Category: USA

Turkey could be America’s most important regional ally, above Iraq, even above Israel, if both sides manage the relationship correctly.

  • Turkish Festival 2023

    Turkish Festival 2023

    Let’s Go Turkish this October!

    Don’t miss out! The Turkish Festival is this Sunday, October 15th.

    It’s free to enter!

    For more information visit: turkishfestival.org

    turkish festival

    *Turkish Festival is brought to you by the American Turkish Association of Washington DC

    Join Us at the Festival: We’re Creative Edge Media Group, and we’re honored to be a Gold Sponsor of the festival. Make sure to visit our tent!

    Networking Table: Don’t forget to bring a stack of business cards to our Business Exchange table. Leave yours and take a moment to pick up others’ cards—it’s a simple and effective way to broaden your professional connections, all at no cost!

  • Living in Glendale as an Azeri/Turk

    Living in Glendale as an Azeri/Turk

    I’m half Azeri and half Turk, is it a good idea for me to move to Glendale, California where the Armenian population is large?

    Glendale has about 200K population. Armenians make up the single largest ethnic community accounting for 40% of the city population. So, that means you statistically have a higher chance of encountering a non-Armenian than an Armenian but clearly you will inevitably stumble upon them.

    glendale

    Of course, not all Armenians hate Azerbaijanis and Turks. I have heard some Azerbaijanis and Armenians making friends or at least maintaining good relationship in LA though such cases are much fewer and rarer than in Moscow, for example. Yet, generally, the Armenian diaspora in the US is known for harboring more animosity towards Azerbaijanis&Turks than other groups of Armenians. Therefore, chances are very high that your car dealer, servant in the restaurant, cashier in the mall, agent at DMV might raise his/her eyebrows as soon as he/she knows you are an Azerbaijani/Turk. Especially, given the war of the last year, within both Azerbaijani and Armenian communities, emotions still run very high. (In July of 2020, Armenians protesting in front of the Azerbaijani consulate in LA had attacked a small group of Azerbaijanis having gathered for a counterprotest. In the same period, some Azerbaijanis living in LA had received threatening messages in their socmed accounts).

    If you are a single person, you can still overlook these things and live even though you might find yourself in a row with some locals esp if you are a man. Glendale is considered one of the safest, cleanest places to live in the LA area. However, if you have a family and your kid should attend a local school, then, I would be very worried. The youth branch of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation – Armenian Youth Foundation is quite active within the Armenian-American diaspora. Through their activities, they help channel ethnic hatred to the young Armenians (though they are not the only channel of hatred transmission). That might mean most likely bullying for your kid at school. I would no way take that risk.

    All in all, I wouldn’t feel comfortable knowing I am surrounded by some people who don’t like me just because of my ethnicity. LA is gigantic. Sure, there are many other districts to settle in.

    Toghrul Bakuvi

  • The US’s Hypocrisy or How Does Look Like Double Standards…

    The US’s Hypocrisy or How Does Look Like Double Standards…

    The US’s Hypocrisy or How Does Look Like Double Standards…

    By Azer HASRET

    We know that the United States of America is the biggest and most powerful country of the world. We understand this and take it into account. But when it comes to fairness, we see that this very most powerful country is biased and hypocritic…

    We are talking about the approach of the US towards the same issue in different countries.

    The US is supporting territorial integrity of Ukraine which is now facing unfair occupation war by its neighbor – Russia. Ukraine is defending itself and even I’m in support of this country. Because I believe and know that Ukraine is in a right side.

    The US also is supporting Ukraine. By any possible means. Like providing huge amount of financial aid plus arms support. We appreciate the US’s this very approach.

    Why do the US do that? The answer is very clear: The US is supporting Ukraine to defend its territorial integrity and state sovereignty.

    Great! Thanks to the US for this approach!

    Indeed, the US is supporting those countries which is under Russian occupation or Russia’s oppression! Thanks again!

    Logically if you do something in a likewise situation for someone you must do the same for others as well.

    Thus, if the US is supporting Ukraine’s fight for its territorial integrity, it must support other countries which suffer from the occupation and separatism the same way!

    But what do we see?

    We see that the US is not doing the same for other countries or for one single country which is also facing occupation and separatism.

    We are talking about Azerbaijan. Most clearly, about US’s stance towards the case with Azerbaijan which is trying to end up with occupation and separatism on its soil…

    Azerbaijani lands were occupied by Armenia 30 years ago. And all cities, villages, even cemeteries, mosques, libraries, cinemas, theatres were destroyed by Armenian occupants during those years.

