"It is the responsibility of Islam to embrace the liberties required for citizens of a modern state, and not the other way around." Family Security Matters
Friday, March 5, 2010
Turkey Angry At U.S. Armenian 'Genocide' Vote
The sign affixed to the black wreath reads "We didn't do genocide. We defended our country."
Sadly in Turkey that is the only thing you are allowed to say!! No genocide committed here!!
And as PM Erdogan would add ~ No Muslim could commit a genocide!!
Armenian orphans are seen in this undated handout photo taken by John Elder as he travelled throughout Armenian populated regions between 1917 and 1919.
(RFE/RL) -- Turkey has reacted angrily to a U.S. congressional panel's resolution branding the World War I-era mass killings of Armenians by Ottoman Turks as "genocide."
Turkey recalled its ambassador to the United States for consultations after the House Foreign Affairs Committee narrowly approved the resolution on March 4. In a written statement, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said the resolution accused Turkey "of a crime that it has not committed."
He also expressed serious concerns that the nonbinding resolution would harm Turkish-U.S. ties and efforts by Muslim Turkey and Christian Armenia to bury a century of hostility.
Riot police block the entrance of the U.S. Embassy during a demonstration in Ankara March 5, 2010. Riot police block the entrance of the U.S.
Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said Turkey would press ahead with those efforts, stemming from an October 2009 accord aimed at normalizing bilateral relations. But he also said parliamentary ratification of that agreement was now at risk.
"Rapprochement needs political will," Davutoglu said. "This is hard to reach, but if we work together it's not an unreachable goal."
Davutoglu also said Ankara was "seriously disturbed" by the measure and warned of a breakdown in Turkish-U.S. ties.
Murat Mercan was part of a Turkish parliamentary delegation that had gone to Washington to try to persuade members of the House of Representatives committee to reject the resolution.
Giving his reaction after the vote, he warned that Ankara doesn't "bluff."
"We are a big very important country. We don't bluff. Whatever we said in the past will come true," Mercan said. "You will all see the government, the prime minister, the foreign minister working on possible reactions and consequences."
'Important Step'
The White House had also urged the U.S. lawmakers not to pass the resolution, saying it would offend NATO member Turkey at a time when relations with Ankara are crucial for U.S. Middle East policy.
Armenians rest in a tent camp in the Syrian desert in this undated handout photo taken by Armin Wegner, a German 2nd Lieutenant stationed in the Ottoman Empire.
Armenia, however, described the vote as a boost for human rights.
In Yerevan, Armenian Foreign Minister Eduard Nalbandian said the vote was "another proof of the devotion of the American people to universal human values" and was "an important step toward the prevention of crimes against humanity."
Armenian-American groups have sought congressional affirmation of the killings as genocide for decades and welcomed the March 4 vote -- despite expressing disappointment at the Obama administration's efforts to block the measure. The Armenian Assembly of America told RFE/RL's Armenian Service it was satisfied with the vote, which it said came "in the face of extreme tactics."
A family of Armenian deportees is seen in this undated handout photo taken by Armin Wegner, a German 2nd Lieutenant stationed in the Ottoman Empire. Wegner was investigating reports of Armenian massacres by taking photographs of deportation camps, primarily in the Syrian desert. A U.S.
And Kenneth Hachikian, chairman of the Armenian National Committee of America, denounced the "incredible pressure from the Turkish government" on U.S. lawmakers. He told reporters that the committee's vote showed that "Turkey doesn't get a vote or a veto in the U.S. Congress."
"We are very gratified that the House Foreign Affairs Committee chose to prevent Turkey from imposing a gag rule on U.S. foreign policy," Hachikian said, "and decided to stand up for peace and justice and to bring forward the truth of the Armenian genocide."
In Turkey ally Azerbaijan, the executive secretary of the ruling Yeni Azerbaijan Party, Ali Ahmadov, expressed regret and denounced a "falsification of history."
The resolution now goes to the full House of Representatives, where it is unclear whether it will pass.
In 2007, Ankara recalled its ambassador after the U.S. committee approved a similar bill. Then President George W. Bush warned against passage and the measure never came to a vote on the House floor. The ambassador returned to his post after one week.
Ankara this time, too, has urged the U.S. administration to block the resolution.
Armenia wants Turkey to recognize the killings of up to 1.5 million Armenians as an act of genocide and has campaigned for them to be recognized as such internationally. But successive Turkish governments have refused to do so. Turkey accepts that many Armenians were killed in 1915 during the war and the break-up of the Ottoman Empire but argues that many Turks were casualties, too.
It also argues that the death toll has been inflated and says there was no systematic attempt to exterminate the empire's largest remaining Christian community.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)






4 comments:
You have a good blog here. The pictures really bring the articles to life, and it's one of the more readable anti-Islamisation blogs.
Although it's very slow to use on my computer - probably because there are a lot of videos/widgets/posts. It would help folks like me, who perhaps don't have the fastest computer, if you could trim the number of vidoes/widgets/posts to speed it up. Just a suggestion.
Meanwhile here is an article by Daniel Pipes on Turkey concocting charges against the military (the defenders of secularism):
THE arrest and indictment of top military figures in Turkey last week precipitated potentially the most severe crisis since Ataturk founded the republic in 1923.
The weeks ahead will probably indicate whether the country continues its slide towards Islamism or reverts to its traditional secularism….
The AKP devised an elaborate conspiracy theory in 2007, dubbed Ergenekon, to arrest about 200 AKP critics, including military officers, under accusation of plotting to overthrow the elected government. The military responded passively, so the AKP raised the stakes on January 22 by concocting a second conspiracy theory, this one termed Balyoz (Sledgehammer) and exclusively directed against the military.
The military denied any illegal activities and the chief of general staff, Ilker Basbug, warned that “Our patience has a limit.” Nonetheless, the government proceeded, starting on February 22, to arrest 67 active and retired military officers, including former heads of the air force and navy. So far, 35 officers have been indicted…
Ultimately, the issue concerns whether sharia law rules or Turkey returns to secularism.
Here are some pics of the top military brass arrested. That's life in so-called 'moderate' Turkey.
Upon investigation, and having seen the unrelenting marches that the Armenians were subjected to, this has been a long time coming. Women and children without food or water dying where they dropped out of sheer exhaustion. The only thing I have ever seen as horrific as that was the camps during the Holocaust. Turkey is already self destructing.
@ Lynn
I wish I could say Turkey was ready to repent ~ there will likely be no acknowledgement of their crimes for the time being.
Turkey is moving in an arrogant direction. It may be some time..
@ Michael
OK I'll see what I can do about the blog widgets.
Post a Comment