Silk Revolution In Karabakh

SILK REVOLUTION IN KARABAKH
Naira Hayrumyan

KarabakhOpen
17-10-2007 17:46:51

Only a revolution is followed by such total replacements in the
nomenclature. Apparently, a revolution has taken place, not a velvet
revolution, of course, maybe a silk revolution, the former member
parliament Levon Hairiyan says.

At first it was hard to agree with this thought because the
presidential campaign, the unification of all the political forces to
support one candidate, the intensive search for an opposition and its
persecution made think of a total victory of the government forces
in the election. But immediately after the election it became known
that everything is different than it seems.

Although the forces which supported the president came to power with
pledges to carry on the policy of the previous government, after the
election the policy of the past decade underwent a severe criticism,
and sweeping replacements in government took place. The new government
started collaborating with organizations which did not collaborate
with the old government. And so on and so forth.

During today’s meeting of parliament the young prime minister Ara
Harutiunyan severely criticized the social and economic policy of the
past decade. He said the tax and loan policy hurdled the development
of business and construction. Over the past year 230 apartments were
built and 100 were demolished in Stepanakert. And many other "trifles"
committed by the former government.

Moreover, the prime minister presented a government program which
has special focus on anti-corruption efforts. Meanwhile, the former
president had said there is no corruption in Karabakh, and no charges
on corruption have been reported over the past decade.

Hence, the policy of the former government is being rejected. And
considering that the Azat Hayrenik Party is strengthening and the
ruling Democratic Party is weakening, we may be sure to state that
an unnoticed silk revolution has been put up in Karabakh. The Azat
Hayrenik Party only needs to hold the parliament majority and nominate
a speaker. This is not impossible because soon members of parliament
will be elected in two constituencies.

The government which has just come to power needs no
opposition. Especially that those from whom power was taken do not
appear vexed. The Democratic faction voted for the government program
presented by the prime minister from the Azat Hayrenik Party despite
some sharp observations. The ex-opposition ARF Dashnaktsutyun and
Movement 88 were not against either.

Hence, in Karabakh it is difficult to distinguish opposition from
government.

The only thing that we would like to note: the issues for which the
present government is criticizing the ex-government have been raised by
the independent media for a long time now. When this government came
to power, it resisted to this criticism, almost describing reporters
as foes of the nation. Now the same issues are being raised by the
prime minister.

As Governor, Huckabee Noted Armenian Deaths As ‘Genocide’

AS GOVERNOR, HUCKABEE NOTED ARMENIAN DEATHS AS ‘GENOCIDE’

Russellville Courier, AR
Oct 17 2007

LITTLE ROCK (AP) – As Arkansas’ governor, Republican presidential
hopeful Mike Huckabee’s action labeling the World War I-era killings
of Armenians by Turks genocide drew no criticism.

That’s not the case for Congress. A decision by the House Foreign
Affairs Committee to send a similar resolution to a full vote drew
condemnation from Turkish officials and sent Turkey’s U.S. ambassador
back to Ankara this week for consultations.

President Bush opposes the bill, worried it would fracture a fragile
relationship with Turkey, a Middle East ally as the war in Iraq
continues.

Then-Gov. Mike Huckabee signed a proclamation declaring a "Day
of Remembrance of the Armenian Genocide" on March 7, 2001. The
proclamation also said the current Turkish government "engages in
a campaign of ‘denial of the Armenian Genocide.’" Huckabee also
proclaimed April 23 as "Turkish Heritage and Children’s Day" and
April 24 as a "Day of Remembrance of the Turkish and Armenian Tragedy."

Leo Stepanian, the son of Armenian immigrants, said he requested
Huckabee sign the recognition. However, the Fort Smith resident remains
indignant over the other proclamations. He said his mother lost four
brothers and his father lost nearly his entire family in the killings.

"It was not a tragedy. It was a genocide," Stepanian said.

Historians estimate up to 1.5 million Armenians were killed by Ottoman
Turks around the time of World War I. Scholars view it as the first
genocide of the 20th century, but Turkey says the toll has been
inflated and that those killed were victims of civil war and unrest.

Alice Stewart, a spokeswoman for Huckabee, said the former governor
had "no intention to make a political point" with the proclamation.

"The 2001 proclamations were like many proclamations requested by
Arkansas citizens," Stewart said.

