AAA: Armenian Orphan Rug to go on Public Display at White House Visi

ARMENIAN ASSEMBLY OF AMERICA
PRESS RELEASE
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Date: October 15, 2014
Contact: Taniel Koushakjian
Telephone: (202) 393-3434
Email: [email protected]
Web:

ARMENIAN ORPHAN RUG TO GO ON PUBLIC DISPLAY AT WHITE HOUSE VISITOR CENTER
NEXT MONTH

WASHINGTON, DC – The Armenian Assembly of America (Assembly) is pleased
to announce that the White House is finalizing plans to prominently display
the Armenian Orphan Rug, also known as the Coolidge Rug, at the White House
Visitor Center November 18-23, 2014, reported the Assembly. The carpet will
be showcased as part of an exhibition entitled “Thank you to the United
States: Three Gifts to Presidents in Gratitude for American Generosity
Abroad,” according to a statement from the White House shared in advance
with the Assembly.

The Assembly has been working with Members of Congress and the White House
to secure the release of the iconic carpet, woven by orphaned girls of the
1915 Armenian Genocide. The Coolidge Rug gained notoriety last year when a
planned exhibition of the carpet at the Smithsonian Institute was
cancelled. Media reports at the time alleged that the government of Turkey
ultimately blocked the planned exhibit.

Last November, Congressman Adam Schiff (D-CA) and David Valadao (R-CA)
spearheaded a letter to the White House, signed by over 30 Members of
Congress, urging the release of the Armenian Orphan Rug for public display.
Senator Ed Markey (D-MA) also weighed in with a letter to the White House.
Armenian Caucus Co-Chair Frank Pallone, Jr. (D-NJ) said the following
regarding today’s announcement: “The White House has taken an important
step in recognizing historical accuracy by displaying the Armenian orphan
rug. The rug was presented to President Coolidge on behalf of the Armenian
people to honor the U.S. assistance provided during the Armenian genocide.
As a result, this cultural treasure has become a symbol of the strong and
historic ties between the United States and Armenia.”

For over a decade, the Assembly has called on the White House and the State
Department to facilitate the release of the Armenian Orphan Rug for public
display. Following the cancelled exhibition at the Smithsonian, the
Assembly embarked on a #ReleaseTheRug campaign and has been working closely
with Dr. H. Martin Deranian, author of “President Calvin Coolidge and the
Armenian Orphan Rug,” in raising awareness of this historic carpet. In
addition, the Assembly has displayed in Massachusetts and Florida a “Sister
Rug” woven by the same orphans. A presentation of the “Sister Rug” is also
planned for California on November 6, 2014.

In 1925, Dr. John H. Finley, editor-in-chief of the New York Times and
vice-chairman of the congressionally chartered Near East Relief
organization, presented a rug made by orphans of the Armenian Genocide to
President Calvin Coolidge. The rug was made in appreciation of America’s
generosity in aiding the survivors of the first genocide of the 20th
Century. It was previously displayed at the White House in 1984 and 1995,
but not since.

“The Armenian Orphan Rug, given to President Coolidge as a symbolic thank
you for America;s humanitarian relief effort in helping to save the
survivors of the Armenian Genocide, is a treasured piece of American
history,” stated Assembly Executive Director Bryan Ardouny. “As such we
welcome today’s announcement by the White House and look forward to the
permanent display of this historic rug,” Ardouny continued.

Established in 1972, the Armenian Assembly of America is the largest
Washington-based nationwide organization promoting public understanding and
awareness of Armenian issues. The Assembly is a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt
membership organization.

###

NR: # 2014-047
Available online at:

http://bit.ly/ZEOJZM
www.aaainc.org

EAEU And Karabakh Draught

EAEU AND KARABAKH DRAUGHT

Vestnik Kavkaza, Russia
Oct 15 2014

14 October 2014 – 8:13am

Yuri Glushakov exclusively to Vestnik Kavkaza

Accession of Armenia into the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU) finally
determined a course of development of the country for future decades,
which will be directed at full dependence on Russia. Considering
its political interests, Moscow agreed to take Yerevan “aboard,”
convincing its partners in the Union that Russia itself would pay
for consequences of such a decision.

