The Price of Denial: Why Turkey needs to come to terms with history.

The Weekly Standard
04/17/2006, Volume 011, Issue 29

rticles/000/000/012/079baety.asp?pg=1

The Price of Denial
Why Turkey needs to come to terms with history.

by Ellen Bork

The Armenian Genocide
PBS, April 17

IN ISTANBUL LAST OCTOBER, an acquaintance invited me to lunch with
three participants in a conference of historians, journalists, and
civil society activists that had recently been held at Bilgi
University. Its subject was the fate of Armenians in Turkey during
the early part of the 20th century.

Although it received far less attention abroad than the prosecution
of novelist Orhan Pamuk for speaking publicly about the deaths of
over one million Armenians and tens of thousands of Kurds, the
conference was just as significant, demonstrating Turkish civil
society’s growing self-confidence in questioning the official line on
the Armenian genocide–and the ruling AKP party’s messy flexibility
in allowing such questioning to take place. Postponed, then blocked
in court after the justice minister called it a “stab in the Turkish
nation’s back,” the conference finally took place with the public
support of the prime minister.

According to my lunch companions, the conference participants agreed,
as one put it, that these massacres were “deliberately done by a
small group within the ruling party.” In other words, without using
the word “genocide,” the specific elements of its definition are
increasingly being accepted by Turkish society.

Describing the fate of the Armenians in Turkey as genocide is much
less charged in the United States. “Turkish deniers are becoming the
equivalent–socially, culturally–of Holocaust deniers,” says author
Samantha Power in The Armenian Genocide, a documentary by Andrew
Goldberg and Two Cats Productions, to be broadcast Monday, April 17,
on PBS. The one-hour program provides a compact, evocative, and
visually rich treatment of the massacres by the Ottoman sultan’s
Hamidiye regiments in the late 19th century, and the 1915
deportations and massacres of approximately one million Armenians,
including intellectuals from Constantinople, as Istanbul was then
called. It also includes the campaign of assassination against
Turkish diplomats by Armenian terrorists in the 1970s and ’80s.

Even here, however, the matter remains fraught. When PBS decided to
follow the documentary with a 25-minute debate among academics and
authors, there were objections that this would suggest the genocide
itself was in question. Some individual PBS stations, including the
Washington and New York stations, have decided not to air the panel
discussion.

The reason controversy persists has little to do with scholarship and
everything to do with the role the United States plays as a
battleground for efforts to achieve official recognition of the
genocide. While the Armenian-American community ensures that the
issue is brought up annually before Congress, Turkey, a NATO ally
with a high diplomatic profile in Washington, wages a campaign that
can be presumptuous. Speaking to the Congressional Study Group on
Turkey last month, the Turkish ambassador admonished American
congressmen to do their patriotic duty by voting down resolutions
recognizing the genocide.

Paradoxically, the importance of the Holocaust to Americans ensures
both sensitivity to the Armenian tragedy and a reluctance to accord
it the significance of genocide. There is also a disinclination to
criticize Turkey, a valuable Muslim ally of Israel. These
considerations inform the views of Turkey’s allies in the foreign
policy establishment, of which conservatives constitute a significant
part. Within the conservative camp, criticism of Turkey recently has
been concerned mainly with an Islamic tilt under the ruling AKP, and
growing anti-Americanism across the Turkish political spectrum. And,
of course, Turkey’s refusal to provide support for the Iraq war.

Little concern has been expressed about persisting limits on speech,
which are frequently connected (in the Pamuk case and many others) to
criticisms of Turkey’s treatment of minorities, and its relationship
to a Turkish national identity forged during a period of instability
and imperial collapse.

As The Armenian Genocide demonstrates, it is precisely this
historical background upon which a specious, yet persistent,
objection to recognition of the genocide is based. In its most
respectable form it is the contention that the deportations,
massacres, and starvation of Armenians took place in a particular
“context”–that is, amid (or in response to) rebellion and treachery
from Turkey’s Armenian population, in league with Russia.

“So, if the Armenians killed and were killed,” Yusuf Halacoglu, head
of the Turkish Historical Society, says in the film, “the fact is
there were two sides involved in a civil war.” The argument boils
down to a claim that the events were not genocide but a response to
provocation in which the victims, including unarmed women, children,
and the elderly, brought on their fate.

It is a variation on the argument, made by some in the 1990s, that
there was no obligation to stop the killing of Muslims by Serbs in
Bosnia since the people of the region had been “killing each other
for centuries.” Both justifications are red herrings, which can be
effective when made with confidence by articulate proponents.

