Paruyr Hayrikyan: Army Commanders, Not Army, Would Be Responsible Fo

PARUYR HAYRIKYAN: ARMY COMMANDERS, NOT ARMY, WOULD BE RESPONSIBLE FOR REPEAT OF MARCH 1ST TRAGEDY
Sona Avagyan

hetq
14:49, February 9, 2012

When asked by a reporter if a new bill being debated in the Armenian
National Assembly that would allow for the president to call in
the army during a state of emergency wouldn’t lead to another March
1st tragedy, Union for Self-Determination (AIM) party leader Paruyr
Hayrikyan said that it wasn’t the army but the army’s commanders that
would bear any such responsibility for civilian deaths.

The bill in questioned was introduced in the parliament yesterday by
the Minister of Justice Hrayr Tovmasyan.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Controversy Over Armenian Genocide Puts U.S. On Shaky Moral Ground

CONTROVERSY OVER ARMENIAN GENOCIDE PUTS U.S. ON SHAKY MORAL GROUND

Tasbeeh Herwees |
1328772649
February 8, 2012 | 11:30 p.m. PST
February 9, 2012 | 7:30 a.m. PST

Senior Staff Reporter
*
-us-shaky-moral-ground

Obama and Turkish President Abdullah Gul, 2010. (Official White House
photo) Obama and Turkish President Abdullah Gul, 2010. (Official
White House photo)
In a few weeks, the French Constitutional Council will be expected to
vote on a law that will officially criminalize denial of the Armenian
Genocide, the 1915 killings of over 1.5 million Armenians perpetrated
by the Young Turks of the Ottoman Empire.

Introduced to the French Senate late January, the genocide bill, if
signed into law by the Council, would penalise the denial of
genocidal events with up to one year in prison and a fine of 45,000
Euros. France officially recognized the 1915 massacres as genocide in
1998, eliciting much ire from the Turkish government.

This new bill makes no mention of the Armenian Genocide in specific,
but France recognizes only one other genocide–the
Holocaust–making deniers of the Armenian genocide primary targets
of the new law.

Turkish authorities are already up in arms about the new
“genocide bill,” denouncing the law and threatening France with
economic sanctions. Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan railed
against the bill, calling it “racist” and a threat to free
speech.

“This is clearly a massacre of freedom of expression,”
Erdogan said in a speech to reporters in the Turkish capital of
Ankara.

Egemen BagıÅ~_, the Turkish Minister of European Affairs, told Al
Jazeera English the law was “null and void” in Turkey and
Turkey’s ambassador to France hinted at his possible
“permanent departure” from Paris after the bill was approved
in the French Senate.

In the midst of the democratic uprisings raging across the Middle
East, Turkey proudly trumpeted the praises of international experts
and diplomats who promote it as an example of a democratic Islamic
state to future Arab leaderships.

The U.S. in particular has strengthened relations with the Turkish
government in recent years. Just last week, President Obama named
Turkey among his top five international “friends.” Like most
U.S. presidents, Obama made plenty of promises to officially
recognize the genocide once in office to Armenian-American voters.

But he has since pandered to Turkish interests by avoiding the
genocide label at all, enabling a horrific tradition of genocide
denial.

Perpetuating genocide

In 1996, the founder and president of Genocide Watch, an
international advocacy organization based in the U.S., Gregory
Stanton famously outlined the genocidal process in eight stages.

The last stage, contended Stanton in what became a seminal resource
of genocide studies and research, was denial.

“The black hole of forgetting is the negative force that results
in future genocides,” he wrote in a briefing paper he presented
to the U.S. Department of State, “…Impunity–literally
getting away with murder–is the weakest link in the chains that
restrain genocide.”

This is a large part of the rhetoric that motivates efforts for
international recognition of the Armenian Genocide. Richard Hrair
Dekmejian, a USC professor and expert of genocide studies, says that
genocide denial is a mitigation of the perpetrators’ guilt.

“The standing position is that when you don’t recognize genocide,
by continuing to deny it, you’re still legally and morally a
killer,” said Dekmejian.

