6 Percent Interest On Mortgage Loan

6 PERCENT INTEREST ON MORTGAGE LOAN

KarabakhOpen
23-10-2007 10:54:49

The residents of Stepanakert and the regional centers can get
a mortgage loan with only 6 percent interest, said the minister
of finance Spartak Tevosyan in a consultation on mortgage loan
yesterday. The heads of all the banks of Karabakh participated in
the consultation.

The minister presented the details of lending which are not final yet
and said the funds allocated for mortgage lending may be boosted. "VTB
and Artsakhbank responded to the president’s appeal, which offer loans
with 10-12 percent interest," Spartak Tevosyan said. The government
will be subsidizing 6 percent, which means that the borrower will pay
only 6 percent interest, but the banks cannot set the interest rate
above 12 percent. In addition, the period of repayment is 20 years.

In answer to Karabakh-Open.com how many mortgage loan applications
the government can subsidize, Spartak Tevosyan said the government
is ready to subsidize all.

As to the funds allocated by the government for mortgage lending over
the past two years, the minister said the demand is high, the sum
which totals 700 million drams is too little to finance it. Besides,
the mechanisms of lending have not been worked out. In answer to
the question whether mortgage loans will be available this year,
the minister said: "It is difficult to tell."

Ahmadinejad Deals With Aftershocks Of Nuclear Negotiator’s Dismissal

AHMADINEJAD DEALS WITH AFTERSHOCKS OF NUCLEAR NEGOTIATOR’S DISMISSAL

International Herald Tribune, France
The Associated Press
Oct 23 2007

TEHRAN: President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad of Iran on Tuesday cut
short a planned two-day visit to Armenia, officials there said,
as the hard-line leader faced signs of unhappiness at home over the
resignation of Iran’s top nuclear negotiator.

The sudden replacement of Ali Larijani further fueled complaints – even
from conservatives who were once his supporters – that Ahmadinejad was
mismanaging Iran’s most vital issues, particularly its confrontation
with the West over the nuclear program.

Beyond the suddenness of Larijani’s departure, the choice for his
replacement, Saeed Jalili, also came as a surprise. Jalili was a
little-known deputy foreign minister, noted mainly for his loyalty
to Ahmadinejad.

In a sign the displeasure may reach high levels in Iran’s clerical
establishment, a foreign policy adviser to Ayatollah Ali Khamenei,
the supreme leader, complained about the change over the weekend just
ahead of a meeting with the European Union in Rome on Tuesday.

"It was definitely better if this did not happen in the important
and sensitive situation when the nuclear issue is on the table," the
adviser, a former foreign minister, Ali Akbar Velayati, was quoted
Monday as saying by the semi-official press agency ISNA.

During Ahmadinejad’s absence Monday, complaints mounted over Larijani’s
dismissal, with 183 lawmakers, most of them conservatives, adopting a
measure praising his performance as negotiator, a sign of displeasure
with his departure.

A conservative lawmaker, Heshmatollah Falahatpisheh, criticized the
change, saying "the calamity of repeated dismissals and replacements
has become a policy in this government, a move that not only has not
brought any improvements, but also has damaged progress both in the
domestic and foreign arenas."

Jalili’s elevation was a startling jump onto the powerful Supreme
National Security Council, the decision-making body that includes
top political and military officials. He met Tuesday in Rome with
the European Union’s foreign policy chief, Javier Solana, in his
first talks as top negotiator, although Larijani attended to help
the transition.

Before Larijani resigned, an EU official who requested anonymity said
that the Rome meeting would focus on Tehran’s refusal to heed the
United Nations Security Council’s demands for a freeze on uranium
enrichment.

Larijani’s resignation has been widely interpreted as a victory
for Ahmadinejad, enabling him to impose a tougher line in the
negotiations. Though a conservative, Larijani was considered more
moderate than Ahmadinejad and had reportedly differed with the
president over how to approach the talks.

But his ouster could hurt Ahmadinejad by further reducing the
president’s support within the political establishment. Many at home
complain that he has failed to improve the economy and unnecessarily
worsened the standoff with the West with fiery rhetoric that has
angered the United States and Europe.

The appointment of Jalili reflects Ahmadinejad’s desire to "consolidate
control over all foreign policy," said Vali Nasr, a professor of
international politics and an expert on Iran at Tufts University’s
Fletcher School. While the discontent may not damage him immediately,
"in the long run it matters because incompetence may bring down
Ahmadinejad," Nasr said.

