Category: Main Issues

  • Armenian Genocide Vote Threatens US-Turkish Ties at Key Moment

    Armenian Genocide Vote Threatens US-Turkish Ties at Key Moment

    Thursday’s vote by a Congressional committee condemning the deaths of up to 1.5 million Armenians during World War I as “genocide” is almost certain to complicate U.S. ties with Turkey, a long-time strategic ally and increasingly influential player in the Middle East and central and southwest Asia.

    The 23-22 vote by the Foreign Affairs Committee of the House of Representatives prompted the immediate recall of Turkey’s ambassador here and an announcement by Ankara that ratification of a pending U.S.-backed treaty with Armenia will be frozen.

    And the government of Recep Tayyip Erdogan, which sent several senior Turkish lawmakers and hired a high-priced public relations firm, as well as a former House speaker, to lobby against the resolution, is likely to take much stronger measures if it reaches the House floor later this year, according to both U.S. and Turkish analysts.

    “We are seriously concerned that the adoption of this draft resolution …will harm Turkey-U.S. relations and impede the efforts for the normalization of Turkey-Armenia relations,” the Turkish embassy said in a release after the vote.

    “This decision, which could adversely affect our cooperation on a wide common agenda with the United States, also regrettably attests to a lack of strategic vision,” it added.

    After maintaining silence about the resolution for several weeks, the administration of President Barack Obama came out against it just hours before the vote – apparently too late to affect the final outcome, according to a number of lawmakers.

    “We do not believe that the full Congress will or should vote on that resolution and we have made that clear to all the parties involved,” Clinton said during a press conference in San Jose, Costa Rica, Thursday morning in the administration’s first official statement on the issue.

    The administration, which needs Turkey’s support on a slew of key issues, ranging from Arab-Israeli peace to Iran and Afghanistan, is likely to lobby hard against any effort by lawmakers to bring the resolution to the floor, despite the fact that both Obama and Clinton promised to support some version of it during their 2008 presidential primary campaigns.

    At least half a million U.S. citizens, many of them concentrated in the electorally powerful state of California, claim Armenian ancestry.

    The Armenian-American community, which is among the wealthiest and best organized of the many U.S. ethnic minorities, has long sought recognition of the 1915 death toll as a genocide. In 1975 and again in 1984, it succeeded in getting such resolutions passed by the House, although never in the Senate.

    In 2007, the Foreign Affairs committee approved a similar “genocide” resolution. However, it was never referred to the floor of the House due to intense opposition by the administration of President George W. Bush backed by the powerful “Israel Lobby,” which has frequently intervened in Congress on behalf since the late 1980s when Ankara and Israel began building a strategic alliance.

    But Israeli-Turkish ties have become increasingly strained in recent years, particularly since Israel’s “Cast Lead” military campaign in Gaza, which Erdogan strongly denounced in a heated exchange with Israeli President Shimon Peres at the World Economic Forum in late January last year, just days after the offensive had ended.

    A number of subsequent incidents, most recently the apparently deliberate televised humiliation in January by Israel’s deputy foreign minister of Ankara’s ambassador in Tel Aviv, have added to the strains.

    Indeed, some analysts here and in Turkey suggested that the resolution’s passage was due as much to the Israel Lobby’s failure to oppose it, as to the Obama administration’s delay in coming out against it. Several key lawmakers who are considered close to the Lobby, notably Gary Ackerman, Brad Sherman, and committee chair Howard Berman, spoke in favor of its approval.

    “In the past, the pro-Israel community has lobbied hard against previous attempts to pass similar resolutions, citing warnings from Turkish officials that it could harm the alliance not only with the United States but with Israel…,” noted the Jewish Telegraphic Agency (JTA) Friday.

    “In the last year or so, however, officials of American pro-Israel groups have said that while they will not support new resolutions, they will no longer oppose them, citing Turkey’s heightened rhetorical attacks on Israel and a flourishing of outright anti-Semitism the government has done little to stem,” it asserted.

    The resolution, which was introduced by a California Democrat, calls on the president to use the annual presidential statement on the 1915 mass deaths next month to “accurately characterize the systematic and deliberate annihilation of 1,500,000 Armenians as genocide.”

