Turkish-Israeli Ties Warming

Turkish-Israeli Ties Warming

Baltimore Jewish Times (Baltimore, Maryland)
April 27, 2005

The recent announcement that Turkey’s prime minister, will visit
Israel is a signal that the two Middle Eastern allies may be coming to
the end of a rocky period in their relationship, officials in Turkey
and Israel say.

“The significance for both sides is that the official declaration of
the visit means that relations are back on track after a tough
political year,” Pinhas Avivi, Israel’s ambassador to Turkey, told
JTA. “The economic and security relations were not impacted, but I
think” Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s “visit will again solidify the political
relations.”

Erdogan, who heads the Islamic Justice and Development Party, is
scheduled to depart for Israel on May 1 and spend two days there. He
is expected to meet with his Israeli counterpart Ariel Sharon, Foreign
Minister Silvan Shalom and President Moshe Katsav.

Erdogan also will visit the Palestinian territories and meet with
officials there.

In many ways, the tension that grew between Jerusalem and Ankara
stemmed from Erdogan’s office. Several times, the Turkish prime
minister described Israel’s actions against the Palestinians as “state
terror.”

The criticism of Israel is believed to stem from two sources: the
roots of Erdogan’s party in Islamic fundamentalism, and the fact that
Turkey can score political points in the Arab and Muslim world by
blasting Israel, knowing that the Jewish state never reciprocates by
criticizing Turkey’s treatment of its minorities or its role in the
Armenian genocide.

The upcoming visit, Erdogan’s first to Israel, has been in the works
for a long time; the length of time it took to arrange it became yet
another point of friction.

In that sense, Erdogan’s visit has important symbolic value, said
Soner Cagaptay, an expert on Turkey at the Washington Institute for
Near East Policy.

“After the strained period of harsh remarks toward Sharon and his
government, if this trip goes well and there is a deepening of
understanding and dialogue, it would mean the return to normality for
the Turkish-Israeli relationship,” he said.

“It’s important for Erdogan and Sharon to meet in person, to create a
channel of communication and to help them realize that they are both
politicians,” Cagaptay continued. “This will be a chance for them,
especially for Erdogan,” to show “that the other side is just a
politician with human ambitions and nothing more.”

Turkey’s relations with the United States also are strained
now. American political and military officials continue to express
disappointment over Turkey’s refusal to allow U.S. troops to enter
Iraq from the north, across the Turkish border, when the war in Iraq
began two years ago.

Washington also has been alarmed by a rise in anti-American sentiment
in Turkey. One of the country’s bestsellers, for example, is the
fictional account of an American military invasion of Turkey.

Erdogan is expected to visit the United States later in May, but
Ephraim Inbar, director of the Begin-Sadat Center for Strategic
Studies at Israel’s Bar Ilan University, said Erdogan’s visit to
Israel is an indication that one of the roads to Washington goes
through Jerusalem.

“I think it’s a signal to Washington” that Turkey wants to improve its
relationship with the United States, “and could use Israel’s help in
doing that,” Inbar said.

Ankara also depends on the support of American Jewish organizations,
who frequently have acted as the main lobbyists on Turkey’s behalf in
Washington. Jewish American leaders recently have expressed concerns
about the strains between Turkey and both Israel and the United
States.

“If the trip is going to bring the period of the strains to an end,”
and will help normalize the relationship between Turkey and Israel,
“this would be one way of winning back the hearts of the American
Jewish organizations,” Cagaptay said.

Despite the political tensions, Israeli and Turkish officials point
out that other components of the relationship between the two
countries – particularly trade and military cooperation – have not
been affected. The level of annual trade between the two countries is
now approaching $2 billion, up from $1.2 billion three years ago.

Turkey also recently signed a $200 million deal to buy a sophisticated
network of unmanned aerial vehicles and ground stations from
Israel. Erdogan’s visit – and an expected reciprocal trip by Sharon to
Turkey – will help bring the relationship back to normal, Inbar said.

“You have to invest in bilateral relations, especially with
Turkey. This is a chance for Israel to invest in the relationship, to
introduce Erdogan to the right people,” Inbar said. “Maintenance is an
important part of the relationship.”

This story reprinted courtesy of the Jewish Telegraphic Agency.

http://www.jewishtimes.com/News/4680.stm

BAKU: Armenian FM misses OSCE-brokered Karabakh talks

Armenian minister misses OSCE-brokered Karabakh talks

Space TV, Baku
27 Apr 05

[Presenter] Another round of the talks on the settlement of the
Nagornyy Karabakh conflict is being held in Frankfurt at the
moment. Armenian Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanyan has avoided the
meeting with the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairmen again.

