed their conquest of
his empire. Underneath the streets of Istanbul lay the shards of antiquity;
walls, vaults, passageways, a great Byzantine cistern where Greek and Roman
columns held up the roof Above, the minarets of the mosques-some of them,
such as the massive Santa Sophia, converted from Christian churches-and the
great tower built by the Genoese brooded over the city’s hills. Across the
deep inlet of the Golden Horn, the old city of Stamboul, with its squalor
and its magnificence, faced the more spacious modern quarter where
foreigners lived. It was a city with many memories and many peoples.
All around was the water. To the northwest, the Bosphorus stretched up into
the Black Sea toward Russia and central Asia; southwest, the Sea of Marmara
led into the- Dardanelles and the Mediterranean. Geography had created the
city, and geography had kept it important through the centuries. From
antiquity, when Jason sailed through and Alexander the Great won a great
victory over the Persians nearby, to more modern times, when Catherine the
Great of Russia and Wilhelm II of Germany both reached out to grasp it, the
city had always been a prize.
Much of the diplomacy of the nineteenth century had revolved around
controlling vital waterways such as this. Russia longed for warm-water ports
with access to the world’s seas. Britain in turn bolstered an ailing Ottoman
empire to keep the Russians safely bottled up in the Black Sea. (Only in the
most desperate moments of the war had the British conceded Russian control
over the straits; fortunately, owing to the revolutions of 1917, Russia
would not be collecting its prize.) The Ottoman Turks, who had once reached
the gates of Vienna, had little to say. Even the Young Turk revolt just
before the Great War did little to arrest their decline. Their empire
shrank, in the Balkans and across North Africa.
In 1914, the Ottoman leaders decided to confront Russia, now allied to their
old friend Britain: the empire joined the war on the side of Germany and
Austria-Hungary. It was a gamble that failed. The Ottoman empire fought
astonishingly bravely, given its relative weakness. In Mesopotamia and at
Gallipoli, Turkish soldiers humiliated the Allies, who had expected quick
victories. But by 1918, Ottoman luck had run out. The collapse of Bulgaria
in September opened the road to Constantinople from the west, while British
and Indian troops pushed in from the south and east. Out on the eastern end
of the Mediterranean, Allied warships gathered in ominous numbers. Only on
its northeastern borders, where the old Russian empire was disintegrating,
was there respite, but the Ottomans were too weak to benefit. Their empire
had gone piecemeal before the war; now it melted like snow. The Arab
territories had gone, from Mesopotamia to Palestine, from Syria down to the
Arabian peninsula. On the eastern end of the Black Sea, subject
peoples-Armenians, Georgians, Azerbaijanis, Kurds-struggled to establish new
states in the borderlands with Russia. “General attitude among Turks,”
reported an American diplomat, “is one of hopelessness, waiting the outcome
of the Peace Conference.” Like so many other peoples, they hoped the
Americans would rescue them; self determination might salvage at least the
Turkish-speaking areas in eastern Thrace and Anatolia. In Constantinople,
intellectuals founded a “Wilsonian Principles Society.”
The men who had led the empire into the war resigned in the first week of
October and fled on a German warship, and a caretaker government sent word
to the British that it wanted peace. The British government agreed to open
talks promptly at the Aegean island of Mudros, partly to keep the French on
the sidelines. Although the British had consulted with the French on the
armistice terms, they made the dubious argument that since the Ottoman
empire had contacted them first, it was Britain’s responsibility to handle
negotiations. The French government and the senior French admiral at Mudros
both protested in vain. All negotiations were handled by the British
commander, Admiral Arthur Calthorpe.
The Ottoman delegates were led by Hussein Rauf; a young naval hero and the
new minister of the navy. On October 28 they arrived at Calthorpe’s
flagship, the Agamemnon. The negotiations were civil, even friendly. Rauf
found Calthorpe honest and straightforward-and reassuring when he promised
that Britain would treat Turkey, for that was all that remained of the
empire, gently. Constantinople probably would not be occupied; certainly no
Greek or Italian troops, particular bugbears of the Turks, would be allowed
to land. When Rauf arrived home, he told a reporter. “I assure you that not
a single enemy soldier will disembark at our Istanbul.” The British had
treated them extraordinarily well: “The armistice we have concluded is
beyond our hopes.” Even though they had accepted all the clauses put forward
by the British, Rauf trusted Calthorpe, who promised that the armistice
terms would not be used unfairly. The British were really only interested in
free passage through the straits; why would they want to occupy
Constantinople, or indeed anywhere else? Rauf told himself that, after all,
the British had already taken the Arab territories. “I could think of no
other area they would want from the point of view of their national
interests and so might try to seize.”
When the two men put their signatures to the armistice on October 30, they
cheerfully toasted each other in champagne. Rauf; the Agamemnon’s captain
wrote to his wife, “made me a very graceful little speech thanking me for my
hospitality and consideration to him as a technical enemy.” The photograph
of the captain’s young twin sons, said Rauf; had been a source of
inspiration to him. “Wasn’t that nice?”
In London, the British cabinet received the news of the armistice with
delight and fell to discussing how Constantinople ought to be occupied,
given “the mentality of the East.” The British and their allies had every
intention of enforcing the armistice rigorously. All Turkish garrisons were
to surrender; all the railways and telegraphs would be run by the Allies;
and Turkish ports were to be available for Allied warships. But the most
damaging clause was the seventh, which read simply “The Allies have the
right to occupy any strategic points in the event of a situation arising
which threatens the security of the Allies” Years later Rauf looked back.
“There was a general conviction in our country that England and France were
countries faithful not only to their written pacts, but also to their
promises. And I had this conviction too. What a shame that we were mistaken
in our beliefs and convictions!”
>From his post far away to the south, by the Syrian border, a friend of
Rauf’s who was also a war hero wrote to his government with dismay: “It is
my sincere and frank opinion that if we demobilize our troops and give in to
everything the British want, without taking steps to end misunderstandings
and false interpretations of the armistice, it will be impossible for us to
put any sort of brake on Britain’s covetous designs.” Mustafa Kemal-better
known today as Ataturk-dashed north to Constantinople and urged everyone he
could see, from leading politicians to the sultan himself to establish a
strong nationalist government to stand up to the foreigners. He found
sympathy in many quarters, but the sultan, Mehmed VI, preferred to placate
the Allies. In November 1918, Mehmed dissolved parliament and tried to
govern through his own men.
The great line of sultans that had produced Suleiman the Magnificent had
dwindled to Mehmed VI. His main achievement was to have survived the rule of
three brothers: one who was deposed when he went mad; his paranoid and cruel
successor, so fearful of enemies that he employed a eunuch to take the first
puff of every cigarette; and the timid old man who ruled until the summer of
1918. Mehmed VI was sane but it was difficult to gauge whether there were
many ideas in his bony head. He took over as sultan with deep misgivings. “I
am at a loss,” he told a religious leader. “Pray for me.”
The power of the throne, which had once made the world tremble, had slipped
away. Orders from the government, reported the American representative,
“often receive but scant consideration in the provinces and public safety is
very poor throughout Asia Minor.” Although Constantinople was not officially
occupied at first, Allied soldiers and diplomats “were everywhere-advising
and ordering and suggesting,” Allied warships packed the harbor so tightly
that they looked a solid mass. “I am ill,” murmured the sultan, “I can’t
look out the window. I hate to see them.” had a very different thought: “As
they have come, so they shall go.
Ataturk was a complicated, brave, determined and dangerous man whose
picture, with its startling blue eyes, is still everywhere in Turkey today:
In 1919 few foreigners had ever heard of him; four years later he had
humbled Britain and France and brought into existence the new nation-state
of Turkey. The tenth of November, the anniversary of his death, is a
national day of remembrance. He could be ruthless, as both his friends and
his enemies found; after his great victories, he tried some of his oldest
associates, including Rauf for treason. He could also be charming, as the
many women in his life discovered. Children loved him, and he loved them; he
always said, however, that it was just as well he was childless since the
sons of great men are usually degenerates. He had a rational and scientific
mind, but in later life grew fascinated by the esoteric. He refused to allow
