Azerbaijan Postpones High-Level U.S. Visit Over Wording On Nagorno-K

AZERBAIJAN POSTPONES HIGH-LEVEL U.S. VISIT OVER WORDING ON NAGORNO-KARABAKH CONFLICT

International Herald Tribune, France
April 22 2007

BAKU, Azerbaijan: Azerbaijan said Sunday that it postponed a
high-level visit to the United States because of what it claimed were
changes in U.S. wording describing its dispute with Armenia over the
Nagorno-Karabakh territory.

The Caspian Sea coast nation’s Foreign Ministry warned that the
issue "may become a serious impediment to further security-related
cooperation between our countries" – a possible reference to
Azerbaijan’s contribution to the U.S.-led coalition in Iraq.

The government postponed the two-day visit for security talks, which
was to have started Monday and to have included high-level officials
from several ministries, because of "changes to the provisions"
on Nagorno-Karabakh in the State Department’s 2006 report on human
rights abroad, a ministry statement said.

The changes "distort the essence of the Armenia-Azerbaijan
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict" and their introduction "puts in doubt
the U.S. position of the ‘honest broker’ in the resolution of the
conflict," the statement said.

It did not offer details, and officials were not available for comment
after the statement’s release.

Today in Europe

Former Russian President Boris Yeltsin dies Sarkozy and Royal win first
round in French elections Bayrou, eliminated from France election,
vows his centrist movement is here to stay Nagorno-Karabakh is a
territory inside Azerbaijan that has been controlled by Armenian
and local ethnic Armenian forces since a six-year war that ended in
1994. Tension remains high between Armenia and Azerbaijan, ex-Soviet
republics in the Caucasus.

There was speculation in Azerbaijan that the government was angry at
the absence, in the State Department’s country report on human rights
practices in Armenia, of a statement saying that Nagorno-Karabakh is
Azerbaijani territory occupied by Armenia.

The country report on Azerbaijan, posted on the State Department Web
site, states that in 2006 "Armenia continued to occupy the Azerbaijani
territory of Nagorno-Karabakh and seven surrounding Azerbaijani
territories" – wording that is apparently acceptable to Azerbaijan.

The report on neighboring Armenia, however, says: "Armenian
forces occupy large portions of Azerbaijani territory adjacent
to Nagorno-Karabakh. Armenian officials maintain that they do not
‘occupy’ Nagorno-Karabakh itself."

The Azerbaijani statement said resolution of the conflict "based on
the territorial integrity of … Azerbaijan, with Nagorno-Karabakh
as its inalienable part, is a primary and foremost element" in its
security cooperation with the United States.

The United States said its policy had not changed.

"Any interpretation that our policy regarding the Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict has changed is not correct," State Department spokeswoman
Nancy Beck said Sunday. She said the U.S. was aware of Azerbaijan’s
statement announcing the postponement and was in contact with its
government.

"These talks are important and we look forward to them taking place
at the earliest date," Beck said.

On Friday, State Department spokesman Sean McCormack also said
there had been no change, adding: "The United States reaffirms its
support for the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan, and holds that
the future status of Nagorno-Karabakh is a matter of negotiations
between the parties."

The United States, Russia and France, under the auspices of the
Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, have been
encouraging Azerbaijan and Armenia to resolve the conflict for more
than a decade.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

ANKARA: Giant Meeting For The Denial Of Armenian Genocide In NY

GIANT MEETING FOR THE DENIAL OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE IN NY

Sabah, Turkey
April 23 2007

Hundreds of Turkish protestors have filled the streets of New York
to protest the pending Armenian genocide bill in the US Congress.

Turks holding banners that say ‘stop the Armenian genocide lie’
marched in New York Streets.

Protests lasted more than four hours without intervention of police.

Some protestors carried posters with pictures of Turkish diplomats
who were killed by Armenian terrorist organization ASALA.

ANKARA: Monsieur Or Madame?

MONSIEUR OR MADAME?

Sabah, Turkey
Reuters
April 23 2007

44 million French people have voted in the first tour of presidential
elections. The election dominated by right-wing front-runner Nicolas
Sarkozy and Socialist Segolene Royal, who hopes to be the first woman
elected head of state.

Elections in France carry an important role in Turkey’s membership
to the EU since Segolene Royal supports Turkey while Sarkozy opposes
Turkey’s membership. Both candidates want Turkey to recognize Armenian
genocide.

