ANKARA: Turkish premier says US Armenian resolution "unfortunate"

Anatolia News Agency, Turkey
Oct 11 2007

Turkish premier says US Armenian resolution "unfortunate"

Istanbul, 11 October: "Approval of the resolution regarding Armenian
allegations on the incidents of 1915 by the US House of
Representatives committee on foreign relations is a really
unfortunate decision for the future," Turkish Prime Minister Recep
Tayyip Erdogan said on Thursday [11 October].

Replying to questions of journalists at Istanbul’s Ataturk Airport
after his arrival from Ankara, Prime Minister Erdogan said, "The
committee made similar decisions in 2000 and in 2005. In 2000, 38
members of the committee voted in favour against 12. In 2005, 40
members of the committee voted in favour against seven. This time, 27
members voted in favour against 21. The US administration tried
really hard to prevent its approval. However, some circles carried
out lobbying activities. Actually, it is a step against the United
States’ interests. It is an unfortunate decision made by those who
could not realize Turkey’s position."

"Our struggle will continue until the debates at the full house.
There are steps we will take later. But it is not the right time to
discuss them now. We will determine our attitude resolutely," Prime
Minister Erdogan added.

Turkey Seethes at the U.S. Over House Genocide Vote

The New York Times
October 12, 2007 Friday
Late Edition – Final

Turkey Seethes at the U.S. Over House Genocide Vote

By SEBNEM ARSU; David Stout contributed reporting from Washington.

Turkey reacted angrily Thursday to a House committee vote in
Washington to condemn as genocide the mass killings of Armenians in
Turkey that began during World War I, recalling its ambassador from
Washington and threatening to withdraw its support for the Iraq war.

In uncharacteristically strong language, President Abdullah Gul
criticized the vote by the House Foreign Relations Committee in a
statement to the semi-official Anatolian News Agency, and warned that
the decision could work against the United States.

”Unfortunately, some politicians in the United States have once more
dismissed calls for common sense, and made an attempt to sacrifice
big issues for minor domestic political games,” President Gul said.

The House vote comes at a particularly inopportune time. Washington
has called on Turkey to show restraint as its military mobilizes on
the border with Iraq, threatening an incursion against Kurdish
insurgents. On Thursday, Turkish warplanes were reported to be flying
close to the border, but not crossing it.

The possibility of Turkish military intervention in Iraq against
Kurdish separatists has long worried American officials for its
potential to ignite a wider war. On Wednesday, the Turkish government
began the process of gaining parliamentary approval to conduct
cross-border operations.

The committee vote in the House, though nonbinding and largely
symbolic, rebuffed an intense campaign by the White House and earlier
warnings from Turkey’s government that such a vote would gravely
strain relations with the United States.

In Washington, the Bush administration tried to ease the hard
feelings between the countries, and vowed to try to defeat the
resolution on Capitol Hill.

”One of the reasons we opposed the resolution in the House yesterday
is that the president has expressed on behalf of the American people
our horror at the tragedy of 1915,” said Dana Perino, President
Bush’s chief spokeswoman. ”But at the same time, we have national
security concerns, and many of our troops and supplies go through
Turkey. They are a very important ally in the war on terror, and we
are going to continue to try to work with them. And we hope that the
House does not put forward a full vote.”

Speaker Nancy Pelosi said the House would definitely take up the
measure. ”I said if it comes out of committee, it will go to the
floor,” she told reporters. ”Now it has come out of committee, and
it will go to the floor.”

In Turkey, there was widespread expectation that the House committee
vote and any further steps would damage relations between the
countries.

Turkish officials and lawmakers warned that if the resolution were
approved by the full House, they would reconsider supporting the
American war effort in Iraq, which includes permission to ship
essential supplies through Turkey from a major air base at Incirlik,
in southern Turkey.

Turkey’s prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, refused to say what
effect the resolution might have on American access to the base, but
he did not exclude the possibility of a policy change. ”This step is
contrary to the U.S. interests,” he said on Thursday, ”and is an
unfortunate decision taken by those who cannot acknowledge Turkey’s
position.”

Already the top Turkish naval commander, Adm. Metin Atac, canceled a
trip to the United States for a conference after Wednesday’s vote, an
American Embassy official confirmed. Admiral Atac’s office did not
specify any reasons for the cancellation.