07

http://www.couriernews.com/story.php?ID=164

Aram G. Sargsian Appointed First Vice-Chairman Of World Armenian Con

ARAM G. SARGSIAN APPOINTED FIRST VICE-CHAIRMAN OF WORLD ARMENIAN CONGRESS

Noyan Tapan
Armenians Today
Oct 17 2007

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 17, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. By the decision
of Ara Abrahamian, the Chairman of the World Armenian Congress (WAC),
Aram G. Sargsian, the Chairman of the Democratic Party of Armenia
(DPA), was appointed WAC’s First Vice-Chairman. He will coordinate
programs to be implemented with the Armenian structures of the
Diaspora, as well as with international organizations.

According to the report provided to Noyan Tapan by the World Armenian
Congress, the new appointment is conditioned by the necessity to
promote actions aimed at solution of all-national problems.

Below are Aram G. Sargsian’s biographical data:

He was born in 1946 in Yerevan. In 1966, after leaving secondary
school he worked as a worker.

In 1972 he graduated from V. Brusov Institute of Russian and Foreign
Languages. Parallel with his studies he worked as a correspondent
of Yerevan Tyre Factory’s newspaper, Secretary of Young Communists’
League, then as a correspondent of the Komsomolets newspaper.

In 1972-74 he continued his studies in Moscow, where he got the
speciality of a journalist. In 1974 he worked as a correspondent of
the Komsomolskaya Pravda newspaper in Moscow.

In November, 1990 he was elected Secretary of the Central Committee
of the Communist Party of Armenia and in June, 1991 First Secretary
of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Armenia.

The Democratic Party of Armenia was created in 1991, the constituent
assembly of which elected Aram Sargsian as the party Chairman.

He formed the National Consent bloc in 1996 jointly with heads of
a number of opposition parties, was registered as a candidate for
presidency.

He worked as an Adviser to the RA President on Foreign Political
Issues since May 1, 1998. In June, 1999 he resigned and was relieved
of that post.

He is married, has three children.

Support Wanes in House for Genocide Vote

Support Wanes in House for Genocide Vote

By CARL HULSE
The New York Times

WASHINGTON, Oct. 16 – Worried about antagonizing Turkish leaders,
House members from both parties have begun to withdraw their support
from a resolution backed by the Democratic leadership that would
condemn as genocide the mass killings of Armenians nearly a century
ago.

Almost a dozen lawmakers had shifted against the measure in a 24-hour
period ending Tuesday night, accelerating a sudden exodus that has
cast deep doubt over the measure’s prospects. Some made clear that
they were heeding warnings from the White House, which has called the
measure dangerously provocative, and >From the Turkish government,
which has said House passage would prompt Turkey to reconsider its
ties to the United States, including logistical support for the Iraq
war.

Until Tuesday, the measure appeared on a path to House passage, with
strong support from House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. It was approved last
week by the House Foreign Affairs Committee. But by Tuesday evening, a
group of senior House Democrats had made it known that they were
planning to ask the leadership to drop plans for a vote on the
measure.

`Turkey obviously feels they are getting poked in the eye over
something that happened a century ago and maybe this isn’t a good time
to be doing that,’ said Representative Allen Boyd, a Florida Democrat
who dropped his sponsorship of the resolution on Monday night.

Others who took the same action said that, while they deplored the
mass killings of Armenians by the Ottoman Empire, the modern-day
consequences in the Middle East could not be overlooked.

`We simply cannot allow the grievances of the past, as real as they
may be, to in any way derail our efforts to prevent further atrocities
for future history books,’ said Representative Wally Herger,
Republican of California.

Representative Mike Ross, Democrat of Arkansas, said, `I think it is a
good resolution and horrible timing.’

The Turkish government has lobbied heavily against the resolution,
which is nonbinding and largely symbolic. But lawmakers attributed
the erosion in support mainly to fears about a potential Turkish
decision to deny American access to critical military facilities in
that nation and its threat to move forces into northern Iraq.

`This vote came face to face with the reality on the ground in that
region of the world,’ said Representative Rahm Emanuel of Illinois,
the chairman of the House Democratic Caucus and an opponent of the
resolution.

The Bush administration and top American generals have been vocal in
warning that passage of the resolution could cause great harm to the
American war effort in Iraq and have put significant pressure on
Republicans to abandon their support for the measure. President Bush
called Ms. Pelosi on Tuesday and asked her to prevent a floor vote.

`The president and the speaker exchanged candid views on the subject
and the speaker explained the strong bipartisan support in the House
for the resolution,’ said Brendan Daly, a spokesman for Ms. Pelosi.