It was not known if the interruption of Ahmadinejad’s visit to Armenia
was linked to the controversy. He may have sought to avoid angering
Turkey by dropping his visit to a genocide memorial there.

Armenian officials said Ahmadinejad had been expected Tuesday to
plant a silver fir sapling at a memorial to the millions of Armenians
slain by the Ottoman Turks at the beginning of the last century. But
he informed his hosts Monday evening that he had to go home early
Tuesday because of unexpected developments in Iran, a spokesman for
President Robert Kocharian said.

Landing in Tehran on Tuesday, Ahmadinejad insisted that his trip had
not been cut short, saying it had been scheduled to last 22 hours
and in fact went 90 minutes over.

The top nuclear negotiator has the official title of secretary of
the council, but usually he is a member of the council before being
elevated to the post. Traditionally, the secretary has also been one
of Khamenei’s personal representatives on the council. Jalili was
not on the council before being named its secretary over the weekend.

Instead, the 42-year-old Jalili served as deputy foreign minister
for European and American affairs. He acted as a quiet envoy for
the president, delivering messages to European officials. He also
wrote the first speech Ahmadinejad gave to the United Nations, in
2005, in which the president proclaimed Iran’s "inalienable right"
to nuclear energy, Nasr said.

The replacement of Larijani could not have taken place without the
consent of Khamenei, who has final say in all state issues. But that
consent may not necessarily be a sign of the supreme leader’s backing
for Ahmadinejad.

Some observers said Khamenei, who has been silent over the change,
may be giving the president more leeway on the nuclear dossier to
be in a better position to reel him in if his policies lead to a new
round of UN sanctions.

TEHRAN: President Ahmadinejad Departs For Yerevan

PRESIDENT AHMADINEJAD DEPARTS FOR YEREVAN

Islamic Republic News Agency
Oct 22 2007
Iran

President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, heading a high ranking delegation,
left Tehran for Yerevan, Armenia, on Monday.

The Iranian president was seen off at Mehrabad International airport
by the Supreme Leader’s representative Hojatoleslam Mohammad Mohammadi
Golpayegani, First Vice-President Parviz Davoudi and Vice-President
for Executive Affairs Ali Saeedlou.

Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki and a number of other senior
officials are accompanying President Ahmadinejad in this visit.

During his two-day stay, the Iranian president is to confer with his
Armenian counterpart Robert Kocharian on issues of mutual interest
as well as the latest regional and international developments.

He will also make a keynote address at the Armenian National Congress.

President Ahmadinejad is scheduled to deliver a speech at Yerevan
University where he will receive an honorary PhD and a medal.

On the second day of his official visit, the Iranian president is to
exchange views with Iranian nationals residing in Armenia.

Why Does Turkey Hate America?

WHY DOES TURKEY HATE AMERICA?
By Spengler

Asia Times Online
23Ak01.html
Oct 22 2007
Hong Kong

With Turkish troops poised to invade the Kurdish sector of Iraq over
Washington’s protests, it seems helpful to understand why Turks hate
America more than any other people in the world. This is surprising
given the 60-year history of military alliance, a thriving Turkish
economy and functioning democratic institutions.

In June 2007, the Pew Research Center polled citizens of 47 countries
on their attitude toward the US. Turkey turned up at rock bottom,
with 83% of respondents holding an unfavorable view of the United
States and only 9% of Turks expressing a favorable view, compared
to 21% of Egyptians and 29% of Indonesians. [1] In 2000, 52% of
Turks expressed a favorable view of the United States. This is not
a general result. Only 46% of Nigerians held a favorable view of the
United States in 2000, for example, compared to 70% in 2007.

A national tantrum against the United States is in full flourish,
expressed in popular culture through such things as the rabidly
anti-American film Valley of the Wolves. Wildly successful, and hailed
by most of Turkey’s leading politicians, the film shows American
soldiers shooting Iraqi civilians in order to harvest their organs for
sale to Jewish doctors. From the American way of looking at things,
the Turks seem to have gone barking mad.

There are many obvious reasons for Turkish discomfort about America,
but the intensity of Turkish hatred had me puzzled – until I read a
two-year-old paper by Omar Taspinar, the resident Turkey expert at
the Brookings Institution. [2] The culprit, he argued convincingly,
is Washington’s misguided promotion of Turkey as a model of "moderate
Islam". The abominable stupidity of American policy towards the
region – I would use stronger words if I could find them – is in
large measure responsible for the looming catastrophe.

