Vardan Oskanian’s About Negotiations Concerning Turkey’s Accession T

VARDAN OSKANIAN’S ABOUT NEGOTIATIONS CONCERNING TURKEY’S ACCESSION TO EU

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 21. ARMINFO. With the beginning of the negotiations
concerning Turkey’s accession to European Union the issue on
recognition of the Genocide of Armenians in 1915 in Ottoman Turkey will
be in the center of attention of Europe. Minister of foreign affairs
of Armenia Vardan Oskanian stated in the interview to Armenia TV.

According to him, the fact that the problems of Armenian-Turkish
relations proved to be in the center of Europe’s attention and that
these issues will be included in the agenda of the negotiations,
is positive at the beginning of the negotiating progress of EU
with Turkey.

During the last two weeks the issue of the Genocide of Armenians were
discussed and marked as often as it was not mentioned during the
last 5 years. All the aforementioned testifies about the doubtless
successes both of Armenian diplomacy and the efforts made by Armenian
foreign communities, the foreign minister stressed.

At the same time the foreign minister of Armenia especially mentioned
the fact, which was positively estimated by the international
community, that Armenia did not and will not put the issue on the
Genocide as a term of normalization of relations with Turkey. Drawing
parallel with the Holocaust, the obvious difference is that Germany
admitting it, officially apologized and paid compensation to suffered
Jewish. And the problem of the recognition of the Genocide of Armenians
is in political aspect, as Turkey not only admits the Genocide,
but also denies the fact, resort to economic blockade and political
blackmail. In this connection, we should not expect that in 2005,
the year of 90th anniversary of the Genocide this problem will be
included in the agenda of UN General Assembly. Though Armenia intends
further to present its position in the highest instances of UN in New
York and Geneva, that’s why the year 2005 will launch a new phase in
the problem of the international community’s recognizing the Genocide
of Armenian, the foreign minster of Armenia said.

ARKA News Agency – 12/14/2004

ARKA News Agency
Dec 14 2004

V.Oskanian: broad discussions of Karabakh issue should be started

The RA commission on securities is to become a member of an
International organization of Commissions on Securities in 2005

Armenian Finance and Economy Minister hospitalized because of heart
attack

Speaker of State Duma of Russia to arrive in Armenia today

*********************************************************************

V.OSKANIAN: BROAD DISCUSSIONS OF KARABAKH ISSUE SHOULD BE STARTED

YEREVAN, December 14. /ARKA/. Broad discussions of Karabakh issue
should be started now, RA Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanian stated
today at the briefing. According to him, discussions should include
not only parliamentarians, but publicity and press. “First President
of Armenia Levon Ter-Petrosian also considered it necessary to
conduct such discussions, unfortunately they never started”, Oskanian
said. “We want the soonest settlement of the conflict, without
violation of anyone’s national interests”, he said. L.D. –0–

*********************************************************************

THE RA COMMISSION ON SECURITIES IS TO BECOME A MEMBER OF AN
INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION OF COMMISSIONS ON SECURITIES IN 2005

YEREVAN, December 14. /ARKA/. The RA commission on securities is
going to become a member of an International organization of
Commissions on Securities in 2005. According to RA President’s Press
Service Department, the Chairman of the RA Commission on Securities
Edward Muradyan stated about it during a work meeting with RA
President Robert Kocharyan. He introduced to the President initial
results of the activity of the commission in 2004, as well as the
main programs that are planned to be implemented next year.
In the course of the meeting issues of development and regulation of
the securities market were discussed as well as international
cooperation in that field. A.H. –0–

*********************************************************************

ARMENIAN FINANCE AND ECONOMY MINISTER HOSPITALIZED BECAUSE OF HEART
ATTACK

YEREVAN, December 14. /ARKA/. Armenian Finance and Economy Minister
Vardan Khachatryan was hospitalized because of heart attack. As
Armenian mass media reports, we was transported to the Clinic on
Friday evening right from his office, then he was sent to Nork Marash
Medical Center. In words of Director of the Center Lida Muradyan, his
health situation at the moment is quite satisfactory. According to
his forecasts, he will leave the hospital in 1-2 weeks, after which
he will be able to resume his work and participate in the discussions
of the budget for the year 2005 in the Armenian Parliament. T.M. –0–

*********************************************************************

SPEAKER OF STATE DUMA OF RUSSIA TO ARRIVE IN ARMENIA TODAY

YEREVAN, December 14. /ARKA/. By invitation of the Speaker of the
Armenian National Assembly Arthur Baghdasaryan, the Speaker of the
State Duma of Russian Federation Boris Gryzlov is arriving in Armenia
today. As the Armenian Parliament Public and Relations Department
told ARKA, in the frames of his visit he will meet the Armenian
President Robert Kocharian, Speaker of the Armenian Parliament Arthur
Baghdasaryan, Chairmen of the Standing Committees of the Parliament,
Heads of the parliament Factions and Groups, Armenian PM Andranik
Margarian, Catholicos of All Armenian His Holiness Garegin II. T.M.
–0–

*********************************************************************

–Boundary_(ID_gOTTBE7pXY3Ajg3Q0mandQ)–

EU clinches deal on starting Turkey entry talks

The Daily Star, Lebanon
Dec 18 2004

EU clinches deal on starting Turkey entry talks
Leaders say there is no certain outcome

Compiled by Daily Star staff

The EU and Turkey reached a historic agreement on Friday on starting
talks on admitting the large Muslim nation to the bloc after overcoming
last minute haggling over Ankara’s relationship with EU member Cyprus.

