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The Armenian Weekly; Feb. 23, 2008; Commentary and Analysis

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  • The Armenian Weekly; Feb. 23, 2008; Commentary and Analysis

    The Armenian Weekly On-Line
    80 Bigelow Avenue
    Watertown MA 02472 USA
    (617) 926-3974
    [email protected]

    http://www.a rmenianweekly.com

    The Armenian Weekly; Volume 74, No. 7; Feb. 23, 2008

    Commentary and Analysis:

    1. Totah Confusion
    By Garen Yegparian

    2. Some Free Republics Free-er than Others
    By Andy Turpin

    3. Letter to the Editor

    ***

    1. Totah Confusion
    By Garen Yegparian

    I've always advocated action, participation, doing something over doing
    nothing-in a word, activism.

    But all along, I've held a bias that's now been revealed to me. I suppose I
    owe everyone an apology. I'd just always assumed that activists, especially
    any who survive into their twenties and beyond, also develop/have good
    judgment. At the very least, I've observed most organizations checking the
    overzealousness of some of their members/activists in the interest of not
    doing damage to their cause. It seems I am dead wrong on this front.

    Some time within the past month or so, Annie Totah, who sits on the Armenian
    Assembly's Board of Directors (and has even been its chair and vice-chair)
    and is ARCA's national chair (the Armenian Rights Council of America-the
    ADL/Ramgavars' version of the ANC), sent out an e-mail that could have
    negative repercussions for the Armenian community. She is also heavily
    involved in the Jewish community, having married into it. Check this and
    more of her credentials out on the Assembly's and ARMENPAC's (the Assembly's
    political arm) websites.

    Normally, this is exactly the kind and level of participation I'd be
    advocating and lauding. But, here that judgment thing pops up again. The
    e-mail she sent negates many of the positives of her involvement. I have not
    been able to secure a copy of the e-mail, and that's secondary. What's more
    important is a piece by Ed Lasky it references found on the "American
    Thinker" website. You can find the reference to this on Ben Smith's Blog,
    Politico.com.

    The problem is the nature of Lasky's piece and being associated with it.
    Eyeballing some of his other writings quickly conforms his conspiracy
    mongering approach. The piece in question, titled "Barack Obama and Israel,"
    does a smear job on that candidate. There're subtle and overt references to
    Obama's choice of religion and denomination; attempts to assign guilt by
    association using some of Obama's supporters alleged transgressions against
    Israel; and even an attack based on Obama's opposition to John Bolton's
    nomination as UN Ambassador. The article even takes potshots at members of
    Congress, some of them H.Res.106 sponsors, among these Adam Schiff, one of
    our strongest Congressional supporters.

    Annie Totah's e-mail, presumably sent to a Jewish audience to demonstrate
    the superiority of her chosen candidate (Hillary Clinton), may or may not
    sway its intended readers. Frankly, I don't care. In fact I wouldn't even
    care if the other candidate were targeted. That's not the point. Totah and
    ARMENPAC have chosen to support Clinton. That's actually good. This way,
    regardless of who wins, with the ANC's endorsement of Obama, one faction of
    our community plugged in.

    But resorting to sleazy, innuendo-laden tactics like using this article
    reflects poorly on us as a community. It certainly reflects poorly on the
    organizations in which Totah holds high positions. But then, in the Assembly's
    case, perhaps this is to be expected. Remember, they won the "coveted"
    SpitRain Award last August. In case you think I'm overreacting, here's how
    Ben Smith describes Totah: "a Washington society figure and
    Armenian-American activist who's also a member of Clinton's finance
    committee." Those who don't personally know any other "Armenian-American
    activists" might, given human nature, attribute to the rest of us a love of
    gutter politics.

    I'm not starry-eyed, nor delusional. Politics is blood sport. Of course
    these kinds of things will be done. But there's a wisdom that's expected of
    those holding visible positions in organizations. They cannot be associated
    with this kind of activity because it reflects poorly on the organization.
    For all I know, the Clinton campaign may have been following exactly this
    line of thinking by feeding Totah Lasky's piece to disseminate.