[Correspondent] Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov, who
came to meet the co-chairmen, made a brief statement to Radio
Liberty. The minister said that today’s meeting was a continuation of
the negotiations that started in Prague. We had a meeting in London
and will continue consultations in Frankfurt. If the presidents’
meeting is important, we will discuss it. This meeting is a step
forward and a continuation of the Prague process, Mammadyarov said.

It should be noted that the co-chairmen had separate meetings with the
ministers in London on 15 April. Negotiations were scheduled in the
same format in Frankfurt, but Armenian Foreign Minister Vardan
Oskanyan did not turn up in Frankfurt.

The OSCE co-chairmen said in a statement on 15 April that the
Azerbaijani and Armenian foreign ministers would meet in
Frankfurt. The US diplomats I talked to declined to make any comments
on Oskanyan’s failure to join the meeting. However, Oskanyan’s absence
raises new questions of whether there has been any progress in the
negotiations.

Mammadyarov said that he would ask the co-chairmen about the causes of
his Armenian counterpart’s absence and clarify this issue. The
negotiations are under way.

Kanan Kazimoglu, Radio Liberty from Frankfurt for Space.

Festive Fireworks Observed in Cyprus on Day of Commemoration

FESTIVE FIREWORKS OBSERVED IN CYPRUS ON DAY OF COMMEMORATION OF VICTIMS OF
ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

YEREVAN, APRIL 26. ARMINFO. In the Northern part of Cyprus occupied by
Turkey in 1974 April 24, the Day of the Armenian genocide, was
accompanied by acts of vandalism, representatives of the community of
Pontian Greeks inform ARMINFO’s correspondent in Yerevan. In
particular, Zoya Kotanova residing in Cyprus reports that the tombs of
Armenians were dug up and fireworks were lighting the evening air.

Armenians mark 90th anniveersary of Ottoman massacres

ONASA News Agency
April 24, 2005

ARMENIANS MARK 90TH ANNIVERSARY OF OTTOMAN MASSACRES

YEREVAN, April 24 (ONASA – AFP) – Armenians across Europe – from
their capital Yerevan to the Ukrainian city of Lviv to the southern
French port of Marseille – Sunday commemorated the 90th anniversary
of the mass killings of their forebears by Ottoman Turks. Hundreds of
thousands of Armenians live in Europe, North and South America and
the Middle East and played a major role in keeping the memory of the
massacres alive through the years of Soviet rule in Armenia when the
subject was taboo. Today they have influential communities in many
Western countries, some of which have officially acknowledged the
Armenian massacres as genocide. The issue is believed to have played
a role in the Armenians’ ability to retain their language and culture
after almost a century in exile. On April 24, 1915 the Ottoman
Turkish authorities arrested some 200 Armenian community leaders in
the start of what Armenia and many other countries contend was an
organized genocidal campaign to eliminate ethnic Armenians from the
Ottoman Empire. Armenians say up to 1.5 million of their kinsmen
perished in the killings between 1915 and 1917 as the Muslim Ottoman
Empire, the predecessor of modern Turkey, was falling apart. Ankara
counters that 300,000 Armenians and thousands of Turks were killed in
“civil strife” during World War I when Armenians rose against their
Ottoman rulers and sided with invading Russian troops. In Paris, the
Notre Dame cathedral hosted a requiem mass Sunday and many other
gatherings took place across the country. Some 350,000 ethnic
Armenians live in France. Armenian religious and community leaders
headed a procession of around 1,000 people in the western Ukrainian
city of Lviv carrying candles and red carnations. Greece recognized
the massacres as a genocide in 1997 and in Athens a crowd of 500
including diplomats and Greek officials placed a wreath at a war
memorial. In Yerevan itself Sunday tens of thousands of Armenians
including the president and top officials filed through the city’s
towering Genocide Memorial to mark the anniversary. A silent
procession headed by President Robert Kocharian laid flowers at an
eternal flame as Armenia’s chief clergymen sang an emotional
Gregorian Apostolic requiem service beneath the baking sun. Armenians
observed a minute of silence at 7:00 pm (1400 GMT) in commemoration.
It was preceded by an ecumenical liturgy in St. Gregory cathedral in
which prayers were read by Roman Catholics, Anglicans, Greek and
Russian Orthodox as well as Armenian Apostolic priests. In the run-up
to the anniversary, Armenia, the world’s first Christian nation, has
pulled out all the stops in an effort to make Turkey acknowledge the
massacres as genocide and officials have estimated that 1.5 million
people — the number of the victims — will visit the memorial
through Sunday. Many members of the Armenian diaspora worldwide have
converged on Yerevan for the ceremonies. “As we live on, we must show
Turkey, which tried to annihilate us, that they were wrong,” said
Vaagn Ovnanian, an American-born millionaire who has invested heavily
in the Armenian economy. Meanwhile, Kocharian made a conciliatory
gesture towards Ankara, saying his government would not ask for
financial compensation for the killings if Turkey recognized them as
genocidal. “We are not talking about compensation, this is only about
a moral issue,” Kocharian told Russia’s Rossiya television, which is
also broadcast in Armenia. The row over whether or not to call the
killings genocide has embarrassed Turkey as it readies for the start
of European Union accession talks later this year. Armenians hope
that their mass commemoration on Sunday will increase the pressure.
On Friday, French President Jacques Chirac accompanied Kocharian to a
Paris monument for victims of the massacre, and in Germany members of
parliament from across the political spectrum appealed to Turkey to
accept the massacre of Armenians as part of its history, saying this
would help its EU aspirations. On Tuesday, Poland joined a list of 15
countries that have officially acknowledged the killings as genocide.
Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan recently proposed the
creation of a joint Armenian-Turkish commission to review the issue,
though officials expressed confidence that the study would confirm
Turkey’s current position.

