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  • Woodrow Wilson's Arbitral Award Is A Valid And Legally Obligatory Do

    WOODROW WILSON'S ARBITRAL AWARD IS A VALID AND LEGALLY OBLIGATORY DOCUMENT
    By Ara Papian

    http://www.armenianlife.com/2011/05/13/wilsondocument/
    May 13, 2011

    The Armenian Genocide during the World War I and after went down the
    history as a crystal-clear example of unpunished crime that reinvented
    itself in Nazi extermination of the Jews, the Gypsies and the Slavic
    peoples. The annihilation of an entire civilization that occurred
    under the apathetic eye of the world at the turn of the XX century
    ricocheted right into our lifetime with the destruction of innocent
    people in Rwanda, Bosnia and Darfur. The principle of an ignored
    crime backfired again.

    All Genocides have a common denominator - it is brutal and premeditated
    killing of hundreds of thousands and millions of people, huge loses
    of cultural values and property. Unfortunately, the Armenian Genocide
    has something in particular that makes it deferent and it stands
    separately from all other Genocides. In addition to human loses and
    destruction of our heritage we lost the most valuable thing that a
    nation can possess - we lost our Homeland. The Armenian massacres
    and deportations uprooted men, women and children who were living
    on their ancestral homeland for several millennia, reducing a once
    vibrant region into open graves and ghost towns throughout Anatolia and
    Western Armenia. It is a sad fact that today there are less than 60,000
    Armenians left in Turkey. After the 1.5 million killed, the remaining
    survivors and their descendants are now dispersed throughout the world.

    Armenian territorial rights are based upon several international
    instruments. The most important of them is the Arbitral Award by the
    United States President Woodrow Wilson, done on November 22, 1920,
    which by a binding decision and conclusively defined the boundary
    between Armenia and Turkey. Because of the time constraint, I will
    not go into details of this document. Especially when the full text
    of the Arbitral Award in English (more than 240 pages) with detailed
    notes and indices will come out in Yerevan at the end of next month -
    on May 28. However, it is important to give the general overview of
    the Arbitral Award, which we Armenians rightfully consider as the
    Bible of our territorial rights.

    As you may know, the Republic of Armenia declared her independence on
    May 28, 1918. One and half years after this declaration, on January
    19, 1920, the Supreme Council of the Allied Powers finally agreed
    to recognize the government of the Armenian State on the condition
    that the recognition should not prejudge the question of the eventual
    frontier.1 The United States recognized the Republic of Armenia on
    April 23, 1920, on the same condition. By the way, the United States
    refused to recognize the independence of Georgia and Azerbaijan
    because of their unlawful claims to Armenian territory.2

    On April 26, 1920, the Supreme Council meeting at San Remo requested
    the President of the United States two things:

    1. The United States assume a mandate over Armenia;

    2. The President of the United States to make an Arbitral Decision
    to fix the boundary of Armenia with Turkey.3 As you may know, the
    Armenian mandate was rejected by Senate vote on June 1, 1920.

    Nevertheless, the American answer to the second request was
    positive and on May 17, 1920, the Secretary of State informed the
    American Ambassador in France that the President had agreed to
    act as arbitrator.4 For the implementation of the task, the State
    Department began to assemble a team of experts in mid-July 1920 headed
    by Professor William Westermann, from Wisconsin University. The state
    department put together a committee, entitled: "The Committee upon
    the Arbitration of the Boundary between Turkey and Armenia".

    As the Treaty of Sevres was signed on August 10, 1920, the boundary
    committee began its deliberations. The fact of signing the Treaty
    of Sevres is important because the compromis, i.e. the application
    for the arbitration, is included in the Treaty as Article 89. It
    must be underlined that the status of the compromis has nothing to
    do with the status of the main Treaty, thus with ratification or
    non-ratification of the Treaty. Therefore, as the State Department
    received the authenticated copy of the Treaty on October 18, 1920,
    it was sufficient for the President officially to conclude the
    arbitration without waiting the ratification of the Treaty of Sevres.

