RPA Spokesman: NKR Will Never Be A Part Of Azerbaijan

RPA SPOKESMAN: NKR WILL NEVER BE A PART OF AZERBAIJAN

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
15.10.2009 14:04 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Normalization of Armenian-Turkish relations is
by no means linked to Nagorno Karabakh conflict settlement process,
said a spokesman for ruling Republic Party of Armenia.

"Turkish officials’ statements that the border will not be opened
unless Karabakh conflict is resolved target the Azerbaijani
public. Turkey is mistaken to think that Armenia can ever make
unilateral concessions in Karabakh process. Instead, it had
better convince Baku that Nagorno Karabakh will never be a part of
Azerbaijan," Eduard Sharmazanov told a news conference on Thursday.

Commenting on Heritage party’s bill on recognition of the Nagorno
Karabakh Republic, he said, "Recognition of NKR should not be an end
in itself and any interference may hamper the Minsk process."

FFA President: It’s Too Bad Turkish Team Was Disqualified From WC-20

FFA PRESIDENT: IT’S TOO BAD TURKISH TEAM WAS DISQUALIFIED FROM WC-2010

PanARMENIAN.Net
14.10.2009 18:34 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Ahead of Armenia-Turkey match, Armenian Football
Federation (FFA) President Ruben Hayrapetyan expressed hope that
the game would be a purely sports event, with teams competing on
equal conditions.

"I hope we’ll eye witness a high quality match, with the strongest
team becoming a winner," he said.

"If Armenian team wins Turkey, coach Vardan Minasyan will remain in
post, otherwise, he’ll be discharged," FFA President added.

When asked by Turkish journalists why Turkey’s team was disqualified
from World Cup, Hayrapetyan said, "Answer to that question should be
given by Turkey’s Football Federation and not me. Anyway, it’s too
that a team demonstrating such high-quality games was disqualified
from WC-2010."

"No Changes In Genocide And Artsakh Issues"

"NO CHANGES IN GENOCIDE AND ARTSAKH ISSUES"

Aysor.am
Wednesday, October 14

Activating the regulation process of the Armenian – Turkish relations
the RA President Serzh Sargsyan just like all the other Armenian
presidents realizes its historical mission, said Hamleth Haroutyunyan,
the deputy of the RPA.

"Armenia which has newly gained its independence has had 3 presidents
three of each has had its historical mission. No one can deny that
we won the Karabakh war during the presidency of Levon – Ter –
Petrosyan. No one can deny that the achievement of the international
recognition of the Genocide is with Robert Kocharyan. I am sure that
the President Serzh Sargsyan also has its historical mission. Armenia
should break this diplomatic blockade and get its important role in
the region", – said he.

According to the speaker the Genocide and Artsakh issues have no
connection with the protocols signed between Armenian and Turkey.

"Armenia will continue its approaches to the Genocide and Artsakh
issues in its interests", – assured the RPA representative.

Speaking about the signing process of the protocols Hamleth Harutyunyan
made a historic review mentioning about the losses that the Armenian
nation had because of the policy of some parties.

"We can only welcome the people who try to improve those relations to
resume the historic justice and not to link that question with the
Genocide or Artsakh issues. We are building our state", – mentioned
the deputy.

Azerbaijani Parliamentarians Believes Erdoghan

AZERBAIJANI PARLIAMENTARIANS BELIEVES ERDOGHAN

hos15546.html
16:46:08 – 14/10/2009

The responsible for the foreign relations of the Turkish ruling party
Gurshad Turzma stated that Turkey will not make steps contradicting
Azerbaijani interests. Such steps will be equal to suicide for the
Turkish leaders, he told the Azerbaijani parliamentarians who arrived
in Turkey to discuss the situation formed around the Armenian and
Turkish relations.

On these days, the Prime Minister Erdoghan assured the leadership of
his ruling party that Turkey will act in accordance with its speech in
the Azerbaijani parliament, that is the border will not be opened till
the Karabakh issue is not settled. The Azerbaijani parliamentarians
stated they believe the prime minister’s words.

http://www.lragir.am/engsrc/politics-lra

Ameriabank’s Time Deposits Rise 7.6 Times To 44 Billion Drams

AMERIABANK’S TIME DEPOSITS RISE 7.6 TIMES TO 44 BILLION DRAMS

ARKA
October13, 2009
Yerevan

YEREVAN, October 13, /ARKA/. Armenian commercial AmeriaBank said its
time deposits rose almost 4 times in January-September, 2009 and 7.6
times in the last 12 months to 44 billion Drams. The bank’s press
service told ARKA that the volume of corporate time deposits in the
first 9 months of the year rose 3.3 times and 9 times over the last
12 months to 32 billion Drams.

It said also 74% of all time deposits are corporate- held, although
the bank’s initiative to insure fully time deposits applies only to
individual deposits.

