Armenian Issue Revisited
Facts
and Discussion Points in the Armenian Allegations
By Ayhan Ozer
Armenian
Terrorism
On
27 January 1973, the Armenians in the United States as well
as around the world launched a brutal terrorism campaign
against the Turks and the Turkish institutions to validate
forcibly a mythical genocide believed only by themselves.
through boold-shed and violence. That day, an old Armenian
man by the name Yanikian invited two Turkish diplomats from
the Los Angeles Consulate to a luncheon in Santa Barbara.
It turned out that the invitation was a dastardly ambush;
he killed both diplomats brutally in the retaurant. For
two decades this senseless terrorism claimed the lives of
more than seventy Turkish diplomats (four in the U.S.) and
their family members, and maimed and wounded several innocent
by-standers in the carnage staged by the Armenians all over
the world. The Armenian terrorists, mostly drop-outs from
Middle Eastern terrorism, recognize no boundary to their
savage operations. They even carried the terror to the college
campuses, ravishing the sanctified atmosphere of the higher-learning
institutions. The American historians who refused to share
the distorted Armenian version of history were targeted
for harassment and threat. The Turkish History professor
Stanford Shaw of U.C.L.A. was one of them, and on October
3, 1977, the Armenian bullies threw a bomb, and blew up
the front portion of his house. He and his family had to
leave the campus under a death threat.
A closing paragraph
can go as follows: Today,
the Armenians are counting on the scant sense of history
of people. They rely on the war-time propaganda materials
long refuted by the U.S., the British and the French authorities;
and on yellow journalism, fictions as well as add-on stories.
They have romanticised their history and embroidered the
truth. The Armenians obstinately ignore or refuse to believe
the preponderence of evidence that shatters their mythical
convictions.
U.N.
Report
When
the Holocaust Council was formed in 1980, the Armenians
were represented by Seth Moomjian, a first-generation Armenian-American
whose parents had been orphaned in 1915 in Turkey. Moomjian
served as an adviser to President Carter, a representative
to the United Nations, and also a White House representative
to the United Nations Human Rights Commission! In 1980,
Moomjian pledged $1,000,000 to the Holocaust Museum. However,
on September 24, 1981 he backed down on this pledge, and
offered instead a payment of $100,000. For a long time no
money was forthcoming. When in December 1988 an earthquake
devastated Armenian Republic the Armenian community grabbed
this event as an excuse not to fulfill its pledge, they
claimed that the earthquake victims needed money. As a result
only part of the pledge was fulfilled.
In 1990 a report
was prepared by Benjamin Whitaker, an obscure U.N. reporter,
repeating the familiar allegations plied by the Armenians
"the tragic events during the First World War involving
the Armenians in the Ottoman Empire constituted the first
case of genocide in the 20th century." Obviously, this distorted
version of history had been spoon-fed to that reporter by
some Armenians, whose names figured prominently in the prologue
of the Report for recognition. Apparently, Mr. Seth Moomjian
was behind this scheme, as he carried the impressive title
of "White House Representative to the United Nations Human
Rights Commission" using his influence he had that Mr. Whitaker
prepare this Report. Like all Armenian falsehoods, it was
far from being a serious work, and the U.N. had nothing
to do with it. It was a private venture undertaken by a
mercenary to play into the hands of the Armenians in their
wicked ethnic politics venture. The purpose was to use insidiously
the name of the U.N. to invest the Report with a certain
authenticity. Historically, the Armenians have had no qualm
to validate their spurious allegations; they can desecrate
the truth, or corrupt venerated institutions, be it the
U.N., the schools, the universities, or the U.S. Congress.
During the 35th
session of the Commission on Human Rights there was a pressure
brought to bear on the U.N. Economic and Social Council
for the inclusion of a paragraph to that effect in the Sub-Commission's
study of "The Question of the Prevention and Punishment
of the Crime of Genocide". The Human Rights Sub-Commission
rightly resisted such efforts during its deliberations,
and refused to transmit it to the higher Human Rights Commission
mainly because the contention was not based on historical
facts, but rather on malicious propaganda and fabrications.
As it has been pointed out by the independent observers,
eminent history professors and the archival materials, those
tragic events were part of an upheaval created by the Armenians
amidst a world conflagration. The Armenian riots, betrayals
and treachery aggravated these conditions and turned it
into a civil war within a global war.
Given the spurious
nature of that Report, the United Nations took a right action
with respect to this report to protect its universally accepted
ideals and lofty principles from diminishing in a petty
ethnic politics.
The Armenians,
counting on the short memory of the people, keep heating
up this old dish and try to foist it upon the public as
a truth. |