ANKARA: Turkish Spokesman Denies Arrest Of Armenian Nationals

TURKISH SPOKESMAN DENIES ARREST OF ARMENIAN NATIONALS

Anatolia News Agency, Turkey
Oct 20 2007

Ankara, 20 October: Some allegations which said that several Armenian
nationals were arrested in Turkey to be deported don’t reflect reality,
Turkish MFA [Ministry of Foreign Affairs] Spokesman Levent Bilman
said on Saturday [20 October].

Bilman stated news reports in some foreign dailies claimed a large
number of Armenian nationals were arrested in Turkey to be deported,
adding that these news reports don’t reflect reality.

Sassounian Awarded

SASSOUNIAN AWARDED

A1+
[01:57 pm] 22 October, 2007

Under a decree of RA Prime Minister Serzh Sargsian, Harut Sassounian
was awarded with a medal of RA Prime Minister for his humanitarian
activity, great contribution to the sphere and charity programmes.

The medal was handed during Serzh Sargsian’s visit to the USA in
Los Angeles.

Turkey ignored the opinion of the `strategic partner and ally’

PanARMENIAN.Net

Turkey ignored the opinion of the `strategic partner and ally’

Practically in North Iraq there is the State of Kurdistan and the
Iraqi Kurds have a big influence on the Turkish Kurds. And this is a
very serious factor for Turkey.
18.10.2007 GMT+04:00

In spite of all the calls of George Bush, the Turkish army started a
wide-ranging military operation against the Kurdish militants in the
Northern border with Iraq. The army almost carries military operation
in the `triangle’ of the provinces of Shirnak, Khakyarri, and
Siirt. On October 17 the Turkish Parliament voted for granting the
government the power of holding military operations in the Northern
Iraq with a one-year-deadline. The truth is though, that the Prime
Minister Recep Erdoghan said, that the decision of the Parliament
doesn’t mean that the operations will at once be started, however a
recurrent war with the Kurds has been unleashed.

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Nothing unexpected had happened. Turkey acted out
of its interests, not taking into consideration the calls of the
`strategic partner and ally’. The last call was made by George
Bush. During the unanticipated press-conference the American President
explained that it is of no interest to Turkey to send extra troops to
the northern part of Iraq. But at this very moment the Turkish
deputies voted in favor of the resolution allowing attacks on the
Kurdish separatists of Kurdistan Workers Party.

Kurds, as it is known, live in Syria and Iran, and it is not by chance
that Turkey has decided to support Syria in its fight with the Kurdish
militants. During his visit to Ankara the Syrian President Bashar Asad
announced that Turkey has the legal right to attack `certain
groups’. Then he also said that this is the problem to be solved by
the Americans. Indeed, the times his father Hafez al-Assad guaranteed
shelter for the separatists are long gone. Iran is not interested in
Kurds’ strengthening either. Practically in North Iraq there is the
state of Kurdistan and the Iraqi Kurds have a big influence on the
Turkish Kurds. And this is a very serious factor for Turkey.

Military analysts believe that the Turks will strike a triple blow:
air raids, operations of landing parties, expansion of the safe haven
(20-30 km) towards the Iraqi border. Large-scale mopping-up on the
principle called `find and destroy’ will be held among all the
units. In this area bases are established, where militants and future
kamikazes are being trained. However, the Kurdistan Workers Party
doesn’t wait without actions. The leadership of the Party has cut down
the number of `columns’ and sent them out to different areas, getting
ready for `make a hell’ in Turkish towns. However, the observers think
that the attack cannot be decisive. Winter is not far and more
problems arise, the Kurds are very decisive. Several days ago the
Turks asked the Iraqis to allow them to pursue the Kurdistan Workers
Party beyond their borders. Baghdad turned down their request. Ankara
began the offensive with the hope that Washington will find a way to
solve the problem.

Meanwhile Baghdad is seriously concerned with the situation. The Iraqi
Kurds make the important part of the New Iraq and the current
President Jalal Talabani is Kurdish as well. The truth is though, that
Talabani during his visit to Paris made an ambiguous statement turning
to the Kurdistan Workers Party; `Stop the attacks, otherwise we will
demand you to leave our territory’, and this is impracticable, because
in the Iraqi Kurdistan the Party feels very much home.