The 25 EU leaders agreed to open accession negotiations with Turkey on
Oct. 3, 2005, but said talks would be open-ended with no guaranteed
outcome in a nod to deeply skeptical public opinion in much of
Western Europe.

The landmark deal, which could change the face of Europe and Turkey
in coming decades, came after hours of wrangling between Turkish Prime
Minister Tayyip Erdogan and Dutch Prime Minister Jan Peter Balkenende,
the summit chairman, mainly over Cyprus.

“(It) is an historic event. It shows that those who believe there is
some fundamental clash in civilizations between Christian and Muslim
are actually wrong, that we can work together and we can cooperate
together,” British Premier Tony Blair told reporters.

Turkey pledged unilaterally to sign a protocol extending its EU
association agreement to 10 states which joined the bloc in May,
including Cyprus, before it starts entry talks.

In return, Balkenende, holder of the EU presidency, would spell out
that this was not tantamount to recognition of the Greek Cypriot
government in Nicosia, which Ankara has rejected until there is a
settlement for the divided island.

Diplomats said the EU dropped a humiliating demand that Turkey initial
the pact immediately on Friday. At one point, Erdogan threatened to
walk out after Cyprus demanded a written commitment. He was dissuaded
by Balkenende, Blair and German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder, the
diplomats said.

EU leaders kept summit guest UN chief Kofi Annan waiting for an hour
and a half as they negotiated over Cyprus.

Annan said Friday he was willing to offer more mediation to resolve the
dispute surrounding the divided island of Cyprus if Greek and Turkish
Cypriots requested. “Once the parties are ready to move forward again,
my good offices could be available,” he said.

A Turkish official quoted Erdogan as telling Balkenende at one point:
“You are choosing 600,000 Greeks (Cypriots) over 70 million Turks,
and I cannot explain this to my people.”

British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw played down the political
significance of signing the so-called Ankara protocol, saying: “It does
not involve formal or informal recognition of the government of Cyprus
and we have been trying to reassure the Turkish government about that.”

Erdogan was satisfied Friday with amendments to provisions that
foresee restrictions on the free movement of people.

“Those (provisions) were different before, but I can say they were
put into the desired shape as a result of the efforts we made,”
Erdogan said.

The agreement was criticized by Armenians in Europe as well as
opposition groups in Turkey.

Turkey’s main opposition party Friday urged Erdogan to suspend
accession talks, arguing that the bloc is not ready to admit the
country as a full member.

Also in Istanbul, some 1,000 Turkish leftists demonstrated Friday
against Turkey’s bid to join the bloc as the country’s leaders
bargained in Brussels to soften the conditions of an EU offer for
accession talks.

The protesters, supporters of the small Turkish Communist Party,
marched to the German Consulate in downtown Istanbul, chanting
anti-West slogans.

Across Europe, thousands of Europeans of Armenian origin demonstrated
during an EU summit here Friday calling on Turkey to admit to genocide
against their people nearly 90 years ago.

They insisted such an acknowledgment must be a precondition for Turkey
to begin talks on joining the EU.

Two main Greek Cypriot parties applauded the EU Friday for asking
Turkey to effectively recognize Cyprus if it wants to start EU
membership talks. But a poll earlier this week showed that 60 percent
of Greek Cypriots wanted President Tassos Papadopoulos to veto the
granting of a date for opening talks if Turkey refused outright
recognition of Cyprus. – Agencies

Refusing turkey would be a bin laden ‘victory’

RABAT: An eventual refusal by the European Union to grant membership to
Turkey would create a chasm between the West and the Muslim world and
be a victory for terror chief Osama bin Laden, Morocco’s L’Economiste
newspaper said Friday.

“Osama bin Laden and his followers are seeking to provoke this split,”
wrote the paper, adding: “Rejection of Turkey’s candidacy would be
seen around the world as a deliberate attempt to rupture ties with
the Muslim world.

“It would be a huge victory for bin Laden and other fanatics. It would
be as if they had succeeded in force-feeding the entire world the
doctrine that religious differences determine political and strategic
choices,” the paper wrote.

“If (Turkey) is rejected because its origins and references are Muslim,
the message for other societies will be clear: It says brutally that
it is useless to make an effort.”

Refusing EU membership to Turkey “would call into question all the
processes that are under way in the Arab world, from democratisation
to economic liberalization,” said the Moroccan business newspaper.

Armenian Genocide Documentation Presented To U.S. Congressmen WithSu

ARMENIAN GENOCIDE DOCUMENTATION PRESENTED TO U.S. CONGRESSMEN WITH
SUPPORT OF CONGRESSIONAL CAUCUS ON ARMENIAN ISSUES

WASHINGTON, December 16 (Noyan Tapan). In anticipation of the
commemoration of the 90th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide and
the consideration of the Genocide Resolution by the incoming 109th
Congress, the Gomidas Institute has donated 500 copies of its latest
publication, United States Official Records on the Armenian Genocide
1915-17, to members of the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives.