Ankara radio to play traditional Turkish music; it was what he listened to
with his friends. He wanted to emancipate Turkish women, yet when he
divorced the only woman he ever married, he did so in the traditional Muslim
way; He was a dictator who tried to order democracy into existence. In 1930
he created an opposition party and chose its leaders; when it started to
challenge him, he closed it down. He was capricious, but in his own way
fair. His subordinates knew that any order he had given at night during one
of his frequent drinking bouts should be ignored.
The man who made Turkey was born on the fringes of the old Ottoman empire in
the Macedonian seaport of Salonika. His mother was a peasant who could
barely read and write, his father an unsuccessful merchant. Like the Ottoman
empire itself Salonika contained many nationalities. Even the laborers on
the docks spoke half a dozen languages. About half of Salonika’s people were
Jews; the rest ranged from Turks to Greeks, Armenians to Albanians. Western
Europeans dominated the trade and commerce, just as European nations
dominated the Ottoman empire.
Early on Ataturk developed a contempt for religion that never left him.
Islam-and its leaders and holy men-were “a poisonous dagger which is
directed at the heart of my people.” From the evening when, as a student, he
saw sheikhs and dervishes whipping a crowd into a frenzy, he loathed what he
saw as primitive fanaticism. “I flatly refuse to believe that today; in the
luminous presence of science, knowledge, and civilization in all its
aspects, there exist, in the civilized community of Turkey, men so primitive
as to seek their material and moral well-being from the guidance of one or
another sheikh.”
Over his mother’s objections, he insisted on being educated in military
schools. In those days these were not only training leaders of the future;
they were centers of the growing nationalist and revolutionary sentiment.
Ataturk’s particular aptitudes were for mathematics and politics. He learned
French so that he could read political philosophers such as Voltaire and
Montesquieu. When he was nineteen, Ataturk won a place in the infantry
college in Constantinople. He found a worldly, cosmopolitan capital. Less
than half its population was Muslim. The rest were a mix of Sephardic Jews
whose ancestors had escaped from Christian Spain centuries before, Polish
patriots fleeing tsarist rule, and Orthodox Armenians, Rumanians, Albanians
and Greeks. Despite four centuries of Ottoman rule, the Greeks still
dominated commerce. (Even after the Second World War, over half the members
of Istanbul’s chamber of commerce had Greek names.) Europeans ran the most
important industries, and Western lenders kept the government solvent and
supervised its finances. The Ottomans were now so weak that they were forced
to give Westerners even more of the special privileges, which first started
in the sixteenth century capitulations, which included freedom from Turkish
taxes and Turkish courts. As a Turkish journalist wrote sadly: “We have
remained mere spectators while our commerce, our trades and even our
broken-down huts have been given to the foreigners.”
The infantry college where Ataturk studied was on the north side of the
Golden Horn, in the newer part of the city, with its wide streets, gas
lighting, opera house, cafes, chamber of commerce, banks, shops with the
latest European fashions, even brothels with pink satin sofas just like
those in Paris. Ataturk explored it with enthusiasm, carousing and whoring
and reading widely, but he always remained ambivalent about Constantinople.
It was a place to be enjoyed but dangerous to governments. He later moved
the capital far inland to the obscure city of Ankara.
Like many young officers in the years before 1914, Ataturk dabbled in secret
societies which swore to give the empire a modern constitution. He shared
the hopes of the revolution of 1908, and the disappointments when it failed
to make the empire stronger. In 1908 Austria annexed Bosnia and Herzegovina
and Bulgaria declared its independence. In 1911 Italy, the weakest of the
European powers, declared war and seized Libya. After the Balkan wars of
1912 and 1913, Albania, Macedonia and part of Thrace, including Salonika,
were gone. By 1914 the European part of the empire, which had once stretched
into Hungary, was reduced to a small enclave in Thrace tucked under
Bulgaria. In six years, 425,000 square miles had been lost.
When the Great War started, Ataturk was enjoying life as a diplomat in
Bulgaria. He went to his first opera in Sofia; fifteen years later, he put
an opera house into the plans for his new capital of Ankara. He took up
ballroom dancing; later, in his new republic, civil servants were made to
dance at official balls because “that was how they do it in the West.” At
the beginning of 1915, he was offered command of a new division which was
being thrown into the defense of the Gallipoli peninsula. Many Allied
reputations were destroyed at Gallipoli; his was made. As the author of the
official British history later wrote, “Seldom in history can the exertions
of a single divisional commander have exercised, on three separate
occasions, so profound an influence on the course of a battle, but perhaps
on the fate of a campaign and even the destiny of a nation.”
The Constantinople Ataturk found at the end of the war was very different
from the city he remembered. There was no coal and very little food. A Turk
who was a boy at the time remembered his mother struggling to feed the
family: “It seemed to us that we had lived forever on lentils and cabbage
soup and the dry, black apology for bread.” The government was bankrupt. On
street corners distinguished officers sold lemons because their pensions
were worthless. And more refugees were pouring in: Russians fleeing the
civil war, Armenians searching desperately for safety, and Turks abandoning
the Middle East and Europe. By the end of 1919 perhaps as many as 100,000
were sleeping on the streets of the city. The only Turks who prospered were
black marketeers and criminals. Crazy rumors swept through the city: one day
crowds rushed to Santa Sophia because it was whispered that Christian bells
were being hung again.
Local Greeks, intoxicated by the hope of restored Hellenic rule, hung out
the blue-and-white flag of Greece; a giant picture of Venizelos went up in
one of the main squares. The Greek patriarch sent aggressive demands to
Paris, denouncing the Turks and demanding that Constantinople be made Greek
again. His office told Greek Christians to stop cooperating with the Turkish
authorities. The Greeks were, said an English diplomat, “apt to be uppish.”
Some hotheads jostled Turks in the streets and made them take off their
fezzes.
Allied officers and bureaucrats arrived in increasing numbers to supervise
the armistice. “Life,” recalled a young Englishman, “was gay and wicked and
delightful. The cafes were full of drinking and dancing.” In the nightclubs,
White Russians sang melancholy songs and pretty young refugees sold
themselves for the price of a meal. You could race motorboats across the Sea
of Marmara, ride to hounds on the Asian side of the Bosphorus and pick up
wonderful antiques for pennies. The Allies unofficially divided up
Constantinople into spheres of influence and took over much of its
administration; they ran the local police and set up their own courts. When
the Turkish press was critical of their guests, the Allies took over press
censorship as well. When Constantinople was officially occupied in March
1920, it was hard to tell the difference.
Outside the city, in Thrace and Asia Minor, Allied officers fanned out to
monitor the surrender. The French occupied the important southern city of
Alexandretta (today Iskenderun) and by early 1919 were moving inland. On the
whole, the British were more popular; as one lady in the south commented,
“Les anglais ont envoyes les fils de leurs ‘Lords,’ mais les francais ont
envoyes leurs valets” (“The English sent the sons of their lords, but the
French sent their valets”). The sultan’s government, as weak and demoralized
as its figurehead, did nothing, seeking only to placate the Allies. The
Allies were not in a mood to be placated. Some, such as Curzon, who chaired
the cabinet committee responsible for British policy in the East, thought
the time had come to get rid of “this canker which has poisoned the life of
Europe.” Corruption, nameless vices and intrigue had spread out from
Constantinople to infect the innocent Europeans. The Peace Conference was
the chance to excise the source of such evil once and for all: “The presence
of the Turks in Europe has been a source of unmitigated evil to everybody
concerned. I am not aware of a single interest, Turkish or otherwise, that
during nearly 500 years has benefited by that presence.” Although as a
student of history he should have known better, Curzon argued: “Indeed, the
record is one of misrule, oppression, intrigue, and massacre, almost
unparalleled in the history of the Eastern world.” His prime minister shared
his sentiments; like many Liberals, Lloyd George had inherited his hostility
to the Turks from the great Gladstone.
For Curzon the question was, What would replace the Ottoman empire? Britain
still wanted to ensure that hostile warships did not use the straits. It
still needed to protect the route to India through the Suez Canal. There was
a new factor, too: the increasingly important supplies of oil from Mosul in
the Ottoman empire and from Persia. Britain did not want to take on the