French turn out in force for presidential election

French voters flocked to choose a new president on Sunday in an
election dominated by right-wing front-runner Nicolas Sarkozy and
Socialist Segolene Royal, who hopes to be the first woman elected
head of state.

Sarkozy, a tough-talking former interior minister, led Royal and the
other 10 candidates in opinion polls throughout the long campaign.

But neither was on course to obtain an absolute majority, making a
run-off between them likely on May 6.

The campaign was characterized by calls for change after 12 years of
conservative rule by President Jacques Chirac which have left one of
the world’s wealthiest nations divided and in need of economic reform,
job creation and a dose of self belief.

"The French people know the importance of this vote, its seriousness,
and I share their sentiment of living through a very important
day," Royal told reporters after casting her vote in the western
Poitou-Charentes region where she is leader.

Royal, 53, has pledged to re-unite the country and build a "fairer
and stronger" France where all citizens would be equal. The ruling
UMP party’s Sarkozy, 52, has promised a break with the past, and a
crackdown on crime and illegal immigration.

Voter turnout was more than 31 percent at 1000 GMT, the Interior
Ministry said, the highest rate at this stage since 1981 and about 10
percentage points higher than at the same time in the last presidential
election in 2002.

The brisk voting in sunny weather followed a big rise in voter
registration before the election and reflected widespread concern
that voter apathy could lead to another shock after far-right leader
Jean-Marie Le Pen, reached the second-round run-off in 2002.

ANKARA: The Last Occupied Territories Of Europe Need To Be Solved

THE LAST OCCUPIED TERRITORIES OF EUROPE NEED TO BE SOLVED
By Nilgun Gulcan

Journal of Turkish Weekly, Turkey
April 22 2007

Armenia has always accused Turkey for anything went wrong. The even
accused Turkey for their bad economy and democracy. They complained
about Turkey, and called the EU and other European countries to
‘punish’ the Turks.

Armenian Foreign Minister Oskanyan and other offcicials argue that
the Armenian side does not put any preconditions to normalize
relations with Turkey and expects that Turkey, too, won’t have
preconditions. Mr. Oskanyan is funny man: Almost 20 percent
of Azerbaijan has been under Armenian occupation, the Armenian
Constitution does not recognise Turkey’s territorial integrity,
the Armenian President makes lobbying against Turkey anywhere in the
World and Armenian Government tries to undermine Turkey’s relations
with any state in the World; and after all these ‘friendly’ acts, Mr.
Oskanyan says that thye have no preconditions. Please have some…

Mr. Oskanyan also says "This is the last closed border in Europe".

However he does not touch the issue of the last occupied territories
of Europe. They occupy, they kill, they blame, and they say "Armenia
has no preconditions". Please have some…

Turkey Bolsters Its Regional Energy Role

TURKEY BOLSTERS ITS REGIONAL ENERGY ROLE
Walid Khadduri

Dar Al-Hayat, Lebanon
April 22 2007

Three major projects to transport natural gas from the Middle East
and the Caspian Sea via Turkey to Europe, and building two refineries
for crude oil in the Turkish Mediterranean port of Gehan are currently
in the study and design stage.

These projects are seen as a response to the US’ insistence not to
export oil and gas from the Caspian Sea area via Iran or Russia,
and the decision by the EU to diversify sources of imported gas,
particularly aimed at reducing dependence on Russian gas supplies.

Once executed, these projects, along with the (Kirkuk-Gehan)
Iraqi oil pipeline, which has a capacity of 1.6 million barrels
per day, will certainly allow Turkey – despite its low oil and gas
production levels – to play a key role in the oil industry in the
East Mediterranean area.

These three gas projects include the Trans Adriatic Pipeline to the
south of Italy, near the Brindisi port, from where it will link with
European gas network.

Construction of this pipeline is set to begin in 2008, and will
have an annual capacity of 10 billion cubic meters. Gas fields in
the Middle East, as well as the Shah Deniz gas field in Azerbaijan,
will supply this pipeline with gas.

The Greece-Italy Pipeline, also running through Turkey, supplied with
gas from Azerbaijan and Russia, reaching Turkey via the Blue Stream
Pipeline, and providing Turkey with quantities exceeding its domestic
consumption levels.

There is a future possibility of feeding this line, planned to reach
northern Italy, with natural gas from northern Iraq.

The third line, the Nabucco Natural Gas Pipeline, which delivers gas
produced from the Caspian Sea and Iran (which currently exports natural
gas to Turkey) to Austria, is estimated to cost more than $6 billion.