    Turkey has argued that the Armenian deaths were a great tragedy played out under the chaotic conditions of World War I when the collapsing Ottoman Empire was under attack on many fronts, including internally in the form of a Russian-backed Armenian insurgency.

    Unlike most of its predecessors, the Erdogan government has indicated a willingness to review the events of that time, possibly even in cooperation with Armenia with which it agreed only last September to establish diplomatic relations and re-open borders that have been closed since 1993.

    It was hoped that that agreement, which was mediated by Switzerland with strong backing from Washington, would be quickly ratified by both countries and lead to the resolution of the territorial dispute between Armenia and oil-rich Azerbaijan over the Armenian enclave of Nagorno Karabakh.

    Despite U.S. urging – most recently in a conversation between Obama and Turkish President Abdullah Gul Wednesday – Erdogan has insisted that implementation of the treaty is dependent on progress in resolving the territorial dispute. Ankara’s decision to freeze the ratification process in the wake of Thursday’s committee vote here could deal a lethal blow to the treaty’s prospects.

    In the four years since the committee last voted out a genocide resolution, Turkey’s strategic importance to Washington has significantly increased.

    In addition to having the largest army among the European members of NATO and having recently increased its troop contribution to U.S.-led forces in Afghanistan, Turkey continues to permit the U.S. access to key military bases on its territory, provides critical supply routes to Iraq, and acts as an increasingly important transit route – bypassing both Russia and Iran – for Caspian and Central Asian oil and gas.

    Ankara’s influence and involvement in the Arab world, particularly in Iraq and Syria, have grown sharply in recent years, and its friendly ties with Iran have positioned itself as a potential mediator between Tehran and the West.

    Turkey has thus far resisted U.S. pressure to host a radar base that would be part of larger regional defense network designed to intercept Iranian missiles and to vote for stronger economic sanctions against Tehran on the U.N. Security Council, of which it is a member.

    Some sectors, particularly those most closely associated with Israel here, have become increasingly concerned about Turkey’s growing orientation toward the Muslim world under Erdogan, who heads the Islamist Justice and Development Party (AKP), in both its foreign and domestic policies.

    Indeed, neoconservatives, whose views often reflect those of Israel’s Likud Party, have been attacking Erdogan and the AKP with growing fervor in recent months, accusing them of a systematic effort to weaken Turkey’s traditionally secular institutions, notably the once-dominant armed forces.

    In a column coincidentally published Friday by the neoconservative Wall Street Journal, Soner Cagaptay, a Turkish-born specialist at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy (WINEP), accused Erdogan of transforming Turkey into a “police state.”

    At the same time, hard-line neo-conservatives, such as the Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs (JINSA) and the Journal’s editorial board, opposed the genocide resolution precisely because of fears that it will serve only to further poison bilateral relations with a country whose geo-strategic importance to Washington and its Israeli ally is simply too great.

    www.antiwar.com

  • JEWISH-ARMENIAN COALITION LAUNCHES ARMENIAN GENOCIDE RECOGNITION EFFORT

    JEWISH-ARMENIAN COALITION LAUNCHES ARMENIAN GENOCIDE RECOGNITION EFFORT

    By Laura Boghosian and Howard Jaffe, Guest Commentary

    Watertown TAB & Press

    March 4 2010
    MA

    WATERTOWN — In 2007, Massachusetts residents learned that the
    Anti-Defamation League was denying the Armenian Genocide and lobbying
    for the Turkish government to prevent Congressional recognition of
    this crime against humanity. Fourteen communities, led by Watertown,
    as well as the Massachusetts Municipal Association, subsequently
    withdrew from the ADL’s No Place for Hate program in protest.

    Many in the Jewish community were shocked that the ADL and other
    national Jewish organizations would actively work to deny another
    people’s genocide. Members of Lexington’s Temple Isaiah and Boston’s
    Temple Israel decided to act, and with Boston-area Armenians, formed
    the Coalition to Recognize the Armenian Genocide.