According to the press release, individual time deposits in
January-September rose almost 6 times and 5 times in the last 12
months to 11 billion Drams as of September 30. At that individual
deposits rose 80 percent in Q3, while corporate deposits rose in the
same time span by 24%.

The press release said also bank’s assets have risen this year by 90%
to 93 billion Drams.

AmeriaBank is a corporate bank with integrated investment-banking
and a limited number of retail banking services. In August 2007 96%
of the bank was obtained by TDA Holdings Limited, an investment
company affiliated with the leading and largest Russian investment
group company – Troika Dialog.

In 2007-2008 TDA Holdings Limited increased its equity participation
up to 99.99%. AmeriaBank chairman of board of directors is Ru ben
Vardanian. ($1 – 385.87 Drams).

US Department Of State – Remarks With Russian Foreign Minister Serge

US Department of State REMARKS WITH RUSSIAN FOREIGN MINISTER SERGEY LAVROV

Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State
Osobnyak Guest House
Moscow, Russia
October 13, 2009

FOREIGN MINISTER LAVROV: (In Russian.)

SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, good afternoon. I want to start by thanking
Minister Lavrov for hosting me in Moscow today, along with my
delegation. We have had a very productive and comprehensive set of
discussions. This follows on the work that we began over the last
many months to transform the relationship between our two countries,
to find common ground wherever we can, to further mutual respect and
mutual interests, without in any way accepting the fact that there
are not differences between us, because there are. But to talk about
those differences, to share them openly, we think is also an important
part of this new aspect to our relationship.

Just three days ago, Sergey and I were in Zurich working together to
bring about the signing of the historic protocols between Armenia and
Turkey regarding normalization of relations. Both of our countries
strongly support this process, and it’s another example of how we
are working together.

We believe that the framework that has been established that was
announced by our two presidents during the summit here in Moscow in
July is extremely important. We have agreed to discuss a broad range
of important matters in these 16 working groups, which, as Sergey
has said, have begun their important consultations. We know that this
takes time. It doesn’t happen overnight. It requires building trust and
confidence between us. But I am very convinced that this is important
for each of our nations and our people, and indeed, the world.

Our work in the Bilateral Presidential Commission is looking closely
at how we can pursue practical, concrete results on issues ranging
from nuclear security and energy ef rts. Now, we know that the fact
that these meetings are occurring does not guarantee results, but they
do set in motion a process and an opportunity to build relationships
that will widen the avenues of cooperation.

President Obama and I believe that it is this cooperative relationship
and the acceptance of shared responsibility that is really at the
core of the 21st century relationship between the United States and
Russia. One example of that is the work that our technical experts are
doing on a START agreement to cut our nuclear arsenal to demonstrate
leadership from the two largest nuclear powers in the world. We are
also committed to working together on the Nonproliferation Treaty. Our
goal remains to complete the work on START by December 5th when the
current agreement expires. The global initiative on nuclear terrorism
to create a joint effort to secure vulnerable nuclear materials
and set new standards is another important step that we are pursuing
together. And we look forward to Russia’s leadership in helping to make
the Global Nuclear Security Summit next April in Washington a success.

As Sergey said, we have also broadened our area of cooperation when it
comes to Afghanistan. We appreciate the transit agreement that is now
in effect. We believe we have common interests to reduce the threat
of extremism, terrorism, narco-trafficking. And this is the kind of
very clear-headed, practical cooperation that is to our mutual benefit.

We obviously discussed some of the broader foreign policy issues that
we both face. Iran’s nuclear program remains a matter of serious
concern, and we’re working closely with Russia through the P-5+1
process. We had a constructive meeting in Geneva on October 1st. And
we are working to ensure that Iran moves forward with us on this
engagement track and demonstrates unequivocally that it is seeking
only the peaceful use of nuclear weapons.

We had a long discussion and brought in some of our technical experts
to review where we stand on missile defense. We explained that of the
evolving threat from Iran led President Obama to adopt a new, different
approach to missile defense. We are very interested in working with
Russia to develop cooperation, including a joint threat assessment
and intensified efforts to establish a joint data exchange center,
as our presidents agreed to in July, as a means of making missile
defense a common enterprise against what we believe are increasingly
common threats.

We appreciate the cooperation that we’ve had on North Korea and
Russia’s very strong interest in the peace process in the Middle
East. We look forward to being able to attend a conference in Moscow
at the appropriate time as part of the process leading to a two-state
solution between Israel and the Palestinians.

Now, we will continue to have disagreements. And I think it’s
very important for both the American media and the Russian media
to understand that we are different countries. We have different
historical experiences, different perspectives. But we are planting
those disagreements in a much broader field of cooperation, and
hopefully, we are enriching the earth in which this cooperation can
take root. We will not see eye-to-eye on Georgia, for example. We just
have a difference of opinion. We have made it clear that we will not
recognize South Ossetia and Abkhazia. But we are going to continue
to work in every other area where we do agree.

