Category: Main Issues

  • NEO-CONS AND GENOCIDE-DENYING CORRUPT LACKEY POLITICIANS SHOULD BE HELD ACCOUNTABLE

    NEO-CONS AND GENOCIDE-DENYING CORRUPT LACKEY POLITICIANS SHOULD BE HELD ACCOUNTABLE

    appo1
    By Appo Jabarian

    USA Armenian Life Magazine
    March 24, 2010

    In early March, the political wrangling between the righteous and
    corrupt politicians in Washington before, during and after the voting
    by the House Foreign affairs committee sparked a series of articles
    critical of genocide-denying corrupt U.S. politicians both in the
    House and the White House.

    In a 12 March article in Huffington Post, Stephen Zunes wrote that
    failure to acknowledge the genocide “is a tragic affront to the
    rapidly dwindling number of genocide survivors as well as their
    descendents. It’s also a disservice to the many Turks who opposed
    the Ottoman Empire’s policies and tried to stop the genocide, as
    well as the growing number of Turks today who face imprisonment by
    their U.S.-backed regime for daring to publicly concede the crimes
    of their forebears. For example, Orhan Pamuk, the Turkish novelist
    who … was prosecuted and fled into exile to escape death threats
    after making a number of public references to the genocide.

    “Some opponents of the resolution argue that it is pointless for
    Congress to pass resolutions regarding historical events.

    Yet there were no such complaints regarding resolutions commemorating
    the Holocaust, nor are there normally complaints regarding the
    scores of dedicatory resolutions passed by Congress in recent years,”
    added Zunes.

    Opponents of the resolution also falsely argue that its passage by the
    Congress can harm the U.S.-Turkey relations. “The United States has
    done much greater harm in its relations with Turkey through policies
    far more significant than a symbolic resolution acknowledging a
    tragic historical period. The United States clandestinely backed
    an attempted military coup by right-wing Turkish officers in 2003,
    arming Iraqi and Iranian Kurds with close ties to Kurdish rebels in
    Turkey who have been responsible for the deaths of thousands of Turkish
    citizens. The United States also invaded neighboring Iraq. As a result,
    the percentage of Turks who view the United States positively declined
    from 52 percent to only 9 percent,” asserted Zunes.

    The Obama administration, also controlled by the neo-cons, insists that
    “this is a bad time to upset the Turkish government.

    However, it was also considered a ‘bad time’ to pass the resolution
    back in 2007, on the grounds that it not jeopardize U.S. access to
    Turkish bases as part of efforts to support the counter-insurgency
    war by U.S. occupation forces in Iraq. It was also considered a ‘bad
    time’ when a similar resolution was put forward in 2000 because the
    United States was using its bases in Turkey to patrol the ‘no fly
    zones’ in northern Iraq. And it was also considered a ‘bad time’
    in 1985 and 1987, when similar resolutions were put forward because
    U.S. bases in Turkey were considered important listening posts for
    monitoring the Soviet Union during the Cold War. For deniers of the
    Armenian genocide, it’s always a ‘bad time,’” he pointed out.

    In 1981, at a time when the neo-cons failed to control the White
    House, President Ronald Reagan brushed off strong diplomatic protests
    from Turkey and used the term genocide in relation to Armenians,
    yet U.S.-Turkish relations did not suffer.

    How come U.S. acknowledgement of the Jewish Holocaust does NOT upset
    the German government, which also hosts critical U.S. bases?

    “Obama is sending a message to future tyrants that they can commit
    genocide without acknowledgement by the world’s most powerful
    country.” In 1994, the Clinton administration “refused to use the word
    ‘genocide’ in the midst of the Rwandan government’s massacres of over
    half that country’s Tutsi population, a decision that contributed to
    the delay in deploying international peacekeeping forces until after
    the slaughter of 800,000 people. … The Obama administration’

    s
    position on the Armenian genocide isn’t simply about whether to
    commemorate a tragedy that took place 95 years ago. It’s about where
    we stand as a nation in facing up to the most horrible of crimes,”
    confronted Zunes.

    In a March 16 HuffingtonPost.com article, titled “Why the Armenian
    Genocide Matters,”, Writer of words and music, rider of waves, world
    traveler Robbie Gennet wrote: “You may ask yourself why the Armenian
    genocide currently matters, or more accurately, why Turkey is so
    resolute against it being recognized as such. One would think after
    almost a hundred years, an official apology for killing or displacing
    2 million Armenians would be a welcome and long overdue occasion for
    Turkey to make peace with Armenia
    . … Germany has made great steps to
    publicly acknowledge and profusely apologize for the Jewish Holocaust,
    even paying reparations, making holocaust denial and the display of
    symbols of Nazism a criminal offense and establishing a National
    Holocaust Memorial Museum in Berlin. But Turkey? They won’t even
    allow the US to label the Armenian genocide as such or acknowledge
    it in any way. Here is why: land.”

