Turkey Still Angry

TURKEY STILL ANGRY
by James Morrison

Washington Times
embassy-row-62525063/
March 10 2010

Turkey remains angered over a congressional resolution recognizing
the killings of Armenians in 1915 as genocide, threatening this week
to keep its new ambassador to the United States at home until the
measure is defeated.

"We will not send our ambassador back unless we get a clear signal
of the situation, regarding the draft law of the Armenian claims,"
Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan told reporters this week
on a visit to Saudi Arabia, mistakenly referring to the nonbinding
resolution as a law.

Mr. Erdogan recalled Ambassador Namik Tan after the House Foreign
Affairs Committee voted 23-22 on March 4 to approve the resolution
and send it to the full House for a vote. Mr. Tan had arrived in
Washington only days before his recall.

The Turkish government apparently is not assured by the Obama
administration’s strenuous objections to the resolution. Secretary
of State Hillary Rodham Clinton told reporters last week that the
White House "strongly opposes" the resolution.

"We will work very hard to make sure it does not go to the House
floor," she promised.

The resolution accused the old Ottoman Turkish Empire of deliberately
trying to exterminate Armenians in a genocidal campaign from 1915 to
1923. The government of the modern Turkish republic, which replaced the
Ottoman regime in 1923, objects to the characterization of the massacre
as genocide and insists that Armenia has inflated the casualties. The
House resolution refers to 1.5 million Armenians killed and 500,000
expelled from their homes.

Turkey has relied on its membership in NATO and its strategic
importance to the West to defeat similar genocide resolutions in
the past.

http://washingtontimes.com/news/2010/mar/11/

ANKARA: Turkey’s President Hopes Inaccuracy On Armenia Bill To Be Se

TURKEY’S PRESIDENT HOPES INACCURACY ON ARMENIA BILL TO BE SEEN

March 11 2010
Turkey

Gul said that politicians and people who did not have any historical
knowledge should not decide on matters related to history.

Turkey’s president said on Thursday that he hoped everybody would
see the inaccuracy of the political decisions on Armenian allegations
regarding the incidents of 1915.

Turkish President Abdullah Gul replied to questions of reporters during
his visit to the office of the mayor of southwestern Isparta province.

Upon a question on a recent resolution adopted by a U.S. congressional
panel and a similar decision to be discussed by the Swedish parliament
regarding the Armenian allegations on incidents of 1915, Gul said
such decisions had no respectability for Turkish nation.

"All these decisions are wrong and they constitute a great injustice
to the science of history," he said.

Gul said that politicians and people who did not have any historical
knowledge should not decide on matters related to history.

"I attach importance to peace, stability and cooperation. Therefore,
solution of the problems in the Caucasus region is important for me,"
Gul said.

"I hope everybody will see the inaccuracy of such political decisions,
which will harm peace and stability in the long term," the Turkish
president added.

The U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Foreign Affairs adopted
a resolution on Armenian allegations related to the incidents of 1915
in a voting of 23-22 last week.

Turkey and Armenia signed two protocols on October 10, 2009 to
normalize relations between the two countries. The protocols envisage
the two countries to establish diplomatic ties and open the border
that has been close since 1993. Turkey and Armenia also agreed to take
steps to operate a sub-commission on impartial scientific examination
of the historical records and archive to define existing problems
and formulate recommendations, in which Armenian, Turkish as well
as Swiss and other international experts would take part. However,
on January 12, 2010, the Constitutional Court of Armenia declared a
decision of constitutional conformity on the protocols. Turkey thought
the fifth article of Armenian Constitutional Court’s verdict regarding
the protocols was against the target and basis of the protocols.

Also, in 2005, Turkey officially proposed to Armenian government the
establishment of a joint commission of history composed of historians
and other experts from both sides to study together the events of
1915 not only in the archives of Turkey and Armenia but also in the
archives of all relevant third countries and to share their findings
with the public.

www.worldbulletin.net

French President Will Host Dinner In Honour Of His Armenian Counterp

FRENCH PRESIDENT WILL HOST DINNER IN HONOUR OF HIS ARMENIAN COUNTERPART TONIGHT

PanARMENIAN.Net
10.03.2010 18:47 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan met with his French
counterpart Nicolas Sarkozy and Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner in
Elysee Palace, today, March 10.

The parties focused on Karabakh conflict settlement and Armenia-Turkey
protocols, as well as bilateral collaboration.

