Azerbaijan Press Distorts Announcement

AZERBAIJAN PRESS DISTORTS ANNOUNCEMENT

Panorama.am
19:14 29/08/2007

Answering panorama.am’s question of a few days ago concerning the
Iranian ambassador’s statement in Azerbaijan and its reporting in
the Azerbaijani press, Vladimir Karapetyan, the Armenian foreign
ministry’s press secretary, said the following: the Iranians have
refuted the Azerbaijani press’s reporting about what the Iranian
ambassador said in Baku and repeated their previously stated position
about the settling of the Karabakh conflict.

"A pity, though, that such distortions have become the norm for Baku,
this point also shared by the Iranians," added Karapetyan.

Action-Oriented Morality: How Can Israel Turn Away Refugees From Dar

ACTION-ORIENTED MORALITY: HOW CAN ISRAEL TURN AWAY REFUGEES FROM DARFUR?
By Shmuel Rosner

Slate

Aug 28 2007

The 1952 debate over the reparations agreement with Germany was
one of the bitterest in the history of Israel. "Sons of Jerusalem,
citizens of Israel," cried opposition leader Menachem Begin in the
speech he made while heading a mass demonstration that threatened
to prevent the Knesset, the Israeli parliament, from voting on the
arrangement. "This evening, the most shameful deed in the history of
our people is about to happen."

Prime Minister David Ben Gurion was pushing the Knesset to approve
the deal. Simply put, it was financial compensation for the loss
of Jewish property during the horrific days of the Holocaust. "The
government of Israel," declared Begin, "is selling the honor of Israel
for greed." Less then a decade after the Holocaust, it was a powerful
accusation, and it still is. But Ben Gurion stood his ground. He had
a job to do-securing the future of the young state.

So, he made a deal with the devil. Like it or not, reparations from
Germany helped Israel become the modern, thriving country it is today.

Israel still faces such moral dilemmas. In the past couple of weeks,
they have surfaced again around ongoing controversies in both Israel
and America. It is the inherent tension between making the rational
decision a "normal" country would and the need to occupy the moral
high ground that Jewish history has burdened Israel with.

Last week, House Democratic Caucus Chairman Rahm Emanuel, D-Ill.,
wrote a letter to Israel’s ambassador in Washington, Sallai Meridor,
the son of one of Begin’s most prominent political supporters.

"Israel has returned 48 Sudanese people to Egypt and intends to
refuse entrance to refugees from the war-torn Darfur region of
Sudan," reported the congressman. "I am writing today to express my
disappointment that Israel would turn away any person fleeing from
persecution. … [I]f any country should understand the special needs
of those affected by the genocide in Darfur, it should be Israel."

He was not alone expressing discomfort with Israel’s decision. Dozens
of Israeli legislators from across the political spectrum made the
same argument, urging the government to refrain from deporting the
refugees who fled to Israel from Darfur, via Egypt. Human rights
organizations blasted the deportations. American Jewish organizations
politely but firmly expressed disappointment.

But Prime Minister Ehud Olmert reached an agreement with Egyptian
President Hosni Mubarak under which any Sudanese citizens illegally
crossing into Israel through the Sinai Peninsula will be sent back to
Egypt. Ten days ago, Israel deported 50 such infiltrators-and Olmert
ordered that Darfurians arriving at the gates should be rejected.

Only 500 were lucky enough to be absorbed by the country
indefinitely. That number, say Israeli officials, is very high
considering how small the country is-it is the equivalent of 20,000
refugees getting into America. (The United States accepted fewer than
2,000 refugees from all of Sudan last year.)

It was a calculated decision, but not a pretty one. Accepting the
first wave of Darfurians proved problematic, tempting more Africans
to attempt entry-50 per day and counting. If he wants to educate
himself about such problems, Emanuel can call his former boss Bill
Clinton. After CIA agents visited his house in Arkansas before he was
even inaugurated, Clinton had to roll back his criticism of the first
Bush administration’s strict policy against accepting refugees from
Haiti. The agents presented him with satellite photos that showed tens
of thousands of Haitians hacking down houses and trees in anticipation
of the new, less restrictive administration.