Professor Taspinar, who also teaches at the National War College, is
one of America’s best-known experts on his native country, and I am
chagrined to have overlooked his analysis until now. He places most
of the blame on Washington’s portrayal of Turkey as a paragon of the
"moderate Islam" it wants to sell to the rest of the Muslim world.

As I wrote last week, the humiliating spectacle of Washington trying
to squelch a congressional resolution on the Armenian genocide
points up fundamental failings in American foreign policy, as well as
foundational flaws within Turkey itself. Taspinar’s paper in the main
reinforces my view of Turkey’s weakness; Turkish rage and paranoia
express conflicts in its national identity.

Dr. Taspinar writes,

As the Cold War came to an end, so did the era of ideology. It
was as if Turkey had suddenly once again returned to its formative
decades of the 1920s and 1930s, during which Ataturk’s Ankara faced
multiple Kurdish-Islamic rebellions challenging the secularist and
nationalist precepts of Kemalism. This is mainly because the central
point that I would like to emphasize is that Turkey’s anti-Americanism
essentially stems from Turkey’s own identity dilemma. At its roots,
Turkey’s current wave of distrust of the United States is Kemalist
identity problem.

By promoting "moderate Islam" on the Turkish model, Taspinar adds,
America undermined the secular state founded by Kemal Ataturk, the
founder of the modern Turkish state after the collapse of the Ottoman
Empire after World War I. That is why secular Turkish nationalists
hate America just as much as Turkish Islamists.

Taspinar writes:

America’s advocacy of "moderate Islam" against the "radical Islam"
in the Middle East worries Turkey the most. Turkey being portrayed
as a model within the moderate Islam project has been conceived as
a support for the moderate Islam in Turkey, thereby led to a clash
between America’s approach and Turkey’s laic and Kemalist identity.

Already alarmed over the landslide victory of Justice and Development
Party (AKP), the Republic’s laic reflexes have become overwhelmingly
concerned with the "model" expression of the US, which allegedly
promoted Turkey’s moderate Muslim identity. In the aftermath of his
victory, Washington’s invitation to the AKP Chairman Tayyip Erdogan,
who was not confirmed as a prime minister then, was perceived [by the
Turkish intellectuals] as the weakening of the secular foundations
of Ataturk’s republic by the United States.

Ataturk suppressed Islam ruthlessly, banning Islamic dress,
emancipating women, requiring universal secular education, and
crushing armed Islamist resistance to his reforms. Ultimately he
failed; the artificial secular culture of Turkishness that Ataturk
sought to conjure from the pre-Islamic Anatolian past left a vacuum
which the new Islamism gradually has filled. Nobel Prize winner Orhan
Pamuk, as I reported earlier, portrays this vividly in his novel, Snow.

Turkey is enmeshed in a terrible battle for its national identity,
in which neither the secular nor the Islamist parties have any use
for "moderate Islam". The Islamists do not wish to be moderate, and
the Kemalists know that the Islamists are not moderate. By pursing
the phantasm of a "moderate" Islam as harmless as George W Bush’s
Methodism, Washington’s strategists have succeeded in enraging both
sides in the battle.

I have never believed that such a thing as "moderate Islam" exists,
any more than I believe that "moderate Christianity" exists. Either
Jesus Christ died to take away the sins of the world, or he did not;
if one believes that Jesus was just another preacher with a knack for
parables, one quickly will be an ex-Christian. Either God dictated a
final revelation to Mohammed which invalidates the corrupted scriptures
of Jews and Christians, and the sign of the crescent should rise
above the whole world, or he did not. Turkey’s Islamists are not
moderates; they are Islamists, and they despise the United States
for religious and cultural reasons, as much as Turkish nationalists
despise the United States for making Turkey into a laboratory rat
for religious reform.

The common hatred of Kemalist nationalists and Turkish Islamists for
America bears on why Turks have the worst opinion of Christianity of
any people in the world. According to a 2005 Pew survey, only 21%
of Turks have a favorable opinion of Christianity, compared to 33%
of Moroccans, 58% of Jordanians, and 58% of Indonesians. [3] The
Kemalists dislike Christians because the Kemalists are atheists,
and the Islamists dislike Christians because they are Islamists.