For his part, Ross Wilson, the United States ambassador to Turkey,
also tried to calm relations, issuing a statement on Thursday saying
that the partnership between Turkey and the United States was strong
and would remain so. He added that he, President Bush and Secretary
of State Condoleezza Rice regretted the committee decision.

He was nonetheless later summoned to the Foreign Ministry in Ankara,
the capital, to be briefed on Turkey’s disappointment.

”We had a meeting with Mr. Wilson during which we expressed our
concerns about the developments,” said a spokesperson for the
Foreign Ministry. ”We drew attention to bad reflections on our
bilateral relations and kindly requested his assistance in preventing
the passage of the bill.”

The House decision prompted reaction on the streets of Ankara and
Istanbul. The youth branch of the extreme-leftist Workers’ Party laid
a black wreath at the United States Embassy and spray-painted the
Turkish flag onto an embassy wall.

A total of 1.5 million Armenians were killed in the Armenian
genocide, which began in 1915 as part of a systematic campaign by the
fraying Ottoman Empire to drive Armenians out of eastern Turkey.
Turks have vehemently denied the genocide designation, while
acknowledging that hundreds of thousands of Armenians died. They
contend that the deaths resulted from the war that ended with the
creation of modern Turkey in 1923.

Identifying Armenian killings as genocide is considered an insult
against Turkish identity, a crime under Article 301 of the Turkish
penal code.

In an Istanbul court on Thursday, Sarkis Seropyan and Arat Dink, the
brother of Hrant Dink, the newspaper editor who was killed by a
17-year-old gunman in January, received suspended jail sentences for
one year for violating that law. They reprinted other newspaper
accounts of Hrant Dink’s statement saying that Armenians suffered
genocide at the hands of the Ottoman Army in the 1910s, their lawyer,
Fethiye Cetin, said.

Not only writers of Armenian origin, but also the Nobel laureate
Orhan Pamuk have been charged under the same law, although his case
was dropped under heavy international pressure.

A State Department spokesman, Tom Casey, said that United States
diplomats were reaching out to their Turkish counterparts to express
not only their opposition to the resolution but ”our commitment with
Congress on this to see that the full House, in fact, votes to defeat
this resolution.”

Mr. Casey said that State Department and White House officials would
try to persuade ”various members” of the House on how to vote.

Ms. Pelosi said that she did not have a date in mind for bringing the
issue to the floor, but that it would be brought up this session,
which is to end around Nov. 16. Whatever happens, she insisted,
relations between the United States and Turkey will remain strong.

Armenian President: Elections To Pass In A Trusting Environment

ARMENIAN PRESIDENT: ELECTIONS TO PASS IN A TRUSTING ENVIRONMENT

Panorama.am
19:29 10/10/2007

In the Armenian-Belgian business forum in Brussels, President Robert
Kocharian assured that the 2008 presidential elections would pass
in a "trusting, solid environment." The president reminded that
international organizations gave a positive rating to the parliamentary
elections of 2007, saying they met international norms.

In the president’s words, "The voters expressed their trust in the
politics of the ruling authorities, refusing the possibility of radical
political forces becoming the majority in the National Assembly."

One Little Word: Is There A Difference Between "Mass Killings" And G

ONE LITTLE WORD: IS THERE A DIFFERENCE BETWEEN "MASS KILLINGS" AND GENOCIDE?
Rick Moran

American Thinker, WA
Oct 11 2007

There is if you’re the Turkish government:

A House panel voted yesterday to approve calling the mass killings
of Armenians that began in 1915 genocide, defying the White House,
which warned that the measure could damage U.S.-Turkey relations.

The Foreign Affairs Committee passed the nonbinding resolution on a
27 to 21 bipartisan vote. Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) has promised
she will bring the resolution to the full House for a vote.

Turkey, one of Washington’s most staunch Islamic allies, lobbied
hard to kill the measure, launching a multimillion dollar campaign
and threatening to curtail its cooperation in the Iraq war.

President Bush, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Defense
Secretary Robert M. Gates were joined by eight former secretaries of
state and three former defense secretaries in condemning the proposal.

"This resolution is not the right response to these historic mass
killings, and its passage would do great harm to our relations with a
key ally in NATO and in the global war on terror," Bush told reporters
in the White House Rose Garden yesterday.

Turkey fears that the descendants of victims of the Armenian Genocide
will seek reparations. So far, 21 nations have passed similar
resolutions stating that the mass deportation and resulting slaughter
of Ottoman Christians – most of whom were Armenian – was planned and
executed by the government of Turkey.

