Embassy of Argentina in Armenia launches creation of chamber of commerce in Yerevan

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 10:13, 28 September, 2021

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 28, ARMENPRESS. The Embassy of Argentina in Armenia is launching the project of creating the first Argentine Chamber of Commerce in Yerevan.

The new chamber’s goal is to become a new business platform offering important toolkit for trade promotion, contribute to business development and creation of favorable environment for new investment and trade flows, the embassy said.

Ambassador of Argentina to Armenia Mariano Vergara said the chamber will initially be based on a virtual application, which will connect in real-time Argentine and Armenian companies and entrepreneurs. This new commercial tool will be at the disposal of the Armenian authorities, marking the 30th anniversary of Armenia’s independence. Special attention will be drawn on many young Argentine specialists who come to Armenia and seek to get integrated into the labor market. “Converse Bank is our partner in this initiative, we expect that the bank will have active participation and role also in the work of the Armenian-Argentine Chamber of Commerce,” the ambassador said.

Albeit the modest trade turnover between Armenia and Argentina, there is big potential to enhance it and subsequently contribute to the development of various branches of the economy. For at least a decade, Argentina was among the five top investment flow countries in Armenia, mostly through the Argentine-Armenian community, and to this day Argentina has a leading place in Armenia’s foreign investments.

“The 1992 establishment of diplomatic relations between Argentina and Armenia was the reflection of the high level political dialogue and successful cooperation between our friendly countries. The significant Armenian Diaspora of Argentina, which is fully involved in Argentina’s society since its formation, also has its invaluable contribution in the development of bilateral relations,” the embassy said.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Putin-Erdogan meeting kicks off in Sochi

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 15:14,

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 29, ARMENPRESS. The meeting of Russian President Vladimir Putin and his Turkish counterpart Recep Tayyip Erdogan kicked off in the Russian city of Sochi on September 29.

The two leaders are expected to discuss the various aspects of the Russian-Turkish cooperation in political, commercial and economic areas, as well as relevant international issues, including the situation in Syria, Libya, Afghanistan and the South Caucasus.

The last in-person meeting of Putin and Erdogan was held in March 2020 at the Kremlin during Erdogan’s working visit to Moscow. After that all the talks were held either by phone or remotely because of COVID-19.

 

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

AW: My Dialogue with Gohar

Image provided by the author, courtesy of the Armenian Rug Society

“I, Gohar, full of sin and weak of soul, with my newly learned hands wove this rug. Whosoever reads this, say a word of mercy to God for me. In the year 1149.” (Inscription in wool rug circa 1699)

Sometime between the years 1699 and 1700 in the mountains of the Caucasus, an Armenian woman by the name of Gohar wove a message for the future into the threads of a rug. The rug was to be donated to an Armenian church, and it was common practice for weavers to leave inscriptions in offerings including dates and names of weavers or patrons. These inscriptions often appear alongside motifs of animals, plants and geometrical shapes on the margins of carpets and tapestries. Amongst the diverse ethnicities of the Caucasus, it is indeed through these woven inscriptions that the ethnic and geographic origins of rugs are now being identified by carpet experts. These specialists also decode the woven chronograms that often point to the date carpets were made. In Weavers, Merchants, and Kings: The Inscribed Rugs of Armenia, Lucy Der Manuelian calculates the chronogram on the Gohar Carpet to the year 1700 in Gregorian calendar (42-43). In general, a chronogram is an inscription or sentence in which letters of a given alphabet are arranged in a way that translate to a specific date. Many Armenian historic carpets carry chronograms, which demand time, effort, expertise and dedication to decipher. It is indeed a deeper engagement that an Armenian carpet requests its viewer.