The Democratic leadership was examining the exact level of that
support to gauge its next step, but lawmakers and officials said it
was now unclear whether the resolution could be approved, given
Republican resistance and Democratic defections. `We will have to
determine where everyone is,’ said Representative Steny H. Hoyer of
Maryland, the majority leader.

Ms. Pelosi, who has promised a vote on the resolution if it cleared
the committee, said she was leaving it to its chief backers to round
up votes. `I have never known a count,’ she said.

Backers of the resolution, which has the fervent support of the
Armenian-American community, described the shift as slight and
attributed it to the intense lobbying by the Turkish government, the
administration and their allies. They said they would try to change
the minds of some of those who were wavering.

`This is what happens when you are up against a very sophisticated
multimillion-dollar campaign,’ said Representative Brad Sherman,
Democrat of California, who chided the Turkish government. `Since when
has it become fashionable for friends to threaten friends?’

But he acknowledged there was little margin of error for backers of
the resolution, which had once boasted 225 co-sponsors. `If the vote
were held today, I would not want to bet my house on the outcome,’ he
said.

Mr. Sherman and others noted that at the start of the war Turkey had
refused to let American forces operate >From its territory and that
its intentions toward the northern border of Iraq clearly captured the
attention of Congress.

American military officials in Iraq and in Washington said Tuesday
they were concerned about possible Turkish military raids into
northern Iraq against the Kurdish Workers Party, an ethnic separatist
movement also known as the P.K.K.

At the moment, they said, they did not see many indications that the
Turkish military was preparing for a large-scale incursion into the
insurgents’ mountainous strongholds and expressed hope that diplomatic
efforts under way between Iraqi and Turkish officials would ease the
crisis, which was sparked by a wave of attacks in eastern Turkey that
its government has blamed on the separatists.

`We see no signs that there’s anything imminent by Turkey,’ said one
senior military officer, speaking on condition of anonymity because he
was discussing military contingency planning. `So there’s time for the
diplomacy to work for a few more days, if not weeks.’ But, he added,
the situation could get `ugly’ if Turkey sent troops across the border
and they clashed with Kurdish militias or Iraqi forces.

The biggest fear, several former officials said, is that Turkish
forces could push past the border and head for Kirkuk. Such a move
could force Iraq to respond and the United States to mediate between
two allies, and decide whether to intervene. Such a crisis could also
draw in Iran, which has also had growing problems with Kurdish groups
crossing into its territory from Iraq.

In addition to the potential movement of Turkish forces, opponents of
the resolution continued to point to Turkey’s role as a staging area
for moving American military supplies into Iraq.

`This happened a long time ago and I don’t know whether it was a
massacre or a genocide, that is beside the point,’ said Representative
John P. Murtha, the Pennsylvania Democrat who is urging Ms. Pelosi to
keep the resolution from the floor. `The point is, we have to deal
with today’s world.’

While the resolution enjoyed more than enough support to pass earlier
this year, about two dozen lawmakers have removed their names from the
official list of sponsors in recent weeks as the vote grew more likely
and the reservations grew more pronounced.

`I think there was genocide in Turkey in 1915 but I am gravely
concerned about the timing,’ said Representative Jane Harman, a
California Democrat. She said she would remain a co-sponsor of the
resolution but at the moment would oppose it reached the floor.

Representative Doug Lamborn, a Colorado Republican who dropped his
backing on Tuesday, said: `Nothing changes the fact that mass killings
and unspeakable acts of brutality occurred. However, passing this
nonbinding resolution at this critical time would be a destabilizing
action when the United States needs the help of its allies, including
Turkey, in fighting the global war on terror.’

David S. Cloud contributed reporting.

Turkey’s War On The Truth

TURKEY’S WAR ON THE TRUTH
by Richard Cohen

The Washington Post
October 16, 2007 Tuesday
Regional Edition

It goes without saying that the House resolution condemning Turkey
for the "genocide" of Armenians from 1915 to 1923 will serve no
earthly purpose and that it will, to say the least, complicate if
not severely strain U.S.-Turkey relations. It goes without saying,
also, that the Turks are extremely sensitive on the topic and, since
they are helpful in the war in Iraq and are a friend to Israel, that
their feelings ought to be taken into account. All of this is true,
but I would feel a lot better about condemning this resolution if
the argument wasn’t so much about how we need Turkey and not at all
about the truthfulness of the matter.