Headed at the time by the "Young Turks" who had taken Turkey to war
on the side of the Central powers, the tensions between the Muslim
middle class and Christian upper class was exacerbated by the belief
that the Armenians were siding with the Allies.

In May of 1915, a "Temporary Law of Deportation" was passed that
authorized the government to deport anyone they considered a national
security risk. Later legislation gave the government the authority
to confiscate property belonging to those being deported.

Through a combination of mass starvation and numerous massacres, it is
estimated the Turkish government murdered up to 1.5 million Armenians.

Turkey is threatening all sorts of dire consequences that would flow
from the passage of this measure in the House. It begs the question;
should conscience trump national interest?

It is not an easy decision as evidenced by the fact that several
original co-sponsors of the Genocide Bill have dropped their support
as a result of the warnings by the White House and foreign policy
establishment. To her credit, Speaker Pelosi has not lobbied one
way or the other for the resolution, leaving it up to the individual
member’s conscience whether they will support it or not.

one_little_word.html

http://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2007/10/

Prime Minister Receives Teodor Meleshkanu

PRIME MINISTER RECEIVES TEODOR MELESHKANU

Panorama.am
17:05 10/10/2007

Armenian Prime Minister Serzh Sargsyan received today National Defense
Minister of Romania Theodore Meleshkanu and the delegation spearheaded
by him.

Government information and public relations department informs that
Serzh Sargsyan has voiced his assurance that the visit of the Romanian
defense minister will boost cooperation between the two countries. The
prime minister praised the Armenian-Romanian relations saying they are
developing successfully both at bilateral and multilateral levels. He
also said there are no obstacles for these relations to become even
stronger.

Serzh Sargsyan mentioned that Armenia views Romania as a member state
of NATO underscoring that Armenia’s cooperation with the Northern
Alliance has deepened in the course of recent few years. He said
Romania’s experience may be very useful for Armenia.

Theodore Meleshkanu noted that the relations between the Armenian
and Romanian people have rich history and promising future. He said
the main aim is to build the best present and deepen cooperation in
economic, military and other fields.

The delegation spearheaded by Romanian National Defense Minister
Theodore Meleshkanu arrived in Yerevan on October 9 on a 3-day
official visit.

AAA Released Video Documenting Historical Truth Of Armenian Genocide

AAA RELEASED VIDEO DOCUMENTING HISTORICAL TRUTH OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

PanARMENIAN.Net
rmenianassembly
10.10.2007 15:39 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The Armenian Assembly of America released a video
which documents the historical truth of the Armenian Genocide.

"As the Turkish Government continues to send delegations of deniers
to be heard in the halls of Congress, we must make the truth heard
even louder," the AAA statement said.

"With today’s vote at 1:30 PM EST, we must ensure that the truth
prevails. Please share this video with your Member of Congress
and their staff and URGE your Representative to vote "Yes without
amendment" on H. Res. 106," it said.

http://www.youtube.com/a

Vazgen Manukyan And Ter-Petrosyan Restored Relations

VAZGEN MANUKYAN AND TER-PETROSYAN RESTORED RELATIONS

Lragir
Oct 10 2007
Armenia

Today Vazgen Manukyan told details about the October 8 meeting of
Levon Ter-Petrosyan and Vazgen Manukyan, at Samson Ghazaryan’s place,
a member of the Karabakh Committee. "In 2005 I asked, I turned to
Levon Ter-Petrosyan to meet, it was my initiative, unfortunately,
he did not respond. This time our meeting was by accident, but it
was also his initiative, because recently we have been meeting at
Samson Ghazaryan’s place, Alik Arzumanyan, Ashot Manucharyan, we
sometimes recalled the past, this time Levon Ter-Petrosyan wished to
come, and I welcomed him. We discussed some issues. We did not assume
any obligations, we did not reach any agreement. But we restored our
relations which were broken, we had not met over the past 14-15 years,"
Vazgen Manukyan says.

He says in the political sense, each continues to hold their opinion.

They even argued on some points. "Let us leave aside memories because
sometimes Levon Ter-Petrosyan remembers one thing in one way, while
I remember it in another way, and we argue. The point is that the
first thing we discussed, we did not go deep into it. I had said
that the model that Robert Kocharyan and Serge Sargsyan have been
developing so far was created in 1994. In other words, they did not
invent this model. Levon Ter-Petrosyan is categorically against this
idea, but we did not want to argue. And we had another argument over
the events of 1996," Vazgen Manukyan says.