Christian America gets no sympathy from either side.

That is only part of the story; Kemalism defined as Turks the Kurdish
fifth of Turkey’s population, suppressing their language and customs
as brutally as it suppressed Islamic dress. As a leader of the "Young
Turk" government, Ataturk bore at least some responsibility for
the genocide against the Anatolian Armenians starting in 1915. The
Turkish government enlisted Kurdish tribes to do most of the actual
killing, in return for what formerly was Armenian land. It is this
crime that made the Kurds preponderant on Turkey’s Eastern borders,
and left them to threaten Turkey’s territorial integrity.

That is where Taspinar’s analysis converges with the thoughts I
published last week. He wrote in 2005, The debate on Turkey’s role
in the promotion of "moderate Islam" and as a "model" had already
created anti-Americanism within the Turkish elite. The Kurdish issue,
in contrast, has carried this anti-American sentiment to public and
rejuvenated nationalist reactions. Today almost everyone in Turkey
– of course we also include the intellectuals in this category –
thinks that Washington supports a Kurdish state in Iraq. The ones
who do not necessarily believe that Washington pursues this policy
on purpose are nevertheless inclined to think that America’s policies
will eventually result in a similar scenario.

As I wrote last week, the prospect of a tri-partite division of Iraq,
endorsed by the US Senate in a 75-23 vote last month, confirmed
Ankara’s worst fears. Virtually all the Senate Democrats and half
the Republicans now endorse partition as an exit strategy for the
United States. No one but the most abject toady of the Washington
administration or a blinkered ideologue can come up with an exit
strategy for Washington other than partition. Partition implies
the realization of Turkey’s worst nightmare (and one of the nastier
nightmares for Iran and Syria), namely an independent Kurdish state
with its capital at Kirkuk, the "Kurdish Jerusalem", sitting on
abundant oil revenues.

In this respect Turkey is far from paranoid: a Kurdish state does
threaten Turkey’s territorial integrity, because the state that Kemal
fashioned 80 years ago was badly made to begin with. That is something
that today’s Kemalists cannot admit, for their only weapon against
the encroachment of political Islam is the integrity of Ataturk’s
secular constitution.

As Taspinar observed in 2005, "that the Kurds refer to Kirkuk as ‘our
Jerusalem’ causes disturbance. In this context, not only Turkey’s
reaction evokes fear, but there is also a legitimate anxiety over
a potential civil war following from Kirkuk’s uncertainty." His
analysis is correct, but nowhere is it written that Washington must
try to avert a Turkish civil war. America’s civil war was the best
and bravest thing it ever accomplished; it washed away the stain of
slavery with an ocean of blood. The cost was terrible, but human
freedom is beyond price. If Turkey requires a civil war to choose
between a Western and Islamic identity, who is to say that what was
good for America is not the cure for Turkey as well?

Kurdish independence cannot long be prevented; Iraqi Kurdistan is
independent in all but name, and the devolution of Iraq is only a
matter of time. In a well-ordered world the Kurds of eastern Turkey
would be able to vote on whether to remain in Turkey or to join
Kurdistan, just as the Saarland chose to join France rather than
Germany in 1947. But Kurdish secession would tear apart the fragile
bonds that hold the Kemalist state together, and for that reason the
Islamists and the Kemalists will unite to prevent it by almost any
means necessary.

It does not matter whether the US Congress passes a resolution on the
Armenian genocide. Irregardless, the tragedy will proceed. I would
vote for such a resolution if asked, because my religion forbids me
to bear false witness, and the governments of world powers must stand
as witnesses to the fate of peoples. But the 3 million citizens of
the small surviving state of Armenia are not actors in this tragedy;
rather, the ghosts of their murdered brethren in western Armenia
haunt the geopolitical stage as a silent chorus.

Notes [1] Global Unease With Major World Powers Pew Global Attitudes
Project, June 27, 2007.

[2] The Anatomy of Anti-Americanism in Turkey The Brookings
Institution, October 22, 2007.

[3] Islamic Extremism: Common Concern for Muslim and Western Publics
Pew Global Attitudes Project, July 14, 2005

http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/IJ

Armenian pontiff works on Habitat for Humanity homes in N.O.

New Orleans CityBusiness (New Orleans, LA)
October 17, 2007

Armenian pontiff works on Habitat for Humanity homes in N.O.

