RA Foreign Minister Meets With Osce MG Co-Chairs In Paris

RA FOREIGN MINISTER MEETS WITH OSCE MG CO-CHAIRS IN PARIS

Noyan Tapan
Oct 17 2007

PARIS, OCTOBER 17, NOYAN TAPAN. RA Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanian
met with the OSCE Minsk Group Co-chairs, Bernard Fassier and Yuri
Merzliakov on October 17 in Paris. Noyan Tapan was informed about it
by the RA Foreign Ministry Press and Information Department.

Issues related to the Co-chairs’ visit to the region envisaged for
October 24-27, as well as some content issues that may be raised by
the Co-chairs during their meetings with Armenian and Azeri Presidents
were discussed at the meeting.

Who changed their minds, and when

Who changed their minds, and when

Los Angeles Times
October 17, 2007

Since the House resolution to recognize the Armenian genocide was
introduced Jan. 30, at least 21 representatives have withdrawn as
cosponsors. At least 11 of those have pulled their support this week,
dropping the number of cosponsors to 215, less than a majority of the
House.

House member … Date withdrew

Bobby Jindal (R-La.)…Jan. 31

Dennis Moore (D-Kan.)…March 13

Phil English (R-Pa.)….March 15

David Scott (D-Ga.)……………………….April 18

Dan Boren (D-Okla.)………………………May 2

Tom Tancredo (R-Colo.)…………………June 27

Roger Wicker (R-Miss.)………………….June 28

Russ Carnahan (D-Mo.)………………….Oct. 2

John Shimkus (R-Ill.)……………………..Oct. 4

Henry Cuellar (D-Texas)…………………Oct. 9

Marion Berry (D-Ark.)……………………..Oct. 15

Sanford D. Bishop Jr. (D-Ga.)…………..Oct. 15

Allen Boyd (D-Fla.)………………………..Oct. 15

Lincoln Davis (D-Tenn.)………………….Oct. 15

Wally Herger (R-Chico)…Oct. 15

Carolyn Cheeks Kilpatrick (D-Mich.)…Oct. 15

Mike Ross (D-Ark.)…Oct. 15

Doug Lamborn (R-Colo.)…Oct. 16

Tim Holden (D-Pa.) …Oct. 16

Hank Johnson (D-Ga.)…Oct. 16

Harry E. Mitchell (D-Ariz.)…Oct. 16

Source: Library of Congress

Source: la-na-genocidebox17oct17,1,4614353.story?ctrack=3& amp;cset=true

http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/asection/

Eshoo Rates Iraq As ‘Blunder,’ Defends Refusal To Impeach Bush

ESHOO RATES IRAQ AS ‘BLUNDER,’ DEFENDS REFUSAL TO IMPEACH BUSH
Written by Peter Burke

Scotts Valley Banner, CA
Oct 16 2007

Rep. Anna Eshoo, D-Palo Alto, admits extreme frustration with the
administration’s handling of the war in Iraq ….

Rep. Anna Eshoo, D-Palo Alto, admits extreme frustration with the
administration’s handling of the war in Iraq.

"I think this is going to go down as the worst public policy blunder
the country has every made," Eshoo said in Scotts Valley Saturday,
Oct. 13, pointing out the $10 billion the United States spends on
the war every month.

But, despite his handling of the war, she won’t vote to impeach
President George Bush, she said.

Eshoo wants a timeline for removing U.S. troops and has voted
against funding the war. "We’re far from cutting our troops short,"
she told the 80-member Town Hall audience. "There is enough money in
the pipeline to last well through spring and possibly into next June."

Some, including three men who stood up and asked loudly, inquired about
why she isn’t pushing to impeach the president since she opposes the
war policy.

"I’m not willing to bring everything to a halt," Eshoo said. She
experienced the process when President Bill Clinton was impeached in
1998. "It tears the country apart."

Eshoo said she is unwilling to halt progress that Congress has made
in the 30 weeks since Democrats came to majority power because of
their accomplishments, she said.

The congresswoman voiced pride that Congress raised the federal minimum
wage for the first time in 10 years and made the largest investment in
student aid since the G.I. bill passed during World War II. Congress
cut interest rates on federal student loans in half to help students
pay for college without facing daunting debts after they graduate,
she noted.

Eshoo is fighting unwarranted surveillance by the administration.

"Some people will give up their freedoms for security," Eshoo said.

"We don’t need to. I can tell you, we don’t need to. We cannot tolerate
the warrantless surveillance of Americans."