    Plus, some 250 thousand Azerbaijanis were ethnically cleansed from Armenia. Then some 750 thousand Azerbaijanis again ethnically cleansed from the occupied Azerbaijani lands by Armenia…

    Thus about 1 million Azerbaijanis were ethnically cleansed from their lands. Up today they can’t return to their homes/lands. The reason is Armenians/Armenia.

    Today some 30 to 40 thousand Armenians are living in Karabakh, Azerbaijan. This region is internationally recognized part of Azerbaijan and no country on the world including the US is against this…

    But from time to time the US policy makers stage discussions about 30 thousand Karabakh Armenians while we don’t hear from them a single word about 1 million Azerbaijanis expelled from their homes/lands.

    We understand and accept that some politicians in the US are supporting Armenians and calling for their rights to be provided. But is there a need for that? Or why to call on Azerbaijan to respect the rights of a small Armenian community while Azerbaijan itself announced that their rights will be protected under the Constitution of the country?

    Azerbaijan repeatedly announced and announces that it will protect Armenian community as well based on the Constitution of the country. So, what is the problem? Or why some people in the US are upset? And why these politicians of the biggest world power are calling on Azerbaijan to respect the rights of Armenians?

    Is Azerbaijan doing something opposite? Is Azerbaijan ignoring the rights of Armenian community?

    No! Clearly no!

    The situation with Armenians is like this. The logic says that the US or other world powers are not interested in rights of Armenians in Karabakh, Azerbaijan. They are interested in producing as much as possible pretexts to press Azerbaijan!

    And by this stance they are forcing Azerbaijan back to the USSR (Russia), while this country is looking towards the West for the integration…

    At the end of this short piece, we’d like to stress out again that the US is supporting the territorial integrity of Ukraine or Georgia which lands are under Russia’s occupation. But the same US is hypocritically avoiding the issue of territorial integrity of Azerbaijan while talking about rights of Armenians…

    Azerbaijan and Armenia must think twice while considering the relations with the US. If not, the US will force both countries to a new war. But we don’t want a new war or any military clashes…

  • Turkish Flag Raising Ceremony

    Turkish Flag Raising Ceremony

    Turkish Flag Raising Ceremony / Wall Street. Celebrating the 100th Anniversary of the Republic of Turkiye

    Turkish Flag Raising Ceremony, Wall Street.

    Cordially invites you to the 23rd Annual Raising of the Turkish Flag at Wall Street’s Historic Bowling Green Park.

    Celebrating the 100th Anniversary of the Republic of Turkiye 

    New York City Mayor Eric Adams tentatively Scheduled to Attend 

    Bowling Green Fence and Park New York City usa
    OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

    CUMHURİYET 100’UNCU YIL DONUMU

    Sizleri, Wall Street’de Tarihi Bowling Green Park’ta yapilacak olan 23 uncu. 

    Geleneksel Turk Bayrak Cekimi’ne davet etmekten onur duyariz.

    Date: Friday, October 27, 2023  Time: 11:30 am 

    Location: 26 Broadway, New York, New York 10006

    For more information call Ibrahim Kurtulus at 646 267 7488

  • Biden disregarded four articles of the U.S. constitution

    Biden disregarded four articles of the U.S. constitution

    April 18, 2023
    President Joe Biden
    The White House
    1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W.
    Washington, DC 20500

    Re: President Biden disregarded four articles of the U.S. constitution by describing the 1915 events as genocide 

    Dear Mr. President, 

    We are writing this letter as the representatives of the Turkish American community, to express our disappointment and dismay concerning your one-sided declaration on April 24, 2022, that the Ottoman Empire committed genocide on its Armenian subjects in 1915.  A claim which was never proven legally or through historical research.  

    Mr. President, we are aware and proud of the fact that you are a graduate of Syracuse Law School and that you were the Chairman or Ranking Member of the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee for 16 years.  We know how knowledgeable, respectful, and sensitive you are about the rule of law. Furthermore, you did solemnly swear as the president-elect on that glorious inauguration day that you would “preserve, protect and defend the U.S. Constitution.”  Yet, we are very astonished, Mr. President, that you disregarded at least four articles and amendments of the U.S. Constitution.  

    We believe that your April 24 statement is in conflict with basic principles of fairness in the U.S. Constitution. The first and second issues are related to the fundamental fairness principles, while the third and fourth issues specifically pertain to the “Due Process Rights” of Turkish Americans.