Negotiations over this line underwent difficulties, however, following
Turkey’s decision to temporarily suspend talks with Gaz de France,
a main partner until after the French presidential elections in
the coming days, due to the French Parliament’s vote last year for
the decision to make denying that Armenians suffered genocide under
Ottoman rule a crime.

Bulgarian, Romanian, Hungarian, Austrian and Turkish companies are
also partners in this project.

There is also the possibility of linking the pipeline in Turkey with
the Arab Gas Pipeline, which receives supplies from the northern
Egyptian border city of al-Arish via the Jordan port of Aqaba (Jordan
has completed constructing the pipeline across its territory) and Syria
(where the project is currently in progress).

Proposed projects are not limited to Turkey’s role in the transport
of gas to Europe, as a number of companies have expressed interest
in exporting oil and gas to Israel, as well.

These projects, nevertheless, have not reached the same advanced stages
as their European counterparts, where in addition to the projects
outlined here, there are plans to construct an oil pipeline to transfer
oil from Kazakhstan and Azerbaijan to Israel through the Turkish port
of Gehan, and to build two refineries there by a consortium of Turkish,
Kazakhstani, Azerbaijani and international companies.

The oil pipeline running through the Mediterranean is also expected
to be linked to the Eilat Ashkelon Pipeline to re-export oil to Asian
markets. There are also plans for a project to construct another gas
pipeline for domestic consumption.

Nicosia: Bad Water Removed

BAD WATER REMOVED

Cyprus Mail, Cyprus
April 22 2007

IMPORTED bottles of water have been removed from the market after
Health Services found they contained arsenic levels 30 times above
the legal limit.

During a chemical analysis of the product, imported from Armenia by
Jermuk Group – Mineral Water of Armenia, the state laboratory found
the water contained 300mg of arsenic per litre, when the legal limit
is 10mg per litre.

The Health Services said drinking water with arsenic posed a series
of health risks including bladder cancer and said consumption of the
product should be avoided.

According to the head of public health services, George Girogallas,
2,520 bottles of the water had been imported to Cyprus through Greece,
though if any and how many bottles had been sold he was unable to say.

The bottled water, which carries a batch number 15/11/2006, is bottled
in green, glass, half litre bottles with a use by date November
15, 2008.
From: Baghdasarian

Armenian Diamond Production Down By A Third

ARMENIAN DIAMOND PRODUCTION DOWN BY A THIRD

Tacy, Israel
April 22 2007

Armenia reduces its production of cut diamonds by 31.6 percent in the
first quarter of 2007, to US$ 34.7 million from US$ 50.7 m illion dram
in the same period in 2006, says a spokesman for Armenia’s Trade and
Economic Development Ministry. The fall is attributed to a slump in
global prices and demand.

Sales of cut diamonds in the period fell 37.5 percent to US$33 million,
while exports were down 34.5 percent to US$32.8 million.

The Politics Of Saying ‘Genocide’

THE POLITICS OF SAYING ‘GENOCIDE’
By Matt Welch, MATT WELCH is The Times’ assistant editorial pages editor

Los Angeles Times, CA
April 22 2007

More than 90 years after the Armenian genocide, the U.S. is deadlocked
in a humiliating linguistic debate.

ON TUESDAY, President Bush will be obliged, by law, to wrap his
double-talking mouth around one of the most curiously persistent
debates in modern geopolitics: Whether to call a 92-year-old genocide a
"genocide."

Every April 24 since 1994, the U.S. president has delivered a
proclamation honoring the people Congress has declared to be "the
victims of genocide, especially the 1 1/2 million people of Armenian
ancestry who were the victims of the genocide perpetrated in Turkey
between 1915 and 1923." And every year since 1994, the U.S. president
has managed to do it without once uttering the G-word. It’s a ritual
of linguistic realpolitik in deference to the massive objections from
Washington’s important NATO ally, Turkey.

But 2007 may be the year that the cop-out finally blows up in a
president’s face. What was once the obscure obsession of marginalized
immigrants from a powerless little Caucasus country has blossomed
in recent years into a force that has grown increasingly difficult
to ignore. In 2000, the Armenian issue helped fuel one of the most
expensive House races in U.S. history; two years ago, it turned a
mild-mannered career U.S. diplomat into an unlikely truth-telling
martyr. Now the question of how to address these long-ago events is
having an impact on next month’s elections in Turkey.