Eshoo reported on the Blackwater contractor scandal in Iraq, saying
that it would haunt the U.S. for a long time, but Congress is taking
the proper steps to find out the facts and make sure it doesn’t
happen again.

As for Resolution 106 that labeled Armenian deaths during the time
of the Ottoman Empire as "genocide," Eshoo did not find the bill
menacing as the Turks have claimed.

"I seriously doubt that the relationship (between the United States
and Turkey) is seriously damaged because of something that happened
100 years ago."

Congress also passed new lobbying and ethics guidelines and Eshoo is
pushing for the State Children’s Health Insurance Program (SCHIP)
to cover an additional 5 million uninsured children, despite a
presidential veto earlier this year.

Eshoo voted for new veteran’s benefits bill, the largest so far, and
pay-as-you-go rules that force Congress to identify funding sources
for a bill before it can pass.

The congresswoman voted for a hate crimes prevention bill that passed
and the Genetic Information Privacy Act which will protect the results
of tests from insurers who might use genetic predisposition against
applicants when setting their rates.

Eshoo, whose 14th District covers much of Silicon Valley and reaches
into Scotts Valley, San Lorenzo Valley and Bonny Doon, said she
was pleased to see a large crowd, comparing the scene to a Norman
Rockwell painting.

"It means a great deal to have constituents that come out and care,"
she said with a smile.

Turkish PM Says Will Act When Time Is Right

TURKISH PM SAYS WILL ACT WHEN TIME IS RIGHT
By Paul de Bendern

Malaysia Star, Malaysia
Oct 17 2007

ANKARA (Reuters) – Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan said on
Tuesday that securing permission from parliament to launch a major
attack on Kurdish separatists in northern Iraq did not necessarily
mean a military incursion was imminent.

Instead, Erdogan said "we will act at the right time and under the
right conditions".

"This is about self-defence," he told his ruling AK Party.

The prospect of a strike into mainly Kurdish northern Iraq helped
push oil prices towards a record high $88 a barrel. The Turkish lira
traded down almost 2 percent against the dollar.

Baghdad sent Sunni Arab Vice President Tareq al-Hashemi to Ankara and
called for urgent talks to head off military action that Washington
fears could sow chaos in an area so far spared much of the carnage
afflicting other parts of Iraq.

Erdogan’s cabinet asked parliament this week for permission to launch
cross-border offensives following a spate of Kurdish separatist
attacks. Approval is expected on Wednesday.

Washington has urged restraint on Turkey, strategically located between
Europe and the Middle East. It relies on Turkey for logistical support
for operations in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Turkey, for its part, argues that the United States and Iraq have
done too little to curb some 3,000 Kurdish rebels attacking eastern
Turkey in pursuit of an independent state there.

PRESSURE TO ACT

Dozens of soldiers and civilians have been killed in recent weeks
by the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) rebels, piling pressure on the
government to act.

The Turkish military has long called for permission to hunt down PKK
rebels in Iraq.

Under heavy security, General Ilker Basbug, head of the land forces,
inspected units stationed in the Turkish border province of Sirnak,
which has been hardest hit by recent PKK attacks.

A paramilitary officer became the latest casualty when he stepped on
a rebel-laid mine, security sources said.

Turkey blames the PKK for the deaths of more than 30,000 people since
it launched its armed struggle in southeast Turkey.

Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki called for a "crisis cell" in
the government established to monitor developments along the Turkish
border to meet on Tuesday.

"We are ready to have urgent talks with senior officials in the Turkish
government to discuss all the pending issues and to give guarantees
which would regulate relations between the two neighbouring countries,"
Maliki’s office said in a statement.

The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees Antonio Guterres
warned of the danger of a refugee crisis in northern Iraq in the
event of a Turkish operation.

Some analysts and diplomats say an operation is more likely after a
vote last week in which a U.S. congressional committee branded killings
of Armenians by Ottoman Turks during World War One as genocide —
a charge Turkey denies.

"There is no formal linkage (between the Armenian bill and an
Iraq operation) except psychological," Brent Scowcroft, a former
U.S. national security council adviser, told Reuters.

"I hope we can work with the Turks to prevent this cross-border
operation. We have taken some steps but they have been inadequate."

Turkey recalled its ambassador from the United States for consultations
after the Congressional vote.