This initiative was taken at the request of a generous benefactor,
and made possible through the support of the Congressional Caucus
on Armenian Issues, as well as the Armenian National Committee in
Washington D.C.

“With the publication of this volume, the Gomidas Institute has, once
again, provided a vital resource for all those working to overcome the
Turkish government’s shameful campaign to pressure the United States
into complicity in Turkey’s denial of the Armenian Genocide,” said ANCA
Executive Director Aram Hamparian. “The comprehensive and compelling
evidence assembled in this book establishes the U.S. response to
the Armenian Genocide as a critical milestone in American history –
one that Turkey should not be allowed to erase.”

United States Official Records on the Armenian Genocide 1915-17
was published by the Gomidas Institute and is the latest book in a
growing body of vital sources on the Armenian Genocide. The Institute
is at the cutting edge of such work, which is utilized by students,
scholars and journalists today.

This book will soon be joined by its sister publication, United States
Diplomacy on the Bosphorus: The Diaries of Ambassador Morgenthau
1913-1916. These two works are an invaluable record of the Armenian
Genocide in all its complexities, and they show how much the United
States government knew about the Armenian Genocide as early as the
summer of 1915.

ANKARA: Armenian Patriarch believes Turkey to get accession date on

Armenian Patriarch believes Turkey to get accession date on 17 December

Anatolia news agency, Ankara
16 Dec 04

Istanbul, 16 December: Mesrob II, Patriarch of Armenian community
in Turkey, said on Thursday [16 December] that he always advocated
Turkey’s membership to the European Union (EU). He said he believed
the EU would give a date to Turkey on 17 December to start full
membership negotiations.

Mesrob II told AA [Anatolia] correspondent that he shared the view that
the EU was not a Christian club, and noted: “Religion and religious
culture have become a tool of politics both for the EU and the Turkish
politicians more than necessary. Parliaments of the EU member countries
do not make decisions according to the doctrines of the Bible and
the Turkish parliament does not make its decisions according to
Koran. Integration of the EU and Turkey would be for the interest of
the region, the world and the peace among the civilizations.”

Replying to a question about the attitude of the Armenians living
in France, putting forward the allegations of “so-called Armenian
genocide”, towards Turkey’s EU membership, Mesrob II said: “The
disaster in 1915 is an issue which can be abused. To this end,
the foreigners will bring this issue on the agenda when they have
the opportunity. The issue should be excluded from being an issue
of exploitation soon by starting official and unofficial dialogue
process.”

“Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan in an earlier
statement said this was the job of historians and should be left to
historians. His statements are extremely realistic. Meeting face
to face with history is important for building of future on solid
basis. People can not embrace each other before making peace. Dialogue
process should be initiated,” Mesrob II said.

Chirac to make case on TV for EU-Turkey talks

Chirac to make case on TV for EU-Turkey talks

The Guardian – United Kingdom
Dec 15, 2004

JON HENLEY IN PARIS

President Jacques Chirac is so concerned about French hostility to
Turkey joining the EU that he has taken the step of asking to be
interviewed on the subject on the TF1 television news tonight.

Two days before EU leaders are expected to propose the start of formal
entry talks with Ankara, Mr Chirac, facing political isolation in
France, “will try to inform the public and explain what’s at stake”, a
spokesman said.

Yesterday the Turkish prime minister, Tayyip Erdogan, said he would
not hesitate to reject entry talks if “unacceptable issues” were
raised.

One such might be France asking Turkey to acknowledge its genocide of
Armenians in the early years of the 20th century, a highly contentious
issue between the two countries.

But the French foreign minister, Michel Barnier, appeared to back away
from this yesterday, despite saying on Tuesday that France might
consider making this a precondition.

A survey published on Monday confirmed the public opposition to
Turkish accession: 67% of those questioned, including 71% of
conservative voters and 61% of leftwingers, disapproved.

That puts Mr Chirac, who has repeatedly backed Turkey’s bid for
accession but admitted openly in Britain last month that the question
was “a real problem in France”, in a very delicate position.

At home he finds himself out of step not only with the voters and many
senior opposition Socialists, but also with most members of his own
centre-right UMP, including its newly installed and highly ambitious
leader, Nicolas Sarkozy, a probable rival in the 2007 presidential
election.

Although he has promised voters the opportunity to veto Turkey’s
accession when the moment comes in another 10 years or so, he is
worried that their fears will affect the outcome of next year’s
referendum on the EU constitution.

Popular rejection of the constitution would be a heavy blow to his
possible quest for a third term in office.

But changing tack on Turkey to appease the public would leave him
exposed in the EU, angering his allies and further diminishing French
influence.

As a former prime minister, Eduard Balladur, said this week: “Europe
is no longer just foreign policy. A good part of it is now domestic
policy.”

The reservations most commonly cited by French voters are
straightforward: the risk of Turkish immigrants entering the EU job
market (the most important factor for 40% of the poll’s respondents),
and the fact that most of Turkey’s 70 million citizens are Muslims
(25% of the poll).