The thesis is confirmed by distribution of sums of customs rates,
which will come to the EAEU from import of goods. Since January 2nd,
2015, the beginning of the Union’s work, Armenia will get 1.13% of the
whole sum of customs duties. The figure appeared due to reduction of
Russia’s share in the “customs pie” from 88% to 86.97%. At the same
time, shares of Belarus and Kazakhstan will decrease only by 0.05%,
Minsk will get 4.65%, Astana – 7.25%.

According to the head of the IMF mission in Armenia, Mark Horton, the
general volume of customs duty resources which will fill the Armenian
budget next year is going to be about $150-200 million. He thinks that
the Armenian government can spend the money for expenditure items of
the budget, that will influence the country’s economy positively.

But this is not all: Armenia has got a respite till 2022 for launching
common customs duties for the EAEU. Till 2020 the country will use
its own rates for some milk products, eggs, and honey; till 2019 some
rates will remain for some fruits and nuts. Some kinds of civilian
helicopters and aircrafts which are imported to Armenia, as well as
goods necessary for construction and modernization of the nuclear
power plant will also stay free from customs duties till 2022.

Another important customs bonus for Armenia is a benefit for import of
military products for the Armed Forces of Armenia, if their analogues
are not produced in other member countries of the Union. Of course
construction of the nuclear power plant and export of weapons to
Armenia will be provided by Russia. It will sponsor Armenian economy.

The general sum of Russia’s “donations” for accession of Armenia into
the EAEU will be about $1 billion annually. By 2022 the sum could
increase by $10 billion, considering investments into construction
of the NPP and export of weapons.

Not all Armenian political forces stood against such presents from
Moscow, but the majority of them focused their attention on another
aspect of the EAEU deal: accession of Armenia into the new Union
within borders recognized by the UN. Surprisingly, Serge Sargsyan’s
consent to accession of Armenia without Nagorno-Karabakh caused a heavy
discussion. The opposition mass media which supports integration with
the EU accused the President of betrayal of the Karabakh movement.

It is surprising, as Armenia doesn’t recognize Nagorno-Karabakh as a
state or a constituent of Armenia. Other countries have even fewer
reasons for taking responsibility and being involved into disputes
in the conflict zone. At least it was strange to read such phrases in
the Armenian media: “Armenia is deprived of its right for independent
foreign policy, including on the Armenian issue.” What did prevent
them from showing their independence in their position earlier?

If Nagorno-Karabakh is an unrecognized formation, why should Moscow,
Minsk, and Astana consider the territory a part of Armenia? The
countries of the Union need no grey zones which could be sources of
conflicts. That’s why Armenia is recognized within borders which are
internationally recognized, i.e. without Karabakh and eastern Turkish
provinces which are marked as the Armenian issue in Yerevan.

As for Azerbaijani euphoria that Karabakh is eliminated from Yerevan’s
influence within the EAEU, it is understandable. Baku has been proving
obvious truth on recognition of borders and occupation of seven regions
along with Nagorno-Karabakh by Armenia for too long. The so-called
Nagorno-Karabakh Republic which tried to be promoted by Yerevan to
the EAEU declares that it includes Azerbaijani regions which didn’t
belong to Karabakh.

What will happen next to Armenia and occupied Karabakh? Of course
we cannot expect building of customs checkpoints on the border of
Armenia and Karabakh, i.e. Armenia and Azerbaijani territory (the
former NKAO had no common border with Armenia) in next few months.

Alexander Iskandaryan, the director of the Caucasus Institute, noted
that only mass media reported on establishing of a customs checkpoint
between Armenia and the NKR; there were no official messages.

We can assume that products made in Karabakh will get to Russian
markets and probably markets of other EAEU countries illegally. Moscow
will diplomatically ignore it. Products made in the unrecognized
territory can be seen not only in Russia today. It is exported to
the UAE, Jordan, other countries of the Middle East. Legalization of
products takes place in Yerevan. To meet requirements of the EAEU,
it will be enough to write a Yerevan address on a package. It will
be enough. Only adherence to principles of members of the Union is
able to reveal illegal goods and cut off their flow.

