Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Hetq Online: Ted Bogosian Loyal To His Untruths About Monte

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

  • Hetq Online: Ted Bogosian Loyal To His Untruths About Monte

    Ted Bogosian Loyal To His Untruths About Monte Melkonian
    By Ara Manoogian

    Hetq Online
    [ 2010/05/03 | 14:15 ]
    http://hetq.am/en/interview/ted-bogosian/

    `Sile nce is one of the
    hardest arguments to refute,'Josh Billings, a 19th century popular
    American humorist, once famously said. But no matter how hard it appears
    to be, I have no other choice but to start a dialogue with a wall of
    silence, behind which Ted Bogosian the Truth Seeker has opted to hide. One circumstance, however, plays in my favor:
    the more garrulous your interlocutor has been preceding his avowed
    silence, the more vulnerable the latter becomes. This point was
    brilliantly proven by Ted Bogosian himself just a few days ago in what
    appeared to be a desperate attempt to stand corrected... by silencing the
    truth.
    It's been roughly a month since Radio Open Source host
    Christopher Lydon's infamous interview with Ted Bogosian, an
    award-winning Armenian-American director, documentarian and journalist,
    was aired online and reposted throughout the web. The dissemination of
    the radio interview served the noble agenda of spreading the word about
    the heart of the Armenian cause - the Armenian Genocide and the Turkish
    denialism. However, his headlong pursuit of big truths was regrettably
    marred with loads of misinformation dishonoring Armenian national hero
    Monte Melkonian, one of the most revered martyrs of modern Armenian
    history who put his life at stake for the defense of fellow Armenians
    and their victory in an unequal war. Mr. Bogosian spoke from the
    viewpoint of a Truth Hound as he was presented at the onset of the
    interview. He made a number of serious unsupported claims that Monte
    Melkonian started a terrorist movement, selling arms and drugs,
    masterminding the Orly Airport attack of July 15, 1983 in Paris, as well
    as Turkish embassies in Europe and other businesses.
    When the
    dead cannot stand up for their own defense, someone alive has to. Having
    spent over a decade researching the life and death of Monte Melkonian
    but never once coming across evidence that would support any such claim,
    I wrote Ted Bogosian an email on April 13, 2010. In my heartfelt
    message, I kindly asked him to share the supporting evidence I assumed
    he would have for the claims regarding Monte Melkonian he made in the
    interview. In expectation of never-before-seen evidence I refrained from
    repudiating any of his claims based on my own research.
    Four days
    of Ted Bogosian's absolute silence and/or complete indifference - thus,
    lack of supporting evidence for his claims - compelled me to set the
    record straight based on existing evidence. I wrote an article and
    submitted it to Hetq, a leading newspaper of investigative journalism in
    Armenia. At the same time, I wrote Mr. Bogosian another email as a
    reminder for a response to my previous letter. But no reply followed. As
    a next step, I posted the whole article as a comment under his
    interview at Radio Open Source website and Huffington post to make sure
    he receives my message. Then I embarked on a mission to make sure my
    refutation of Ted Bogosian's untruths catches up with the speed at which
    his interview with dubious truths was spreading online.
    Although a
    couple of people had already voiced their discontent with Bogosian's
    inaccurate claims about Monte Melkonian's pre-Artsakh past prior to the
    posting of my article, it is a bitter truth that the presentation of
    someone as a Truth Hound is for the majority of people sufficient
    evidence of the veracity of any statement uttered by him or her. For
    many people these `truths' become facts, and thus history is unjustly
    rewritten.
    I contacted Markar Melkonian, Monte Melkonian's
    brother, the co-author of My Brother's Road, a biography of Monte
    Melkonian, to get his commentary regarding Ted Bogosian's latest
    interview. He had this to say: `By far the most scurrilous of Bogosian's
    claims is his contention that Monte masterminded attacks such as Orly.
    Not only was Monte not involved in this attack in any way, but as you
    [Ara Manoogian - A.M.] quite correctly noted, Orly and similar attacks
    drove Monte into desperate plans to kill Hagopian [Hagop Hagopian,
    founder of ASALA - A.M.] and any of his henchmen who got in the way, in
    order to stop such operations. With each outrage Monte became more
    desperate, until he resolved to take steps against Hagopian, with the
    full expectation that he would be killed in the process. Monte abhorred
    Orly, the Istanbul bazaar attack and the Ankara Airport attack, both
    because they took innocent lives, and because he believed such attacks
    harmed the cause to which he had pledged his life.'
    As Ted
    Bogosian's silence grew more deafening, and I received no confirmation
    that he had, in fact, received my emails, I implemented a tactic I was
    certain would repudiate an old Italian proverb: `Silence was never
    written down.' It was, in fact, on April 20, 2010. The tactic was to
    register tedbogosian.com and tedbogosian.blogspot.com, then upload my
    article debunking Ted Bogosian's untruths about Monte Melkonian.