This story has been lasting for more than 30 years with changeable
success. Kurds are pursued by the Turkish army, Saddam Hussein tried
to annihilate them. They understood and still understand quite well
that nothing will ever stop the Kurds to establish the independent
Kurdistan. However another truth is that the Turkish soldiers settled
down on the Iraqi territory in the end of the 1990’s already, long
before the coalition offensive against Saddam’s regime had
started. According to the Pentagon Press-Secretary Jeff Morrell, the
presence of the Turkish soldiers in the North of Iraq shouldn’t give
rise to worries.

It should be reminded that Turkey threatened the USA with the military
operations in the North of Iraq, so that Resolution 106 about the
Armenian Genocide wouldn’t be approved. However, as we can see, there
is nothing in common between the fight against Kurdistan Workers Party
and Resolution 106, the dates of the voting haven’t been mentioned
yet, but the troops have already started their fight against Kurdish
militants. The day before the U.S. President George Bush called the
congressmen to adopt the Resolution on the Armenian Genocide, for `the
Congress shouldn’t give any adjectives to historical events in the
Ottoman Turkey. The Congress has many other, more important things
than kindling hostility between the USA and its democratic allies in
the Islamic world, particularly those allies who always support our
troops,’ announced George Bush. True though, according to Professor
Ruben Safrastyan the real allies of the USA in the region are Kurds.

«PanARMENIAN.Net» analytical department

Historical Truth: Tit for tat

Seattle Post Intelligencer, WA
Oct 19 2007

Historical Truth: Tit for tat

SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER EDITORIAL BOARD

So, riddle us this, America … Why is it that President Bush
chastised Congress in its efforts to declare the mass killings of
Armenians by the Turkish-led Ottoman Empire starting in 1915
genocide?

Because it’ll upset a key ally in the region, Turkey, which allows us
to drive our supply trucks into Iraq through its border. So why then,
does he feel it’s OK to stick it to the Chinese by honoring the Dalai
Lama with a Congressional Gold Medal? His urgent need for diplomacy
took a powder, angering the Chinese. Could it be because China has
refused to condemn Iran’s quest for nuclear energy?

Surely the timing is no more convenient for this move than it is for
the Armenian motion before Congress. Consider that on the same day
that the Dalai Lama met with Bush, China, along with Iran, was
awarded a $1 billion contract by the Iraqi government for the
construction of power plants.

We happen to believe that the Tibetan spiritual leader deserves the
honor bestowed upon him — we just find it hard to believe that
Bush’s motives for honoring the man were pure. If we’re getting on
the right side of history on Tibet, we should get it right with the
Armenians.

ion/336023_provokeed.html

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/opin

The Good…The Bad…The Ugly

Lake Expo, MO
Oct 19 2007

The Good…The Bad…The Ugly

Friday, October 19, 2007 10:11 AM CDT

Hammons Hotels TIF good for Osage Beach…Only bad blood can come
from condemning deeds of Ottoman Empire…Shawnee Bend hydrant ordeal
just keeps getting uglier

Good

The Osage Beach Tax Increment Financing Commission has made a
well-considered decision that will have far-reaching implications for
the fiscal future of the lake.

The commission unanimously approved a proposal from John Q. Hammons
Resorts and Hotels, sending the matter on to the city’s Board of
Aldermen for consideration.

The Hammons organization – perhaps the strongest such business in the
country – plans to build a nearly $100 million resort hotel in Osage
Beach. They have asked for just over $3 million in reimbursable TIF
dollars and another $3 million in a hotel-specific sales tax.
ADVERTISEMENT

As TIF Commission Chairman Gary Hamner rightly pointed out, the city
and taxing entities are being asked to invest $6 million up front as
pump priming for an expected $60 million in additional tax revenues
over the next two decades. A simple formula for success.