The memory of the Holocaust and the Jewish refugees who wanted to
flee Europe but could find no country willing to accept them was a
handy weapon for those who criticized Israel for its cold-hearted
decision. It became useful again last week, in an American-based
controversy involving the Anti-Defamation League, an American Jewish
organization that faces mounting criticism from both Jews and non-Jews
over its refusal to acknowledge the Armenian genocide at the hands
of the Turks in World War I.

This story is also an old one, but it never dies. Turkey, an important
international and regional player, refuses to make peace with its
murderous past and threatens to sever its ties with any country that
contradicts its version of events. Israel-among many others-chose a
Turkish connection over truth and justice to history.

The ADL did what it thought was the responsible thing: defending Israel
and Jews in Turkey from the possible consequences of acknowledging
the genocide. But criticism threatened to tear the organization apart.

Eventually, after constant pressure from outside the organization and
also from its own activists, this led to a change of course by ADL
leader Abraham Foxman. Since advocating against anti-Semitism and
hate is the organization’s core issue, its position seemed highly
hypocritical.

After consulting with his friend Nobel Prize winner Eli Wiesel, Foxman
declared that "the consequences of those actions [by the Turks] were
indeed tantamount to genocide." But he is still holding his ground on
a practical matter related to this thorny issue. He refuses to support
a bill (submitted to Congress by a Jewish legislator, Adam Schiff,
D-Calif.) that would force the administration to take such a position.

"The Jewish people will always bear the burden of the memory of the
Holocaust and the comfort of redemption," said then-Prime Minister
Shimon Peres in 1996, while honoring German Chancellor Helmut Kohl.

But last week, Peres took a morally indefensible stand on the Armenian
genocide. Israel has not changed its position on the killing of 1.5
million Armenians during World War I, President Peres assured the
Turkish prime minister last week. Ben Gurion’s most brilliant student,
the last one standing, reiterated the always controversial Israeli
position: As it has always done, it chooses Realpolitik over moral
purity. Call it an action-oriented morality.

http://www.slate.com/id/2172964/

Sacramento Kings add Rex Kalamian to coaching staff

an.html

KINGS ADD REX KALAMIAN TO COACHING STAFF

——————————————- —————————–

*SACRAMENTO**, CA**, Wednesday, August 29, 2007* — The The Sacramento
Kings today added Rex Kalamian to their coaching staff as an assistant
coach, it was announced by Kings’ President of Basketball Operations
Geoff Petrie.

"Rex brings a lot of experience to the job," said Petrie. "Reggie
intervied a lot of people and felt he would be the best fit for the
remaining vacancy on his staff. We all look forward to working with him
and the contribution he can make."

Kalamian, who spent the past two seasons as an assistant coach with the
Minnesota Timberwolves, enters his first season with the Kings and 15th
year overall in the NBA. He served as an assistant coach for player
development for the Denver Nuggets in 2004-05.

"I think Rex really does round out a very good coaching staff,"
explained Kings’ Head Coach Reggie Theus. "I think it’s as important to
blend experience with personalities, and we have a good blend of both
with this coaching staff. I’m very excited because I got to know Rex
when he was working with the Clippers and I was doing television in Los
Angeles. So there was some familiarity there with him."

Prior to joining the staff in Denver, Kalamian served as a West Coast
scout for the Philadelphia 76ers in 2003-04. Additionally, he spent 11
seasons with the Los Angeles Clippers.

Kalamian began his career with the Clippers as an assistant to the
scouting department in 1992 before being promoted to video coach in
1994. In addition to his many responsibilities on the bench, Kalamian
prepared scouting reports on upcoming opponents for coaches and players,
as well as breaking down individual player performance.

"I’m very excited," said Kalamian. "This is a first-class organization,
from the ownership in the Maloofs to Geoff Petrie and on down. I think
we have a strong coaching staff and a roster with a lot of talent. I’m
excited about some of the established players here as well as the newer
guys coming in. It should be an exciting year."