Turkey’s denial

While Turkey has begrudgingly acknowledged the deaths of 500,000
Armenians in 1915, it stubbornly refuses to call them a genocide.

With thousands of eyewitness accounts, photographic documentation,
and the testimony of the U.S. Ambassador to Turkey himself as proof,
there are few historians who would deny that the events of 1915 were
a systematic attempt to exterminate the Armenian population.

And most scholars number the deaths at 1.5 million–not, as the
Turkish government would have you believe, half a million.

The Turkish government has not refused to acknowledge these deaths,
it has banned all others from doing so. An article in the Turkish
penal code criminalizes any insult or public denigration of
“Turkishness” or the government of Turkey.

Any acknowledgment of the Armenian genocide–even mention of the
word itself–may be penalized with imprisonment. This article has
been used to prosecute journalists like the late Hrant Dink and even
Turkish scholars like Orhan Pamuk, a Nobel Peace Prize-winning
author.

“They don’t want to pay restitution, especially in terms of
land,” said Dekmejian, “Part of eastern Turkey today used to
be populated by Armenians and that was supposed to be part of the
Armenian republic.”

American complity

“The facts are undeniable,” wrote Obama to Armenian voters
during the 2008 presidential elections. “An official policy that
calls on diplomats to distort the historical facts is an untenable
policy. As a senator, I strongly support passage of the Armenian
Genocide Resolution, and as President I will recognize the Armenian
Genocide.”

Since election, however, Obama has fallen back on what is a long-held
tradition of U.S. presidents. Instead of recognizing the genocide, he
has abandoned the term altogether.

“American presidents use the terms ‘atrocities’, ‘tragedy’.” said
Dekmejian, “Sometimes they mention Turkey, sometimes they don’t.”

Turkey engages in a form of international bullying, threatening to
cut diplomatic ties or install economic sanctions, to dissuade nations
of recognizing the genocide. France has been at the recieving end of
these threats and the U.S. has heeded the warnings.

“We have been told by very very expensive lobbying groups that the
United States needs Turkey much more than Turkey needs the United
States,” said Dekmejian.

Trade statistics reveal that Turkey’s threats are mostly benign.

In fact, in the past few years, Turkey has expanded trade with
governments that have recognized the genocide — Belgium, Lebanon,
and Canada among them. In 2011, Turkey’s fifth largest market for
exports–at a volume of $6.9 billion–was France.

Recognition: Why it’s important

The histories of most modern nations are stained with the blood of the
subjugated — but no longer is it acceptable for most modern nations to
deny the crimes of their pasts. Denial robs the victimized of justice;
and sanitizing history does not make it go away, but perpetuates
cycles of oppression.

The U.S. government understands this in a very negligible fashion,
having paid reparations to former slaves, the Japanese-Americans
who suffered the indignity of internment camps, and even the Native
Americans from whom American soil was stolen.

The Armenian Genocide was a man-made crime–and it wasn’t an evil
peculiar to its time. In January, Genocide Watch named 18 countries
at risk of genocide, politicide or mass atrocities; seven of those
countries are currently experiencing massacres on a horrific scale.

Money, land, and memorials do very little to ease the heartache history
has left behind, but recognition does much in the way of honoring
the memory of those who have passed, and preventing the recurrence of
such atrocities. And when recognition is the very least we could do,
how do we, as U.S. citizens, seek any claim to moral righteousness
when we refuse to do so?

http://www.neontommy.com/news/2012/02/non-recognition-armenian-genocide-puts

Yerevan Mayor Meets With Hyatt International’s Official

YEREVAN MAYOR MEETS WITH HYATT INTERNATIONAL’S OFFICIAL

news.am
February 09, 2012 | 17:23

YEREVAN. – Armenian capital Yerevan’s Mayor Taron Margaryan met with
a working delegation from Hyatt International company, which was
led by Gebhard Rainer, Managing Director of Hyatt International,
Europe-Africa-Middle East. The parties discussed the company’s
investment programs in Yerevan.

The Mayor welcomed the Hyatt International’s first investment program
in Yerevan: the building of a Hyatt hotel in Armenia’s capital. “The
presence of a world-renowned brand in Yerevan is truly important for
us, and this in its turn will stimulate tourism development in our
capital,” Taron Margaryan said.

