Turkish Threats Helped Armenians

TURKISH THREATS HELPED ARMENIANS

A1+
[05:35 pm] 11 October, 2007

"The adoption of the Resolution by the U.S. House Foreign Affairs
Committee does not have the force of law, it has a moral significance",
announced Arpi Vardanian, Regional Director for Armenia and
Nagorno-Karabakh of the Armenian Assembly of America.

She considers the Resolution an attitude, which may have an essential
impact on other countries, which have not recognized the fact of the
Armenian Genocide yet.

Arpi Vardanyan considers the adoption of the Resolution a victory,
although a similar resolution was adopted with 40 for and 7 against
votes, while this time – with 27 for and 21 against votes. "Taking into
consideration the fact, that Turkey has a great influence, much money,
and the US Administration and George Bush himself supports Turkey,
we managed to succeed. This is a victory indeed", says Arpi Vardanyan,
who has written a letter to congressmen.

In the interview with "A1+" Arpi Vardanyan mentioned that Turkish
aggressive attitude had opposite effect, and the congressmen were
rather annoyed by Turkish pressures and threats, thus it had a positive
impact on the adoption of the Resolution.

The 106 Resolution will be put to the vote in the House of
Representatives, where 225 senators of 435 support the Resolution.

The discussion of the bill depends on the House Speaker Nancy
Pelosi. Pelosi is the member of the Congressional Caucus on Armenian
Issues and has always supported the recognition of the Armenian
Genocide.

The Armenian lobby will continue its activities. By the way, the
Armenian authorities did not have any influence on the adoption of the
Resolution and they could not have it, since as Arpi Vardanyan stated:
"The Armenian community in the US has voter for those congressmen
and has certain levers there".

Arpi Vardanyan doubted to answer what impact may have the adoption
of the Resolution on the Armenians living in Turkey, but expressed
hope that the Turkish authorities would be as wise as not to harm
the Armenian community. However, the influence of the Resolution in
Turkey may vary – it may cause both negative and positive changes.

Meeting President Of Armenia Robert Kocharyan

MEETING PRESIDENT OF ARMENIA ROBERT KOCHARYAN

ABHaber, Belgium
EU-Turkey News Network
Oct 11 2007

During his discussions with Mr Kocharyan, president Barroso stressed
the importance the EU attaches to Armenia’s inclusion in the European
Neighbourhood Policy (ENP) and commended Armenia on the steps it has
already taken towards political reform under the ENP action plan. On
sensitive issues, namely Armenia’s relations with its neighbours,
the president underlined the need for good neighbourly relations on
all sides.

Press conference, Berlaymont, Brussels, 10 October 2007
Speaking points, Jose Manuel BARROSO
President of the European Commission
Following his meeting with the President of Armenia Robert Kocharyan

I just had a very interesting meeting with President Kocharyan which
was an opportunity to review EU-Armenia relations in the context of
the European Neighbourhood Policy.

And I told the President how satisfied we are with the good progress
made by Armenia under the Action Plan to implement this Neighbourhood
Policy, especially in the field of political reforms.

This Action Plan will further support Armenian reform efforts through
deepening of the political dialogue. And you know how I am personally
attached to political dialogue and governance as solid foundations
for political stability, democracy and shared prosperity.

I really think Armenia has understood the rationale behind our
Neighbourhood Policy and it is applying it consequently. This European
Neighbourhood Policy is not only about benefiting from some trade
and economic cooperation advantages, which are also important, of
course, but it is also a tool that generates peace, stability and
political dialogue.

We also discussed sensitive issue namely Armenia’s relations with
its neighbours, Azerbaijan and Turkey. We exchanged views on progress
made in settling the conflict with Azerbaijan over Nagorno Karabakh.

The President will probably tell you more about this but I think it
is very important to make a real effort on all side to make progress
on those very difficult and sensitive issues.

Concerning Armenian-Turkish relations, I stressed the importance of
good neighbourly relations.

In substance, I appreciated the frank and direct exchange of views
with the President.

sp?id=19246

http://www.abhaber.com/haber_sayfasi.a

Turkish FM’s Visits Israel At A Delicate Time In Ankara-Jerusalem Re

TURKISH FM’S VISITS ISRAEL AT A DELICATE TIME IN ANKARA-JERUSALEM RELATIONS
By Gil Zohar

European Jewish Press, Belgium
Oct 11 2007

JERUSALEM (EJP)—Turkey’s new Foreign Minister Ali Babacan met earlier
this week with Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert for wide-ranging
discussions on regional and bilateral issues.