    She outlined: “Take a look at a map of pre-genocide Armenia here, here
    and here. What you will notice is that a huge chunk of what is now
    Turkey was then considered Armenia. If the 1915 Turkish actions were
    indeed recognized as a genocide, current day Armenia could potentially
    petition for the return of its land. Note that this may even include
    the area known as Cilicia, a separate but ethnically connected entity
    bordering the Mediterranean Sea that dates back to the Kingdom of
    Cilician Armenia in the early part of the second Millenium. These
    historically grounded lands could rightfully be considered Armenian if
    they could establish that they were unlawfully taken from them via the
    genocide.
    The evidence is there and so is the history. Armenia itself
    was officially named way back in 512 BC when it was annexed to Persia,
    while Cilicia was established as a principality it 1078. After years
    of struggle under Turkish, Kurdish and Mongol rule, the Ottoman Empire
    ruled Armenia from 1453-1829, after which the Russian Empire ruled
    through the rest of the 19th century. After the Genocide and WWI,
    what’s left of Armenia was annexed by Bolshevist Russia and became
    part of the Soviet Union from 1922-1991, after which Armenia declared
    its independence. But let’s back up for a moment for a glimpse at
    what happened during WWI”.

    She revealed: “In 1913, three so-called Young Turks took over the
    Turkish government via a coup with a goal of uniting all of the
    Turkic peoples in the region and creating a new Turkish empire called
    Turan with one language and one religion. They wanted to expand their
    borders eastward but standing in their way was historic Armenia. Hence,
    the Armenian Genocide.”

    Gennet asserted: “Judging from Turkey’s recalcitrance to discuss or
    acknowledge it, that stain may never go away. But that doesn’t mean
    it will ever be forgotten, no matter how much Turkey wishes it would
    fade into history. Though they would like to take advantage of the
    world’s collective amnesia, the internet has made it impossible to
    forget and erase” the facts of the genocide by Turkey. In answer to
    Adolph Hitler’s infamous quote, “Who still talks nowadays about the
    Armenians?” she rebutted: “We all do, Mr. Hitler, and long after your
    genocidal dreams have faded, long after the last survivors of those
    inflicted generations have passed, they will not be forgotten.”

    Turkish writer Lale Kemal interestingly wrote in Today’s Zaman:
    “Turkey has currently been paying the price of sweeping under the
    carpet its chronic and historic problems, such as the events of 1915,

    in which, it is claimed, over 1 million Armenians were subjected
    to a genocide campaign under the rule of the Ottoman Empire, the
    predecessor to modern Turkey.
    … The Armenian Diaspora has moved
    tobring this topic to the agenda of the Spanish Parliament after the
    regional Catalonian Parliament passed a bill recognizing the events
    as Armenian genocide. … The adoption of the genocide resolution
    by the Committee on Foreign Affairs has already set an encouraging
    example for Sweden to be followed by Britain.”

    Speaking of the Turkish-occupied Armenian lands, Kemal wrote: “But
    Ankara believes that adoption of such a resolution by the full US House
    would have a snowball effect, raising the danger that Armenians will
    initiate legal measures seeking land and compensation from Ankara.”

    While awareness of anti-Semitism is fortunately widespread enough
    to marginalize those who refuse to acknowledge the Holocaust,
    tolerance for anti-Armenian bigotry appears strong enough that it’s
    still considered politically acceptable to deny their genocide,”
    lamented Zunes.

    The U.S. congressional mid-term elections in November is the number
    one source for pre-occupation among the incumbent congressional
    candidates in battle-ground districts and states.

    Armenian Americans and their friends across the nation should move to
    politically punish the deniers. Denial of the crime of any genocide –
    from Turkish-occupied Western Armenia and Cilicia to Darfur, should
    be made politically unaffordable. The neo-cons and their lackeys do
    not understand the language of morality. But they readily comprehend
    the language of deterrence.

  • BOSTON : Turks & Armenians: What Really Happened

    BOSTON : Turks & Armenians: What Really Happened

    Press/Media Release

    Contact: Mr. Sefer Ozdemir

    Email: [email protected]

    Telephone: 617-833-1218

    There has been a great deal of confusing information published about what took place on April 24, 1915 in the region in which present day Turkey exists. Leading up to the events of 1915 various ethnic interest groups who were deceived by Russia, Britain and French and were made part of a historical plot to destroy the Ottoman empire have offered conflicting versions of the events.