In the documentary, Turkish historians reject this claim, providing
historical context that enhances rather than undermines an
understanding of the fate of the Armenians as genocide. The loss of
Balkan territory, the flow of refugees from these Christian quarters
of the empire telling of persecution–all combined, says Taner Akcam,
to make “fear of collapse . . . [the] basic factor of the emergence
of Turkish nationalism.”

The effects of this fear have been profound, and the documentary’s
most compelling moments come when the Turkish historians describe
their experience with their society’s most stubborn taboo. Halil
Berktay received death threats for being a “Turkish historian inside
Turkey that has spoken up.” He argues that the new Turkish republic,
launched in 1923, dissociated itself from the past by adopting
attributes of Western society, including secularism, and found itself
embraced and courted by Western powers.

“All kinds of reasons like this made it undesirable for the young
republic to maintain an honest memory of what had been done in 1915,”
says Berktay, and “as a result, you have an enormously constructed,
fabricated, manipulated, national memory.”

After decades of denial and silence, it took an act of courage for
these historians to question the official version. Fatma Müge Göcek
expresses the confusion she felt upon realizing “you could actually
live in a society, get the best education that society has to offer,
which I did, and not know about it or have any books or anything
available to read about it.”

This situation is changing, as this documentary and events like the
Bilgi conference make clear. While my acquaintances in Istanbul have
complicated feelings about international pressure on Turkey to
confront its past, America has been involved from the outset.
Reporters and diplomats relayed news of the atrocities, and charity
appeals raised enormous sums, all of which is documented in the film.
For some Turks, it was in the United States that they found the
freedom, the libraries, and the contacts with Armenian Americans that
enabled them to delve into the past and develop independent
judgments. Of course, the U.S. government is still the prime target
of Turkish efforts to prevent official recognition of the genocide.

It will be up to the Turks to come to a complete understanding of
their past, and consolidate their democratic institutions and civil
liberties. In the meantime, less deference to the Turkish official
position would put America on the side not only of justice for
genocide victims, but also of Turks, like the historians in this
film, who refuse to accept limits on their speech and scholarship.

Ellen Bork is deputy director at the Project for the New American
Century.

© Copyright 2005, News Corporation, Weekly Standard, All Rights
Reserved.

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What Is Happening With The State?

WHAT IS HAPPENING WITH THE STATE?

Lragir.am
06 April 06

Visiting Armrusgasard April 5, President Robert Kocharyan confirmed
the plan “price of Russian gas – Hrazdan Thermal Power Plant 5th
generating unit.” Of course, the president did not exclude subtleties
in a new Russian-Armenian property agreement, but he announced that
an investment program would be implemented with the Russian party. As
Robert Kocharyan assured on TV, this program would enable modernization
of the thermal power plant, allowing more sustainable energy generation
and reducing dependence on gas. Thus, Russians have agreed to a plan
which will reduce the dependence of Armenia on them. It is difficult
to believe, on the other hand, that the president is not telling
the truth or he is not telling the whole truth. Moreover, it is even
difficult to suggest that the president does not know the whole truth.

On the other hand, if Robert Kocharyan announced something, it is
the reality. However, the problem is that Robert Kocharyan spoke to a
camera, and it is not known which mass media the camera belongs. His
words were spread through TV channels. No news reporters were invited
to cover Robert Kocharyan’s visit to Armrusgasard. This is not an
exception, but with regard to these issues it is necessary to have a
closer contact with the public through a wider news coverage, which
the president of Armenia has not done for ages. In the meantime,
the society is not merely interested in the modernization of the 5th
generating unit of the thermal plant and the price at which gas will
be supplied to people, but also other questions emanating from these.

For instance, are there guarantees that the plan of modernization of
the thermal plant would not the same fate as all the other companies
transferred to Russia in repayment of the government debt? Or when
the president announces that price of gas will go up by at least
10-15 per cent for the population, one may wonder who is going to
cover the remaining 65-70 per cent of 80 per cent increase of the
price of gas to be paid to Armrusgasard. The government publicly
assumes compensation. The other question that occurs is why the
government should compensate if the Public Utilities Commission had
made a hasty decision. Or why the commission made a hasty decision,
and if anyone from the government is going to find it out, or if the
reason for hastiness is known to the government, or maybe this reason
is visible or tangible. If we assume that the government is going to
compensate to Armrusgasard, the question is on what money.