    The first issue concerns Article VI of the U.S. Constitution, which makes international treaties ratified by the Senate a part of U.S. domestic law.  Here is a partial quote:

    “…This Constitution, and the Laws of the United States which shall be made in Pursuance thereof; and all Treaties made, or which shall be made, under the Authority of the United States, shall be the supreme Law of the Land; and the Judges in every State shall be bound thereby, any Thing in the Constitution or Laws of any State to the Contrary notwithstanding…”

    “Genocide”, an international crime, was coded by the “U.N. Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of Genocide,” approved and proposed for ratification in 1948 and entered into force in 1951. Türkiye became a party to this Convention in1950. This Convention regulates the crime of genocide in the domestic legal structure of the U.S. by being approved by the Senate on November 11, 1988, in accordance with Article VI of the U.S. Constitution. It became PUBLIC LAW 100-606 called the “Genocide Convention Implementation Act of 1987 (the Proxmire Act)”.  You, Mr. President, yourself sponsored the resolution that paved the way to this law.  

    According to this 1948 Convention, adopted by 140 states around the world and has the character of “jus cojens” (the compelling, overriding, unchallengeable rule) in law, in order for an act to be considered genocide, a competent tribunal must prove the material and moral elements of the crime (actus reus and mens rea) and, in particular, the crime must be determined to have been committed with special intent (dolus specialis.)  No such proceedings were instituted against the Ottoman Empire or its rulers, and no competent court ruled that the crime of genocide had been committed. In this case, your April 24 statement is clearly in conflict with both the U.S. Constitution and the U.S. domestic law, not to mention international law. 

     The second issue is the conflict with the “principle of legality” enshrined in Article I, Section 9 of the U.S. Constitution. This section prohibits the adoption of “ex post facto laws” and their retroactive application.  Here is a partial quote:  

    “…No Bill of Attainder or ex post facto Law shall be passed….”

    According to this article, an act that does not constitute a crime according to the law of the time it was committed does not constitute a crime by a subsequent law. “Genocide” did not exist in 1915 as a word or concept. It was first defined as a crime in the U.N. General Assembly document of December 11, 1946, and codified by the U.N. Genocide Convention adopted on December 9, 1948. The 1948 concept of genocide cannot be used retroactively to describe the events in 1915.  Therefore, Mr. President, your April 24 statement is undoubtedly contrary to the letter and spirit of section 9 of Article I of the U.S. Constitution.

    The third, and the most important, issue is the “Due Process Rights” of Turkish Americans, protected under the 5th and 14th Amendments in the U.S. Constitution – combining your third and fourth infringements. 

    The Constitution states only one command twice. The Fifth Amendment dictates to the federal government that no one shall be “deprived of life, liberty or property without due process of law.” The Fourteenth Amendment, ratified in 1868, uses the very same words, called the Due Process Clause, to describe a legal obligation of all states. This means that the government must follow fair procedures and respect the legal rights of individuals before depriving them of their fundamental rights. Fourteenth Amendment applies this protection to the states and ensures that all individuals are entitled to due process of law, regardless of their race, ethnicity, or gender. In this case, we strongly believe, that the due process rights of Americans of Turkish origin were totally disregarded. We strongly disagree with your declaration as it is not based on historical facts and lacks any legal basis. We believe that your declaration was motivated solely to gain political popularity among the strong Armenian diaspora, while jeopardizing the safety and well-being of Turkish Americans in the United States.

    We are deeply concerned that your declaration, claiming the events of 1915 as Armenian Genocide, could negatively affect the fairness and impartiality of legal proceedings involving American citizens of Turkish and Armenian descent. It is important to note that the growing Turkish American community has become increasingly vocal about the facts of the 1915 events and aims to educate the public about the Turkish perspective, which has long been overshadowed by the one-sided and often fabricated narrative presented by the Armenian side.

    The growing visibility and public awareness of the true side of the History, as advanced by non-partisan scholars based on credible historical research, has unfortunately led to an increase in hate crimes and terrorism, victimizing Turkish Americans at the hands of Armenian radicals.  Your declaration may inadvertently encourage the perpetrators of these hate crimes and negatively impact the fairness and impartiality of legal proceedings against such suspects. Encouraged by your April 24 statement, Armenian racists inclined to avenge the alleged Armenian Genocide, threatened Turkish Americans, inflicted physical harm on them, and destroyed their property.  We are kindly asking, Mr. President, that you consider incidents of hate crimes and bullying against Turkish Americans, particularly in California, where a significant number of Armenians reside.

    As a community that values justice, fairness, and the principles of due process, we, the people of Turkish American heritage, request that you reconsider your declaration and take steps to promote a more balanced and accurate understanding of the events of 1915. We believe that all individuals, regardless of their ethnicity or background, deserve fair and impartial treatment under the law.