He says someone must be responsible for the presidential election
of 1996, either he or Levon Ter-Petrosyan. "People ask me whether we
forgive each other or not. It is not a matter of personalities. What
happened in 1996 was a shock that changed life in Armenia. I am sure
I won the election, he is sure that he won the election. But someone
is definitely responsible for this situation, aren’t they?" Vazgen
Manukyan asks.

According to him, whatever personal relations of political figures
are, they should settle everything by forgiving one another, if the
events concerned were crucial to the country’s and society’s future.

"The country underwent a shock, hundreds of people were beaten,
arrested, the building was picketed. Either people won or the votes
were tampered, those were not my votes, those were people’s votes,
in that case it is a crime. Or people did not win but we tried to use
people against the government, and in this case you are responsible.

I wish from now on, it may be my friend, my relative or me, any event
that concerns the future of the country, people must be responsible.

Look at other countries. Decades later presidents, prime ministers
are made responsible. It is usually symbolic, in other words, they
are not prosecuted, persecuted, but the society understands that every
encroachment on the society, on the law will be punished some time,"
Vazgen Manukyan says, stating that he wants Armenia to be this kind
of a country, no matter it refers to him or others.

Nevertheless, Vazgen Manukyan did not want to speak about the
expediency of Levon Ter-Petrosyan’s return to and prospects in
politics, saying that he has already spelled out his stance, and it
is up to Levon Ter-Petrosyan to make a decision. Vazgen Manukyan only
described Levon Ter-Petrosyan’s decade of silence in general phrases.

"Whoever the president is, he cannot tell me I finished my work and I
can go home. The responsibility that you assume as the first president
of the country lasts for the rest of your life. Therefore, the first
president of the country should at least once a year spell out his
opinion and try to influence the processes. In a normal country,
the first president should use his status in contacts with other
countries, to help solve national problems," Vazgen Manukyan says.

Armenian Leader Upbeat About 2008 Presidential Poll

ARMENIAN LEADER UPBEAT ABOUT 2008 PRESIDENTIAL POLL

Mediamax
Oct 8 2007
Armenia

Yerevan, 10 October: Armenian President Robert Kocharyan has expressed
his confidence that the 2008 presidential election will be held in the
"atmosphere of trust and stability".

Kocharyan said that the 2007 parliamentary election was recognized
as the one meeting international standards, he said while addressing
the Armenian-Belgian business forum on 9 October [in Brussels].

The Armenian president said that "the electorate had expressed their
trust in the government’s policy and denied the radical political
forces the right to be in the National Assembly".

U.S.: Turkey Needs Careful Decision On Support

U.S.: TURKEY NEEDS CAREFUL DECISION ON SUPPORT

Stratfor
/premium/read_article.php?id=296518
Oct 9 2007

Turkey needs to make careful decisions on whether to cut logistical
support to the U.S., which uses Turkey’s Incirlik air force base to
carry out operations in Iraq, U.S. Ambassador to Turkey Ross Wilson
said Oct. 9. The statement comes in response to comments from Egemen
Bagis, a senior Justice and Development Party lawmaker, who said Oct.

8 that Ankara might cut support if the U.S. Congress passes a bill
recognizing the 1915 massacre of Armenians as genocide.

http://www.stratfor.com/products

Videos For SOAD’s Serj Tankain’s Solo Record To Be Screened At The M

VIDEOS FOR SOAD’S SERJ TANKAIN’S SOLO RECORD TO BE SCREENED AT THE METRO OCT. 22

Seattle Post Intelligencer
ves/123306.asp?from=blog_last3
Oct 9 2007

Serj Tankain, the lead singer for Armenian rockers System of A Down,
has a solo album titled "Elect The Dead" due out Oct. 23.

To support the album, Tankain has asked various directors to make
videos for each song on the record (ahem, copy Death Cab For Cutie
much?) and is screening the videos in theatres in select cities on
Oct. 22. Seattle happens to be one of those cities.

The videos will be shown at the Metro Cinemas in the University
District at 8 p.m.

You can read the track list for "Elect The Dead" and see the various
directors involved by clicking on the jump.

For now, here are the videos for two tracks off the record:

http://blog.seattlepi.nwsource.com/earcandy/archi