Of even that, I have some doubt. The congressional resolution
repeatedly employs the word "genocide," a term used by many scholars.

But Raphael Lemkin, the Polish-Jewish emigre who coined the term in
1943, clearly had in mind what the Nazis were doing to the Jews. If
that is the standard — and it need not be — then what happened in
the collapsing Ottoman Empire was something short of genocide. It
was plenty bad — maybe as many as 1.5 million Armenians perished,
many of them outright murdered — but not all Armenians everywhere in
what was then Turkey were as calamitously affected. The substantial
Armenian communities in Constantinople, Smyrna and Aleppo were largely
spared. No German city could make that statement about its Jews.

Still, by any name, what was begun in 1915 is unforgivable and, one
hopes, unforgettable. Yet it was done by a government that no longer
exists — the so-called Sublime Porte of the Ottomans, with its sultan,
concubines, eunuchs and the rest. Even in 1915, it was an anachronism,
no longer able to administer its vast territory — much of the Middle
East and the Balkans. The empire was crumbling. The so-called Sick
Man of Europe was breathing its last. Its troops were starving, and,
both in Europe and the Middle East, indigenous peoples were declaring
their independence and rising in rebellion. Among them were the
Armenians, an ancient people who had been among the first to adopt
Christianity. By the end of the 19th century, they were engaged in
guerrilla activity. By World War I, they were aiding Turkey’s enemy,
Russia. Within Turkey, Armenians were feared as a fifth column.

So contemporary Turkey is entitled to insist that things are not so
simple. If you use the word genocide, it suggests the Holocaust —
and that is not what happened in the Ottoman Empire. But Turkey has
gone beyond mere quibbling with a word. It has taken issue with the
facts and in ways that cannot be condoned. Its most famous writer,
the Nobel Prize-winning novelist Orhan Pamuk, was arrested in 2005
for acknowledging the mass killing of Armenians. The charges were
subsequently dropped, and although Turkish law has been modified in
some ways, it nevertheless remains dangerous business for a Turk to
talk openly and candidly about what happened in 1915.

It just so happens that I am an admirer of Turkey. Its modern leaders,
beginning with the truly remarkable Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, have done
a Herculean job of bringing the country from medievalism to modernity
without, it should be noted, the usual bloodbath. (The Russians, for
instance, did not manage that feat.) Furthermore, I can appreciate
Turkey’s palpable desire to embrace both modernity and Islam and to
show that such a combination is not oxymoronic.

(Ironically, having a dose of genocide in your past — the United
States and the Indians, Germany and the Jews, etc. — is hardly "not
Western.") And I think, furthermore, that House Speaker Nancy Pelosi
should have spiked the House resolution in deference to Turkey’s
immense strategic importance to the United States. She’s the speaker
now, for crying out loud, not just another House member.

But for too long the Turks have been accustomed to muscling the truth,
insisting either through threats or punishment that they and they alone
will write the history of what happened in 1915. They are continuing
along this path now, with much of official Ankara threatening this
or that — crossing into Iraqi Kurdistan, for instance — if the
House resolution is not killed. But it may yet occur to someone
in the government that Turkey’s tantrums have turned an obscure —
nonbinding! — congressional resolution into yet another round of
tutorials on the Armenian tragedy of 1915. Call it genocide or call it
something else, but there is only one thing to call Turkey’s insistence
that it and its power will determine the truth: unacceptable.

ANKARA: Policy Of 1915

POLICY OF 1915
By MUmtaz’er TUrkOne

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
Oct 15 2007

The rise of an incident that occurred nearly a century ago as one
of the most important problems of Turkish foreign policy is very
unusual. To formulate a law in regards to events that took place during
World War I is a rather interesting decision for the US Congress,
especially considering what took place during World War II and the
Cold War, both of which stand between then and now. There is a pretty
unusual situation here.

There should be a plausible explanation for this. Why does such an
old incident bother Turkey? Why does the US Congress go after this
meaningless genocide legislation?

Why genocide comes to the agenda?

