In this mailing:
- Con Coughlin: Russian Plans for
This Week's European Union Elections
- Uzay Bulut: Turkey: Erdogan
Describes Armenian Genocide as 'Reasonable Relocation'
by Con Coughlin • May 22, 2019 at
5:00 am
- Russian President
Valdimir Putin is actively cultivating a network of contacts
in EU member states with the aim of building a pro-Russian
bloc in the next EU parliament, one that will be active in
calling for the sanctions to be lifted.
- Concerns about
Russian influence have also been raised in France, Italy,
Greece, the Netherlands and Germany, while questions remain as
to whether Moscow tried to interfere in Britain's 2016
referendum on leaving the EU.
- Elsewhere Moscow has
worked hard to forge closer relations with Hungary and
Bulgaria, two former Soviet satellites that appear to prefer
maintaining good links with Russia over their support for the
EU.
- As part of his
effort to broaden his ties with pro-Russian states, Mr Putin
is now focusing on the Czech Republic, where the Kremlin is
actively engaged with the country's pro-Russian president,
Miloš Zeman, as well as Andrej Babiš, the controversial prime
minister.... Certainly, from Moscow's perspective, adding the
Czech Republic to the burgeoning list of EU states and
political parties with pro-Russian sympathies can only
strengthen its efforts to undermine the EU's efforts to
maintain a united front against Russia.
Russian
President Vladimir Putin is now focusing on the Czech Republic,
where the Kremlin is actively engaged with the country's
pro-Russian president, Miloš Zeman, as well as Andrej Babiš, the
controversial prime minister. Pictured: Russian President Vladimir
Putin meets with President of the Czech Republic Milos Zeman, in
Moscow on November 21, 2017.
No one is working harder to achieve a successful
outcome from this week's European Union elections than Russian
President Vladimir Putin.
Even though there is little prospect of Russia ever
wanting to join the family of EU nations, that has not stopped Mr
Putin from intensifying his efforts to expand his influence over
those countries that are members of the European trade bloc.
Consequently, at a time when Moscow is desperate to
have the sanctions lifted that have been imposed in response to
various Russian acts of provocation, such as last year's Salisbury
poisoning, Mr Putin is investing much time and energy to ensure
that a strong pro-Russian lobby is elected to the new EU parliament
following Thursday's Europe-wide ballot.
by Uzay Bulut • May 22, 2019 at
4:00 am
- "What Erdogan
refers to as 'relocation' was actually the genocidal
deportation of civilian populations --mainly women, children
and the elderly -- to the very interior of Asia Minor. These
populations were not simply relocated to another place,
contrary to what the Turkish state claims. They were sent to
concentration and extermination camps or remote places in the
interior to be slaughtered or to die from exposure,
exhaustion, hunger or epidemics -- either on the way to, or at
the place of, their destinations." — Vasileios
Meichanetsidis, an Athens-based genocide scholar and editor of
the 2012 book, The Genocide of the Ottoman Greeks, in
an interview with Gatestone Institute.
Pictured:
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)
At a symposium in Ankara on April 24 -- the 104th
anniversary of the Armenian Genocide -- Turkish President Recep
Tayyip Erdogan repeated his distortion and denial of the 1915 mass
murder of Christians at the hands of Ottoman Turks. "The
relocation of the Armenian gangs and their supporters who massacred
the Muslim people, including women and children, in eastern
Anatolia, was the most reasonable action that could be taken in
such a period," Erdogan said. This quote was then posted on
the official "Turkish Presidency" Twitter page.
"Erdogan's statement was factually flawed,
deceptive and insulting," Vicken Babkenian, an independent
researcher for the Australian Institute for Holocaust and Genocide
Studies, told Gatestone in a recent interview.
Babkenian, a descendant of genocide survivors on
both sides of his family, explained:
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