Israel and Turkey have traditionally enjoyed strong political and
economic ties.

But that alliance has been strained recently: the talks between
Babacan and Olmert were held in the context of the Israel Air Force’s
September 6 attack on a Syrian military facility which may have been
intended to process North Korean plutonium.

That attack involved an IAF flyover over Turkish territory.

As well, Ankara is concerned that Jerusalem may change its position
against recognizing the death of 1.5 million Armenians in the Ottoman
empire during World War I as genocide.

That issue is both a matter of Turkish national pride and a stumbling
block in Turkey’s stalled bid to join the European Union.

The talks between Babacan and Olmert came on the eve of a crucial vote
Wednesday in the House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee
to label the Ottoman massacre of Armenians as genocide.

Resolution adopted

To cheers and applause from emotional Armenians, including elderly
wheelchair-bound survivors, the committee voted for the resolution
by 27 votes to 21.

The US State Department has expressed regret and said it hoped the
move would not interfere with relations with Turkey.

"We regret that the House Foreign Affairs Committee has approved House
Resolution 106," State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said in
a statement. "The administration continues strongly to oppose this
resolution, passage of which may do grave harm to US-Turkish relations
and to US interests in Europe and the Middle East," McCormack said.

The vote outraged the Turkish government, which issued a statement
Thursday stating the "irresponsible" resolution was likely to endanger
bilateral relations.

"We still hope that the House of Representatives will have enough
good sense not to take this resolution further," said the statement.

To do so, it added, would jeopardize a strategic partnership with an
ally and friend and would be an "irresponsible attitude", it added.

"It is unacceptable that the Turkish nation should be accused of a
crime that it never committed in its history."

Turkey views Israel as having crucial influence on US foreign policy,
and is seeking to have Jerusalem pressure Washington not to enact
the Armenian genocide bill in Congress.

But in August, an American Jewish advocacy group, the Anti-Defamation
League (ADL), shocked the Turkish authorities when it recognized the
World War I-era killings of Armenians as genocide.

In his talks with Olmert, Babacan said that there is a profound
solidarity between Turkey and Israel both of which suffer from
terrorist attacks.

The two leaders reviewed the expanding economic relations between
the countries in the fields of industry, tourism and infrastructure.

Prime Minister Olmert noted the importance of Turkey’s involvement in
the upcoming international meeting to be held in the US and emphasized
that the participation of moderate Arab and Islamic countries, which
openly express their support for the advancement of the bilateral
negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians, would greatly
contribute to its success.

He also noted that the meeting is not in place of direct negotiations
between Israel and the Palestinians but is an open show of support
for reaching an agreement via dialogue between the sides.

As is customary for all foreign politicians visiting Israel, Babacan
began his visit with a tour of the Yad Vashem Holocaust Memorial in
Jerusalem, where he laid a wreath.

Babacan was appointed Turkey’s Minister of Foreign Affairs on August 29
in the new cabinet of re-elected Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

He succeeded Abdullah Gul, who became president of Turkey. Babacan
also continues to be the chief negotiator of Turkey’s membership of
the European Union.

Babacan was previously State Minister for Economy in the 58th cabinet
from the Justice and Development Party (AKP), which came to power in
November 2002.

http://www.ejpress.org/article/20789

Robert Kocharian Welcomes U.S. Lawmakers’ Resolution On Armenian Gen

ROBERT KOCHARIAN WELCOMES U.S. LAWMAKERS’ RESOLUTION ON ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

Pravda, Russia
Oct 11 2007

Robert Kocharian, Armenian President, approved the decision of
U.S. lawmakers to recognise the extermination of hundreds of thousanfs
of Armenians during WWI as genocide.

"We hope this process will lead to a full recognition by the United
States of America of the fact of the Armenian genocide," Kocharian
told reporters after talks with EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana.

Kocharian, Armenian President, appealed to Turkey to join Armenia in
talks to restore bilateral relations, but said Ankara had no right to
bully other countries into refraining from recognizing the killings
as genocide.