We will continue to raise questions concerning civil society and the
rule of law and the role of NGOs. We think that that’s a way to really
deepen and broaden our engagement. But on balance, I feel very good
about the so-called reset of our relations. Even though I didn’t get
the Russian word right – which Sergey immediately corrected me over –
it is a real pleasure to be back in Moscow for the continuation of
these dialogues that our two presidents and the minister and I and
other members of our government are engaged in. We really are committed
to this relationship. We believe strongly that working together,
step by step, we are lly assured destruction into one that is based
on mutual respect and, over time, increasingly mutual trust, because
we both have an obligation to the Russian people and to the American
people, but indeed to all the people of the world, for us to lead on
matters that are really at the heart of the future we hope to share.

MODERATOR: (In Russian.)

QUESTION: (In Russian.)

FOREIGN MINISTER LAVROV: (In Russian.)

SECRETARY CLINTON: We had a very long discussion about missile
defense and we outlined for the minister and the other officials
at the meeting the basis of our threat assessment, which President
Obama ordered to be conducted upon taking office. And the conclusion
we reached that the concerns about the ICBM development in Iran were
not as urgent as new concerns regarding the short- and medium-term
missiles that they are developing. The United States believes that
it is better to be prepared and defended against possible aggressive
offensive action by Iran or others who might develop such weapons,
and therefore, the phased adaptive approach which we have outlined
is intended to protect against that threat.

We have shared this with our Russian colleagues. Our experts are going
through all of the details, because we would like to see the United
States and Russian collaborate closely on missile defense. We think
it is in our mutual interest. We believe it is something that, given
our respective nations’ technological expertise, could be important
for the rest of the world.

And as Minister Lavrov said, we want to ensure that every question that
the Russian military or the Russian Government asks, we answer. We
have invited your leading experts to our missile command and control
center in Colorado Springs. We want to be as transparent as possible,
because this is important so that we agree on the common threat and
we agree as to how we will address that common threat. And we see
this as yet another area for deeper cooperation between our countries.

QUESTION: On Iran, what did you ask the minister with regard to
pressure and sanctions, and did you receive any assurances?

And for the minister, if I could ask, your president has said
that sanctions are inevitable. Do you still believe that to be the
case? Thank you.

SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, again, w ct to Iran, we had a lengthy
conversation. We reviewed the outcome of the October 1st meeting. The
United States has always had a dual-track approach to Iran where
we made it clear we wanted to pursue the engagement and diplomatic
track. And the very strong, united approach that has been taken in
the P-5+1 which, of course, includes the United States and Russia,
we think is making an impact on Iran. Iran has several obligations
that it said it would fulfill. We believe it is important to pursue
the diplomatic track and to do everything we can to make it successful.

We believe that Iran is entitled to peaceful nuclear energy, but
that it is not entitled to nuclear weapons. Russia agrees with us
on that. At the same time that we are very vigorously pursuing this
track, we are aware that we might not be as successful as we need to
be. So we have always looked at the potential of sanctions in the
event that we are not successful, that we cannot assure ourselves
and others that Iran has decided not to pursue nuclear weapons.

I think what President Medvedev said was that they may be inevitable,
not that they are inevitable. He said that they’re not always
preferable, but they may be inevitable. But we are not at that point
yet. That is not a conclusion we have reached, and we want to be very
clear that it is our preference that Iran work with the international
community, as represented by the P-5+1, fulfill its obligation on
inspections, in fact, open up its entire system so that there can be
no doubt about what they’re doing, and comply with the agreement in
principle to transfer out the low-enriched uranium. Those would be
confidence-building measures, and that would give us an opportunity
to take stock of where we are on the diplomatic track.

FOREIGN MINISTER LAVROV: (In Russian.)

MODERATOR: (In Russian.)

QUESTION: (In Russian.)

FOREIGN MINISTER LAVROV: (In Russian.)

MR. KELLY: And the last question to Mary Beth Sheridan from The
Washington Post.

QUESTION: Thank you. Minister Lavrov, a question for you.

U.S. is interested in gaining more Russian support for the effort in
Afghanistan. You’ve allowed these U.S. overflights. Are you prepared
to also provide other support, and specifically what?

And two questions, if I may, for Secretary Clinton. One is that it
sounds like you did not get the commitment from the Russian side in
terms of sanctions or other forms of pressure that could be brought
to bear on Iran. Could you comment on that?

And second question: Are you considering loosening sanctions on North
Korea to get the Six-Party Talks going? Thank you.

FOREIGN MINISTER LAVROV: (In Russian.)