In his turn, Gebhard Rainer underscored the construction of a Hyatt
hotel in Yerevan, since this will be the company’s first presence
in the region. “Yerevan has great development prospects, and we wish
to continue the investment projects,” Hyatt International’s official
stated, and he expressed a conviction that there is a bilateral desire
to develop tourism in Armenia’s capital.

Yerevan’s Mayor noted that the City Hall will assist as much as
possible so that the outlined projects are successfully materialized.

“We are open and ready for cooperation,” Taron Margaryan stressed.

And Hyatt International’s partner in Armenia, businessman Samvel
Sargsyan assured that their partnership envisions continuous projects
in Yerevan. “The first hotel will open by the end of the year,
and you will see the comfort we offer to the guests of our city,”
the businessman noted.

Political Parties Of Armenia To Be Obliged To Publish Their Financia

POLITICAL PARTIES OF ARMENIA TO BE OBLIGED TO PUBLISH THEIR FINANCIAL FLOWS

arminfo
Thursday, February 9, 19:15

The Armenian parliament made alterations to the law “On parties”,
and alterations and amendments to the Administrative Offenses Code
and Civil Code in the second and final reading, Thursday.

Justice Minister Hrayr Tovmasyan said 3 written suggestions were
received by the second reading, with two of them were accepted fully
and the other partially.

According to the draft law, it is forbidden to finance a party by
foreign states, organizations and citizens and the companies with
foreign capital. If earlier the share of the foreign participation was
25%, at present it will become 30%. The diversification of financing
is another new limit in the law. According to the draft law, the sums
as well as property and services, got by a party as a gift, can be not
more than a million size of the minimal salary for a year. Donation
more than 10 thousand-fold of the minimal salary is not allowed from
one commercial organization or individual person, and 1 thousand-fold
– from a non-commercial organization. The donations more than 100
thousand-fold of the minimal salary (100 thsd drams or $265) must
not be transferred in cash. The parties will be obliged to publish
their annual financial reports, in which besides the financial flows
they should mention expenses for the election campaign. Every year,
not late than on 25 March the parties must publish in the press the
report about the funds spent and received by them and to present the
audit conclusion on the matter if necessary. The parties, the assets of
which are more than 10 mln drams, will be obliged to publish reports
and the audit conclusion after holding of audit.

Armenian Parliament Defines Conditions To Initiate Extraordinary Sit

ARMENIAN PARLIAMENT DEFINES CONDITIONS TO INITIATE EXTRAORDINARY SITUATION IN THE COUNTRY

arminfo
Thursday, February 9, 19:16

At its today’s session Armenian parliament adopted in the first
reading the draft law submitted by the government “On legal regime
of extraordinary situation”, which determines in what conditions an
extraordinary situation should be initiated and what means should be
used to provide its regime.

As Armenian Justice Minister Hrayr Tovmasyan said, in case of the
extraordinary situation appearing, Armenia should have a right for
transition from the natural life to the extraordinary situation.

According to the draft law, the extraordinary situation in the republic
may be initiated only in case of availability of the circumstances
which are directly dangerous for the Constitutional regime of
Armenia. The extraordinary situation may be initiated during the
armed revolts, mass disorders, terrorist acts, occupation or blockade
of specific facilities, during the actions of illegal armed groups,
national, ethnic and religious conflicts which are accompanies with
violence and directly threat the life and health of people. To ensure
the legal regime of the extraordinary situation, the forces of police,
national security and state security structures may be used.

Tovmasyan said that the armed forces should be used only in case if the
forces of the police and national security cannot implement their task.

New Military Industrial Enterprises To Be Founded In Armenia As Part

NEW MILITARY INDUSTRIAL ENTERPRISES TO BE FOUNDED IN ARMENIA AS PART OF ARMENIAN-RUSSIAN COOPERATION

arminfo
Thursday, February 9, 19:09

Secretary of the National Security Council of Armenia Arthur
Baghdasaryan and his Russian counterpart Nikolay Patrushev met
in Yerevan Thursday and signed a number of agreements on further
enhancement of the bilateral cooperation.