"All of our foreign contacts around the world demonstrate that there
is no disagreement or that there is no doubt anywhere in the world
about the events that took place in Turkey in 1915, and there is a
consensus regarding those events," Kocharian said.

"The fact that Turkey has adopted a position of denial of the genocide
doesn’t mean it can bind other states to deny historic truths as well,"
he added.

Solana urged Armenia and Turkey to "look to the future" and work to
build bilateral ties.

Kocharian said the passing of a resolution by the U.S. Congress
would have no impact on diplomatic ties between his country and its
neighbor, Turkey – which are nonexistent – but said he was open to
talks with Turkey.

"We are ready for diplomatic relations without any preconditions and
we are ready to start a very wide dialogue with our Turkish partners
on all possible issues of Armenian-Turkish relations," he said.

The U.S. House Foreign Affairs Committee voted Wednesday to pass a
measure calling the killings of Armenians early in the last century
a genocide, despite objections from U.S. President George W. Bush and
Turkey, a NATO ally that has provided support to Washington in Iraq.

The dispute involves the killing of up to 1.5 million Armenians by
Ottoman Turks around the time of World War I, an event viewed by
genocide scholars as the first genocide of the 20th century. Turkey
denies that the deaths constituted a genocide, saying the toll has
been inflated and insisting that those killed were victims of civil
war and unrest.

France voted last year to make it a crime to deny the killings were
genocide, after which the Turkish government ended its military ties
with that country.

U.S.: House Panel Approves Armenian Genocide Resolution

U.S.: HOUSE PANEL APPROVES ARMENIAN GENOCIDE RESOLUTION

Stratfor
Oct 11 2007

The House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee approved a
resolution calling the 1915 massacres of Armenians by Ottoman Turks
genocide on a 27-21 vote, Reuters reported Oct. 10. It will now
go to the House floor, where Democratic leaders promise a vote by
mid-November. The Senate has a companion bill, but both measures are
symbolic and do not require the president’s signature. U.S. President
George W. Bush has spoken against the measures.

Reluctantly Thrust Into Spotlight, Armenia Scholar Becomes Equal Opp

RELUCTANTLY THRUST INTO SPOTLIGHT, ARMENIA SCHOLAR BECOMES EQUAL OPPORTUNITY OFFENDER
Gabriel Sanders

Forward, NY

Oct 10 2007

Last week, while on his way to visit a friend in Watertown, Mass. –
the Boston suburb that served as ground zero in last summer’s showdown
between Armenian groups and the Anti-Defamation League over recognition
of the Armenian Genocide – James Russell, a professor of Armenian
studies at Harvard University, stopped at Arax, a popular Middle
Eastern market.

As he gathered his groceries, he heard a fellow shopper, an Armenian,
somewhat menacingly say, "Have a look at Mr. Russell over there." The
professor, taken aback, asked, "Have I had the honor?" The two had
never met before, but Russell’s reputation as a perennial thorn in
the Armenian community’s side preceded him.

A complex figure, the 53-year-old Russell resists easy classification
and is no stranger to controversy: reviled by Turks and Armenians
alike, a Jew and staunch Zionist working in a field that is often
hostile to Israel, and a gay man and self-described red-diaper
baby who has served as a faculty adviser to a conservative Harvard
student newspaper. And yet, while he is for some a polarizing figure,
his variousness has also allowed him to serve as something else –
a bridge builder.

Russell’s grocery store interlocutor, who it turned out was
a doctor and prominent member of the local Armenian community,
wanted to know if Russell was for or against the ADL’s involvement
in Watertown. The town made headlines last summer when it voted to
withdraw from an anti-bigotry program run by the ADL to protest the
group’s long-standing refusal to refer to World War I-era massacres
of Armenians as genocide. In August, the ADL, under pressure from
its New England chapter, reversed its position but stopped short of
endorsing a resolution recognizing the genocide now before Congress.

Russell answered that he was satisfied with the group’s new stance.

Should they lobby against the resolution, he will oppose them, he said,
but should they take a neutral view, he will not be opposed.

The doctor was incredulous, and asked Russell how a Jewish group
could justify such a stance.

"And what are Armenians doing to help Jewish causes?" Russell
countered. "How is it that nobody faults Armenia for being friendly
with Syria and Iran?"