    On November 22, 1920,5 Woodrow Wilson signed the final award with
    seven enclosed appendices. So under the Arbitral Award of November 22,
    1920, the border between Armenia and Turkey was settled conclusively
    and without appeal, because, as clearly states The Hague Convention6
    (article 54 of the 1899 edition and article 81 of the 1907 edition):7
    "The award, duly pronounced and notified to the agents of the parties,
    settles the dispute definitively and without appeal." 8

    Few words on the content of the Arbitral Award. According to the
    Arbitral Award, the title and the rights of the Republic of Armenia
    were recognized on the large part of the provinces of Van, Bitlis,
    Erzerum and Trebizond. It was less than the half of the territory
    on which the Armenian title was recognized by the article 24 of the
    Mudros armistice on October 30, 1918. This drastic cutback was due
    to far-reaching reduction of native Armenian population, because of
    the Armenian Genocide.

    Now briefly on the most important issue - the present status of the
    Arbitral Award. As indicates the official Manual of the Terminology
    of Public International Law of the United Nations, for the arbitral
    award to be valid it must meet four criteria:9

    Criterion 1: The arbitrators must not have been subjected to any
    undue external influence such as coercion, bribery or corruption;
    Criterion 2: The production of proofs must have been free from fraud
    and the proofs produced must not have contained any essential errors;
    Criterion 3: The compromis must have been valid; Criterion 4: The
    arbitrators must not have exceeded their powers.

    Due to time limits, I will not go into details. However, after
    assessing Wilson's Arbitral award against the abovementioned criteria,
    it can be declared confidently: The Arbitral Award of Woodrow
    Wilson is still a valid and legally obligatory document, because the
    indispensable feature of an arbitral award is that it produces an
    award that is final and binding. By agreeing to submit the dispute to
    arbitration, i.e. signing a compromis, the parties in advance agree
    to accept the decision.10 Therefore, in spite of the long-standing
    occupation, Turkey does not possess any legal title to the territory
    of Wilsonian Armenia. After the arbitral award of the US President,
    signed and sealed on November 22, 1920, Turkish presence over there
    is not more than an administrative control alike of Turkish status in
    Northern Cyprus. Thus, the presence and all acts taken by the Turkish
    Republic in the "Wilsonian Armenia" are illegal and invalid, because
    the belligerent occupation does not yield lawful rule over a territory.

    It is true that international law by itself will not be able to bring
    about a solution for the Armenian-Turkish confrontation. Nonetheless,
    there is no doubt that international law is the only way to bring
    about a just and peaceful resolution, thus a durable and permanent
    solution. The main basis for the lawful solution of long-standing
    Armenian- Turkish problem are not the infamous Armenian-Turkish
    protocols, but the Arbitral Award, done over 90 years ago in the
    capital city of this country by 28th President of the United States
    of America Woodrow Thomas Wilson.

    __________________________________________________ __________________________

    Notes

    1 G. H. Hackworth, Digest of International Law, Turkishâ~@~PArmenian
    Boundary Question, vol. I, Chapters I-V, Washington, 1940, p. 715.

    2 (H. Lauterpacht, Recognition in International Law, Cambridge, 1947,
    p. 11. Papers Relating to Foreign Relations of the United States,
    1920, v. III, Washington, 1936. p.

    778.) [hereinafter - FRUS].

    3 The Treaties of Peace, 1919â~@~P1923, (Preface by Lt.â~@~PCol.

    Lawrence Martin).vol. I, New York, 1924, p. xxxii.

    4 Ibid., p. 783.

    5 Cukwurah A. O., The Settlement of Boundary Disputes in International
    Law, Manchester, 1967, pp. 165-166.

    6 The 1899 Convention was ratified by Turkey on July 12, 1907. (The
    Hague Court Reports, op. cit., p. cii).

    7 This notion was comprised in article # 54 of the 1899 Convention
    with slightly deferent wording: "The award, duly pronounced and
    notified to the agents of the parties [at variance, puts an end to]
    the dispute definitively and without appeal."( The Hague Court Reports,
    op. cit., p. lxxxix).