The Gohar Carpet is known to have been used occasionally for ceremonial purposes at the church it resided before taken by Turks in early 19th century. It only resurfaced in London in 1899 at the Victoria and Albert Museum before disappearing again from public sight until it was sold at auction in London in 1977. Throughout the years after its creation, the Gohar Carpet has transformed in function performing in different roles: from an _expression_ of devotion to an object of religious significance to an artifact. While it has incited curiosity, fascination and awe, it has also conjured nostalgia, respect and admiration, as well as trauma and grief in those who share its history. During the time when the carpet’s whereabouts was unknown, it continued to elicit comments from art historians due to its unique and complicated design and colors as photographs from the first exhibition remained in circulation.

Three hundred years ago, Gohar, the young woman who wove perhaps her very first carpet, initiated an affective dialogue through time and space by her plea and her demand: “Whosoever reads this, say a word of mercy to God for me.” This is an imperative sentence. It asks us to do something. The carpet has been positioned as Gohar: “I, Gohar, full of sin and weak of soul, with my newly learned hands wove this rug.” Gohar is now the carpet and the carpet is speaking to us through its threads. The communication is clear and straightforward. She has done her work, and now it’s our turn to respond. Gohar the weaver and Gohar the carpet have become one, not a material object in an archive but a site for dialogue and engagement.

I came across the image of Gohar on a Facebook post at the height of the Artsakh War. Through the screen of my computer, I heard Gohar’s demand for a prayer. It was alive and speaking, and I could hear her. I then researched her origins, where last exhibited, where she might be now, what the motifs and inscriptions indicate and how the chronograms are deciphered. The image of her initiated in me a drive to search and learn. Gohar has since left a lasting impression on me. She has become a part of me. The moment of contact with Gohar was a moment of recognition and reorientation. A diasporic body is constantly directing itself between the homeland and the second home, a constant fluctuation between alienation and belonging. To be disoriented is inherent to the very experience of living in the diaspora. Yet, it is in such brief moments of recognition, of recognizing a plea and a call for engagement that bodies reorient. The Gohar Carpet is then a site for momentary reorientation toward our common Armenianness. It is through such recognition that the Gohar Carpet also heals as it reminds and re-establishes the wholeness interrupted by war, loss of land and division. Gohar sent out her plea 300 years ago, and it is now upon us to respond.

Talin Abadian is a translator and playwright, currently pursuing a Ph.D. in drama and theatre studies at the University of California, Irvine. Her research centers around public assembly, protest and activism. She has published on theatre in Iranian newspapers and journals as well as translations of plays, a playwrighting textbook and a collection of essays.



RFE/RL Armenian Report – 09/28/2021

                                        Tuesday, 


Baku, Tehran Trade Barbs After Iran-Armenia Trade Disruption


IRAN -- Iranian Revolutionary Guard forces hold a military exercise involving 
ballistic missiles and drones in the country's central desert, January 15, 2021


Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev has criticized Iran for holding military 
exercises near Azerbaijan’s borders after Baku began taxing Iranian trucks 
transporting goods to and from Armenia.

Azerbaijani police and customs set up on September 12 a checkpoint on the main 
highway connecting Armenia with Iran. A 21-kilometer section of the highway 
passes through Armenian-Azerbaijani border areas along Armenia’s southeastern 
Syunik province also bordering Iran. The Armenian government controversially 
ceded it to Azerbaijan following last year’s war in Nagorno-Karabakh.

The Azerbaijani roadblock caused significant disruptions in Iran’s cargo traffic 
with Armenia, with many Iranian drivers refusing or unable to pay a hefty “road 
tax” demanded by Azerbaijani officers. Two of them were arrested by Azerbaijani 
authorities two weeks ago for allegedly travelling to Nagorno-Karabakh without 
Baku’s permission.

The Iranian Foreign Ministry called for the immediate release of the drivers. 
Meanwhile, the Iranian military reportedly massed troops along the Azerbaijani 
border and began large-scale military exercises there last week.

Aliyev described the exercises as “very surprising” in an interview with the 
Turkish Anatolia news agency published on Monday.