Baghdasaryan told media that an agreement to enhance the
military-technical cooperation was achieved during the meeting. In
particular, he said, new military industrial enterprises will be
established, and the frontier infrastructure on the Armenian border
with Iran and Turkey will be modernized. Baghdasaryan said that the
arrangement achieved imply also creation of joint regional center
of the Emergency Situation Ministry that will make it possible for
Armenia and Russia to upgrade operative response to and management
of the existing challenges.

Armenian Banks Lobbying For Their Interests – Opposition Rep

ARMENIAN BANKS LOBBYING FOR THEIR INTERESTS – OPPOSITION REP

Tert.am
09.02.12

The bill on restrictions on cash transactions is in itself positive.

However, it is untimely for Armenia.

Speaking of the parliament-rejected bill, Zoya Tadevosyan, a member
of the opposition Armenian National Congress (ANC), said: “It is a
desirable law for any society. In Armenia’s case, however, through the
government, banks are lobbying for surplus funds to be concentrated
in their hands,” Tadevosyan said.

She does not share the opinion that the bill is Republican Party of
Armenia’s (RPA) attempt to strip the Prosperous Armenia Party (PAP)
of resources.

“They in the PAP know very well where they keep their money. All
oligarchs own banks. Ordinary citizens are suffering. It is a blow
on small and medium businesses,” Tadevosyan said.

Artak Davtyan, an RPA MP, gave assurances that the bill has nothing
with the PAP.

“The issue might not have evoked such a response if, before the voting,
PAP representatives had made their position public,” Davtyan said.

Noam Chomsky Discusses Turkey With David Barsamian

NOAM CHOMSKY DISCUSSES TURKEY WITH DAVID BARSAMIAN
by David Barsamian

February 9, 2012

David Barsamian, the director of Colorado-based Alternative Radio,
conducted the following interview with Noam Chomsky on Jan. 20 at
MIT in Cambridge, Mass.

Noam Chomsky Chomsky is the internationally renowned Institute
Professor Emeritus at MIT. In addition to his pioneering work in
linguistics, he has been a leading voice for peace and social justice
for many decades. “The New Statesman” calls him “the conscience of
the American people.”

Howard Zinn described him as “the nation’s most distinguished
intellectual rebel.” He’s the author of scores of books including
Failed States, What We Say Goes, and Hopes and Prospects.

Chomsky and David Barsamian have collaborated on a series of
best-selling books.

Their latest is How the World Works. This interview will be part of
Demand the Impossible, to be published later this year.

The Armenian Weekly thanks David Barsamian for providing a transcript
of the interview.

***

D.B.: Let’s talk about Turkey. The country for a number of years
strove to get into the European Union, and did not succeed. There’s
a front-page New York Times article [Jan. 5, 2012] entitled “Turkey’s
Glow Dims as Press Faces Charges.” Turkish human rights advocates say
that there’s been a “crackdown” on journalists that “is part of an
ominous trend.” Further, it says, “The arrests threaten to darken the
image of the prime minister, Erdogan, who is lionized in the Middle
East as a powerful regional leader who can stand up to Israel and
the West.” According to this report, “There are now 97 members of
the news media in jail in Turkey, including journalists, publishers,
and distributors,” a figure that human “rights groups say exceeds the
number detained in China.” One of those imprisoned is Nadim Sener,
an award-winning journalist, for his reporting on the murder of Hrant
Dink, a prominent Turkish-Armenian journalist who was assassinated
in Istanbul in January 2007.

N.C.: First of all, that this report should appear in the New York
Times has ample ironic connotations. What’s going on in Turkey is
pretty bad. On the other hand, it doesn’t begin to compare with what
was going on in the 1990’s. The Turkish state was carrying out a major
terrorist war against the Kurdish population: tens of thousands of
people killed, thousands of towns and villages destroyed, probably
millions of refugees, torture, every kind of atrocity you can think
of. The Times barely reported it.