whole responsibility itself and Greece certainly could not; on the other
hand, it did not want another major power moving in, such as its ally
France. After all, the two countries had fought for centuries, over Europe,
North America, India, Africa and the Middle East. Their friendship, by
comparison, was a recent affair. It had stood the test of the war but it was
not clear that it would stand the test of peace. There had already been
trouble over the Arab parts of the Ottoman empire. Did Britain really want
French ships at the eastern end of the Mediterranean, French bases up and
down the coast? Curzon was quite sure that it did not:
A good deal of my public life has been spent in connection with the
political ambitions of France, which I have come across in Tunis, in Siam,
and in almost every distant region where the French have sway. We have been
brought, for reasons of national safety, into an alliance with the French,
which I hope will last, but their national character is different from ours,
and their political interests collide with our own in many cases. I am
seriously afraid that the great Power from whom we have most to fear is
France.
It would be a great mistake, he went on, to allow the French to acquire
influence in the Middle East: “France is a highly organised State, has
boundless intrepidity, imagination, and a certain power of dealing with
Eastern peoples.”
The French did not trust the British any more than the British trusted them.
And France had considerable interests in the Ottoman empire, from the
protection of fellow Christians to the extensive French investments. For
France, though, what happened to the Ottoman empire or in the Balkans was
much less important than dealing with Germany. Clemenceau, whatever his
colonial lobby thought, would compromise with Britain because he needed its
support in Europe. While he did not want to see the Asian part of Turkey
disappear completely, Clemenceau did not, at least initially, have strong
views about Greek claims there. As far as Europe was concerned, he supported
Greek claims to Thrace. If Greece blocked Italian claims, so much the better
for France.
During the war, Britain, France and Russia had held a number of discussions
about the future of the Ottoman empire. In 1916, the British and French
representatives, Sir Mark Sykes and Georges Picot, had agreed that their two
countries would divide up the Arab-speaking areas and that, in the
Turkish-speaking parts, France would have a zone extending north into
Cilicia from Syria. The Russians, who had already extracted a promise that
they would annex Constantinople and the straits, gave their approval on
condition that they got the Turkish provinces adjacent to their borders in
the Caucasus. The decision of the new Bolshevik government to make peace
with the Central Powers effectively canceled that agreement. Britain and
France were now left as the major powers in the Middle East, and as the war
wound down, they circled suspiciously around each other.
In the Supreme Council on October 30, Lloyd George and Clemenceau quarreled
angrily over Britain’s insistence on negotiating the Turkish truce on their
own. “They bandied words like fish-wives,” House re- ported. Lloyd George
told Clemenceau:
Except for Great Britain no one had contributed anything more than a handful
of black troops to the expedition in Palestine, I was really surprised at
the lack of generosity on the part of the French Government. The British had
now some 500,000 men on Turkish soil. The British had captured three or four
Turkish Armies and had incurred hundreds of thousands of casualties in the
war with Turkey. The other Governments had only put in a few nigger
policemen to see that we did not steal the Holy Sepulchre! When, however, it
came to signing an armistice, all this fuss was made.
It was an unfair argument; as Clemenceau pointed out on a later occasion,
the British had sent correspondingly fewer troops to the Western Front.
“My opinion was and remains that if the white troops which you sent over
there had been thrown against the Germans, the war could have been ended
some months earlier.” The French nevertheless backed down on the armistice,
as Pichon said, “in the spirit of conciliation which the French government
always felt to apply in dealing with Britain.” There was not to be much of
that spirit when it came to dividing the spoils.
The peacemakers did not get around to the Ottoman empire until January 30,
1919, and then it was only in the course of that difficult discussion over
mandates for the former German colonies. Lloyd George, who had spent the
previous week bringing the Americans and his recalcitrant dominions to
agreement, mentioned the Ottoman empire briefly as an example of where
mandates were needed. Because the Turks had been so bad at governing their
subject peoples, they should lose control of all their Arab
territories-Syria, Mesopotamia, Palestine and Arabia itself. Since the Arabs
were civilized but not yet organized, they would need outside guidance. The
Ottomans also ought to lose territory on their northeast frontier. They had
behaved appallingly to the Armenians, and clearly an Armenian state should
come into existence, probably as a mandate of an outside power. There might
have to be a Kurdistan, south of Armenia. That still left the predominantly
Turkish-speaking territories, the slice in Europe, the straits and Anatolia
in Asia Minor. Those, Lloyd George said airily, could be settled “on their
merits.” (He did not mention the parcels of land stretching inland from the
coast of Asia Minor that had been promised to the French, the Italians or
the Greeks.)
The other important thing, Lloyd George argued, was to keep all the various
groups within the empire from attacking each other. This was not a
responsibility Britain wanted. As Lloyd George pointed out, the Allies had
over a million troops scattered across the Ottoman empire and Britain was
paying for the lot. “If they kept them there until they had made peace with
Turkey, and until the League of Nations had been constituted and had started
business and until it was able to dispose of this question, the expense
would be something enormous, and they really could not face it.” He had to
answer to Parliament.
Lloyd George hoped that Wilson would take the hint and offer the United
States as the mandatory power at least for Armenia and the straits. Better
still, the Americans might decide to run the whole of the Turkish areas.
House certainly hinted at the possibility. However, the Americans had not
really established a clear position on the Ottoman empire beyond an
antipathy toward the Turks. American Protestant missionaries, who had been
active in Ottoman Turkey since the 1820s, had painted a dismal picture of a
bankrupt regime. Much of their work had been among the Armenians, so they
had reported at first hand the massacres during the war. Back in the United
States large sums of money had been raised for Armenian relief. House had
cheerfully chatted with the British about ways of carving up the Ottoman
empire, and Wilson had certainly considered its complete disappearance.
The United States had never declared war on the Ottoman empire, which put it
in a tricky position when it came to determining the empire’s fate. The only
one of Wilson’s Fourteen Points that dealt with it was ambiguous: “The
Turkish portions of the present Ottoman Empire should be assured a secure
sovereignty, but the other nationalities which are now under Turkish rule
should be assured an undoubted security of life and an absolutely unmolested
opportunity of autonomous development.” What were the Turkish portions? Who
should have autonomous development? The Arabs? The Armenians? The Kurds? The
scattered Greek communities?
When the Inquiry, that collection of American experts, produced its
memorandum in December 1918, it said both that Turkey proper (undefined)
must be justly treated and that subject races must be freed from oppression
and misrule, which in turn meant “autonomy” for Armenia and “protection” for
the Arab parts. Oddly contradicting this, the official commentary on the
Fourteen Points, which had come out in October 1918, talked about
international control of Constantinople and the straits, perhaps a Greek
mandate on the coast of Asia Minor, where it was incorrectly said that
Greeks predominated, and possibly American mandates for Constantinople,
Armenia, even Macedonia in the Balkans. Before the Peace Conference started,
it was generally assumed that, at the very least, the United States would
take a mandate for Armenia and the straits. Not everyone was pleased.
British admirals, having got rid of the Russian menace, did not want to see
a strong United States at the eastern end of the Mediterranean. The India
Office was also concerned. Mehmed VI was not only the Ottoman sultan but
also the caliph, the nearest thing to a spiritual leader of all Muslims.
Turning him out of Constantinople, even putting him under the supervision of
an outside power, might enrage Indian Muslims. Lloyd George simply ignored
their objections.
As so often, the Peace Conference delayed difficult decisions. At that
January meeting, Wilson suggested that the military advisers look at how the
burden of occupying the Turkish territories could best be shared out. “This
would clarify the question,” said Lloyd George. Of course, it did not. The
report duly came in and was discussed briefly on February 10; it was put on
the agenda for the following day but in the event the boundaries of Belgium
