ANKARA: Washington Post Column: The Armenian Diaspora Is Mis-Directi

WASHINGTON POST COLUMN: THE ARMENIAN DIASPORA IS MIS-DIRECTING ITS ENERGIES

Hurriyet, Turkey
Oct 16 2007

The Washington Post newspaper yesterday carried an opinion column by
writer Fred Hiatt criticizing Armenian diaspora work on the allegations
against Turkey.

In his article, Hiatt notes, "Just think, if it worked as hard as the
Armenian diaspora does on passing this bill, modern Armenia could
actually be as democratic as modern Turkey." Hiatt also underlines
the current economic conditions that prevail in Armenia, noting
"What is sad is that while Congress members present this bill as a
victory for human rights, the state of human rights in Armenia is
actually very bad." Hiatt points out in his article also that while
Armenian groups in the US are focused on making sure weapons are not
sold to Azerbayjian, and that an anti-Turkey stance is maintained,
they are ignoring the serious infractions against democracy taking
place currently in Armenia.

Newsweek: A Fight Over An Ugly Past

A FIGHT OVER AN UGLY PAST
by Michael Isikoff

Newsweek
October 22, 2007
U.S. Edition

The House Committee vote to label Turkey’s mass killing of Armenians
during World War I as a "genocide" followed one of the most intense,
and unusual, battles on Capitol Hill in recent memory. The measure
passed despite a lobbying blitz from the Turkish government, which
hired an army of K Street lobbyists to fight it. The team included
former House majority leader Dick Gephardt, who as a congressman had
cosponsored genocide resolutions but switched sides in March when
his firm signed a $1.2 million-a-year contract to represent the Turks.

The flip-flop resulted in some awkward phone calls for Gephardt.

"Dick, if memory serves me, didn’t you used to support this?" New
York Rep. Eliot Engel says he told Gephardt during a call urging
him to oppose the measure. (Gephardt did not return calls seeking
comment.) President George W. Bush and Secretary of Defense Robert
Gates also made late appeals, fearing that the move would endanger
diplomatic relations as well as Turkish defense contracts with major
U.S. firms. Even Gen. David Petraeus, the U.S. commander in Iraq, got
involved, warning visiting House members in Baghdad that the measure
would be a "big mistake," according to Tennessee Rep. Steve Cohen,
because it might disrupt supply lines that run through Turkey.

But the opposition couldn’t overcome a well-organized and emotional
push by Armenian-American groups to get the U.S. government to
acknowledge the slaughter of 1.5 million Armenians by the Ottoman
Empire, the precursor to modern Turkey. (Turkish officials call it a
"tragedy," not a "genocide.") When California Democratic Rep. Jane
Harman, a cosponsor of the resolution, suggested it was "the wrong
time" for a vote, she was confronted by protesters in her district
chanting, "Hypocrite, liar, genocide denier!"

The Armenian push was also boosted by campaign contributions: Annie
Totah, co-chair of the Armenian American Political Action Committee,
told NEWSWEEK she has raised "hundreds of thousands of dollars" for
Democratic candidates and recently joined Hillary Clinton’s finance
committee. (Clinton is a cosponsor of the resolution in the Senate.)
Totah, for her part, believes Turkey is overreacting. "They should stop
acting like this is World War III," she said. But Turkish officials
are unlikely to be mollified, especially if House Speaker Nancy Pelosi
follows through on a pledge to bring the measure to the House floor. If
that happens, Turkey is likely to retaliate, says Egeman Bagis, a top
adviser to Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan. How? By sending
troops, over U.S. objections, into northern Iraq to crack down on
Kurdish rebels. "You can’t insult an entire nation like this," he said.

ANKARA: Many States in The USA Have Long Recognized "Genocide"

Many States in The USA Have Long Recognized "Genocide"

Although there is diplomatic tension between Turkey and the USA
because of the passing of the "genocide" resolution in a committee of
the House of Representatives, most US states already recognise a
"genocide".

Býa news centre

16-10-2007

Erhan Üstündag

The recent furore over the passing of a resolution by the Foreign
Affairs Committee of the House of Representatives, accepting the
events of 1915 as a "genocide" with 27 votes for and 21 votes against,
has made people forget that many countries, including parts of the
USA, have already defined events as such.

In the USA, forty of the fifty states accept the events of 1915-1917
as a "genocide". Although Turkey is now working towards the resolution
not being passed by the complete House of Representatives, House
Speaker Nancy Pelosi is in firm support of the resolution.