    Please call on Annie Totah, ARCA, ARMENPAC and the Armenian Assembly to
    apologize for this embarrassing gaffe. If she refuses, those organizations
    and others she serves should remove her from any offices she holds.

    If they don't, then we the community will know how to judge and not support
    them in the future.
    ------------------------------------------ -----------------------------------

    2. Some Free Republics Free-er than Others
    By Andy Turpin


    WATERTOWN, Mass. (A.W.)-Many will remember Feb. 17 as the day of
    independence for the Republic of Kosovo (or Kosova, depending on your ethnic
    identity).

    You may be asking, however, "Why should we care?"

    The first answer is that both American and Armenian UN peacekeeping troops
    are in Kosovo at the moment, and any Serb or Russian military aggression in
    protest of Kosovo's declared independence would directly endanger them.

    The second answer is that such a declaration of independence sets an
    international legal precedent for the "legitimatization" of the Republic of
    Karabakh.

    Though to be pragmatic, the precedent itself may have to tide us over for a
    while in lieu of international recognition of Karabakh.

    The reasons, of course, are political. To the U.S. and the UN, Kosovo's
    successful independence proves that 1999's NATO air strikes and commencement
    of UN peacekeeping efforts were not in vain. It also doesn't hurt that in a
    post-9/11 world, most Kosovar Albanians are Muslim and very pro-U.S. at a
    time when our list of Muslim political allies is short.

    Yes, this is the same strategic devil's logic that is behind America's
    ongoing alliance with Turkey that constantly kills Armenian genocide
    recognition bills in Congress, but if its results help Karabakh's case
    later, then some small Armenian phoenix may arise from the ashes.

    Government agencies also tend to prefer one-party systems and oligarchies
    when it comes to both legitimate and underworld governments at home and
    abroad.

    Given Kosovo's high corruption rate, it must be known by the State
    Department that much of their donated aid money, given through organizations
    such as USAID, is often siphoned off by Albanian-KLA oligarchs who funnel it
    back into their U.S. operations, thereby making the U.S. State Department
    tacitly creating more hardship for US law enforcement agencies in the States
    by backing Kosovo's independence.

    The New York police department would seem to understand this equation all
    too well.

    Its recent "Operation Old Bridge" swoop, a 90-member cooperative arrest
    operation between US and Italian law enforcement agencies as a massive
    Italian mafia crackdown in the month of February, is illustrative of such
    crime rate boil-over fears.

    The unspoken consensus is that some law enforcement higher ups would rather
    just keep tabs on Albanian crime instead of Albanian, Russian, Turkish and
    Italian crime together.

    There is also the added factor that if Kosovo-Albanian groups are in part
    funded by some U.S. monies, that investigations into Albanian crime might
    not dig too deep if they happen across funds that could trace back to the
    golden State Department victory of independence.

    This was the case, and the lesson learned by law enforcement agents in the
    1970s and 80s.

    At that time, the Russian mafia was actually facilitated by the US
    government to take its current infamous position of prominence by having
    several federal indictments against Russian criminals blocked by officials
    in the US-Israel lobby on the grounds that it would damage State Department
    programs that had issued such criminals politcal asylum visas to come to the
    U.S. from the former Soviet Union on grounds they were persecuted as ethnic
    Jews.

    The lesson to Armenian criminals in Glendale: Beware, unless "U.S.
    Approved."
    ---------------------------------- -------------------------------------------

    3. Letter to the Editor

    Dear Editor,

    We were upset to see the ad for Vahan Hovhannisyan (Feb. 9 issue, p. 16)
    published in the "New Armenian" orthography. Perhaps you will say that this
    was a camera-ready ad sent from Armenia; however, even then, it should have
    been disqualified on account of its typos. We, who are subscribers and/ or
    readers of the Armenian Weekly hope that we won't see a repeat use of
    material in the "New Armenian" orthography, which needs to be dismissed in
    favor of the 1600-year-old "Mesropian" or classical orthography for the
    unadulterated preservation of the Armenian language and for the realization
    of the oft-touted slogan "One Nation, One Culture."

    Sincerely,
    Aris G. Sevag
    On behalf of "Mesrobian Oukhd" Eastern U.S. Branch
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