SECRETARY CLINTON: Mary Beth, as I said, we are actively pursuing the
engagement track. We have two outstanding obligations plus another
meeting upcoming between the P-5+1 and the Iranians. It is not any
surprise to anyone, as I stated earlier, that in the absence of
significant progress and assurance that Iran is not pursuing nuclear
weapons, we will be seeking to rally international opinion behind
additional sanctions.

But Russia has been extremely cooperative in the work that we have
done together. Back at the United Nations General Assembly, Minister
Lavrov and I were at a meeting together with the P-5+1 ministers,
where a very strong statement was issued. In that statement, it
said that other actions will have to be considered in the absence
of Iranian meeting – Iran meeting its obligations. So we didn’t ask
for anything today. We reviewed the situation and where it stood,
which I think was the appropriate timing for what this process entails.

We have absolutely no intention of relaxing or offering to relax
North Korean sanctions at this point whatsoever. As you know, we’re
looking to restart the Six-Party process. Sergey and I talked about
that. We continue to believe it is the best way forward. We may use
some bilateral discussions to help get that process going, but that
is not in any way linked to relaxing any sanctions whatsoever.

MODERATOR: (In Russian.) Thank you.

Armenian Sport And Gymnastics In The Ottoman Empire

ARMENIAN SPORT AND GYMNASTICS IN THE OTTOMAN EMPIRE

armradio.am
13.10.2009 17:27

The presentation of the illustrated book of the director of the
Armenian Genocide museum-Institute, Mr. Hayk Demoyan, entitled
"Armenian Sport and Gymnastics in the Ottoman Empire" (in Armenian,
220 pages) was held at the the Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute
today. The book presents the history of sport and physical training
among Armenian population of the Ottoman Empire with more than five
hundred photos.

The book refers to the activities of Armenian sport clubs established
in Armenian populated cities of the Ottoman Empire, to the organization
of Pan-Armenian Olympic Games, to the history of intensively developing
athletic movement in Western Armenia and Cilicia, as well as refers
to the sport unions of Armenian women, to sport competition and
nationalism, to the establishment of Armenian scout movement. A
separate chapter is dedicated to the Armenian sportsmen who fell
victims to the Armenian Genocide.

The history of the development of Armenian sport and gymnastics in
the Ottoman Empire takes its beginning from the end of 19th century,
when the first athletic clubs and societies were established. Under
the rule of the Sultan, being engaged in sports or athletics was
strictly forbidden and those who broke this law were punished.

After the coup d’etat of Young Turks in 1908, the first Armenian
athletic clubs and footb all teams were formed in Constantinople and
Smyrna. During this period the first professional Armenian sportsmen –
Shavarsh Chrisian, Mkrtich Mkrian, Grigor Hakobian and others played
significant role in propagating athletics among the Ottoman Armenians.

A unique phenomenon in the history of sport of the Ottoman Empire was
the participation of two Armenian sportsmen in the 5th International
Olympic Games in Stockholm. Armenian athletes Vahram Papazian and
Mkrtich Mkrian became the first sportsmen who represented the Ottoman
Empire in the International Olympic Games.

The publication of the first sport magazine in the Ottoman Empire
by Shavarsh Chrisian, called "Marmnamarz" ("Athletics") (1911-1914),
offered an additional incentive for extending the interest towards the
sport among the Ottoman Armenians. "Marmnamarz", the "body of national
physical training", became the major instrument for the development of
sport and athletic life among the Armenian population. This magazine
published information about various sport games and their results,
as well as published photos of Armenian and foreign athletes and
Armenian football teams.

On the eve of World War I there were about 40 Armenian athletic clubs
in Constantinople alone. Armenian football teams took part in team and
international tournaments of several leagues in the capital. The most
famous football teams were "Balta Liman", "Araks9 D and "Torq". The
most famous team of Smyrna was "Hay Vorsordats Club" ("The Armenian
Hunters’ club"). Armenian sport clubs were established also in Smyrna,
Nikomedia, Karin, Marzvan, Samson, Adana, Van, Caesarea, Dortyol,
Trapizon, Konya etc.

In 1911-1914 the Pan-Armenian Olympic Games were organized with
the participation of tens of Armenian sport and athletic clubs and
societies.

During the Games records were held and the winners were awarded with
silver medals. In 1914 were also held the first "Cilician Olympic
Games".

Many Armenian sportsmen fell victims to the Armenian Genocide. Among
them was Shavarsh Chrisian, the editor of "Marmnamarz", and after it
the publication of the magazine was stopped.