“Every country can carry out any military drill on its own territory. It's their 
sovereign right … But why now and why on our border?” he said.

“Why weren't the drills held when the Armenians were in the Jabrail, Fizuli and 
Zangelan districts? Why is this being done after we liberated these lands after 
30 years of occupation?” he asked.

Aliyev expressed hope that Tehran will end its “emotional reactions to our 
legitimate steps.” He said that Baku set up the roadblock after Tehran ignored 
repeated warnings to stop Iranian trucks from shipping cargo to Karabakh. That 
was “disrespectful to the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan,” he said.

The Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman, Saeed Khatibzadeh, reacted to Aliyev’s 
remarks on Tuesday, saying that they are “surprising” given the “good relations” 
between the two states.

Khatibzadeh insisted that Iran has always respected Azerbaijan’s territorial 
integrity and that its war games are aimed at “protecting regional security.” 
The Islamic Republic “will not tolerate the Israeli regime’s presence near its 
borders,” he added, clearly alluding to Azerbaijan’s military ties with Israel.

Iran’s Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian discussed the road crisis with 
his Armenian and Azerbaijani counterparts during separate meetings held in New 
York last week. According to the Iranian Foreign Ministry, Amir-Abdollahian told 
Azerbaijan’s Jeyhun Bayramov that “some third parties should not be allowed to 
affect” Azerbaijani-Iranian relations.

The friction between Azerbaijan and Iran was also highlighted by bitter verbal 
exchanges reported between members of their parliaments.

The Iranian ISNA news agency reported late last week that some Azerbaijani 
lawmakers have threatened to “remove Iran from the world map” and “raise Turkish 
flags in all parts of Iran.” It said Iranian parliamentarian have responded by 
“warning Baku of the dangers” of picking a fight with the Islamic Republic.



Ruling Party, Opposition Disagree On Karabakh War Probe

        • Gayane Saribekian

Armenia - A woman visits one of the graves of Armenian soldiers killed in the 
2020 war in Nagorno-Karabakh and buried in the Yerablur Military Pantheon in 
Yerevan, .


Parliamentary leaders of the ruling Civil Contract party and Armenia’s two 
leading opposition blocs have reached no agreement so far on practical 
modalities of investigating the causes and outcome of last year’s war in 
Nagorno-Karabakh.

They both have pledged to launch parliamentary inquiries focusing on the 
Armenian government’s handling of the six-week war that resulted in sweeping 
Armenian territorial losses and at least 3,900 deaths.

Civil Contract’s Andranik Kocharian signaled the impending creation of a 
relevant parliament commission as the newly elected National Assembly began its 
work in early August. The commission has still not been set up.

Kocharian, who heads the parliament’s standing committee on defense and national 
security, on Tuesday declined to give any reasons for the apparent delay. “We 
are moving forward,” he said vaguely.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian stated later in August that the ad hoc commission 
should comprise not only representatives of the parliamentary forces but also 
political parties that failed to win any seats in the current legislature as 
well as representatives of the families of Armenian soldiers killed or missing 
in action. He held a series of meetings with the leaders of several such parties 
this month.

The parliament statutes stipulate that only serving lawmakers can join such 
commissions. Reports in the Armenian press have said that the ruling party wants 
to amend the statutes accordingly.

Kocharian said that the authorities are now discussing “legal issues” relating 
to the work of the commission. He did not elaborate.

The idea of expanding the commission is rejected by the main opposition Hayastan 
alliance. One of its senior lawmakers, Artsvik Minasian, claimed on Tuesday that 
Pashinian simply wants to involve more of his political allies in the planned 
parliamentary inquiry to ensure that it covers up his mishandling of the war.

“They have said ... that the commission should be expanded, including through 
the involvement of representatives of extra-parliamentary political forces 
sympathetic to the authorities,” Minasian told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service.

“It is evident that they are not interested in solving apparent crimes committed 
on their watch. They are interested in the opposite: to cover up, to withhold 
and not to solve,” he said.