They certainly didn’t report-or if they did, it was very marginal-the
fact that 80 percent of the weapons were coming from the U.S., and that
Clinton was so supportive of the atrocities that in 1997, kind of when
they were peaking, that single year Clinton sent more arms to Turkey
than in the entire Cold War period combined up until the onset of the
counterinsurgency campaign. That’s pretty serious. You won’t find it
in the New York Times. Their correspondent in Ankara, Stephen Kinzer,
barely reported anything. Not that he didn’t know. Everybody knew.

David Barsamian So now if they’re upset about human rights violations,
we can take the reaction with a grain of salt. Now they are willing to
highlight the human rights violations because it’s not the U.S. that’s
backing them, it’s a country that’s been standing up to the U.S. And
that they don’t like. Erdogan’s popularity in the Middle East does
not make him popular in the U.S. He’s by far the most popular figure
in the Arab world, whereas Obama’s popularity is actually lower than
Bush’s, which is quite a trick.

Turkey has taken a fairly independent role in world affairs, which
the U.S. doesn’t like at all. They’ve maintained trade relations with
Iran-in fact, are even increasing them. Turkey and Brazil carried
out a major crime. They succeeded in getting Iran to agree to a
program of transferring the low-enriched uranium out of Iran, which
happened to virtually duplicate Obama’s program. In fact, Obama had
actually written a letter to Lula, the Brazilian president, urging
him to proceed with this, mainly because Washington assumed that
Iran would never agree, and then they could use it as a diplomatic
weapon against them and have more support for sanctions. But they
did agree. There was great anger here that they got Iran to agree,
because then that might undermine the push for sanctions, which is
what they really were after. So that was another source of hostility.

And there are others. For example, in the case of Libya, Turkey,
which is a NATO power, interfered with NATO’s early efforts to carry
out the bombing of Libya, effectively overriding the UN resolution,
though they claimed they were observing it. Turkey was by no means
cooperative; in fact, they actually blocked NATO meetings. Washington
didn’t like that either.

They don’t like the increasing trade relations with Iran, they don’t
like their independent foreign policy. So given that situation, it’s
appropriate to condemn human rights violations in Turkey, which are
there. There’s been regression. Actually, there was a lot of progress
over the past 10 years, quite considerable progress, but the last
couple of years have been pretty unpleasant. It’s correct to protest
them, cynicism aside.

D.B.: In March 2011, Orhan Pamuk, a leading Turkish writer, Nobel
Prize winner, was fined for his statement in a Swiss newspaper that
“We have killed 30,000 Kurds and 1 million Armenians.” Hardly any
discussion of Turkey can take place without mention of at least the
Kurds, and sometimes of the Armenians.

N.C.: Actually, the Kurds are rarely discussed. The worst atrocities
against the Kurds, as I mentioned, were in the 1990’s. And then the
press coverage was very slight and dismissive. I actually ran through
it once. There were a couple of things, but not a lot. That, of course,
was the most significant period, not just because of the scale of the
atrocities but because we could have stopped them. They were being
supported strongly by the U.S., and NATO generally, the U.S. in the
lead. If that had been made public, it could have had an effect.

It was particularly striking in 1999. There was a NATO conference, an
anniversary, in 1999, that was right around the time of the decision
to bomb Serbia. There was plenty of coverage in the West about how
NATO was lamenting the fact that atrocities are being carried out so
close to the NATO world, so we have to do something about it, like
bomb Serbia. Actually, much worse atrocities were being carried out
within NATO, namely, in Turkey. But try to find a word about that. You
can find a word. I wrote about it, a couple of other mavericks wrote
about it. So the cynicism is overwhelming.

But putting that aside, the problems are real. I was in Turkey a
year ago at a conference on freedom of speech. A large part of it
was devoted to the Turkish journalists speaking, describing their own
activities in trying to write about, expose the Hrant Dink murder, the
atrocity against the Armenians, the repression of the Kurds. These are
very courageous people. It’s not like a New York Times correspondent,
who could write about it if he wanted and nothing would happen. Maybe
he would be censured by the editors. These guys can get sent to jail,
undergo torture. That’s serious. But they talk openly and strikingly.