Turkish Experts Consider Possibility Of Protocol Ratification By Par

TURKISH EXPERTS CONSIDER POSSIBILITY OF PROTOCOL RATIFICATION BY PARLIAMENT

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
13.10.2009 15:53 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Majority of Turkish parliamentarians endorse
Prime Minister’s statement on Turkish parliament’s not ratifying
RA-Turkish Protocols unless there is progress in Karabakh
settlement process, Head of TURKSAM centre Sinan Ohan told a
Yerevan-Ankara-Moscow TV bridge on "New Geopolitical situation in
the East: Armenian-Turkish rapprochement, problems and realities". "I
recently had conversations with MPs, and they expressed full support to
Premier’s standpoint. Turkish Parliament will be waiting for progress
in Karabakh process," Turkish expert stressed.

Huseyin Bagci, Vice President of European Security Academy and
scientific board member in Middle East Technical University, stressed
in turn that Protocols would be ratified by Turkish parliament,
since normalization of Armenian-Turkish ties required spirit of
time. "Superpowers are currently coercing Armenia and Turkey into
normalizing ties, forcing Recep Tayyip Erdogan to ensure Protocol
ratification," Professor said.

Theriault: The Final Stage Of Genocide: Consolidation

THERIAULT: THE FINAL STAGE OF GENOCIDE: CONSOLIDATION
By Henry Theriault

11/theriault-the-final-stage-of-genocide-consolida tion/
October 11, 2009

This essay is an analysis of the Turkish-Armenian protocol process in
relation to the Armenian Genocide. I say "protocol process" because
mere analysis of the protocols themselves cannot be meaningful. The
protocols exist within a complex historical, cultural, political, and
geopolitical context dominated by genocide and its aftermath. It is
impossible to interpret accurately the meaning of particular elements
of the protocols without reference to that context.

Before I offer my analysis, I must point out that there has emerged
a certain conceptual muddle in recent self-declared "objective" or
"rational" evaluations of the protocols. I am especially concerned
by Asbed Kotchikian’s neutralist analysis and David Davidian’s
claimed "rational" analysis, both of which dismiss much of the recent
diasporan discourse on the protocols that challenges their value and
legitimacy (Kotchikian, "The Armenian-Turkish Protocols and Public
(Dis)Content," Armenian Weekly On-line, October 4, 2009, and Davidian,
"Turkish-Armenian Protocols: Reality and Irrationality," Armenian
Weekly On-line, October 1, 2009).

The conceptual muddle is this: Neutrality is not inherently
objectivity and dispassion is not inherently rationality. In fact,
neutrality itself is a position that can be biased or irrational,
if the facts and logic call for taking a position one way or
another on an issue. Furthermore, a person who chooses to advocate a
position in strong terms is not by that fact automatically biased or
irrational. Rationality-logic-is a form of thought in which reasons
are given in support of a claim. Far from it being illogical to take a
position on an issue, reasonable people have a moral responsibility to
take positions if the facts and reason warrant doing so. The question
of rationality is simply the question of whether one provides reasoning
(facts and logical connection of the facts to the position advocated)
to support one’s position. Unequivocal advocacy of a position, no
matter how "all or nothing" (to quote Davidian), is not inherently
irrational. A viewpoint is non-rational if it is not supported by
logically connected reasons in support of the position or supported by
facts that are not convincingly connected to the position advocated. A
position is irrational if it contradicts or culpably ignores known
evidence and the logical connections of that evidence to the question
at hand. While of course there are irrational and biased individuals
in any large group, overall, the numerous dissenting Armenian voices
rejecting the protocols present rational arguments based on factual
evidence for rejection. While one might challenge the logic and dispute
the claimed facts, the fact that some rational people disagree with
rejection of the protocols does not mean that those who reject them
are irrational.

Perhaps with some dramatic irony, in his own thinking Davidian himself
presents us with a very good example of irrationality. In the opening
sections of his piece, he states that if Armenia chooses to reject
international pressure to "discuss historical issues" (read: discuss
whether a genocide happened) with Turkey, then the situation will be
analogous to Slobodan Milosevic’s refusal to stop "ethnic cleansing"
(does Davidian mean in 1995 in Bosnia or in 1999 in Kosovo?) because
he believed (most genocide perpetrators, as contemporaneous genocide
deniers, do) that the Serbs "didn’t start it." Davidian points out that
Serbs were bombed and were foolish not to yield to the pressure as
Armenia appears poised to. Thus, Armenians today would be irrational
not to cave to the international pressure being applied to them. But,
an analogy is the presentation of a situation, argument, or event
(1) that is emotionally, politically, culturally, etc., neutral for
the author/speaker and/or his/her audience and (2) that has strong
relevant structural similarities to a situation, argument, or event to
which the author/speaker and/or audience have emotional, political,
cultural, etc., connections to. The goal is to allow dispassionate
analysis of the latter situation, in order to see things that
proximity and emotion obscure. An analogy depends on the structural
similarity between the things analogized. But Davidian is comparing
(1) a post-genocidal victim state and society that have attempted
to engage the international community, including Turkey, on the past
genocide (though of course not in the way the perpetrator, committed to
denial, would like) with (2) a perpetrator state actively engaged in
an act of genocide and organized around pathological rationalization
of that genocide despite legitimate international objection to and
pressure against it. That Davidian finds it logically valid to liken
the situation of the Armenian state and society today to Serbia at
the time it was committing genocide does not call into !