In some countries there have been symbolic decrees to remember and
condemn the terrible experiences of Armenians at the time. ýn other
countries, the denial of a genocide may be pursued legally. For
instance, Argentina has passed many decisions, such as the one to
acknowledge a "genocide", to demand that Turkey and the United Nations
do so, too, and to include the events in school curricula.

18 parliamentary resolutions

Particularly since 2005, the parliaments of several countries have
decided to officially recognise the events of 1915 as a "genocide".

There are eighteen countries who have passed such decisions in parliament:

Uruguay: 1965, 2004, 2005; Southern Cyprus: 1982; Argentina: 1993,
2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007; Russia: 1995, 2005; Canada: 1996, 2000,
2004; Greece: 1996; the Lebanon: 1997, 2000; Belgium: 1998; Italy:
2000; the Vatikan: 2000; France: 2001; Switzerland: 2003; Slovakia:
2004; Holland: 2004; Poland: 2005; Venezuela: 2005; Lithuania: 2005;
Chile: 2007.

Other recognition

Sweden, Austria and Armenia have recognised the 1915 events as a
"genocide" without a parliamentary decision, and the German parliament
passed a decision in 2005 to "remember the Armenians who were exposed
to violence and forced emigration and killed before the First World
War". While the Germans do not use the term "genocide", the parliament
has said that "some independent historians, institutions and
parliaments have described these events as genocide."

Apart from the Federal government, Canada’s states of Quebec and
Ontario also recognise a "genocide". Australia’s state parliament of
New South Wales recognised and condemned the "genocide" in 1997.

In Brazil, the states of Ceara and Sao Paolo have accepted a "genocide.

In 2007, the Basque parliament passed a similar resolution.

According to the law passed in France in 2006, a denial of the
"Armenian genocide" is punished with imprisonment and fines.

A draft brought to the Bulgarian parliament in 2006 was voted against
because of the reactions of Turkish MPs. (EÜ/NZ/AG)

* This news item has used information from Wikipedia, Agos, BBC, the
Guardian, the American Armenian National Committee and the Los Angeles
Times.

Source: 318/many-states-in-the-usa-have-long-acknowledged- genocide

http://www.bianet.org/english/kategori/english/102

Les Etats-Unis font face a la colere de leur allie turc

Le Temps, Suisse
12 octobre 2007

Les Etats-Unis font face à la colère de leur allié turc

DIPLOMATIE. En reconnaissant l’existence d’un «génocide» contre les
Arméniens, les élus américains ont rendu furieuses les autorités
d’Ankara. Qui menacent de lancer des représailles.

Depuis le début de la guerre en Irak, des milliers et des milliers de
soldats américains sont passés par la base d’Incirlik, dans le sud de
la Turquie. C’est par là que transitent aussi la plus grosse partie
du matériel de guerre et le carburant. C’est par là, encore, que
passent les nouveaux véhicules blindés dont vont être équipés les GI,
pour tenter de les prémunir contre les bombes qui explosent au
passage de leurs convois.

Bien avant l’Irak, au temps de la Guerre froide, Incirlik avait été
le ciment qui unissait la Turquie et les Etats-Unis. Ainsi ces mots,
prononcés à Washington par Egemen Bagis, ont résonné comme une réelle
menace aux oreilles des Américains: «Imaginez juste ce que
représenterait pour les Etats-Unis une fermeture d’Incirlik», s’est
contenté de dire ce proche du premier ministre turc, Recep Tayyip
Erdogan.

Les responsables turcs sont furieux. Mercredi, le comité des Affaires
étrangères de la Chambre des représentants a commis ce qui, à leurs
yeux, constitue l’affront suprême: par 27 voix contre 21, les élus
ont qualifié de «génocide» le massacre des Arméniens durant la
Première Guerre mondiale qui a ensanglanté les dernières années de
l’Empire ottoman.

Cette décision, qui devrait être suivie par un vote en plénière en
novembre prochain, ne doit rien au hasard. Dans le touffu jeu des
lobbies qui entoure la vie politique américaine, la communauté
américano-arménienne a joué de tout son poids. Elle a notamment fait
pression ces derniers mois pour que des villes américaines retirent
leur soutien à l’«Anti-Defamation League», active dans la lutte
contre l’antisémitisme et proche d’Israël, si elle ne reconnaissait
pas l’existence du «génocide» des Arméniens. Cette dernière a fini
par céder, même si c’est du bout des lèvres, en parlant de
«l’équivalent d’un génocide». Un revirement qui a été déterminant
pour le vote au Congrès.