What’s more, Congress appears poised to vote on a resolution urging
the president to say the words "Armenian genocide" when observing
the awkwardly named "National Day of Remembrance of Man’s Inhumanity
to Man" on April 24 – the date in 1915 when the Ottoman predecessors
of modern Turkey launched the genocide by rounding up 250 Armenian
intellectuals for eventual execution.

The resolution won’t take effect on Tuesday. The Bush administration,
ever mindful of its delicate relationship with Turkey (especially with
a war in Iraq next door), takes the bill so seriously that Secretary
of State Condoleezza Rice and Defense Secretary Robert M.

Gates warned in a joint letter to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-San
Francisco) that it could "harm American troops in the field." The
lobbying has been successful enough that the House has delayed its
vote until after this year’s April 24 commemoration. But passage
later this year would still be an enormous blow to the White House.

Why is this hairsplitting exercise over a single word – in a nonbinding
resolution, no less – reverberating so strongly more than nine
decades later? The easy answer is that there has been a confluence
of mostly unrelated events. Democrats took control of Congress in
January and are spoiling for a fight, especially one that can paint
Bush’s foreign policy as hypocritical. The president, after all,
used "genocide" as a justification to topple Saddam Hussein before,
during and after the war against his regime, and the United States
has not hesitated to apply the word to the crisis in Darfur, where
more than 200,000 people have died since 2003.

Across the Atlantic, the Armenian question – especially Turkey’s
offensive laws against "insulting Turkishness," which have been
used to prosecute even novelists who create fictional characters
questioning the government’s denialist position – has become one of
the main lines of attack against Turkey’s bid to become the first
majority-Muslim country to join the European Union. Most of the 15
countries that have officially recognized the genocide are European
(with Switzerland and France even going so far as to pass over-the-top
laws making it a crime to deny the genocide).

Then there was the January murder of ethnic Armenian journalist Hrant
Dink in broad daylight on a busy Istanbul street. Dink’s assassination,
at the hands of a Turkish nationalist, shocked the world and led to
a wave of anxious introspection in Turkey. Yet Ankara quickly – and
disastrously – concluded that the proper response was to redouble its
losing campaign to prevent foreign governments from using the G-word.

High-level Turkish ministers were dispatched to Washington over the
last few months to warn that the resolution in Congress could force
them to close the crucial U.S. Air Force Base at Incirlik and could
imperil relations at a tipping-point moment for the Middle East. (The
exact same argument was used by President Clinton in October 2000
to convince then-House Speaker J. Dennis Hastert to withdraw at
the last moment a similar bill, introduced by then-Rep. James Rogan
(R-Glendale), who was fighting a losing battle against Democratic
challenger Adam Schiff in an $11-million race.)

For Turks, the genocide is taboo for a host of reasons, but perhaps
the most important is that it occurred at the time of the founding of
modern Turkey under Kemal Ataturk, a man so sainted that insulting
his memory is still punishable by jail. So the battle continues,
year after year.

Earlier this month, Turkish lobbyists successfully scotched a United
Nations exhibit on the 13th anniversary of the Rwandan genocide because
it dared refer to the "1 million Armenians murdered in Turkey." "Every
time they try to censor discussion of the Armenian genocide," a New
York Times editorial observed, "they only bring wider attention to
the subject and link today’s democratic Turkey with the now distant
crime." Turks even helped water down a U.S. Senate resolution
condemning Dink’s murder.

Yet this flurry of recent developments doesn’t adequately explain
the enduring potency of the recognition issue.

For that I will defer to the most recent U.S. ambassador to Armenia,
John Marshall Evans: "In the real world," Evans told a packed Beverly
Hilton hall of diaspora Armenians in February, "when an official policy
diverges wildly from what the broad public believes is self-evident,
that policy ceases to command respect."

Evans, a career, keep-your-head-down foreign service type, surveyed
the available literature on the events of 1915-23 before taking the
Armenian post in September 2004 and concluded that the U.S. position
of avoiding the word "genocide" diverged so wildly from the historical
consensus that it undermined Washington’s moral authority.

He attempted to budge the policy from behind the scenes, but when
that failed he took a page from a man he knew well from his pre-
and post-communist postings to Prague – former Czech President Vaclav
Havel and decided to publicly "call things by their proper names."

So in February 2005, while speaking in California, Evans said:
"I will today call it the Armenian genocide. I think we, the U.S.
government, owe you, our fellow citizens, a more frank and honest
way of discussing this problem." For that remark he was recalled from
his post so that Washington could get back to the business of evading
the historical truth.