A New York native, Russell’s interest in Armenia began during a trip
he took to the Soviet Union as a high school student in 1969. Upon
his return, he began studying Armenian with tutors he found in upper
Manhattan. He then intensified his study of the language at Columbia
University, where he was the first undergraduate ever to major in
Armenian studies. After completing a graduate degree at Oxford, Russell
ultimately earned his Ph.D. from the University of London, where he
wrote a dissertation on Zoroastrianism in Armenia. Russell spent the
first years of his career back at Columbia’s department of Middle East
studies, which denied him tenure in 1992. (Russell maintains that the
decision was rooted in antisemitism.) He then moved to Israel, where
he taught at Hebrew University. Shortly after his arrival in Jerusalem,
however, he learned that he had been appointed to the chair in Armenian
studies at Harvard, which has served as his academic home since 1993.

In conversations with the Forward, Russell emphasized that he is a
scholar of Armenian language and literature and not a historian of the
genocide, discussions of which, he noted with some dismay, often come
to eclipse his true areas of specialty. "Sometimes it reminds me of how
American Jews don’t bother to learn about Hebrew, but they know about
the Holocaust," he said. As a prominent Armenologist, however, Russell
has felt it his duty to decry Turkish genocide denial, a stance for
which he has been attacked both in the Turkish press and on the Web.

Russell’s insistence on the truth of the Armenian genocide has not,
however, served to endear him to the American Armenian community,
at least not when coupled with criticism of Armenians. A threatening
and almost cartoonishly antisemitic 2002 opinion piece in the New
York-based Armenian Reporter newspaper essentially instructed Russell
to keep quiet.

"Regardless of his professional qualifications," it said, "[Russell]
should not forget his conditional position within the Armenian
community. Mr. Russell’s professional services regarding Armenian
studies do not in any way give him the liberty to attack any Armenian
organization or individual. On the contrary, Mr. Russell’s position
as an Armenian studies chairman requires his conformity with and
subservience to the greater Armenian community, regardless of its
political affiliations."

In a sense, Russell and his critics are in agreement when it comes to
the matter of where his allegiances lie. "My primary loyalty is to
my own people," he said. But, for Russell, solidarity is not simply
a synonym for clannishness. It also demands responsibility.

"When people fight for their rights and acquire power, they also
acquire a sense of their own responsibility and integrity, wholeness.

This is what gay liberation has done for gays. As Jews, since we are
not powerless anymore, since we have a state, we don’t have to be the
lambs of the sacrifice, the conscience of the world, the people held
to a higher standard."

Ultimately, Russell said, his hope is that Armenians can feel similarly
empowered.

"In discussing the genocide with Armenians, I don’t want to appeal
to a sense of victimhood," he said. "I want to say, ‘You too have a
state. It too has interests. In the long run, Armenia and Israel can
be friends.’"

In the interim, Russell contents himself with dialogue. Even when
receiving hate mail, he tries to engage.

"I’ve gotten some threatening letters from Turks by email," he said.

"I always answer. If they call me a name, I call them a name. Then
they usually write back saying, ‘Professors shouldn’t use such
language.’ And then I say, ‘I thought that’s the language you used,
but if you want to speak human language here’s my home address,
why don’t you come have dinner.’ Then they write back and say,
‘I’ll bring the baklava.’"

And in small yet tangible ways, Russell’s approach is working. After
his initially tense run in at the Watertown market, the doctor offered
to pay for some of Russell’s groceries. This week, he came to sit in
on one of Russell’s classes. The discussion went on for four and a
half hours.

http://www.forward.com/articles/11796/

Armenian President: "Our Economy Has Overcome The Transition Period

ARMENIAN PRESIDENT: "OUR ECONOMY HAS OVERCOME THE TRANSITION PERIOD AND HAS ENTERED THE PHASE OF STABLE DEVELOPMENT"

Mediamax
Oct 10 2007
Armenia

Yerevan, October 10 /Mediamax/. The volume of foreign investments in
the Armenian economy this year made $532.9mln.

As the special correspondent of Mediamax reports from Brussels,
Executive Director of the Armenian Development Agency Tigran Davtian
brought these numbers, speaking on October 9 at the Armenian-Belgian
business-forum. He informed that in 2007 the GDP volume in Armenia
will make $8.1bln, as compared to $7.1bln in 2006.

