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Posts Tagged ‘Armenia’

Russia preparing to defend Armenia

by Phantom Ace ( 2 Comments › )
Filed under Headlines at June 9th, 2012 - 11:02 pm

Russia makes it clear they are prepared to defend Armenia from Azeri aggression. The Russians have an airbase in that nation and have religious ties. They have increased air patrols and have stated they are prepared to intervene.

MOSCOW — Russian fighter jets are conducting an increasing number of training flights over Armenia, a military spokesman said Saturday, sending a clear warning that Russia could intervene at any moment should violence escalate further in the territorial dispute between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

[….]

Russia maintains a military base in Armenia and regularly sells weapons to Armenia.

Colonel Gorbul said Russian fighter pilots were preparing for combat. “The main emphasis in performing aerobatic elements is made on the ability to apply them in real-life air combat conditions,” he said.

The Russian Foreign Ministry last week said it regarded the border clashes as “unacceptable” and would continue to try to broker a peaceful settlement.

The Azeris better not try anything.

Islamic Azeris threaten Christian Armenians

by Phantom Ace ( 5 Comments › )
Filed under Islam, Islamic Invasion, Islamic Supremacism, Jihad, Orthodox Christianity, Russia, Special Report at June 8th, 2012 - 10:30 am

Back in the early 90’s Armenian forces liberated  Nagorno-Karabakh from Islamic occupation. Since then the Islamic Imperialists of Azerbaijan have not accepted this defeat. The majority of the population of  Nagorno-Karabakh are Armenian and don’t want to live under Islamic rule. The Azeris have played the moderate Islamic card to suck the West into supporting them. Using oil revenue, they have built up a strong military. Now they are threatening to ethnically cleanse Nagorno-Karabakh of Armenians. As usual the world remains silent in the face of Islamic genocidal threats against Christians.

Azerbaijan’s Armed Forces are ready to clear Nagorno-Karabakh of its “Armenian occupiers” anytime, Azerbaijani Deputy Prime Minister Ali Gasanov said on Friday.

“The head of state has repeatedly stated that Azerbaijan will never put up with the injustice. This statement holds true to date,” he said.

Commenting on the recent Armenian “provocation” on the frontline, which led to the death of five Azerbaijani servicemen, Gasanov said it was evidently aimed against U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s visit to the region, also dropping a vague hint at Russia.

“Presumably, some states patronizing Armenia were unhappy with the U.S. state secretary’s visit, and they organized that incident,” Gasanov said

[….]

They accused Azerbaijani troops of attempting an incursion into the enclave early on Wednesday, and say two other Armenian fighters were wounded as they beat off the alleged attack.

The Azeris are playing with fire. Armenia is an ally of Russia and as we saw in Georgia, they will not sit idly by as an ally is attack. If Armenia comes close to defeat, Russia will intervene. As usual, many Conservatives will foolishly view Russia as the bad. In this case, they are not. The Russians will be defending Christians against Muslims. That’s something I wish America would do isntead of always defending Islamic scum.

The Blog owners (M, Me and Coldwarrior) stand with the Christian Armenians against the Islamic scum of Azerbajian. Love live Armenia and long live the a free Armenian ruled Nagorno-Karabakh.

 

International relations and the Armenian genocide

by Mojambo ( 180 Comments › )
Filed under History, Holocaust, Turkey at April 30th, 2012 - 2:00 pm

Even though Turkey does not even try to make as if she is pro American, there is no diplomatic reason (there never was any moral reason) for the Untied States and other nations acknowledging the Armenian Genocide). However since Obama and the racist, bigoted, anti-Semitic  Erdogan are BFF’s , and Armenians are Christians and Turks are Muslims – the odds of the United States speaking up on this subject are zero.

by Harout Harry Semerdjian

While the modern-day Republic of Turkey was founded in 1923, eight years after its Ottoman predecessors embarked on a massive and systematic undertaking to rid the empire of its Armenian population, the country today often finds itself in diplomatic spats with various Western nations over its history. Outside the periphery of geopolitics, it would be perplexing to most as to why an event that occurred nearly 100 years ago would impact relations between Turkey and the United States and various European countries. The answer lies in the annals of history.

During the First World War, while the Islamic Ottoman Empire was fighting the Allied Powers on the side of Germany, its native Christian Armenian population became a target of organized deportations and massacres. Long having suffered from discrimination and second-class citizenship, WWI provided the Young Turk government a cover to reach a “final solution” to the prevailing Armenian question.

Starting April 24, 1915, with the arrest and killing of the Armenian intelligentsia, an entire civilization was uprooted from its many-millennia-old homeland and outright massacred or driven to a slow death in the deserts of Syria. The material and cultural loss of the Armenians has also been enormous, with some 3,000 churches destroyed alone. It is estimated that out of a population of two million Armenians, one-and-a-half million were killed while another half a million survived and dispersed to nearly every continent, thus resulting in the creation of a large and dynamic Armenian diaspora.