Meetings with French National Assembly President and Senate Chairman
are on Serzh Sargsyan’s agenda.

BAKU; Azerbaijani Party Supports Turkey

AZERBAIJANI PARTY SUPPORTS TURKEY

news.az
March 9 2010
Azerbaijan

The Civil Unity Party has voiced regret at resolution adopted by US
Committee recognizing the killings of Armenians in Ottoman Empire as
‘genocide’.

‘We, as a political party, consider this decision unjust, as it
does not reflect the real situation that prevailed n the Ottoman
Empire in the early part of last century,’ Sabir Hajiyev, Civil Unity
Party chairman, Milli Majlis deputy and a member of the Azerbaijani
delegation to the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe.

‘The issue of the so-called "genocide" has been discussed long ago.

The Armenian lobby has repeatedly raised it in the United States
and other countries, but the state figures of most countries have
correctly assessed the situation, considering it wrong to assess the
1915 events in this way. It is historians who should deal with this
issue,’ he said.

Hajiyev said that the members of his party supported Turkey and the
Turkish people.

‘We support Turkey. Azerbaijan has always been close to our friendly
Turkish people. We do hope that the US Congress will not consider this
decision of the committee and that justice will win. We believe in
the wisdom of Congress and the US leadership. And I think strategic
relations with Turkey are more important for the White House today
than the efforts of some Armenian lobby that has been trying to pass
this issue in Congress for decades. We think that they won’t succeed,’
the parliamentarian said.

On Turkey And The Armenian Genocide, The Obama Administration Needs

ON TURKEY AND THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE, THE OBAMA ADMINISTRATION NEEDS TO SING A NEW SONG
By Taner Akcam

History News Network

Mar ch 9 2010

Taner Akcam is associate professor of history and the Kaloosdian/Mugar
Chair in Armenian Genocide Studies, at the Strassler Center for
Holocaust and Genocide Studies, Clark University (Worcester, MA). A
leading international authority on the Armenian Genocide, he is
the author of "A Shameful Act: the Armenian Genocide and Turkish
Responsibility." He is coordinating a workshop at Clark to examine the
"State of the Art of Armenian Genocide Research" (April 8-10).

What is the difference between the Obama and Bush administrations?

Nothing, it seems, when it comes to facing history and recognizing
historic wrongdoings. They both sing the same old song.

The White House appears poised to reject House Resolution 252,
which the House Foreign Affairs Committee passed last week (March
4), an unusual move in a long history of failed resolutions in
"recognition of the Armenian Genocide." Congressional hearings,
resolutions in sub-committees, bold campaign promises, and quiet
assurances all come to the same predictable conclusion when Turkey
flexes its muscles and openly threatens American interests in the
region. Members of Congress reliably agree to step back, not because
they don’t believe the Armenians were victims of genocide but because
of perceived national interests in the Middle East.

According to the old song, facing history is a moral response rather
than an understanding that addressing historic wrongs is actually
in the real national interests of the region. Two arguments seem
forever in conflict: National security versus morality or, in other
phraseology, realists versus moral fundamentalists.

Turkish realists are very much concerned about national security. In
2007, a Turkish Court convicted two Turkish-Armenian journalists, Arat
Dink, son of assassinated journalist Hrant Dink, and Sarkis Seropyan,
for using the term "genocide" and sentenced them to a year in prison.

The Turkish court stated that: "Talk about genocide, both in Turkey
and in other countries, unfavourably [sic] affects national security
and the national interest." The ruling stated further that the
Republic of Turkey is under "a hostile diplomatic siege consisting
of genocide resolutions… The acceptance of this claim may lead
in future centuries to a questioning of the sovereignty rights of
the Republic of Turkey…" Due to these national security concerns,
the court declared that speech about genocide in 1915 is not protected.

The court found that "the use of these freedoms can be limited in
accordance with aims such as the protection of national security,
of public order, of public security." The realists here in the United
States should understand that their actions are consistent with the
undemocratic rulings of the Turkish court.

For decades, the Turkish state treated any acknowledgment of 1915 as
genocide as an attack on its national security. The state organized
witch hunts against intellectuals and scholars who made any reference
to it. Orhan Pamuk, the Nobel Prize winning author, and Hrant Dink
were put on trial, dragged from courtroom to courtroom. Hrant Dink’s
assassination in 2007 was an inevitable result of this campaign.