    8 Ibid.

    9 Manual of the Terminology of Public International Law, op.cit.,
    § 508, pp. 588â~@~P590.

    10 Ibid., p. 27.

    http://www.armenianlife.com/2011/05/13/wilsondocument/

    ###

    OPEN LETTER

    to the Foreign Minister of the Republic of Armenia

    Mr. Edward Nalbandian

    Respected Minister,

    On the first of October this year, at the end of the parliamentary
    hearings on the pair of unfortunate Armenian-Turkish protocols, you
    declared the following in the course of answering the predetermined
    questions: "Wilson's decision has no legal implications, as it was
    not ratified by the US Senate" (I would like to apologise if your
    wording is not reproduced exactly; the meaning, however, is accurate,
    I believe). It was most unfortunate that I was not in attendance
    at that time. I could not have known beforehand that your responses
    would be delayed until the end of the working day & had to leave for
    a prior engagement.

    But something good has come of this. I am now compelled to respond to
    your claim in the form of an open letter. It is not worthy to leave
    the words of a Minister unaddressed. You have repeated, word-for-word,
    the opinion expressed in Yerevan two weeks ago by your compatriot,
    Andranik Mihranian. I had the honour then of clarifying certain things,
    & so, would like to repeat my own arguments now.

    You, as well as Mr. Mihranian have clearly confused the chronologically
    close, yet two very distinct issues - the mandate for Armenia &
    the question of Armenia's borders - & have therefore arrived at a
    wrong conclusion. Considering the timeliness of the matter, I find
    it appropriate to give a brief account of the aforementioned issues.

    The mandate for Armenia & the question of Armenia's borders

    The Paris Peace Conference ultimately took up the main issues of the
    Ottoman Empire in the San Remo session, which took place from the
    24th to the 27th of April, 1920. The conference got involved with
    clarifying the fate of Armenia as well within this context, by which
    the Supreme Council of the Allied Powers officially approached the US
    President Woodrow Wilson on the 26th of April, 1920 with two separate
    requests: a) for the United States to assume a mandate for Armenia, &
    b) for the President of the United States to arbitrate the frontiers
    of Armenia. The two issues were completely independent of each other,
    & therefore were addressed to separate people or bodies & came under
    separate judicial authorities.

    For the first - the mandate - the Paris Peace Conference approached
    the US as a state. The legal basis for such a request was Article 22
    of the Covenant of the League of Nations, according to which member
    states of the League of Nations could carry out "tutelage" on behalf
    of the League of Nations. Since this issue concerned an obligation
    by an international treaty, the President of the United States had to
    receive the "Advice & Consent" of the Senate, in accordance with the
    US Constitution. & so, the Senate of the US - & not Congress - having
    discussed the issue of taking on a mandate for Armenia from the 24th
    of May to the 1st of June, 1920, voted against it. The real reason
    for this was that the US was not a member of the League of Nations,
    & therefore there was no legal basis to carry out any activities on
    its behalf.

    The second request - arbitrating the frontier of Armenia with
    Turkey - did not come under the authority of the Senate, & so that
    part of the legislative branch of the United States could not &
    in fact never did take up this issue. International arbitration
    forms part of international law & is regulated exclusively as per
    international public law. Therefore, even a week before the Senate
    began to discuss the mandate for Armenia, on the 17th of May, 1920,
    President Wilson gave an affirmative answer to the second request,
    taking on the responsibility & authority of arbitration to decide the
    frontier between Armenia & Turkey. So, whether there would be a Treaty
    of Sèvres or not, the legal compromis existed, and, consequently,
    the legal arbitration was to take place.

    What followed in this regard is relatively better known. Based on
    the compromis of San Remo (the 26th of April, 1920), as well as
    that of Sèvres (the 10th of August, 1920), US President Woodrow
    Wilson granted the arbitral award on the frontiers between Armenia &
    Turkey on the 22nd of November, 1920, which was to come into force
    in accordance with the agreement immediately & without preconditions.

    Two days later, on the 24th of November, the award was conveyed by
    telegraph to the Paris Peace Conference & for the consideration of
    the League of Nations. The award was accepted as such, but remained
    unsettled, because the beneficiary of the award - the Republic of
    Armenia - ceased to exist on the 2nd of December, 1920.