    Coalition members cite the double standard of the Holocaust being
    universally recognized, while affirmation of the Armenian Genocide
    is subordinated to politics. To combat this injustice, the coalition
    has launched an online petition urging Congress and President Obama
    to recognize the Armenian Genocide.

    As a presidential candidate, Barack Obama proclaimed “a principled
    commitment to commemorating and ending genocide” that “starts with
    acknowledging the tragic instances of genocide in world history,”
    pledging, “As President, I will recognize the Armenian Genocide.” He
    reiterated the Armenian Genocide is “a widely documented fact
    supported by an overwhelming body of historical evidence. The facts
    are undeniable. An official policy that calls on diplomats to distort
    the historical facts is an untenable policy.”

    Yet President Obama, like those before him, acquiesced to Turkish
    threats and refused to employ the word “genocide” in his remarks
    last April 24, the day on which Armenians worldwide commemorate the
    victims. By appeasing the Turkish government, which orchestrates
    a multimillion-dollar campaign of denial, the United States makes
    itself complicit in this last stage of genocide.

    Some may view the Armenian Genocide as ancient history and wonder
    why it is so vital to affirm the historical record. Genocide denial
    endangers all humanity, as it fuels ongoing genocide and emboldens
    those who would commit future mass murders. The International
    Association of Genocide Scholars considers the Armenian Genocide the
    template for all the 20th-century genocides that followed. Indeed,
    on the eve of the Holocaust, Adolph Hitler observed, “Who, after all,
    speaks today of the annihilation of the Armenians?”

    Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir, under indictment by the
    International Criminal Court for atrocities in Darfur, has allied
    himself with Turkey, which, in turn, supplies him with weapons and
    denies Sudan is committing genocide. This cycle of genocide must
    be stopped!

    The House Foreign Affairs Committee will vote on a bill to recognize
    the Armenian Genocide in early March; if passed, it will advance to
    the full House. Turkey and its apologists are hard at work to prevent
    this resolution from passing. Sadly, the ADL is still speaking out
    against Congressional acknowledgment of the Armenian Genocide, and
    is, instead, advocating Turkey’s call for a historical commission to
    study the events. Seven former IAGS presidents, including Helen Fein,
    Israel Charny and Gregory Stanton, have condemned this proposal as
    “a political sleight of hand designed to deny” the Armenian Genocide.

    As citizens, we must ensure that universal human rights and historical
    truth guide American foreign policy. How we act defines us as a
    people. If we insist that other nations uphold human rights, we must
    do so as well. And we must be consistent and not sacrifice the rights
    of some for political expediency.

    Forty-three U.S. states and numerous countries and international bodies
    have affirmed the Armenian Genocide. The time is long overdue for
    the United States government to join them. Please sign our petition
    calling for U.S. recognition of the Armenian Genocide, and ask your
    family and friends to do so as well.

    To sign, go to:

    Laura Boghosian is a resident of Lexington. Howard L. Jaffe is rabbi
    of Temple Isaiah, Lexington. They are co-founders of the Coalition
    to Recognize the Armenian Genocide.

    ==============================================

    From: Yuksel Oktay [mailto:[email protected]]
    Sent: Saturday, March 06, 2010 12:08 PM
    To: [email protected]; Dr. Kayaalp Buyukataman; Karahan Mete
    Cc: paxturcica; ATAA-US
    Subject: JEWISH-ARMENIAN COALITION LAUNCHES ARMENIAN GENOCIDE RECOGNITION EFFORT | Turkish Forum

    Unfortunately, some Jewish – American organisations are beginning to show their true colors, marching on the road to accomplishing their aims symbolized on the Israeli Flag. We would like to believe that the Jewish-American coalition does not speak for all the Jewish-Americans, just as the Turkish Coalition of America does not speak for all the Turkis-Americans. The ad published by TCA “H. Res 252: Does not speak for america” recently was a tasteles and meaningless message without any beef. Sorry, but this is the view from istanbul on the situation on the Turkish-American relations which is now hanging on a shoe string. Americans will value due process if they know the truth and the other side of the story, which is being told to them by the media (CBS 60 Miniutes, PBS Armenian genocide, thousands of books including the one by the 1915 US Ambassador to the Ottoman Empire and by the Israeil Ambassador to US who completely ignores Turks in his book about America, etc… and the play, “Beast on the Moon” being staged every year.