proved to be much more interesting.
On February 26, the appearance of an Armenian delegation before the Supreme
Council briefly reminded the peacemakers that the Ottoman empire remained to
be settled. Boghos Nubar Pasha was smooth, rich and cultivated; his father
had been prime minister of Egypt. His partner, Avetis Aharonian, was a
tough, cynical poet from the Caucasus. Boghos spoke for the Armenian
diaspora, Aharonian for the homeland in the mountains where Russia, Persia
and Turkey met. In what was by now a familiar pattern they appealed to
history-the centuries that Armenians had lived there, the persistence of
Armenian Christianity-to their services to the Allies (some Armenians had
fought in Russia’s armies) and to Allied promises. And, like other
delegations, they staked out a claim for a huge area of land, stretching
south and west from the Caucasus down to the Mediterranean. Less typically,
they also asked for the protection of an outside power, a wise request for a
country with such neighbors and such a past. They placed their hopes on the
United States. “Scarcely a day passed,” said an American expert, “that
mournful Armenians, bearded and blackclad, did not besiege the American
delegation or, less frequently, the President, setting forth the really
terrible conditions in their own native land.”
The Armenians brought one of the saddest histories to the conference.
Between 1375, when the last independent Armenian state was conquered, and
the spring of 1918, when nationalist forces had proclaimed the republic of
Armenia on what had been Russian territory, they had lived under alien rule.
After the Russians had advanced down into the Caucasus at the start of the
nineteenth century, the Armenian lands were divided up among Russia itself;
Ottoman Turkey and Persia. The Armenians, many of them simple farmers, had
become Russian, Turkish or Persian, but as ideas of nationalism and
self-determination swept eastward, the vision of a reborn Armenian nation
took shape. It was not a coherent vision- Christian, secular, conservative,
radical, pro- Turkish or pro-Russian, there was no agreement as to what
Armenia might be-but it was increasingly powerful. Unfortunately, however,
Armenian nationalism was not the only nationalism growing in that part of
the world. “Who remembers the Armenians today?” Hitler asked cynically. At
the Paris Peace Conference, the horrors of what the Turks had done to the
Armenians were still fresh, and the world had not yet grown used to attempts
to exterminate peoples. The killings had started in the 1890s, when the old
regime turned savagely on any groups that opposed it. Ottoman troops and
local Kurds, themselves awakening as a nation, had rampaged through Armenian
villages. The Young Turks, who took over the government in 1908, promised a
new era with talk of a secular, multi-ethnic state, but they also dreamed of
linking up with other Turkish peoples in central Asia. In that Pan- Turanian
world, Armenians and other Christians had no place.
When the Ottoman empire entered the war, Enver Pasha, one of the triumvirate
of Young Turks who had ruled in Constantinople since 1913, sent the bulk of
its armies eastward, against Russia. The result, in 1915, was disaster; the
Russians destroyed a huge Ottoman force and looked set to advance into
Anatolia just when the Allies were landing at Gallipoli in the west. The
triumvirate gave the order to deport Armenians from eastern Anatolia on the
grounds that they were traitors, potential or actual. Many Armenians were
slaughtered before they could leave; others died of hunger and disease on
the forced marches southward. Whether the Ottoman government’s real goal was
genocide is still much disputed; so is the number of dead, anywhere from
300,000 to 1.5 million.
Western opinion was appalled. In Britain, Armenia’s cause attracted
supporters from the duke of Argyll to the young Arnold Toynbee. British
children were told to remember the starving Armenians when they failed to
clean their plates. In the United States, huge sums of money were raised for
relief. Clemenceau wrote the preface for a book detailing the atrocities:
“Is it true that at the dawn of the twentieth century, five days from Paris,
atrocities have been committed with impunity, covering a land with
horror-such that one cannot imagine worse in time of the deepest barbarity?”
The usually restrained Lansing wrote to Wilson, who was strongly
pro-Armenian, “It is one of the blackest pages in the history of this war.”
“Say to the Armenians,” exclaimed Orlando, “that I make their cause my
cause.” Lloyd George promised that Armenia would never be restored to “the
blasting tyranny” of the Turks. “There was not a British statesman of any
party,” he wrote in his memoirs, “who did not have it in mind that if we
succeeded in defeating this inhuman Empire, our essential condition of the
peace we should impose was the redemption of the Armenian valleys for ever
from the bloody misrule with which they had been stained by the infamies of
the Turks.”
Fine sentiments-but they amounted to little in the end. At the Peace
Conference, even heartfelt agreement on principle faltered in the face of
other considerations. Armenia was far away; it was surrounded by enemies and
the Allies had few forces in the area. Moving troops and aid in, at a time
when resources were stretched thin, was a major undertaking; what railways
there were had been badly damaged and the roads were primitive. Help was far
away, but Armenia’s enemies were close at hand. Russians, whether the armies
of the Whites or the Bolsheviks, who were advancing southward, would not
tolerate Armenia or any other independent state in the Caucasus. On
Armenia’s other flank, Turks deeply resented the loss of Turkish territory,
and the further losses implied in the Armenian claims.
In Paris, Armenia’s friends were lukewarm and hesitant. The British, it is
true, saw certain advantages for themselves in taking a mandate for Armenia:
the protection of oil supplies coming from Baku on the Caspian to the port
of Batum on the Black Sea, and the creation of a barrier between Bolshevism
and the British possessions in the Middle East. (In their worst nightmares,
the British imagined Bolshevism linking up with a resurgent Islam and
toppling the British empire.) On the other hand, as the War Office kept
repeating, British resources were already overstretched. The French Foreign
Office, for its part, toyed with ideas of a huge Armenia under French
protection which would provide a field for French investment and the spread
of French culture. Clemenceau, however, had little enthusiasm for the
notion. The Italians, like the French, preferred to concentrate their
efforts on gains on the Mediterranean coast of Turkey and in Europe. That
left the Americans.
On March 7, House assured Lloyd George and Clemenceau that the United States
would undoubtedly take on a mandate. Lloyd George was delighted at the
prospect of the Americans taking on the “noble duty,” and relieved that the
French were not taking on a mandate. House, as he often did, was
exaggerating. Wilson had warned the Supreme Council that “he could think of
nothing the people of the United States would be less inclined to accept
than military responsibility in Asia.” It is perhaps a measure of how far
Wilson’s judgment had deteriorated that, on May 14, when Armenia came up at
the Council of Four, he agreed to accept a mandate, subject, he added, to
the consent of the American Senate. This ruffled the French because the
proposed American mandate was to stretch from the Black Sea to the
Mediterranean, taking in the zone in Cilicia promised to France under the
Sykes-Picot Agreement. While Clemenceau, who took little interest in the
Turkish-speaking territories, did not raise an objection, his colleagues
were furious. From London, Paul Cambon complained: “They must be drunk the
way they are surrendering. .. a total capitulation, a mess, an unimaginable
shambles.” Although no one suspected it at the time, no arrangement made in
Paris was going to make the slightest difference to Armenia.
Many other schemes for the Ottoman empire were floating around the
conference rooms and dinner tables in Paris that spring. “Let it be a manda
[buffalo] ,” said one wit in Constantinople, “let it be an ox, let it be any
animal whatsoever; only let it come quickly.” If all the claims,
protectorates, independent states and mandates that were discussed actually
had come into existence, a very odd little Turkey in the interior of
Anatolia would have been left, with no straits, no Mediterranean coast, a
truncated Black Sea coast, and no Armenian or Kurdish territories in the
northeast. What was left out of the calculation in Paris, among other
things, was the inability of the powers to enforce their will. Henry Wilson,
chief of the British Imperial General Staff: thought the politicians
completely unrealistic: “They seem to think that their writ runs in Turkey
in Asia. We have never, even after the armistice, attempted to get into the
background parts.” Also overlooked were the Turks themselves. Almost
everyone in Paris assumed that they would simply do as they were told. When
Edwin Montagu, the British secretary of state for India, cried, “Let us not
for Heaven’s sake, tell the Moslem what he ought to think, let us recognize
what they do think, ” Balfour replied with chilling detachment, “I am quite
unable to see why Heaven or any other Power should object to our telling the
Moslem what he ought to think.” That went for the Arab subjects of the
Ottoman empire as well.