Maybe the money of taxpayers? But the money of taxpayers is spent
under the law on the budget, and nothing of the kind is set down
in that law. It is not set down that the taxpayers must pay for the
mistakes of the authorities in governance and foreign policies. If
there are other means, it is interesting to know where these come
from: loan, grant, privatization, personal savings of government
officials. It is also interesting to know why the president, who
usually had consultations in his office, decided to go himself. The
president did not say a single word about transferring the shares of
the Iran-Armenia gas pipeline in the context of the gas price talks.

Why? Is it real or not? The president could have refuted it but he
did not. Whereas he should have assured the society that we are not
going to give the pipeline, essential to our energy security, to a
country we want to be less dependent on in terms of energy.

Questions are too many, and no doubt the president’s answers
to these questions would give rise to new questions. Probably,
Robert Kocharyan avoided meeting news reporters to save time, and
considered it enough to broadcast the video on several channels. Or
maybe answering these questions is inferior to the competence of the
president. In this case the president could instruct a top official
to give up attempts of reassuring people with a heroic mystery on
their face, and give true information to public on what is happening
with the state property of the Republic of Armenia, the policies on
energy security, and the Republic of Armenia in general. Finally,
the state has the right to know what is happening with itself. Maybe
the state could tell something.

Dual Citizens Will Pay Taxes And Serve Another Country

DUAL CITIZENS WILL PAY TAXES AND SERVE ANOTHER COUNTRY

Lragir.am
05.04.2006

According to the concept of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation,
presented on April 6, dual citizens cannot be taxed twice or serve
in the army of two countries. Thus, if a Diaspora Armenian wishes
to become citizen of the Republic of Armenia, remaining citizen of
another country, he needs to decide which country he is going to pay
taxes to or serve in the army. Of course, if he has already served
in the army, in accordance with the concept of Dashnaktsutiun he
will not have to serve in the Armenian army after becoming citizen
of Armenia. As to paying taxes, according to the ARF, a citizen
must pay taxes and serve in the army of the country where he lives
permanently. Thus, Diaspora Armenians becoming citizens of Armenia,
pay taxes to the country where they live. However, in that case,
they will not have all the rights of the citizens of Armenia because
they fail to fulfill all the duties of Armenian citizens.

BAKU: Presidents Of Azerbaijan And Turkey Meet At Enlarged Format

PRESIDENTS OF AZERBAIJAN AND TURKEY MEET AT ENLARGED FORMAT

AzerTag, Azerbaijan
April 4 2006

After their private meeting, President Ilham Aliyev and President
Ahmet Necdet Sezer met in enlarged format.

Once again greeting the President of Turkey and the Turkish delegation,
President Ilham Aliyev said he attached great importance to this
visit. ‘Out unity is an important factor both for our countries and
for the region’, he emphasized. The historical ties connecting us, the
cultural links play great role in the present. At the same time, our
political relations are high level. The Turkish-Azeri relations also
cover the power sector – one of the important fields for globe. The
large-scale energy projects in this field connect us closely. I am
convinced, President Aliyev noted, that this visit and our meeting
here will fuehrer strengthen out unity, Turkey and Azerbaijan —
the two fraternal countries will come closer.

As you know, we have active political dialogue. All questions are
actively discussed, and our trade links are well developed. We have
reached accomplishments in all fields, and we have joint programs
also in cultural and humanitarian sphere and they are successfully
implemented. I am confident, that and this visit will play certain
role and be very successful.

President of Turkey Ahmet Necdet Sezer expressed deep gratitude for
rendered hospitality and conveyed hi pleasure with the held meetings in
Baku. He, in particular, said the trade turnover between two countries
would make over billion dollars current year. Opportunities for that
are available, he stressed.

Noting the interest of businessmen to Azerbaijan, President of
Turkey said the Turkish businessmen have invested in Azerbaijan some
2,2 billion dollars and ‘we are convinced, that this figure will go
up’, he underlined. In particular, investments of the Turkish “Turk
Petrollari” Company will make 4,5 billion dollars.

In the meeting, also discussed were the questions of peaceful
settlement of the Armenia-Azerbaijan, Nagorno Karabakh conflict,
the regional and international projects.

BAKU: NK Problem And Elections In Azerbaijan Won’t Be Discussed At T

NK PROBLEM AND ELECTIONS IN AZERBAIJAN WON’T BE DISCUSSED AT THE PACE SESSION- AGSHIN MEHTIYEV
Author: R. Abdullayev

TREND Information, Azerbaijan
April 3 2006

The Nagorno-Karabakh problem and elections in Azerbaijan won` t be
discussed at the PACE session, the permanent Azerbaijani representative
at the CE, ambassador, Agshin Mehtiyev told Trend , adding that these
questions are not on the agenda.