At the same time, it will be difficult to substitute volumes of
economic ties between Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh. In 2013 the general
volume of NKR’s revenues was about $70 million. Such volumes are at
the level of margin for the EAEU countries. So, Russia will close
eyes for the Karabakh hole which will inevitably attract cheating
players. Only settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, deoccupation
of the territories and further opening of borders between Armenia
and Azerbaijan and Turkey could close the hole. Russia diplomacy will
have to do its best to convince Yerevan that such a step is necessary,
otherwise the Karabakh draught blow off the building of the new Union,
just like in the early 1990s.

http://vestnikkavkaza.net/analysis/politics/61017.html

BAKU: Elmar Mammadyarov: We Can Start To Develop Peace Treaty On Bas

ELMAR MAMMADYAROV: WE CAN START TO DEVELOP PEACE TREATY ON BASIS OF CO-CHAIRS’ STRUCTURAL PROPOSALS

APA, Azerbaijan
Oct 15 2014

[ 15 October 2014 14:32 ]

“We’re fully ready for the next stage and waiting for a similar
position from Armenia”

Baku. Rufet Ahmadzadeh – APA. “Azerbaijan is anticipating a serious
progress from the presidents’ trilateral meeting to take place in
Paris in late October”, said Azerbaijani Minister of Foreign Affairs
Elmar Mammadyarov, APA reports.

The minister said Azerbaijan is willing to start developing a peace
treaty on the settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict without
delay, adding that the co-chairs put forth some structural proposals
covering a number of issues.

“We came to the conclusion that we can start to develop a peace treaty
on the basis of the co-chairs’ structural proposals that will cover the
liberation of the lands and return of the refugees. We’re fully ready
for the next stage and waiting for a similar position from Armenia,”
he added.

White House Confirms Display Of Rug Linked To Armenian Genocide

WHITE HOUSE CONFIRMS DISPLAY OF RUG LINKED TO ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

01:04, 16 Oct 2014

A istoric rug tied to the Armenian genocide will go on display at the
White House Visitor Center in November after several failed attempts
to display the piece, the Los Angeles Times reports.

The Ghazir rug was created by orphans of the genocide and presented
to President Calvin Coolidge in 1925. It will be featured alongside
other artifacts in an exhibition highlighting gifts to the United
States from groups that have benefited from American humanitarian aid.

“The rug … is a reminder of the close relationship between the
people of Armenia and the United States,” National Security Council
spokeswoman Bernadette Meehan said in a statement announcing the
exhibition.

The tapestry, also called the Armenian Orphan Rug, has been in
storage for decades with only limited public appearances. In 2013,
the White House blocked a plan to display the rug at the Smithsonian
Institution, saying the planned exhibition, which would have featured
the release of a book about the piece, was a private event and thus
“not viewed as commensurate with the rug’s historical significance.”

http://www.armradio.am/en/2014/10/16/white-house-confirms-display-of-rug-linked-to-armenian-genocide/

Genocide Recognition Has Preventive Value, Says Armenian Parliament

GENOCIDE RECOGNITION HAS PREVENTIVE VALUE, SAYS ARMENIAN PARLIAMENT OFFICIAL

15:30 * 16.10.14

Armenia’s parliament a vice speaker, who is in Switzerland on a
working visit, has thanked the country’s legislative authorities for
the passage of a resolution aimed condemning the Genocide.

At a meeting with Claude Heche, the first vice president of the Swiss
Federal Council of States, Eduard Sharmazanov highly praised the move,
noting that the recognition and the condemnation of a crime of genocide
is a step ahead towards preventing similar atrocities in future.

He further praised a recent decision to erect the monument Memorial
Lanterns in Geneva’s Ariana Park to eternalize the victims of the
big tragedy.

According to a press release by the National Assembly, the sides also
discussed the recent developments in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict
settlement talks and the current level of the Armenian-Swiss relations.

At the end of the meeting, Sharmazanov invited the Swiss official
to visit Armenia next year to participate in the Genocide centennial
commemoration events.

Armenian News – Tert.am

Government Grants Three-Year Vat Payment Deferment To Ararat Food Fa

GOVERNMENT GRANTS THREE-YEAR VAT PAYMENT DEFERMENT TO ARARAT FOOD FACTORY

YEREVAN, October 16. / ARKA /. The Armenian government has granted
today a three-year VAT payment deferment to Ararat Food Factory for
importing equipment worth over 300 million drams.