His Holiness Karekin II, leader of the Armenian Church and supreme
patriarch of all Armenians, rolled up his sleeves in New Orleans
today to help build a home in Habitat for Humanity’s Musicians’
Village.

The 56-year-old pontiff visited New Orleans as a gesture of goodwill
from Armenia, which is still recovering from the devastating 1988
earthquake that left 500,000 people homeless and inspired his work
with Habitat for Humanity.

The pontiff has worked with Habitat for Humanity in Armenia by
planting trees, painting walls and hammering nails while helping
build more than 70 homes.

In April 2006, the Armenian Church and Habitat for Humanity signed an
agreement of long-term cooperation to create His Holiness Karekin II
Work Project.

The pontiff personally spearheaded efforts to build 37 homes across
Armenia, giving witness to the ancient Armenian tradition of charity,
volunteerism and social concern as part of the His Holiness Karekin
II Work Project in 2007.

In September 2006, Habitat For Humanity Armenia drew together more
than 300 volunteers from Europe, the United States, Armenia and other
countries to help build a 24-unit condominium building.

The pontiff presides over the Supreme Spiritual Council (the Armenian
Church’s governing college of bishops and lay persons). He is the
leader of the world’s 7 million Armenian Christians.

The pontiff worked on Musicians’ Village, a community for musicians
and other families displaced by Hurricane Katrina. Conceived by New
Orleans natives Harry Connick Jr. and Branford Marsalis, Musicians’
Village is being constructed in the Upper Ninth Ward, where an 8-acre
parcel will hold 70 single-family homes built by volunteers, donors,
sponsors and low-income families.

Since groundbreaking in March 2006, 40 homes have been completed.
Elder-friendly duplexes are being readied for senior members of the
community and the Ellis Marsalis Center for Music, a 150-seat
performance space with state-of-the-art lighting and sound, a
recording studio, classrooms and rehearsal spaces. The facility will
be available to Musician’s Village residents, students and artists
citywide.

Blunt: Resolution Condemning Ottoman Empire Sets In Motion Dangerous

BLUNT: RESOLUTION CONDEMNING OTTOMAN EMPIRE SETS IN MOTION DANGEROUS CHAIN OF EVENTS

Earthtimes, UK
Oct 17 2007

WASHINGTON, Oct. 17 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ — In response to the
Turkish Parliament’s vote to authorize their troops’ incursion into
Iraq, House Republican Whip Roy Blunt (Mo.) today strongly urged
Speaker Nancy Pelosi to reconsider bringing a resolution to the floor
condemning as genocide the actions taken by Ottoman Turks against
Armenians 90 years ago. Blunt issued the following statement: "Today,
as expected, Turkey’s parliament passed a measure authorizing their
troops to enter Iraq – making an already tense situation along Iraq’s
northern border even worse. At a time when we are trying to bring
stability and security to the region, this resolution would needlessly
imperil American diplomatic credibility. And though it is important
that the Turkish Prime Minister and his Government exercise due caution
and restraint, this resolution would provide cover to those in Turkey
who seek to destabilize the region by invading Iraqi Kurdistan.

"Earlier this year, the speaker said that Democrats would are new
longstanding alliances that have advanced our national security
objectives.’ Moving this disastrous bill to the House floor would
absolutely contradict that promise and demonstrate a wholesale lack of
judgment on matters related to foreign policy and national security. I
urge the speaker to do the right thing and reconsider bringing it to
the House floor."

NOTE: Turkey’s parliament today approved a potential cross-border
military offensive against Kurdish rebels in Iraq who have conducted
terrorist activities inside Turkey. The government of Turkey must
still order the operation before it can begin.

Speaker Pelosi promised in her "A New Direction for America," to
"…renew longstanding alliances that have advanced our national
security objectives."

Congressman Blunt signed a letter to Speaker Pelosi today along with
44 bipartisan Members, urging her not to bring the resolution to the
House floor.

House Republican Whip Roy Blunt

Jewish Congressmen Fight Genocide Bill

JEWISH CONGRESSMEN FIGHT GENOCIDE BILL

Jewish Telegraphic Agency, NY
Oct 18 2007

Two Jewish congressmen are working to keep the Armenian genocide bill
from reaching the U.S. House of Representatives floor.

U.S. Reps. Robert Wexler (D-Fla.) and Stephen Cohen (D-Tenn.), as
well as three other opponents of the controversial bill memorializing
the killings of Armenians by the Ottoman Empire during World War I,
spoke harshly of its implications for U.S. relations with Turkey at
a news conference Wednesday in Washington.