    Immediately after that I sent an email to the address I still believed
    belonged to Ted Bogosian, notifying him of the registration of
    tedbogosian.com for exposing his lies about Monte Melkonian. Silence was
    finally and immediately written down, as mentioned above, on April 20,
    2010, as frugal as it was. Ted Bogosian wrote: `I will respond tomorrow,
    Ara.'
    The next day I received an email from Jeffrey K. Techentin
    of Adler Pollock & Sheehan P.C. engaged to represent Ted Bogosian
    with respect to my registration and use of www.tedbogosian.com and
    www.tedbogosian.blogspot.com. The content of his email revealed
    utilization of a more traditional tactic: when you can't answer the core
    question, you have to cloud the issue. To this effect Mr. Techentin had
    this to say: `Mr. Bogosian has forwarded me the communications received
    from you.Please refer any further communications directly to
    me.Additionally, please note that Mr. Bogosian takes your threats very
    seriously, and objects to your appropriation of his name for your own
    purposes.' The latter of the concerns is understandable and expected,
    however, I was baffled by the respectable Truth Hound's perception of my
    pursuit of truth as a threat. I honestly expected his cooperation in
    finding the truth wherever it leads. I must have been misled by Mr.
    Bogosian's bold statement in the same interview in question: `Every
    single truth that gets revealed leads to another and other and other,
    and we may never arrive at truth. But we're obligated to try. That's my
    view.'
    Having had them serve their purpose - making Ted Bogosian
    speak out - I parked the domains. When it became clear that Bogosian was
    unwilling to address the issue as seriously as he had taken the
    non-existent threats his attorney had referred to, I decided to issue a
    press release uncovering Ted Bogosian's untruths on April 22, 2010. As I
    had hoped, many media outlets responded to the cause by publishing it. I
    should also note that I received scores of emails encouraging my
    efforts. I'll take advantage of this platform and say a big `thank you.'
    Nonetheless,
    one thing that the launch of the press release revealed for me was the
    justification of my apprehension that there will never be a shortage of
    people falling short of transcending stereotypical judgment, such as
    this: if you are a terrorist, then you kill innocent people, sell drugs
    and arms. How many people will question this? With this stereotype, one
    will perhaps be right nine times out of ten. However, Monte Melkonian,
    an exceptionally gifted person who preferred standing up and dying for
    the rights of his nation at any cost over a brilliant academic career
    awaiting him at one of the most prestigious European universities,
    deserves to be more than just a negligible statistical error differing
    from the expected value. This is my chief concern that has been fueling
    my active stance on inhibiting public dissemination of Ted Bogosian's
    inaccuracies purported to be facts.
    Later that day, Ted Bogosian,
    as confirmed by Radio Open Source host Christopher Lydon, his friend of
    35 years, posted a comment under the interview on Huffington Post: `I am
    pleased that my conversation with Christopher Lydon has inspired such
    informed comments. [...] Finally, I pledge to correct any inadvertent
    errors and omissions I may have made at Brown, as always. That is a
    Truth Hound's obligation. Thanks to everyone for listening.'
    Mr. Bogosian fulfilled
    his promise the next day by posting `corrections and amplifications' in
    the form of a comment at the Radio Open Source and, with some minor
    difference, at Huffington Post, which reads as follows:
    `CORRECTIONS
    & AMPLIFICATIONS: Everything I told Open Source about Monte
    Melkonian related to the period ending in April 1988, when `An Armenian
    Journey' premiered on PBS. I did not reference Monte's exploits after he
    left prison. While I still consider Monte and myself to be the `same
    age', he was, in fact, 6 years younger. Monte was an undergraduate at
    UC-Berkeley, not a graduate student there. I could have named the
    terrorist movement he started: ASALA-Revolutionary Movement. Finally,
    while Monte was convicted of illegal weapons possession, he was not
    charged with selling arms or illegal drugs. (I knew him to practice
    healthful living habits during his imprisonment.) I stand corrected and
    regret these errors and omissions.'
    How can Ted Bogosian `stand
    corrected' if he has provided elusive responses to most of my questions
    and ignored the others. Isn't there anything to correct in the following
    statement he made in the interview to Radio Open Source: `[Monte
    Melkonian] having masterminded several bombings in Europe, at Orly
    Airport'? I wrote as many as five paragraphs to tell the story behind
    this bombing as I know it in an attempt to set the record straight that
    Monte Melkonian not only was not involved in that attack but also did
    his utmost to prevent it (for more details read claim #5 in `Ted
    Bogosian And His Untruths About Armenian National Hero Monte
    Melkonian'). At the same time, I requested evidence from Mr. Bogosian to
    back up that claim. But instead of providing supporting evidence or
    retracting the false statement, he has shrouded the issue with silence.
    However, I'll try to analyze each of Ted Bogosian's responses pertaining
    to the matter.