Masco Corporation Announces Live Webcast of Presentation

Masco Corporation Announces Live Webcast of
Presentation at Investor Meeting

PRNewswire-FirstCall
Wednesday March 2, 2005

TAYLOR, Mich., March 2 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ — Masco Corporation’s
(NYSE: MAS) Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Richard Manoogian
will present at the Raymond James Institutional Investors Conference
in Orlando, Florida on March 8, 2005 at 7:30 a.m. ET.

Masco’s presentation will be webcast live on the Internet at
or via the Company’s website at
. A replay of the webcast will be available via
the above link or via Masco’s website through April 1, 2005.

Headquartered in Taylor, Michigan, Masco Corporation is one of the
world’s leading manufacturers of home improvement and building
products as well as a leading provider of services that include the
installation of insulation and other building products.

Statements contained herein may include certain forward-looking
statements regarding Masco’s future sales, earnings growth potential
and other developments. Actual results may vary materially because of
external factors such as interest rate fluctuations, changes in
consumer spending and other factors over which management has no
control. The Company believes that certain non-GAAP performance
measures and ratios, used in managing the business, may provide users
of this financial information with additional meaningful comparisons
between current results and results in prior periods. Non-GAAP
performance measures and ratios should be viewed in addition to, and
not as an alternative for, the Company’s reported results under
accounting principles generally accepted in the United
States. Additional information about the Company’s products, markets
and conditions, which could affect the Company’s future performance,
is contained in the Company’s filings with the Securities and Exchange
Commission and is available on Masco’s website at
. Masco undertakes no obligation to update any forward- looking
statements, whether as a result of new information, future events or
otherwise.

Source: Masco Corporation

http://www.wsw.com/webcast/rjii05/mas
http://www.masco.com
http://www.masco.com
http://biz.yahoo.com/prnews/050302/dew020_1.html

Bridgehead for the yankees

Agency WPS
DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
March 2, 2005, Wednesday

BRIDGEHEAD FOR THE YANKEES

SOURCE: Novye Izvestia, February 28, 2005, p. 4

by Mekhman Gafarly

“The Pentagon does not want Russia to oppose US military presence in
Azerbaijan and Georgia,” said Charles Wald, US Second-in-Command in
Europe. “It will be nice to get a chance to run exercises and
operations there.”

Wald visited Azerbaijan and Georgia more than once, discussing
military cooperation with the United States. he is in charge of the
new American military initiative Silky Way (non-proliferation of
weapons of mass destruction in the Caucasus and Central Asia), these
days. The list composed by the US Congress includes Armenia,
Azerbaijan, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan,
Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan. Still, the Pentagon concentrated on
Azerbaijan and Georgia which in expert opinion may be ascribed to the
American attack on Iran.

Not so long ago, Azerbaijani media reported with references to Cmag
of Canada that the United States was preparing for a strike at Iran
and that the US Administration had already begun consultations with
allies including Azerbaijan. Some newspapers referring to military
sources reported the plan of the future attack. Ekho newspaper (Baku)
wrote that American experts had drawn a scenario of a military action
against Iran from the territory of Azerbaijan (not only Azerbaijan).
The American strike aimed to ruin nuclear objects of this Islamic
state and install a new regime there was designed by the American
Committee of Iranian Specialists including all sorts of experts (some
of them military). The authors called the operation “Iran – Strategic
Surprise”. It stipulates establishment of American military bases in
Azerbaijan within 20 days. Bases will be established simultaneously
with rotation of American troops in Iraq. Air strikes and ground
operations in Iran will follow for 30 days after that. The attack
will proceed against 30 targets. THAAD gear will be installed in
certain locations (Azerbaijan, Georgia, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Iraq),
capable of detecting missiles practically at launch and taking them
out. Azerbaijani military experts acquainted with the plan call it
quite realistic.

Azerbaijan is expected to play a key role in the American operation.
Azerbaijani airfields Gala on Apsheron, Baku-Bina, Nasosny in
Sumgait, Garachala in Salian and civilian airports in Lenkoran,
Kyurdamir, Yevlakh, Gyandzh, Dallyar, and Nakhichevan will be used in
the operation. Validity of these forecasts is confirmed by
Azerbaijani military expert Uzeir Dzhafarov.

According to the plan, US State Secretary will personally coordinate
the operation with the governments of Georgia, Azerbaijan, and Iraq.
Air strikes will come from Iraq, special forces from Afghanistan,
special forces and landing forces from Azerbaijan. Distracting
maneuvers will take place in the Persian Gulf. All the same, the
Americans cannot guarantee Azerbaijan’s safety in a war on Iran.
Hence the intention to deploy special anti-missiles on Apsheron.
According to Azerbaijani media outlets, 10 radars were already
installed on the Azerbaijani-Iranian border. The radars and the 5
helicopters America has in the area gather intelligence information
for the United States. What information is already available enables
the Americans to maintain that Tehran is forcing development of
nuclear technologies and will possess nuclear weapons by 2006. Iran
already has delivery means and will double their quantity by 2008.

The United States is settling in Georgia too where 100 American
instructors train the Georgian military. Tbilisi received $10 million
from Washington in late 2004 within the framework of Initiative Silky
Way. Moscow fears therefore that once it withdrew its bases from the
territory of Georgia, Washington will immediately establish its own
bases there.

Killings of journalists in former Soviet Union

Reuters, UK
March 3 2005

Killings of journalists in former Soviet Union
03 Mar 2005 12:42:52 GMT

Source: Reuters

BAKU, March 3 (Reuters) – Popular Azerbaijan opposition journalist
Elmar Huseinov was shot dead late on Wednesday at the entrance to his
home. These are some of the most high-profile killings of other
journalists in the former Soviet Union:

*In March 1995, Vladislav Listyev, a popular TV anchorman and
executive with Russia’s Channel 1 television station, shot dead in
Moscow. His killers have never been found.

*In October 1995, Dmitry Kholodov, reporter with Russia’s Moskovsky
Komsomolets paper, blown up in his Moscow office. He had been
investigating alleged defence ministry corruption.

*In Sept 1998, Tajik opposition figure and professional journalist,
Otakhon Latifi, shot dead leaving his home in the capital Dushanbe.

*In September 2000, Ukrainian Internet journalist Georgiy Gongadze
disappeared. His headless body later found in a wood outside Kiev.
Authorities this week said they had arrested his killers.

*In July 2000, Dmitry Zavadsky, cameraman with Russia’s Channel One,
disappeared in Belarus. His body has never been found.

*In July 2001, television journalist Ihor Alexandrov, who reported on
corruption from the eastern Ukrainian city of Donetsk, bludgeoned to
death.

*In July 2001, Georgy Sanai, anchor on Georgia’s Rustavi 2 television
station, shot in the back of the head. Big protests in Tbilisi
followed the killing.

*In December 2002, chairman of the board of Armenian public
television and radio Tigran Naghdalyan shot dead in Yerevan.

*In October 2003, Alexei Sidorov, editor of campaigning Russian
provincial newspaper Togliatti Review, stabbed to death. His
predecessor was killed about 18 months earlier.