President Bush won’t say "genocide" on Tuesday. In the words of
Condoleezza Rice, the administration’s position is that Turks and
Armenians both need to "get over their past" without American help.

But this issue won’t go away. Watching Rice’s linguistic contortions
in response to harsh congressional interrogation by Schiff, who has
become the Armenians’ great House champion, is profoundly dispiriting;
it makes one embarrassed to be American. Of all issues subject to
realpolitik compromises, mass slaughter of a national minority surely
should rank at the bottom of the list.

Hitler reportedly said, just before invading Poland, "Who, after
all, speaks today of the annihilation of the Armenians?" It’s a
chilling reminder that forgetting is the first step in enabling future
genocides. Yet Hitler was eventually proved wrong. No temporal power
is strong enough to erase the eternal resonance of truth.

WWI Armenia Genocide Issue Heats Up

WWI ARMENIA GENOCIDE ISSUE HEATS UP

United Press International
Washington Times
April 22 2007

WASHINGTON April 21 (UPI) — Congress and the White House are at odds
again over the effort to pass a resolution condemning the alleged
genocide in Armenia carried out during World War I.

The Bush administration is following in the footsteps of President
Clinton in trying to derail the House resolution for fear of offending
NATO ally Turkey.

Rep. George Radanovich, R-Calif., is sponsoring the measure and told
the Los Angeles Times Saturday it will likely pass if it reaches the
House floor. But passage would require the green light from House
Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who will be under pressure to side with the
administration and block the vote on national-security grounds.

California is home to a large Armenian community that steadfastly
blames Turkey for the deaths of about 1 million of their countrymen
between 1915 and 1918. Turkey is equally adamant that the tragedy was
not a deliberate campaign of genocide, and Washington is concerned
passing the resolution would stir up anti-American feelings among
the Turkish public and government.

Radanovich told the Times he didn’t see things as quite so dire. "The
Turkish government will throw a fit, and three months later, they’ll
be over it," he said.

Turkey At A Crossroads, As Always

TURKEY AT A CROSSROADS, AS ALWAYS

ZNet, MA
April 22 2007

Khatchig Mouradian interviews Amberin Zaman

"Turkey is always at a crossroads," I said. "That’s what we have been
reading in the newspapers in Turkey and in the West for years now. It
seems it is convenient to stay at a crossroads."

There is no choice but to take the road to EU integration,
he insisted. It is the only way to bring freedom of expression,
minority rights and democracy to Turkey. For Turkish-Armenians, too,
it is crucial. "There are people in this country who-if given the
chance-would slaughter us again," he told me.

This was in June 2005 in Istanbul.

On Jan. 19, 2007, I woke up from a phone call from Turkey. "It is
all over Turkish TV," I was told. "They killed him."

Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink was slaughtered in front of
the editorial offices of his newspaper Agos. He had met one of the
people who was "given the chance" and acted upon it.

Three months have passed since Dink’s murder, and-you guessed it-the
country is still at a crossroads. I talked about today’s Turkey with
Amberin Zaman, Turkey correspondent for The Economist.

"Even I, as a journalist, have to measure my words very very carefully,
because I don’t know when some extremist will consider what I said to
be ‘insulting Turkishness’ and take me to court on that," Zaman says
in this interview. " It’s a very nefarious, poisonous atmosphere that
we live in today, and all the more so because we really can’t pinpoint
where the danger is coming from. And what’s really obscene about it is
that these people use Turkish law to attack intellectuals," she adds.

*** Khatchig Mouradian-How does an election year differ from typical
years in Turkey? What makes this election year special?

Amberin Zaman-In a typical election year, you have all of the issues
in the country being debated and politicians claiming that they have
the solutions to these problems. There’s a lot of noise, a lot of
propaganda. But this is a quite unique year because we have both
presidential and parliamentary elections.

For the presidential elections, the government is in a position to
elect its own candidate, because the ruling party has a majority in
the parliament. We haven’t seen this for a long time in Turkey, not
since former Prime Minister Turgut Ozal managed to elevate himself
to the presidency back in the early 90s.

The ruling AK [Justice and Development] party has brought political
Islam closer to the political center; and despite all the scare
mongering that’s going on, it will win the next election. People don’t
buy the Islamist bogeyman stories anymore. That is not to say that
the forces that oppose democracy won’t keep pulling deadly tricks
out of their bag. But I truly believe their days are numbered.