Cette affaire embarrasse au plus haut point le gouvernement de George
Bush, qui a jeté dans la mêlée tous ses piliers, y compris la
secrétaire d’Etat Condoleezza Rice ou le chef du Pentagone, Robert
Gates, afin de tenter de «ramener à la raison» les élus. «Les Turcs
ont été très clairs sur certaines des mesures qu’ils prendraient si
la résolution était approuvée (par la Chambre des représentants)»,
expliquait Robert Gates jeudi. «Nous regrettons tous la souffrance
tragique du peuple arménien. Mais cette résolution n’est pas la bonne
réponse à ces tueries de masse», enchaînait le président américain,
en prenant bien soin d’éviter le mot «génocide».

D’ores et déjà, la contre-attaque turque est lancée. Recep Tayyip
Erdogan annonçait hier qu’il prônerait l’autorisation d’une vaste
offensive militaire contre la rébellion kurde dans le nord de l’Irak.
Le parlement turc doit en débattre la semaine prochaine. Et cette
perspective fait frémir les Américains: elle risquerait d’embraser la
seule partie de l’Irak qui est aujourd’hui plus ou moins pacifiée.

Mais les menaces du farouche allié turc ne s’arrêtent pas à la base
d’Incirlik ou au Kurdistan irakien. En visite ces jours en Israël, le
chef de la diplomatie turque, Ali Babacan, n’a pas pris de gants, lui
non plus, en déclarant que les relations entre les deux pays
«pourraient souffrir» du vote américain. Pour Israël, comme pour les
Etats-Unis, la Turquie représente un important allié stratégique. Et,
comme Washington, Tel-Aviv a toujours refusé de qualifier de
«génocide» le massacre des Arméniens. Ou même «d’équivalent de
génocide».

Evils of history can hurt future

Amarillo.com , TX
Oct 13 2007

Editorial: Evils of history can hurt future

Congressional resolutions usually contain meaningless statements of
support or indignation that have no practical effect on actual
foreign policy.
Unless, of course, the words offend a key U.S. ally in a bloody war
against ruthless terrorists.

The House Foreign Affairs Committee has approved a resolution that
condemns Turkey for committing what it calls "genocide" against
Armenians near the end of the Ottoman Empire’s rule in 1915. Did the
Turks commit unspeakable acts when they massacred Armenians? No one
disputes that. Moreover, the Turks have been shamefully negligent in
recognizing the horror of those deeds.

But the resolution headed for a full House vote might enrage the
secular Turkish government, which is giving U.S. supplies safe
passage through and over that country as they support American troops
fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Rep. Mac Thornberry, R-Clarendon, who opposes the resolution, said
Friday that the statement "is coming about because of domestic
political pressure by ethnic Armenians living in key congressional
districts."

He said approval of the resolution "could have detrimental
consequences for our war effort."

On Thursday, Turkey recalled its ambassador to the United States and
warned of serious repercussions if Congress proceeds with a
resolution that well might endanger this country’s vital military
mission in neighboring Iraq.

Does the House really intend to infuriate this key ally, which could
retaliate by shutting down transport routes to the battlefield? If it
does, then U.S. troops are placed even more directly in harm’s way.

This is not the time for resolutions that could produce far more
negative results than positive.

Words, as they say, have consequences, and the term "genocide" could
produce horrific consequences for young Americans fighting on our
behalf.

7/opi_8672248.shtml

http://www.amarillo.com/stories/10130

Trouble’s brewing in Turkey

Ottawa Citizen, Canada
Oct 12 2007

Trouble’s brewing in Turkey

Harry Sterling, Citizen Special
Published: Friday, October 12, 2007

Turkey’s threat to invade northern Iraq to crush Kurdish guerrillas
has serious implications not just for Iraq’s stability but also for
Turkey’s relations with the United States and with the European
Union.

A resolution before the U.S. Congressional foreign affairs committee
describing the large-scale deaths of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire
from 1915 to 1917 as genocide has further heightened tension with
Turkey.

For months, the government of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has
been demanding the Iraqi government in Baghdad and the Bush
administration move forcefully against insurgents belonging to the
Kurdistan Workers’ Party, PKK, which have escalated attacks into
southeastern Turkey from bases in Iraq’s autonomous Kurdistan
Province. Fifteen Turkish soldiers were killed by the PKK last
weekend, prompting Mr. Erdogan to announce his government was
preparing the groundwork for military intervention in northern Iraq.