(Additional reporting by Hidir Goktas in Ankara, Daren Butler in
Sirnak, Ingrid Melander in Brussels and Baghdad bureau)

Bush s’oppose a un texte sur le genocide armenien

Les Echos, France
11 octobre 2007 jeudi

Bush s’oppose à un texte sur le génocide arménien

George W. Bush s’est opposé hier à un texte que pourrait adopter le
Congrès américain et qui reconnaîtrait le « génocide » arménien,
estimant qu’il causerait un « tort considérable » aux relations avec
la Turquie. « Nous regrettons tous profondément les souffrances
tragiques endurées par le peuple arménien à partir de 1915 », a
déclaré le président américain. Mais le texte sur lequel le Congrès
devait se pencher n’apporte pas « la réponse qui convient à ces
massacres historiques », a-t-il dit.

BAKU: US tries to halt Turkey attack

Trend News Agency, Azerbaijan
Oct 14 2007

US tries to halt Turkey attack

Senior US officials were engaged last night in last-ditch efforts to
persuade Turkey not to launch a major military incursion into Iraqi
Kurdistan to target armed separatists.

A team was diverted from a mission to Russia to make an unscheduled
stop in Ankara yesterday. Against the background of the escalating
diplomatic row between Turkey and the US over a congressional
resolution that branded as ‘genocide’ massacres of Armenians by
Ottoman Turks in 1915, US Secretary of State, Condoleezza Rice,
revealed she had personally urged Turkey to refrain from any major
military operation in northern Iraq. The row between the two Nato
allies comes against the dangerous background of a threat by the
Turkish parliament to approve this week a ‘hot pursuit’ of the
Kurdish separatist Kurdistan Workers’ Party, the PKK, across the
border into northern Iraq.

The threat of military action came after last Sunday’s killing by the
PKK of 13 Turkish soldiers in an ambush in Sirnak province, close to
the Iraqi border.

‘I urged restraint,’ said Rice, on a visit to Moscow, acknowledging
‘a difficult time’ between the two countries as she described her
telephone conversations with Turkey’s President Abdullah Gul, its
Prime Minister and foreign minister.

‘It’s a difficult time for the relationship,’ Rice said. ‘We just
thought it was a very good idea for two senior officials to go and
talk to the Turks and have reassurance to the Turks that we really
value this relationship.’ Rice said that in her conversation with the
Turks ‘they were dismayed’ by the congressional resolution. ‘The
Turkish government, I think, is trying to react responsibly. They
recognise how hard we worked to prevent that vote from taking place.’

About 60,000 Turkish troops are based near the northern Iraqi border.
US military officials have said they believe they will get some
warning if the Turks attack the PKK.

Rice’s phone conversations came as two senior US officials flew to
Turkey yesterday to attempt to defuse tension that has seen the
Turkish ambassador to Washington return home for consultations
following the resolution, which Turks regard as deeply offensive.

US Assistant Secretary of State Dan Fried and US Under Secretary of
Defence Eric Edelman flew from Moscow, where they had been
accompanying Rice. It was reported that Edelman said on his arrival
they were visiting Turkey to express regret over the approval of the
resolution. The pair are likely to hear sharp criticism from the
Turkish government.

‘They are sure to raise the northern Iraq issue, but from our
perspective the top issue is the Armenian resolution,’ a Turkish
diplomat said. The row between the two allies follows the decision by
the Foreign Affairs Committee of the House of Representatives to
approve a resolution labelling the 1915 killings genocide, rejecting
appeals by President Bush. Turkey denies genocide but says many died
in inter-ethnic fighting in an issue that is still deeply sensitive
to Turks.

Turkish officials say foreign ministry and military officials met
after the resolution was approved to discuss potential measures
against the US. In initial repercussions, a US visit by Trade
Minister Kursad Tuzmen was cancelled, along with a conference being
held by the Turkish-US Business Council.

Other potential moves may include blocking US access to Incirlik air
base, cancelling procurement contracts, scaling down bilateral
visits, denying airspace to US aircraft and halting joint military
exercises, say analysts and diplomats.

The US relies heavily on Turkish bases to supply its war effort in
Iraq. Ankara has long complained Washington has not done enough to
crack down on PKK rebels who use northern Iraq as a base to attack
Turkey. The PKK said on Friday its guerrillas were crossing back into
Turkey to target politicians and police after the prospect of a
cross-border military operation emerged. Turkey blames the PKK for
the deaths of more than 30,000 people since the group launched its
armed struggle for an ethnic homeland in south-east Turkey in 1984.