The bill, which would label the killings as genocide, was approved by
the House Foreign Affairs Committee by a 27-21 vote on Oct. 10. At that
time it had 226 co-sponsors, but support has waned due to threats from
Turkey to withdraw support for American troops in Iraq if it is passed.

More than half of the cargo traveling from the U.S. to Iraq is flown
through Turkey’s Incerlik air base, and Turkish troops are allied
with Americans on the ground in Iraq and Afghanistan. President Bush
is fiercely opposed to the resolution.

"The Middle East is a tinderbox," Wexler said. "Our responsibility
is to bring as much stability as is humanly possible."

Cohen added that passage of the bill would cause "real-time harm to
real people."

Vardan Oskanyan: "Destruction Of A Nation’s Heredity Is Equivalent T

VARDAN OSKANYAN: "DESTRUCTION OF A NATION’S HEREDITY IS EQUIVALENT TO ENDING ITS MEMORY"

Panorama.am
21:17 18/10/2007

"We aren’t the only ones who have stood on this stage and said that the
destruction of a nation’s heredity is the same as ending its memory,
its history, its individuality. Unfortunately, we have neighbors who
base their individuality on history not so correct.

And we see from that their trauma and instability," Armenian foreign
minister Vardan Oskanyan said at the recent session of UNESCO in Paris.

In his words, as borders in the region often change, movements of
people naturally follow. Preserving the ancient Armenian monuments
and churches is every important for historians and artists, but still
more important for the world, who needs to remember its history,
and needs to remember the heredity of those nations who have come
and left the pages of history.

The foreign ministry’s press department informed that the minister said
that Armenia is a country that is proud of its education and science,
as well as its ancient history, but now finds itself in an active
era of reforms. He notes that this second generation of reforms is
difficult, perhaps the most difficult to bring to realization.

In Oskanyan’s words, diplomats, artists, and representatives from
culture benefit from dialogue, and perhaps it is because of this that
they feel obligated to look in other direction than tradition to find
themselves a peaceful life.

"Diplomats and those working in culture, like different groups in
society, live as neighbors who are not subject to these change and
reforms, as memories can’t be put to rest, as experience shows. For
this reason people try to tear down blockades from the past, as they
thing that there needs to be dialogue between countries and cultures,"
Oskanyan said.

To Deny What The Turks Did Was Genocide Is Intolerable

TO DENY WHAT THE TURKS DID WAS GENOCIDE IS INTOLERABLE
by jeff jacoby

J. – the Jewish News weekly of Northern California, CA
Oct 19 2007

Was there an Armenian genocide during World War I?

While it was happening, no one called the slaughter of Armenian
Christians by Ottoman Turks "genocide." No one could: The word wouldn’t
be coined for another 30 years. But those who made it their business
to tell the world what the Turks were doing found other terms to
describe the state-sponsored mass murder of the Armenians.

In its extensive reporting on the atrocities – 145 stories in
1915 alone – The New York Times described them as "systematic,"
"deliberate," "organized by government," and a "campaign of
extermination." A Sept. 25, 1915 headline warned: "Extinction Menaces
Armenia." What the Turks were embarked upon, said one official in the
story that followed, was "nothing more or less than the annihilation
of a whole people."

Foreign diplomats, too, realized that they were observing genocide
avant la letter. American consular reports leaked to the Times
indicated "that the Turk has undertaken a war of extermination on
Armenians, especially those of the Gregorian Church, to which about
90 percent of the Armenians belong." In July, U.S. Ambassador Henry
Morgenthau cabled Washington that "race murder" was underway – a
"systematic attempt to uproot peaceful Armenian populations and …

to bring destruction and destitution upon them." These were not random
outbreaks of violence, Morgenthau stressed, but a nationwide slaughter
"directed from Constantinople." In his memoirs, he bluntly labeled
the butchery "The Murder of a Nation."

Another US diplomat, Consul Leslie Davis, described in grisly detail
the "reign of terror" he saw in Harput, and the corpses of "thousands
and thousands" of Armenians murdered near Lake Goeljuk. The mass
deportations ordered by the Turks, in which hundreds of thousands
of Armenians were crammed into freight cars and shipped hundreds of
miles to die in the desert or at the hands of killing squads, were far
worse than a straightforward massacre, he wrote. "In a massacre many
escape, but a wholesale deportation of this kind in this country means
a longer and perhaps even more dreadful death for nearly everyone."