The most important reason seems to be the internal problems of the
Armenian diaspora. Only a small portion of the Armenian population
lives in Armenia. There are large Armenian communities all over the
world, particularly in the US and France. The Armenians who live
separately in other countries need to keep the bonds among themselves
intact. Sustaining such bonds and preserving one’s identity is a
basic human need. The events of 1915 play a significant role for
the sustainability of these bonds between the Armenians who come
together to remember these incidents and bring them to the agenda of
the country where they live. They inform the conscience of the new
generations regarding their past and identity. The Armenians maintain
the relations between their communities in different parts of the world
in this way. 1915 turns into a common denominator between Armenians all
over the world. To make put the special agenda of a certain community
on the agenda of mainstream society is seen as a huge success. This
could be observed in the process by which the US Congress made progress
towards the recognition of the so-called Armenian genocide.

The second important factor can be found in current approaches to
minority problems. The Armenian question was a minority issue for
the Ottoman Empire under the war conditions in 1915. The minority
issues that are being discussed in different parts of the world also
determine relations to the past. An old story like that of 1915
becomes attractive for today’s minorities as they consider such
questions. Thus, people start to pay attention to this particular
issue.

US domestic politics and diplomacy:

Are these two factors enough to explain the eagerness of the US
House of Representatives to proceed with their recognition of the
"Armenian genocide"? Not yet. There must be something in the current
political landscape to explain this eagerness. So attention should
also be directed to current diplomacy and domestic political balances.

The Armenian genocide issue comes on the agenda in the US every year
immediately before the presidential elections, which are held every
four years. Both the Republicans and the Democrats show interest
in this issue constantly sustained by the Armenian lobby. The
question remains on the agenda for a while and is destined to be
shelved following the elections. In this way, the Armenian genocide
resolution is kept on the agenda as a domestic political issue all
the time. But this time the case is different. For the first time the
issue was discussed very seriously. This time, a concrete result is
expected. Therefore, it is essential to see that American diplomacy
was involved in this decision to use it as a trump card against Turkey.

Turkey is one of the most influential allies for the US in its way
out of the Iraqi quagmire. The US needs trump cards to transform
the strategic partnership between the two countries into a strong
cooperation. Seen from this perspective, the Armenian genocide
resolution, currently being discussed before the US Congress, which
is seriously considering the proposed resolution, is a useful means of
imposing pressure for the US diplomats. It is very reasonable for the
American side to use the proposed Armenian genocide resolution as a
trump card against Turkey in return for its assistance with regard to
the Iraq issue. The use of such tactics is not new; it has been used
in the past by US diplomats. But something is different this time. The
US has to take radical decisions in regards to Iraq. It needs Turkey
more than ever at this stage so the trump card to be used needs to be
stronger. This is the central reason that the US Congress has chosen to
deliberate on the Armenian genocide resolution with such earnestness.

Turkey’s approach

As a state whose diplomatic traditions and reflexes are strong on
such issues, it is only natural for Turkey to react. We are talking
about a diplomatic tradition by which the Turkish state intervened in
European internal balances and subsequent developments as a European
state. Turkey is very well aware of the meaning of the prevalent
eagerness to present this issue as a diplomatic problem.

Harmony between the Justice and Development Party (AK Party) government
and the military wing is a result of this diplomatic maturity. Recently
Chief of General Staff Gen. Yaþar Buyukanýt said the attempt of a
strategic ally to legally recognize these historical incidents in
such a way as to accuse Turkey was incomprehensible.

This statement, in fact, summarizes the subject. Buyukanýt describes
the Committee on Foreign Affairs as having shot itself in the foot
with the recent vote. The Turkish side is more concerned about Iraq.

It holds that the US does not provide the necessary support in the face
of escalating terrorism. Turkey plans to launch a military cross-border
operation to deal with this rising problem. It perceives the recent
action by the House of Representatives as inconsistent with friendship
at a time when it is getting ready to ask permission from Parliament
for such an operation.

For this reason, the remarks of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoðan,
who expressed anger with the US, in relation to the cross-border
operation should be taken as normal. His insistence that Turkey is
ready to pay the price for such an operation is also a warning to
the US.

What really happened in 1915?

Remembering what the 1915 incident represents to Turkey independently
of this recent diplomatic row is also important for understanding
the anger on the Turkish side.

World War I was a way of sharing imperialist spoils. The war broke
out because Germany and Italy were late in this imperialist sharing.

Ottoman soil was an important part of these imperialist moves. The
government aligned with Germany in the war out of consideration of
the seriousness of the situation.

