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ANKARA: Radical US Armenians Plan To Boycott Clinton Meeting

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  • ANKARA: Radical US Armenians Plan To Boycott Clinton Meeting

    RADICAL US ARMENIANS PLAN TO BOYCOTT CLINTON MEETING

    Hurriyet Daily News
    Jan 18 2010
    Turkey

    U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. AP photo

    The Armenian National Committee of America, or ANCA, the largest
    and most radical Armenian-American group, has said that it is not
    planning to attend a meeting next month between U.S. Secretary of
    State Hillary Clinton and major Armenian-American organizations to
    discuss the Turkey-Armenia reconciliation process.

    The ANCA, in a weekend statement, said its move is in protest of
    a State Department stance to decline to invite many influential
    Armenian-American groups, which oppose the normalization talks between
    Ankara and Yerevan.

    Invited to attend the Feb. 9 meeting with Clinton were the Armenian
    Assembly of America, the Armenian General Benevolent Union, the
    Diocese of the Armenian Church of America (Eastern), the Diocese of
    the Armenian Church (Western), the Knights of Vartan, and the ANCA.

    The ANCA accused the State Department of not inviting to the
    meeting the Eastern U.S. and Western U.S. Prelacies of the Armenian
    Apostolic Church, Apostolic Exarchate for Armenian Catholics, Armenian
    Evangelical Union of North America, Armenian Missionary Association of
    America, Armenian Relief Society, Armenian Bar Association, Armenian
    International Women's Association, Armenian Rights Council of America,
    Armenian Youth Federation, Hamazkayin Armenian Cultural & Education
    Association, Homenetmen Armenian General Athletic Union, Tekeyan
    Cultural Association, United Armenian Fund, and the U.S.-Armenia
    Public Affairs Committee.

    "I am writing to share our serious concern that your initial round of
    invitations to Armenian-American organizations to meet with you this
    coming Feb. 9 does not represent our traditional community leadership
    nor does it reflect the widely understood Armenian-American opposition
    to the Turkey-Armenia protocols," ANCA Chairman Ken Hachikian said
    in a letter sent to Clinton last week, according to the ANCA statement.

    "As presently configured, the meeting you have proposed will not
    serve the vital and worthwhile aim of healthy discourse, and would,
    at this sensitive moment, in fact be counter-productive. The current
    arrangement, which, by all appearances, intentionally excludes so
    many of our traditional community and church leaders on the basis of
    their views and values, would set an undemocratic and highly negative
    precedent," Hachikian said. "We would not be able to meaningfully
    participate under these narrow and exclusionary terms," he said.

    Strong US support

    The Turkish and Armenian foreign ministers signed a set of agreements
    on Oct. 10 under which Ankara and Yerevan should set up normal
    diplomatic relations and reopen their land border. U.S. President
    Barack Obama's administration strongly supports this process.

    But there are signs that the reconciliation process could face an
    uphill battle. The Turkey-Armenia accord needs to be ratified by the
    parliaments of the two neighbors before implementation, and there
    is no indication of when both nations may bring the deal to their
    parliaments.

    The problem that lies at the root of the problem is the unresolved
    Nagorno-Karabakh dispute between Armenia and Azerbaijan, Turkey's
    close friend and ally. Turkey first wants to see progress toward
    the solution of the Karabakh conflict before opening its border with
    Armenia. And the Armenians are hinting no sign of this.

    Nagorno-Karabakh, a mostly Armenian-populated enclave inside Azerbaijan
    and parts of Azerbaijan proper, has been under Armenian occupation
    since a war in the early 1990s. As a result of this war, Turkey has
    refused to set up normal diplomatic relations with Yerevan and has
    kept the land border with Armenia closed since 1993.

    The ANCA is staunchly opposing the Ankara-Yerevan process and seeking
    to obtain formal U.S. recognition of the World War I-era killings of
    Armenians in the Ottoman Empire as "genocide."

    The Armenian Assembly of America, the second-largest Armenian-American
    group, which will attend the meeting with Clinton, says it in principle
    supports the Turkey-Armenia process. But at the same time, it also
    pursues U.S. genocide recognition.

    Turkey has strongly warned that any formal U.S. "genocide recognition,"
    either by the administration or in Congress, would lead to a major
    and lasting deterioration of bilateral ties.
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