Hamner said opening the door for a world-class 300-plus room hotel,
spa and convention center will recenter the Osage Beach and Lake of
the Ozarks tourism industry. The loss of room and resort space to
condominium development lakewide has made it increasingly difficult
to attract short-term visitors. This hotel project is an important
part of putting that component back in the lake mix. The commission
members and chairman embraced the lake’s future with their
affirmative vote.

Not every TIF deal is a bargain. Longtime Lakers will remember the
North Port disaster and its ongoing ramifications in Miller County.
However, when an organization of the quality of Hammons Hotels offers
to partner with public entities to the benefit of all concerned, it
is a very good idea to accept the offer. Good for the TIF Commission
for doing so.

Bad

The resolution floating around Congress to condemn killers long dead
is not just bad, it is stupid.

Although a lot of Democrats are backing away from the meaningless
move to label the death of a million Armenians in the century-gone
Ottoman Empire as genocide, the move itself has angered the modern
Turkish government.

It is worth remembering that Turkey is what passes for a democracy in
the Muslim world and is a key element in our military structure in
the world’s most troubled region.

It is also worth remembering that the resolution is meaningless, the
empire and the killers are long ago turned to dust. Certainly the
slaughter of the Armenians was wrong but what in the world does it
matter now? If the current Turkish government kills an Armenian, then
let’s pay attention. Digging up the past dead in a world knee deep in
fresh bleeding bodies is just ridiculous.

We increasingly appear to be led by a bunch of knuckleheads on both
sides of the aisle.

The ones that are not in bathrooms looking for dates are in the halls
of Congress worrying about things that do not make us safer, richer
or more likely to fiscally survive a trip to the emergency room.

Ugly

Those in charge of Sunrise Beach and Lake Ozark – the people who are
charged with using your money to bring you police, water, sewer and
other public services – have decided instead to spend your money
keeping others from having fire hydrants.

Not satisfied with a local court’s decision to allow the hydrant
project on Shawnee Bend move forward, the cities have decided to
appeal the ruling. That will take months if not years and thousands –
if not hundreds of thousands – of your dollars. Dollars that will pay
no policeman, deliver no service, provide no benefit.

Lake Ozark, for its part, has a legitimate gripe with the water
company involved. That makes this move no more palatable for
taxpayers, but it does make some kind of sense.

Sunrise Beach just wants to annex everything in site and is blocking
this move by the water company as part and parcel of land greed.
Sunrise Beach officials want more territory so they can misspend even
more tax dollars. There is no plan, there is no reasonable goal.
There is only an apparent desire to keep the homeowners of Shawnee
Bend from having fire hydrants, hiding behind the sham of one day
annexing people who will go to the barricades to prevent that move.
It is either municipal stupidity, envy or both.

The collective political skills, vision and sense of the Sunrise
Beach board would not impress a third grader.

This case will drag on while the people at the end of Shawnee Bend
wait for the next house to burn down.

This is municipal mismanagement at its most ugly.

/03.txt

http://lakeexpo.com/articles/2007/10/19/top_news

TV cos have received "recommendation" not to cover rally on Oct 26

Lragir, Armenia
Oct 19 2007

TV COMPANIES HAVE RECEIVED `RECOMMENDATION’ NOT TO COVER THE RALLY ON
OCTOBER 26

Statement of Yerevan Press Club, Committee to Protect Freedom of
Expression, `Asparez’ Journalist’s Club of Gyumri, Vanadzor Press
Club, Helsinki Committee of Armenia Vanadzor Office of Helsinki
Citizens’ Assembly

We, the public organizations, express our concern over the negative
and unacceptable developments that have been recently observed with
regard to freedom of expression. The print media have been reporting
that for several days already correspondents of broadcast media do
not come to press conferences, organized at various press clubs. A
supposition was made that this attitude is imposed by various power
agencies. We realize that media do not have to cover all press
conferences; however, the simultaneous and unanimous display of
indifference to events of public importance only comes to confirm the
version of intervention by `invisible hand’.

