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Kaligian To Sarkisian: How Can You Accept These Severe Concessions?

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  • Kaligian To Sarkisian: How Can You Accept These Severe Concessions?

    KALIGIAN TO SARKISIAN: HOW CAN YOU ACCEPT THESE SEVERE CONCESSIONS?
    By Dikran Kaligian

    http://www.hairenik.com/weekly/2009/10/1 0/kaligian-to-sarkisian-how-can-you-accept-these-s evere-concessions/
    October 10, 2009

    Below is the text of the comments made by Dr. Dikran Kaligian during
    the Oct. 3 meeting with President Serge Sarkisian in New York.

    Mr. President, I am here representing the Armenian National Committee
    of the Eastern U.S., but I am also a historian. As a historian, one
    of the most disturbing parts of these protocols is the establishment
    of a historical commission. The text of the protocols calls for
    an "impartial scientific examination of historical records and
    archives." This implies that decades of research on the genocide by
    Armenian and non-Armenian scholars was not impartial or scientific
    and undermines its credibility. And, as genocide scholar Roger
    Smith wrote in an open letter to you, this call for a historical
    commission is offensive to all genocide scholars and especially to
    those non-Armenian scholars who have spent their lives documenting
    the historical reality of the Armenian Genocide.

    In spite of anything that Armenian members of such a commission may
    or may not do, the mere existence of a historical commission will be
    exploited by the Turkish government to discredit the scholarship of
    Dadrian and Hovannisian, Charney and Smith, and all the others who
    have written on the subject. Turkey will exploit it to undermine
    the campaign for international genocide recognition and to dismiss
    the consensus among all genocide scholars that the events of 1915
    constitute genocide. In your opening remarks, you spoke of the need
    to educate the population of Turkey. Yet the Turkish government will
    use the protocols to sabotage the process of educating the Turkish
    people about the Armenian Genocide that has been started by a few brave
    Turkish scholars-they will be discredited and endangered. This is an
    extremely harmful proposal and should be dropped from the protocols.

    A second disturbing feature regards Artsakh [Karabagh]. We know
    from press reports that Turkey has consulted with the government of
    Azerbaijan throughout the negotiation of the protocols. The lack
    of an Azeri outcry when the protocols were announced, as opposed
    to what happened in April, shows that they are certain that their
    demands regarding Artsakh will be satisfied-there is no other way to
    interpret it.

    The protocols are flawed in that they not only speak of a
    general principle of territorial integrity without mentioning
    self-determination, but go much farther by including a mutual
    recognition of existing borders.

    This shows that Azerbaijan is right: the protocols threaten the
    independence and self-determination of Artsakh. Not only that, but a
    mutual recognition of borders strips the Armenian people of our rights
    to the return of our Western Armenian lands. This is a dangerous and
    foolhardy concession to Turkey.

    We in the diaspora have been confronting Turkey for generations. We
    understand the Turkish government's tactics and we have succeeded
    in putting Turkey on the defensive around the world-they cannot
    appear anywhere without being confronted by the Armenian demand for
    justice-and now this is being signed away.

    We saw how, when Turkey's entry into the European Union was being made
    contingent on its recognition of the genocide, the State Department
    and Turkey created the Turkish Armenian Reconciliation Commission to
    give the semblance of dialogue and reconciliation. Thus the European
    Commission was conned into dropping all mention of the Armenian
    Genocide. Mr. President, how are these protocols any different? Are
    they not just another con game cooked up by the State Department?

    Mr. President, I do not understand how you can accept the severe
    concessions contained in these protocols. I do not understand how
    you can place the future of Artsakh in jeopardy.

    I do not understand how you can deprive the Armenians of the diaspora
    of their rights. I do not understand how you can adopt protocols that
    will have such a terrible impact on the diaspora without giving the
    diaspora any voice, until now, at the eleventh hour, when we are told
    that they are to be signed in a week and changes cannot be made.

    I do not understand how these protocols provide any benefit whatsoever,
    to Armenia or to the Armenian people. Mr. President, I truly do
    not understand.
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