Prior to joining the Clippers, he was an assistant coach for his former
team at East Los Angeles College for two seasons. Kalamian led the South
Coast Conference in three-point field goal percentage during the 1988-89
season. He also was named First Team All-San Gabriel Valley in 1985 and
1986 while attending Mark Keppel High School in Alhambra, Calif.

Kalamian graduated from Cal Poly Pomona in 1993 with a bachelor’s degree
in business management.

http://www.nba.com/kings/news/kings_add_rex_kalami

Putin to meet Armenian leader today

RosBusinessConsulting Database
August 23, 2007 Thursday 3:59 AM EST

Putin to meet Armenian leader today

Russian President Vladimir Putin will be conducting negotiations with
his Armenian counterpart Robert Kocharian, who is scheduled to arrive
in Russia for a working visit today.

The two leaders are expected to discuss the prospects of expanding
bilateral trade and economic cooperation between the two countries,
including the implementation of large-scale projects sponsored by
Russian businesses. Putin and Kocharian will also exchange opinions
on international politics and share their outlooks for settling the
Karabakh conflict and the Caucasus situation in general, as well as
discuss preparations for the upcoming CIS, CSTO (Collective Security
Treaty Organization) and EurAsEC (Eurasian Economic Community)
summits, scheduled for October 2007 in Dushanbe.

Foxman and the Armenian Genocide

The Atlantic
Aug 22 2007

Foxman and the Armenian Genocide
22 Aug 2007 03:56 pm

The ADL head is coming in for criticism over this quote:

"We have never negated but have always described the painful events
of 1915-1918 perpetrated by the Ottoman Empire against Armenians as
massacres and atrocities," Foxman said in a written statement
yesterday. But upon reflection, Foxman continued, "the consequences
of those actions were indeed tantamount to genocide."
One blogger is underwhelmed. Jewcy isn’t so sure either:

[Foxman] seems to acknowledge the genocide, without explicitly
stating that he does. He says that he’s consulted with those who
"acknowledge the consensus," that it was "tantamount to genocide,"
and "If the word genocide had existed then, they would have called it
genocide." It would have been nice to see a simple "It was a
genocide," but this is certainly a major step forward.

But the rub is that Foxman is trying to placate his critics while
maintaining his opposition to the Congressional resolutions that
would acknowledge the genocide. My bet: it’s too late for that. And
I’m certain that most Armenian-American activists will not be
satisfied with this statement.

the_daily_dish/2007/08/foxman-and-the-.html

http://andrewsullivan.theatlantic.com/

ADL to consider genocide position at national meeting

Jewish Telegraphic Agency, NY
Aug 22 2007

ADL to consider genocide position at national meeting

Published: 08/22/2007

The Anti-Defamation League agreed to put its position on a possible
congressional resolution on the Armenian to a vote of its national
governing body.

The move came Wednesday after a request from the league’s New England
regional board, which has been fiercely critical of National Director
Abraham Foxman’s stance on the issue and his firing of the
organization’s regional director. The ADL’s national commission will
meet in November.

On Tuesday, Foxman reversed himself and said massacres of Armenians
by Ottoman Turks during World War I were "tantamount to genocide." He
continued to stand by his earlier position concerning the
Congressional resolution, which, along with other Jewish groups, ADL
has called "counterproductive."

Foxman earlier claimed he didn’t know whether the killings
constituted genocide, a position which generated tremendous anger
among Boston’s Jews who have strong ties to the city’s substantial
Armenian population.

Foxman refused to say whether the regional director, Andrew Tarsy,
would be reinstated, a move also requested Wednesday by the New
England board. Tarsy publicly broke ranks with the national ADL
position last week and was summarily fired.