Because the weakest link of the multinational empires was the ethnic
question, the minorities in the Ottoman state were provoked during the
war. In war conditions under which males were fighting at the front and
the remaining population was defenseless, the Armenian gangs backed
by Russia committed violent acts inside Ottoman territories. The Van
insurgency that broke out immediately after the war started made
the situation very urgent. The Ottoman state resorted to forced
migration to resolve the problem. Horrible events happened during
the migration. Many Armenians died. But the fact is that Russia,
England and France are more responsible than the Ottoman state is in
this case. Now, current imperialist considerations rather than the
incident itself are behind this diplomatic question.

There is no doubt that Turkey has the right to defend itself in
this case.

–Boundary_(ID_UuX1/efCMpy9RLRPQoWDLw)–

U.S. House speaker vows debate on Armenian genocide resolution

International Herald Tribune, France
Oct 14 2007

U.S. House speaker vows debate on Armenian genocide resolution

By Brian Knowlton Published: October 14, 2007

WASHINGTON: The speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives insisted
Sunday that she would bring to the full chamber a resolution
condemning the killings of Armenians nearly a century ago as
genocide, even as a Turkish general warned that this could lastingly
damage a military relationship crucial to American forces in Iraq.

A House committee Wednesday passed a nonbinding resolution declaring
the killings, which began in 1915 in the waning days of the Ottoman
Empire, to be genocide, and the speaker, Representative Nancy Pelosi,
said Sunday that "I’ve said if it passed the committee that we would
bring it to the floor."

But in Ankara, the Turkish military chief, General Yasar Buyukanit,
said that if the full House passed the resolution, "our military
relations with the United States can never be the same," Reuters
reported. "The U.S. shot its own foot," he told the Milliyet
newspaper.

Buyukanit’s comment came two days after Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
Erdogan cautioned that bilateral relations with the United States, a
key partner in NATO, were endangered. To underscore the point, Turkey
has recalled its ambassador from Washington for consultations.

Strains have been further heightened by Turkish military and
political preparations for possible strikes inside northern Iraq
against militant Kurdish separatists, something U.S. officials fear
could further destabilize the region. With troops poised near the
border, the Turkish Parliament is set to debate whether to authorize
an incursion. The rising tensions sent oil prices Friday to a record
high of $84 a barrel.

The stage is thus set for a major showdown, with unknown
consequences, if the full House approves the genocide resolution.

The Turkish government has bitterly protested the use of the word
genocide – acknowledging the deaths of more than a million Armenians,
many during forced relocations, but saying there was no intent to
eliminate them. The deaths occurred before the creation of the
Turkish republic in 1923.

Ankara’s past warnings have not been hollow. Last year, it halted
military cooperation with France after French lawmakers passed a
genocide resolution.

The Bush administration’s paramount concern is that U.S. forces might
lose access to a major hub for shipping fuel and matériel to Iraq, a
case President George W. Bush made Thursday.

The administration has sent two senior officials to Ankara to allay
Turkish anger. One of the two, Eric Edelman, under secretary of
defense for policy, said Saturday that Secretary of State Condoleezza
Rice had "asked us before we came here to express that the Bush
administration is opposed to this resolution," The Associated Press
reported from Istanbul. Edelman was joined by Dan Fried, assistant
secretary of state for European affairs.

Rice and Defense Secretary Robert Gates have argued strongly against
the resolution. The Turkish government has hired top lobbyists to add
to the pressure on Congress.

If Pelosi does bring the matter to the full House, probably late this
month or next month, it would be "the most irresponsible thing" to
come from Congress this year, said Representative John Boehner,
Republican of Ohio, the House minority leader.

"There’s no question that the suffering of the Armenian people some
90 years ago was extreme," he said on Fox-Television. But that
chapter in Turkey’s past, Boehner added, "ought to be a subject for
historians to sort out, not politicians."

An ABC-TV interviewer put to Pelosi the tough question at the core of
the debate: What if forcing a vote on the resolution were to endanger
the security of American troops in Iraq?

"Some of the things that are harmful to our troops relate to values –
Abu Ghraib, Guantánamo, torture," said the California congresswoman,
whose district includes thousands of Armenian-Americans. "Our troops
are well-served when we declare who we are as a country and increase
the respect people have for us as a nation."

Pointing to a 20-year history of votes on the Armenian matter being
deferred by war or geopolitical considerations, she said, "There’s
never been a good time."

Pelosi made other points: President Ronald Reagan had referred to the
killings as genocide; aging Armenian survivors will soon be dead; and
23 other countries have declared the killings genocide.

The committee vote Thursday was bipartisan, but on Sunday, Republican
leaders roundly condemned the resolution.