We receive alarming information that over the past week heads of
private TV companies were invited to various agencies, where they
were `persuaded’ to ignore the public events, appearances of certain
opposition figures, not to invite them to studios, not to interview
them and not to show them on air. In particular, the TV companies
have received a `recommendation’ not to cover (either positively or
negatively) the rally of a number of political forces, scheduled for
October 26.

We remind that impeding the legitimate professional activities of
journalists is a criminal offence. Moreover, Clause 2 of Article 164
of the RA Criminal Code refers to the commitment of the same offence
by an official, using his/her position.

Having no common political preferences or dislikes, all of us think
it to be an urgent necessity that information and opinions be
disseminated freely, in particular, ahead of presidential elections,
and we call on authorities to abstain from interfering with the
editorial policy of media, primarily the broadcasters, since it
irreparably damages the freedom of expression and pluralism as
cornerstone principles of democracy.

Yerevan Press Club

Committee to Protect Freedom of Expression

`Asparez’ Journalist’s Club

Vanadzor Press Club

Helsinki Committee of Armenia

Vanadzor Office of Helsinki Citizens’ Assembly

October 19, 2007

VoA: U.S.-Turkish Relations Strained Over Iraq, Armenian "Genocide"

Voice of America
Oct 19 2007

U.S.-Turkish Relations Strained Over Iraq and Armenian "Genocide"

By Judith Latham
Washington
19 October 2007

Turkey, a member of NATO, is a key U.S. ally on whom Washington
depends for logistical support in the Middle East
U.S.-Turkish relations are in an extremely delicate phase. A member
of NATO, Turkey is a key U.S. ally on whom Washington depends for
logistical support in the Middle East and as a bridge to the Muslim
world. Earlier this week Turkey’s parliament voted to authorize
cross-border military operations into Iraq against the Kurdish
Workers Party, or PKK, as the ethnic separatist movement is also
known. Turkey blames Iraqi-based rebels of the PKK for attacks that
have killed about 30 Turkish soldiers and civilians in the past few
weeks. But Iraq’s Deputy Prime Minister Barham Salih has warned
Ankara that a unilateral military operation across the border would
have `grave consequences’ that could destabilize Iraq and the region.
Washington has also urged Turkey not to resort to military action.

Kurdish supporters in Dahuk (northern Iraq) protest Turkey’s decision
to send army to Iraq, 18 Oct 2007
Turkish journalist Ali Aslan, Washington correspondent for Zaman
newspaper, says that the current problems in U.S.-Turkish relations
are not new. Speaking with host Judith Latham of VOA News Now’s
International Press Club, Mr. Aslan explains that they began with the
U.S. decision to invade Iraq in 2003. He reminds that Turkey refused
at that time to allow U.S. troops to use Turkish territory, which
represented the first time that Turkey had said no to a `major U.S.
demand.’ Furthermore, Mr. Aslan says, Ankara believes the United
States has an obligation to help contain the PKK in northern Iraq by
putting pressure on the Kurdish leadership there. He acknowledges
that Washington is now in a difficult position – having to choose
between its ally and friend, Turkey, and its need for `relative
stability’ in the Kurdish region of northern Iraq.

1.5 million Armenians are estimated to have died in mass killings
during and after First World War when the Ottoman Empire was
collapsing. The historians have generally accepted it as genocide
Meanwhile the Iraqi-Kurdish issue has been enormously complicated by
Turkey’s strong objection to support in a U.S. congressional
committee for a non-binding resolution condemning as `genocide’ the
mass killings of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire nearly a century
ago. During that tumultuous period from 1915 to 1923, when the
Ottoman Empire was collapsing and the Russian Empire was
transitioning to Soviet communist rule, Newsweek correspondent
Richard Wolffe says, 1.5 million Armenians are estimated to have died
in mass killings that `historians have generally accepted as
genocide.’

Nonetheless, Turkey rejects this interpretation, arguing that the
mass killings were an unfortunate consequence of civil war.
Furthermore, Ankara objects to the U.S. Congress weighing in on a
matter that they believe is better left to historians. But U.S.
domestic politics is also a factor in the controversy. The strong
Armenian-American lobby has been fighting for a genocide resolution
for decades, and some members of Congress with Armenian-American
constituents in their districts continue to back the resolution.