The real threat to Turkey in my opinion comes from instability on its
southern border. The worst thing that could happen would be for Turkey
to intervene militarily in Iraq, and there is no dearth of hotheads
calling for this. The other big issue is corruption and sadly the AK
party is not as "white" as its name claims. The parallel economy, which
accounts for roughly half of the economy by the Economy Minister’s
own admission, is sucking up huge resources that could help alleviate
poverty in the southeast, for instance.

This time around, the issue has taken a particular significance
because the secular camp, led by the military, is arguing that if
the AK party manages to elect its own candidate, and particularly
if this candidate happens to be Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan,
Turkey’s secularism, its westward orientation, will be at stake.

On the other hand, there are liberals who argue that if Turkey is
a democracy and if a party has a majority, then it is perfectly
legitimate for it to have its own candidate-be it the Prime Minister
or somebody else-and elevate him to the presidency.

In this case, there is the added twist of the Islamic style
headscarf. Critics argue that the scarf, worn by more than half
the spouses of members of Erdogan’s cabinet, is a sign of Islamic
militancy and not just an expression of personal piety. So there is
incredible debate revolving around, I must say, a woman’s head.

K.M. -It has become a cliche to say that Turkey is torn between the
East and the West, Islam and secularism, totalitarianism and democracy,
etc. What are your thoughts on this duality paradigm?

A.Z. -I disagree with that paradigm because over the past few years,
and particularly with the AK party’s rise to power, modern democracy,
rule of law and human rights have all found expression in ways that
have also captured the imagination of pious people in this country. I
think the people who tend to portray overtly pious politicians as
Islamic fundamentalists are just afraid of losing power. They are
scared of change. They don’t want a Turkey that’s open and transparent.

K.M.-Does the ruling party push the democracy project because it is
aware that this is the only way it can survive?

A.Z.-Yes, they fully understand that democracy is the only way
forward for the country and indeed for their own survival, because
the forces that oppose them can only be countered through democracy
and the EU project.

Let us also not forget about market forces. The market economy has
also played a big role in helping cement democracy in this country.

The average Turk can now project 4-5 years into the future,
something they were unable to do just a few years ago. The Turkish
lira is now stable and inflation has been brought under control The
Turkish consumer is rather happy and does not want to see any of
that threatened by political tension. And I think that lesson has
been taken on board by the Turkish military, especially after the
huge financial crisis in 2001 when everyone woke up to the reality
of globalization-that what happens in Turkey has an impact abroad
and vice versa.

K.M. -What are the main challenges Turkey faces on its path to
democracy?

A.Z. -The Kurdish issue is a very key one. Being able to deal honestly
with the past-the Armenian issue-is another key challenge.

Accommodating Turkey’s non-Muslims, non-Turks and non-Sunni Muslims
is also a big challenge facing Turkey. And we still have quite a long
way to go before finding solutions to all of these problems.

K.M.-You use the term democracy quite frequently when you talk about
Turkey. How loosely are you using this term? How much of a democracy
is Turkey?

A.Z. -If Turkey is to become a full democracy, there are several
things that need to be fixed. First of all, it needs to reduce the
role of the military. Unless you do that, it’s pretty hard to fix
the other problems.

K.M.-During Hrant Dink’s funeral, tens of thousands of mourners
chanted, "We are all Hrants, We are all Armenian." Yet, a nationalist
backlash was also evident in the aftermath of the killing. What has
changed in Turkey after January 19 [the day Dink was assassinated]?

A.Z. -I don’t know if anything changed. I think it is a question of
what emerged. I think what emerged during Hrant’s funeral was that a
lot of Turkish people-despite all this nationalism, despite all this
fear of the other-were able to empathize with the Armenians who have
been portrayed as the enemy even though they happen to be Turkish
citizens and have lived on these lands for thousands of year. This
is an extremely important development.

Yes, there has been a backlash, but the very fact that over 100,000
Turks took to the streets raising placards saying they were all Hrant,
were all Armenians is something quite extraordinary. At Hrant Dink’s
funeral, the mourners-mostly middle-class Turks-felt horribly guilty,
horribly ashamed. I think the forces that are opposed to change in
this country were quite shocked and disturbed by that.

Yes, we have all these weird, creepy ultra-nationalists organizing
across the country, but there is a parallel protest by an increasing
number of Turks who want a more democratic, less paranoid country
for themselves.

Regarding the Armenian issue, people are just trying to block what they
suspect might have happened. There is "collective amnesia," as Elif
Shafak calls it, carried down from generation to generation. I don’t
think it’s a conscious denial. It’s buried in the people’s collective
memory and now, finally, self-questioning has started in this country.