    A concerned Turkish-American.

  • Davutoglu challenges U.S. to answer the question whether it wants peace in the region:

    Davutoglu challenges U.S. to answer the question whether it wants peace in the region:

    Turkish FM calls on U.S., West to saypic63267 whether they really want Armenia-Azerbaijan reconciliation- UPDATE

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    05 March 2010 [16:21] – Today.Az http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ttuzoe7x4UI

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    In his televised speech on March 5, Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu urged the United States and West to resolve the Armenian-Azerbaijani Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.Stability in the South Caucasus can become real only after Armenia withdraws from Azerbaijan’s occupied lands and Armenia-Turkey and Armenia-Azerbaijan reconciliation are ensured, CNN-Turk quoted Davutoglu as saying.

    Unilateral reconciliation is impossible, Davutoglu said.

    It is difficult to reach a full peace through reconciliation only between individual countries in the South Caucasus region, the Foreign Minister explained. In his view, a full peace is possible if only all existing conflicts are solved.

    Davutoglu stressed that not only the Armenian-Turkish reconciliation, but also the Armenian-Azerbaijani reconciliation must be focus of attention adding that the United States and West are interested only in normalization of Armenian-Turkish relations.

    “If we want peace, then why we talk only about the Armenian-Turkish reconciliation? Why do not we put forward the Armenian-Azerbaijani reconciliation? Why can not we believe that this can be realized? Why Turkey is mistaken when it talks about the Armenian-Azerbaijani reconciliation? Our American and Western friends need to think about it.”

    “The question is clear and open. And our response is clear and open, too. Does someone want the Armenian-Turkish reconciliation? Yes, Turkey wants. And now we ask the question: “Do you want the Armenian-Azerbaijani reconciliation or not?” Let them come out and say: “We do not want.” And we’ll know about it. But if they want, let them do all that it is required,” the Turkish FM underscored.

    Peace depends on a political will. The path is difficult, but this is not an impossible goal, Davutoglu added.

    ———–
    13:15

    Turkey calls on Armenia to open all archives and not to exert pressure through the U.S. Congress, and negotiate face to face, Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said.

    “The adoption of the resolution on” Armenian genocide” is comical, as the difference of one vote seems very strange,” he added.

    U.S. House Committee on Foreign Affairs on Thursday adopted 23 votes to 22 a resolution recognizing the so-called “Armenian genocide”.

    Armenia claims that the Ottoman Empire committed genocide against Armenians living in Anatolia in 1915.  Making greater efforts to promote the issue internationally, Armenians have achieved its recognition by parliaments of some countries.

    Signing the protocols with Armenia, Turkey sought to bequeath to future generations of peace and stability among nations, but the adoption of this resolution by the U.S Congress’s Committee shows that Yerevan does not act openly in this matter, he added.

    The minister considers erroneous the view that the adoption of the resolution could put pressure on Ankara to ratify the Armenian-Turkish protocols.

    “The fact is that Turkey has taken decision on in this issue for ten days while Armenia has done for four months,” he said.

    The intervention of a third party, in this case the U.S., in relations between Armenia and Turkey, complicates the process of reconciliation between the countries, he said.

    The adoption of a resolution recognizing the “Armenian genocide” indicates that the U.S Congress is very weak in developing a future political strategy, the Turkish minister said.

  • Q&A: Armenian genocide dispute

    Q&A: Armenian genocide dispute

    BBC

    Boy victim of 1915 deportation of Armenians

    Arguments have raged for decades about the Armenian deaths

    The mass killing of Armenians by Ottoman Turks during World War I remains a highly sensitive issue.

    Turkey has resisted widespread calls for it to recognise the 1915-16 killings as genocide, while historians continue to argue about the events.

    What happened?

    There is general agreement that hundreds of thousands of Armenians died when the Ottoman Turks deported them en masse from eastern Anatolia to the Syrian desert and elsewhere in 1915-16. They were killed or died from starvation or disease.

    The total number of Armenian dead is disputed. Armenians say 1.5 million died. The Republic of Turkey estimates the total to be 300,000.