*In July 2004, U.S citizen Paul Klebnikov, editor of the Russian
edition of Forbes magazine, shot dead outside his Moscow office.
(Reporting by Reuters bureaux in Moscow, Yerevan, Tbilisi, Baku,
Almaty, Minsk, Kiev)

ANKARA: Evans Had To Correct His Statement Again After Apology

Turkish Press
March 3 2005

Evans Had To Correct His Statement Again After Using ”genocide” In
His Apology

WASHINGTON – US Ambassador in Yerevan John Evans had to correct his
statement one more time using the expression ”genocide” regarding
the relocation of some Armenians under Ottoman rule during the past
century, despite formal policy of the United States.

Evans, at a meeting he had with the representatives of Armenian
community living in the United States, criticized formal policy of
Washington, affirming that the incidents should be described as
”genocide”.

As a reaction, US State Department posted a statement of apology
signed by Evans, on the website of US’s Yerevan Embassy. In this
apology, Evans said that to use the term of ”genocide” was his
personal position, refuting any change in US policy. Evans also
apologized for causing misunderstandings.

However Evans, in his apology, said, ”there was no change in
Armenian genocide policy of US”, and secretly included the term
”genocide” to the text.

Turkey’s Ambassador in Washington Faruk Logolu reacted to this.
Ambassador Logoglu reminded his interlocutors in the State Department
that the United States did not recognize ”Armenian genocide” noting
the expression in Evans’ apology was unacceptable.

Justifying Turkey’s warning, US State Department made Evans to issue
a ”correction” for the apology.

ANKARA: French to hold referendum on Turkey’s EU membership

Journal of Turkish Weekly
March 2 2005

French to hold referendum on Turkey’s EU membership

French Parliament voted “yes” yesterday to hold a referendum on
Turkey’s bid for EU membership.

Despite fighting strong opposition from his centre-right party UMP,
French Prime Minister Jack Chirac is in favor of Turkish EU
membership.

The party is currently split down the middle on the subject, but are
expected to reach an agreement in December 2005.

Before the referendum on Turkey can take place, France will hold a
referendum on the EU constitution. This referendum was originally
going to be held late in 2005, but as France wants to keep the issue
of “Turkey’s EU bid” completely separate, the date may be brought
forward to May 8. , symbolising the end of world war II.

Once all member states have signed the treaty on October 29. , the
ratification process can begin.

There is a strong anti-Turkish lobby in France including the Greek
and Armenian lobby groups. Apart from teh ethnic lobbies, the
rightist groups claim that Turkey is a Muslim country and there is no
room in EU for the non-Christian states. The EU has no Muslim member
now, though there are Muslim states in the continent like Turkey,
Albania, Bosnia, Turkish Cyprus and Azerbaijan.

Compiled from Hurriyet, Milliyet, Zaman.

A Monument to Denial

Los angeles Times
March 2, 2005

A Monument to Denial

By Adam Hochschild, Adam Hochschild is the author of “King Leopold’s Ghost”
(Mariner Books, 1999) and “Bury the Chains: Prophets and Rebels in the Fight
to Free an Empire’s Slaves” (Houghton Mifflin, 2005).

No country likes to come to terms with embarrassing parts of its past.
Japanese schoolbooks still whitewash the atrocities of World War II, and the
Turkish government continues to deny the Armenian genocide. Until about
1970, the millions of visitors to Colonial Williamsburg saw no indication
that roughly half the inhabitants of the original town were slaves.

Until recently, one of the world’s more blatant denials of history had been
taking place at the Royal Museum of Central Africa, an immense, chateau-like
building on the outskirts of Brussels. It was founded a century ago by
Belgium’s King Leopold II, who, from 1885 to 1908, literally owned the Congo
as the world’s only privately controlled colony. Right through the 1990s,
the museum’s magnificent collection of African art, tools, masks and weapons
– among the largest and best anywhere, much of it gathered during the 23
years of Leopold’s rule – reflected nothing of what had happened in the
territory during that period. It was as if a great museum of Jewish art and
culture in Berlin revealed nothing about the Holocaust.

The holocaust visited upon the Congo under Leopold was not an attempt at
deliberate extermination, like the one the Nazis carried out on Europe’s
Jews, but its overall toll was probably higher. Soon after the king got his
hands on the colony, there was a worldwide rubber boom, and Leopold turned
much of the Congo’s adult male population into forced labor for gathering
wild rubber. His private army marched into village after village and held
the women hostage to force the men to go into the rain forest, often for
weeks out of each month, to tap rubber vines. This went on for nearly two
decades.

Though Leopold made a fortune estimated at well over $1 billion in today’s
dollars, the results were catastrophic for Congolese. Laborers were often
worked to death, and many female hostages starved. With few people to hunt,
fish or cultivate crops, food grew scarce. Hundreds of thousands of people
fled the forced-labor regime, but deep in the forest they found little to
eat and no shelter, and travelers came upon their bones for years afterward.
Tens of thousands more rose up in rebellion and were shot down. The
birthrate plummeted. Disease – principally sleeping sickness – took a toll
in the millions among half-starved and traumatized people who otherwise
might have survived.

Leopold’s murderous regime was exposed in its own day by a brave band of
activists: American, British and Swedish missionaries, and a hard-working
British journalist, E.D. Morel. Any historian of Africa knows the basic
story, and many have written about parts of it.

In 1998, I finished a book on the subject, “King Leopold’s Ghost,” which was
published in Belgium and drew furious denunciations from royalists and
conservatives. The foreign minister sent a special message to Belgian
diplomats abroad, counseling them on how to answer awkward questions from
readers. Asked if the museum planned changes, a senior official of the Royal
Museum of Central Africa replied that some were under study, “but absolutely
not because of the recent disreputable book by an American.”

The museum’s current director, Guido Gryseels, caught between pressure from
human rights activists on the one hand and rumored strong pressure from the
government and the royal family on the other, several years ago appointed a
commission of historians to study the Leopold period and determine just what
did happen. The move won favorable press coverage, but was in essence an odd
one: Usually commissions take evidence and hear witnesses; they don’t study
the distant past.

Under Gryseels, the museum has also gradually begun rewording signs on its
exhibits, and several weeks ago opened a new exhibit, “Memory of Congo: the
Colonial Era,” accompanied by a catalog, a thick, lavishly illustrated
coffee-table book of several dozen scholarly articles.

Judging from the latter, the museum has pulled its head out of the sand –
but only part way. There are a few atrocity photos, but they are far
outnumbered by pictures of dancers, musicians and happy black and white
families. The catalog is rife with evasions and denials. The commission of
historians, for instance, sets the loss of population during the most brutal
colonial period at 20%. This ignores the fact that in 1919 an official body
of the Belgian colonial government estimated the toll at 50%. And that the
Belgian-born Jan Vansina, professor emeritus of history and anthropology at
the University of Wisconsin-Madison and widely regarded as the greatest
living student of Central African peoples, makes the same estimate today.

One wall panel at the new museum exhibit raises – and debunks – the charge,
“Genocide in the Congo?” But this is a red herring: No reputable scholar of
the Congo uses the word. Forced labor is different from genocide, though
both can be fatal. Most of all, it is strange to see the catalog’s articles
on the bus system of Leopoldville, Congo national parks and the Congo visit
of a Belgian crown prince, but not a single piece on the deadly forced labor
system.

Belgium is not alone in failing to face up to its own history. All countries
mythologize their pasts and confront the worst of it only slowly. But once
they do, there are positive discoveries as well as painful ones. When I went
to school in the 1950s, I never heard the name Frederick Douglass, but my
children, who went in the 1980s, did.