    The status of Wilson's arbitral award

    It is necessary to state, first of all, that any arbitral award,
    if it is carried out with due process, does not just have some
    theoretical "legal force", but is a binding document to be carried
    out without reservations. Moreover, arbitral awards are "final &
    without appeal". "The arbitral award is the final & binding decision
    by an arbitrator".

    The final & non-appealable nature of arbitral awards is codified
    within international law. In particular, by Article 54 of the 1899
    edition & Article 81 of the 1907 edition of the Hague Convention for
    the Pacific Settlement of International Disputes.

    It is evident from the aforementioned that arbitral awards a) are
    inherently binding & non-appealable decisions, & b) do not require
    any ratification or approval from within a state.

    And so, by the arbitral award of the President of the United States
    Woodrow Wilson, the frontier between Armenia & Turkey has been decided
    for perpetuity, being in force to this day & not subject to any appeal.

    There is another important issue to consider. Have the authorities &
    public bodies of the United States ever expressed any position with
    regards to President Wilson's arbitral award deciding the border
    between Armenia & Turkey?

    The position of the executive branch

    The highest executive power of the United States not only recognised
    Wilson's arbitral award, but has also ratified it and, therefore,
    it has become part of the law of the land of the USA. The President
    of the United States Woodrow Wilson & Secretary of State Bainbridge
    Colby ratified the award of the arbitrator Woodrow Wilson with
    their signatures & The Great Seal of the United States. According
    to international law, the personal signature of the arbitrator &
    his seal, if applicable, are completely sufficient as ratification
    of an arbitral award. Woodrow Wilson could have been satisfied with
    only his signature or as well as his presidential seal. In that case,
    the award would have been the obligation of an individual, albeit a
    president. However, the arbitral award is ratified with the official
    state seal & confirmed by the keeper of the seal, the Secretary of
    State. The arbitral award of Woodrow Wilson is thus an unqualified
    obligation of the USA itself.

    The position of the legislative branch

    As mentioned above, arbitral awards are not subject to any legislative
    approval or ratification. So the Senate, which reserves the right
    to take up matters relating to foreign policy according to the
    US Constitution, never discussed the arbitral award deciding the
    Armenian-Turkish frontier. Nevertheless, in the course of discussing
    other matters, the Senate of the US explicitly expressed its position
    on this award on at least one occasion.

    On the 18th of January, 1927, the Senate rejected the Turkish-American
    treaty of the 6th of August, 1923, for three reasons. One of the
    reasons was that Turkey "failed to provide for the fulfillment of the
    Wilson award to Armenia". Senator William H. King (D-Utah) expressed
    himself much more clearly in an official statement on this occasion,
    "Obviously it would be unfair & unreasonable for the United States
    to recognize & respect the claims & professions of Kemal so long as
    he persist in holding control & sovereignty over Wilson Armenia." The
    vote in the Senate in 1927 testifies without a doubt to the fact that
    Wilson's arbitral award was a ratified award & had legal bearing
    in 1927. Nothing from a legal perspective has changed since then,
    & it thus remains in force to this day. I would like to especially
    emphasise that this aforementioned discussion & vote took place years
    after "the relevant treaties ... defin[ing] ... the ...

    border" cited in the unfortunate pair of protocols.

    Let me also add that the restoration of relations between Turkey &
    America (after the WWI) still does not have a basis in any treaty,
    & numerous controversial legal questions are left unaddressed in
    that matter.

    The position of public bodies

    The most important public bodies in the USA are the political
    parties. The main clauses of party programs are to be found in the
    party platforms, which are approved by the general assemblies of
    political parties.

    The Democratic Party of the US (the party of current President Obama)
    has official expressed a position on Wilson's arbitral award on two
    occasions, in 1924 & in 1928.

    In its 1924 programme, the Democratic Party included a separate clause
    of the "Fulfillment of President Wilson's arbitral award respecting
    Armenia" as a platform & goal. The 1928 platform went even further,
    citing the US as a state and, as per the "promises & engagements"
    of the Allied Powers, "We favor the most earnest efforts on the part
    of the United States to secure the fulfillment of the promises &
    engagements made during & following the World War by the United States
    & the allied powers to Armenia & her people." The only "promise &
    engagement" of the United States to the Republic of Armenia was &
    continues to remain the arbitral award of Woodrow Wilson on the border
    between Armenia & Turkey.