Economy minister Karen Chshmarityan said the company plans to import
ten large trucks to carry out also cargo transportation.

He said the trucks will ensure a stable circulation of products and
increase the volume of exports.

In 2010 the company established a factory for the production of natural
juices and created more than 100 jobs as part of its first-phase 1.6
billion drams worth investment program.

The minister said the company is carrying out the second phase of
the investment program worth 600 million drams in order to expand the
product range. He said due to new equipment the company will process
also tomatoes, apricots, peaches to get high quality raw materials
for the production of canned products.

Ararat Food factory is producing now natural juices and nectars, teas
and canned food, selling about 80% of the output in the CIS countries
and Europe under the brands “Ararat”, “Lina” and “Josie.” -0–

http://arka.am/en/news/business/government_grants_three_year_vat_payment_deferment_to_ararat_food_factory/#sthash.aeWm55sR.dpuf

Hotel Number Grows In Armenia

HOTEL NUMBER GROWS IN ARMENIA

[ Part 2.2: “Attached Text” ]

11:31, 16 October, 2014

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 16, ARMENPRESS: The number of the hotel objects
has increased in a year in the Republic of Armenia by 72 and in 2013
their number made 229 in comparison with the previous year’s
157. The National Statistical Service of Armenia informed Armenpress
that the major part of the hotels – 75 – are located in Yerevan.

33 hotels function in the regions of Kotayk and Tavush, 31 – in Syunik,
17 – in Gegharkunik and 15 – in Vayots Dzor.

11 hotels function in the regions of Lori and Shirak and 3 –
in Aragatsotn.

Hotels are not registered only in Armavir and Ararat.

http://armenpress.am/eng/news/780303/hotel-number-grows-in-armenia.html

ANKARA: Turkish FM: 1915 Incidents Being Used For Political Gain

TURKISH FM: 1915 INCIDENTS BEING USED FOR POLITICAL GAIN

Anadolu Agency, Turkey
Oct 13 2014

Cavusoglu addressed members of US non-governmental organizations at
Turkish Association in New York. NEW YORK (AA) – Turkey’s Foreign
Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu has said that the United States should not
blindly accept certain countries’ version of events when it comes to
the 1915 incidents between Turkey and Armenia

The 1915 incidents took place during World War I when a portion of
the Armenian population living in the Ottoman Empire sided with the
invading Russians and rose up against the ruling Ottoman authorities.

The uprisings were followed by a decision by the Ottoman Empire to
relocate Armenians living in eastern Anatolia.

Addressing members of US non-governmental organizations at the Turkish
Association in New York on Saturday, Cavusoglu said that the peoples
of Armenia and Turkey have “enough common sense not to be fooled by
politicians and academics who have political motivations.”

“The 1915 incidents are being misused for political gain and votes,”
the foreign minister continued. He explained that the US must take
into account Turkey’s views about the incidents as well.

Cavusoglu also mentioned that the US and Turkey have a strong
alliance in matters pertaining to foreign policy and that the Turkish
community’s voice in the United States was becoming stronger by
the day.

The Armenian diaspora and the state of Armenia have both described
the incidents as “genocide” and have asked for compensation.

Turkey states that even though Armenians died during the relocation,
many Turks were also killed in attacks carried out by Armenian gangs.

“We should oppose and prevent this great sorrow in our history being
used for malicious purposes and for influencing our friends in the US
We should also show them what really took place with real, empirical
evidence,” he said.

In April, Turkey’s then Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan who
was elected president with popular vote on August 10 offered his
condolences for those Armenians who died during the incidents of 1915.

Festival Of Lavash And Armenian Dishes To Take Place In Armenia

FESTIVAL OF LAVASH AND ARMENIAN DISHES TO TAKE PLACE IN ARMENIA

15:51 14/10/2014 ” CULTURE

Nor Artik village in Aragatsotn province of Armenia will host a
festival of lavash and Armenian dishes on October 18, the Armenian
Culture Ministry reports.

The festival will be held for the second time. It was organized by
Association of Ashtarak Region Women NGO in cooperation with the
Culture Ministry and regional administration of Aragatsotn.