    Mr Ozdemir who is hosting the lecture maintains that these powers bear overall responsibility for the deaths of Ermenians, Kurds as well as Turks who lived in the area together for thousands of years before and “will have to continue to live together in the future.” Mr Ozdemir further proposes that the parties who have suffered should join together and file for class action lawsuit against Russia, British and French governments.

    These governments and others to this date still employ same tactics (fueling hatred, pitting ethnic groups against another) in order to financially benefit from the suffering of innocent everyday people. “it is our moral responsibility to shed light to what really happened and the parties responsible” Mr. Ozdemir says.

    Dr. Turkkaya Ataov has researched and found documentain that will show that;

    • On April 24, 1915, 235 leaders out of 77,735 Armenians of Istanbul were moved to and placed under house arrest to the Anatolian city of Chankiri.  They were free to move about the city in the day time, and confined to house arrest at night.  All were eventually released.  One died due to natural causes.  Two were murdered by two hooligans, who were tried and executed for their crimes.
    • In May 1915, many Armenians in the eastern provinces of the Ottoman Empire were relocated from the war zones in response to the Armenian Revolt which reached its most destructive point in the Van Revolt of March 1915.  In June 1915, the relocation reached port cities in Western Anatolia, where Armenian rebels were importing and transporting arms and ammunitions to Armenian nationalists in the east.
    • In November 1915, the relocation ended.  The relocation was a military response to a military problem.  Having initially “slaughtered about 120,000 non-Armenians” in Eastern Anatolia, as recorded even by the British, and seized control of the Ottoman city of Van, with the backing of the invading Russians, the Armenians posed a great military danger to the 3rd, 4th, and the 6th Ottoman armies, as well as to the Ottoman civilian Muslim and Jewish populations
    • There is absolutely no similarity between the Armenian case and the Holocaust, as Jews never engaged in an armed revolt to create a Jewish state in Germany.  To equate the Armenian case with genocide, is to dilute the definition of genocide and understate the suffering of the Jews.
    • Whether the events of 1915 constitute genocide is not a political question, where truth may be sacrificed for election purposes at Congressional district levels.  History and jurisprudence have their own methodologies that should be respected by all.

    In a national speaking tour, Prof. Dr. Turkkaya, a highly respected historian and professor will give a lecture on the political landscape and events of April 24, 1915 which will serve to enlighten the general public and especially those who receive communications from organizations whose agendas include disruption of peaceful relations and bridge building.

    Details of this lecture are included herein.

    Prof. Dr. Turkaya Ataov
    Capital Forum and National Speakers Bureau Program

    US-Canada Lecture Series

    Turks & Armenians: What Really Happened

    on April 24, 1915

    Saturday, March 27, 2010 –

    Boston 3:00-5:00pm

    15 Boston Street Courtyard, Andrew Square
    South Boston , 02127
    Organized by TurkBirDev Association
    Information: 617.833.1218

    Biographical Sketch of  Prof. Dr. Turkkaya Ataov

    Türkkaya Ataöv is Professor Emeritus in International Relations at Ankara University, Turkey. He did his graduate work in the United States, where he received two M.A.s (NYU & Syracuse Univ. ) and a Ph.D. (1959, Syracuse U., NY ). He taught at Ankara Univ. for more than four decades and lectured in several American, British, Russian, German, Dutch, Indian, Chinese, Middle Eastern, African and Australian universities. He is the author of close to 140 books (most of which have been in foreign languages and printed in Europe or in the

    Americas), a few hundred academic treaties, and a few thousand newspaper articles. His writings have been translated into 20 languages and appeared in 17 European, 13 Asian, 5 African, and 3 American states and Australia. He was elected to central executive positions of UN-related international organizations, dealing with racial discrimination, human rights, terrorism, nuclear war, and exchange of prisoners of war.

    Professor Ataöv published 80 books or booklets on the Armenian issue, was invited (as “witness of authority”) by the Paris court to the two (1984 & 1985) trials of Armenian terrorists, participated in the UN (1985) Geneva meetings of the Human Rights Commission on the Genocide Convention, and partook in several meetings of the European Parliament that dealt with the Armenian issue.

    Professor Ataöv received 17 academic awards or medals in recognition of his published works and activities. They include two (Italian and Federal Yugoslavian) presidential medals, two UN-affiliated awards, and several honorary doctorates and academic citations.