You also have to give credit to popular culture in this regard. A
widely popular series called the "Valley of the Wolves," which
appealed to all of our worst nationalistic instincts, has been taken
off the air. This didn’t happen because the EU told us to do so,
but because hundreds of thousands of Turkish citizens believed that
this was very harmful. And I think that Hrant’s tragic death helped
us realize this. And it was probably one of the very few instances as
a journalist in this country that I ever saw this kind of spontaneous
civic reaction actually materializing to something concrete.

We have this explosion of TV series that depict love affairs between
Greeks and Turks. Indeed, one piece of extraordinary news emerged in
the past few days that the very same production company that put out
"Valley of the Wolves" also has a project to air a show about a love
affair between a Turk and an Armenian. Popular culture is a very
effective way to overcome stereotypes and taboos. It is not overtly
political so people are much open to accept messages through popular
culture than through the voices of various politicians and Western
countries that lecture Turkey. I do believe civil society is really
taking root in this country.

Still, there is this great resistance on the part of certain great
forces to deal honestly with the past, because in fact it will
challenge some of the notions on which the republic was founded.

There is this almost existential fear about the issue-a siege
mentality, a sense that these Western forces are using these "local
collaborators" (Armenians, Kurds, non-Muslims) to dismember Turkey.

Eighty years on, we still seem to be immersed in that sort of
paranoia, which is very recklessly exploited not just by the army
but by politicians as well.

It is my firm conviction that until Turkey deals honestly with its
past, it will not be able to move forward. And I believe it is now all
coming to a head with Hrant’s death. There is a collective malaise
in this country born of the knowledge buried somewhere deep in the
Turkish psyche that some pretty horrendous things happened before
the Republic was formed. That is what propelled so many to take
part in Hrant’s funeral. It’s almost as if they were trying to say,
"We aren’t all murderers." But then, so many other horrible things
followed, though they were far from being on the same scale, that
people didn’t really have a chance to take stock. It’s only now,
after 6 years of largely uninterrupted democracy and a cooling down
of the violence in the southeast, that we can reflect on the past.

There has been a profusion of films and TV series questioning military
interventions. Despite the intimidation campaign unleashed by the
ultra nationalist thugs and their mentors, I think it’s only a matter
of time before the Armenian issue is debated in its proper context
as it should be.

K.M.-But most people are still afraid to speak out in Turkey…

A.Z. -Even I, as a journalist, have to measure my words very very
carefully, because I don’t know when some extremist will consider
what I said to be "insulting Turkishness" and take me to court on
that. It’s a very nefarious, poisonous atmosphere that we live in
today, and all the more so because we really can’t pinpoint where
the danger is coming from. And what’s really obscene about it is that
these people use Turkish law to attack intellectuals.

K.M. -What are the prospects of Article 301 being removed?

A.Z. -The Prime Minister keeps saying that he is open to the idea of
amending it, certainly not scrapping it altogether. It is an election
year and like all politicians, the Prime Minister is very wary of
losing nationalist votes. I frankly can’t say with any certainty that
we will see change in that law, but even if we amend Article 301,
there are other laws out there that extremists can use to continue
attacking intellectuals. What really needs to change as much as the
law is the mentality in the country.

K.M. -How do you envision this change? Will it come from civil society,
or are the powers that be so strong that change will only happen when
they are ready to allow it?

A.Z. -I think it’s a two-way process. There is a civil society that
seems to be bearing fruit and at the same time there is some readiness
to change at the top.

What makes the Turkish military very unique when you compare it
to other militaries in developing countries is that it has always
drawn much of its popularity from the Turkish people. Let us not
forget that it continues to be the most popular institution in this
country and I think Turkish officers and generals would never want
to lose that support. They understand that as Turkey becomes more
open and democratic in this global world, people’s perceptions are
changing and that they, too, have to change. Reasonable people in the
military fully appreciate and understand that their actions now have
a very direct impact on the economy, and that there’s no better way
to antagonize your citizens than to make them poor.

K.M.-Let us talk about the Kurdish issue. What does the average Kurd
suffer from in Turkey?

A.Z. -First of all, there are the very real problems of poverty,
illiteracy and unemployment in the regions of Turkey mainly populated
by Kurds. That is a very big challenge. Also, if you are an ordinary
Kurd living in the southeast and you want to express yourself on the
basis of your very distinct ethnic and cultural identity, you still
run into problems. I’ve been down to that region countless times. I
can give you the example of a private radio station in the province of
Hakkari, where the owner told me that he is constantly in trouble with
Turkish authorities because he plays Kurdish music on his channel, even
though the lyrics of the songs are in no way offensive or threatening.