Other eyewitnesses, including American missionaries, provided
stomach-clenching descriptions of the "terrible tortures" mentioned
by Morgenthau. Women and girls were stripped and raped, then forced
to march naked through blistering heat. Many victims were crucified
on wooden crosses; as they writhed in agony, the Turks would taunt
them: "Now let your Christ come and help you!" Reuters reported that
"in one village, 1,000 men, women, and children are reported to have
been locked in a wooden building and burned to death." In another,
"several scores of men and women were tied together by chains and
thrown into Lake Van."

Talaat Pasha, the Turkish interior minister who presided over the
liquidation of the Armenians, made no bones about his objective. "The
Government … has decided to destroy completely all the indicated
persons" – the Armenians – "living in Turkey," he wrote to authorities
in Aleppo. "An end must be put to their existence … and no
regard must be paid to either age or sex, or to conscientious
scruples." Talaat told Morgenthau that "we have already disposed of
three-quarters of the Armenians; there are none at all left in Bitlis,
Van and Erzerum." To the ambassador’s remonstrations, Talaat curtly
replied: "We will not have the Armenians anywhere in Anatolia."

Was there an Armenian genocide during World War I? The Turkish
government today denies it, but the historical record, chronicled
in works like Peter Balakian’s powerful study, "The Burning Tigris"
(HarperCollins, 2003) is overwhelming. Yet the Turks are abetted in
their denial and distortion by many who know better, including the
Clinton administration and both Bush administrations, and prominent
ex-congressmen-turned-lobbyists, including Republican Bob Livingston
and Democrats Dick Gephardt and Stephen Solarz.

Particularly deplorable has been the longtime reluctance of some
leading Jewish organizations, including the Anti-Defamation League,
the American Jewish Committee, and the American Israel Public Affairs
Committee, to call the first genocide of the 20th century by its
proper name. When Andrew Tarsy, the New England director of the
ADL, came out last week in support of a congressional resolution
recognizing the Armenian genocide, he was promptly fired by the
national organization. Shaken by the uproar that followed, the ADL
finally backed down. The murder of a million Armenians at the hands
of the Ottoman Turks in 1915, it acknowledged yesterday, was "indeed
tantamount to genocide."

Now the other organizations should follow suit. Their unwillingness
to acknowledge that the Turks committed genocide stems from the
fear that doing so may worsen the plight of Turkey’s beleaguered
Jewish community, or may endanger the crucial military and economic
relationship Israel has forged with Turkey – the Jewish state’s only
such relationship with a major Muslim nation. Those are honorable
concerns. But they cannot justify keeping silent about a most
dishonorable assault on the truth. Genocide denial must be intolerable
to everyone, but above all to those for whom "never again" is such a
sacred principle. And at a time when jihadist violence from Darfur to
Ground Zero has spilled so much innocent blood, dissimulation about
the jihad of 1915 can only aid our enemies.

The Armenian genocide is an incontestable fact of history. Shame on
anyone who refuses to say so.

Jeff Jacoby is a writer for Aish Hatorah Resources, where this story
first appeared.

dule/displaystory/story_id/33822/format/html/displ aystory.html

http://www.jewishsf.com/content/2-0-/mo

AR Minister Of Culture: Azerbaijan Refused But Armenia Is At Fault

AR MINISTER OF CULTURE: AZERBAIJAN REFUSED BUT ARMENIA IS AT FAULT

2007-10-18 12:02:00
ArmInfo.

Representative of Azerbaijan, AR Minister of Culture and Tourism
Abulfaz Garayev has made the regular absurd accusations to Armenia.

"UNESCO mission’s visit to the region on investigation of the
facts failed through Armenia’s fault", the minister said. As APA
reports, Garayev said that "the opposite party raised the issue of
sending missions of different staff to the regions, while Azerbaijan
disagreed". "Our position is unambiguous. I claim once more that all
the missions should arrive together", A. Garayev said.

"Investigations are to be carried out in Azerbaijan, in the occupied
territories and in Armenia at the same time, by a common principle. We
can agree to fulfillment of this work only based on this principle",
Garayev added. Thus, though Azerbaijan did not give its consent to
the UNESCO delegation’s visit, the Azerbaijani official thinks that
Armenia is at fault as regards it.