  • More than 100 protesters took to the streets of Istanbul on Friday, March 19, 10

    More than 100 protesters took to the streets of Istanbul on Friday, March 19, 10

    demonsration against Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Istiklal Avenue in Istanbul on March 19, 2010

    Ermeni forumlarindan ulasan bilgiler:

    Turks Forum <[email protected]>


    A demonsrator holds a placard reading ”You are not alone” during a demonsration against Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Istiklal Avenue in Istanbul on March 19, 2010. Protestors took the streets accusing Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan of racism over his threat to deport illegal Armenian workers in a row over the recognition of Armenian claims of a genocide by Ottoman Turks.
    Photograph by:
    Bulent Kilic, AFP/Getty Images

    . com/news/ Turks+protest+ Armenian+ deportation+ threat/2703368/ story.html
    tar.com/news/ Turks+protest+ Armenian+ deportation+ threat/2703368/ story.html
    http://rawstory. com/news/ afp/More_ than_100_ protest_Turkish_ PM_s__03192010. html

    Agence France-Presse  – March 19, 2010 4:03 PM

    A demonsrator (C) holds up a placard that reads, “You are not alone”‘ during a demonsration on Istiklal Avenue, in Istanbul. More than 100 protestors took to the streets of Istanbul Friday, accusing Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan of racism over his threat to deport illegal Armenian workers.
    e.ca/Article. aspx?ID=77481&L=en


    ISTANBUL – More than 100 protesters took to the streets of Istanbul Friday, accusing Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan of racism over his threat to deport illegal Armenian workers.

    Between 100-150 demonstrators marched along the Istiklal Avenue, the main commercial street on the European side of the city, carrying banners with the inscription “You are not Alone” in Turkish, English, Armenian and Kurdish, an AFP photographer said.

    “Tayyip should be deported! A world without nations, borders and classes,” chanted the demonstrators gathered at the call of a non-governmental organization campaigning for immigrants’ rights.

    A statement, distributed to the press, accused Erdogan of treating Armenian immigrants as a pawn in Ankara’s protests against some foreign parliament’s recognition of Armenian claims of genocide by Ottoman Turks.

    “We strongly condemn Erdogan . . . and those who share his racist and discriminatory mentality,” the statement added.

    The demonstration ended peacefully.

    In comments criticized at home and abroad, Erdogan said his government could expel thousands of illegal Armenian workers if foreign parliaments continue to pass votes branding the World War I-era massacres of Armenians as genocide.

    Resolutions recently voted to that effect in the United States and Sweden “adversely affect our sincere attitude” towards illegal Armenians, Erdogan told the BBC Turkish service on Tuesday.

    “There are 170,000 Armenians in my country. Of these, 70,000 are citizens, but we are tolerating the remaining 100,000 . . . If necessary, I may have to tell them to go back to their country . . . I am not obliged to keep them here,” he charged.

    The exact number of illegal Armenians in Turkey are unknown, but researchers say there are between 10,000 to 20,000 of them, adding that Turkish authorities tend to inflate the figures to put pressure on Armenia.

    Armenians say up to 1.5 million of their kin perished in a systematic extermination campaign during 1915-1918 as the Ottoman Empire fell apart.Turkey categorically reject the genocide label and argues that the toll is grossly inflated.

  • ‘Turkey has no moral right to impose any conditions,’ Says Sarkisian

    ‘Turkey has no moral right to impose any conditions,’ Says Sarkisian

    By Asbarez Staff

    YEREVAN—President Serzh Sarkisian Friday, in an interview with Euronews, said Turkey had no moral right to blame Armenia for anything, nor does it have a right to impose any conditions on Armenia. Sarkisian also voiced official Yerevan’s concerns regarding the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict resolution process.

    The transcript of the interview with Euronews’ Laura Davidescu was obtained as Asbarez was going to press. We present the transcript in its entirety below:


    Euronews: President Sarkisian, with 23 votes in favour of the resolution and 22 against, the Foreign Affairs Committee of the United States’ House of Representatives has decided to declare that the 1915 massacre of over one million Armenians by the Ottoman Turks was genocide. Why do you think the committee has voted the resolution now?


    President Serzh Sarkisian: Discussions on the recognition of the Armenian genocide are not new in the political life of the United States of America.
    Several times at least in the past 10 years, the Foreign Affairs Committee of the House of Representatives has tried to vote on the resolution.
    Forty-two states in the US have recognized the events as genocide, so the resolution on the 4th of March is neither a surprise nor a new thing for us.


    Euronews: Do you think of any particular reason for them voting it now, in this particular context of Turkish-Armenian reconciliation?


    Sarkisian: We are currently in discussions with Turkey on the issue of re-establishing our relations. This should be done without any preconditions, and I think that Turkey has no moral right to blame us about anything or to impose any conditions. Re-establishing relations without preconditions means we are not under any obligations to stay away from any of the possible topics.

    Let’s say that, by some miracle, the Turkish Parliament ratifies the protocols, the Armenian Parliament does the same, we re-establish our relations and a third country, which is against us re-establishing our relations, on purpose takes up the genocide issue. Will the Turks, therefore, use this as a pretext and break off relations?


    Euronews: If Armenia’s major problems now are unemployment, economic isolation and long- running disputes with Turkey and Azerbaijan, can these problems be more easily solved now?