There is also concern about Ankara’s human rights record, including
its refusal to recognise the Armenian genocide.

But Mr Barnier said yesterday that the genocide was “not a condition
that we are setting on the opening of negotiations, like the ones that
the heads of state will discuss on Thursday and Friday”.

France would bring it up in the first round of talks, likely to begin
next year. When the time came Turkey should face up to the need to
recognise “this tragedy”.

He added: “The European project itself is founded on the idea of
reconciliation.

“We have 10 years to ask it; the Turks have 10 years to think about
their response.”

But Ankara has made it clear that there is no question of it
recognising the genocide, which it denies.

The success of Mr Chirac’s attempt to win over French voters,
stressing less the advantages to the EU than the fact that entry talks
will not automatically lead to membership, is by no means certain.

He has already angered Turkish leaders and upset his main EU partners
by suggesting that the talks should be delayed until late next year,
and by floating – with Austria – the idea that Brussels should hold
out to Ankara a form of privileged partnership or “third way” if it
fails to meet the full EU criteria.

The Turkish Paradox, Part II

The Turkish Paradox, Part II

FrontPageMagazine.com
December 16, 2004

By Gamaliel Issac

Was the Turkish Destruction of Smyrna Vengeance?

Mustafa Akyol wrote[i] that the Turks were not invading Smyrna, they
were liberating the city from the occupying Greek army. He also wrote
that the Greeks had previously committed atrocities against the Turks
and that ?The bloodshed in Smyrna in September, 1922 was an act of
vengeance.? If the bloodshed in Smyrna was an act of vengeance
against the Greeks then why did the Turks also annihilate the Armenian
population of Smyrna? If vengeance against atrocities committed by
the Greek Christians against Turkish Muslims was the motive, than why
did the Turks commit atrocities against the Armenians and Greeks in
Smyrna before the Greek re-occupation? The reason the Greeks
re-occupied Smyrna to begin with was to prevent more of these
atrocities. Perhaps the atrocities committed by the Greeks were
vengeance.

The Turkish Paradox

Why were the Turks so brutal to the Armenians and yet as Mr. Akyol
pointed out in his previous article[ii], did they offer refuge to Jews
fleeing from European Nations. In order to understand this we need to
first understand the concept of Dhimma. Tudor Parfitt in his book,
The Jews in Palestine[iii] 1800-1882 (The Boydell Press, 1987)
explains that concept as follows:

?Dhimma is the relationship between the protector (in this case the
Sultan) and the protected (the Dhimmi) and was the dominant factor in
the status of the ahl al-kitab (People of the Book) i.e. Jews,
Christians, Sabeans, (sabi?un) and later Persian Zoroastrians, in the
Muslim state. Dhimma required the state to protect the life and
property of the Dhimmi, exempt him from military service and allow him
freedom of worship, while the Dhimmi was expected to pay the poll
tax(cizye), not to insult Islam, not to build new places of worship
and to dress in a distinctive fashion in order not to be mistaken for
a Muslim. In cases of civil and family law, non-Muslims had judicial
autonomy except in such cases which involved both a Dhimmi and a
Muslim, in which event the case would be tried before a Muslim court
(mahkama) where the Dhimmi?s legal testimony was unacceptable?The
measure of religious toleration that obtained under Islam had to be
purchased: and the price was a considerable one. ?

The Jews and Armenians as long as they meekly tolerated the
depredations of Dhimmitude were not considered enemies. In fact a
jizya [tax] paying infidel was considered a very valuable commodity.
Joan Peters, in her book, From Time Immemorial[iv] wrote how after the
conquest of Alexandria, Caliph Omar received word from his general
describing the wealth they had just attained.

?I have captured a city from the description of which I shall
refrain. Suffice it to say that I have seized therein 4,000 villas
with 4,000 baths, 40,000 poll-tax paying Jews and four hundred places
of entertainment for the royalty.”

Mr. Akyol responded to two quotes from the Koran from my previous
article, by referring the reader to two articles he had written. In
one of those articles ? Still Standing For Islam and Against
Terrorism?[v], Mr. Akyol, quoted Karen Armstrong?s writings about the
aftermath of the fighting at Badr as follows:

?The Muslims were jubilant. They began to round up prisoners and, in
the usual Arab fashion, started to kill them, but Muhammad put a stop
to this. A revelation came down saying that the prisoners of war were
to be ransomed.?

The quote chosen by Mr. Akyol demonstrates that money was what kept
the Muslims from murdering the infidel. Ransom was why Muhammad put a
stop to the Muslim murder of the prisoners of war from Badr. Money is
the reason that subjugated people, who pay the jizya and karaj taxes
are not killed.

Another argument in Mr. Akyol?s article is that according to Islam
there is no compulsion in religion. Although Muslims have violated
this law frequently, a recent example being the forced conversion of
the wife of an Egyptian priest[vi], there have actually been cases
where they have compelled infidels not to convert.

Bernard Lewis in his book The Arabs in History[vii] wrote that during:

?The time of `Abd al-Malik the Muslim government actually resorted to
discouraging conversion ? in order to restore the failing revenues of
the state.”