However, the U.S. strongly opposes this, fearing it will destabilize
Iraq and alienate pro-American Iraqi Kurds who were highly supportive
of Washington’s invasion of 2003. The European Union also opposes
intervention.

Although Iraq’s Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki agreed following a
meeting in Ankara to implement measures blocking financial and other
aid to the PKK, he has little military means to force the PKK to stop
cross-border attacks. The Kurdistan authorities for obvious reasons
are reluctant to take on the PKK, though they have in the past. Their
inability to control Iranian-based Kurdish insurgents from attacking
Iranian targets has led to Iran shelling Iraqi Kurdish villages along
its border.

Unless the Kurdistan authorities can persuade the PKK to stop its
attacks, more killings will only increase public demands in Turkey
for direct intervention.

Much of the Turkish public has become increasingly anti-American
since U.S. President George W. Bush’s invasion of Iraq. Growing
numbers have also questioned whether Turkey should continue to accept
demands from the European Union for further democratic and human
rights reforms as the price for joining the EU when several EU
states, including France, Germany, Austria and others oppose full
membership.

Thus, calls by the Bush administration and EU leaders for Turkey to
respect Iraqi sovereignty are not falling on receptive ears in Turkey
at a time when Turks, some of them Kurds, are being killed by the
PKK. (The PKK purportedly has been behind a number of bombings in
Turkish cities over the past year.)

Although some analysts believe threats of intervention from the
Erdogan government are intended primarily to force the central Iraqi
government and the Americans to clamp down on the PKK’s bases in
Kurdistan, others believe the Turkish military wants to move against
the PKK and will ultimately prevail in some fashion or other, whether
through approval for significant hot-pursuit operations, shelling PKK
bases, or the establishment of a Turkish controlled cordon sanitaire
on Iraqi territory along the border.

Some believe nationalist elements in Turkey would like to use
military intervention as a means to prevent the Kurdistan authorities
expanding their control over other areas of northern Iraq, including
Kirkuk where there is a Turkmen community.

To complicate matters for President Bush, the congressional genocide
resolution has unleashed an uproar in Turkey. The Erdogan government
has warned the Bush administration that if the resolution actually
goes forward to the full Congress it will have immediate
repercussions on bilateral relations.

There’s concern the U.S. military would lose the use of Turkey’s
important Incirlik military airbase, a critical staging area for
American aircraft supplying U.S. forces in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Although President Bush opposes the non-binding resolution, it has
the backing of many Democrats, including House Speaker Nancy Pelosi
whose electoral district has a large Armenian community.

If all parties involved don’t quickly look for an acceptable solution
to the present crisis, Turkey’s traditionally close relations with
the U.S. and other allies could soon be in jeopardy with
unpredictable long-term fallout for the United States, NATO, the EU
and the Middle East region.

Harry Sterling, a former diplomat, is an Ottawa-based commentator. He
served in Turkey.

s/opinion/story.html?id=a668afb5-7dff-45e4-83f3-34 4d0871aadf

http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/new

Democrat-led ‘genocide vote’ gets Turkey offside

The Australian (Australia)
October 12, 2007 Friday
All-round Country Edition

Democrat-led ‘genocide vote’ gets Turkey offside

WASHINGTON: US politicians defied strong warnings by President George
W.Bush and Turkey by voting to label the Ottoman Empire’s World War I
massacre of Armenians as ”genocide”.

The House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee voted by 27
votes to 21 for the resolution that calls the killings of up to 1.5
million Armenians under the Ottoman Empire from 1915 a genocide.

Mr Bush and his top lieutenants were unusually blunt in attacking the
non-binding resolution, warning that it would trigger Turkish
reprisals and undermine US efforts in Iraq, Afghanistan and the
Middle East.

The vote ”may do grave harm to US-Turkish relations and to US
interests in Europe and the Middle East”, State Department spokesman
Sean McCormack said. ”Nor will it improve Turkish-Armenian relations
or advance reconciliation among Turks and Armenians over the terrible
events of 1915,” he said.

Assistant Secretary of State Nick Burns said the department was
communicating to Turkey its unhappiness with the vote and its desire
to keep working closely with Ankara.

The measure is likely to be sent on to a vote in the full
Democratic-led House, where a majority has signed the resolution. A
parallel measure is in the Senate pipeline. Bryan Ardouny, executive
director of the Armenian Assembly of America, lauded ”a historic
day” after the committee’s vote.