    Sarkisian: Our difficulties with Turkey did not begin yesterday. For 17 years, Turkey has kept the Armenian border under blockade. Was there such a resolution 17 years ago? We fully understand that Turkey is a big country — in terms of population, territory and power… vastly bigger than Armenia. And if we lived apart from each other we would [also] understand. But since Armenia and Turkey are part of the international community, and the United States, France and the European Union are too, then the international community must assess the developments and situations as they unfold.


    Euronews: I would go back to the recognition of the Armenian genocide: If this issue is of paramount concern for Armenians both at home and in the Diaspora, could you please tell us why the Yerevan State University awarded an honorary degree to the Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in 2007? The Iranian president denies the Holocaust.


    Sarkisian: You know, we cannot oblige our neighbours to think as we do. One should not narrow things down to a single person. To bestow upon the leader of a country an honorific reward signifies an expression of gratitude and recognition towards the people of that country. The Iranians have been our neighbours for centuries and they are very important to us.


    Euronews: Would you call the Yerevan state university’s decision Armenian “realpolitik”?


    Sarkisian: I would consider it as a particular approach by the State University of Yerevan towards a particular issue, an approach quite current in Europe and in the democratically developed countries of the world.


    Euronews: You are quoted as having said in London, in February, that Nagorno Karabakh was never a part of independent Azerbaijan. Well, the international community seems to have another opinion, another assessment.


    Sarkisian: The international community does not have a different vision. History is well-known… Nagorno Karabakh was not a part of independent Azerbaijan. It was the Caucasus Bureau of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union which attached Nagorno Karabakh to Azerbaijan.

    Why did the international community acclaim the collapse of the Soviet Union and not consider Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan part and parcel of the Soviet Union? — still saying Karabakh is an integral part of Azerbaidjan? It is not logical, is it?


    Euronews: What kind of compromises are you willing to make in order to achieve a peaceful resolution of this conflict?


    Sarkisian: One cannot eliminate the consequences of this conflict without addressing its causes. And when speaking about the causes… we talk about recognising the people of Nagorno Karabakh’s right of self determination… the recognition of this right and its implementation. The other problems will be solved rapidly after that.

    The Armenian parts of this conflict, Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh, are profoundly interested in a swift resolution of this conflict. But a sustainable resolution that would allow for peace and security in the region, as opposed to giving Azerbaijan Nagorno Karabakh, which would spell the end of its existence.


    Euronews: Azerbaijan states very clearly that it will never ever accept Nagorno Karabakh as an independent entity. They will never let it go.


    Sarkisian: What does the international community propose to us? To solve this conflict on the basis of three principles of international law: firstly, self-determination; secondly, territorial integrity; and thirdly, the non-use of force. I propose, through you, the media, to appeal to Azerbaijan to sign an agreement not to use force. This would instill trust in the Armenian people of Karabakh and Armenia. And under these conditions of trust we would begin the negotiations for a settlement. We Armenians know very well what Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity means. We’ve talked about it openly several times. The Azerbaijanis… can they say what the right of self-determination means for the people of Nagorno Karabakh?

    When we issue joint declarations about the right of self-determination, Azerbaijan is not talking about the Armenian people’s right to self-determination but of the right of the main player in the conflict… the people of Nagorno Karabakh.

  • CLINTON: TURKEY AND ARMENIA’S PAST SHOULD BE STUDIED BY HISTORIANS’ COMMITTEE

    CLINTON: TURKEY AND ARMENIA’S PAST SHOULD BE STUDIED BY HISTORIANS’ COMMITTEE

    23 March 2010

    U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said that so called Armenian genocide is not forgotten but it is very important that Turkey and Armenia are making joint efforts to solve the problem. Stressing that establishment of a joint historians committee is the right thing to do, Clinton said that Turkey and Armenia are executing joint work for establishment of the commission.
    In an interview with Russian 1 channel, Clinton said, “I do not think the “genocide” is forgotton. But the important thing is that Turkey and Armenia are making joint efforts.”
    Reminding that she was present at the signing ceremony of Zurich protocols towards normalization of relations between Turkey and Armenia, Clinton said, “One of these protocols provides for the establishment of a committee of historians to deal with historical issues. I believe it is the right approach when Turkey and Armenia focus on all these. The committee is currently on the process of establishment. It is not possible to change the past but we can make efforts for a better future”.

    TARİH KOMİSYONUNUN LAFI BİLE ERMENİLERİ ÇILDIRTTI


    Hürriyet
    24 Mart 2010

    Türkiye ile Ermenistan arasındaki protokoller kapsamında 1915 olaylarını araştırmak üzere kurulacak tarih komisyonu için çalışmaların başladığı yönündeki açıklamaya Erivan çok sert tepki gösterdi.