    According to the International Association of Genocide Scholars, the death toll was “more than a million”.

    What is genocide?

    Article Two of the UN Convention on Genocide of December 1948 describes genocide as carrying out acts intended “to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnic, racial or religious group”.

    Were the killings systematic?

    The dispute about whether it was genocide centres on the question of premeditation – the degree to which the killings were orchestrated.

    Many historians, governments and the Armenian people believe that they were; but a number of scholars question this.

    Turkish officials accept that atrocities were committed but argue that there was no systematic attempt to destroy the Christian Armenian people. Turkey says many innocent Muslim Turks also died in the turmoil of war.

    What was the political context?

    The Young Turks – an officers’ movement that had seized power in 1908 – launched a series of measures against Armenians as the Ottoman Empire was crumbling through military defeats in the war. The Young Turks – calling themselves the Committee of Unity and Progress (CUP) – had entered the war on Germany’s side in 1914.

    Turkish propaganda at the time presented the Armenians as saboteurs and a pro-Russian “fifth column”.

    Armenians mark the date 24 April 1915 as the start of what they regard as the genocide. That was when the Ottoman government arrested about 50 Armenian intellectuals and community leaders. They were later executed.

    Armenians in the Ottoman army were disarmed and killed. Armenian property was confiscated.

    Was anyone held to account?

    Several senior Ottoman officials were put on trial in Turkey in 1919-20 in connection with the atrocities. A local governor, Mehmed Kemal, was found guilty and hanged for the mass killing of Armenians in the central Anatolian district of Yozgat. The Young Turks’ top triumvirate – the “Three Pashas” – had already fled abroad. They were sentenced to death in absentia.

    Historians have questioned the judicial procedures at these trials, the quality of the evidence presented and the degree to which the Turkish authorities may have wished to appease the victorious Allies.

    Who recognises it as genocide and who does not?

    Argentina, Belgium, Canada, France, Italy, Russia and Uruguay are among more than 20 countries which have formally recognised genocide against the Armenians.

    The European Parliament and the UN Sub-Commission on Prevention of Discrimination and Protection of Minorities have also done so.

    The UK, US and Israel are among those that use different terminology to describe the events.

    In 2006, Turkey condemned a French parliamentary vote which would make it a crime to deny that Armenians had suffered genocide. The bill did not become law – but Turkey suspended military ties.

    In March 2010, Turkey withdrew its ambassador to Washington after a US congressional committee narrowly approved a resolution branding the killings as “genocide”. The House Foreign Affairs Committee endorsed it, despite the objections of the White House. Barack Obama’s administration has called for the resolution not to be “acted upon” by the full Congress.

    What is the political impact of the row?

    The killings are regarded as the seminal event of modern Armenian history, binding the diaspora together.

    Armenians are one of the world’s most dispersed peoples.

    In Turkey, public debate on the issue has been stifled.

    Article 301 of the penal code, on “insulting Turkishness”, has been used to prosecute prominent writers who highlight the mass killings of Armenians. Among them were Nobel laureate Orhan Pamuk and Hrant Dink, who was later shot dead in January 2007. A teenage nationalist is on trial for his murder.

    The European Union has said Turkish acceptance of the Armenian genocide is not a condition for Turkey’s entry into the bloc.

    Are Armenia-Turkey relations still frosty?

    After decades of hostility there has been a slight thaw. Turkey and Armenia signed a deal in October 2009 to establish diplomatic relations and open their border.

    But the deal is yet to be ratified by either parliament, and some in Ankara accuse Armenia of trying to alter the terms of the deal.

    A complicating factor is mutual suspicion over the frozen Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. Turkey backs Azerbaijan in the dispute over Nagorno-Karabakh, a territory inside Azerbaijan held by ethnic Armenians since a war in the 1990s.


    Correction July 2008: This article has been amended following a ruling by the BBC Trust. For details, follow the links on the right hand side of the page

  • News Alert from The Wall Street Journal

    News Alert from The Wall Street Journal

    A U.S. congressional panel has approved a resolution declaring that the killing of Armenians by Ottoman Turks around the time of World War I was genocide.