Indeed some critics of the resolution say that, even if what happened
to the Armenians was tantamount to genocide, they think it is unwise
for Congress to pass such a resolution at a time when smooth
relations with Turkey are critical to the U.S. effort in Iraq.
Worried about antagonizing Turkish leaders, members of both political
parties are now withdrawing their support for the resolution. Many
U.S. lawmakers now think passage of the resolution would be extremely
ill timed and worry that Ankara might deny American access to
critical military facilities in Turkey that are needed to continue
supplying U.S. troops in Iraq and Afghanistan.

-10-18-voa45.cfm

Judith Latham’s Report 1.2 MB (Real)
Judith Latham’s Report 3.4 MB (MP3)
Listen to Judith Latham’s Report 3.4 MB (MP3)

http://www.voanews.com/english/NewsAnalysis/2007

Realism And The Armenian Genocide Resolution

REALISM AND THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE RESOLUTION
James Joyner

Outside the Beltway, VA
Oct 18 2007

Responding to Matt Yglesias’ assertion that the Armenian genocide
resolution is essentially irrelevant because "Turkey is going to
formulate its policy vis-a-vis the United States of America in light
of Turkey’s interests and not actually radically restructure things
in the wake of a symbolic resolution," Jim Henley notes that,

Turkey needs to figure out where the US fits into the picture of its
interests, and something like the Armenian genocide resolution can
play a crucial signaling role. On the view of the Turkish government,
Turkish Kurdistan is part of Turkey, and Turkey is under assault from
the territory of a US protectorate. The genocide resolution says,
to Turkey, we care more about what your predecessor government did 90
years ago than what others do to you now. It also says, our instincts
are to support your ethnic minorities in any conflict. This strikes
me as information, and information that Turkish rulers would figure
has to be reckoned in any account of how relations with the US affect
their interests.

I think that’s right. Obviously, good relations with the United States
are important to Turkey’s interests and they’re unlikely to cut off
their proverbial nose to spite their face. But Turkey has multiple
interests, domestic and regional, that are harmed by this resolution.

Fred Kempe, my boss at the Atlantic Council, dubs this "the
most-irresponsible, self-defeating and short-sighted congressional
foreign policy action of this year" and observes it "can only produce
a nationalist backlash that will make it harder for those, such as
Nobel laureate Orhan Pamuk, who have called for a more open historical
accounting in a Turkey aspiring to European Union membership."

Turkish resistance to the prevailing global view that the Ottoman
government tried to exterminate its Armenian population is a
testimony to the tensions inside modern Turkey. Mustafa Kemal Ataturk
aggressively forged the state from the remains of the Ottoman Empire
84 years ago and forced aside ethnic, tribal and religious identity
to create Turkish civil society.

The House resolution thus is an outside intervention into a painful
and long-repressed family debate, a match tossed into brew made more
combustible by the country’s rising religiosity and nationalism.

[…]

Those who think this vote is about setting historic facts right
aren’t paying attention to the present. What we’re dealing with isn’t
some rogue, failed state housing sworn enemies but Turkey, the only
Muslim country in NATO, a potential European Union country and the
most-important front-line state in the struggle against Islamist
extremists. It is the West’s leading bridge to and democratic model
for the Mideast.

It also is the country through which 90 percent of cargo passes for
U.S. and allied troops in Iraq. At the very least, U.S. logistical
problems will increase.

Howard LaFranchi observes in today’s CSM that the debate "illustrate[s]
a recurring tug of war in US foreign policy: when to take the moral
high ground and when to heed the pragmatic realities of national
interests." It would appear that those pressing for the resolution
have decided to do the latter.

In this case, the overriding interest appears to be keeping on good
terms with Turkey, a NATO ally that opposed the war in Iraq but that
allows the United States to use bases there as part of crucial supply
lines to US troops and personnel in Iraq.