In fact, one of the most interesting things about Turkey-here, again,
is an irony-the European Union says, “We can’t invite them in because
they don’t meet our high standards of human rights,” and so on. Turkey
is about the only country I know of in which leading intellectuals,
journalists, academics, writers, professors, and publishers not only
constantly protest the atrocities of the state but regularly carry out
civil disobedience against it. I actually participated to an extent
10 years ago when I went there. There’s nothing like that in the West.

They put their Western counterparts to shame. So if there are lessons
to be learned, I think it’s in the other direction. Frankly, I never
thought that Turkey would be admitted into the EU, mainly on racist
grounds. I don’t think Western Europeans like the idea of Turks
walking around freely in their streets.

D.B.: How do Turkish-Israeli relations have an influence Washington,
with the 2010 Israeli commando raid in international waters on a
Turkish ship killing nine Turks, one of whom was an American citizen?

And now there has been a suspension of diplomatic relations.

N.C.: It started before that. Turkey was the only major country,
certainly the only NATO country, to have protested very sharply against
the U.S.-Israeli attack on Gaza in 2008-09. And it was a U.S.-Israeli
attack. Israel dropped the bombs, but the U.S. backed it, blocked
the UN resolution, and so on, including Obama. Turkey came out very
strongly in condemnation. There was a famous incident in Davos at
the World Economic Forum where the Turkish prime minister spoke out
strongly against the attack while Shimon Peres, the Israeli president,
was on stage with him.

In general, they stood out for their protest-one reason why Erdogan
is so popular in the Arab world. Of course, the U.S. didn’t like that.

Having cordial relations with Iran and condemning Israeli crimes does
not make you a favored figure in Georgetown cocktail parties.

D.B.: And now there’s a report that Israel, which has long been
denying the Armenian Genocide, is considering a resolution, primarily
to irritate the Turks now, who they know are hypersensitive to any
mention of the Armenian Genocide.

N.C.: It cuts both ways. Israel and Turkey were pretty close allies.

In fact, Turkey was the closest ally of Israel, apart from the U.S.

Their alliance was kept kind of under cover, but it was perfectly
open, from the late 1950’s. It was very important for Israel to have
a powerful non-Arab state allied to it. Turkey and Iran under the
Shah were very close to Israel. At that time they refused to allow
any discussion of the Armenian Genocide.

In 1982, Israel had a Holocaust conference. It was organized by a
Holocaust specialist in Israel, Israel Charny, somebody I knew as a
kid in Hebrew-speaking camps. He went to Israel. He organized it. He
wanted to invite someone to talk about the Armenian atrocities, and
the government tried to block it, strongly opposed it. In fact, they
pressured Elie Wiesel, who was supposed to be the honorary chair,
to resign, which he did. They went ahead with it anyway. It was
over strong government opposition. At that time Turkey was an ally,
so you don’t talk about it.

Now, as you say, relations are frayed, so you can sort of stick it
to the Turks, you can talk about it now. In fact, Israel’s behavior
has been pretty remarkable. One of the incidents that didn’t get
much publicity here but really bothered the Turks was a meeting
between the Turkish ambassador to Israel and Danny Ayalon, the deputy
foreign minister. He called in the Turkish ambassador and they set up
a photo op with the Turkish ambassador sitting on a very low chair and
Ayalon sitting on a higher chair above him. And then the photographs
are publicized all over. Countries don’t act like that. It’s very
humiliating. The Turks didn’t like it a bit. Israel is so arrogant,
they didn’t care. They figure, we can do anything we like so long as
the master is behind us, which he is.

That’s one of a series of events which actually, from Israel’s own
strategic point of view, is not very brilliant. The Turkish-Israeli
military strategic relationship, trade relationship, commercial
relationship is pretty significant. Again, we don’t really know the
details, but for years Israel has been using eastern Turkey, as the
U.S. has, for military bases, military training, preparations for
possible war, aggression in the Middle East. If they sacrifice that,
it’s serious.

D.B.: And the Mavi Marmara incident, in which nine Turkish civilians
were killed.