[……]

The Armenian refugees of 1915 who eventually found themselves integrated and well-established into their host societies, and frustrated with a lack of justice for the genocide, often succeeded in bringing their families’ plight to the attention of world leaders and onto the agendas of global parliaments and the US Congress. It is this very Armenian diaspora that is so feared and vilified by the Turkish government, which regrettably fails to comprehend and accept the realities, needs and anguish of these communities spread all across the world. An eerie reminder of the policy of exile still in effect, visiting diaspora scholars who have written on the genocide have also been deported from the country.

To date, over 20 countries and 43 US states have officially recognized the Armenian genocide, often with high costs and difficult political battles. In 2001, when the French parliament officially passed a resolution formally recognizing the Armenian genocide, Turkey recalled its ambassador and threatened to cut off economic and military ties with France. The two countries narrowly escaped yet another political fallout earlier this year over a proposed bill that would have criminalized the denial of the Armenian genocide in France. The French Constitutional Court, however, found the bill unconstitutional and the measure eventually fell through.

Arguably the most influential Armenian diaspora is that of the United States, where powerful Armenian lobby groups often influence members of Congress to pass pro-Armenian legislation and secure large amounts of foreign aid to Armenia every year. While successful on a number of issues, the Armenian Genocide Resolution is yet to be passed by both the House and the Senate – a measure that consistently fails due to Turkey’s heavy pressure on the White House and threats to close down a US military base on its territory.
[……]

With the one-hundredth anniversary of the Armenian genocide fast approaching, Turkey increasingly finds itself isolated on this issue and under international pressure to finally recognize the wrongs of its predecessors. Its official policy of denial has been a total failure over the decades. Turkey has long relied on its military strength and geopolitical location to get its way on this and other issues including Cyprus and the Kurdish question; if its leadership wants to seriously advance the country’s democratization and “Europeanization” processes, as well as to set the stage for its rise as a regional power, it ought to think along the lines of peace and reconciliation with its neighbors, starting with an honest acknowledgment of its own history.

Read the rest –  Armenian genocide and international relations

Calgary Mayor Naheed Nenshi spreads Muslim propaganda against Christian Armenians

by 1389AD ( 37 Comments › )
Filed under Canada, Christianity at March 12th, 2012 - 8:30 am

This Muslim mayor is officially memorializing a supposed massacre of Muslim Azeris by Christian Armenians in 1988. There was no such massacre. The evidence for it was faked.

It has been confirmed that the official recognition letter came from the mayor’s office. However, the mayor did not refer to the event as “genocide”; that term appears on an Azeri website.

Khojalu map

Link to the letter of the mayor of Calgary recognizing the “mass killings” of the Azeris in Khojaly by the Armenian forces: [click here to view]

From armcalgary.com: Khojaly

Friday, 09 March 2012 18:26

On February 25th, his Worship Naheed Nenshi, Mayor of Calgary issued an official Letter of Recognition accusing Armenian military forces for surrounding and brutal massacre of citizens of Khojaly, Nagorno Karabagh. Decades after the events of February 1992, official Baku has been obstinately fanning anti-Armenian hysteria with the aim of falsifying the events and discrediting the Armenian people in the eyes of the international community.

The history of our Armenian brothers and sisters, the brave citizens of Karabagh are well renowned. Under Gorbachev’s policy of glasnost and perestroika, Karabagh sought freedom and independence from Soviet Azerbaijan. Glasnost OR “openness” granted limited freedom to Soviet citizens to express grievances about the Soviet system and its leaders. Capitalizing on this new policy from Moscow, the leaders of the Regional Soviet Karabagh decided to vote in favor of unifying the autonomous region with Armenia on February 20, 1988. In response, a full-scale war was launched against the Armenians living in the Nagorno Karabagh region.

Between hunger and fire – Khojaly documentary Official Trailer

Uploaded by PanoramaamTV on Feb 24, 2012

“Սովի եւ կրակի արանքում” – Խոջալու վավերագրական ֆիլմի պաշտոնական թրեյլեր

Stepanakert, Nagorno Karabakh Republic
February, 1992
Between hunger and fire
Power struggle in Azerbaijan at the expense of lives
Xocali, Khojaly, Azerbaijan, Heydar Aliyev, Ilham, Karabakh, Freedom

People Who Live In Glass Houses Should Not Throw Stones

Twenty-four years ago, on February 27-29, 1988 horrific atrocities, murders and pogroms were committed against 18.000 Armenians in the city of Sumgait, situated 26 kilometers away from Baku. It was a barbaric response by Azerbaijan to the legitimate and peaceful decision adopted by the Deputies of the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Region Council at the session held on February 20, 1988. The decision was followed by the submission of the petitions to the Supreme Councils of the USSR, Azerbaijan and Armenia with the request to transfer the NKAO from Azerbaijan to Armenia. The bloodbath in Sumgait was followed by the massacres of Armenians in Kirovabad, Baku, Khanlar, Shamkhor…, ethnic cleansing of the Armenian population on the territories surrounding Nagorno Karabakh and in Nagorno-Karabakh proper.