Public and educational institutions, families participate in the
festival.

Source: Panorama.am

Who Lost Turkey? An Ally Goes Rogue.

WHO LOST TURKEY? AN ALLY GOES ROGUE.

The Weekly Standard
Vol. 20 No. 5
October 13, 2014 Monday

by Daniel Pipes, The Weekly Standard

Only 12 years ago, the Republic of Turkey was correctly seen as the
model of a pro-Western Muslim state, and a bridge between Europe and
the Middle East. A strong military bond with the Pentagon undergirded
broader economic and cultural ties with Americans. And then, starting
with the 2002 elections that brought the Justice and Development party
(AKP) and Recep Tayyip Erdogan, first as prime minister and now as
president, to power, Turkey dramatically changed course. Slowly at
first and then with increasing velocity since mid-2011, Erdogan’s
government began breaking laws, turned autocratic, and allied with
the enemies of the United States.

Even those most reluctant to recognize this shift have been forced to
do so. If Barack Obama listed Erdogan as one of his five best foreign
friends in 2012, he showed a quite different attitude by having a mere
charge d’affaires represent him at Erdogan’s presidential inauguration
a few weeks ago a public slap in the face.

What caused this shift? To understand today’s unexpected circumstances
requires a glance back to the Ottoman Empire. Founded in 1299, its
control over substantial parts of the European continent (mainly
the Balkan area, named after the Turkish word for mountain) made it
the only Muslim polity to engage intensely with Europe as Western
Christians rose to become the wealthiest and most powerful people on
the planet. As the Ottoman Empire weakened relative to other European
powers over the centuries, how to dispose of it became a major concern
of European diplomacy (the Eastern question ) and the empire came to
be seen as potential prey (the sick man of Europe ).

Turkey’s defeat in World War I occurred against this backdrop,
prompting the army’s outstanding general, Mustafa Kemal, to seize
power and close down the empire in favor of the Republic of Turkey,
far smaller and limited mainly to Turkish-language-speakers. For the
new country’s first 15 years, 1923-38, Kemal (who renamed himself
Ataturk) dominated the country. A strong-willed Westernizer, he
imposed a sequence of radical changes that characterize the country
to this day, and make it conspicuously different from the rest of the
Middle East, including laicism (secularism on steroids) and codes of
law based on European prototypes.

Starting almost immediately after Ataturk’s death in 1938, a reversal
of his secularism began. But the Turkish military, in its dual role
as the country’s ultimate political power and the self-conscious heir
of Ataturk’s legacy, placed limits on these changes. The military,
however, is a force for neither creativity nor intellectual growth,
so the adages of Ataturk, unceasingly repeated over the decades,
became stale and restricting. As dissent increased, the parties
holding to his 1920s vision stagnated, degenerating into corrupt,
power-seeking organizations. By the 1990s, their revolving-door
governments had alienated a sizable portion of the electorate.

In 2001, Erdogan and another Islamist politician, Abdullah Gul,
founded the AKP. Promising good government and economic growth based
on conservative values, it performed impressively in its inaugural
election of November 2002, winning just over one-third of the vote.

Erdogan focused at first on the economy and racked up Chinese-like
rates of economic growth. In foreign policy, he emerged as a
power-broker in the Middle East (for example, offering to mediate
peace talks between Israel and Syria) and became the West’s favorite
Islamist. In the process, he seemed to solve a centuries-old conundrum
of relations between Islam and the West, finding a successful blend
of the two.

In reality, it seems that Erdogan sought to reverse the Ataturk
revolution and return Turkey to an Ottoman-like domestic order and
international standing. With that in mind, he weakened the military
by contriving preposterous conspiracy theories its top brass had
ostensibly engineered. For reasons still unclear, the leadership of
the armed forces barely pushed back, even as its top officers were
arrested and the general staff eventually fired.

As the military surrendered, Erdogan took aim at his domestic rivals,
especially his longtime ally, Fethullah Gulen, an Islamist and leader
of a massive national movement with networks placed in key government
institutions. As Erdogan demonized his critics, he delighted his
base Turks who felt oppressed by Ataturkism. With each election,
he accrued more personal power, as did Hugo Chavez in Venezuela.