    Respected Minister,

    You have stated, that " Armenia is the inheritor of treaties
    signed by the USSR" (I apologise again for any inaccuracy in exact
    wording). You are incorrect, as the heir to the Soviet Union is the
    Russian Federation. Have a look at the composition of the UN Security
    Council. The international personality of a state cannot be so torn
    apart. When, for example, India was partitioned into India & Pakistan,
    the country's personality did not shift. It inherited India, & Pakistan
    was forced to create its own international personality, step-by-step,
    including signing treaties & establishing relations. When Bangladesh
    seceded from Pakistan, the personality of Pakistan was unaffected &
    Bangladesh started to create its own international personality.

    With the collapse of the USSR, the heir of the international
    personality of that state was unequivocally the Russian Federation, &
    not Armenia under any circumstances. The newly-created Armenia, as well
    as the other newly-independent countries, declared merely the following
    in Article 12 of the agreement on the establishment of the Commonwealth
    of Independent States: "The parties in high negotiation guarantee
    the fulfilment of international obligations arising from treaties &
    agreements of the former USSR". That is, the newly-established states
    bore certain responsibilities of conduct, but that does not mean
    that they became party to treaties signed by the USSR. In that case,
    the Republic of Armenia would not need to sign one-by-one or become
    party to numerous international conventions, treaties or protocols of
    which the Soviet Union was part for years. For example, the Republic of
    Armenia joined the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations (1961),
    which has come up a lot lately, only on the 23rd of July, 1993,
    whereas the USSR (that is to say, the current Russian Federation)
    has been party to that convention since the 11th of February, 1964.

    The "tabula rasa" principle ("a clean slate") was put in place
    when the Soviet Union collapsed. It could not have been otherwise,
    because, from the perspective of international law, the countries
    of the Southern Caucasus were under occupation, as when Bolshevik
    Russia re-conquered Azerbaijan, Armenia & Georgia in 1920-1921,
    they were already recognised states. Not only is the Republic of
    Armenia not the inheritor of treaties of the USSR ("In general,
    no treaty or obligation can have a legal basis for any country,
    if the officials of that country were clearly functioning under the
    command of a foreign power") but any changes in the territory of the
    Republic of Armenia during the years of Soviet Russia (1920-1922),
    then the occupation by the USSR (1922-1991), is illegal, as "a cession
    of territory during occupation is not effective".

    Please accept, Minister, the assurances of my highest consideration.

    Ara Papian

    Head, "Modus Vivendi" Center

    2 October 2009

    P.S. Minister, if you disagree with my arguments, I would like to
    request an invitation to debate on live television. Silence, that is,
    the absence of an invitation, would be perceived as a sign of agreement
    with my arguments.

    http://www.wilsonforarmenia.org/

    ###

    OPEN LETTER

    to the Foreign Minister of the Republic of Turkey

    Mr. Ahmet Davutoglu

    Respected Minister,

    I read with interest the text of your speech of the 21st of October
    at the Grand National Assembly of Turkey. My impressions were mixed.

    However, I mainly felt that you wished to present what was desirable,
    instead of what was real.

    To begin with, it was astonishing to hear of "occupation" from the
    foreign minister of a country which has itself been occupying 37%
    of the territory of Cyprus for more than three decades now, not to
    mention three-fourths of my homeland - the Republic of Armenia - for
    almost nine decades. I would like to stress that I am not referring
    to some abstract "Armenian lands", but solely the territory granted
    to the Republic of Armenia through a document of international law,
    that is, the arbitral award of US President Woodrow Wilson of the
    22nd of November 1920. I shall elaborate on the arbitral award later,
    but for now I would simply like to say that, in accordance with
    international law, arbitral awards are "definitive and without appeal."

    Respected Minister,

    While commenting on the fifth clause of protocol on the establishment
    of diplomatic relations between the Republic of Armenia and the
    Republic of Turkey, you drew the conclusion that the Republic of
    Armenia recognises "the existing border" according to the treaties
    of Moscow (of the 16th of March 1921) and Kars (of the 13th of
    October 1921).

    This is a very arbitrary conclusion indeed. The document in question
    does not cite the aforementioned so-called treaties. The protocols
    refer only to "the relevant treaties of international law".

    That is, evidently, the treaties in question must be governed by
    international law, at the very least not being in violation of it.

    Simultaneously, by referring to "the relevant treaties of
    international law" and not simply "international treaties", the
    protocol provides a more inclusive definition, and thus brings in
    "the instruments of international law" in general, regardless of the
    kind of document, as, given the present case, we have a document
    known as a "protocol". Accordingly, a "treaty" must be understood
    in a way separate from the term for the document, purely as a legal,
    written international agreement.

    ["Treaty" means an international agreement concluded between States
    in written form and governed by international law - Article 2.1(a),
    Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties, 1969].

    It is evident that "the existing border" mentioned in the protocol
    is not the illegal dividing line, which came about as a result of
    Bolshevik-Kemalist actions. Ex injuria non oritur jus, illegal acts
    cannot create law. "The existing border" implies that which exists in
    international law and in accordance with international law. Moreover,
    there is no only one such border between Armenia and Turkey: the
    border decided by the arbitral award of US President Woodrow Wilson.

    The treaties of Moscow and Kars, which you mentioned in your speech,
    are not treaties at all from an international law point of view. In
    order for them to be considered as treaties, they ought to have been
    signed by the plenipotentiary representatives of the lawful governments
    of recognised states. Neither the Kemalists, nor the Bolsheviks, to
    say nothing of the Armenian Bolsheviks brought to power in Armenia,
    fulfilled the above requirement in 1921. Therefore, the act of
    signing those treaties was in violation of the basic principles
    of international law - jus cogens - at the very moment they were
    signed. And according to Article 53 of the Vienna Convention on
    the Law of Treaties, 1969, which you yourself cited in your speech,
    "A treaty is void if, at the time of its conclusion, it conflicts
    with a peremptory norm of general international law."

    Do you really believe that two unrecognised, and consequently illegal
    self-proclaimed administrations, as the Bolsheviks and Kemalists
    were in 1921, could, through a bilateral treaty (of Moscow), nullify
    a legally negotiated international document signed by eighteen
    recognised states (the Treaty of Sèvres)? Do you believe that the
    Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact, for example, is a legal document? I do not
    think so, because two countries, namely the USSR and Germany, could
    not decide the borders of a third country. Then why do you believe
    that two rebel movements, as, I repeat, the Bolsheviks and Kemalists
    were in 1921, had the authority to decide in Moscow the borders of
    some other country, the Republic of Armenia, even if it were occupied?

    Do you really believe that the Armenian Soviet Socialist Republic,
    as well as the Georgian and Azerbaijani Soviet Socialist Republic
    ever had the capacity to make treaties under international law? Of
    course not. Since April of 1920 (for Azerbaijan), December of 1920
    (for Armenia) and February of 1921 (for Georgia), these countries
    were rendered simply territories of different administrative units
    under Russian Bolshevik occupation. In Armenia's case, the Senate
    of the United States adopted outright the following by Resolution
    #245 on the 3rd of June, 1924: " Turkey joined with Soviet Russia in
    the destruction of the Armenian State." If there were no Republic
    of Armenia from the 2nd of December 1920, how could it sign an
    international treaty in Kars in October of 1921?

    It is an indisputable fact of international law that no legal
    consequences are held for an occupied country by the acts of the
    occupiers, as "a cession of territory during occupation is not
    effective." There is no ambiguity in this matter.

    The fact that the protocols do not make legal the situation created
    as a result of the Armenian Genocide and that they do not recognise
    any frontiers was stated outright in the address of the President of
    the Republic of Armenia, Serge Sargsyan, on the 10th of October 2009:
    "Any sort of relationship with Turkey cannot cast into doubt the
    reality of the dispossession and genocide of the Armenian people",
    and "The issue of the current frontier between Armenia and Turkey
    is subject to a resolution as per prevailing international law. The
    protocols say nothing more than that."

    Clear and simple.

    Now let us see what this "prevailing international law" is exactly,
    according to which "the issue of the current frontier between Armenia
    and Turkey is subject to a resolution."

    In order to understand this, one must return to the not-too-distant
    past, during that short period of time, when the international
    community recognised the Republic of Armenia as a state. When,
    on the 19th of January 1920, the Supreme Council of the Paris Peace
    Conference, that is, the British Empire, France and Italy, recognised
    the Republic of Armenia, it was done so with a certain condition,
    that the borders of the Republic of Armenia were to be determined
    soon afterwards. The US also recognised the Republic of Armenia with
    that same condition on the 23th of April 1920.

    When it came to the borders of the Republic of Armenia, naturally,
    the most important was the question of the Arme­nia-Turkey frontier.

    And so, at the San Remo session of the Paris Peace Conference,
    alongside other issues, this particu­lar question was discussed
    during the 24th to the 27th of April, 1920, and, on the 26th of
    April, the US President Woodrow Wilson was officially requested
    to arbitrate the frontiers of Armenia. On the 17th of May, 1920,
    President Wilson accep­ted and took on the duties and authority as
    the arbiter of the frontier between Armenia and Turkey. I would like
    to espe­cially emphasise that this was almost three months before
    the Treaty of Sèvres was signed (which took place on the 10th of
    August, 1920). Whether the Treaty of Sèvres would come to pass or
    not, the compromis of a legal arbiter existed, and consequently, the
    arbitral award deciding the border between Armenia and Turkey would
    take place. It is another matter that the Treaty of Sèvres consisted
    of an additional compromis. It is necessary to note that the validity
    of the compromis only requires the signatures of the authorised
    representatives and that no ratification is required for compromis.

    Accordingly, based upon the compromis of San Remo (of the 26th of
    April, 1920), as well as that of Sèvres (of the 10th of August,
    1920), US President Woodrow Wilson carried out his arbitral award
    on the borders between Armenia and Turkey on the 22nd of November,
    1920, which was to be enforced thereupon and without reservations in
    accordance with the agreement (compromis).

    Two days later, on the 24th of November, the award was officially
    conveyed by telegraph to the Paris Peace Conference for the
    consideration of the League of Nations. The award was accepted as
    such, but remained unsettled, because the beneficiary of the award -
    the Republic of Armenia - ceased to exist on the 2nd of December 1920.

    The issue of the current status of Wilson's arbitral award

    It is necessary to state, first of all, that any arbitral award is
    a binding document to be carried out without reservations. Moreover,
    arbitral awards are "final and without appeal". "The arbitral award
    is the final and binding decision by an arbitrator".

    The final and non-appealable nature of arbitral awards is codified
    within international law. In particular, by Article 54 of the 1899
    edition and Article 81 of the 1907 edition of the Hague Convention
    for the Pacific Settlement of International Disputes. And so, by
    the arbitral award of the President of the United States Woodrow
    Wilson, the frontier between Armenia and Turkey has been decided for
    perpetuity, being in force to this day and not subject to any appeal.

    Therefore, when the fifth clause of the protocol on the establishment
    of diplomatic relations between the Republic of Armenia and the
    Republic of Turkey mentions "the mutual recognition of the existing
    border between the two countries as defined by the relevant treaties
    of international law", then that can only take into consideration
    the border defined by the only legal document in force to this day,
    the arbitral award of US President Woodrow Wilson. There is no other
    legal document "of international law", as the protocol says.

    There is another important issue to consider here. Have the authorities
    and public bodies of the USA ever expressed any position concerning
    President Wilson's arbitral award deciding the border between Armenia
    and Turkey?

    The position of the executive branch

    The highest executive power of the United States not only recognised
    Wilson's arbitral award, but has also ratified it and, therefore,
    it has become part of the law of the land of the United States. The
    President of the United States Woodrow Wilson and Secretary of State
    Bainbridge Colby ratified the award of the arbitrator Woodrow Wilson
    with their signatures and The Great Seal of the United States.

    According to international law, the personal signature of the
    arbitrator and his seal, if applicable, are completely sufficient as
    ratification of an arbitral award. Woodrow Wilson could have been
    satisfied with only his signature or as well as his presidential
    seal. In that case, the award would have been the obligation of an
    individual, albeit a president. However, the arbitral award is ratified
    with the official state seal and confirmed by the keeper of the seal,
    the Secretary of State. The arbitral award of Woodrow Wilson is thus
    an unqualified obligation of the United States of America itself.

    The position of the legislative branch

    Arbitral awards are not subject to any legislative approval or
    ratification. They are governed by international public law.

    Therefore, the Senate, which reserves the right to take up matters
    relating to foreign policy according to the US Constitution, never
    directly discussed the arbitral award deciding the Armenian-Turkish
    frontier. Nevertheless, in the course of discussing other matters,
    the Senate of the United States explicitly expressed its position on
    this award on at least one occasion.

    On the 18th of January 1927, the Senate rejected the Turkish-American
    treaty of the 6th of August 1923, for three reasons. One of the
    reasons was that Turkey "failed to provide for the fulfilment of the
    Wilson award to Armenia". Senator William H. King (D-UT) expressed
    himself much more clearly in an official statement on this occasion,
    "Obviously it would be unfair and unreasonable for the United States to
    recognize and respect the claims and professions of Kemal so long as he
    persist in holding control and sovereignty over Wilson Armenia." The
    vote in the Senate in 1927 testifies without a doubt to the fact that
    Wilson's arbitral award was a ratified award and had legal bearing
    in 1927. Nothing from a legal perspective has changed since then,
    and it thus remains in force to this day.

    The position of public bodies

    The most important public bodies in the United States are political
    parties. The main clauses of party programmes are to be found in
    party platforms, which are approved by the general assemblies of
    political parties.

    The Democratic Party of the US (the party of current President Obama
    and Secretary of State Clinton) has official expressed a position on
    Wilson's arbitral award on two occasions, in 1924 and in 1928.

    In its 1924 programme, the Democratic Party included a separate
    clause of the "Fulfilment of President Wilson's arbitral award
    respecting Armenia" as a platform and goal. The 1928 platform went
    even further, referring to the US as a state and, as per the "promises
    and engagements" of the Allied Powers, "We favour the most earnest
    efforts on the part of the United States to secure the fulfilment
    of the promises and engagements made during and following the World
    War by the United States and the allied powers to Armenia and her
    people." The only "promise and engagement" of the United States to
    the Republic of Armenia was and continues to remain the arbitral
    award of Woodrow Wilson on the border between Armenia and Turkey.

    Respected Minister,

    As opposed to the current generation of Americans and Europeans, we
    know the Turks well, and we therefore do not harbour any illusions. I
    believe that you, in turn, know us well, and must therefore bear
    no illusions of your own. If you Turks believe that by arm-twisting
    Armenia you can force anything upon the Armenian people, you are much
    mistaken. Our history is proof of quite the contrary.

    We - the Armenians and the Turks - are condemned together to find
    mutually acceptable solutions. Such solutions may come in many
    forms, but one thing must be clear, that they have to benefit the
    establishment of a stable peace for the entire region, the development
    of a diverse economy, the creation of a co-operative atmosphere, while
    serving as well the realisation of certain interests of global powers
    and their greater inclusion in regional issues. And so, that solution
    must be such that it dispels the security concerns of the Armenian
    side, while providing conditions of sustained economic growth and
    development for the Republic of Armenia, as well as guaranteeing the
    preservation of Armenian cultural values. Simultaneously, the solution
    must not go against the core interests of Turkey, and the proposal
    must be appreciable by the Turkish side as a dignified solution to
    the given circumstances.

    Respected Minister,

    We are willing to co-operate, but do not take that as a sign of
    weakness and do not force us to raise a white flag of surrender. That
    will never occur.

    Accept, Minister, the deepest assurances of my consideration.

    Ara Papian

    Head, "Modus Vivendi" Center

    Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the Republic of
    Armenia to Canada 2000-2006

    23 October 2009

    http://www.wilsonforarmenia.org/

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