question tocols but to Davidian’s own pretentions to logical
analysis. When the issue is negotiation over the truth about a
genocide, by definition the logical positioning of a state that is
heir to a victim society cannot be analogous to the positioning of a
perpetrator state. To suggest that Armenia would face military force
for not signing the protocols in the way that Serbia faced bombing
because it was participating in genocide makes no sense. Indeed, the
real lesson regarding Serbia is that a state can do much more against
international pressure than Armenia is doing-indeed, participate in
a genocide for three years-without being subjected to any meaningful
outside intervention for quite awhile, which is the opposite message
from what Davidian suggests.

Let me qualify this somewhat. A victim state cannot be analogized
to a perpetrator state in so far as the former is a victim state. If
Armenia were to commit a genocide itself, then this would be the basis
of an analogy between it and Serbia. In addition, if a particular
individual or group within Armenia adopted a denialist position and
agenda similar to that in Turkey, there could be some kind of analogy
based on this as well. But this is not what Davidian is claiming.

Now to the analysis. It has become a truism that "denial is the
final stage of genocide." Greg Stanton, the former president of the
International Association of Genocide Scholars, for instance, asserts
this in his stage theory of genocide. But, as with many truisms,
this one is false. That denial is present long after a genocide
does not mean that denial is the final stage of a genocide. Denial
is present at many stages of a genocide. With very few exceptions,
denials are issued by perpetrators while they are committing genocide.

Denials are typically offered immediately after a genocide to prevent
accountability of individual perpetrators as well as the perpetrator
society. One need only look at the court transcripts of trials of
Rwanda or Bosnia Genocide perpetrators to confirm this. And, denials
are offered in the long-term aftermath of a genocide to cover up the
historical facts. The motives for this include such things as the
desperate desire to preserve the legitimacy of an ideology and linked
sense of group identity in the face of exposure of the genocidal nature
of that ideology, the desire to prevent reparations in terms of land
and/or wealth, and a sense of shame among members of the perpetrator
society that is not coupled with a moral commitment to rectify the
impact of the past. Given this, denial is dominant in the long-term
aftermath of genocide, but it is an instrument for deeper goals.

The last stage of genocide is consolidation of the gains of the
genocide. In this stage, the perpetrator group tries to establish the
results of the genocide as the status quo, rather than a persisting
violation requiring rectification. It uses denial as a tool, because
if deniers convince enough people that a genocide did not happen or
is doubtful, then these people will see the existing post-genocidal
state of affairs as legitimate. They will see the small population of
the victims, their political weakness, their cultural tenuousness,
their relative poverty, and so forth as the natural result of an
uneventful history. If a perpetrator society can effectively deny the
past genocide, it will succeed in keeping what the direct perpetrators
gained for it.

To the credit of Stanton and others who view denial as the last stage
of genocide, it is typically the dominant activity of the perpetrators
in the long-term aftermath of genocide. What is more, even when the
possibility of material rectification is lessened, the perpetrators
or their progeny typically aggressive seek to cover up even the
knowledge of the genocide, to achieve full erasure of its victims and
full validation of the perpetrators such that they do not even pay
a moral price for the past. Such figures as Elie Wiesel and Israel
Charny have commented on this attempted final conceptual erasure.

But, sometimes denial fails to change perceptions of history or
at least to produce a stalemate in which the issue is viewed as a
perpetual and irresolvable conflict between two parties over history,
which is a victory for perpetrators in so far as they are allowed to
keep the material, political, ideological, and cultural gains of the
genocide for the foreseeable future. In such a case, denial has become
ineffective, but consolidation is still the goal. The perpetrator
state will seek to consolidate the gains of the genocide in question
by some other means.

This is precisely what we are seeing with the new protocols. Denial
has failed the Turkish state, and until April 2009 the pressure
was mounting to deal with the legacy of the Armenian Genocide
in a meaningful manner. That pressure had intensified especially
over the past two years through the challenges posed by activists,
journalists, and intellectuals inside Turkey after the Hrant Dink
assassination shocked morally-grounded members of Turkish society with
the genocidal anti-Armenianism that had previously been rationalized
by their government or hidden from their view. The stage was set for
the kind of real transformation in Turkey that can be the only path
toward a genuine improvement in Armenian-Turkish relations.

