ANKARA: ‘Genocide’ Course For Teachers In The US

‘GENOCIDE’ COURSE FOR TEACHERS IN THE US
By Ahmet Dinc, Ankara

Zaman, Turkey
March 13 2006

The Federation of Turkish-American Associations (FTAA) in the United
States has taken the initiative to explain the true face of the
so-called Armenian genocide. The project was launched in 2006 by
the federation which believes the Armenian issue is not thoroughly
explained to American teachers.

The FTAA, beyond the Atlantic, is exerting great efforts for the
promotion of Turkey. As part of this project the federation aims at
elaborating on the details of the so-called Armenian genocide, and so
far 46 American teachers have been reached as part of this initiative.

In various cities across the US with a high Turkish population, the
FTAA plans to establish “Turkish towns”. In the days following the
“Turkish Day Parade,” this year, “Peace Day Parades” will be started
with the participation of various other nations. The federation
has also launched a campaign to send cards on special days, such
as anniversaries and birthdays, to prominent US figures including
President George W. Bush and pop star Madonna. It has also been
reported that Turks living in the US had requested an imam be provided
by the FTAA.

Establishing community associations such as the Turkish People’s
Union and the Cyprus Association, operating since 1956, Turks in
America have increased the number of such associations to more than
40, and have managed the formation of the federation. From Turkey,
Atilla Pak from Midyat in Mardin, was appointed as the FTAA president
three months ago, and as head of the federation he hopes to shed
light on the problems facing Turks, as well as the Armenian genocide
allegations. The federation, operating in the interests of the country,
continues its struggle in several other areas such as lobbying for
Turkey, Pak informs. The FTAA cooperates with organizations from nine
countries to stage the “Peace Day Parades,” and it will be a wholly
Turkish production, Pak adds.

About a thousand Turkish restaurants operate in the US, according
to the FTAA’s newly elected president. As part of their activities,
they will assemble a box to include three CDs, one will contain the
Armenian Reality, and the others will have information about Turkey
and will reflect the lives of Turks residing in the US. The evil eye,
as part of the unique Turkish tradition, will also be added to this
box bearing the slogan, “Not Turkey, but Turkiye” together with a
tulip motif. Customers at Turkish restaurants will be presented with
this box, as part of the new project initiated by the FTAA.

ANKARA: Washington – Baku Relations

WASHINGTON – BAKU RELATIONS
By Semih Idiz

Turkish Press
March 13 2006

MILLIYET- Possible US plans to invade Iran have raised Azerbaijan’s
strategic importance for Washington. This situation is infuriating
Yerevan and the Armenian lobby, because their hopes for turning
the anti-Turkish wind – raised over such factors as Hamas’ visit
to Ankara and the anti-American film ‘Valley of the Wolves Iraq’ –
into an advantage in the US Congress are now fading. The Azerbaijani
people reject the so-called Armenian claims as much as Turks do. In
short, the Bush administration knows that an Armenian “genocide”
resolution would make not only Turks, but also Azerbaijanis angry.

Therefore, the possibility that April 24 will be declared ‘Armenian
genocide commemoration day’ in the US seems to be weak this year
as well. This time the tide is working against the Armenians due
to Iran. Meanwhile, the US administration is taking certain steps
pleasing Azerbaijanis and Ankara even at the cost of making Armenians
angry. I can give two examples:

1. Washington is preparing to bring home its Ambassador to Yerevan John
Marshall Evans before his term of office ends, because, speaking to
US Armenians last year in California, Evans said that he would call
the incidents of 1915 a genocide, no matter what other people call
them. This incident made the Azerbaijanis very angry. Meanwhile,
this made the US angry, too, because it contradicts its current
policy. Firstly, it forced Evans to say that these words were
only his personal opinion and then prevented the American Foreign
Service Association (AFSA) from giving him an order of merit. Now
it’s preparing to send US Ambassador to Tajikistan Richart Hoagland
to replace him.

2. The US administration is moving to water down a law which was
passed by Congress under the pressure of the Armenian lobby. This
law envisages a balance in US military aid extended to Armenia and
Azerbaijan. Azerbaijan’s strategic importance, which rose after Sept.

11, has actually caused this balance to spoil.

The administration wants Congress’ approval so more military aid is
sent to Azerbaijan than Armenia. In addition, Washington started to
make its importance felt more for a solution of the Montenegro issue.

It sent Deputy Secretary of State Matt Bryza to the region last
week and it will send Assistant Secretary of State for European and
Eurasian Affairs Daniel Fried this week. This liveliness of course
increases Armenians’ suspicions. Meanwhile, Scott Ritter, former
weapons inspector of the United Nations, explained Azerbaijan’s
importance for the US in terms of the Iran issue in an article
on aljazeera.net. According to Ritter, Washington is preparing
Azerbaijan for a possible military operation against the regime in
Tehran. Meanwhile, it’s also watching the population of northern Iran,
which consists mostly of ethnic Azerbaijanis. We can’t know if Ritter
is right on this issue. However, it’s true that military relations
between the US and Azerbaijan have developed rapidly. This situation
provides Turkey with an important ‘strengthening’ element against
the Armenian lobby in the US.

Robert Fisk’s “The Great War For Civilization”: A Thousand Pages OfR

ROBERT FISK’S “THE GREAT WAR FOR CIVILIZATION”: A THOUSAND PAGES OF RAGE
By Robert Bryce

New Socialist Group, Canada
March 13 2006

It’s 1,000 pages of rage. One thousand and thirty eight pages, to be
exact. And Robert Fisk, one of the best, most courageous Westerners
who writes about the ongoing military conflicts in the Middle East,
justifies that rage on every page of his magnum opus, The Great War
for Civilisation: The Conquest of the Middle East.

Fisk, a reporter for the British newspaper, The Independent,
has covered the Middle East for nearly three decades. And he has
brought formidable skills to that assignment. Fluent in Arabic,
and incredibly dedicated to his job, Fisk repeatedly returns to the
very front lines of the war zones, telling the stories of individual
soldiers and their terrors.

Fisk’s willingness to repeatedly visit war zones proves his personal
bravery. He takes readers with him to the battlefields of the Iran-Iraq
War, the First Iraq War, and the Second Iraq War. And his unflinching
descriptions of what he sees are not to be read by the squeamish. In
one visit to a hospital in Baghdad, he writes “I’ll leave out the
description of the flies that have been clustering round the wounds
in the Kindi emergency rooms, of the blood caked on the sheets and
the dirty pillow cases, the streaks of blood on the floor, the blood
still dripping from the wounds of those I talked to.

All were civilians. All wanted to know why they had to suffer.” There
are dozens of other horrifying passages in this book ­descriptions
of bodies blown apart by bomb blasts, of severed heads. There are
vivid descriptions of the torture procedures used by the Iranians,
the Iraqis, the Israelis and others. And by page 1,000 or so when
Fisk catalogs some of Saddam Hussein’s favorite methods of torture,
it becomes too much to tolerate. But there’s a reason for Fisk’s
gruesome recitations: they are graphic (perhaps pornographic) pictures
of warfare and despotism.

Blood and guts aside, Fisk is a graceful, passionate writer. And it’s
the passion that makes this book sing. Fisk plays no favorites. He is
disgusted by the duplicity and mendacity of Western leaders and Arab
leaders alike. His passion is for the ordinary people that he meets.

And he introduces us to many: the survivors of the Armenian genocide,
the Iraqi victims of American bombing attacks, the Palestinian victims
of Israeli missile attacks, the Iranian soldiers who were hit by Saddam
Hussein’s poison gas assaults, the young Algerian who was subjected
to savage torture by Algerian policemen. (Again, vivid descriptions
of the torture methods that are not for the squeamish).

He also provides insights into the views of Osama bin Laden, who Fisk
has interviewed twice.

Fisk’s book is particularly interesting for American readers ­like
this reviewer who seldom see news coverage of the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict that tells of the conflict from the Palestinian side. In 1982,
Fisk was among the first reporters to visit the Sabra and Shatila
refugee camps in Lebanon after several thousand Palestinians were
slaughtered by the Christian Phalangists allied with the Israelis. Fisk
repeatedly points out how the occupation of the West Bank and Gaza
has fomented the ongoing conflicts in the region. “There was one
outstanding, virtually unchanging phenomenon which ensured that the
Middle East balance of power remained unchanged: America’s unwavering,
largely uncritical, often involuntary support of Israel. Israel’s
‘security’ or supposed lack thereof became the yardstick for all
negotiations, all military threats and all wars.”

Fisk reserves special disdain for reporters from the western media
outlets and particularly for the New York Times, the paper that led
the American media’s cheerleading in the months before the launch of
the Second Iraq War in 2003. Fisk says that the Times was a “virtual
mouthpiece for scores of anonymous U.S. ‘officials'” all of whom
supported the war. And he shows how newspapers in Britain and the
U.S. trumpeted every bit of fabricated news about Saddam Hussein’s
alleged weapons of mass destruction while ignoring the data coming
from independent analysts which suggested that Iraq did not, in fact,
have any.

Fisk recounts the latest chapters of the West’s ongoing militarization
of the region. “In 1998 and 1999 alone, Gulf Arab military spending
came to $92 billion. Since 1997, the Emirates alone had signed
contracts worth more than $11 billion, adding 112 aircraft to their
arsenal” He tells of meeting arms designer Mikhail Kalashnikov at
an Abu Dhabi arms bazaar in 2001. The man who created the AK-47,
the weapon that has become a symbol of warfare around the world,
was “a small, squat man with grey coiffed hair and quite a few gold
teeth.” And Fisk allows Kalashnikov to tell his version of history,
that he is not to blame for the violence done by the rifle that bears
his name, instead, “I think the policies of these countries are to
blame, not the weapons designers. Man is born to protect his family”

Fisk seems to have been at every important event affecting the Middle
East over the past three decades. He has seen the Israeli invasion of
southern Lebanon, the Iran-Iraq war, the defeat of the Soviet army in
Afghanistan, the Algerian civil war and Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait. He
was at the United Nations in February of 2003 to hear Secretary of
State Colin Powell presented his dubious evidence against Iraq. And
of course, Fisk was in Baghdad a few weeks later when the U.S. began
what he calls “this frivolous, demented conflict.”

The most powerful passage in this book comes on page 378, where Fisk
dismantles the rhetoric being used by the Bush Administration and
other politicians to justify the massive militarization of Iraq and
other regions of the Middle East. Fisk strips naked Bush’s vaunted
“global war on terrorism” by showing how Bush and others are debasing
the language. It’s a passage so powerful that I dearly wish I’d
written it myself. It deserves full quotation:

“Terrorism” is a word that has become a plague on our vocabulary,
the excuse and reason and moral permit for state-sponsored violence
our violence which is now used on the innocent of the Middle East ever
more outrageously and promiscuously. Terrorism, terrorism, terrorism.

It has become a full stop, a punctuation mark, a phrase, a speech,
a sermon, a be-all and end-all of everything that we must hate in
order to ignore injustice and occupation and murder on a mass scale.

Terror, terror, terror, terror. It is a sonata, a symphony, an
orchestra tuned to every television and radio station and news
agency report, the soap-opera of the Devil, served up on prime-time
or distilled in wearingly dull and mendacious form by the right-wing
“commentators” of the American east coast or the Jerusalem Post or
the intellectuals of Europe. Strike against Terror. Victory over
Terror. War on Terror. Everlasting War on Terror. Rarely in history
have soldiers and journalists and presidents and kings aligned
themselves in such thoughtless unquestioning ranks. In August 1914,
the soldiers thought they would be home by Christmas. Today we are
fighting for ever. The war is eternal.

This is not a perfect book. I wished for better attribution and more
footnotes. Fisk helpfully place his footnotes on the page in which
the notes appears, rather than hiding them in the back of the book.

But there are too few footnotes and too few attributions of sources
and quotations. Second, and most obvious, this book is too long.

Better editing could have cut the book by a third and still made it
work. That said, Fisk’s ability to sustain his rage for 1,030 pages
is remarkable and laudable. And for the dedicated readers who finally
reach page 861, they will find Fisk’s personal credo. There he quotes
the Pakistani national poet Allam Mohammed Iqbal, who wrote “Of God’s
command, the inner meaning do you know? To live in constant anger is
a life indeed.”

Fisk’s a man of constant anger. And he directs it toward the
miscreants who have used their violence on the Middle East “ever more
outrageously and promiscuously.” And yet, amidst Fisk’s rage and
righteous indignation lies an unspoken, secular prayer for peace,
a prayer that the violence that has haunted the entire region for
decades might one day be stopped. It’s a long prayer 1,038 pages but
it deserves to be read by everyone interested in knowing the modern
history of the Middle East.

Robert Bryce is the author of Cronies: Oil, the Bushes, and
the Rise of Texas, America’s Superstate. He may be reached at
[email protected].

–Boundary_(ID_2Y7Dgjv MjMMVJuAye4jX1g)–

BAKU: Stockselius:”Information On Armenian Singer To Be Changed On O

STOCKSELIUS: “INFORMATION ON ARMENIAN SINGER TO BE CHANGED ON OFFICIAL WEBSITE OF EUROVISION”

Today, Azerbaijan
URL:
March 13 2006

“Some changes will be made to the information on Armenian singer Andre
after the letter by the Azerbaijani Culture and Tourism Ministry,”
said Svante Stockselius, the head of the Song Contests Unit of the
European Broadcasting Union Television Department.

“The competition is not political event. Therefore, the information
placed on the official web site of Eurovision can not include political
motive,” Trend reports quoting Svante Stockselius, the head of the
Song Contests Unit of the European Broadcasting Union Television
Department, as stating by Lider TV channel.

The Azerbaijani Culture and Tourism Ministry sent a letter to the
organizers of the competition, where it noted that Nagorno Karabakh was
integral part of the Azerbaijan Republic and called on the organizers
of the competitions to clear up the mess.

It should be mentioned that the reason for dissatisfaction of
Azerbaijan was placement of the information on the web site that
Armenian singer Andre was born in “Nagorno Karabakh Republic”. It must
be regarded as disrespect to the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan
and support to the aggressive policy of Armenia, a letter says.

http://www.today.az/news/society/24093.html

Kenya: Mercenary Claims Acquire New Twist

MERCENARY CLAIMS ACQUIRE NEW TWIST
By Graham Kirwa ( Monday, March 13, 2006)

Kenya Broadcasting Corporation, Kenya
March 13 2006

One Artur Sargsyan who was alleged by Langata MP Raila Odinga as
being part of mercenaries operating in the country Monday denied
the allegation accusing Raila of trying to defraud him of over 100
million shillings he lent him.

Speaking at Jomo Kenyatta International Airport Sargasyan who claims
to be an uncle to Armenian president alleged that Raila and Kalonzo
Musyoka approached him for a loan of 3 billion shillings to finance
a vote of no confidence in the government which he and his brother
Artur Margaryan declined.

He claimed that he owns vast business empires in Dubai and various
investments in other countries.

Sargsyan said he come to Kenya last year to seeking investment in
Hotel industry upon which he was introduced to Kalonzo and Raila.

He has now threatened legal action against Raila and Kalonzo for
tarnishing his name and reputation.

He said he jetted to Kenya Monday to demand his money from Raila
Odinga and clear his name.

Meanwhile Raila Odinga and Kalonzo Musyoka have refuted Sargasyan
claims saying allegation that they had sought 3 billion shillings to
fund a vote of no confidence in the government as bassles and lacking
in authenticity.

Raila claimed that he has never met Sargasyan and has never transacted
any business with him. He has challenged Sargasyan to table prove
that he lent him 1.5 millions US dollars and where the business
was transacted.

Raila alleges that was a conspiracy to malign his name. Kalonzo Muyoka
on his part claimed that he might have met Sargasyan but has never
sought a loan of 3 billion shillings from any quarter.

Kalonzo also denied discussing the acquisition of bullet proof jacket
with Sargasyan. Kalonzo dismissed the allegation as a ploy to taint
his name.

Turkish Ngo’s To Protest France’s Genocide Recognition

TURKISH NGO’S TO PROTEST FRANCE’S GENOCIDE RECOGNITION

ABHAber
March 13 2006

Turkish groups in France are set to join forces in Paris today to
work to overturn the French Parliament’s recognition of the so-called
Armenian genocide.

For the first meeting of an umbrella committee spearheaded by
local offices of the Anatolian Culture Centers and Kemalist Thought
Association, some 300 Turkish associations in France were invited.

Today’s meeting is going to be held to exchange ideas for the goals
and work of the committee. A public statement after the meeting
is planned to announce how the committee will campaign against the
legislative recognition.

At a press conference last week, the groups organizing the committee
meeting demanded that Parliament’s recognition of the “genocide” in
2001 be reversed, saying that judging history was up to the historians,
not lawmakers.

BAKU: Eurovision Organizers:”The False Information On Armenian Parti

EUROVISION ORGANIZERS: “THE FALSE INFORMATION ON ARMENIAN PARTICIPANT IN THE WEBSITE WILL BE CORRECTED”

Azeri Press Agency, Azerbaijan
March 13 2006

Showing of the place of birth of the Armenian participant as “Nagorno
Garabagh Republic” in the official website of the Eurovision song
contest does not aim any political content, the organizers of the
song contest told (APA).

The organizers said that the organizational committee of the contest
has already received the protest letter sent by Azerbaijan’s Culture
and Tourism Ministry and, they will correct the false information soon.

Azerbaijan’s Culture and Tourism Ministry sent a letter to the
organizers of the song contest protesting to the information on the
official website of the Eurovision song contest that the Armenian
participant Andre was born in the “Nagorno Garabagh Republic”.

The Ministry stated that this fact might be assessed as disrespect
to Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity and provocation as well as the
contest organizers’ support for Armenia’s aggressive policy against
Azerbaijan.

“We hope the organizers of the Eurovision song contest, which serves
cultural diversity and intercultural dialogue, will remove this
misunderstanding soon, and respect Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity
recognized by world states,” the Ministry wrote in the letter.

BAKU: Meeting Of Presidium Of PFUAP Held

MEETING OF PRESIDIUM OF PFUAP HELD
Author: J.Shahverdiyev

TREND Information, Azerbaijan
March 13 2006

The Popular Front of United Azerbaijan Party (PFUAP) regards signing
of agreement between Azerbaijan and Turkey on mutual military
cooperation. The issue was considered at the meeting on Monday,
Trend reports.

The meeting underlined that it was necessary to sign a contract on
military cooperation after setting the bilateral cooperation. The
document is due to meet the agreement on cooperation between
Armenia and Russia. The same time the meeting stressed the efforts on
strengthening cooperation with NATO within the individual partnership
program and further membership of the country to NATO.

The members of the Board also discussed the last report by the U.S.

State Department and the course of negotiations on regulation of the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

TBILISI: U.S. Declines Russia’s Policy Of Universality In ConflictRe

U.S. DECLINES RUSSIA’S POLICY OF UNIVERSALITY IN CONFLICT RESOLUTIONS

Civil Georgia, Georgia
March 13 2006

The United States considers that conflicts in South Caucasus are
“unique” which should be dealt “with on their own merits,” Sean
McCormack, U.S. Department of State Spokesman, said on March 8.

He was responding to a question regarding the Russia’s position
solution on the status of Kosovo should be “universal” in character
and applicable for the conflicts in the post-soviet space.

“I think, again, these are issues that are unique unto themselves
that have to be taken on their own merits and be dealt with as
separate issues. You [referring to a journalist] mentioned conflicts
in Nagorno-Karabakh and South Ossetia. Each of those have unique
characteristics that need to be dealt with on their own merits and
that’s how we view the issue,” Sean McCormack said.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Armenian Peacekeeping Battalion Can Be Reformed In Brigade

ARMENIAN PEACEKEEPING BATTALION CAN BE REFORMED IN BRIGADE

Regnum, Russia
March 13 2006

Armenian peacekeeping battalion can be reformed in a brigade, Armenian
Deputy Minister of Defense Artur Agabekyan stated during a seminar
in Yerevan on March 13. He said that it was caused by reforms in
county’s defense system that will fit NATO standards and logics of
professional army establishment.

One must note that Armenian peacekeepers are currently on duties in
Iraq and Kosovo. Third relief of Armenian peacekeepers, consisting
of 46 people departed to Iraq on January 18.

As REGNUM already informed, in the fall 2005, the Armenian Parliament
approved prolongation of Armenian peacekeepers mandate in Iraq for
another year, Armenian peacekeepers are part of Polish peacekeeping
mission. All charges for dislocation, communication, medicine and
other corresponding needs bears the US government. Memorandum on
participation of Armenian peacekeepers in Iraqi operation in staff
of Polish division was ratified in the fall 2004.