In 1492, when Spain expelled the Jews, Sultan Bayazid II ordered the
governors of the provinces of the Ottoman Empire “not to refuse the
Jews entry or cause them difficulties, but to receive them cordially”.
One reason for this was the wealth that the Sultan knew the Jews would
bring to Turkey. The Sultan even said that: “the Catholic monarch
Ferdinand was wrongly considered as wise, since he impoverished Spain
by the expulsion of the Jews, and enriched Turkey”.

Serge Trifkovic in an article in Chronicles Magazine titled Turkey in
the European Union: a lethal fait accompli[viii] (10/29/04) wrote
about the Sultan?s offer of refuge to the Jews of Spain as follows:

?The act that resonates with modern Ottoman apologists was the
invitation to the Jews of Spain to resettle in the Sultan’s lands
after expulsion under Ferdinand and Isabella. They were invited not
because of the Turks’ “tolerance,” however, but primarily because it
was necessary to replace the vast numbers of Christians who had been
killed, expelled, or reduced to penury, and thus to maintain the
Sultan’s tax base. The fact that the Ottoman Jews held a more favored
status within the Empire than the giaours (infidel Christian dogs) is
as much a reason for celebration of the Ottoman “tolerance” as is the
fact that the Nazis were somewhat more “tolerant” of occupied Slavs
than of the Jews the reason to exonerate them for their many crimes. ?

If the Dhimmi explanation above were the whole story that leaves the
question of why the Armenians? Dhimmi status didn?t protect them from
genocide. It doesn?t explain why Smyrna was burned while Kemal
Atatürk who was secular in his beliefs was in command. It also
doesn?t explain the Turkish atrocities against the Jews of Palestine.

The Jews of Palestine and the Armenians of Turkey had one crucial
thing in common that endangered them, Turkey was occupying their
homeland and they wanted to liberate their homeland. The ultimate
crime as far as the Turks were concerned was the Armenian and Jewish
desire for freedom, because such freedom threatened the integrity of
their empire.

Liberation, the Root Cause of Turkish Revenge

Turkish vengeance occurred when they felt there was a threat to the
integrity of their empire. In April 1876 when Bulgarians fought for
their freedom, the Turks committed mass slaughter in Bulgaria, killing
12000-15,000 Bulgarians.

Graber, in his book, Caravans to Oblivion, The Armenian Genocide[ix],
explained how the threat of Armenian liberation led to revenge by the
Turkish authorities.

?It was in Geneva in 1887 that the first radical Armenian political
organization was born. It was called Hunchak, meaning ?bell,? and it
was revolutionary in its aims. It was followed in 1890 by the
foundation of the much more important and longer lived Dashnakstutium.
Both organizations called for an independent Armenia?This was
basically a new position for the Armenians. Its effect on Abdulhamid
was predictable. He felt he was faced with a sinister revolution that
he must use all his resources to combat.

When Armenian resistance first arose in 1893, however, it was not
driven by urban radicals or intellectual leaders. Its voice was the
Armenian peasantry in Sassun, deep in the Armenian mountains. It was
not based primarily on a yearning for freedom; its cause was much
nearer to the hearts of a peasant society. The wandering Kurdish
tribes had been given tacit allowance by the sultan to extort the
peasant Armenian communities in the way that gangsters extort
protection money for use of their turf. According to the historian
Christopher J. Walker, ?The Kurdish aghas [commanders] used to demand
from them a kind of protection tax ? an annual due of crops, cattle,
silver, iron ore?agricultural implements or clothes? In many places
the Armenians were forced to pay double taxes?

By 1892 Abdulhamid had authorized the formation of some thirty
regiments of Hamideye, each about five hundred men strong and each
composed of itinerant Kurds whose spoken or unspoken function was to
suppress the Armenians. To defend themselves against the depredations
of the Kurds and the corruption of the Turkish officials, Armenian
peasants in the Sassun district retreated into the mountains and held
out against successive attacks mounted by Kurds and regular Turkish
army units. ? In the end, despite some early success, the Armenian
peasants were overrun and murdered ? men, women and children ? in
their mountain hideouts.?

The Armenian desire for national liberation ultimately led to their
destruction. Graber wrote that:

?In November 1914, the Russians published a declaration that promised
national liberation to the Armenians on the condition that they oppose
their Ottoman masters. Some Armenians answered the call; small
numbers of Armenian soldiers deserted from the Turkish army and some
in the areas of the battles gave assistance to the Russian
forces… In the winter of 1914-15, the Ottoman army mounted a major
attack against the Russians? Enver Pasha, who had assumed command of
the Third Army, made fatal errors which led to the loss of most of his
forces and the loss of wide stretches of territory to the Russian
army. There are those who point to Enver Pasha?s direct
responsibility for the military defeat as the motive for his search
for a scapegoat; the Armenians were accused of treachery by Enver
Pasha and his supporters. It was alleged that Armenian betrayal,
according to the Empire?s rulers, had caused the defeat? To this day,
the Turkish government claims the treachery of the Armenians as the
explanation for what subsequently befell them.

