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  • ASBAREZ Online [03-30-2005]

    ASBAREZ ONLINE
    TOP STORIES
    03/30/2005
    TO ACCESS PREVIOUS ASBAREZ ONLINE EDITIONS PLEASE VISIT OUR
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    1) US Stance on Armenian Genocide May Ease Turkey-US Tensions
    2) Armenia Makes New Bid for Extra US Aid
    3) Switzerland Urges Turkey to Face The Past
    4) Deputy Commander of US European Command Visits Yerevan
    5) DM Says Azerbaijan Would Sustain Huge Defeat in War, Calls for `Painful'
    Compromise Solution
    6) Syrian Delegation at ARF Center

    1) US Stance on Armenian Genocide May Ease Turkey-US Tensions

    ISTANBUL (AFP)--The United States will help ease tensions with Turkey if it
    sticks to its stance of not recognizing the "killings of Armenians under the
    Ottoman Empire as genocide," Anatolia news agency quoted a senior Turkish
    official as saying.
    Turkey expects Washington "to maintain the sound position on the issue it has
    displayed in the past as a first step...[towards] leaving current disturbances
    behind so that Turkish-US ties can progress on a healthy basis," the head of
    the National Security Council, Yigit Alpogan said.
    "We believe the American administration will not give the green light to
    slanders which render all Turks as children of murderers," Alpogan told a
    gathering of a Turkish-American business group.
    Washington has so far refrained from terming the World War I massacres as
    genocide, despite pressure from pro-Armenian lobbies.
    Ankara is concerned that the Armenians will this year [on the 90th
    anniversary
    of the Armenian genocide] step up their campaign to have the events
    acknowledged as genocide by Washington--at a time when Turkish-US relations
    are
    markedly strained by differences over Iraq.
    In October 2000, a draft congressional resolution acknowledging the killings
    as genocide was pulled from the House floor following an intervention by then
    president Bill Clinton, who argued that the United State not damage its ties
    with Turkey, a key Muslim ally.
    Since then, however, those ties have deteriorated.
    The Turkish parliament stunned Washington just before the occupation of Iraq
    in March 2003 when it denied US troops access to Turkish territory for a
    planned invasion of Iraq from the north.
    Relations between the two NATO allies were further strained by US reluctance
    to take military action against Turkish Kurd rebels in northern Iraq and
    Ankara's concern that Iraqi Kurds are getting too much power in post-war Iraq.


    2) Armenia Makes New Bid for Extra US Aid

    YEREVAN (RFE/RL)--The Armenian government has submitted new, more modest
    proposals for additional US economic assistance under the Millennium Challenge
    Account program, almost six months after presenting its initial application.
    The Finance Ministry announced on Wednesday that the government has asked for
    about $175 million worth of aid and hopes that its upcoming negotiations with
    the Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC), a US government agency managing
    the
    scheme, will be successful. "In the coming months the government of Armenia
    and
    the MCC will hold negotiations in order to reach a final agreement on the
    issue," the ministry said in a statement.
    Armenia had initially sought $900 million worth of aid over three years, but
    lowered expectations after Armenian and US officials met in October.
    A Finance Ministry statement revealed the government approved the new aid
    application on March 25 and submitted it to Washington on Tuesday. Most of the
    requested money would be spent on rebuilding battered irrigation networks and
    roads in rural regions of Armenia.
    The Millennium Challenge Account (MCA) was unveiled by President George W.
    Bush last year. Armenia is among 16 developing nations eligible for the
    program's first $1 billion aid allocation. They were chosen on the basis of 16
    indicators of political and economic reforms.
    Armenia has already been a leading per-capita recipient of US assistance
    which
    has totaled more than $1.5 billion since 1992.


    3) Switzerland Urges Turkey to Face The Past

    (AFP)--Swiss Foreign Minister Micheline Calmy-Rey on Tuesday urged Turkey to
    carry out a detailed study on the Armenians genocide, under Ottoman rule
    during
    World War I.
    "We think that it is essential that every country conduct an in-depth
    historical research of its own past, especially when the question is so
    painful," Calmy-Rey told reporters after talks with her Turkish counterpart
    Abdullah Gul.
    The Swiss minister was speaking on the first day of an official visit which
    was originally supposed to take place in 2003, but was cancelled after the
    Swiss canton of Vaud officially recognized the 1915 genocide of Armenians.
    Shortly afterwards, the lower house of the Swiss parliament also followed
    suit--against the Bern government's advice--and adopted a similar resolution,
    unleashing an angry response from Ankara.
    Referring to Turkey's call for an "unbiased" study by [Turkish] historians of
    its past, Calmy-Rey called the move a "good idea," but said she had
    proposed to
    Gul the inclusion of international experts in such a commission for the
    credibility of the work.