”It is long past time for the US Government to acknowledge and
affirm this horrible chapter of history — the first genocide of the
20th century, and a part of history that we must never forget,” he
said.

The text says the killings of up to 1.5 million Armenians was a
”genocide” that should be acknowledged fully in US foreign policy
towards Turkey, along with ”the consequences of the failure to
realise a just resolution”.

While the American-Armenian community celebrated, Turkish President
Abdullah Gul denounced the vote as ”unacceptable”, and accused the
House of sacrificing US interests to ”petty games of domestic
politics”.

Turkey’s ambassador to Washington, Nabi Sensoy, said the vote was
”very disappointing”, and called on House Speaker Nancy Pelosi to
refrain from bringing it to a full vote.

Mr Sensoy, who has personally lobbied more than 100 House members
against the resolution, said ”those who said it won’t do any harm,
we will have to wait and see”.

Mr Bush said the resolution would do ”great harm” to ties with
Turkey, a Muslim-majority member of NATO whose territory is a crucial
transit point for US supplies bound for Iraq and Afghanistan.

According to the Armenians, 1.5 million of their kinsmen were killed
from 1915 to 1923 under an Ottoman Empire campaign of deportation and
murder that later encouraged Nazi leader Adolf Hitler’s Holocaust
against the Jews.

Rejecting the genocide label, Turkey argues that 250,000 to 500,000
Armenians, and at least as many Turks, died in civil strife when
Armenians took up arms for independence in eastern Anatolia during
the war.

Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Defence Secretary Robert
Gates, also denounced the measure before the hearing, after veiled
threats from Ankara that US access to a sprawling air base in
southern Turkey could be denied.

Despite the warnings, the resolution’s backers warned the issue could
not be ignored as they drew parallels to the Holocaust and the
present-day bloodshed in the Sudanese region of Darfur.

”We’ve been told the timing is bad,” Democratic House member Gary
Ackerman said in an emotional hearing that lasted nearly four hours.
”But the timing was bad for the Armenian people in 1915.”

None Dare Call It Genocide

NONE DARE CALL IT GENOCIDE
By Andrew E. Mathis

Online Journal, FL
Oct 12 2007

In case you missed it (and really, unless you live in New England,
or you’re Armenian, or you have some interested in the Anti-Defamation
League [ADL] of B’nai Brith, you probably did), there’s been something
of a to-do between the ADL and very specifically its leader, Abraham
Foxman, and the Armenian-American community of Watertown, Mass.

It seems the ADL recently honored the city as one of its "No Place
for Hate" cities, only to have the city reject the honor because of
the ADL’s position on the mass killings of Armenians by the Turkish
governments between 1895 and 1922 (peaking in 1915 under the so-called
Young Turks).

Estimates run between 600,000 and 1.5 million Armenians killed during
this period — either slaughtered wholesale by Ottoman troops and
auxiliaries or starved, beaten, and raped on death marches out of
Anatolia for "relocation in the east" in Syria and elsewhere. The
Armenians have been living in a diaspora very much like that of the
Jews for a large portion of their history — certainly since the
conquest of their land by the Turks — and these massacres took a
serious toll on the Armenian population not already safely domiciled
in North America, South America, Australia, and other points outside
Asia Minor and the Caucasus.

So what is the ADL’s position on the Armenian massacres? It’s shifted
in the last month. Originally, the position of the ADL and Foxman
was that what happened to the Armenians does not constitute genocide.

I’ll go over the U.N. definition of genocide in a few moments and
show that the Armenian massacres more than meet the criteria set
forth there, but what Foxman and the ADL were up to (and still are)
is something much more sinister, and the ideology behind what they’re
doing has two prongs: (1) Insisting on the uniqueness of the Holocaust;
and (2) Trying to preserve the generally positive relationship between
Turkey and Israel by denying the genocide against the Armenian people.

The first issue is a thorny one, because I, personally, would say
that the Nazi Holocaust against European Jewry was unique in some
ways and not unique in others. But the uniqueness that Foxman and
others like him (notably Elie Wiesel) argue for is on a mystical level
(which is garbage — the Nazis killed the Jews because they were in
the way and they were deemed as subhumans, and this is pretty much
the prerequisite conditions for all genocides), on an historical
level (the Holocaust was the culmination of 2,000 years of European
anti-Semitism — and with this point I can agree to a certain extent),
and the mechanization of the killing of Europe’s Jews (fair enough —
on this point I agree wholly).