During the night, between April 23 and April 24, 1915, the
Constantinople police broke into the homes of the Armenian elite in
the city. Two hundred thirty five Armenian leaders politicians,
writers, educators, lawyers, etc. ? were taken to the police station
and then deported.?

The method of elimination by deportation is explained by Graber as
follows:

?The Young Turks had no railroad system to collect and dispose of the
Armenians. Despite the efforts to proceed with the construction of
the Berlin to Baghdad railroad, there were few miles of track
available, and the condition of most highways was appalling.
Consequently, those charged by the Teshkilati Mahsusa with the
responsibility of eliminating the Armenian community evolved a system
of such primitive brutality that even today, after our century has
witnessed the indiscriminate massacre of many millions, the Ittihadist
project still evokes the most fundamental feelings of revulsion.
There is no doubt that if a more sophisticated machinery for slaughter
had been available, the Young Turks would have used it. Lacking such
machinery, their system of eradication worked along the following
lines, as described by one scholar of the period:

?Initially all the able-bodied men of a certain town or village would
be ordered, either by a public crier or by an official proclamation
nailed to the walls, to present themselves at the Konak [government
building]. The proclamation stated that the Armenian population would
be deported, gave the official reasons for it, and assured them that
the government was benevolent. Once at the konak, they would be
jailed for a day or two. No reason was given. Then they would be led
out of jail and marched out of town. At the first lonely halting
place they would be shot, or bayoneted to death. Some days later the
old men and the women and children were summoned in the same way; they
were often given a few days grace, but then they had to leave. It was
their misfortune not to be killed at the first desolate place. The
government?s reasoning appears to have been: the men might pose a
threat ? leaders might spring up among them, who would defy the
order; but why waste valuable lead on women, old men and children?
Instead they were forced to walk, endlessly, along pre-arranged
routes, until they died from thirst, hunger, exposure, or exhaustion.?

Jewish Liberation and The Revenge of the Turks

A declaration about Zionism released in January 25, 1915 by the
Turkish Authorities and published by Haherut, a Hebrew language
newspaper, demonstrates that Turkish hostility was to the Jewish
liberation movement of Zionism more than it was to the Jews. The
declaration was:

?The exalted Government, in its resistance to the dangerous element
known as Zionism, which is struggling to create a Jewish government in
the Palestinian area of the Ottoman Kingdom and thus placing its own
people in jeopardy, has ordered the confiscation of all postal stamps,
Zionist flags, paper money, banknotes, etc., and has declared the
dissolution of the Zionist organizations and associations, which were
secretly established. It has now become known to us that other
mischief makers are maliciously engaged in libelous attempts to assert
that our measures are directed against all Jews. These have no
application to all of those Jews who uphold our covenant?We hope and
pray that they will be forever safe, as in the past?It is only the
Zionists and Zionism, that corrupt incendiary and rebellious element,
together with other groups with such delusionary aspirations, which we
must vanquish.?

Yair Auron, in his book, The Banality of Indifference, Zionism and the
Armenian Genocide[x], wrote how the Turks almost annihilated the
Jewish community of Palestine because of the threat of Zionism. He
wrote:

?In the spring of 1917, the small Jewish community in Palestine was
stunned by an order issued by the Turkish authorities for the
deportation of the 5,000 Jews from Tel Aviv to the small farming
villages in the Sharon Plain and the Galilee. This may have been the
beginning of a plan to deport the Jews in the villages and in the
Jerusalem region as an emergency war measure, and the decree aroused
grave concern about the future of the Jewish settlement in the
country. When the deportation order became known to the Nili
organization [a hebrew spy organization], its members publicized the
plan in the world press. American Jewry was shocked, and the nations
fighting against Turkey released reports on Turkish intentions to
exterminate the Jews in Palestine, as they had already done to the
Armenians. Public opinion in the neutral countries, as well as in
Germany and the Austro-Hungarian Empire, was outraged and Jamal Pasha
was forced to reconsider his plan of action.

The Role Played by Islam

Although the direct cause of the massacres of the Armenians was the
threat they posed to the integrity of the Ottoman Empire the
underlying cause was Islam. Islam was one of the factors that led to
the Jihad that led to the conquest of Armenia. Islam was responsible
for the creation of the oppressed Armenian Dhimmi class. It was that
oppression that forced the Armenians to fight back even at tremendous
risk to themselves. The role of Islam in the massacre of the
Armenians also becomes clear in a communication between a German
witness to the deportations Scheubner Richter and the German
ambassador in Constantinople, Wangenheim, about the deportation.
Mr. Richter wrote[xi]:

?This large scale evacuation is synonymous with massacre, for in the
absence of any means of transport , hardly half of the refugees will
reach their goal alive?. Those who convert to Islam are not evicted.?

The fact that those who converted to Islam were protected shows that
the infidel status of the Armenians played a role in the thinking of
those who massacred them. Many Armenians converted in order to
survive until Talaat, Turkey?s minister of the interior, issued a
circular banning the conversion of Armenians to Islam.

