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ANCA: Erdogan Presses Protocols Advantage During DC Visit

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  • ANCA: Erdogan Presses Protocols Advantage During DC Visit

    Armenian National Committee of America
    1711 N Street, NW
    Washington, DC 20036
    Tel. (202) 775-1918
    Fax. (202) 775-5648
    Email. [email protected]
    Internet www.anca.org

    PRESS RELEASE

    December 8, 2009
    Contact: Elizabeth S. Chouldjian
    Tel: (202) 775-1918

    LEVERAGING TURKEY-ARMENIA PROTOCOLS,
    ERDOGAN PRESSES ADVANTAGE DURING DC VISIT

    -- Escalates Genocide Denial, Pushes Preconditions, Reinforces
    Pressure on Nagorno Karabagh

    -- WATCH VIDEO:
    http://www.anca.org/press_releases/press_re leases.php?prid=1788

    WASHINGTON, DC - Turkey's Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan,
    having secured at least temporarily, the silence of yet another
    Administration on the Armenian Genocide, has used his U.S. visit to
    further press Turkey's advantage - dramatically escalating his
    genocide denial rhetoric, reinforcing Turkey's "Protocols"
    preconditions for lifting its blockade of Armenia, and attempting
    to use Ankara's new found leverage in the Nagorno Karabagh peace
    process to deliver a pro-Azerbaijani settlement of this conflict,
    reported the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA).

    "Today, more than seven months into the silence of yet another U.S.
    Administration on the Armenian Genocide, it's painfully clear that
    Erdogan has not, as President Obama had hoped, moved toward a full,
    frank and just acknowledgement of the facts - but rather sprinted
    in exactly the opposite direction, dramatically ramping up his
    denial rhetoric and pressing more aggressively against U.S.
    recognition of this crime," said Aram Hamparian, Executive Director
    of the ANCA. "As we've said from day one, for Erdogan and his
    government, the Protocols are not about peace. They represent
    simply another tactic by Turkey to extend U.S. complicity in
    Turkey's denials from one April 24th to the next," added Hamparian.

    In addition to escalating his Armenian Genocide denial demands,
    Erdogan also made clear that his government would not respect
    either of the two U.S. priorities for Turkey-Armenia normalization:
    no preconditions and a reasonable timeframe. He continued to press
    for both the two Turkish preconditions hardwired into the
    Protocols, namely a historical "commission" and the confirmation of
    borders, as well as a third unwritten precondition that the Nagorno
    Karabagh issue be settled to Azerbaijan's satisfaction. At the
    same time, he firmly established that Turkey does not feel any
    obligation to move forward in a timely manner.

    Erdogan's comments came during a press conference held at the
    Willard Hotel, followed by a presentation at the Johns Hopkins
    University School of Advanced and International Studies (SAIS) and
    an evening speech at SETA-DC, touted as the only Turkish think tank
    in Washington, DC. He will continue presentations on Tuesday at
    the German Marshall Fund and later do a PBS television interview
    with Charlie Rose.

    During his think tank appearances, Prime Minister Erdogan
    pontificated - often in a lecturing and self-righteous tone - on a
    broad range of topics, from foreign policy to climate change and
    world poverty. The formats of these presentations, which featured
    highly controlled third-party participation, lent themselves to
    this type of one-way communication. The only exceptions were the
    few questions, submitted in writing, dealing with the Armenian
    Genocide and freedom of speech in Turkey. Both of these topics
    sparked angry and unscripted responses from Erdogan.

    Asked during his Johns Hopkins presentation by ANCA Communications
    Director Elizabeth Chouldjian about his thoughts on repeated
    statements by President Obama that his views had not changed on the
    "events on 1915," Erdogan descended into a strident diatribe of
    denial of the Armenian Genocide, dismissing decades of scholarship
    documenting the systematic destruction of the Armenian population
    from 1915-1923. "My ancestors have never committed genocide,"
    asserted Erdogan. "This is, in my opinion, not possible... Those
    people who speak of genocide, I don't know what documentation they
    base it on."

    Asked about recent Congressional rebuke of media repression in
    Turkey, Prime Minister Erdogan denied that there are restrictions
    on the press in Turkey, stating, "The press in Turkey is perhaps
    freer than the press in the U.S. - much more so, in my opinion."

    At SETA-DC, in response to a question on the ratification timeline
    of the Turkey-Armenia protocols, Prime Minister Erdogan stated
    that: "There are certain connections, which need to be taken into
    consideration, the first one of which being the relations between
    Azerbaijan and Armenia. There is at the moment this concern in the
    Parliament and that's why we called the MINSK group - the United
    States, Russian Federation and France especially - to move forward
    in this area. If they can work on the Nagarno-Karabakh problem
    between Azerbaijan and Armenia, which has been ongoing for the last
    20 years and if progress can be made towards a solution to the
    problem of Nagorno-Karabagh, then not only will problems between
    Azerbaijan and Armenia be resolved but also there will be a
    positive contribution to the process between Turkey and Armenia,
    whereby the parliaments will reflect upon their work, the good will
    and progress in the issue of Nagarno-Karabagh, and this what we
    would like to see happen."
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