The protocols are the last-ditch response by the Turkish government to
protect and solidify the gains of the genocide. Through them, Turkey
has gone from the brink of required justice to a potential victory
deniers could only dream of three decades ago. What the protocols do
is achieve agreement from the putative representative of the victim
community that the perpetrator’s successor state and society will
never have to give up the land gained through the genocide nor make
any material restitution for the horrific suffering imposed on the
victim community, which still reverberates today. What the protocols
ensure is that the weak and poor Armenia produced by the genocide will
become the permanent state of Armenians, while the increased power,
prestige, land, wealth, and ideological security the Turkish state
and society gained through genocide will remain its. In other words,
the protocols finish the Armenian Genocide as successfully as the
pro-genocidal segment of today’s Turkey ever could have hoped. The
protocols are the last stage of the Armenian Genocide, the successful
completion of the Armenian Genocide.

It is telling that an important element of the protocols is the
reinsertion of denial of the Armenian Genocide as a credible position
by agreement of the Armenian government itself. This is the meaning of
the provision for a historical commission to study the mutual history
of the two protocol partners. Denial is the official position of
the Turkish government and clearly the starting position for their
participation in such a commission. The fact that the protocols
do not specify that the commission will consider the issue of
"the Armenian Genocide" shows that Turkey wants to maintain this
position. Given that its government and academic leaders know full
well a genocide occurred, there is no reason Turkey would not just
admit the genocide if it were not intent on maintaining denial. As
Roger Smith, the former president of the International Association of
Genocide Scholars and current chair of the Academic Board of Directors
of the Zoryan Institute, states in his Sept. 30 letter to Armenian
President Sarkisian, Turkey would even be bound by its own laws to
reject a finding of genocide by this historical commission. Of course,
it is unlikely that the commission’s membership will be constituted
in such a way as to allow that result to emerge-we are sure to see
Turkey insist on deniers as members of the commission. In this way,
the denial campaign that has faltered and been widely discredited
will be relegitimized within the process that has resulted from the
denial’s failure in the first place. The irony is thick here.

For Armenians to acquiesce in this is not merely to betray the memories
of those who died and those who survived. It is not merely to accept
one of the great grand larcenies of history and the debilitating
poverty that has resulted. It is to accept the permanence of the
destruction of Armenian political, social, cultural, and economic
life, rather than receive the rehabilitative rectification that world
ethical and legal principles unequivocally recognize as the victims’
desperate need and right.

Davidian and others argue that Armenia and Armenians have no choice
and should try to get what they can in the face of this inevitable
destruction. But, if, as many in Armenia and outside have argued,
Armenia’s survival depends on some rectification of the genocide that
continues to impact it materially,

geopolitically, etc., then acquiescing is dangerous self-delusion. It
is yet another instance of Armenians in a desperate situation giving
up and embracing a thoughtless, irrational faith that those who have
done them great harm in the past and present will somehow suddenly
change utterly and things will work out. It is the mentality of
the beaten, the destroyed, the resigned. It is the mentality that
Armenian Genocide survivors rejected despite the horrific suffering
they experienced. Can we do less now?

Davidian claims that the geopolitical realities of Armenia’s
existence preclude it "from engaging in zero sum inanity, such as
demanding an all-or-nothing state of affairs." The idea is that
realism should replace ethical principle as the basis of Armenian
decision-making. But, given the history with Turkey, given its clear
intentions and absolute lack of repentance for the Armenian Genocide to
the point where it cannot even recognize the genocide in the interest
of negotiating better relations with Armenia, it would be truly
"inane" to enter into an agreement that depends on Turkey working
with Armenia in good faith. It is not just that it is wrong to trade
recognition of the Armenian Genocide for some short-term economic
benefit (which might prove illusory anyway); the trade cannot work by
its very nature. The fact that the perpetrator successor state remains
committed to denial of the genocide and thus to the acceptability of
genocide as a tool against Armenians makes it impossible for it to
enter a productive relationship with Armenia and Armenians. So long
as the Turkish state and society remain unrepentant for the genocide,
Armenians have no choice but to require an all-or-nothing state of
affairs regarding the Armenian Genocide. It is Turkish denial and
approval of genocide that forces Armenians into this position.

