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Will Obama Be The Next World Leader To Recognize The Armenian Genoci

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  • Will Obama Be The Next World Leader To Recognize The Armenian Genoci

    WILL OBAMA BE THE NEXT WORLD LEADER TO RECOGNIZE THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE?

    Ha'aretz, Israel
    April 21 2015

    With authorities as diverse as the Vatican and European Parliament
    recently acknowledging the atrocities of 1915, Turkey's leaders have
    been in belligerent mood.

    By Zvi Bar'el | Apr. 21, 2015 | 1:06 AM

    In a recent column on the Hurriyet Daily News website, commentator
    Burak Bekdil promises his readers "good news" and proceeds to recount
    what his "own sources" told him about "how Turkey will retaliate
    against the Vatican's stab in the back: Defense companies from the
    Vatican will not be allowed to compete for lucrative Turkish contracts,
    including deals for missile systems and fighter aircraft.

    Government-friendly NGOs in Turkey will launch massive boycotts
    against Vatican-made whiteware and other consumer goods.

    "Economists expect the Vatican's powerful carmakers will be affected
    the most. Turkish tour operators will stop carrying millions of
    tourists to the holy city every year, depriving the Vatican's vibrant
    hotel industry of $$$$$.

    "Turkey will also use its superpower influence and block the Vatican's
    bid to become a member of the United Nations Security Council.

    Separately, a planned Turkish soft loan for the Vatican, worth $52
    billion, will be suspended until the Pope apologizes to Turkey.

    "Rumor also has it that Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu told his inner
    cabinet that the Pope's days as the leader of the worldwide Catholic
    Church were now numbered - just like Syrian President Bashar Assad's."

    Bekdil's pointed ridicule, written in response to Davutoglu's threats
    of punitive measures against the Vatican that go beyond the recall
    of the Turkish ambassador, adds to the storm caused by the Vatican's
    recognition, on April 12, of the mass killings of Armenians a century
    ago as genocide. The annual commemoration of the beginning of the
    Ottoman war against the Armenians, observed on April 24, always gets
    Turkey's foreign ministry into a lather, trying to fend off the charges
    of genocide, and loosens the tongue of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

    This year is the centenary of the massacre, and Turkey has already
    weathered a few heavy blows. Last Wednesday, the European Parliament
    not only reaffirmed its recognition of the Armenian genocide -
    as it did in 1987 and 2005 - but also called for the establishment
    of diplomatic relations between Turkey and Armenia, and encouraged
    Turkey to open its archives in order to come to terms with its past.

    http://www.haaretz.com/news/world/.premium-1.652698



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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