"I don’t think the Congress passing this resolution is a good idea at
any point," Mitch McConnell, Republican of Kentucky, the Senate
minority leader, said on ABC-TV, "but particularly not a good idea
when Turkey is cooperating with us in many ways, which assures
greater security for our soldiers."

It is unclear whether the administration might yet be able to
dissuade Pelosi from pressing ahead. But she noted Sunday that she
had yet to hear directly from Bush.

"We’ve never had a conversation about it," she said. "I’ve heard from
the secretary of state and others in the administration, but I’ve
never heard from the president."

Representative Steny Hoyer , Democrat of Maryland, the House majority
leader, said he hoped Turks would understand that the resolution was
not aimed at modern-day Turkey or its people. But he seemed to imply
that the economic and political costs to Turkey of cutting off U.S.
access might be so great that it might ultimately back down.

"Turkey’s help to us is vital," he said on Fox TV, but "more vital is
the United States’ help to Turkey."

Eight former U.S. secretaries of state oppose the resolution, and on
Sunday, former President Jimmy Carter joined them.

"I think if I was in Congress I would not vote for it," he said on
CNN.

Arpi Vartanian: We won a great diplomatic victory

ArmRadio – Public Radio, Armenia
Oct 11 2007

Arpi Vartanian: We won a great diplomatic victory
11.10.2007 15:43

`Today is a happy day for Armenians of the world, since we won a
great diplomatic victory, Regional Director of the Armenian Assembly
of America Arpi Vartanian told a news conference, commenting on the
adoption of the Armenian Genocide Resolution in the Foreign Affairs
Committee of the US House of Representatives.

According to Arpi Vartanian, the victory is important, taking into
consideration the pressure of Turkey on US Congressmen and even
threats. Possibly, in this case the threats had the opposite
influence, since it’s not ruled out that members of the Committee
have voted for the bill as a sign of protest against Turkey’s
pressure, Arpi Vartanian noted. She underlined that although the bill
is not binding, it can serve as a basis for future documents of the
US Administration, which will have the force of law. It’s necessary
to continue the work both in the House of Representatives and the
Senate, she noted.

Commenting on the stormy reaction of the Turkish side, Arpi Vartanian
underlined that although the document has no force of law, Turkey
realizes pretty well that in case the US Congress adopts the
resolution, many countries will follow the example and it will be
forced to recognize the Armenian Genocide.

Politics drive US Armenia resolution

Agence France Presse
Oct 12 2007

Politics drive US Armenia resolution

WASHINGTON (AFP) – An explosive mix of political opportunism, moral
crusading and a bitter feud with President George W. Bush is driving
Democrats to ignore Turkey’s ire and label massacres of Armenians as
genocide.

In a case steeped in history, riven with domestic politics but with
major international implications, the House of Representatives is set
to debate a measure on the killings in World War I of up to 1.5
million Ottoman Armenians.

Though it is non-binding, the bill, likely to come up in the full
House in November, has enraged Turkey, which recalled its ambassador
to Washington and stoked fears here it will cut vital logistical
support for US Iraq operations.

Democrats argue that by refusing to condemn the Armenian massacres as
"genocide" the United States will encourage impunity for current and
future crimes against humanity, for example the killings of civilians
in Darfur.

One of the faces of the Democratic effort is Democratic Congressman
Tom Lantos, chairman of the House Foreign Relations Committe and a
Holocaust survivor known for infusing his politics with a strong
moral tone.

The committee this week passed the bill to the full House floor after
Lantos had called a vote of "conscience" and argued the United States
had a moral duty to describe the killings as "genocide" despite the
consequences.

It was a reminder of the consequences when domestic US politics erupt
onto the international stage from a system where the legislature and
the executive (presidential) branches are equal and often at odds.

Democratic determination on the issue also appears partly born of
intense frustration at past failures to ram the genocide bill through
Congress while it was controlled by Republicans.

"For 25 years I have been told — because I have sponsored a single
resolution for a quarter of a century — I have been told that this
was not the right time to pass this," said House Democratic majority
leader Steny Hoyer.

In 2000, it was pressure by the Democratic administration of
president Bill Clinton, concerned about damage to relations with a
key political ally, which thwarted the measure.

The same committee passed a similar resolution in 2005, but the
Republican leadership stopped it from being brought to the full House
floor in order to spare Bush embarrassment.

