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 Winter 2000 (8.4)
 Page
      10
 Reader's Forum
 Calling
      the Kettle "Black"
 
 [The following
      letter was published in the Washington Times, October 18, 2000.]
 
 _____
 Your October 12 Editorial, "Genocide by No Other Name"
      makes a good point in noting that the "Armenian aggression
      against the people of Azerbaijan, who are ethnically and religiously
      akin to the Turks, in 1995 led to massive casualties and has
      created hundreds and thousands of refugees."
 
 In fact the Armenian aggression which began in 1992, resulted
      in the current military occupation of 20 percent of Azerbaijan
      and the displacement of a million people - giving Azerbaijan
      the world's highest per capita population of internally displaced
      persons (IDPs) and refugees. This aggression was preceded by
      ethnic cleansing in Armenia, in which more than 200,000 ethnic
      Azerbaijanis were exiled from Armenia. In 1992, Armenian forces
      massacred hundreds of civilians, including children and the elderly
      in the Azerbaijani town of Khojali.
 
 To make matters even worse, in 1992, Armenia lobby group secured
      passage of Section 907 of the Freedom Support Act, which denies
      most direct assistance from the United states to Azerbaijan,
      including for several years, even humanitarian assistance to
      the IDP / refugee population.
 
 Given the record, I find it impossible to agree with your conclusion
      that the Armenian Genocide Resolution should be passed by the
      House of Representatives. Far from being innocent, Armenians
      not only have stained their hands with the blood of many Turks,
      but also have pursued over a significant historical span, their
      aggressive ambitions toward Azerbaijan and other neighbors. In
      the words of the British consul in Baku in 1918, Major Ronald
      MacDonell, who referred to wide-scale massacres conducted by
      Bolshevik-backed Armenian gangs: "There were no Moslems
      in the town except corpses." Let me emphasize that all this
      transpired at a time to which the resolution in question refers
      to as a period of "Armenian genocide."
 
 There are serious moral questions about the motivations behind
      this critical ethnically driven resolution. Moreover Congress
      certainly should not undermine U.S. strategic objectives, nor
      should it damage the uneasy peace process between Armenia and
      Azerbaijan.
 
 
 
        
          | Elmar
            MammadyarovChargés d'Affaires
 Azerbaijan Embassy, Washington, D.C.
 |  .____
 From Azerbaijan
      International
      (8.4) Winter 2000.
 © Azerbaijan International 2000. All rights reserved.
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