    Üstelik bu beklenmedik açıklama çok üst düzey bir yerden, ABD Dışişleri Bakanı Hillary Clinton’dan geldi. Clinton, bir Rus televizyonuna yaptığı açıklamada, Türkiye ile Ermenistan’ın komisyonu kurmak için çalıştıklarını söyledi.

    ABD Dışişleri Bakanlığı’nın internet sitesinde yer alan konuşma dökümüne göre, Clinton, bir soru üzerine, “(Türkiye-Ermenistan arasında imzalanan) bu protokollerde, iki ülke arasında geçmişin parçası olan bütün meseleleri inceleyecek bir tarih komisyonunun kurulması da yer alıyor” dedi.

    GAF MI YAPTI?

    Bu değerlendirmenin üzerine Clinton’a “Peki bu komisyon şu anda mevcut mu?” sorusu yöneltildi. Clinton’ın Ermenilerin sert tepkisini çeken açıklaması da bu soruya cevaben geldi:

    “Şu anda oluşturmak için üzerinde çalışıyorlar.”

    Bu beklenmedik açıklamanın üzerine söyleşiyi yapan Vladimir Pozner, “Üzerinde çalışıyorlar yani” diye yorum yapınca, Clinton da “Evet” yanıtını verdi.

    Clinton’ın bir gaf mı yaptığı yoksa perde arkasında tarih komisyonuyla ilgili çalışmaların başladığı konusu ise henüz netlik kazanmadı.

    ERMENİSTAN AYAKLANDI

    Ermenistan yönetimi, protokoller henüz yürürlüğe girmeden komisyonla ilgili çalışmaların yapıldığı yönündeki bu açıklamaya sert tepki gösterdi.

    Doğan Haber Ajansı’na göre, Ermenistan Dışişleri Sözcüsü Tigran Balayan, dün Clinton’ın sözleri üzerine bir açıklama yaptı.

    Balayan, “Protokoller Türk ve Ermenistan meclislerinde onaylanmadan böyle bir komisyon söz konusu değil” dedi.

    Balayan ayrıca, böyle bir komisyonda Ermenistan soykırımının tartışma konusu yapılmayacağını savunarak, “Ermenistan ne bunu ne de soykırımın gerçek olup olmadığını tartışma konusu yapmayacaktır” dedi.

    EN HASSAS KONU

    Tarih komisyonu, her iki taraf için de en hassas konuyu oluşturuyor. Komisyon önerisini gündeme getiren Türkiye, 1915 olaylarının araştırılmasını istiyor.

    Bu nedenle de komisyon konusunun protokollere girmesi Türkiye açısından önemli bir kazanım olarak görülüyor.

    Ancak Ermenistan için 1915 olaylarının ne olduğunun tartışılması bile söz konusu değil. Gerek Ermeni yönetimi gerekse de Ermeni halkı, 1915’in tartışma konusu bile yapılmayacağını, yaşananların “soykırım” olduğunu belirtiyor.

    Son olarak Ermenistan Anayasa Mahkemesi de protokollerin bağımsızlık deklarasyonuna aykırı bir şekilde uygulanamayacağına hükmetti.

    Deklarasyonda, Ermenistan devletinin “soykırım” iddialarının uluslararası alanda tanıtılması için çalışması gerektiği belirtiliyor.

  • IMPLICATIONS OF THE FAILED TURKISH-ARMENIAN NORMALIZATION PROCESS

    IMPLICATIONS OF THE FAILED TURKISH-ARMENIAN NORMALIZATION PROCESS

    Turkey Analyst,
    vol. 3 no. 5
    15 March 2010

    Svante E. Cornell

    In spite of great hopes and much foreign pressure, the Turkish-Armenian reconciliation process can be said to have failed to bring about its intended result. Under current circumstances, the likelihood of the ratification of the Protocols signed in August 2009 is close to nil, barring some major turn of events. It is therefore time to reflect on the reasons that the process failed; and the implications for Turkey and the wider region. The process itself is in fact illustrative of the erroneous assumptions that Western political leaders appear to have harbored about regional realities.

    BACKGROUND: The Turkish-Armenian reconciliation process got serious on the inter-governmental level in 2008. (See Turkey Analyst, 10 April 2009 for background) Following Turkish President Abdullah Gül’s historic visit to Yerevan, Swiss mediation helped produce Protocols that would lead to the establishment of diplomatic relations and the opening of the common border. The Protocols, originally intended for signing in April 2009, were nevertheless not endorsed formally until August that year.