Prospects for a full House statement on Armenian genocide have been
feeding nationalist flames in Turkey. The government of Prime Minister
Recep Tayyip Erdogan has already been battling heavy anti-American
public opinion as it acts to address the problem of recurring attacks
by Kurdish rebels from across the border in Kurdish Iraq.

For many in Turkey, including in the government, the US has not done
enough in next-door Iraq and with its Kurdish allies to address the
activities of the separatist Kurdistan Workers Party, known as the
PKK – a group the US lists as a terrorist organization. On Wednesday,
the government won a vote in the Turkish parliament authorizing the
military to undertake cross-border incursions into Iraq where the PKK
is based. The destabilizing potential of such military operations is
as worrying to the Bush administration as Turkish threats to end use
of its air bases by the US.

Indeed, this illustrate that Matt’s point about Realism works both
ways:

The intense politicking on the issue further exemplifies how national
interests tend to supersede all other concerns in international
relations, experts say. "The United States, like any other great
power, seriously considers moral issues only to the extent that
those moral issues coincide with substantive interests," says Andrew
Bacevich, who teaches foreign policy at Boston University’s Center
for International Relations.

Or when there’s no real cost in standing up and preaching.

Henley also notes a subtle irony in the proposed resolution: "Barely
20 years before the 1915-17 ethnic cleansing of Turkey’s Armenians,
the US was still wrapping up its own comprehensive forced march of
its indigenous enemies." Nations then, as now, had interests and used
whatever means necessary to pursue them.

007/10/realism_and_the_armenian_genocide_resolutio n/

http://www.outsidethebeltway.com/archives/2

Serge Sagsyan’s Meetings In The US

SERGE SAGSYAN’S MEETINGS IN THE US

amradio.am
19.10.2007 11:11

In the framework of the visit to the United States, RA Prime Minister
Serge Sargsyan met with US Defense Secretary Robert Gates. During
the conversation Serge Sargsyan turned to the provision of American
military assistance to the countries of the South Caucasus. In
particular, he suggested to maintain the parity of the military
assistance to Armenia and Azerbaijan. Robert Gates, in turn, highly
appreciated Armenia’s participation in the reconstruction of Iraq.

At the MCC headquarters RA Prime Minister Serge Sargsyan met with
the Chief Executive Officer of the Millennium Challenge Corporation
John Danilovich.

Later in the evening US Vice-President Dick Cheney received Serge
Sargsyan at the White House.

Today the Prime Miniseter is scheduled to have a meeting with the
editorial board of "Los Angeles Times". Later Serge Sargsyan will
meet with the top management of the Lincy Foundation.

Soccer: UEFA And FIFA Set To Keep Armenia, Azerbaijan Apart In Futur

UEFA AND FIFA SET TO KEEP ARMENIA, AZERBAIJAN APART IN FUTURE QUALIFYING GROUPS

The Associated Press
International Herald Tribune, France
Oct 17 2007

BAKU, Azerbaijan: Azerbaijan and Armenia are likely to avoid playing
each other in future European Championship and World Cup qualifiers.

UEFA president Michel Platini said Wednesday it was a "mistake" to
have Azerbaijan and Armenia – which have no diplomatic relations –
in the same Euro 2008 qualifying group.

"We will try that both teams never face each other again," said
Platini, who was in Baku with FIFA president Sepp Blatter for the
opening of the Azerbaijan soccer federation’s new headquarters.

Armenia and Azerbaijan had back-to-back matches in Group A canceled
in September after the two failed to agree on a neutral location. No
points were given for the matches.

Both teams have failed to qualify for next year’s European Championship
in Austria and Switzerland.

Blatter said FIFA would try to avoid teams "with complicated political
relations" being drawn in the same group. Armenia and Azerbaijan
will begin in the same pool when the draw for the 2010 World Cup
qualifying stage is held next month in South Africa, Blatter said,
making it impossible for the two teams to play in the same group.

Armenia and Azerbaijan remain in dispute over the territory of
Nagorno-Karabakh, which is inside Azerbaijan but has been controlled
– along with some surrounding areas – by local and Armenian forces
since 1994.