    Mr. President, you put forward the long-discredited political claim of Armenian genocide as an irrefutable fact, following up on your many similar statements during your 2020 election campaign.  Your statement, unfairly and untruthfully, stigmatized Turkish Americans as evil people who deserve to be punished.   What you have done with the April 24, 2022 statement is nothing less than “extrajudicial execution” in terms of the U.S. Constitution and domestic law.

    Your April 24 statement, Mr. President, is pedagogically unsound, as there are multiple reasons for doubting the Armenian Genocide thesis, including the absence of a court verdict. In addition, hostility towards viewpoints that dispute the Armenian Genocide thesis stifles open and honest discussion, represents viewpoint discrimination, and constitutes a further problem with the First Amendment.  

    Mr. President, your April 24 statement will cause academic freedom to be curtailed as it erroneously presumes that genocide occurred.  On the other hand, the work and research of many distinguished scholars have shown that these genocide claims are nothing more than fabrications and distortions of history. Among the many examples are the scholarly work and publications of professors Bernard Lewis of Princeton University, Gunter Lewy of the University of Massachusetts Amherst, and Justin McCarthy of the University of Louisville, which clearly demonstrated that such a crime did not occur. Dissenting views are educationally valuable, as they expose falsehoods, refine partial truths, and reinforce truths by battle-testing them.  But when your April 24 statement stops all that, education and truth suffer, prejudices and perceptions will continue to dominate.  

    Mr. President, we would like to remind you your own words: “…America is an idea. An idea that is stronger than any army, bigger than any ocean, more powerful than any dictator or tyrant. It gives hope to the most desperate people on earth, it guarantees that everyone is treated with dignity and gives hate no safe harbor…”  We, the people of Turkish-American heritage, are not treated with dignity.  Unfortunately, your April 24 statement does give a safe harbor to hate and does not help build peace as our children are already being bullied in K-12 schools. 

    Most importantly, we are kindly asking you, Mr. President, that you support the initiative by the republics of Türkiye and Armenia to establish a Joint Historical Commission, composed of historians and legal scholars to be selected by Ankara and Erivan. We hope you will contribute earnestly to the realization of this initiative.  

    For this to work, of course, all national archives must be fully open to research.  While Ottoman and Turkish archives are fully open to international research since 1980s, Armenian archives remain closed to scholars critical of genocide claims.

    This is the only way to end this ethno-religious bias and discrimination against Turkish-Americans by those influenced by crude stereotypes of genocide claims that are rooted, in large part, in the deliberate wartime propaganda efforts of the World War I Allies.  

    Mr. President, a Turkish-Armenian Joint Historical Commission to investigate the genocide claims may be the only frank, honest, ethical, logical, and effective way forward.  We believe research and dialogue, not stereotyping and defamation, can build the way to peace, reconciliation, and closure.  

    Respectfully,

    Mazlum Kosma
    President

    Dr. Bulent Basol
    Chairman of the Board of Trustees

    Prof. Dr. Ulku Ulgur
    The Founding President

    Ergun Kirlikovali
    Past President

  • Why is Turkey still in NATO?

    Why is Turkey still in NATO?

    It is obvious that the Erdogan’s Republic of Türkiye has always played a double game.

    image009 5
    epa01389608 French soldiers of NATO\’s International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) patrol Arghandab district, Afghanistan after NATO and Afghan military forces have driven out hundreds of Taliban militants from around restive Kandahar, Afghanistan, 20 June 2008. At least 57 Taliban insurgents were killed and dozens more were wounded as NATO and Afghan forces drove out militants who had recently infiltrated several villages in the southern province of Kandahar, officials said 19 June 2008. EPA/HUMAYOUN SHIAB

    A NATO presence but also special relations with Putin’s Russia. It seems that between dictators, we like to stick together …

    On September 12, 2017, the Republic of Türkiye signed a contract with Russia for the purchase of S-400 systems for an amount of 2.5 billion dollars with delivery initially scheduled for 2020.

    On this occasion, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan declared, “We alone make decisions that fall under our independence.”

    However, NATO, and more particularly the United States, did not see it that way and believed that this decision greatly threatened the Republic of Türkiye’s ties with its Western partners as well as the security of NATO materials.

    America then sanctioned the Republic of Türkiye and denied it access to the purchase of American military equipment. The Turks were thus unable to renew their aging F16s with F35s.

    However, it is not possible to exclude Erdogan’s Republic of Türkiye because the Republic of Türkiye occupies a strategic position between Europe and Asia. To deprive oneself of Turkey would greatly weaken NATO.

    Everyone knows this, and that is why despite all of Erdogan’s eccentricities and the fact that he plays a double game, Turkey will remain in NATO.

    Sylvain Saurel’s Newsletter