There are so many other examples that I can give you. In recent
weeks, we have seen an enormous amount of pressure brought to bear
on the leaders of the largest pro-Kurdish party. The president and
co-president of the party were sentenced to six months in jail because
they had handed out flyers in the Kurdish language.

Also, you still need to have 10 percent of the national vote in order
to make it into parliament. This needs to be lowered to a reasonable
level because it automatically excludes pro-Kurdish parties. A Kurdish
politician cannot go to parliament and represent the cultural demands
of the Kurds. Until you allow this people to be a part of the political
system and empower them in that way, there will always be non-political
actors such as the PKK who continue to advance these goals on behalf
of the Kurdish people.

K.M.-How is the U.S. intervention in Iraq viewed in Turkey?

A.Z. -I think that everyone-from the leftists to the centrists to
the rightists to the Islamists-is pretty much opposed to the U.S.

intervention in Iraq. Insofar as how they view Turkey’s interests
in light of the situation there, you have different voices, but the
strongest one says that the emergence of an independent Kurdistan in
northern Iraq is being encouraged by the U.S., and that this poses
an existential threat to Turkey. The strongest evidence of this, they
argue, is the fact that the U.S. has not taken military action against
the PKK. The common perception is that the U.S. favors Iraqi-Kurdish
leaders Massoud Barzani and Jelal Talabani over the Turks, and that
this is partly due to Turkey’s refusal to allow U.S.

troops to open a second front against Saddam Hussein using Turkish
territory in 2003.

There is this tunnel vision on Iraq. They see everything through the
PKK lens.

K.M.-What about the Palestinian-Israeli conflict? On one hand, there
is popular support for the Palestinian cause, and, on the other,
there is the strategic alliance with Israel…

A.Z. -There seems to be a contradiction between Turkey’s strategic
alliance with Israel and this huge wave of support and sympathy for
the Palestinians. But that contradiction in many ways exposes broader
contradictions in the way Turkey thinks about itself and the world.

Because on the one hand, they believe that the alliance with Israel
will make Turkey stronger in the region. Before the Iraq war,
it helped Turkey gain favor in Washington and gave it a lot of
maneuvering space, certainly vis-a-vis the EU. You had that sort of
structure in place, that sort of idea that if you have good relations
with Israel then America will always be behind you and you can flex
your muscles more effectively vis-a-vis the EU, Iran even, and the
entire region. Certainly, that whole paradigm has shifted following
the U.S. occupation of Iraq. It’s one that was already beginning
to unravel after the first Gulf War. I think that we are now seeing
significant realignment of that power equation.

K.M.-Talk about Turkey’s relations with Iran, especially in the
context of the nuclear issue.

A.Z.-Turkey is increasingly seeing this as an opportunity to
exercise its regional power and influence. It seems to have portrayed
itself as an honest broker in this crisis. As a Muslim, pro-Western
country and a member of NATO, Turkey has credibility on both sides,
and certainly its credibility in the Muslim world has been greatly
enhanced by the AK party. There are many examples of Turkish behavior
that suggest it wants to embrace the Muslim world in a way that none
of its predecessors did. I think the Turks see all of it as more of
an opportunity than a problem.

K.M.-If the confrontation deepens, will Turkey be forced to choose
sides?

A.Z. -I think Turkey will be on the side of European governments
and the U.S. as long as it’s confined to non-military measures. But
beyond that, Turkey will remain decidedly neutral. In my opinion,
Turkey will not allow the U.S. to use its territory or airspace to
launch attacks against Iran.

K.M. -Where do you see Turkey going? Will we witness more EU
integration or will extreme nationalist feelings and growing pressure
from the EU will take the country in another direction?

A.Z. -I like to remain optimistic and hopeful that Turkey’s general
direction will be towards a modern democratic society. There is going
to be plenty of towing and throwing along the way. That’s what we are
witnessing now, strong nationalist pressure. But you have to look at
the historical perspective. Turkey has been trying to modernize since
the 19th century and from that time until today we have had reactions
and counter reactions.

Today, the military enjoys more influence than it should in a
democratic society but I think the winds are blowing in the direction
of more democracy and not less.

Khatchig Mouradian is a Lebanese-Armenian journalist, writer
and translator. He is the editor of The Armenian Weekly
(), published in Boston, MA.

www.armenianweekly.com