Why the ADL Recognized the Armenian Genocide

Why the ADL Recognized the Armenian Genocide
Michael Weiss <;, August 23, 2007
TAGS: Abe Foxman <;
ADL&l t;; Armenian
Genocide < ; Israel
Lobby< obby> Joey
Kurtzman <;
Me arsheimer< >
Politics < olitics>
Turkey< rkey>
Walt <;

Sometimes a Google news search works like an Ask Sherlock engine. I don’t
mean to tread on Joey’s well-pounded terrain, but I think I know why the ADL
offered its mealymouthed half-recognition of the 20th century’s first
genocide. Abe Foxman has a book to sell.

John Mearsheimer and Stephen Walt have broadened their notorious thesis,
that U.S. foreign policy is perilously controlled by a Zionist Lobby (their
caps) consisting of high-powered American Jews, into a volume that’s already
led to the usual cycle of nonsense: canceled lecture gigs, rescinded
invitations, and an overflowing Dershowitz inbox. And as disastrous as it
may be to hear this, the one person responsible for rebutting Lobby
hobbyhorse is none other than the charming Mr. Foxman himself. This sailed
in < .html?hp> under the radar
in the *Times* a few days ago:

Also being released on Sept. 4 is "The Deadliest Lies: The Israel Lobby and
the Myth of Jewish Control" (Palgrave Macmillan) by Abraham H.
Foxman< ce/timestopics/people/f/abraham_h_foxman/index.htm l?inline=3Dnyt-per>,
the national director of the Anti-Defamation
League< m/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/a/antide famation_league/index.html?inline=3Dnyt-org>.
T he notion that pro-Israel groups "have anything like a uniform agenda, and
that U.S. policy on Israel and the Middle East is the result of their
influence, is simply wrong," George P. Shultz, a former secretary of state,
says in the foreword. "This is a conspiracy theory pure and simple, and
scholars at great universities should be ashamed to promulgate it."

You don’t know whether to laugh or cry, really. But how clear it now seems.
The ADL is looking to rob Mearsheimer and Walt of their easy trump: How dare
we be accused of* *propagating* the* deadliest lie being by the man who
believes mass graves are only as real as their Hebraic inhabitants. Foxman
will presumably argue that M/W are wrong because, well, his pro-Israel
organization just alienated Israel’s biggest Muslim ally, so there.

That smile on Tony Judt’s face right about now? Ear to ear, baby.

Source: gnized_the_armenian_genocide

http://www.jewcy.com/user/michael_weiss&gt
http://www.jewcy.com/tags/abe_foxman&gt
http://www.jewcy.com/tags/adl&gt
http://www.jewcy.com/tags/armenian_genocide&gt
http://www.jewcy.com/tags/israel_l
http://www.jewcy.com/tags/joey_kurtzman&gt
http://www.jewcy.com/tags/mearsheimer
http://www.jewcy.com/daily_shvitz_categories/p
http://www.jewcy.com/tags/tu
http://www.jewcy.com/tags/walt&gt
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/08/16/books/16book
http://topics.nytimes.com/top/referen
http://topics.nytimes.co
http://www.jewcy.com/daily_shvitz/why_the_adl_reco

Breaking: ADL Now Recognizing The Armenian Genocide

BREAKING: ADL NOW RECOGNIZING THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

Bostonist, MA
hp
Aug 21 2007

The action of the citizens of Watertown has had a tremendous ripple
effect. After releasing a statement refusing to recognize the Armenian
genocide and firing its New England director, the national director
of the Anti-Defamation League, Abraham Foxman, released a statement
today in which he recognizes the Armenian genocide. Here is what he
has to say:

On reflection, we have come to share the view of Henry Morgenthau,
Sr., that the consequences of those actions [when Ottoman Turks
slaughtered up to 1.5 million Armenians in 1915] were indeed tantamount
to genocide. If the word genocide had existed then, they would have
called it genocide.

Foxman said that he spoke with Elie Wiesel about the matter. However,
Foxman said that the ADL still won’t back a Congressional resolution
that recognizes the Armenian genocide as a genocide, so the controversy
isn’t over.