International relations followed a similar pattern, with an initial
set of modest foreign goals becoming, over time, ever grander and more
dangerous. A zero problems with neighbors policy enunciated by foreign
minister Ahmet Davutoglu began successfully as Ankara managed warm
relations with Syria and Iran, and mutually beneficial, albeit tepid,
relations with Israel. Even longtime foes such as Greece and Armenia
gained from Erdogan’s charm offensive. The great powers sought good
relations. The AKP’s neo-Ottoman dream of acquiring primacy among
its former colonials seemed attainable.

But then Erdogan displayed the same arrogance abroad that he had
unleashed at home, and to much worse reviews. If a majority of the
Turkish electorate applauded his tongue-lashings, few foreigners did.

As the Arab upheavals changed the Middle East beginning in 2011,
Erdogan and Davutoglu found their accomplishments slipping away, to
the point that Ankara now has poor to venomous relations with many
of its neighbors.

The break with Syrian president Bashar al-Assad, perhaps the most
dramatic of Erdogan’s losses, has had many negative consequences. It
saddled Turkey with millions of unwelcome Arabic-speaking refugees,
led to a proxy war with Iran, obstructed Turkish trade routes through
much of the Middle East, and gave rise to jihadist forces. Hostility
to Israel ended Ankara’s strongest regional bond. Erdogan’s support
for the short-lived Muslim Brotherhood rule in Egypt turned into open
enmity toward the next government in Cairo. Threats against Cyprus
in the aftermath of its discovery of gas further soured an already
adversarial relationship. Turkish contractors lost more than $19
billion in Libya’s anarchy.

Internationally, a feint in the direction of buying a Chinese missile
system brought security relations with Washington to a new low.

Erdogan’s urging the millions of Turks living in Germany to resist
assimilation caused tensions with Berlin, as did Ankara’s possible
role in the murder of three Kurds in Paris. These outrages have
left Ankara nearly friendless. It enjoys warm relations with Qatar,
the Kurdistan Regional Government in northern Iraq, and the Muslim
Brotherhood, including its Palestinian offshoot, Hamas.

Erdogan will face three challenges over the next year: electoral,
psychological, and economic. Having ascended to the presidency on
August 28 requires constitutional changes allowing him to become the
strong executive president he aspires to be. In turn, those changes
require the AKP to do well in the June 2015 national elections; or,
alternatively, to make substantial concessions to Turkish Kurds to win
their support for his ambitions. Now that the party finds itself in the
untested hands of Davutoglu, recently promoted from foreign minister
to prime minister, its ability to win the necessary seats is in doubt.

Second, Erdogan’s fate depends on Davutoglu remaining his faithful
consigliere. Should Davutoglu develop independent ambitions, Erdogan
will find himself limited to a mostly ceremonial post.

Last, the shaky Turkish economy depends on foreign money seeking higher
rates of return and a host of infrastructure projects to continue
growing. Here, Erdogan’s highly erratic behavior (ranting against
what he calls the interest lobby, rating agencies such as Moody’s,
and even the New York Times) discourages further investment, while
huge debt threatens to leave the country bankrupt.

With its youthful population of 75 million, a central location,
control of a key waterway, and eight mostly problematic neighbors,
Turkey is a highly desirable ally. In addition, it enjoys a position
of prominence in the Middle East, among Turkic-speakers from Bosnia to
Xinjiang, and among Muslims worldwide. The U.S.-Turkish alliance that
began with the Korean War has been highly advantageous to Washington,
which is understandably loath to lose it.

That said, one side alone cannot sustain an alliance. Ankara’s record
of friendly relations with Tehran, support for Hamas and the Islamic
State, undermining the authority of Baghdad, virulence toward Israel,
and threats against Cyprus make it a questionable, if not entirely
duplicitous, NATO partner. The Obama administration can signal that the
bullying tactics that have won Erdogan votes at home have won him only
animosity in the rest of the world. The White House can make clear
that unless major changes occur quickly, it will push for Turkey’s
suspension and eventual expulsion from NATO. If Erdogan insists on
acting the rogue, then that’s how its former ally should treat him.

Daniel Pipes is president of the Middle East Forum.

http://www.weeklystandard.com/author/daniel-pipes