Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Mensoian: If The ARF Fails To Confront The Challenges, Who Will?

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Mensoian: If The ARF Fails To Confront The Challenges, Who Will?

    MENSOIAN: IF THE ARF FAILS TO CONFRONT THE CHALLENGES, WHO WILL?
    By Michael Mensoian

    http://www.armenianweekly.com/2010/02/22 /mensoian-if-the-arf-fails-to-confront-the-challen ges-who-will/
    February 22, 2010

    Deja vu. Again we anxiously wait to see if the resolution recognizing
    the Armenian Genocide will be favorably voted out of the House Foreign
    Relations Committee. If Turkey with its coterie of paid lobbyists,
    academic surrogates, and other associated anti-genocide proponents
    fails to defeat congressional passage of the resolution, another moral
    victory may be added to the two dozen or so moral victories in hand
    from foreign governments that have recognized the genocide.

    Several years ago it was opined that Turkey was sufficiently emboldened
    to launch a diplomatic offensive that was geared to placing Yerevan in
    a compromising position based on its obsessive desire to normalize
    relations and have an open border (see "Normalization Can Never
    Be Worth Turkey's Asking Price," the Armenian Weekly, Dec. 6,
    2008). Secret negotiations between Ankara and Yerevan during 2008
    culminated in President Serge Sarkisian's "surprise" invitation to
    Turkish President Abdullah Gul to attend the soccer match in Yerevan.

    Thus began the "soccer diplomacy" charade leading to the signing
    of the protocols and Sarkisian's invitation to witness the second
    meeting of their nation's soccer teams in Bursa, Turkey.

    At the same time in the United States, the Armenian electorate was
    euphoric when candidate Obama recognized the Armenian Genocide as
    a historic fact. Why those who supported his candidacy should have
    been dismayed when this charming eloquent politician qualified his
    explanation is difficult to understand. As president, he adroitly
    side-stepped his acceptance of the Armenian Genocide by essentially
    saying that it was his personal belief and not the basis for United
    States foreign policy (see "President Obama's Message to Turkey: Let's
    Agree to Disagree on the Armenian Genocide," the Armenian Weekly,
    April 18, 2009).

    Rapprochement is the Turkish Trojan Horse of their diplomatic offensive
    whose acceptance will marginalize Armenia as an effective political
    entity. Its concomitant objective is to eliminate the political,
    economic, and psychological "millstone" that Hai Tahd represents
    and by association the influence of the Dashnaktsutiun that has been
    Hai Tahd's historic proponent. Recently Sarkisian not only challenged
    recalcitrant Turkey to ratify the protocols, but has spoken forcefully
    with respect to Karabagh's right to independence. Hopefully this is not
    more "planned spontaneity." Time will tell. However, the ARF remains
    the principal Armenian organization opposed to the ratification of
    these documents. Individuals and organizations that have accepted
    the view "Let's see what happens" or "It's in the best interests of
    Armenia" represents a grasping for straws which places faith in a
    process that has yet to show how the Armenian nation will benefit. It
    is this group that Secretary of State Hillary Clinton encourages to
    continue their support of Yerevan.

    Normalization with an open border provides absolutely no benefit
    for Armenia. No explanation has yet been offered by proponents
    to contradict this assessment. Any benefit that might be conjured
    would come at an exorbitant cost (see "Sarkisian's Faustian Bargain,"
    Armenian Weekly, Oct. 24, 2009). While the United States continues to
    press Yerevan, the Minsk Group (United States, France, and Russia),
    representing the interests of the Organization for Security and
    Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), continues to seek a settlement of
    the Karabagh conflict that will deny de jure independence to the
    Karabaghtsis (see "The Key to Armenia's Future Political and Economic
    Future," the Armenian Weekly, January 2010 magazine). Political
    stability and economic development in the south Caucasus is a laudable
    goal, but should it come at the expense of Armenia's interests and
    those Armenians who live in the historic Armenian regions of Artsakh,
    Javakhk, and eastern Anatolia?

    Since independence in 1991, a maelstrom of events has battered
    Armenia and the Armenians of Artsakh and Javakhk. The protocols and
    rapprochement are the most recent issues to confront the Armenian
    nation. The ARF has recognized the inherent dangers to Armenia
    posed by these protocols. The Jan. 12, 2010 ruling by Armenia's
    Constitutional Court tangentially confirmed the ARF's concerns, but
    does not prevent the protocols from being presented to parliament
    for ratification. Ankara views the decision as hindering their
    insidious plot to use the protocols' suggested historic commission
    to redefine the Armenian "Genocide." The Turkish end-game has always
    been to marginalize Armenia, eliminate the moral issue of genocide
    that besets the nation, and in the process nullify Hai Tahd and
    the influence of the Dashnaktsutiun. According to their reasoning,
    whatever else remains will easily fall into place.