The Royal Museum of Central Africa has similar figures it could celebrate.
Stanlislas Lefranc was a devout Catholic and monarchist who went to the
Congo 100 years ago to work as a magistrate. In pamphlets and newspaper
articles he later published in Belgium, he spoke out bravely against the
cruelties he witnessed. Jules Marchal, who died recently, was a Belgian
diplomat in Africa who, in his spare time, wrote the definitive history of
forced labor in the Congo, much of it based on years of searching files for
duplicate copies of documents that King Leopold had ordered destroyed. Both
men were shunned and ostracized in their time. Confronting the past is not
just about acknowledging guilt, but rediscovering heroes.

If you want other stories on this topic, search the Archives at
latimes.com/archives.

Prepared Remarks Of Honorable Norman Y. Mineta,, US Sec. Transport.

PREPARED REMARKS OF THE HONORABLE NORMAN Y. MINETA, U.S. SECRETARY OF
TRANSPORTATION

MARITIME TRADES DEPARTMENT
LAS VEGAS, NEVADA

U.S. Department of Transportation
Office of Public Affairs
FEBRUARY 25, 2005

Good morning, everyone. It’s wonderful to be with all of you again.

I don’t know about you, but I find it hard to believe that almost an
entire year has come and gone since we were last together in
Hollywood, Florida.

>From that gathering last year through today, our economy has gotten
stronger, and more Americans have been able to find good, quality
jobs.

Or, at least in my case, more Americans are holding on to their
quality jobs!

I have President Bush to thank for giving me the opportunity to serve
this great Nation again as the Secretary of Transportation.

And, I have you to thank for the invitation to be in Las Vegas today
with the Maritime Trades Department and your 29 affiliated unions.

All of us in this room, from the people who work in the ports to the
mariners aboard the ships, are drawn together by a common interest in
one thing – the health of our economy.

We are a maritime Nation. And the maritime industry is essential to
our economic strength, to our productivity, and to the creation of
American jobs.

Just a few weeks ago we learned that, nationwide, 46,000 jobs were
created in January — the 20th straight month of steady employment
gains.

What does that tell us? It means that President Bush’s policies are
doing exactly what they are intended to do. They’re creating
employment opportunities for the rank and file, and they’re energizing
the economy.

There is another linchpin issue uniting all of us, and that is
maritime security. The President has said, and I quote, `We are safer,
but we’re not yet safe.’

And he is right.

The Maritime Security Program (MSP) supports the war on terror by
giving us the wherewithal to carry equipment and supplies to those
charged with defending our freedom and expanding liberty.

This program is one more important measure of the maritime industry’s
vital importance to our economic and national security, and our
commitment to addressing its needs.

So, I am pleased to announce that the President’s fiscal year 2006
budget calls for a fully funded fleet expansion to 60 ships, up from
47.

This marks the first increase in the fleet since the program was
created more than ten years ago.

Without MSP reauthorization, there would have been a high likelihood
that many of the existing 47 ships would have been re-flagged to
foreign registries employing foreign crews.

And they would not be putting money into our economy or paying taxes.

Now, with the funding that the President has proposed, when the new
MSP begins on October 1 of this year, it will bring greater
opportunities and more jobs for U.S. citizens.

As you know, the MSP fleet employs a labor base of skilled and loyal
American seafarers. They must also be well-trained.

When the Congress passed the Maritime Transportation Security Act in
2002, it gave the Secretary of Transportation the responsibility of
developing new, focused security training courses for maritime
professionals.

We have done that.

And we have set up a voluntary process to assess the quality of the
courses being offered by private parties.

The Seaferers’ Harry Lundeberg School of Seamanship was the first
training provider to apply to MARAD for course certification. We also
received submissions from several non-union training providers.

This is a great opportunity to announce that SIU has the distinction
of being the first to receive certification for your Vessel Security
Officer training course.

Congratulations to Mike Sacco and the SIU.

Nearly one year ago, at the MTD’s last conference, you’ll recall that
I unveiled the Administration’s blueprint for a comprehensive Marine
Transportation System.

I called that initiative SEA-21.

This is one of my top priorities for this second term, and several
crucial components have already gone into effect.

One of the issues that SEA-21 recognized was that America’s merchant
marine was at a disadvantage compared to foreign-flagged vessels whose
owners and crews pay minimal taxes.

This issue was brought directly to the President’s attention. And I am
extremely pleased that, after years of competing on a slanted playing
field, tax relief for the U.S. shipping industry is a done deal, and
the field has been leveled.

As if taxes were not enough of a challenge, there are 17 Federal
agencies in six, separate cabinet-level Departments participating in
maritime decision-making.

The job of coordinating their work and their policies has never been
easy, but we hope we’ve found a way to make their job easier.

The answer is a one-stop shop for the maritime sector.

President Bush is committed to improving the coordination of maritime
policy, and an integral part of that is building a higher profile for
the Interagency Committee on the Marine Transportation System.

On December 17 of last year, in his U.S. Ocean Action Plan, the
President elevated the ICMTS to a Cabinet-level body, ensuring that
the maritime sector will now be accorded the attention it deserves.

I want to thank Captain William Schubert for his tremendous efforts in
this regard while he was the Maritime Administrator.

Thanks to his leadership and ability to work as an honest broker with
all segments of the maritime community, there is now greater
across-the-board industry cooperation to help us in addressing the
challenges of the future.

And John Jamian, our acting Administrator, is working with the Coast
Guard to develop the framework that will make the ICMTS a useful tool
for the maritime industry.

We’ve already done something similar with aviation policy, and it has
really improved the way that we coordinate the Nation’s air
transportation planning.

In short, we are bringing that same can-do mindset to the maritime
sector, in cooperation with all of our partners, especially the Coast
Guard, the Army Corps of Engineers, and NOAA.

Let’s turn now to another significant constraint facing the maritime
community.

And that is, congestion and inadequate infrastructure at the
connections between our ports and the Nation’s surface transportation
system.

I know that John Jamian spoke to you yesterday about port congestion,
so for the moment I’ll focus on infrastructure and what we’re doing
about it.

Too often, the connections between trucks and trains and merchant
ships are neglected, which slows the efficiency of the entire system.

One solution can be found in our reauthorization proposal for surface
transportation programs, which we call SAFETEA, or the Safe,
Accountable, Flexible, and Efficient Transportation Equity Act.

SAFETEA encourages, in new and innovative ways, meaningful investments
to help improve the critical `last-mile’ road connections from the
National Highway System to intermodal freight facilities.

These initiatives are designed to enhance accessibility and to improve
the productivity of the entire maritime system.

With freight volumes soaring and bottlenecks on the rise, the time for
this legislation is now.

I will continue to work with the Congress to get SAFETEA passed. And I
believe that it will pass, early this year.

And then in 2006, when I stand once again before the Maritime Trades
Department, we can celebrate another major success for the
U.S. maritime industry.

Thank you for inviting me to share our plans. May God bless all of
you, and may God continue to bless the United States of America.

http://www.dot.gov/affairs/minetasp022505.htm

Remembering Armenian, Greek, Serbian, Jewish, Roma (Gypsy) Victims

REMEMBERING ARMENIAN, GREEK, SERBIAN, JEWISH AND ROMA (GYPSY) VICTIMS OF
GENOCIDE ON 22-24 APRIL 2005

FUND FOR GENOCIDE RESEARCH
Yugoslavia, Belgrade
27 marta 24/I
tel/fax (381-11) 3238-790, (381-11) 334–7758
E-Mail [email protected]

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
13 December 2004

BELGRADE — Genocide is the most severe crime against Humanity and
International Law. It is frequently a consequence of the crime against
peace which occurs at times when great world powers attempt to achieve
world domination.

Twentieth century is marked by Genocide. In 1915, Turkey committed
Genocide on Armenian and Greek populations. During World War II Croatian
Nazis known as Ustasha committed a Genocide in the system of
Concentration Camps of Jasenovac. Literally hundreds of thousands of
Eastern Orthodox Serbs, as well as Jews, Roma people and some Croatian
anti-fascists were bestially murdered.