    Enormous external pressure – primarily from the White House – appears to have been the main reason that the Turkish and Armenian Foreign Ministers signed the Protocols. The presence at the signing ceremony of U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, and EU Foreign Policy Chief Javier Solana was indicative of the level of pressure on Ankara and Yerevan. Yet even then, the process almost broke down at the last minute, as differences on the ceremony itself led to a three hour long delay, which was only solved by shelving the intended declarations of the two signatories.

    This very delay suggested the lack of enthusiasm that had already begun to grip the Turkish and Armenian governments. Indeed, in the months that followed, it is difficult to avoid the perception that both governments – the Turkish perhaps slightly more than the Armenian – took steps to distance themselves from a process that neither felt comfortable with. In Yerevan, while the government asked the Constitutional Court for an interpretation, leading parliamentarians spoke of the need for an “exit strategy.” In Ankara, the government handed the Protocols to the parliament, but appeared perfectly happy to have it languish there rather than bring them to a vote of approval. As time passed, mutual incriminations ensued: Ankara seemed to seize on the Armenian Constitutional Court’s interpretations of the Protocols as an excuse to delay the process, while Yerevan threatened to shelve it entirely.

    By the spring of 2010, the process was hanging by a thread. Then came the passage (by a single vote’s margin) of a bill to recognize the 1915 massacres of Armenians as Genocide in the Foreign Affairs Committee of the U.S. House of Representatives. As in previous years that this had happened, visceral reactions ensued in Turkey, including the recall of the Turkish Ambassador to Washington. More unexpected was the introduction and passage of a similar bill in the Swedish Parliament. That bill also passed by a single vote’s margin. In fact, both the ruling coalition government and the leadership of the main opposition Social Democratic Party were opposed to the bill. But because it had been pushed through as a binding resolution at the Social Democratic Party’s yearly Congress, and because four members of the ruling parties split ranks, it eventually passed. Taken together, these two resolutions stirred up emotions in the region – particularly in Turkey – adding what may have been the last two nails in the coffin of the Turkish-Armenian reconciliation process.

    IMPLICATIONS: Time has thus come to evaluate why this process went wrong, and what implications are likely to emerge from this failure. The deeply negative effect of foreign parliaments’ meddling in historical truths exacerbated the difficulties in the process and may have helped kill it – if nothing else, given Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s reaction to threaten to expel 100,000 Armenian migrant workers living in Turkey. (In fact, the real number  is believed to be lower.) But as deplorable as the role of the U.S. House of Representatives and the Swedish Parliament may have been, they were not the root causes of the failure of the normalization process.

    One key reason, however, was that the process was allowed to proceed on the basis of divergent and erroneous assumptions. First, the tragedy of 1915 was a main cause of the discord between the two countries, and intimately connected with the normalization process. Ankara, rejecting the label of genocide, interpreted the Protocols as having moved that issue to a commission of historians to be created following ratification. Perhaps naively, Turkish leaders therefore expected the Diaspora Armenian push for genocide recognition to be eased – an unlikely prospect given Yerevan’s limited influence on the Diaspora, and the latter’s deep misgivings about the Protocols. But as the Armenian Constitutional Court made clear, Armenia interpreted the Protocols as in no way hindering the push for international recognition. As Armenian and allied groups kept pushing for recognition in both the U.S. and Europe, it became clear that the normalization process would not even temporarily relieve Turkey of that headache.

    The Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict posed an even larger problem – but also one whose importance the Western powers fundamentally misunderstood. Turkey had originally closed its border with Armenia as a result of the Armenian occupation of the Azerbaijani province of Kelbajar – one of seven districts outside of the Armenian-populated enclave of Nagorno-Karabach that Armenian forces occupied and ethnically cleansed during the war. To most Turks, therefore, some form of progress in the Armenian-Azerbaijani negotiations was a prerequisite for opening the border. In fact, Turkish leaders appear to have embarked on the process in the belief – entertained by American and Russian diplomats – that there was indeed a serious prospect for a breakthrough in the Armenian-Azerbaijani talks. As the AKP had not been closely involved in the conflicts in Caucasus prior to 2008, its leaders overlooked the fact that such imminent breakthroughs in the negotiations had been predicted frequently during the past fifteen years, without results. In other words, it was clear from the AKP leadership’s moves that it gambled on a breakthrough in negotiations that was never to be. (See Turkey Analyst, 14 September 2009 issue for background)

    If the Turkish government miscalculated, the West’s behavior was unrealistic. Egged on by NGOs such as the International Crisis Group, American and European leaders urged Ankara to de-link the Turkish-Armenian normalization process from the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict. Positive ties between Turkey and Armenia, they argued, would lead Armenia to feel more secure, thereby more likely to make difficult concessions over Nagorno-Karabakh. Yet de-linking the two conflicts was both politically and practically impossible.