    Unfortunately, neither preventing the ratification of the protocols
    nor genocide recognition by the United States Congress will provide
    the proverbial "silver bullet" that will smite Turkey and allow final
    victory to be declared. (To what political end has genocide recognition
    by France and Russia served?) A universe of legitimate issues
    exist-many are long-standing-that must be vigorously confronted and
    resolved before Armenia's future is secure. The singular problem for
    the ARF is to determine the how and when and where it may efficiently
    and effectively respond to these challenges. This is no easy matter.

    This universe of issues encompasses the harsh unjustified political,
    economic, and cultural policies that the Georgian government imposes
    upon the Javakheti Armenians. Yerevan is not aggressively confronting
    Tbilisi on these policies and actions that contravene the required
    economic, political, and core democratic value changes in its treatment
    of minorities agreed to by Georgia in 2006 as a member of the European
    Union's "European Neighborhood Policy" (ENP). And this by a government
    that the United States steadfastly maintains is the beacon of democracy
    in the south Caucasus. If these discriminatory policies by Tbilisi
    are not challenged (hopefully by the ARF) within the next several
    generations Armenian Javakhk will be irretrievably lost.

    Linked to this "harassment" is the perversion of justice perpetrated on
    the Javakheti Armenian activist Vahagnn Chakhalyan (sentenced in 2009
    to 10 years in prison) that has been visited upon two other activists:
    Gurgen Shirinyan, who was given a 3-year sentence in October 2009 in
    addition to a 17-year sentence originally handed down in 2008, both
    trials in absentia; and the ongoing trial of Aram Batoyan, again in
    absentia, who is being tried on charges that date back to 2005 (see
    "Javakheti Activist Vahagn Chakhalyan: Justice Denied by Georgia,"
    the Armenian Weekly, Sept. 19, 2009). This police and judicial
    misconduct has been documented by Yerkir Union and acknowledged by
    the International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH).

    Then there is Karabagh. Since the 1994 ceasefire, the imperative to
    resettle strategic areas of Karabagh has languished. What happened to
    the government's program to increase the population by some 100,000
    people? During the 14 years of de facto independence, the population
    has basically remained unchanged (see "The Political-Strategic
    Resettlement of Karabagh's Security Zone," the Armenian Weekly, June
    30-July 7, 2007). On another front, what is being done to lay the
    requisite foundation to support Karabagh's right to be recognized
    as an independent political entity? It will take more than public
    declarations that the Karabaghtsis have this inalienable right. It
    would be a logical initiative for the ARF to convene a conference of
    recognized scholars who would discuss the legal and human rights basis
    for the former Soviet autonomous region of Karabagh to be independent.

    Coincidentally, what is being done to influence sympathetic
    journalists, political leaders (especially members of the U.S.

    Congressional Armenian Caucus), business leaders, leaders of advocacy
    groups, and the public at large (including Armenians) by visits and
    reports to support Karabagh's right to recognition? Azerbaijan and its
    enabler Turkey are being allowed to describe the conflict in terms
    of terrorist activity and the claim for independence as an Armenian
    irredentist ploy.

    And now Turkey. There are so many issues that have been left to
    languish. Where to begin? The destruction and seizure of religious
    and educational property and its restitution or indemnification have
    not been forcefully and continuously challenged in appropriate venues.

    Neither has government policy allowing for the physical decay of
    cultural artifacts or for their planned destruction. What of the
    Armenian farmlands, businesses, and homes that were involuntarily
    abandoned when the Ottoman Turkish government carried out its
    genocidal plan to empty historic western Armenia (eastern Turkey) of
    its inhabitants resulting in the systematic murder of some 1.5 million
    innocent Armenian men, women, and children? At best only sporadic,
    uncoordinated, and ineffectively implemented actions have been made
    to challenge these issues to which Turkey is vulnerable.

    And finally, what of the tens of thousands of children and young women
    who were "taken" by tribal villagers (under varying circumstances)
    and required to live within an alien cultural environment. During
    the ensuing 90 years, these "lost" Armenians of the genocide became
    the progenitors of successive generations who presently populate the
    Turkish western provinces of historic Armenia. Has thought been given
    to what should or could be done with respect to these "forgotten"
    Armenians still connected by blood to the martys of the genocide?

    It is obvious that this universe of issues contains more than the
    protocols and genocide recognition. In accepting the challenge, the ARF
    faces a Herculean task that far transcends anything the Dashnaktsutiun
    may have attempted in the past. In charting its course of action, the
    ARF must continue its active engagement of the Armenian Diaspora for
    the moral and financial support required to achieve its mission. And
    it must harness the expertise of those dedicated Armenian men and
    women who can assist in formulating and implementing the initiatives
    necessary to achieve its objectives. Now is the most critical period in
    the modern history of the Armenian nation. If the Dashnaktsutiun fails
    to vigorously and effectively confront these challenges, who will?
Working...
X