Although Islam prevented the killing of Armenian converts to Islam,
Islam made it permissible to kill the Armenians and the Jews when they
rebelled. Chief Dragoman (Turkish-speaking interpreter) of the
British embassy reported regarding the 1894-96 massacres:

??[The perpetrators] are guided in their general action by the
prescriptions of the Sheri [Sharia] Law. That law prescribes that if
the “rayah” [dhimmi] Christian attempts, by having recourse to foreign
powers, to overstep the limits of privileges allowed them by their
Mussulman [Muslim] masters, and free themselves from their bondage,
their lives and property are to be forfeited, and are at the mercy of
the Mussulmans. To the Turkish mind the Armenians had tried to
overstep those limits by appealing to foreign powers, especially
England. They therefore considered it their religious duty and a
righteous thing to destroy and seize the lives and properties of the
Armenians?”

The Turkish Rescue of Jews From the Holocaust

Although Turkey turned back the Jewish refugee ship, the Struma during
World War II, there were heroic Turks who risked their lives to save
Turkish Jews from the Holocaust. This cannot be explained by desire
for money, this can only be explained by compassion, humanitarianism
and heroism. Perhaps the reforms ending the discriminatory laws of
Dhimmitude introduced into Turkish society in the 19th century by the
European powers, can partly explain the changes in Turkish society
that made this possible.

Should Turkey be Accepted into the European Union?

The stabilizing factor in Turkey that prevented radical Islamists from
taking over was the military. The army did not act to prevent the
current radical Islamic government of prime minister, Recep Tayyip
Erdogan from coming to power. The opinions of the Turkish masses are
moving against the United States and Israel partly as a result of this
governments influence over the media according to an article by Soner
Cagaptay in the Middle East Quarterly[xii]. This is alarming because
it suggests a movement away from the enlightenment that made possible
the rescue of Jews by Turks during World War II and a movement back
toward the beliefs that led to Turkey?s terrible past.

The secular Turkish army has been a stabilizing force on Turkey in the
past but if Turkey joins the European Union it is unlikely to be able
to play this role. The Anatolia news agency[xiii] quoted the European
Union envoy to Turkey, Ambassador Hansjorg Kretschmer, as saying that
?the European Turkey’s EU-inspired democracy reforms will be
incomplete if the country fails to curb the influence its powerful
army wields in politics?

New EU commissioner Olli Rehnn said on Oct. 20 that “Turkey’s EU
membership will open new horizons for both Turkey and the Union and
bring forth new challenges.” On the same day Germany’s foreign
minister Joschka Fischer went a step further and declared that Turkish
entry to the EU would be as important for Europe as the D-Day invasion
60 years ago – a key way to liberate Europe from the threat of
insecurity from the Middle East and “terrorist ideas.”

In light of these comments and the threat faced by Europe, I think the
most suitable way to finish this article is with the final sentence of
Marjorie Housepian Dobkin?s book The Smyrna Affair[xiv].

?The course of history in recent years suggests that the ultimate
victims may be those who delude themselves.?

NOTES

[i] Akyol M., “What’s Right with Turkey”,
FrontPageMagazine.com, 12/3/04

[ii] Akyol M., “What’s Right with Turkey”,
FrontPageMagazine.com, 12/3/04

[iii] Parfitt, T., ?The Jews in Palestine 1800-1822″,
The Boydell Press, 1987

[iv] Peters, J.. ?From Time Immemorial?, Harper & Row,
1984

[v] Akyol, M. “Still Standing for Islam – and Against
Terrorism” FrontPageMagazine.com 10/8/04

[vi] Klein, A. “Christians protest kidnapping forced
conversion”, Worldnetdaily.com 12/6/04

[vii] Lewis, B. ?The Arabs in History?, Oxford
University Press, 1993

[viii] Trifkovic, S. ?Turkey in the European Union? a
lethal fait accompli?, Chronicles Magazine, 10/29/04

[ix] Graber, G. S. :Caravans to Oblivion, The Armenian
Genocide: John Wiley and Sons 1996

[x] Auron, Y., The Banality of Indifference, Zionism
and the Armenian Genocide, Transactions Publishers,
New Brunswick, NJ 2000

[xi] Graber, G. S. :Caravans to Oblivion, The Armenian
Genocide: John Wiley and Sons 1996

[xii] Cagaptay, S., ?Where Goes the U.S.-Turkish
Relationship?? Middle East Quarterly, Fall 2004

[xiii] ?Turkish Army should Toe European Union line,
EU official says,?, EU Business, 6/14/03

[xiv] Dobkin, M., The Smyrna Affair, Harcourt Brace
Jovanovich, [1st ed.] 1971

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http://www.frontpagemag.com/articles/readarticle.asp?ID=16318&amp

AAE: Euro Parl. calls on Turkey to recognize the Armenian Genocide

Assembly of Armenians of Europe
Contact: Armine Grigoryan
Rue de Treves 10, 1050 Brussels
Tel: +32 2 647 08 01
Fax: +32 2 647 02 00

On its report on “Turkey’s progress towards accession” the European
Parliament calls on Turkey to recognize the Armenian Genocide

Brussels, 15/12/2004 – According to the recent information received from
the European Parliament (Strasbourg), the European Parliament voted the
84 amendments to the report on “Turkey’s progress towards accession” of
the rapporteur Camiel Eurlings and adopted the final text of the report.
Amendments regarding the recognition of the Armenian Genocide by the
Republic of Turkey, the recognition of the Greek Cyprus State, the
minority rights (etc) were submitted to the vote by the European
Parliament during the plenary session on 15/12/2004.