N.C.: The Mavi Marmara was part of a flotilla. It was attacked in
international waters by Israeli commandos, who killed nine people,
Turks, one of them Turkish American. Attacking a ship in international
waters is a serious crime. Israel was kind of surprised at the
reaction-with some justification, because they’ve been hijacking ships
in international waters since the late 1970’s, and the U.S. never
made a fuss about it. They’ve been attacking ships going from Cyprus
to Lebanon, sometimes killing people, sometimes taking prisoners,
kidnapping them, and taking them off into Israeli jails, where they
are kept as hostages. And the master never objected. So they were a
little surprised that there was a fuss about this. But there was a lot
of international indignation, not just by Turkey but more broadly,
for their really criminal behavior. Turkey demanded an apology,
Israel refused. It led to a serious souring of relations.

D.B.: There has been a severing of diplomatic relations.

N.C.: Severing at least on the surface. There’s probably more going
on under the surface. But, yes, a formal severing of relations.

D.B.: The Kurds, who straddle three or four countries-Iran, Iraq,
Turkey-constitute, I think, the largest single minority in the world
that does not have a nation-state. What about the situation of the
Kurds, particularly the semi-autonomy that they have achieved in
northern Iraq? How viable is that?

N.C.: There are plenty of problems. They have achieved a kind of
semi-autonomy in northern Iraq, but, first of all, there’s a lot of
repression and corruption there. Furthermore, it’s fragile. And it’s
not really viable. They’re landlocked. If they don’t have significant
support from the outside, they can’t be sustained for long. And they’re
not only landlocked but they’re surrounded by enemies, so Iran on one
side, Turkey on the other, Arab Iraq as well. There’s a connection
to Syria, but that doesn’t help much. So it exists by the tolerance
of the great powers, primarily the U.S., which could be withdrawn.

The U.S. has repeatedly sold them out over the years. They sold them
out to Saddam Hussein in the 1970’s and again in the 1980’s. During
Saddam Hussein’s atrocities against the Kurds, the U.S. government
tried to silence them. The Reagan Administration refused even to
acknowledge them. They tried to blame them on Iran. The Kurds have
an old saying, which goes something like, “Our only friends are the
mountains,” meaning we can’t rely on outsiders for support. If you
look at their history, they have plenty of reason to believe that. So I
think they have to find some mode of accommodation with the surrounding
countries and also a way to deal with their Kurdish population.

The Kurdish population, say, in Turkey, is quite excited about Kurdish
semi-autonomy in Iraq.

D.B.: They see that as a model?

N.C.: They see that as something hopeful, but they themselves have
not been well treated by the semi-autonomous Iraqi Kurds, who are
after their own interests. One of the few American journalists to
have really worked in the area, Kevin McKiernan, once described a
mountain in northern Iraq called Mount Kandil. He said it has two
sides: on one side there are terrorists, on the other side there are
freedom fighters. They’re exactly the same people: They’re Kurdish
nationalists. But one side faces Turkey, so they’re terrorists. The
other side faces Iran, so they’re freedom fighters. Apparently,
they’re pretty well integrated. It’s reported that the guerrillas on
the mountain have regular commercial and other interactions with the
general surrounding population.

http://www.armenianweekly.com/2012/02/09/chomsky/#comments

Hamparian: Confronting A Pre-Genocidal Turkey

HAMPARIAN: CONFRONTING A PRE-GENOCIDAL TURKEY
by Aram Hamparian

February 9, 2012

It’s sometimes said that the obstruction of truth and justice for
the Armenian Genocide is the result of actions by the Turkish state,
not a reflection of the values of Turkish society.

In modern Turkey, Hrant Dink’s killer is treated like a hero, and
those guilty of his assassination are let free.

On the surface, this explanation might have some superficial appeal.

But upon any meaningful examination, this formulation falls apart. It
dramatically oversimplifies the complex reality on the ground in
Turkey, at so many levels, and ignores the deep historical and societal
roots of anti-Armenian racism and violence in modern Turkish culture.