Contrary to Davidian’s assertion, such an all-or-nothing ethics-based
approach that rejects coercion by the pressure of "interests"
and power is anything but irrational. We need look no further than
Plato’s Republic and Gorgias to see advocacy of ethical principle
over realpolitik by a thinker universally recognized as one of the
most rational in human history. Of course, those who understand how
social movements really work, how they succeed, will recognize this
all-or-nothing strategy as quite practical, and not only because the
squeaky wheel gets the oil or because pressing such demands pushes
the compromise point of the negotiation further toward the goals of
that squeaky wheel. It wasn’t those who accepted segregation because
it was backed by tremendous political, cultural, social, and military
power whose view of race relations changed the United States; it was
Malcolm X’s and Martin Luther King’s all-or-nothing challenges. India
was not freed from the British because Gandhi compromised with the
British, but because he asserted an all-or-nothing requirement for
independence and dignity. What is striking about these examples-and
many others from history-is that these all-or-nothing demands came
from positions of great material, political, and military weakness and
yet still succeeded because of the moral strength of the position of
the "weak" vis-a-vis the "strong." Moral legitimacy is a great force
in geopolitics and is the reliable ally of the weak, oppressed, and
marginalized. It is the force that those committed to power politics,
realpolitik, fear so desperately that they incessantly mock it as
if whistling in the dark, ridiculing those who believe in it in the
hope that they will stop believing and thus be tricked into giving up
the most powerful tool of change. It is Armenia’s one advantage today,
and the present leadership, through unhistorical, naive "realpolitical"
calculations of the web of power and interests around them, are about
to squander it.

Henry Theriault is a Professor of Philosophy at Worcester State
College.

http://www.hairenik.com/weekly/2009/10/

Sarkisian Confirms Turkey Trip

SARKISIAN CONFIRMS TURKEY TRIP

Asbarez
rkisian-confirms-turkey-trip/
Oct 12th, 2009

YEREVAN (RFE/RL)-Armenia’s President Serzh Sarkisian announced on
Monday his decision to visit Turkey this week to attend a football
match between the two neighbors, while questioning Ankara’s commitment
to honor the fence-mending agreements with Yerevan.

Sarkisian suggested that Turkish leaders’ weekend statements linking
the normalization of Turkish-Armenian relations with a settlement
of the Nagorno-Karabakh were "primarily addressed to the Azerbaijani
audience."

"Otherwise, it would seem strange to me: if the Turks are not going
to ratify the protocols, then why did they sign them [in Zurich on
Saturday] in the first place?" he told journalists. "Maybe they thought
that we might not display sufficient will and take a step back. Maybe."

"In any case, the ball is in the Turkish court today, and we have
enough patience to await further developments," said Sarkisian. "If
the Turks ratify the protocols, if they stick to the agreed timetable,
we will continue the process. If not, we will not be bound by anything
and will do what we have announced."

In a televised address to the nation on Saturday, Sarkisian
likewise implicitly threatened to walk away from the controversial
agreements-which have put him at odds with the Armenian Disapora and
the people in Armenia-if Ankara fails to implement them "within a
reasonable timeframe." Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan
stated on Sunday that the establishment of diplomatic relations and
reopening of the border between the two states hinges on a breakthrough
in the Karabakh peace process.

Galust Sahakian, the parliamentary leader of Sarkisian’s Republican
Party , indicated on Monday that Armenia’s National Assembly will
start debating the protocols only after they are approved by the
Turkish parliament. "If Turkey makes any reservations, our parliament
will not even include [the issue] on its agenda," said Sahakian.

Both the Republican Party and Erdogan’s Justice and Development Party
have a solid majority in their respective legislatures.

Sarkisian also made clear that he has accepted his Turkish counterpart
Abdullah Gul’s invitation to watch with him the return match of
Armenia’s and Turkey’s national soccer teams that will be played in
the western Turkish city of Bursa on Wednesday. The Armenian leader
said earlier that he will visit Turkey it only if Ankara takes "real
steps" to normalize bilateral ties.

Sarkisian said on Monday that "sufficient prerequisites" are now
in place for the landmark trip. "Turkey’s president, Mr. Gul, had
responded to my invitation and come to Armenia [in September 2008,]
and I now see no serious basis not to accept his invitation," he
said. "My counterpart has sent a written invitation, and unless
something extraordinary happens in the next two days, I will go to
Bursa and cheer for my favorite team."

The president answered journalists’ questions at Yerevan’s Zvartnots as
he prepared to fly to Moscow for what his office described as a brief
working visit. It said Sarkisian will meet with Russian President
Dmitry Medvedev but gave no details.

Shortly before his departure, Sarkisian sent a letter to U.S. President
Barack Obama thanking Washington for its active role in the
Turkish-Armenian dialogue.

"I am convinced that without the decisive help of the United States
it would have been impossible to make effective efforts in this
direction," he said after "warmly" congratulating Obama on winning
the Nobel Peace Prize.

Meanwhile, Turkey’s Deputy Prime Minister Cemil Cicek said later on
Monday that the Erdogan government will send the protocols to the
Turkish parliament "next week." "The assembly will decide whether
to approve or reject them," Cicek told reporters after a cabinet
meeting. But he underlined that the "parliament will undoubtedly
follow developments in Armenia during this process."

According to the AFP news agency, Cicek described the pacts as a
"sincere and serious show of will" by Turkey. But he reiterated that
lasting peace in the region also depends on the resolution of the
Karabakh dispute.

http://www.asbarez.com/2009/10/12/sa