The amendment 18 submitted by MEP Francis Wurtz and Dimitris
Papadimoulis on behalf of the GUE/NGL group was approved by the European
Parliament and will be included in the final text of the report:

“Calls on Turkey to promote the process of reconciliation with the
Armenian people by acknowledging the genocide perpetrated against the
Armenians as expressed in Parliament’s earlier resolutions with regard
to Turkey’s candidate status (from 18 June 1987 to 1 April 2004).

In the same report the European Parliament calls upon Turkey to improve
the situation of minority rights and protect their cultural heritage; to
engage a constant dialogue with the European Parliament on women’s
rights in Turkey and take note in this regard of the resolution on the
role of women in Turkey in social, economic and political life, etc.

Armenian premier rules out Karabakh concessions to Azerbaijan

Armenian premier rules out Karabakh concessions to Azerbaijan

Arminfo
11 Dec 04

YEREVAN

Nagornyy Karabakh will never be part of Azerbaijan, Armenian Prime
Minister Andranik Markaryan has told a congress of the Yerkrapa Union
of Volunteers in Yerevan.

He went on to say that Armenia’s territory can never be a subject of
bargaining during discussions about options for settling the conflict
and that Nagornyy Karabakh should have status that would ensure the
security of the people and borders of both Nagornyy Karabakh and
Armenia. “Therefore, proposals that run counter to these principles
will be accepted neither by the Yerkrapa Union nor by the Republican
Party or political forces which do not want peace at all costs just to
resolve the problem,” Markaryan said.

Armenian Court Gives Green Light For Iraq Deployment

Armenian Court Gives Green Light For Iraq Deployment
By Anna Saghabalian 09/12/2004 09:02

Radio Free Europe, Czech Rep
Dec 9 2004

Armenia’s Constitutional Court gave the government the green light
on Wednesday to send Armenian non-combat troops to Iraq, a deployment
which Defense Minister Serzh Sarkisian claimed will spare the country
international isolation.

The ruling paved the way for a debate on the issue in parliament
dominated by President Robert Kocharian’s loyalists. Some of them
have serious misgivings about the wisdom of the deployment, sharing
concerns about the security of Iraq’s Armenian community.

But Sarkisian brushed aside those concerns as he addressed the panel
of nine judges. “Armenia could not have stayed isolated from regional
developments,” he said. “Hence, the Armenian authorities’ decision
to participate in the process of Iraq’s stabilization.”

Sarkisian warned that Armenia’s failure to follow neighboring
Azerbaijan’s and Georgia’s example and join the U.S.-led “coalition
of the willing” in Iraq “could create certain obstacles to a further
expansion of Armenia’s cooperation in the international arena.” He
did not elaborate.

The one-day court hearing centered on an agreement between Poland and
18 other countries that have troops in a Polish-led multinational
division controlling south-central Iraq. Kocharian promised to
place about 50 Armenian military doctors, sappers and truck drivers
under Polish command during a visit to Warsaw last September. The
Constitutional Court found that the agreement does not run counter
to the Armenian constitution.

Sarkisian said Yerevan will sign up to the document on the condition
that the Armenian military personnel take part only in “defensive
and humanitarian activities” and avoid joint actions with the bigger
Azerbaijani contingent. “Performance of joint tasks with the contingent
of Azerbaijani armed forces stationed in Iraq will not be acceptable,”
he said.

Speaking to reporters afterward, the powerful defense chief was
confident that the National Assembly will endorse the deployment
plans welcomed by the United States. “I think that the overwhelming
majority of our parliamentarians care about Armenia’s future and will
not make emotional decisions,” he said.

Critics have been warning that an estimated 25,000 Iraqi citizens of
Armenian descent could face retaliatory attacks from Iraqi insurgents
once Armenia becomes part of the U.S.-led occupation force. The
insurgents have routinely kidnapped and killed citizens of countries
cooperating with it.

Leaders of the Iraqi Armenians have themselves exhorted Kocharian
not to send any servicemen. Underscoring their fears was Tuesday’s
bombing of Armenian and Chaldean churches in the northern Iraqi city
of Mosul. News reports said gunmen burst in and set off explosions
inside the buildings, damaging them but hurting no one.

The Armenian Apostolic Church condemned the violence, with Catholicos
Garegin II warning of a “danger to the centuries-old co-existence
of the Christian and Islamic peoples” of Iraq. Garegin urged Iraqi
spiritual leaders to prevent the continuing unrest in the country
from degenerating into a religious conflict.

The alarm was echoed Pope John Paul II on Wednesday. “I express
my spiritual closeness to the faithful, shocked by the attacks,”
John Paul said, speaking from his apartment window above St. Peter’s
Square on the Roman Catholic feast of the Immaculate Conception.

In Yerevan, meanwhile, one of the Constitutional Court judges, Kim
Balayan, wondered if the planned deployment could put the lives of
Iraqi Armenians at greater risk. Sarkisian countered that they will
be insecure regardless of Armenian military presence in Iraq.