Tigran Davtian noted that, according to the forecasts, the GDP
volume per head will make $3.200 in 2008, which can be compared to
the indices of Eastern Europe states.

Speaking at the business-forum, Armenian President Robert Kocharian
stated that "today we can state with confidence that the economy of
our country has overcome the transition period and entered the phase
of stable development".

Kars-Akhalkalaki-Tbilisi-Baku Railroad Project Cost Likely To Rise

KARS-AKHALKALAKI-TBILISI-BAKU RAILROAD PROJECT COST LIKELY TO RISE

PanARMENIAN.Net
08.10.2007 17:06 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The cost of the Kars-Akhalkalaki-Tbilisi-Baku railway
project is likely to rise because the prices of materials and energy
supplies went up, said Ziya Mammadov, Transport Minister of Azerbaijan.

As to the media reports that the 160km Marabda-Akhalkalaki railroad
is in bad condition and will need more funds for rehabilitation,
Ziya Mammadov declined to answer anything.

"Azerbaijan will finance construction of 26km railroad and
reconstruction of 160km Akhalkalaki-Marabda railroad in Georgia,"
he noted.

The preliminary cost of the project was fixed at $422 million, of
which $202 million was supposed to be covered by Georgia and $220
million by Turkey.

The three countries agreed in February to build a rail line linking
Baku, Tbilisi and Kars.

As per the agreement, Azerbaijan undertook to extend a $200mln loan
to Georgia’s Marabda-Kars Railroad LLC for 25 years at 1% interest
rate annually.

The loan will be spent on construction of a 29km long railroad in
Georgia, a station in Turkish-Georgian border and rehabilitation of
old railway.

The first installment of $50 million has already been transferred for
the construction. The rest of the loan will be available next year,
APA reports.

Switzerland continues its acquaintance with Armenian culture

Panorama.am

18:37 05/10/2007

SWITZERLAND CONTINUES ITS ACQUAINTANCE WITH ARMENIAN CULTURE

An exhibition opened under the title ”Armenian landscapes in modern
art and architecture” in `EWZ’ exhibition hall of Zurich. It is
organized by the efforts of the Armenian embassy in Switzerland with
close cooperation of Zurich municipality, Armenian foreign ministry
press services report.

The aim of the event is to present Armenian rich cultural heritage as
a unique reality formed at the crossroads of the East and the
West. The biggest event took place in Geneva in September – `Armenian
miniature: collection of Matenadaran.”

Source: Panorama.am

ANKARA: Oskanian Sends Letter To Pelosi In Response To US Statesmen

OSKANIAN SENDS LETTER TO PELOSI IN RESPONSE TO US STATESMEN

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
Oct 3 2007

Armenian Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian has sent a letter to US
Speaker of the House of Representatives Nancy Pelosi, reacting to
an earlier letter addressed to her by eight former secretaries of
state that said a resolution calling on the US administration to
recognize Armenian claims of genocide would harm US interests and
disrupt Turkish-Armenian reconciliation prospects.

Armenian Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian

"It is with dismay that I read that the letter claims that such
a resolution would hurt Armenia-Turkey relations. It is quite
unfortunate that eight experienced diplomats would buy into Turkish
manipulation," Oskanian said in his letter dated Sept. 27, according
to a statement from the Armenian Foreign Ministry e-mailed to Today’s
Zaman yesterday. "I regret to say that there is no process in place
to promote normalization of relations between Armenia and Turkey.

Expressing concern about damaging a process that doesn’t exist is,
at the very least, disingenuous."

The letter from US diplomats was signed by Madeleine K. Albright,
James A. Baker III, Warren Christopher, Lawrence S. Eagleburger,
Alexander M. Haig, Jr., Henry A. Kissinger, Colin L. Powell and George
P. Shultz. They called on Pelosi, who is known to be an advocate of
the resolution, to block the vote on it.

Turkey categorically rejects Armenian claims of genocide, saying that
Turks as well as Armenians died during the World War I years when
Armenians took up arms against the Ottoman Empire in collaboration
with the invading Russian army in the hope of creating an Armenian
state in part of eastern Anatolia.