    To begin with, the Western logic did not play out. Having signed the Protocols, Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian lost a nationalist coalition partner and a good deal of domestic public support. Sarkisian thus moved to harden rather than soften Armenia’s negotiating stance in talks with Azerbaijan, putting those talks in peril.

    Secondly, whether one liked it or not, de-linking Turkish-Armenian ties from the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict was impossible in the Turkish domestic context. This has often been blamed on Azerbaijan’s supposed “lobbying” in Turkey. Reality is much simpler: most of the Turkish population and a significant share of the AKP voters and politicians (though not the top leadership) are strongly wedded to Turkic solidarity. Thus, the AKP leadership faced vehement nationalist opposition from within the party (not simply the nationalist opposition) to ratifying the Protocols without some progress on the Karabakh conflict. Given the close linguistic ties between Turkey and Azerbaijan, the AKP leadership knew that a single camera crew, filming from Azerbaijani refugee camps to which 800,000 people had been confined by Armenian conquests, could generate a public outcry against the government should it open the border without Armenian concessions. Rather than understanding this reality and putting serious efforts behind the diplomatic endeavors on Nagorno-Karabakh, the Western powers pushed harder for Ankara to de-link the two processes.

    Stuck in the Mountains of Karabakh?

    This was all the more remarkable given the recent history of the South Caucasus. Indeed, if there was one lesson to be learned from the Russian-Georgian war, it was that the conflicts in the Caucasus were not “frozen”. They were dynamic and dangerous processes that the West had willfully ignored, thereby contributing to allowing the tensions between Russia and Georgia to spiral out of control. The Russian-Georgian war having rocked the foundations of the European security structure, the lessons for Nagorno-Karabakh were clear: left to its own devices, the conflict was at great risk of re-erupting, an event that could pull in regional powers including Russia, Iran and Turkey. Substantial revamping of efforts to resolve that conflict was in order, but the West instead decided to push it even deeper into the “freezer”.

     In general terms, this failure  may have left the region in an even more precarious position than it was before its inception. Turkish and American policies have alienated Azerbaijan – damaging Western interests in that crucial country and in the broader Caspian region. The energy partnership between Turkey, Georgia and Azerbaijan – which formed the cornerstone of Western policies toward the region since the Clinton Administration’s times – is in tatters, as seen in the difficulties Baku and Ankara are experiencing in achieving a transit agreement for Azerbaijani gas sales to Europe. Turkey’s ties with Armenia have also been greatly damaged. It remains unclear if the bilateral relationship can muddle along, or whether it will revert to pre-2008 levels.

    Turkey’s relations with the U.S. and Russia have also suffered. With Washington, Ankara is frustrated with the Obama administration’s  refusal to seriously try to achieve progress on Nagorno-Karabakh, and especially with its failure to prevent the genocide resolution passing in the House Foreign Relations Committee. With Moscow, Ankara had hoped for support in resolving the Karabakh conundrum; but as senior Turkish officials have stated, Moscow instead grew unhelpful, seconding the American view that the two processes should not be linked. This in turn led Ankara to doubt whether Moscow really wanted either of the two processes to see progress. Finally, Armenia’s weakened leadership is now highly unlikely to make concessions on Karabakh in the near future.

    CONCLUSIONS: What lessons does the failure of the Turkish-Armenian normalization process hold for the future? Several are in order. First, the resilience of nationalist sentiment and traditional allegiances – such as that between Turkey and Azerbaijan –should not be underestimated. Second, Western and in particular American leaders cannot expect to ignore regional realities and strong-arm local leaders into compliance with their agendas without taking a long-term and serious interest in the deeper problems of the region.

    Third, the unresolved conflicts of the Caucasus have once more showed their powerful role as an impediment to progress and stability in the entire wider Black Sea region. For a decade and a half, the Western powers have sought to achieve policy goals in the region by willfully circumnavigating these conflicts, rather than seriously working to resolve them. Ironically, relatively limited progress toward a resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict would likely have sufficed to allow the Turkish-Armenian reconciliation process to go forward. Instead, that conflict was the key element that derailed the process.

    In the final analysis, the failure of the Turkish-Armenian reconciliation process has helped reiterate one useful conclusion. Should Western leaders truthfully seek to stabilize the Wider Black Sea region, they should know the place to start: A serious and long-term engagement to resolve rather than to freeze the region’s conflicts.

    Svante E. Cornell is Research Director of the Central Asia-Caucasus Institute & Silk Road Studies Program Joint Center.

    © Central Asia-Caucasus Institute & Silk Road Studies Program Joint Center, 2010. This article may be reprinted provided that the following sentence be included: “This article was first published in the Turkey Analyst (www.turkeyanalyst.org), a biweekly publication of the Central Asia-Caucasus Institute & Silk Road Studies Program Joint Center”.