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TARC's Phillips at NYU

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  • TARC's Phillips at NYU

    PRESS RELEASE
    Armenian National Committee
    Eastern United States
    69-23 47th Avenue
    Woodside, NY 11377
    Contact: Doug Geogerian
    Tel: 917 428 1918
    Fax: 718 651 3637
    E-mail: [email protected]
    Web: http://www.anca.org/

    TARC Moderator David Phillips at NYU: Each Side has its Historians
    Armenian Students Barred from Seminar

    David Phillips spoke at New York University's Center for Global Affairs on
    February 4 at a seminar entitled, "Turkey and its Neighbors: Current
    Political Overview and Forecast for 2005 and Beyond." Phillips used the
    opportunity to discuss his yet-to-be released book, Unsilencing the Truth,
    about the Turkish Armenian Reconciliation Commission (TARC). Phillips was
    the architect and moderator of TARC, which he claims was meant to foster
    dialogue between Armenians and Turks. TARC was disbanded in September 2002,
    when worldwide Armenian opposition arose when it became clear that hindering
    international recognition of the Armenian Genocide was one of its main
    purposes.

    Another result of TARC, which some believe was not accidental, was to divide
    the Armenian-American community about how to treat the issue of the
    genocide. TARC excluded one of Armenia's traditional political parties, the
    Armenian Revolutionary Federation, and characterized the party as extremist
    due to its criticism of TARC. TARC's exclusionary practices continued at
    New York University, when Armenian students at NYU were turned away from
    attending the event by the Global Affairs Department. "Many Armenians on
    campus would have really wanted to attend this seminar had it not been kept
    secret from them. The organizers are using NYU's name, but then excluded
    very relevant segments of NYU's community," said Veronica Siranosian, a
    graduate student at NYU's Wagner School of Public Affairs. Siranosian and
    other NYU students were told by the Center for Global Affairs that they
    would not be allowed into the seminar.

    Ms. Vera Jelinek, assistant dean at NYU's School of Continuing and
    Professional Studies and Director of the Center for Global Affairs,
    introduced Phillips and described the event as partly a discussion of "the
    Turkish-Armenian crisis of the past." During his presentation, Phillips
    discussed his work dealing with some of Turkey's most significant problems
    regarding democracy and human rights. Former US Ambassador to Turkey Marc
    Grossman of the U.S. State Department had asked Phillips to approach the
    Turko-Armenian conflict, using the "track two diplomacy" method he had
    employed to bring together Kurds and Turks, as well as Greek and Turkish
    Cypriots. Phillips explained that this method attempts to establish a space
    that is "low-key, non-judgmental, and non-coercive" so that participants are
    willing "to explore ideas for resolution, free of the constraints of
    government positions." After he agreed to Grossman's request, he soon
    learned how much he "had underestimated the bitterness which Turks and
    Armenians hold for each other."

    Provided with three million dollars, Phillips said that the U.S. government
    "wrote a blank check to do this work, which is highly unusual for U.S.
    government officials to do." This led to the formation of the Turkish
    Armenian Reconciliation Commission. Once talks began, Phillips said the
    issue of the Armenian Genocide continued to arise. Moving forward did not
    seem possible without addressing it. Therefore Phillips approached the
    International Center for Transitional Justice (ICTJ) for it to study the
    Armenian Genocide and issue a legal opinion on the applicability of the
    Genocide Convention to it. Phillips said, "that the U.S. government knows
    that Turkey will never return land nor pay reparations." He said that, "I
    have nothing against historians, but often they can't agree on what the
    facts are. The Turks and Armenians each have its group of historians with
    volumes and volumes claiming their own side of the story."

    Phillips went on to explain that, "the reason I use the word genocide has to
    do with the working through the International Center for Transitional
    Justice, which determined that the Armenian Genocide did not apply to the
    Genocide Convention." According to Phillips, the ICTJ explained that no
    treaty had ever been applied retroactively so no reparations could be
    expected from Turkey. Phillips closed his comments by saying that the
    September 11th terrorist attacks and the invasion of Iraq increased Turkey's
    strategic value to the United States and thus interfered in TARC's work
    because it was more difficult to pressure Turkey to make concessions. He
    had hoped that Turkey's border with Armenia would be opened, but the
    relaxing of visa regimes was the only progress made.

    Phillips also discussed what he saw as the great geopolitical advantages if
    Turkey was allowed to join the European Union. He briefly reviewed Turkey's
    modern history, mentioning that the Republic of Turkey emerged from the
    ashes of the Ottoman Empire when Kemal Ataturk set out "to build a truly
    modern state on a par with its European neighbors." Phillips went to say
    that, "Turkey's founding constitution enshrined the country's commitment to
    secularism and republicanism."

    Phillips explained that the role of the military and national security
    apparatus in the years following the founding of the Turkish Republic has
    been to preserve the secular principles of Kemalism and guard against
    tendencies to return to Islamic rule. Phillips said, "Turkish officers see
    their task extending beyond the protection of the country's territory to
    include warding off threats to the public order, such as separatism,
    terrorism, and religious fundamentalism." He noted that this had led to
    previous military coups when the Turkish General Staff felt Kemalism was
    under threat.

    Addressing the rise to power of Recip Erdogan, Phillips related how his
    Justice and Development Party came to dominate the Turkish parliament. He
    stated that concerns remain about how committed Erdogan and his Islamist
    party are to preserving Ataturk's secular Turkish state. Phillips reviewed
    the Turkish Parliament's decision to ultimately not allow U.S. troops to use
    southeastern Turkey as a point of entry to invade Iraq. Phillips also
    devoted a portion of the lecture to Erdogan's campaign to gain Turkish
    accession to the European Union.
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