But am I, a Jewish person and Holocaust educator, willing to say that
this was the worst genocide in history or that other mass killings
don’t count as genocide? In short, do I harbor that level of chutzpah?

The answer is no. I am personally of the opinion that the worst
genocide in history took place on the continent where I am currently
writing this, and that this genocide is continuing as I write. This
genocide was/is against the indigenous pre-1492 populations of North
and South America by European conquerors and was one of the most
wholly effective genocides in all of history. More than 95 percent
of the original population of these two continents were either
decimated by disease or simply murdered, mainly by the Spanish and
British colonists, and later by the U.S. military and Latin American
death squads. Entire nations were wiped off the face of the earth,
and because they were often preliterate cultures, no trace of them
is left except for the occasional archaeological find.

That I sit on land right now that used to belong to Lenape Indians,
and I’ve never met a Lenape Indian (and I’ve lived in this part of
the country my entire life) should speak volumes. I would refer
the interested reader to David E. Stannard’s American Holocaust,
published 15 years ago but no less relevant today. So, in the sick
moral calculus to which all of us in Holocaust studies must resort
to at one time or another, I rank the American genocide as a greater
crime against humanity than the Nazi Holocaust.

But I digress. Back to the ADL’s uniqueness argument: I deny any
ontological uniqueness to the Holocaust, and I deny that it was worse
than other genocides. That’s the first prong of the ADL’s ideology.

As noted, the ADL’s second prong here involves the "special
relationship" between Turkey and Israel (not to mention Turkey and
the U.K. and Turkey and the U.S.). Turkey is the only secular Muslim
state in the world. It is also one of very few Muslim nations that
has relations with Israel. The Turkish military and the IDF engage
in joint training exercises and arms sales, and basically Israel
counts on Turkey as a regional ally, figuring that in a regional war,
Turkey might side with Israel, and that, subsequently, any attack on
Turkey by a hostile party would then be an attack against NATO and
would then involve European-wide involvement. In short, along with
nuclear weapons, Turkey is Israel’s ace in the hole.

The issue that remains before us, now, is whether what happened to
the Armenians constitutes genocide. Recalling the U.N. definition,
a genocide is characterized by any combination of the following: (1)
Killing members of the group; (2) Causing serious bodily or mental
harm to members of the group; (3) Deliberately inflicting on the group
conditions of life, calculated to bring about its physical destruction
in whole or in part; (4) Imposing measures intended to prevent births
within the group; and (5) Forcibly transferring children of the group
to another group.

The Armenian genocide meets all five of these critiera. Armenians
could only save their own lives (and even then it was a stretch)
if they agreed to abandon the Armenian language and adopt Islam
as their faith (an action that should, under no circumstances, be
considered "typical" of Islam as a faith). Armenian children were
given to Turkish families. Forcible relocation always (not sometimes,
but always) results in deaths of the "relocated" groups.

So what was Foxman thinking in this odious example of genocide denial
(denial being what genocide scholar Gregory Stanton has noted is
typically the final stage in a genocide)? Well, his "denial" is
really his opposition to a congressional resolution on the Armenian
genocide. Asked to explain further, Foxman said this: "This is not
an issue where we take a position one way or the other . . . This is
an issue that needs to be resolved by the parties, not by us. We are
neither historians nor arbiters." I’d take him at his word were it
not for the ADL’s unbending support for similar resolutions regarding
the Holocaust, not to mention the Stalinist firings of New England
ADL officers who publicly disagreed with Foxman.

Outrage against Foxman was not limited to Armenians. Jewish and Israeli
newspaper columnists commented on the issue and Holocaust denial
scholar Deborah Lipstadt stated categorically that no reasonable
person could look at the Armenian massacres and not conclude it was
genocide. Finally, on August 21, Foxman and the ADL, in their own
words, "revisited" the Armenian genocide.

"We have never negated but have always described the painful events of
1915-1918 perpetrated by the Ottoman Empire against the Armenians as
massacres and atrocities," Foxman said. "On reflection, we have come
to share the view of Henry Morgenthau, Sr., that the consequences of
those actions were indeed tantamount to genocide. If the word genocide
had existed then, they would have called it genocide."

Pardon me if I’m a little less than impressed. Fire existed before
it was called fire, and it should be borne in mind as well that fire
is not "tantamount" to fire. Fire is, quite simply, fire.

"Having said that," Foxman said in the same statement, "we continue
to firmly believe that a congressional resolution on such matters
is a counterproductive diversion and will not foster reconciliation
between Turks and Armenians and may put at risk the Turkish Jewish
community and the important multilateral relationship between Turkey,
Israel and the United States."