Out of curiosity, will Andrew Tarsy get his job back?

http://bostonist.com/2007/08/21/breaking_adl_no.p

Armenian Economy Grows 12 Percent In January-July

ARMENIAN ECONOMY GROWS 12 PERCENT IN JANUARY-JULY

FreshPlaza
Aug 21 2007
Netherlands

Yerevan, August 20 /Armenpress/ Armenia’s economy grew 12.1 percent
in January-July from a year ago to 1.3 trillion Armenian Drams.

Armenian Statistical Service said industrial output grew a slight
1.3 percent to 389 billion Drams.

It said power generation not counted, industrial output was 318.5
billion Drams, 0.2 percent higher from a year ago, while diamond
industry output not counted, it grew almost 9 percent to 385 billion
Drams.

The Statistical Service said in January-July Armenian power plants
produced almost 3.6 billion kilowatt/hour electricity, 1 percent down
from a year ago. It also said agriculture grew 2.2 percent to 212
billion Drams. The biggest growth was again in construction which
saw 254 billion Drams in investments.

The retail trade grew 11 percent to 435 billion Drams. Population
incomes grew 27 percent to 1.4 trillion Drams and expenses grew 23
percent to almost 1 trillion Drams.

Almost 780 billion Drams were spent on purchase of goods and services.

A painful truth

The Boston Globe
August 18, 2007

A painful truth

By Rachel Kaprielian and Alan Dershowitz

THE CONTROVERSY in Watertown over the Anti-Defamation’s League’s
anti-bigotry program, "No Place for Hate," has struck an important chord in
the historical and global struggle for human rights. Moreover, it reopened a
deep wound for the Armenian people, whose nation was devastated, half their
population murdered, and the remainder deported in what was the first
genocide of the 20th century.
The tragedy is compounded by the denial by Turkey itself. In 1915, Henry
Morganthau, then US ambassador to the Ottoman Empire, worked tirelessly to
bring the genocide to the world’s attention and warned the US secretary of
state that "a campaign of race extermination" was occurring against
"peaceful" Armenians.
The New York Times published 145 articles in 1915 and stressed that what was
happening to the Armenians was a "deliberate" "policy of extermination."
Thousands of eyewitness accounts, official government documents, and
photographs buttress the historical truths.
The Association of Genocide Scholars and the community of Holocaust
scholars, as well as numerous others, have written that this horrific event
was genocide. In 2000, 126 leading Holocaust scholars — including Nobel
Prize laureate Elie Wiesel — published a statement in The New York Times
that sought both to "affirm the incontestable fact of the Armenian Genocide
and urge Western Democracies to officially recognize it."
The matter is not subject to interpretation. In recent decades, the Armenian
genocide has been referred to as "the forgotten genocide" and to understand
it is to note that it was the template for the genocides that followed: the
Holocaust, Pol Pot’s genocide in Cambodia, the 1994 genocide in Rwanda, and
today in Darfur. Adolf Hitler famously said in 1939 upon the commencement of
his own "final solution:" "Who now remembers the Armenians?"
For any organization or official to believe that there are differing sides
to the Armenian Genocide is as much an outrage as it would be for Germany to
say that the work of Jewish scholars, witnesses, and victim testimonies
represented merely the "Jewish side" of the Holocaust. To deny genocide
victims their history and suffering is tantamount to making them victims
again.
Justice and memory demand that we recognize the Ottoman Turkish genocide
against the Armenians for what it was: the destruction of a large part of an
ancient and vibrant community as well as the horrible model of what Hitler
did to Jews and what the janjaweed is doing to the victims of Darfur.
The Anti-Defamation League has done enormous good around the world. Its
regional chapter was courageous and correct in its decision to affirm its
position that the genocide was fact.
No Place for Hate is a wonderful project that is not limited to Watertown.
It represents the defense of human rights yesterday, today, and tomorrow and
challenges our strongest determination, our greatest will, and our most
humanitarian spirit.
To assure that "Never Again" remains more than an aspiration we must all
join together to proclaim the truth, no matter how painful or difficult.

Rachel Kaprielian is a state representative from Watertown. Alan Dershowitz
is a professor at Harvard Law School.