Events devoted to Armenian Genocide to be held in Capitol Hill

Pan Armenian News

EVENTS DEVOTED TO ARMENIAN GENOCIDE TO BE HELD IN CAPITOL HILL

24.04.2005 07:49

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The Capitol Hill is announced to be the venue for holding
events marking the 90-th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide in Washington,
the Armenian Assembly of America reported. These will be held under the
auspices of the US Congressional Caucus on Armenian Issues and the Armenian
Embassy in Washington. In the opinion of US Senators and Congressmen, the
events will remind the world of the victims of the first genocide of the
20-th century and will unite the efforts of over 25 Armenian American
organizations aiming at acknowledgement of the Genocide.

EU official denies Azeri reports of South Caucasus meeting’s failure

EU official denies Azeri reports of South Caucasus meeting’s failure

Arminfo
23 Apr 05

YEREVAN

The chairwoman of the commission on interparliamentary cooperation
between the European Union and the South Caucasus, Marie [Anne] Isler
Beguin, has denied Azerbaijani media reports that the sitting of the
commission on interparliamentary cooperation between the European
Union and Azerbaijan failed and did not adopt a final resolution.

The sitting of the commission took place in a normal working
atmosphere and an appropriate resolution was adopted on its results,
Marie [Anne] Isler Beguin told our correspondent. The chairwoman of
the commission promised that the text of the resolution will be
submitted to Arminfo new agency so as to compare it with the
resolution on Armenia adopted by the commission in Strasbourg on 14
April.

[Passage omitted: quotes from Azerbaijani media reports]

Armenia may better relations with Turkey without preconditions

-TASS News Agency
TASS
April 21, 2005 Thursday 11:57 AM Eastern Time

Armenia may better relations with Turkey without preconditions

By Tigran Liloyan

YEREVAN, April 21

Armenia’s government is ready to establish good relations with Turkey
without preliminary conditions, Prime Minister Andranik Margarian
said Thursday.

Turkey’s recognition and condemnation of the genocide of Armenians in
the Ottoman Empire would be the touchstone in Armenian-Turkish
relations, Margarian said.

“Gradual restoration of confidence would promote regional security
and cooperation, settlement of conflicts and neighborliness in the
South Caucasus,” Margarian told a conference devoted to the 90th
anniversary of Armenian genocide.

“Armenia sees eye to eye with those political quarters in Europe who
argue that Turkey as a country that wants to join the European Union
should at least display the ability to critically reconsider its
past, and to admit its historical guilt,” Margarian said. “We want to
see Turkey as a country that has relieved itself of the legacy of its
past and distanced itself from its nihilistic position and policy.”

“However, today’s Turkey as a successor of the Ottoman Empire denies
the very instance of Armenian genocide, and by doing so it has put
itself on the sidelines of the process of repentance and
reconciliation with its own history,” Margarian said.

Occurrences Of Beginning Of XX Century In Ottoman Turkey CorrespondF

OCCURRENCES OF BEGINNING OF XX CENTURY IN OTTOMAN TURKEY
CORRESPOND FULLY TO UN CONVENTION ON GENOCIDE: TURKISH SCIENTIST

YEREVAN, APRIL 20. ARMINFO. What happened with Armenians in the
beginning of the 20th century in Ottoman Turkey, correspond fully
to the UN Convention on Genocide, Professor of Istanbul University
Murat Belge stated in an interview to Armenian journalists.