    4) Deputy Commander of US European Command Visits Yerevan

    YEREVAN (Combined Sources)--Gen. Charles F. Wald, US European Command Deputy
    (USEUCOM) Commander, arrived in Armenia on March 30 to discuss developing
    US-Armenia military ties.
    During his meeting with President Robert Kocharian, General Wald discussed
    US-Armenia military technical cooperation, as well as developments in the
    Karabagh conflict regulation.
    Gen. Wald noted the importance for both for the US and Europe to ensure
    stability and peace in the region.
    While in Yerevan, General Wald and his staff will also meet with Defense
    Minister Serge Sargsian and members of the Armenian military leadership.
    USEUCOM, based in Stuttgart, Germany, is responsible for all US forces
    operating across 91 countries in Europe, Africa, Russia, parts of Asia, and
    the
    Middle East, as well as most of the Atlantic Ocean. General Wald became Deputy
    Commander of the United States European Command on Dec 2, 2002.
    Meanwhile, the periodic session of the NATO's Euro-Atlantic Partnership
    Council's Atlantic Policy Advisory Group will take place in Yerevan, March
    31-April 1, with the participation of 65 representatives from NATO's 38 member
    and partner countries. They will discuss security issues in the Euro-Atlantic
    region.
    The deputy of the NATO Secretary General on political relations and security
    policy issues, Günter Altenburg, will chair the session. He will also meet
    with
    President Kocharian, Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian, and Defense Minister
    Sargsian.


    5) DM Says Azerbaijan Would Sustain Huge Defeat in War, Calls for `Painful'
    Compromise Solution

    YEREVAN (RFE/RL)--Addressing parliamentary hearings on resolving the
    Mountainous Karabagh conflict, Armenian Defense Minister Serge Sargsian
    said he
    has no doubts that the long-standing dispute can be solved only through
    peaceful means, based on mutual compromises.
    He cautioned, however, that if Azerbaijan resumes hostilities in an effort to
    take Mountainous Karabagh back, it would `sustain a heavy defeat.'
    "The price we might pay for it would depend on how strongly the Armenian
    people and political forces back the army. If--God forbid--the situation in
    Armenia resembles that of Azerbaijan of 1992-1994, we may face a catastrophe,"
    he said. He also added that he did not rule out the possibility of resumption
    of war.
    `I did not deny such a possibility in 1995, 1998, and in 2000--and I do not
    deny it now. There is always the threat of a new war and there are no
    guarantees against it,' he said.
    Sargsian went on to argue that the regulation process would be painful for
    both nations, as only a compromised solution is possible. `Compromise means
    that you have to give in part of what you have, which is always a painful
    process. The compromise solution must be first of all backed by Armenians and
    not only by the political elite,' he said.
    Sargsian outlined acceptable compromises that include the implementation of
    Council of Europe Resolution 1416, another referendum of independence in
    Karabagh, and a return of seized lands. `We could make concessions on the
    condition that Azeri side gives clear guarantees of non-resumption of military
    actions which must be confirmed by authoritative international organizations
    and states,' he said.


    6) Syrian Delegation at ARF Center

    YEREVAN (Yerkir)--The delegation of 12 Arab tribal leaders from Syria, met
    with
    the leadership of Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF) Armenia on
    Wednesday,
    at the ARF Simon Vratsian Center in Yerevan.
    The tribal leaders, who are participating in events marking the 90th
    anniversary of the Armenian genocide, conveyed that their century-long
    friendship with Armenian is a firm and lasting one.
    Representatives of the Armenian parliament also met with the Arab leaders,
    and
    thanked them for respecting the memory of the genocide victims, as well as for
    the kindness of their ancestors who gave refuge to the fragments of Armenians
    who miraculously survived the genocide of Armenians by Ottoman Turkey in 1915.


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