The U.S. Government and Congress need to acknowledge that Turkey is
using the pretext of national security to limit freedom of speech,
a basic democratic right. Indeed, returning to the history now in
dispute, let us recall that Armenian demands for equality and social
reform in the declining years of the Ottoman Empire were also treated
as threats to the state. The mantra of national security became a
pretense for their massacre and deportation. Today the demand for
an honest account of history is being handled in the same way: as a
security problem.

The irony is that criminalizing historical inquiry in the name of
national security is not only an obstacle to democracy, but also leads
directly to real security problems for Turkey and the entire region.

This "self-fulfilling prophecy" can be shown in the Armenian genocide
of the past and in the Kurdish problem today. The present-day Kurdish
problem arose from their democratic demands for social reform, which
were classified as a threat to security. As long as Turkey continues to
regard moral principles and national security as mutually exclusive,
and refuses to come to terms with the past for national security
reasons–indeed, as long as Turkey’s national security is defined in
opposition to an honest historical reckoning–international problems
will persist.

If one knows the Middle East, one easily recognizes that historical
injustices and persistent denial of these injustices by one or another
state or ethnic-religious group are major stumbling blocks. History
and historical injustices are not merely academic issues from the past;
the past IS the present in the Middle East. For realpolitik to succeed
in the region, it is necessary to interrogate the acknowledgement of
historic wrongs into a policy of national security.

The United States must change its policy toward the recognition of the
Armenian genocide and reevaluate what constitutes security for Turkey.

During the nineteenth century the French concept of "Bon pour
l’Orient!" ["It is good enough for the East"] legitimized French
colonialism and provided justification for demeaning the countries
they colonized and for acts they committed there. The United States
must rid itself of this classic colonial patronization. If democracy
and facing history is good for the United States then the same should
hold true for Turkey.

Congress and the White House should be suspicious of the national
interest canard as a reason to reject the genocide resolution. Such an
argument runs counter to American values and legitimizes the Turkish
state’s campaign against intellectuals. We need to start singing a
new song that doesn’t support authoritarian and denialist regimes
in the Middle East. Security in Turkey and the United States must
integrate facing history and democratization.

Obama came to Washington on a platform of change. My question again:
What is the difference between Obama and Bush administration? Could the
answer be the acceptance of the genocide resolution and the promotion
of democratic change in the Middle East?

http://www.hnn.us/articles/124006.html

ANKARA: Turkish FM Comments On US Vote On Armenian Bill, Relations W

TURKISH FM COMMENTS ON US VOTE ON ARMENIAN BILL, RELATIONS WITH MAURITANIA

Anadolu Agency
March 8 2010
Turkey

Ankara: Turkish foreign minister on Monday said his country would not
bow down to any pressure over the course of relations with Armenia
after a US House panel had adopted a resolution over the tragic events
of 1915 – shortly before the fall of the Ottoman Empire.

"We will maintain our peaceful perspective but we will not let
anyone put pressure on Turkey over issues on which we can give no
concessions. We hope our counterparts on this issue had received the
message," Ahmet Davutoglu told reporters at a joint press conference
with his Mauritanian counterpart Naha Mint Mouknass in capital Ankara.

US House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee last Thursday
adopted the resolution with 23 votes against 22, raising concerns
that the approval might hurt rapprochement between Ankara and Yerevan,
which have recently signed protocols to open their border and resume
diplomatic relations.

Turkey has recalled its ambassador in Washington, Namik Tan, to Ankara
for consultations shortly after the House panel vote.

Davutoglu said he had met with Tan today, adding that their
consultations would continue for some time.

Davutoglu told reporters that Turkey and Mauritania are set to open
embassies in each other’s countries.

The Turkish foreign minister said the two countries had a deep rooted
history of cooperation, adding that Turkey considered Mauritania as
"a country of special importance."

Davutoglu said Turkey is set to introduce a special training programme
for young Mauritanian diplomats, adding that the two countries had
also agreed to cooperate in mining sector.

Davutoglu said the two countries also had been cooperating on military
issues in a bid to boost Mauritania’s stability.

Delegation Headed By OSCE PA President Joao Soares To Arrive In Arme

DELEGATION HEADED BY OSCE PA PRESIDENT JOAO SOARES TO ARRIVE IN ARMENIA ON MARCH 10

Noyan Tapan
March 9, 2010

YEREVAN, MARCH 9, NOYAN TAPAN. A delegation headed by the President
of the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly Joao Soares will arrive in Armenia
late March 10.