However, two other questions related to Azerbaijan will be raised
at the session; considering the first document- of the resolution
project on refuges in the South Caucasus countries. Mehtiyev stated
that “the given document in general is not bad, though it

has mistakes in numerical data.” “The resolution project has to be
corrected, and works on that problem are now carried out,” he said,
adding that Azerbaijani delegates who will arrive to the meeting will
have personal discussions with the rapporteur. “The document will be
finalized during the session itself. So its prematurely to evaluate
it now, ” he concluded.

As for the second question of importance- Human rights in the
post-soviet armies, Mehtiyev said that Azerbaijani army is also
included into the document. “The document sates some mistakes and
demerits of the national army,” for example human rights in Armenian
army is protected more efficiently. “Of course, there are demerits
in our army,” he concluded.

Paper Warns Against Azeri Membership Of Anti-Iran Coalition

PAPER WARNS AGAINST AZERI MEMBERSHIP OF ANTI-IRAN COALITION

Zerkalo, Baku
1 Apr 06

If Azerbaijan supports the USA more concretely following its
preliminary agreement to join the anti-Iran coalition, Tehran
will undoubtedly start taking serious retaliatory measures, the
Russian-language Azerbaijani daily Zerkalo has said.

The paper said that “Russia is one of the main opponents of US
sanctions against Iran and it cannot be ruled out that most of Iran’s
retaliatory actions against Azerbaijan will be agreed with Russia”.

Zerkalo believes that Iran and Russia will do their best to aggravate
the situation on the Armenian-Azerbaijani front line to be able to use
it to put pressure on Armenia and Azerbaijan and considerably reduce
the possibility of US attacks from Azerbaijani territory. The daily
said that Tehran may even recognize the independence of the “Nagornyy
Karabakh republic” in the event of Azerbaijan acting against Iran.

Zerkalo said that the Islamic factor could be another response to
Azerbaijan should it back US sanctions against Iran. The paper said
that “a critical mass of people may form…, taking into account the
extremely religious people in Baku’s villages and Azerbaijan’s southern
districts, and it will be difficult for the government to oppose them.”

Moreover, Tehran will start raising the entire Arab world against
Azerbaijan. It is not known whether the country’s law-enforcers will
be able to cope with extremists from the Mideast, Zerkalo said.

The paper noted that the USA is doing its best to prevent the
Nagornyy Karabakh conflict from escalating as it does not want to
have another seat of tension in the region when they start military
action against Iran.

“The US co-chairman of the OSCE Minsk Group, Steven Man, has been
talking about the Karabakh conflict more than any other co-chair
recently. He says 2006 is an optimal year for the Karabakh resolution,”
the paper said.

Zerkalo also cited as an example US Assistant Secretary of State
Daniel Fried’s recent visit to the region and intensive talks with
the Azerbaijani and Armenian governments on the peaceful resolution
of the Nagornyy Karabakh conflict.

The daily said that as part of measures against Azerbaijan’s
membership of the anti-Iranian coalition, Russia may aggravate the
economic and political situation in Azerbaijan and cause accidents on
gas pipelines. The paper did not rule out Moscow’s sanctions against
Azerbaijanis working in Russia, a possible repetition of the situation
of the 1990s in Azerbaijan, and riots and terrorist attacks.

Zerkalo added that war against Iran, should it start, may pose a
threat to entire Azerbaijan and its oilfields.