Hayastan and other major opposition groups blame Pashinian for Armenia’s defeat 
in the war with Azerbaijan.

Minasian said that Hayastan will also press for the creation of a separate 
“fact-finding” body tasked with looking into the causes of the defeat. He said 
it should consist of an equal number of pro-government and opposition members as 
well as independent experts.

Another opposition party, Bright Armenia, already called for the creation of 
such body early this year. Pashinian’s political team rejected the idea.



U.S. Watchdog Deplores ‘Degradation Of Democratic Norms In Armenia’


Armenia - Former Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and senior members of his Civil 
Contract Party celebrate their election victory at a rally in Yerevan, June 21, 
2021.


U.S. democracy watchdog Freedom House criticized Armenian authorities on Tuesday 
for seeking to prosecute a person who allegedly insulted Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian on social media.

It urged the authorities to stop enforcing recently enacted amendments that 
criminalized defamation of government officials.

The amendments to the Armenian Criminal Code were passed by the country’s former 
parliament dominated by Pashinian’s loyalists during its final session held in 
late July.

They stipulate that “grave insults” directed at individuals because of their 
“public activities” will now be crimes punishable by fines ranging from 1 
million to 3 million drams ($2,000-$6,000) and a prison sentence of up to three 
months. Those individuals include state officials, politicians and other public 
figures.

The Armenian police reportedly opened last week the first criminal case under 
the new articles of the Criminal Code. A police spokesman said that they are now 
trying to identify the social media user who made an offensive comment under a 
photograph of Pashinian posted on the prime minister’s Facebook page. It is not 
clear whether investigators have already tracked down charged that person.

Freedom House expressed concern at the investigation. “This comes only two 
months after the Parliament passed amendments criminalizing ‘serious insults’ 
against government officials, and signifies a clear degradation of democratic 
norms in Armenia, including freedom of expression,” the Washington-based group 
said in a statement.

“We call on the Armenian authorities to immediately cease enforcement of this 
unconstitutional legislation criminalizing defamation,” added the statement.

The controversial amendments have also been condemned by the Armenian 
opposition. Opposition leaders claim that Pashinian himself has relied heavily 
on slander and “hate speech” since coming to power in 2018.

All forms of defamation had been decriminalized in Armenia in 2010 during then 
President Serzh Sarkisian’s rule.

Government officials and pro-government lawmakers have denied trying to restrict 
freedom of expression. One of them said in July that penalties for defamation 
must be toughened now because verbal abuse in the country has become widespread, 
especially on social media.

Pashinian’s political team already sparked controversy in March this year when 
it pushed through the National Assembly a bill tripling maximum legal fines for 
defamation. Armenia’s leading media associations criticized the move, saying 
that it could be exploited by government officials and politicians to stifle 
press freedom.

Consequently, President Armen Sarkissian refused to sign the bill into law and 
asked the Constitutional Court to assess its conformity with the Armenian 
constitution.



PACE Urges Azerbaijan To Free Armenian Prisoners


FRANCE – A session of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe in 
Strasbourg, April 25, 2017


The Council of Europe’s Parliamentary Assembly (PACE) has called on Azerbaijan 
to set free “without further delay” all Armenian soldiers and civilians held by 
it one year after the outbreak of a war in Nagorno-Karabakh.

In a resolution on “humanitarian consequences” of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict 
adopted late on Monday, the PACE also urged Armenia to provide Azerbaijan with 
more information about minefields in districts around Karabakh recaptured by 
Azerbaijani forces.

The wide-ranging resolution, opposed by virtually all Azerbaijani and Turkish 
members of the Strasbourg-based assembly, further says that both sides should 
investigate allegations of war crimes committed by them the during the six-week 
hostilities stopped by a Russian-brokered ceasefire accord last November.