The press service of the RA National Assembly reports that the
delegation will have meetings with Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan,
Speaker of the RA National Assembly Hovik Abrahamian, Speaker of the
National Assembly of the Nagorno Karabakh Republic Ashot Ghulian,
and Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian. The Catholicos of
All Armenians Karekin II will receive the delegation.

The delegation members will lay a wreath at the Memorial Complex to
the Victims of the 1915 Armenian Genocide.

On March 11 the delegation will participate in the Rose Roth seminar
of the NATO Parliamentary Assembly.

New York Times: Turkey And The Army

THE NEW YORK TIMES

March 7, 2010
on2.html?th&emc=th

The recent arrest or detention of dozens of Turkish military officers
for alleged coup plotting could signal a significant shift in power
from the tarnished army to civilian leadership. These cases could
help strengthen Turkish democracy – provided the government and the
judiciary scrupulously apply the rule of law.

For most of modern Turkey’s history, the army has been dominant,
and far too willing to use any means to keep Turkey a secular,
Western-oriented state. That included overthrowing four democratically
elected governments since 1960. As recently as 2007, the military
tried to block the selection of Abdullah Gul of the Islamic-influenced
Justice and Development Party (A.K.P.) as president largely on the
ground that his wife wore an Islamic headscarf.

The military’s hold on political life has weakened steadily under
A.K.P. rule and pressure from the European Union, which has insisted
that as part of Ankara’s bid for membership, the military must become
more accountable to civilian leaders.

The recent detentions and arrests came after a small independent
newspaper, Taraf, published what it said were military documents
from a 2003 meeting describing preparations for a coup. The military
acknowledged the meeting but said it was focused only on protecting
the country from external, not domestic, threats. Since the arrests,
the military’s top leaders have shown welcome restraint.

Meanwhile, relations with the United States hit a new rut on
Thursday when the House Foreign Affairs Committee denounced the
World War I mass killings of Armenians as genocide. We think the
resolution was unnecessary, just as Ankara’s denial of that tragedy is
self-destructive. Instead of threatening Washington with retaliation
for the vote, Ankara should focus on getting a normalization deal
with Armenia back on track.

The United States and other Western countries need to keep nudging
Turkey forward while keeping the hope of E.U. membership alive and
credible.

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan needs to curb his own autocratic
tendencies and push for replacing the military-imposed constitution
with one that enshrines rights for Kurds and other minorities,
religious and press freedoms, a commitment to secular rule and a
law-based judiciary. And Turkey’s military leaders need to continue
exercising restraint.

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/08/opinion/08m

Vic Darchinyan: "Doner Is Afraid Of Me"

"VIC DARCHINYAN": "DONER IS AFRAID OF ME"

Aysor
March 8 2010
Armenia

The world champion in WBC and WBA light weight category Vic Darchinyan
thinks that Nonito Doner who is the temporary world champion in WBA
is afraid of having a revenge fight with him. The Armenian boxer has
lately preserved his titles in the fight with Rodrigo Herrero.

"I don’t think he will have the fight with me. Here are my champion
belts. If he knocked me down once, why doesn’t he try to take them
from me? I don’t want to repeat his name any more. It’s unfair. I
want to get higher w/c and fight with better champions", – Vic said.

President meets film director and musician Emir Kusturica

President Serzh Sargsyan meets film director and musician Emir Kusturica

armradio.am
06.03.2010 14:44

President Serzh Sargsyan today received world-known film director and
musician Emir Kusturica, who gave his first concert in Armenia with
`The No Smoking Orchestra.’

`It’s a great pleasure to host you on Armenian soil. Your visit is a
significant event for our country. Our peoples have much in common,
and your art and music are dear to our people,’ President Sargsyan
said.

Emir Kusturica shared his impressions from the first visit to Armenia.
`Armenia is a very beautiful country. Our peoples have much in common
as regards the tragic past. I’m very glad for the visit, which
provides an opportunity to express my feelings about all this and
reinforce the friendship between our nations,’ the famous
film-director noted.

Emir Kusturica informed Serzh Sargsyan about his future plans. He said
he would do his best to support the Armenian `Golden Apricot’ Film
Festival.