    In Turkey, the government said it was recalling its ambassador
    from Washington in response.

    The House Foreign Affairs Committee endorsed the resolution with
    a 23-22 vote Thursday, even though the Obama Administration had
    urged Congress not to offend Turkey by approving it.

    The resolution now goes to the full House, where prospects for
    passage are uncertain.

    http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704187204575101420718337134.html?mod=djemalertNEWS

  • It’s not up to Congress to write history of Turkey and Armenia

    It’s not up to Congress to write history of Turkey and Armenia

    By NJ Voices Guest Blogger/For NJ.com

    March 03, 2010, 12:30PM

    By G. Lincoln McCurdy/NJVoices Guest Blogger

    The United States is currently confronted with a daunting number of challenges in our nation’s foreign relations. America is managing wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and trying to find ways to bring our troops back safely and without compromising our national security. We are working to maintain a nuclear-free Iran, secure our energy sources and prevent the growth and spread of international terrorist networks.

    In all these and many other areas affecting Americans and millions of others around the world, we have an ally in Turkey. Our trade with Turkey topped $10 billion in 2009, leaving the United States with a $3.5 billion trade surplus, supporting thousands of valuable jobs in critical industries.

    In a bizarre move during such turbulent times members of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, including Representative Donald Payne, are preparing to vote on March 4 on House Resolution 252, which will recognize as “genocide” tragic events that took place nearly 100 years ago in the now defunct Ottoman Empire, despite many holes in the historical argument.

    This begs the question: why are the 48 members of the committee, at a time when we are dealing with pressing international and domestic issues, all of which require Turkey’s support and active participation, squandering their time on an issue that has no relevance to America’s foreign relations and interests?

    The answer is simple: Lobbying.

    Despite much bravado about limiting the influence of special interests, groups with money and manpower still control Washington’s agenda. In the United States there are nearly one million Armenian Americans, concentrated in a number of congressional districts, who support a lobby that spends an estimated $40 million annually on furthering its agenda, which revolves around recognition of an “Armenian Genocide.”
    Their efforts have also made Armenia, a small landlocked country, the second largest per-capita recipient of US foreign aid.

    Proponents of the Resolution frequently admonish its opponents by pointing to a moral obligation of Congress to pronounce that the now-defunct Ottoman Empire, committed “genocide” against Armenians. In doing so, they choose to ignore the many well-regarded historians who dispute this claim. Still, Armenian resolutions persist year after year due to the efforts of a well organized Armenian lobby that has turned hating Turkey into an existential cause.

    To roaring cheers at a 2005 Armenian rally in New York, Congressman Frank Pallone of New Jersey, Co-Chair of the Congressional Armenian Caucus, proclaimed: “The Turkish envoy said that not only did the Genocide never occur, but he suggested that the reason why Armenians want to recognize the Armenian Genocide today – want the Congress and the other countries to be on record – is because they wanted restitution and they wanted reparations. And I say to that ‘Yes, we do!’ It is important not only to recognize the genocide but we have to make it clear that those who committed it pay restitution … There must be recognition, there must be restitution, there must be reparations for the Armenian Genocide.”

    The resolution comes up for a vote at a particularly strange time. Armenia and Turkey are trying to work through a diplomatic process, with the active backing of the United States, which lays out a road map to normalizing relations. This effort includes the establishment of a joint historical commission of scholars and experts. Turkey’s leadership time and again has stated that it will accept the findings of such a commission. It is telling that the Armenian lobby and its supporters in Congress not only oppose the normalization process, but, with even greater zeal, the establishment of this commission.

    This issue, ultimately, should not be on the docket of the House Foreign Affairs Committee. Congress is neither the “conscience” of the world, nor its revisionist historian. It’s time to put an end to an dangerous game, played year after year when Congress is taken for a ride by a single-issue lobby at the expense of America’s national interests. This is that time, but it will only end when Americans pay attention and raise their voice and tell Representative Payne to oppose this resolution on March 4, and every time it comes up in the future.

    Lincoln McCurdy is President of the Turkish Coalition of America and a former U.S. diplomat.

    Source: blog.nj.com, March 03, 2010