The deal calls, among other things, for the unconditional release of all 
prisoners of war and civilian captives held by the parties. Dozens of Armenians 
remain in Azerbaijani captivity.

They include 48 soldiers taken prisoner when Azerbaijani troops seized in 
December the last Armenian-controlled portions of Karabakh’s southern Hadrut 
district. Baku says that they are not covered by the truce accord, a claim 
rejected by Yerevan.

The PACE expressed serious concern about their detention conditions as well as 
the fate of about 30 other Armenians “allegedly seen, filmed or photographed in 
captivity, with no indication as to their current whereabouts.”

“The Assembly is alarmed at allegations made by Armenia that these persons have 
been subjected to enforced disappearances and possibly killed,” it said, adding 
that the Azerbaijani authorities must shed light on their whereabouts and 
“release all remaining captives and return them to Armenia without further 
delay.”

Baku repatriated 30 other Armenian prisoners this summer in exchange for 
Armenian maps of about 200,000 landmines laid around Karabakh. The PACE 
resolution urges Yerevan to release “all mine maps in its possession.”

“The Assembly is concerned about the many allegations of crimes, war crimes and 
other wrongful acts leveled against both Armenia and Azerbaijan during the 
6-week war,” reads the resolution.

It points to a “substantial number of consistent allegations of inhuman and 
degrading treatment and torture of Armenian prisoners of war by Azerbaijanis, as 
well as a number of allegations of similar treatment of Azerbaijani prisoners of 
war by Armenians.” The two sides, it says, must “fully investigate the 
allegations and bring to justice anyone, including at command level, found to be 
responsible for crimes, war crimes or other wrongful acts.”

The PACE also stressed the need to help tens of thousands of Karabakh Armenian 
civilians displaced by the war, protect religious and historical monuments in 
the conflict zone and de-escalate tensions along the Armenian-Azerbaijani 
border. It called on Armenia and Azerbaijan to start demarcating the border and 
“examine the possibility of creating a demilitarized zone with the presence of a 
peacekeeping or military monitoring force.”

The head of the Armenian delegation at the PACE, Ruben Rubinian, was quick to 
welcome the resolution passed by 80 votes to 18, with 3 abstentions. In a long 
Facebook post, Rubinian listed its provisions, notably the call for the release 
of the Armenian prisoners, reflecting the Armenian authorities’ position.


Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2021 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

 

CivilNet: Eternal: A place for the mothers of fallen soldiers

CIVILNET.AM

27 Sep, 2021 03:09

Karine Muradyan is Vahe’s mother. Eighteen year old Vahe died while fighting the 2020 Karabakh War. To be able to share the grief, pain and sadness of this loss with other mothers who experienced such loss, Karine created “Haverj” (Eternal) – an organization through which mothers find comfort with one another. They cry together, remember together, get angry together and, at times, laugh together. There are roughly one hundred mothers in the organization and “unfortunately the number is increasing through time,” says Karine.

Assembly Statement on First Anniversary of Artsakh War


Washington, D.C. – One year ago today, Azerbaijan, with the full and open support of Turkey, and Turkish-recruited jihadist mercenaries, launched an unprecedented war on the Armenian people of Artsakh. Over the course of 44 days, the citizens of Artsakh were subject to brutal incendiary weapons, such as internationally banned cluster and white phosphorus munitions, which were aimed at civilians and civilian infrastructure, including hospitals and schools.

On this solemn day, the Assembly remembers the thousands of Armenian soldiers and volunteers who fulfilled their call of duty and sacrificed their lives for their homeland, leaving behind families and unrealized potential. The loss of that generation – who sought to transform Armenia into a beacon of progress and prosperity – is tremendous. The Assembly honors the memory of every single fallen soldier and volunteer and vows to continue its advocacy work in their name.