In the end, Foxman tipped his hand on both prongs of the ADL’s
campaign to sanctify the Holocaust as the sine qua non of Jewish
existence. There was a time when the work of the ADL was useful and
productive. Those days, sadly, are gone, as the ADL has sunk to the
level of spying on private citizens, blindly supporting Israel in
whatever endeavor she undertakes, however wrongheaded, and "expressing
outrage" at the slightest provocation. The little boy who cried wolf
comes to mind.

Or was that the little boy who cried fox?

Andrew E. Mathis is a medical editor, Holocaust historian, and adjunct
professor of English and humanities at Villanova University.

sh/article_2525.shtml

http://onlinejournal.com/artman/publi

Genocide Vote Sparks Protests

GENOCIDE VOTE SPARKS PROTESTS

SBS – World News Australia, Australia
Oct 12 2007

Turkish workers have taken to the streets of Istanbul to protest
against a US ruling that the deaths of Armenians during the Second
World War was genocide.

Members of the left-wing Workers Party waved flags, chanted slogans and
carried placards proclaiming "Genocide is a lie and it’s an American
game" as they marched through the city on Thursday.

Their demonstration was sparked by US Congress’s passing of a bill
describing the killing of Armenians as genocide, despite intense
lobbying by Turkish officials and opposition from U.S. President
George W. Bush.

Many Turkish people consider the move an insult, and the Turkish
government – long an ally of America – has warned the US may face
consequences as a result.

"Insulting Turkishness’

Addressing the crowd of protesters in Istanbul, Erkan Onsel, the
Vice President of the Labour Party, said that by passing the bill,
"the US has made it clear once again that it targets Turkey."

Armenians say up to 1.5 million Armenians were killed in a systematic
genocide between 1915-17, before modern Turkey came into being in 1923.

Turkey says the killings occurred at a time of civil unrest as the
Ottoman Empire was falling apart, and that the numbers are inflated.

Meanwhile, two journalists have been handed suspended jail sentences
for a newspaper article in which they referred to the Armenian murders
as genocide.

Arat Dink, the son of murdered Armenian-Turkish editor Hrant Dink,
and Sarkis Seropyan, the proprietor of the Agos newspaper, were each
given one-year suspended terms for insulting Turkishness.

Controversial ruling

They were charged under a controversial law – article 301 of the
country’s penal code – which critics say severely limits freedom of
speech in Turkey.

At a news conference on Thursday, lawyer Fethiye Cetin said the pair
were charged just for publishing a story in their newspaper.

"This verdict shows that in Turkey to make a news story about Hrant
Dink, who says that there was an Armenian genocide in 1915, is a
crime," she told reporters outside Istanbul’s courthouse.

The European Union, which Turkey wants to join, has repeatedly urged
Ankara to scrap article 301, under which Nobel Laureate Orhan Pamuk
has also been tried.

n.php?id=140654&region=3

http://www.worldnewsaustralia.com.au/regio

Armenian Lobby’s Triumph: Genocide Resolution Risks Shattering Relns

ARMENIAN LOBBY’S TRIUMPH

Genocide Resolution Risks Shattering Relations with Turkey

By Gregor Peter Schmitz in Washington
October 12, 2007

A small resolution with a big effect: A US Congressional committee has
voted to call the massacre of Armenians during World War I genocide —
a move that now threatens to shatter the Turkish-American friendship.
The history of the resolution is a lesson in the power of lobbying.

Picture circa 1915 of Turkish soldiers standing next to the hanged
bodies of Armenians.
Stephen Walt is a down-to-earth man who doesn’t like long sentences.
He is a professor at Harvard and together with his colleague from
Chicago John Mearsheimer he caused quite a fuss earlier this year.
They published an article and then a book with the simple title "The
Israel Lobby." Their central thesis: A small group of very influential
friends of Israel have forced US foreign policy into an unconditional
backing of Israel, which is damaging Americans’ strategic interests.

When SPIEGEL ONLINE recently asked Walt if other interest groups had a
similar influence in Washington, the realist wouldn’t hear of it. He
said that the actions of Armenian-Americans or Cuban-Americans would
never have the same far-reaching effects on US foreign policy.

Really? Two days ago the House of Representatives’ Foreign Affairs
Committee approved a remarkable resolution. The mass murder of
Armenians in the Ottoman Empire starting in 1915 was to be named
genocide.