He noted that a word “genocide” is a juridical term, therefore its use
often causes contradictory reactions. Speaking about contradictious
position of Ankara in the issue of recognizing Armenian Genocide,
Belge stated that one of its main reasons is that Turkey avoids
territorial claims which Armenia could make in case of recognition
of Genocide. If Armenia states clearly that it has no territorial
claims to Turkey, the possibility of recognizing Genocide by Ankara
will be greatly increased, Belge stressed.

He also stressed that entrance of Turkey into the EU will make much
more easier to solve problems between Yerevan and Ankara. “Armenians
strive for accent the attention of international community to
occurrences in Ottoman Turkey in 1915, but Turks want to discuss a
situation preceded these occurrences. And exactly this difference
in positions of the two countries prevents the establishment of
Armenian-Turkish dialogue”, Belge noted.

The other Turkish historian Kemal Chichek expressed a cardinally
opposite position. He stated that occurrences of early XX century
do not correspond to the UN Convention on Genocide. In his words,
Turkey does not know what term to use qualifying occurrences of
early XX century – “mass massacres” or “Genocide”. “Ankara offers to
create an Armenian-Turkish scientific commission to study historical
facts of early XX”, Chichek noted. At the same time, he stressed that
these occurrences cannot be qualified as Genocide as Genocide is the
crime fulfilled by the order of authorities of one or another country.
However, there is no proofs that they were fulfilled by the authorities
of Ottoman Turkey. Moreover, there are evidences that Turkish powers
tried to prevent Armenians’ massacres and even

ANKARA: Prof. Feigle: It Is A Standard Lie To Claim Ottomans Killed1

Prof. Feigle: It Is A Standard Lie To Claim Ottomans Killed 1,5 Million Armenians

Turkish Press
April 19 2005

ISTANBUL – Prof. Erich Feigle of Austria said, “it is a standard
lie to claim that Ottomans killed 1,5 million innocent (Armenian)
women and children.”

Speaking at a panel discussion on “Historical Realities in
Turkish-Armenian Relations” held in Istanbul Technical University on
Monday, Prof. Feigle said, “people are misled with imaginary incidents
and wrong numbers. It is a standard lie to claim that Ottomans killed
1,5 million innocent women and children. 1,700,000 Armenians were
living in Ottoman Empire in 1912 and this means that 4.4 percent of
population in Ottoman-ruled territories were Armenians.”

“Armenian national delegation chairman wrote a letter to Armenians
and said 700,000 Armenians had been exiled and he did not mention
genocide in that letter. Also in a letter to French Foreign Minister,
the chairman said Armenians were one of the leading communities from
the beginning of the war,” said Prof. Feigle.

“This is the most important document we have. Armenians hide documents
which are against them. They pursue physical and psychological
war. This war is a camouflage. They occupied one-fifth of lands of
Azerbaijan under this camouflage. They killed 20,000 civilians,”
added Prof. Feigle.

“It seems that Turkey can’t do anything against this psychological
war. I request Turks to trust themselves. Turkey shall not start a
discussion on ‘genocide’. If it such a discussion starts, Armenians
firstly want compensation and then land from Turkey. Their propaganda
aims to divide Turkey,” noted Prof. Feigle.

Main Flow of Contraband to Armenia Comes From Turkey, UAE and China

MAIN FLOW OF CONTRABAND TO ARMENIA COMES FROM TURKEY, UAE AND CHINA

YEREVAN, APRIL 15. ARMINFO. The main flow of contraband goods to
Armenia comes from Turkey, UAE, China, and partially from Georgia,
Chairman of Customs Committee of the Republic of Armenia Armen
Avetisian informed during the news conference Friday.

However, now the Georgian side is actively renewing its customs
system. Regarding Russia Avetisian mentioned that Armenia is
cooperating with this country, as besides the exchange of official
annual reports the parties exchange operative information.
“Representative of the committee in Russia informs us what goods went
from Russia to Armenia”, Avetisian informed.

It should be noted that the trade turnover between Armenia and Russia
decreased by 10.4% in 2004, totalling $266.197 mln against $297.8 mln
in 2003. The share of trade with Russia in the structure of the
foreign trade turnover of Armenia made up 12.9%, including the exports
from Armenia to Russia decreased by 17.3% and totaled $78 mln, and the
imports decreased by 7.5% and totaled $188 mln.