Khzmalian shoots film "Main Secret of Yerevan" about A. Tamanian

Noyan Tapan News Agency, Armenia
Oct 12 2007

TIGRAN KHZMALIAN SHOOTS FILM "MAIN SECRET OF YEREVAN" ABOUT
ALEXANDER TAMANIAN

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 12, NOYAN TAPAN. Director Tigran Khzhmalian’s
documentary "Main Secret of Yerevan" is dedicated to the life and
fate of Alexander Tamanian, a prominent architect of the 20th
century. Its presentation took place on October 10 at the
house-museum named after the master, with the presence of his
relatives and media. This is the 11th film from the series "Armenia:
20th century."

According to the author, the pupil of Saint Petersburg’s Academy of
Art, to whom preservation of Russian culture was entrusted, who
projected and built many palace buildings in Moscow and Saint
Petersburg, was the architect of the Russian Palace, reached the peak
of glory during his life, but had misfortunes (lost his two
daughters), saw betrayal, persecution, and remained pure and spotless
like his creations.

Tigran Khzmalian said that in the very museum he had revealed the
secret of the great scientist’s and architect’s life through a famliy
portrait, that of Tamanian and his English wife, Camilla Edwards.

The director has profoundly studied Tamanian’s archives and got
convinced that the secret of building Yerevan was the very great love
of the architect and his wife, Camilla. According to Khzmalian,
Yerevan has many secrets: "We live in the period of split and we all
are united by our love for Yerevan. I have tried to reveal the secret
of Yerevan, which, in my opinion, is the great love of Tamanian and
his wife." "It is very important to say just today that love is the
basis of this city, a love between a woman and a man. And everything
in the city should be done with love, if we wish to save our city,
out country, and to have a future," Tigran Khzmalian said.

The director is convinced that but for love, Yerevan would not be so
beautiful. And now, according to him, Yerevan, which has become a
construction site, is developed without love and tenderness, as a
result of which we have the following: square, unprepossessing and
ugly buildings and constructions looking like a painted and cleaned
scarecrow."

Author: Ruzanna Bagratunian
Editor:

Turkish PM slams US Democrats on Armenian genocide issue

Jerusalem Post
Oct 12 2007

Turkish PM slams US Democrats on Armenian genocide issue
By ASSOCIATED PRESS
ANKARA, Turkey

Turkey’s prime minister on Friday urged the US administration to make
greater efforts to block passage of a resolution backed by Democrats
in the US Congress that would label the killing of Armenians a
century ago as genocide.

"Democracts are harming the future of the United States and are
encouraging anti-American sentiments," Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
Erdogan said.

ANKARA: US Ambassador To Turkey Regrets Armenian Resolution

US AMBASSADOR TO TURKEY REGRETS ARMENIAN RESOLUTION

NTV MSNBC, Turkey
Oct 11 2007

Wilson said he hoped the resolution would not be passed into law.

Guncelleme: 15:26 TSÝ 11 Ekim 2007 Perþembe

ANKARA – Washington’s ambassador to Ankara said he deeply regretted the
decision by the House of Representatives Committee on Foreign Affairs
to approve a resolution recognising Armenian claims the Ottoman Empire
had committed an act of genocide against its Armenian citizens and
hoped it would not be ratified by the US Congress.

"I sincerely hope the resolution will not be passed," Wilson said.

One of the many many tragedies of World War One and the 20th century
were the deaths of many Ottoman Armenians, an event that deserves
careful attention and historical study, he said.

"Mutual understanding and reconciliation among Turks and Armenians
will remain the right course for all to follow," said Wilson.

"The partnership between Turkey and the United States is strong and
will remain so. We are determined to pursue our common vital interests
and strengthen our shared values."

–Boundary_(ID_s/3fezZxBfIpk1Cwm5s1 yA)–

Local Response To Recognizing An Armenian Genocide

LOCAL RESPONSE TO RECOGNIZING AN ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

CBS47, CA
Oct 11 2007

Recognizing an Armenian genocide

They speak in favor if a U.S. House resolution Thousands of local
Armenians want the United States to take a stand.

During World War I, as many as a million and a half Armenians were
killed in Turkey. Armenians call it a genocide, Turkey calls it the
result of a civil war.

Now, a U.S. house panel has approved a resolution recognizing the
killings as a genocide. It is likely to pass a full House vote,
despite White House objections. The Bush administration says the
resolution could hurt the war on terror because it could offend Turkey.