From the letter of the Academician Andrei Sakharov addressed to M. Gorbachev, August 1988:

“If before Sumgait anyone was in doubt whether Nagorno-Karabakh should belong to Azerbaijan, after this tragedy no one has a moral right to insist that it should.” (published in “Nezavisimaya gazeta”, 27.10.1992).

As stated by Ilias Ismailov: “Those responsible for instigating pogroms (in Sumgait), now sit in the Milli Majlis [Azerbaijani Parliament] with the parliament mandates in their pockets.” (“Zerkalo”, 21.02.2003). Ilias Ismailov knew what he was talking about – in 1988 he was the Prosecutor General of the Azerbaijani SSR.

The anti-Armenian hysteria around the Khojaly events is incited by Azerbaijan with the purpose to deny the right of self-determination to the people of Nagorno-Karabakh and to avoid responsibility for the deliberate policy of killings and ethnic cleansing of the Armenian population.

It is not about whether the events in Khojaly were a tragedy or not; it’s about what really happened there, and who is responsible for that tragedy.

1992 … The aggression of Azerbaijan against the Republic of Nagorno-Karabakh is in full swing, half of the Republic’s territory is under occupation, and remaining parts of Karabakh, including the capital – Stepanakert, are exposed to a daily shelling from Azerbaijan’s firing positions. Village of Khojaly was one of those positions, located close to the only airport in this area, capable to link Karabakh with the outside world. The capture of Khojaly was the only way to break the blockade and escape from the artillery fire, cold and hunger forced by the Baku authorities with the sole purpose of eliminating the people of Nagorno-Karabakh.

The Azeri authorities as well as the population of the village were informed in advance about the imminent attack. They were also informed about the humanitarian corridor which was established to ensure an unobstructed exit of the population in the direction of Aghdamm, which was under control of the armed forces of Azerbaijan. Because of the counteraction of the Azerbaijani authorities, some residents were not able to use the corridor before the operation; however those who left after the beginning of the Khojaly operation, managed to get through the humanitarian corridor to the territory controlled by Azerbaijan. It was there, away from Khojaly and on the outskirts to Aghdam that civilians were shot and killed.

“…the Armenians had nevertheless left a corridor, through which the people could escape. Therefore, why did they have to open fire? Especially in the area around Aghdam, where at that time there was sufficient force to get out and help the people.” (Ayaz Mutalibov, First President of the Republic of Azerbaijan, “Nezavisimaya Gazeta”, 02.04.1992)

“Four days before the events of Khojaly. On February 22, there took place a session of the National Security Council with the participation of the President, Prime Minister, Head of the KGB and others, during which it was decided not to evacuate people from Khojaly. Thus, we ourselves pressed the Armenians to attack. The members of the Security Council knew that the Armenians would not carry out actions akin to genocide.” (Ramiz Fataliev, Chair of the Committee Investigating the Events of Khojaly, http://www.azadliq.org/content/article/1818751.html)

“Khojaly residents themselves insist that they did use the corridor and that the Armenian soldiers, on the other side of the corridor, did not open fire. Some soldiers of the Azerbaijani Popular Front evacuated part of the Khojaly residents in the direction of the village of Nakhijevanik – I have no idea why, since at the time it was under control of the Armenian Askeran Battalion. Others were caught in artillery fire in the area around Aghdam.” (Eynulla Fatullayev, Azerbaijani Journalist, the newspaper “Realny Azerbaijan”, April 2005)

Evidences of the kind provided by the representatives of Azerbaijan and other countries are sufficient to conclude that the residents of Khojaly became victims of Baku’s intrigues and currently are being used for propaganda purposes. It is no coincidence that the Azerbaijani journalist Chengiz Mustafayev was killed in 1992 under “obscure” circumstances. He visited twice the site where the bodies of the people from Khojaly had been found. During his second visit he discovered that the bodies had been stripped naked and scalped. He showed the captured footage to the Czech journalist Dana Mazalova in March of 1992. (see: http://www.golosarmenii.am/ru/19958/world/2203/)

Nothing can justify the attempts to exploit tragedies for propaganda purposes, especially when it’s done by the side which holds full responsibility for that tragedy.

Shavarsh Kocharyan

Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Armenia

Read the story of the faked Khojalu massacre here [PDF, click to view]:
“KHOJALU” is political capital for official Baku’s manipulations

Azerbaijan has started its traditional anti-Armenian campaign related to the 1992 events in the settlement of Khojalu – a village in the territory of Nagorno Karabakh, which, in 1988-1990, was intensively populated by the Azerbaijani SSR authorities, in particular, with Meskhetian Turks from the Fergana valley of Uzbekistan. The official propaganda does not disdain to use any means to put the blame for the tragedy on the Armenian side and inject a new portion of hatred towards Armenians into the conscious of the international community and in the opinions of its own people.

More here: