Year: 2010

  • Armenia and Turkey: The truce in need of a rescue

    Armenia and Turkey: The truce in need of a rescue

    Opinion


    They have a chance to make peace over their troubled past and move forward — or balk and leave themselves, and their region, worse off than before.

    By Henri J. Barkey and Thomas de Waal
    February 5, 2010

    For a while, it looked like the start of a great reconciliation. Armenia and Turkey have lived beneath the vast shadow of the mass murder of Armenians in eastern Turkey during World War I, and to this day they maintain no diplomatic ties. But in October, the Armenian and Turkish foreign ministers met in Switzerland and signed two protocols to set up relations, open their common border — closed since 1993 — and begin addressing the painful disputes that divide them. Each nation’s governments must still ratify the agreements. The United States, with its large Armenian American community and strategic alliance with Turkey, threw its weight behind the deal.

    But this great truce is already in need of a rescue, and if it breaks down, we will end up in a worse place than where we started. In January, Turkey showed signs of having cold feet. Its foreign ministry objected to a judgment by the Armenian constitutional court supporting the protocols on the grounds that they are consistent with the founding principles of the state, which commit it to pursuing recognition of the 1915 killings as genocide.

    The endorsement of the court, which the U.S. government welcomed, actually opens the way for the Armenian parliament to ratify the protocols. Turkey’s move was a fairly transparent device to put the brakes on the process.

    Why is Turkey trying to backtrack? Its government agreed to the protocols, in part because it wanted to prevent the U.S. administration and Congress from passing a resolution describing the Armenian massacres as genocide. But Ankara was surprised by the vehemence of the opposition the deal generated both at home and in its ally, Azerbaijan, which lost a conflict with the Armenians over the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh in the early 1990s.

    The text of the protocols does not explicitly mention Nagorno-Karabakh, but the dispute looms large in the background. Turkey originally shut the border with Armenia in 1993; the Armenians captured an Azerbaijani province during the Nagorno-Karabakh war. When the accord was signed last year, the Turks hoped that there would be a breakthrough in the peace talks over the conflict, but that hope is fading. Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has boxed himself in by proclaiming that the protocols will not be implemented until Armenia withdraws from occupied Azerbaijani territory.

    A rapprochement would be good news for Armenia, which would see its main border to the West opened and an end to years of regional isolation. Yet Armenian President Serge Sarkisian also faces unexpectedly strong opposition. In the diaspora, there are loud complaints that the provisions to confirm the existing Armenian-Turkish border and set up a joint historians’ commission on the massacres relieve pressure on Ankara to own up to the Armenian genocide.

    Yet the world would never tolerate a redrawing of Turkey’s borders — even Josef Stalin failed to accomplish that in the flush of victory over the Nazis in 1945 — and the Turkish government is unlikely to recognize the Armenian genocide with a gun pressed to its head. Turkey’s own growing internal debate about the crimes of 1915 is a much surer road to their eventual acknowledgment than political lobbying from abroad.

    On the Armenian side, it would be political suicide for Sarkisian to make a major concession over Nagorno-Karabakh — such as a unilateral withdrawal from occupied Azerbaijani land. Yet it is not unreasonable for the Turks to expect some progress. After all, they closed the Armenian border in solidarity with their Azerbaijani brethren, who would be furious if it were reopened without any move forward on the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute. At the very least, Azerbaijan could retaliate by charging the Turks higher gas prices and favoring Russian export routes over the Nabucco gas pipeline projected to traverse Turkey en route to Europe.

    Allowing these protocols to fail would unleash a destructive chain of events. An aggrieved U.S. Congress might press ahead with a genocide resolution, a move that would provoke a strong anti-American backlash in Turkey. The already faltering peace process over the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict — the major issue impeding peaceful development in the South Caucasus — would be hit hard, and calls for war could resume in Azerbaijan.

    But Armenia can take smaller steps to break the deadlock. Owing to the geography of this region, everyone suffers. Azerbaijan also has an isolated territory that suffers economically — the exclave of Nakhichevan, separated from the rest of Azerbaijan by an unfriendly Armenia, its road and rail links severed. As a gesture of goodwill, the Yerevan government could take steps to ease the blockade of Nakhichevan in parallel with the opening of the Armenian-Turkish border. The Armenians could also begin work on rehabilitating the long-defunct railway line that once connected Azerbaijan, Armenia, Nakhichevan and Turkey. It is a sad symbol of the closed borders and suspicions that cripple this region, but one day it could be a major east-west transport route. The Turks would be wise to hail such an initiative as a success and move on with ratifying the protocols.

    More broadly, better relations with Armenia offer Turkey a chance to lift the burden of history from its shoulders. Turkey’s ambitious foreign policy, with its goal of “zero problems with its neighbors” and becoming the central power in its region, will come to nothing if its enmity with Armenia endures. Tiny Armenia may be dwarfed by Turkey’s size and clout, but it can lay claim to a moral imperative.

    Henri J. Barkey is a professor of international relations at Lehigh University and a visiting senior scholar at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, where Thomas de Waal is a senior associate on the Caucasus.

    Copyright © 2010, The Los Angeles Times

  • Those Who Continued Living in Turkey

    Those Who Continued Living in Turkey

    ‘Those Who Continued Living in Turkey’ at ACF

    On Sun., Feb. 14, Dr. Rubina Peroomian will present a lecture titled “And Those Who Continued Living in Turkey after 1915” at the Armenian Cultural Foundation (ACF) in Arlington, Mass. The event is organized by the Boston Chapter of the Hamazkayin Armenian Educational and Cultural Society.

    The recent political developments in the world have created a new atmosphere whereby the events of 1915 and the plight of the Armenian survivors in Turkey, be they Christian, Islamized, or hidden, have been espoused and fictionalized in the literature of Turkey. Artistic expressions echo the continuing trauma in the life of these “rejects of the sword,” a Turkish moniker for Armenians, having “undeservedly” escaped from death. The stories that Turkish writers unearth and the daring memoirs of Turkish citizens with an Armenian in their ancestry, as well as obscured references to these same stories and events in Turkish-Armenian literature, have unveiled the full picture of survival, with an everlasting memory of the lost ones, but also of forced conversions, of nurturing the “enemy” in the bosom, and of the dehumanization and sexual torture of men and women.

    A multifaceted image, an identity, of what is broadly generalized as Turkish-Armenian, thus emerges—a phenomenon that contradicts the long-researched and explored concept of the Diasporan Armenian post-genocide ethnic identity. Nevertheless, the sociopolitical and religious impositions and the hegemony of Muslim identity have not yet been fully challenged. External pressures may influence the metamorphosis of the Turkish state, but the real change should come from within the Turkish society. That change may be underway. Peroomian’s recent book And Those Who Continued Living in Turkey After 1915 addresses the issues of the psychology of the survivors of the Armenian Genocide who remained in Turkey, their lifestyle after the tragedy, and the struggle to preserve their identity. What happened to the women and the children who were kidnapped during the massacre? What happened to those Armenians who were forced to adopt Islam? How does the Armenian community of Istanbul live, and what does it do to preserve its Armenian identity?

    Peroomian, a lecturer of Armenian language and literature, is currently a research associate at UCLA. She is the author of several books, textbooks, chapters in books, and research articles in scholarly journals on Armenians and the Armenian Genocide. Her major publications include Literary Responses to Catastrophe: A Comparison of the Armenian and the Jewish Experience (1993); Armenia in the Sphere of Relations between the Armenian Revolutionary Federation and the Bolsheviks, 1917-1921 (1997) in the Armenian language (translated and published in Russian); The Armenian Question, a series of textbooks in Armenian for grades 10-12 (1990-99); and a comprehensive textbook of the History of the Armenian Question for high schools in Armenia (2000). And Those Who Continued Living in Turkey after 1915 (2008) is her most recent publication. Peroomian has lectured widely and has participated in several international symposia. She received a Lifetime Achievement Award by the Armenian Educational Foundation and the Mesrob Mashtots Medal with an encyclical by His Holiness Aram I Catholicos of Cilicia.

    The lecture begins at 4 p.m., and is free and open to the public. The Armenian Cultural Foundation is located on 441 Mystic St. in Arlington. For more information, call (617) 924-8849 or email [email protected].

    ***

    Hamazkayin-Boston aims to uphold the ethnic identity and cultural heritage of the Armenian community in the Greater Boston Area by cultivating and promoting local, national, and international Armenian arts; celebrating important educational and cultural milestones in our history; and engaging the youth and young professionals in educational and cultural issues of importance to the Armenian community, thereby cultivating the next generation of local and national community leaders.

    Hamazkayin-Boston holds bi-weekly meetings on Monday evening at the Hamasdegh Library, located on the second floor of the Armenian Educational and Cultural Center (ACEC) on 47 Nichols Ave. in Watertown. Their meetings are open to all who would like to help promote our cultural treasures. For more information, visit or email [email protected].

    Peroomian to Lecture on ‘Those Who Continued Living in Turkey’ at ACF (Date/Time Update)

    ——————-

    Artist: Varteni

    Category: Painter
    Profile: Varteni was born in Istanbul on june 24, 1953 to an Armenian family. Her schoolings, first at the Armenian grade school then at the Austrian Sankt Georg Gymnasium, significantly contributed to her early development. She arrived in Boston, MA at age 16, attended Lynn Classical High, enrolled at Cal Arts in Los Angeles and in 1979 received her BFA from the University of Central Florida (UCF). Her biography has been published in the Who is Who of American Women 1999.
    More information: Please visit www.varteni.com to view a sampling of Varteni’s works.

  • La Toya Jackson: ‘They murdered my brother’

    La Toya Jackson: ‘They murdered my brother’

    La Toya Jackson, sister of the late King of Pop Michael Jackson, has claimed that more people were responsible for the death of her brother and she would provide the facts to prove it.

    La Toya Jackson
    La Toya Jackson

    Los Angeles prosecutors plan to file a criminal case in the death of Michael Jackson that is expected to include a charge of involuntary manslaughter against the singer’s doctor, Conrad Murray.

    La Toya said she would be attending the court case but also claimed: “They murdered my brother and they know who they are. It’s not just Dr. Murray I promise you that. It’s more people involved and they know exactly who they are and I’m going to let you guys know exactly what’s happening, what’s going on.”

    Looking visibly shaken, she was then driven away in a car.

    The Los Angeles District Attorney’s office said on Friday details of its case would be released on Monday, but gave no further details.

    Sources close to the case said Dr. Murray, who has been under investigation for months, would be charged with the crime of unlawfully killing another person without malice or intent. If convicted, he faces up to four years in jail.

    Video link:

    ITN

  • ARMENIAN AND JEWISH COMMUNITY LEADERS OF AMERICA TO LAUNCH GRASSROOTS PETITION FOR U.S. REAFFIRMATION OF THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

    ARMENIAN AND JEWISH COMMUNITY LEADERS OF AMERICA TO LAUNCH GRASSROOTS PETITION FOR U.S. REAFFIRMATION OF THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

    Noyan Tapan
    Feb 3, 2010

    BOSTON, FEBRUARY 3, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. The Boston based
    coalition of Armenian and Jewish Community Leaders launched grassroots
    petition urging all people to sign a letter to President Obama and
    Congress that calls for swift passage of H. Res. 252, reported the
    Armenian Assembly of America.

    The Armenian American Action Committee of Massachusetts< SPAN class=ecxecxApple-converted-space> (ARAMAC-MA),
    Armenian National Committee of Massachusetts, the Massachusetts Jewish
    community and Assembly anti-genocide coalition partner Investor’s
    Against Genocide were instrumental in launching the petition and
    resource page.

    Herman Purutyan, ARAMAC-MA State Chair and coalition member stated that
    was an exciting collaboration of two communities, who have experienced
    the ultimate crime against humanity, to stop future genocides wherever
    they may occur.

    “As two communities, Jewish and Armenian, we ask our fellow citizens
    to let the President and Congress know that the recognition of the
    Armenian Genocide is critically important, not only because it is
    morally the right thin g to do, but also it is necessary to prevent
    such crimes from happening again.”

    ————————–

    From: [email protected]
    Date: Fri, 5 Feb 2010 15:20:13 -0500
    Subject: Re: [TheArmenianGroup] ARMENIAN AND JEWISH COMMUNITY LEADERS OF AMERICA TO LAUNCH GRASSROOTS PETITION FOR U.S. REAFFIRMATION OF THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

    They are not Jewish community leaders of China.

    dp

    Jerry Tutunjian wrote:

    The headline is misleading. It says that Jewish community leaders of America are backing the petition, but in fact it’s just the Massachusetts branch. Mainstream American-Jewish organizations continue to lobby on behalf of Turkey. “Meg dzaghigov karoun cheekar.”
    Jirair

  • CALL FOR PAPERS FOR THE SPRING 2010 ISSUE OF  THE CAUCASIAN REVIEW OF INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS

    CALL FOR PAPERS FOR THE SPRING 2010 ISSUE OF THE CAUCASIAN REVIEW OF INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS

    The Caucasian Review of International Affairs (CRIA) is pleased to invite submissions for its Spring 2010 issue (Vol. 4, No. 2) to be published in the beginning of May 2010. Deadline for submissions is March 15, 2010. Submission guidelines can be viewed at Submit a Paper.

    Nasimi Aghayev [[email protected]]

    CRIA is particularly interested in papers on the following topics:
    Regional topics:

    – Prospects of the resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict;
    – Turkish-Armenian rapprochement;
    – Relations between Azerbaijan and Turkey;

    – Separatist conflicts in Georgia;

    – Western energy interests in the South Caucasus and Central Asia;
    – Nabucco gas pipeline;

    – White Stream gas pipeline;
    – European Union and the South Caucasus;
    – European Union and the conflict resolution in the South Caucasus;
    – Georgia and NATO;
    – Russian policy towards the South Caucasus;
    – New US Administration and the South Caucasus;
    – Prospects of the South Caucasian regional security;
    – Regional integration in the South Caucasus;
    – Situation in the North Caucasus;
    – Ethno-nationalism and violence in the North-Western Caucasus;
    – Different faces of Sufi Islam in the present-day North Caucasus;
    – Israel in the Caucasus;
    – Azerbaijan’s foreign policy;
    – Azerbaijan’s relations with the Moslem world;

    – Relations between Azerbaijan and Georgia;

    – Islam in Azerbaijan; Islam in the Caucasus;
    – Foreign policy of Armenia;
    – Iran-Armenia relations;
    – Azerbaijani community of Iran;
    – Legal status of the Caspian Sea;
    – Azerbaijan-Turkmenistan legal dispute over the oil fields in the Caspian Sea;
    – Turkey’s new foreign policy;
    – Turkey ‘s accession to the EU;
    – Iran-Turkey relations;
    – Iran’s nuclear program;
    – New Islamic directions in Central Asia: internal and external dimensions;
    – Global and regional powers in Central Asia;
    – Energy security in Central Asia;
    – Ukraine ‘s foreign policy;
    – Moldova’s foreign policy;

    – GUAM and its future;
    – Armenian Diaspora and lobby in the US;

    – US missile defense shield in Eastern Europe.
    International relations and general topics:

    – Theory of International Relations;
    – Problems of the Modern International Law;
    – International Law and current world politics;

    – International Court of Justice and the separatist conflicts;
    – US foreign policy;
    – Russia’s foreign policy;
    – China’s foreign policy;
    – Foreign policy challenges for the European Union.

    This is a preliminary list. Please feel free to offer alternative topics, including commentaries and book reviews, to the Editor.

    All correspondence and submissions should be e-mailed to:

    contact[at]cria-online.org

    The CRIA distinguishes itself as the only open-access peer-reviewed e-journal worldwide covering a variety of topics on the Caucasus. Being based in Germany the CRIA is published quarterly in English. The Review is committed to promote a better understanding of the regional affairs by providing relevant background information and analysis, as far as the Caucasus in general, and the South Caucasus in particular are concerned. The CRIA also welcomes and publishes lucid, well-documented papers on other countries and regions including especially Turkey, Iran, Central Asia, Russia, Ukraine, and Eastern Europe, as well as on all aspects of international affairs, from all political viewpoints. The CRIA is indexed/abstracted in Columbia International Affairs Online, ProQuest Research Library, EBSCOhost Political Science Complete, Directory of Open Access Journals, Ulrich’s Periodicals Directory, Deutsche Nationalbibliothek, etc. The last issue of the Review can be viewed at

    Caucasian Review of International Affairs

    Eppsteiner Str. 2, 60323 Frankfurt am Main, Germany
    Tel: +49 69 138 76 684
    E-mail: [email protected]
    Web: www.cria-online.org

    ISSN: 1865-6773

  • ARMENIA, NATO DEVELOPING COOPERATION

    ARMENIA, NATO DEVELOPING COOPERATION

    ARMENIA, NATO DEVELOPING COOPERATION

    Armenia-NATO cooperation is successfully developing. New events in the framework of the Individual Partnership Action Plan, said Robert Simmons, NATO special representative for Caucasus and Central Asia. “We are continuing cooperation with the Armenian Defense Ministry. NATO assists implementation of reforms and development of strategically important documents,” he told a news conference in Yerevan. Mr. Simmons said the Alliance is thankful to Armenia for participation in peacekeeping missions in Kosovo and Afghanistan. He also informed that NATO is negotiating establishment of anti-crisis reaction center with the RA Ministry of Emergency Situations.

    Nazar [[email protected]]

    —————————-

    Armenia to develop cooperation with NATO

    The 6th International NATO Seminar was initiated by the Armenian Atlantic Association(ААА) in Yerevan on Mar. 13-14. The Seminar “South Caucasian Youth Forum. 60th Anniversary of NATO – The New Beginning” was organized with the assistance of NATO and the US Embassy in Armenia. 30 representatives of Armenia, Russia, Ukraine, Slovenia, Georgia, Latvia, Turkey as well as the US Ambassador to Armenia Marie Yovanovitch, GB Ambassador to Armenia Charles Lonsdale and NATO official representatives participated in the seminar.

    European integration, in particular, development of relations with NATO is one of the priorities in the Armenian foreign policy, said Arman Israelyan, Head of the Armenian Foreign Ministry Department for NATO, speaking at the opening of the seminar ‘South-Caucasian Youth Forum: 60th Anniversary of NATO: New Start.

    Armenia is interested in maintaining the relations with NATO as never before. The country’s involvement into the NATO PfP project is one of the most important elements of the country’s multiple-aspect security system and even one of the dynamically developing dimensions of the foreign policy, he said. A. Israelyan highlighted the importance of Armenia-NATO cooperation in reforming the military system of Armenia where NATO provides consultations and renders specialized assistance to Armenia. The final goal of the reform is to bring the Armenian army in conformity with European standards.

    ‘Participation of the Armenian contingent in the peacemaking mission in Kosovo is very important to us. The Foreign ministry is currently studying the issue of sending an Armenian contingent to Afghanistan. In 2008 the number of Armenian peacemakers to Kosovo has been doubled. The ministry is likely to adopt a decision to send a contingent also to Afghanistan’, he said.

    In the nearest future Armenia’s new Individual Partnership Action Plan (IPAP) with NATO, meant for two years, will be adopted.  The NATO representatives, who participated in the sixth annual youth seminar informed on this.