    - `Monte was an undergraduate at UC-Berkeley, not a
    graduate student there.
    What Mr. Bogosian had stated in the
    original interview was as follows: `And while I was at Duke, he was at
    Berkley, and when I went to graduate school, he went to graduate school
    in Beirut.' Monte never went to graduate school in Beirut, he was
    admitted to graduate school at Oxford but he never went there. Mr.
    Bogosian's latest response is simply inadequate.`I could have
    named the terrorist movement he started: ASALA-Revolutionary Movement.'
    This
    correction refers to the following statement in the original interview:
    `[Monte Melkonian] started an Armenian terrorist movement.' I had
    identified this terrorist movement with ASALA, which was founded by
    Hagop Hagopian in 1975 and Monte Melkonian was recruited in 1980 (for
    more details read claim #4 in `Ted Bogosian And His Untruths About
    Armenian National Hero Monte Melkonian'). In his attempt to clarify this
    statement, Mr. Bogosian identified that terrorist movement as
    ASALA-Revolutionary Movement (ASALA-RM). I wonder what exactly made him
    conclude that ASALA-RM is a terrorist movement.
    ASALA fell apart
    at Monte Melkonian's initiative exactly because of the murderous
    deviation of Hagop Hagopian. The Orly Airport attack masterminded by
    Hagopian was the final blow to the unity of ASALA and the finishing
    touch to the split spearheaded by Monte Melkonian. ASALA-RM, the
    resulting splinter, in its early stage is best represented through the
    following collectively written statement: `We do not believe in
    benevolent friends, the inevitable triumph of justice, or covertly and
    cleverly manipulating the superpowers.If we are to achieve national
    self-determination, then we ourselves, the Armenian people, will have to
    fight for it.We believe in the power of organized masses and in the
    capacity of our people to determine their own future. We believe in
    revolution.' This movement that had no real members but quite a few
    sympathizers became the personification of Monte Melkonian who
    concentrated on raising awareness about the Armenian cause mainly
    through writing.
    In the times when there's no definitive
    international consensus on a legally binding definition of terrorism and
    terrorist organizations, Mr. Bogosian is making hasty conclusions.
    Personally, I am more inclined towards this viewpoint of a terrorist and
    counter-insurgency expert Bruce Hoffman: `Terrorism is a pejorative
    term. It is a word with intrinsically negative connotations that is
    generally applied to one's enemies and opponents, or to those with whom
    one disagrees and would otherwise prefer to ignore.' Labeling a
    revolutionary movement as terrorist, while it seeks to unite the nation
    to struggle for self-determination, is usually the signature of
    governments targeted by such movements.
    - `Finally, while Monte was
    convicted of illegal weapons possession, he was not charged with selling
    arms or illegal drugs.'
    This correction refers to my criticism
    targeting the following passage in his original interview: `...and [Monte
    Melkonian] started selling arms and started selling drugs...' None of the
    abundant evidence I have researched about Monte Melkonian maintains this
    claim. On the contrary, there are plenty of stories about Monte
    Melkonian being a fierce opponent to drug use or sale (for more details
    read claim #3 in `Ted Bogosian And His Untruths About Armenian National
    Hero Monte Melkonian').
    Ted Bogosian's response to my question is a
    cunning way to steer away from the main point. His statement clearly
    implies that not being charged with selling arms or illegal drugs does
    not necessarily exclude the possibility of being involved in such
    activity. It is neither a retraction nor a clarification, but rather a
    fragile exit strategy due to lack of supporting evidence. I was not
    questioning only the validity of the charges Mr. Bogosian ascribed to
    Monte Melkonian's case in the interview, but also his assertion that
    Monte Melkonian was involved in such activity. I'm still waiting for
    supporting evidence or unconditional retraction of these false
    statements.
    Silence is a text easy to misread, as science-fiction
    writer Alfred Attanasio once said. Nevertheless, I want to believe that
    Mr. Bogosian had no malice in ascribing all of the aforementioned
    inaccuracies to Monte Melkonian, and I believe that his good will may
    well be manifested by a full-fledged direct response to each of the
    questions I singled out and any others he might be enthused to enlarge
    on. If Ted Bogosian is a man of his word and believes `we're obligated
    to try' to `arrive at truth,' he must then fulfill his `pledge to
    correct any inadvertent errors and omissions' more elaborately with the
    following options as guidelines: a) present evidence to support his
    claims; b) retract the claims, for which he cannot provide supporting
    evidence; c) make corresponding arrangements to have the parts of radio
    interview that include the abovementioned misinformation about Monte
    Melkonian removed.
    Ara Manoogian is a human
    rights activist representing the Shahan Natalie Family Foundation in
    Artsakh and Armenia, as well as a member of the Washington-based Policy
    Forum Armenia (PFA)
    An online petition addressed to Ted Bogosian can be signed at http://www.gopetition.com/online/35986.html
Working...
X