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Canadian Historian Refutes Azerbaijan's Accusation Against Armenians

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  • Canadian Historian Refutes Azerbaijan's Accusation Against Armenians

    CANADIAN HISTORIAN REFUTED AZERBAIJAN'S ACCUSATIONS AGAINST ARMENIAN PARTY

    DeFacto Agency
    June 10 2008
    Armenia

    YEREVAN, 10.06.08. DE FACTO. "There is no evidence that the Armenians
    of Nagorno-Karabagh committed "genocide against Meskhetian Turks
    of Khojaly," said Canadian military historian Patrick Wilson Gore,
    during the launch of his latest book "Tis Some Poor Fellow's Skull -
    Post-Soviet Warfare in the Southern Caucasus" at the embassy of the
    Republic of Armenia in Ottawa, an independent French journalist Jean
    Eckian told DE FACTO.

    The Canadian expert stated that for 70 years Armenians of
    Nagorno-Karabagh had been treated as second-class citizens under
    Azeri rule. The treatment of Armenians by Azeris was a classic case of
    ethnic cleansing. After the Soumgait and Baku massacres of Armenians
    in the early 1990s, the Armenians were forced to fight to defend
    their families and their lives.

    In regard to the Khojaly incident, Gore said "Azeri troops ran
    faster than the Meskhetian Turk civilians they had been using as
    human shields". Upon their retreat to Agdam, civilians of Khojaly
    were fired upon by the Azeri OMON garrison of Agdam, mistaking them
    for Armenian forces. He said that a day before the start of Khojaly
    battle, the Azeri forces had executed 32 Armenian prisoners of war.

    Regarding the ongoing Azeri government threats of resumption of war
    to take Nagorno-Karabagh, Gore said that "peace is for the benefit
    of both sides". It is true that the Azeri government is getting
    emboldened with its new-found oil wealth, but the Aliyev government
    has to "consider that their oil and gas pipelines run 30 km north
    of Nagorno-Karabagh, and Azeris have invested heavily in their Baku
    facilities." Gore questioned whether Azeris wanted to jeopardize
    their vital pipelines and "risk their money sources."

    To note, the author of the 139-page book is a Canadian specialist in
    military history and theory. He studied at Oxford, and subsequently
    graduated from the National Defense College at Kingston, one of NATO's
    senior command colleges. Much of his career has focused on strategic
    intelligence. This is his eleventh book. He used to be paratrooper
    and marine commando.

    The gathering was co-sponsored by the Armenian Embassy and the Armenian
    National Committee of Canada (ANCC).
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