An imperfect (but perhaps useful) analogy may help shed some light
on this issue: America’s brutal treatment of African Americans and
Native Americans was not simply the function of governmental policy
driven from above, but rather a reflection and a direct result, sadly,
of very toxic and hateful cultural attitudes on race. Attitudes that
created the very basis for the horrors of slavery and the genocidal
massacres and ethnic-cleansing of American Indian tribes from their
ancient homelands. Reading our Declaration of Independence (and its
reference to “merciless Indian Savages”) or our Constitution (and its
inhuman description of African Americans as three-fifths of a human
being) just scratches the surface of the untold terror visited upon
these peoples.

Add to this intolerance the vast American wealth drawn from centuries
of slave labor and the massive theft of native lands-a parallel to the
foundation of the modern Turkish economy, built upon the wealth and
properties of literally hundreds of thousands of Armenian families and
businesses stolen during the Armenian Genocide era-and you compound
racial discrimination with deeply rooted and highly influential
economic interests. A powerful combination. Hard, but not impossible,
to challenge.

To our credit, as Americans-after decades of denial, demonstrations
and, eventually, dialogue-we are today openly struggling with these
deeply intense issues that are so closely tied to our very foundation,
growth, and future as a nation. In Turkey, it is still illegal to
talk about them.

Imagine Birmingham or Montgomery, Ala., at the height of Jim Crow.

Imagine a time in American history, thankfully behind us now, when
segregationists openly celebrated Klan lynchings, and school children
were raised to revel in old-school Westerns that demonized American
Indians and glorified their destruction.

Well, sadly, that is where Turkey stands today.

In modern Turkey, Hrant Dink’s killer is treated like a hero, and
those guilty of his assassination are let free. Armenians are regularly
threatened with renewed deportations, the remaining Christian heritage
of Anatolia is being systematically erased, and the country’s most
popular films and books are about scapegoating and striking down
treasonous minorities.

There are, of course, Turks who line up on the side of the angels.

Unfortunately, however, U.S. policy toward Ankara has long been to
play to the lowest common denominator, backing demagogues who appeal
to their population’s basest instincts, at the expense of the small
but growing number of brave souls who are struggling and sacrificing
for the simple freedom to speak and act in pursuit of their country’s
highest aspirations.

Turkey today is not a post-genocidal state, but a pre-genocidal
society, angrily lashing out at its imagined enemies and, it would
seem, seeking out its next target. The remaining Armenians on the soil
of present-day Turkey – reminders of the unfinished work of Turkey’s
last genocide – are high on this list, as, of course, are the Kurds,
the most likely victim of its next.

The bottom line is that what is needed is not simply a change in
Turkey’s policies, but rather a profound, long-term movement driven
by both international and domestic pressure to rehabilitate Turkey
into a modern, tolerant, and pluralist society that-as proof of its
reform-willingly forfeits the fruits of its genocidal crimes.

Any less would be a disservice to Turkey’s victims, to Turkey’s
neighbors, and to Turkey’s own citizens.

http://www.armenianweekly.com/2012/02/09/hamparian-confronting-a-pre-genocidal-turkey/

Yerevan Mayor Meets With British Ambassador To Armenia

YEREVAN MAYOR MEETS WITH BRITISH AMBASSADOR TO ARMENIA

ARMENPRESS
FEBRUARY 9, 2012
YEREVAN

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 9, ARMENPRESS: Yerevan Mayor Taron Margaryan met with
British Ambassador to Armenia Catherine Jane Lich. Taron Margaryan
noted that despite the high level of the relations between the two
countries, no partner relations have been established between Yerevan
and British cities up to now, press service of Yerevan Mayor’s Office
told Armenpress.

“I am sure that with your support and with the support of the Armenian
Ambassador to Great Britain this flaw will soon be fulfilled,” said
the Mayor.

Ambassador Lich showed interest in Yerevan development projects
especially in the spheres of nature protection and monument
preservation. Yerevan Mayor presented the strategy for development
of Yerevan town and the project priorities.

“I am sure that experience exchange in the field of local
self-government between Yerevan and British cities will be mutually
useful and will promote strengthening, development and expansion of
mutual ties,” said Mr. Margaryan.

For his part, Ambassador Lich expressed readiness to contribute to
establishment of ties between Yerevan and British cities.