System Political Changes Necessary For Overcoming Problem Of Sphere

SYSTEM POLITICAL CHANGES NECESSARY FOR OVERCOMING PROBLEM OF SPHERE
OF FREEDOM OF SPEECH

YEREVAN, MARCH 31, NOYAN TAPAN. The March 31 seminar-discussion “Ways
of Overcoming the Information Crisis in Armenia” was dedicated to
issues of the freedom of speech in Armenia and the situation created
on the information field after closing the “A1+” and “Noyan Tapan”
TV channels. The National Civic Initiative organized the seminar. The
speakers, “A1+” Director Mesrop Movsisian and David Petrosian, the
political correspondent of the “Noyan Tapan” information center,
expressed anxiety concerning the present situation on the freedom
of speech in the country. According to M.Movsisian, the issue
of closing those TV channels is first of all the problem of the
whole society as after that the freedom of speech in Armenia began
dicreasing step by step. D.Petrosian mentioned that authorities of
Armenia as well as authorities of Russia, make an attempt to build a
“controlled democracy,” at the same time, mass media are used as a
mean of propaganda and a mean for making a fool of people. At the same
time, he expressed sorrow for the opposition as well has no concrete
program in the sphere of development of mass media and just comes to
“best wishes.” The discussion participants pointed out the absence of
financial independence of mass media, as one of the greatest problems
of today’s information field. According to D.Petrosian, independence of
press is first of all its financial independence. But, only 5-7 media
are financially independent in Armenia today. “Unfortunately, most
of our media “look at a sponsor’s hand,” D.Petrosian mentioned. The
discussion participants pointed out the regress in the issue of
the freedom of speech compared with early 90s, the low level of the
Armenian journalism. In D.Petrosian’s opinion, system political, legal
and economic changes are necessary for solution of these problems.

NEWS ITEM Press Release – Australian Government Deplores Destruction

Armenian National Committee of Australia
259 Penshurst Street
Willoughby, NSW 2068
Contact: Mr. Varant Meguerditchian
Tel: 612 9419 8264
Fax: 612 9411 8898
Email: [email protected]
Web:

31st March 2006

Press Release – Australian Government Deplores Destruction of Historical
Monuments in Nakhichevan

In the face of growing pressure from the Armenian National Committee
of Australia and the Australian-Armenian Community at large, the
Australian Government has joined the European Parliament and the
U.S. State Department in condemning the destruction of the medieval
Armenian cemetery in Djulfa, Nakhichevan.

In response to an ANC Australia letter which brought these horrors
to light, the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade stated, that
“the Australian Government deplores the destruction of historical
and artistic monuments and sites, [noting] the distress caused to
the Armenian people.”

“We welcome the Australian Government’s stance on this sensitive
issue and encourage the Hon. Mr. Alexander Downer, Minister of
Foreign Affairs to further pressure his Azeri counterpart so that the
Azerbaijani Government will put an end to the destruction and begin
immediate restoration of this site, to the extent possible, under the
appropriate supervision of Armemian experts and other internationally
recognised authorities,” said ANCA President Dr. Tro Kortian.

The ANC Australia’s efforts in raising awareness of the desecration
of the 7th century Armenian Cemetery in Djulfa by Azeri Forces,
coincides with the Armenian Government’s own efforts. Recently,
Armenian Foreign Minister Mr.

Vartan Oskanian brought this issue to the attention of UNESCO and asked
that a team of expert be sent to asses the situation in Nakhichevan.

www.anc.net.au

Deputy Foreign Ministers Of Armenia And Greece Discuss Present Stage

DEPUTY FOREIGN MINISTERS OF ARMENIA AND GREECE DISCUSS PRESENT STAGE OF TWO COUNTRIES’ RELATIONS WITH NEIHGBORS

Noyan Tapan
Armenians Today
Mar 30 2006

YEREVAN, MARCH 30, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. Bilateral relations
and regional issues, particularly, the present state of relations
of Armenia and Greece with neighbors were discussed at the March
29 meeting of Arman Kirakosian, the RA Deputy Foreign Minister,
with Evripidis Stylianidis, the Chairman of the Armenian-Greek
Intergovernmental Commission, the Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs of
Greece. As Noyan Tapan was informed by the RA Foregin Ministry’s Press
and Information Department, during the promoted friendly conversation,
the Deputy Ministers touched upon some issues connected with energy
safety and communication ways of Armenia as well. E.Stylianidis
presented briefly the results of the regular sitting of Armenian-Greek
Intergovernmental Commission and the agreements they reached. RA
Deputy Foreign Minister presented the peaceful settlement process of
the Nagorno Karabakh conflict and approaches of Armenia.

They Try To Assuage The Results

THEY TRY TO ASSUAGE THE RESULTS

A1+
03:22 pm 29 March, 2006

The RA President Robert Kocharyan and the Minister of Energy Armen
Movsisyan had a working meeting today.

During the meeting they discussed issues about the mechanisms
to assuage the results of the raise of the costs of gas and the
construction of the gas pipeline Iran-Armenia.

A decision was made to continue the negotiations with the Russian
side about the price of gas and to represent the pack of offers agreed
with Robert Kocharyan to the society.

The Minister informed that the construction works of the gas pipeline
Iran-Armenia have already started.