In this mailing:
- Uzay Bulut: Armenian
Genocide: Turkey Cracks Down
- Amir Taheri: Iran, Macromel
and the Purloined Letter
by Uzay Bulut • May 6, 2018 at
5:00 am
- The Christian
genocide in Ottoman Turkey lasted for 10 years -- from 1913 to
1923 -- and targeted Armenian, Greek, Assyrian and other
Christians. It resulted in the annihilation of around three
million people. Sadly, Turkish aggression against the
remaining Armenians continues.
- According to Turkish
myth, it was actually the "treacherous" Armenians
who persecuted Turks; and the Turks were acting in
self-defense to rid themselves of murderous Armenians. A
widespread Turkish claim is, "They deserved it."
- The lies and state
propaganda, which hold the victims responsible for their own
annihilation, are what enable the ongoing Turkish persecution
of the country's remaining Armenians, including the conversion
of their churches into mosques and the digging up of Armenian
graves and churches by treasure-hunters who search for gold.
Armenian
civilians, escorted by Ottoman soldiers, marched through Harput to
a prison in nearby Mezireh (present-day Elazig), April 1915. (Image
source: American Red Cross/Wikimedia Commons)
The annual Armenian Genocide commemorative event
that the Istanbul branch of Turkey's Human Rights Association (IHD)
and the European Grassroots Antiracist Movement (EGAM) planned to
hold on April 24 -- which they have been holding every year since
2005 -- was blocked by police, who seized the placards and banners
about the genocide and carried out criminal record checks on
participants. Three human rights activists were detained and then
released.
In an exclusive interview with Gatestone, Ayşe
Günaysu, an activist with the IHD's Commission Against Racism and
Discrimination, said that "on their way to police station, the
detainees were made to listen to racist songs containing hostile
words concerning Armenians."
by Amir Taheri • May 6, 2018 at
4:00 am
- There is of course
nothing illegal about enriching uranium or producing nuclear
weapons or even using them. The only thing is that you cannot
be a signatory of the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty (NPT),
as Iran has been from the start, and violate it at the same
time.
- That the Europeans
don't care much about the substance of the issue is indicated
by Macron and Merkel insisting that "signatures" be
honored. The fact, however, is that no one signed the
"deal" which lacks a legal status.
- The Obama
"deal" is bad for Iran, bad for Europe and bad for
the Middle East. At the same time it keeps the clock ticking
towards the "threshold" moment when the mullahs, if
their regime survives, decide to go full shebang for "the
ultimate weapon."
French
President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Angela Merkel chat
in Berlin on May 15, 2017. (Photo by Michele Tantussi/Getty Images)
Seeking to persuade the US President Donald Trump to
drop his demand for improving the "nuke deal" with Iran,
French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Angela
Merkel have insisted on one shibboleth: No better deal is possible!
(In political circles of Paris and Berlin the
Macron-Merkel tandem is now known as Macromel!)
However, the Franco-German claim, subtly backed by
the British and echoed by President Hassan Rouhani in Tehran,
suffers from at least one logical defect: We won't know whether or
not an improvement is possible unless we give it a try.
Tried for two years, the "deal", concocted
out by former President Barack Obama, has proven unworkable.
Iran has been unable, not to say unwilling, to
fulfill its part of the bargain on key issues.
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