On 22 April 1945 a few surviving inmates made a heroic break through and
liberated themselves from Jasenovac. The day of April 22 is declared
Victims of Genocide Remembrance Day. The Council of the Serbian Eastern
Orthodox Church decided that every year on that day a holy liturgy will
be held and we will pray for the souls of the victims of Genocide.

At the end of 19th and the beginning of 20th century, from 1894 to 1923,
the Ottoman Empire committed a Genocide on Christian population of the
Near East, in Asia Minor between Black Sea and Meditteranean. The
estimate is that some 3.5 million Christians were murdered during that
period. Sultan Abud Hamid started a state Genocide against Armenian
people in 1893. By 1896 some 300,000 Armenians were brutally murdered.
In a repeated massacre in 1909 some two hundred Armenian villages were
pillaged. Only in Adan, district of Cilicia, between 20 and 30 thousand
Christian Armenians perished.

During World War One, the Ottoman Empire, in alliance with Germany and
Austria-Hungary, was resolute to fulfill the plan of “Turkey to the
Turks.” This plan of building “Greater Turkey” (so called “Turan”)
included complete elimination of all Christians – the Greeks, Armenians,
Syrians and Nestorians – who constituted some 10% of the population of
the country. The pogrom started on 24 April 1915. The Turkish Government
deported 1,800,000 Armenians; some two thirds of the entire Armenian
population. They were send to a March of Death, Southwards through
Syrian desert and to East Anadolia, the Asian part of Turkey. The desert
was the scene of massacre, rape, starvation and dehydration, which is
how most of these poor people perished. Over 1.5 million Christian
Armenians were thus murdered. This includes some four thousand priests
and bishops. The Turks tried to forcefully convert Armenian children.
Those who reneged on their Christian roots and became Muslims were
allowed to live, but now under new, Muslim names. This is but repetition
of what the Ottoman Turks did, over centuries, to the Serbian population
as they forcefully converted kidnapped Serbian children into Janissaries.

After they cleansed the Armenians, the Turks turned their attention
toward the Greeks. In the town of Smyrna the Turkish conquerors went
from house to house. There they raped and murdered the Greek owners and
then pillaged and burned their houses. French, British and American
ships were at bay and witnessed the carnage but were sure not to
interfere. The American Consul, though, compared the destiny of Smyrna
to the Roman destruction of Carthagina.

To this day the Turkish Government did not acknowledge its
responsibility for the crime of Genocide perpetrated on Greek and
Armenian population. This behavior enabled even Hitler to try to excuse
his own act of Genocide and Holocaust by saying: “Who ever mentions
Armenians today?”

On 18 June 1987, the European Parliament issued a decision to bind
acceptance of Turkey to the Union on the condition that Turkish
Government should acknowledge its Genocide perpetrated on the Armenians.
Mr. Roberto Kalderoli, the Italian Minister for Reform, went so far as
to say in December 2004 that eventual acceptance of Turkey into European
Union “would be a crime against our History and against our Christian
heritage.”

Today, 60 years after Genocide perpetrated on the Orthodox Serbs in Nazi
Croatia, there is no recognition of that fact. Without this basic fact
it is impossible to understand the roots and the cause of the events of
the last few years of the 20th century as they happened on the grounds
of former Yugoslavia. Unluckily, in the trials conducted in Croatian
capital of Zagreb in 1986 and 1999, both Dr Anrija Artukovif, who was
Minister of Interior of Ustasha (the Croat Nazi) Government and Mr.
Dinko akif, who was a commander of Jasenovac Concentration Camp, were
sentenced only for common acts of murder and not for the crimes of Genocide.

All of this explains how it was possible that the Serbian people were
target to a genocide once again, at the end of the same century. In
1990’s the Serbs were victims of jihad as Mujahedin pored into Bosnia
and Herzegovina. The Croatian Government fulfilled its World War II
genocidal plan as almost entire Serbian population, who lived for
centuries as majority in Krajina and Western Bosnia was cleansed by
Croat armed forces in 1995. The last census in Croatia conducted in
2001, shows that only 4.2% of Serbs are still citizens of that country!
In Kosovo and Metohija the Serbian population is again a target. In that
Province, under UN supervision, the Albanian terrorists are cleansing
all Christian Orthodox as well as all non-Albanian population. The
Albanian terrorists already dare threaten integrity of the remaining
parts of Serbia as well as question the integrity of neighboring
Macedonia and Greece.

Neither President of Croatia Franjo Tudjman nor the President of Muslim
part of Bosnia Alija Izetbegovic were charged with Genocide. On the
other hand, the entire political leadership of the Serbian people – all
the Presidents of Serbia, Yugoslavia, Republic of Srpska Krajina,
Republika Srpska – as well as the entire military leadership of the
Serbian people – all were charged with nothing less but Genocide! This
was done by the self-declared “International Community” as the Western
Governments like to be call themselves.

The Muslim controlled Bosnian Government is charging the remaining
Serbian lands of Serbia and Montenegro with Genocide! In the law suit
submitted to the International Court they demand a compensation worth
between 200 and 300 billion dollars!!! Croatians who cleansed Serbian
population from large swaths of Historicaly Serb-populated Krajina,
dared charge the Serbian people with the same.

The complete truth about the Genocide perpetrated in 20th century is not
fully known. The responsibility is not acknowledged. The perpetrators
are not yet charged and brought to justice for their crime. This
situation enabled a climate in which it was possible that someone like
Mr. Ramu Haradinaj, an ethnic-Albanian who committed crimes of Genocide
against non-Albanian population was declared a Prime Minister of Kosovo.
This in the very place where he perpetrated his crime. The self-declared
“International Community” refused to intervene. In 2004 alone, the same
“International Community” issued 59 (fifty-nine) orders in NATO-occupied
Bosnia, with express purpose to enslave the surviving Serbian population
that fell under their control. The orders were to single-handedly depose
the entire leadership the Serbian people elected in Republika Srpska,
the remaining Serbian entity in Bosnia. All Ministers as well as
generals of the entity were deposed in this dictatorial fashion.

From Serbia, the “International Community” demands surrender of the
Yugoslav general who was in charge of suppressing Albanian terrorism in
Kosovo and Metohia. This is but another attack on the sovereignty of the
Serbian people.

This, 21st century started with mass Genocide in Darfur, Sudan. The
“International Community” did nothing to protect the victims. They did
not even use harsh words to describe this Genocide on non-Arab population.

On 22 April 2005, it will be 60th anniversary of the day when surviving
few charged to liberate themselves from Jasenovac.

On 24 April 2005 it will be 90th anniversary of the Turkish Genocide
perpetrated on Armenians, Greeks and other people.

The Days of 22-24 April 2005 we declare the Days of Remembrance of the
Armenian, Greek, Serbian, Jewish and Roma Victims of Genocide.

We ask you for help to commemorate those events.

We plan to organize an International Symposium as well as an Exhibition
which would present to the public – here and abroad – the historical
roots as well as causes for continued Genocide.

Please respond as soon as possible.

Respectfully,

SERBIAN-ARMENIAN SOCIETY
Boda Markovif, President

ARMENIAN SOCIETY OF BELGRADE (SERBIA)
Miodrag Vartabedijan, Honorary President

SOCIETY OF GREEKS OF SERBIA ;RIGA OD FERE+
Jannis Savas, President

SERBIAN-GREEK FRIENDSHIP SOCIETY
Prof. Dr. Miodrag Stojanovif, President

JEWISH-SERBIAN FRIENDSHIP SOCIETY
Academitian Ljubomir Tadif, President

ROMA WORLD PARLIAMENT
Dragoljub Ackovif, Vice-President

SOCIETY OF JASENOVAC SURVIVORS
Smilja Tima, President

COMMITTEE FOR JASENOVAC, SERBIAN ORTHODOX CHURCH
Archbishop Atanasije Jeftif, President

FUND FOR GENOCIDE RESEARCH
Dr Milan Bulajif, President