The November 9 trilateral ceasefire statement put an end to the daily savagery of the war, however, Azerbaijan's violent aggression continues, particularly in Armenia’s Syunik Province, as well as the ongoing destruction of religious, archeological, and other cultural heritage sites. Torture and inhuman abuses against Armenian POWs and civilians still illegally held in captivity remains unchecked – in stark violation of the terms of the statement.

The Assembly is encouraged by recent congressional actions in response to the behavior of the Aliyev and Erdogan regimes. Again the Assembly thanks President Biden for explicitly reaffirming US recognition of the Armenian Genocide and expects full enforcement of Section 907 and sanctions to ensure US tax dollars do not support its continued aggression and ongoing human rights abuses.

The Assembly also thanks the US, France, and Russia for their renewed commitment to use the OSCE Minsk Group, which the UN Security Council endorses, toward that end. The corrupt, authoritarian regime in Azerbaijan, led by Aliyev, continues to violate its commitments in a thinly veiled continuing effort to resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh issue by eliminating the Christian Armenians. His speech at the UN last week only confirmed that design with Erdogan, as the Armenian people pursue peace, democracy, and human rights.


Established in 1972, the Armenian Assembly of America is the largest Washington-based nationwide organization promoting public understanding and awareness of Armenian issues. The Assembly is a non-partisan, 501(c)(3) tax-exempt membership organization.


###


NR# 2021-82

Armenia – Prime Minister Addresses United Nations General Debate, 76th Session | #UNGA

Sept 25 2021



Nikol Pashinyan, Prime Minister of the Republic of Armenia, addresses the general debate of the 76th Session of the General Assembly of the United Nations (New York, date).

The UN General Assembly (UNGA) is the main policy-making organ of the Organization. Comprising all Member States, it provides a unique forum for multilateral discussion of the full spectrum of international issues covered by the Charter of the United Nations. Each of the 193 Member States of the United Nations has an equal vote.

The United Nations is an international organization founded in 1945. Currently made up of 193 Member States, the UN and its work are guided by the purposes and principles contained in its founding Charter.

The UN has evolved over the years to keep pace with a rapidly changing world.

But one thing has stayed the same: it remains the one place on Earth where all the world’s nations can gather together, discuss common problems, and find shared solutions that benefit all of humanity.

General debate website: https://gadebate.un.org/

—————————————-

Watch this video in English: https://youtu.be/KCbabD8ohC8


Egypt’s Cairo Tower lit in celebration of Armenia’s independence

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 16:19,

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 22, ARMENPRESS. The Gezira Cairo Tower was illuminated with the tricolour flag of Armenia on 21 September to mark 30 years on the republic's independence from the Soviet Union, Ahram Online reports.

The event, organized in cooperation with the Armenian Embassy in Cairo, saw the tower lit in red, blue, and orange. 

Members of the Armenian community in Egypt celebrated the event by taking Nile feluccas to watch up close the tricolour flag on the tower.

հրավեր

ՀՀ-ՈՒՄ ԻՐԱՆԻ ԻՍԼԱՄԱԿԱՆ ՀԱՆՐԱՊԵՏՈՒԹՅԱՆ ԴԵՍՊԱՆՈՒԹՅԱՆ ՄՇԱԿՈՒՅԹԻ ԿԵՆՏՐՈՆԻ և 
ՀԱՅԱՍՏԱՆԻ ԱԶԳԱՅԻՆ ԿԻՆՈԿԵՆՏՐՈՆԻ նախաձեռնությամբ տեղի կունենա «ԻՐԱՆԻ ԺԱՄԱՆԱԿԱԿԻՑ 
ԿԻՆՈՅԻ ՕՐԵՐԸ ՀԱՅԱՍՏԱՆՈՒՄ» եռօրյա ցուցադրություն:
Իրանական ֆիլմերը կցուցադրվեն սեպտեմբերի 23-25-ը: Սկիզբը` ժ. 19:00-ին:
Ցուցադրվելու են «Թիկնապահը», «Վիլլայի բնակիչները» և «Գիշերային հերթափոխ» ֆիլմերը:
Բոլոր ֆիլմերը հայերեն ենթագրերով են:
ՄՈՒՏՔՆ ԱԶԱՏ Է:
Սիրով սպասում ենք ձեզ:



Hrachya Kochar Ave., 7/3 Yerevan Republic of Armenia  Tel. (+ 374 10) 229053, 
229054, 229766 

   [email protected]

A hundred years ago, France let go of the Armenians

Sept 20 2021
by Guest Contributor

It was a hundred years ago – France and Kemalist Turkey signed an agreement which sealed the abandonment of Cilicia and with it the Armenian population who had placed their hopes on the “eldest daughter of the Church”. 

On this occasion, it was appropriate to return to this dark page in our history and to be able to draw lessons from it. 

Just a hundred years ago, France negotiated and signed an agreement ending the Franco-Turkish war with the Grand Assembly of Turkey, an unrecognized authority, in the hands of Kemalist forces.

With this agreement, France was the first power in the Entente to recognize the government led by Mustafa Kemal.

Deeply weakened by the outcome of the First World War, France no longer had the human and financial resources for its ambition. She longed only to rebuild herself and find peace.

The French want their soldiers back when the Great War ended in 1918, but blood still flowed in the Near and Middle East, where national insurrection and revolutionary struggles prolonged the war.

In the East, France mobilized on several fronts: in Syria and Turkey. It therefore encountered difficulties in the area of its mandate, both against Kemal in Cilicia and against Fayçal.

He proclaimed himself king of Syria and rejected the French mandate committing to new confrontations.

Kemal launched a Turkish national reaction against the ambitions of the European powers and against the signing of the Treaty of Sèvres.

He also organized a national reconquest and gathered weapons and soldiers, calling for a  Turkey for the Turks – This is how the Kemalist nationalist movement was born.

The French troops (made up of Armenian legionaries and Algerian soldiers sensitive to Turkish propaganda) and Kemalists faced each other in Cilicia and the Turks are quickly gained the advantage.

The Franco-Kemalist was becoming more and more costly and Paris did not have the means to engage in a sustained struggle against both the Turks and the Syrians, and thus preferred to deal with Kemal.

In 1920, an armistice was signed between France and the Kemalists, but they did not respect it and it rather amplified the clashes.

France, weakened by the War, envisaged with fear a renewal of military operations in Cilicia, which had already caused many losses on finances and human life, and thus chose to pursue a policy of conciliation.

In 1921, France then decided to conduct direct talks with the Kemalists. 

We can understand the argument of the unfavorable balance of power, France comes out of the First World War bloodless, it did not have the means to face two guerrilla forces in both Syria and Cilicia.

But wasn’t this a way for Paris to harm their British partner (and rival) than to draw closer to the Kemalists? 

The French and the British may be allies, but they did not take the same position vis-à-vis the Kemalist nationalist movement.

If London underestimated its importance, Paris was in a hurry to sign an armistice.

In the spring of 1920, the British were ready to resume war against the Turks, but public opinion was against it. And the French were opposed to it.

The Greeks alone embark on a two-year war with the tragic consequences that we know.

Divergent interests fueled dissensions between  Allies that benefited the Kemalists.

One can easily think that if the Franco-British agreement had been real, it would have supported Greece.

But France chose to encourage Kemalist pride by complying with its demands and even became Ankara’s supplier of arms and material free of charge against its Greek ally!

London sees this Franco-Turkish agreement as a stab in the back because it was a separate peace.

Indeed, under the pact signed by the Allies in 1915, they were prohibited from entering into peace agreements without consulting each other.

For his part, the French president of the council Aristide Briand was focused on domestic politics but also on the reparations to be obtained from Germany.

France showed itself to be tough and uncompromising with Germany by imposing on it the “dictated peace” of the Treaty of Versailles, as well as heavy reparations, but it knelt in front of Kemalist Turkey, even when the balance of power was favorable.