The result was a medium-level political earthquake. US President
George W. Bush reacted with anger. Turkey temporarily recalled its
ambassador from Washington, and Turkish newspapers seethed with rage.
And all that even though the resolution is only symbolic in character
and won’t be presented to Congress for a vote until November. How
could it go so far?

Armenians say that more than 1.5 million people were killed during the
deportations and massacres during World War I, while according to
Turkish figures between 200,000 and 300,000 Armenians were killed.
Turkey still refuses to accept the description of the crimes as
genocide and speaks instead of the "repression" of a rebellious people
who were allied with the Russians during World War I.

The Triumph of the Armenian Lobby

Armenian-Americans have been fighting for years to have the massacre
of Armenians be officially named genocide in the United States.

Concerns over a lasting cooling of relations between Turkey and the US
had always prevented a genocide resolution being passed — President
Bush had failed to stick to his election promise to work towards the
recognition of the genocide. He regularly declined to use the word
genocide in his annual speech in April to mark the beginning of the
massacres. In 2000 a similar draft resolution was pulled when US
President Bill Clinton intervened at the last moment.

The fact that it has now been approved is a triumph for the "Armenian
Lobby," if you want to call them that. Around 1.2 million Americans
have Armenian forefathers and many of them grew up listening to the
tales of the suffering of their people.

Armenian-Americans are particularly active in California, New Jersey
and Michigan — which happens to be the constituency of Nancy Pelosi,
the Democratic Speaker of the House. Her Californian colleague Adam
Schiff, who promoted the resolution, has the issue to thank for his
own political career. His predecessor in the constituency lost his
seat when he failed to push through the resolution in 2000.

Armenian groups have been bombarding their representatives over the
past few years with an unusually massive PR drive. Their most
important umbrella group "Armenian Assembly of America" has 10,000
members and an annual budget of over $3.5 million. It employs four
different influential PR firms in Washington to keep the suffering of
the Armenians on the agenda in the US capital.

The Turkish government couldn’t do enough to counter them, even though
for years it has invested millions of dollars in presenting its
arguments. Ankara engaged prominent former representatives like
Republican Bob Livingston, who even produced his own video in which he
argued against unnecessarily damaging relations with Turkey. And he
said that Turkey was still an important symbol of how a Muslim society
can build democratic structures.

In the complicated intertwining of minority representation in the US,
many Americans with Armenian roots also say the approval of the
resolution as a sign that they have arrived in the center of American
society. They compare their lobby work with the success of the Jewish
lobby in the US, which has anchored the commemoration of the Holocaust
in Americans’ collective memory.

Washington is Worried

Admittedly they have a long way to go: the massive protests against
the resolution showed the effects of its passage a day later. Of
course, some representatives ruefully admitted that perhaps it was not
the best of the timing. According to the hearing, the congressional
representatives are already considering another resolution — one that
would stress how important relations with its Turkish ally are to the
US.

And President George W. Bush immediately expressed his concern, saying
the initiative undermines relations with a close ally in the fight
against terrorism. All eight living former US Secretaries of State
signed a letter of protest against the resolution. Secretary of
Defense Robert Gates sought to remind people that around 70 percent of
all air transports for the US troops heading to Iraq go through
Turkey. And US Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs,
Nicholas Burns, tried for an entire day at the beginning of the week
to convince members of Congress to veto the resolution.

That’s an awful lot of attention paid to a vote about an historical
event about which very few Americans (or even Europeans) know the
details. But because the memory of the Armenian suffering is still a
delicate subject for modern Turkey, any attempt to deal with it risks
being a powder keg for the once-warm relationship between the US and
Turkey.

The relationship has been approaching a crisis for some time —
recently more than ever because the Turks are agitated about the
attacks by militant Kurdish troops in Iraq and are even considering a
military attack. The US wants to avoid this at all costs. Turkey’s
logistical support for the US-led Iraq invasion is, in turn, still
highly controversial. A current poll reported that 83 percent of Turks
would wish to discontinue such support if the US Congress votes to
pass the Armenian resolution.

The Turks have proven in the past that such threats are not empty
promises: When the French parliament passed a resolution making denial
of the Armenian genocide a crime punishable by law in 2006, the
Turkish broke off their military relationship with France. But up
until now there has been no clear sign — aside from the short-term
departure of the ambassador to Washington — that they would go far
beyond symbolic gestures.

Source: ,1518,5 11210,00.html

http://www.spiegel.de/international/world/0