No such sentiment applies to Democrats, who are locked in a tense
political showdown with the White House, on issues as diverse as
Iraq, children’s health care and a ‘war on terror’ wiretap program.

Democratic Speaker Nancy Pelosi is determined that will not happen
again, despite unusual and outspoken public entreaties from Bush,
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Defense Secretary Robert
Gates.

"I said, if it comes out of committee, it will go to the floor. Now,
it has come out of committee, and it will go to the floor," she said
Thursday.

Frustrated by years in the political wilderness, Democrats give every
sign that they plan to wield the power granted to them when they
routed Republicans in last November’s congressional elections.

George Harris, a former State Department analyst now at the Middle
East Institute, said the machinations of domestic politics were
playing a key role in the affair — one year out from the next
presidential elections.

"The Democrats won control of Congress and they have to show they can
do something," he said, adding that Pelosi, like many others who
support the bill have powerful constituents in the Armenian
community.

The issue has also seen a fierce lobbying effort on Capitol Hill,
where senior Turkish officials meeting top Democrats and high-priced
lobbyists employed by the Turks and the Armenian exile community
here.

Pelosi, who represents a liberal district in San Francisco has long
been a supporter of the Armenian genocide measure, and it would have
been hard for politically to turn her back on it, as the leader of
her party.

The Armenian National Committee of America, an exile group, gives
Pelosi an ‘A’ rating on its report card on various issues important
to the community.

Michael Rubin, a scholar with the American Enterprise Institute in
Washington, named this week as an advisor to former New York
Repubican mayor Rudolph Giuliani’s campaign, also saw political
motives at play.

"We’re in election season right now. Unfortunately, many people in
Congress are more concerned with posturing than consequences," he
said.

Turkey May Punish Boeing Over Genocide Vote

Turkey May Punish Boeing Over Genocide Vote

Business In The Beltway

Forbes.com
10.11.07

By Brian Wingfield

WASHINGTON – Boeing could lose more than a billion dollars worth of
defense contracts with Turkey if the House of Representatives adopts a
resolution to label as genocide the killing of Armenians by Ottoman
Turks nearly a century ago, a State Department official indicated Thursday.

R. Stephen Beecroft, executive assistant to Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice, told reporters traveling to Russia and the Middle East
with the secretary that Turkey would consider canceling its Boeing
contracts if the House passes the measure, which could be voted upon as
early as next week.

The Bush administration has lobbied fervently against the resolution,
which has touched a raw nerve for Turkey, a strategic Muslim ally of the
United States in both the war on terror and in Iraq. On Thursday, Ankara
recalled its ambassador to the U.S. for consultations, though he is
expected to be back in Washington within a week to 10 days, the
Associated Press reported.

Officials from the Turkish Embassy did not return a request for comment,
and a spokesman for Boeing Integrated Defense Systems, which builds
military equipment, said the company was not aware of any potential
retaliatory action from the Turkish government.

"Our longstanding relationships with Turkish customers, industry and
communities are based on years of experience and mutual respect and
benefit," said the spokesman, Paul Lewis. "We are confident in our
relationship and remain focused on the business and community interests
that have always brought Boeing and Turkey together."

Boeing’s primary defense contract in Turkey is a $1 billion deal to
provide the government with four 737 Airborne and Early Warning Control
aircraft and the accompanying ground support. The first test flight for
the aircraft was completed last month. The Turkish military also uses
Boeing-made guided missiles for its fighter jets.

It was not immediately clear whether Turkey’s contracts with other
U.S.-based military suppliers could be affected. Two years ago, Lockheed
Martin, inked a $67.7 million deal to upgrade Ankara’s F-16 fleet, and
Northrop Grumman has in place a $160 million deal to supply the Turkish
Air Force’s Boeing 737s with radar systems.

In 1915, amidst the crumbling of the Ottoman Empire and the backdrop of
World War I, Ottoman Turks began a campaign to drive Armenians out of
what is now modern-day Turkey. About 1.5 million Armenians were killed.
The Turkish government maintains that the widely accepted number is an
exaggeration, and that what deaths there were came as a result of war.

On Wednesday the House Foreign Relations Committee passed a
nonbinding – and hence symbolic – resolution to label the killings as
genocide. A floor vote on the issue could come as early as next week.

With additional reporting by Matt Swibel

oeing-turkey-congress-markets-equity-cx_bw_1011mar kets40.html

http://www.forbes.com/markets/2007/10/11/b