Aristide Briand sends Franklin Bouillon, former journalist, former deputy and former minister, to congratulate Kemal on his victory against the Greeks, who are nevertheless allies of France.

France feared political instability in Turkey, seeing it as a risk to its material interests and its privileged position and being able to build a relationship of trust with Kemal as he played  with Franklin Bouillon, the emissary sent by Aristide Briand.

Franklin Bouillon arrived in Ankara with a case of cognac as a means to forge an understanding with Kemal, which fascinates him. He is also described as a Turkophile.

The distinction between winners and losers in the Great War does not exist for members of this delegation, and they deal with Kemal on an equal footing. These negotiations are conducted in a very opaque manner.

The Turks were aware of the enthusiasm they aroused, which is why they themselves proposed to Aristide Briand to send Franklin Bouillon, knowing that the latter is already on their side.

By accepting all Turkish demands without obtaining the fulfillment of French demands, Franklin Bouillon placed France in a position of weakness and deference, especially as the Kemalist leader was on the ascendancy.  

France therefore clearly did not pursue a winning policy against the Turkish nationalist movement.

The winning country of the First World War, and said to have the most powerful army in the world at that time, did not protect its mandate, nor the populations who lived there, particularly the Armenians who suffered from genocide.

Without consulting her British ally, France signed a more advantageous bilateral agreement

Finally, France legitimized an unrecognized government even though the latter was waging a nationalist war against French positions.

French indulgence was seen as a policy of abdication and weakness that served its true interests.

Thus, these Angora accords were the dress rehearsal of the 1923 Treaty of Lausanne, which was the diplomatic death warrant on the Armenian question.

The Angora Accord and then the Lausanne Treaty illustrated a policy of renunciation – that of France in 1921 than that of the Allies in 1923.

The scope of this agreement, however little known, is decisive: it confers legitimacy on a revolutionary government that is not recognized internationally. Note that it is on this government that modern Turkey is based on.

Paris’ efforts to win the sympathy for the new Turkish power will not prove to be a winner. France did not gain anything in the exchange, in fact, quite the contrary!

The few vague promises of economic benefits contained in the Angora accord were never honored.

The privileged economic partnership with French companies promised by the Turks did not fully materialized.

On the other hand, the Turks were the winners: they obtained the departure of French troops from Cilicia and the end of war.

Prisoners were immediately released and amnestied too.

France renounced the disarmament of populations and gangs, as well as the constitution of a Turkish police force assisted by French officers. France was also humiliated by the chauvinist and revengeful attitude of the Turks who attacked her interests (schools, hospitals, French private property) throughout Turkish territory.

The failure of the Angora deal for France was evident barely a year after it was signed.

Not content with not honoring the terms of its agreement with France, Turkey created difficulties for it in the Syrian mandate.

In Damascus, the Turks were trying to exacerbate public opinion with propaganda, encouraging Syrians to revolt.

Franklin Bouillon did not obtain any guarantee of protection for minorities that France had encouraged to seek refuge in Cilicia after the Armenian genocide.

For the military in place, which denounced this departure, it was the abandonment of the “comrades in arms”, of these Armenian volunteers who had formed the Eastern Legion.

France and the Allies, however, pledged in May 1915 to punish the perpetrators of the genocide.

In 1920 and 1921, they once again had the mandate to protect Christian minorities, and yet these surviving populations found themselves delivered to the vindictiveness of their former executioners.

It was once again exodus or death that awaits them. 

The author wants to acknowledge the impact of the following book on his article: “Aurore Bruna, L’accord d’Angora de 1921, théâtre des relations franco-kémalistes et du destin de la Cilicie, Cerf, 2018.”

Tigrane Yegavian is a French-Armenian journalist. He is an   citizen and an expert at its Foreign Affairs Think Tank. 

https://greekcitytimes.com/2021/09/20/hundred-years-ago-france-let-go/