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Statement by H.E. Vartan Oskanian, Washington DC,Advocacy Conference

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  • Statement by H.E. Vartan Oskanian, Washington DC,Advocacy Conference

    MINISTRY OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS OF THE REPUBLIC OF ARMENIA
    ----------------------------------------------
    PRESS AND INFORMATION DEPARTMENT
    375010 Telephone: +37410. 544041 ext 202
    Fax: +37410. 562543
    Email: [email protected]


    PRESS RELEASE

    28-03-2006

    Statement by H.E. Vartan Oskanian
    Minister of Foreign Affairs
    Republic of Armenia
    Washington DC
    Advocacy Conference
    March 27, 2006

    I want to thank you for the invitation to speak here today. I
    especially appreciate the fact that in this hall are members and
    activists from the Assembly, the Armenian Church, the AGBU, and
    individuals - all of whom are here to plan together, to work together,
    to register successes together.

    Since independence, we have indeed registered successes together -
    significant US assistance to Armenia, trade privileges, military
    assistance parity, progress in genocide recognition and education
    efforts, a better understanding by opinion and policy makers of
    Armenia's geographic, historic and economic limitations.

    If I think back, I don't know where Armenia would have been without the
    Diaspora. The dedicated, focused efforts of the Armenian Assembly of
    America have resulted in a support base that is essential for Armenia.
    We know we can always depend on the real, sincere, deep commitment of
    the Assembly leadership and the dedicated work of the Assembly staff.

    In Yerevan, we are very aware that for you to be able to promote
    Armenia, its policies, its future, Armenia must be the kind of
    place that you can and want to promote. The Diaspora will promote
    and support an Armenia that reflects its own best dreams, values and
    ambitions. The Armenian-American Diaspora will promote and support
    an Armenia that is a friend of the United States.

    And we are. Despite the huge geographic distance between Yerevan
    and Washington, we are partners in the war on terror, in supporting
    the non-proliferation of weapons, in searching for global peace thru
    regional security, in supporting the rule of law, as well as democratic
    and economic freedoms.

    Not only are we ideological partners, but we share the values that
    have made America. We want those values to be not just aspirations
    for the citizens of Armenia but solid realities, to be comfortably
    taken for granted.

    The US is the country that makes it possible for individuals to
    reinvent themselves - to relocate, to take on new careers, to pursue
    new challenges and new directions.

    Armenians have been a people who have reinvented themselves throughout
    the centuries on every continent. The challenge in this century is:
    for the first time in history, will we be able to reinvent ourselves
    on our own land?

    Do we want to become a country where every man and woman assumes
    they have a right to speak their mind, to cast their vote, to affect
    change? Of course we do.

    Do we want to become a country where we can take the impartiality
    of judges, the decency of policemen and the ethics of teachers for
    granted? Of course we do.

    Do we want to become a country where you pay taxes to the system
    rather than fees to the official? Of course we do.

    Do we want to become a country where the difference in rich and poor
    is only a matter of time and not a matter of destiny? Of course we do.

    Do we want to become a country where each person believes that he or
    she can individually reinvent themselves? Of course we do.

    That is the Armenia we want. That is the Armenia you want.

    How do we get there? You are blissfully unaware of the difficulties
    and travails of the process of becoming a democracy because Americans
    live in the only country to have been born democratic. America was
    built from the ground up, democratic institutions were defined and
    created as you went along. As such, you have the good fortune to be
    able to take this system for granted.

    The entire process of nation-building has been different for us,
    since we had to undo an existing system and build a new one. That is
    why we have welcomed the various US programs which have supported our
    institutional, democratic and economic reforms. We also appreciate that
    in anticipation of the elections of 2007 and 2008, the US has proposed
    additional, targeted assistance so we can hold normal elections and
    rise to the next level of democratic development.

    But democracy is more than elections. Democratic institutions and
    processes are not just ends. They are also means to creating the
    necessary political and economic environment which lead to distributed
    growth and dignified development. The cruelties inherent in the process
    of massive economic readjustment which we have been making have led
    to a sense of powerlessness on the part of ordinary citizens. So,
    democracy is a tool for development, just as economic development is
    a facilitator of democratization.

    This afternoon, I will be attending the signing of a
    visionary instrument that drives both economic development and
    democratization. The Millennium Challenge Compact is intended to
    bolster development in countries where the society and leadership
    comprehend their political responsibility to nurture and sustain
    democratic practices. This is the single largest government investment
    in Armenia's economy. It consists of $235 million over 5 years.
    Before I tell you what we're going to do with the money, let me tell
    you why we were fortunate enough to receive this grant.

    The US government chose Armenia as one of the potential recipients
    because Armenia is needy. That's no secret. But there are lots of
    needy countries in the world. Why Armenia? Because the US government
    determined to contribute to the budgets of those countries that are
    themselves attempting to grow in the right direction - to govern
    justly, to encourage economic openness and to invest in people.

    Armenia is. And being made eligible for the MCC is evidence of
    this. Simply put, Armenia is a part of the MCC because not only is
    there plenty about our society that needs to be put right, but because
    we are on a path that is right. This farsighted program provides a
    generous push in the direction that we have chosen for ourselves.

    I said to Ambassador Danilovich when the decision was made, and I say
    this to you now, Armenia has the honor and the obligation to build
    on the confidence that has been placed in our government and our
    people. And so, even as we spend these funds to turn mud into asphalt
    and to give farmers the irrigation water that is their lifeblood,
    we will work to make sure that good governance and the principles of
    an open and fair society take root in our homeland.

    In the 21st century, philanthropy is more than charity. It is
    about finding lasting solutions to deep-seated social and economic
    problems. That is what the MCC intends to do. And so I am going to
    use this opportunity to say to the Diaspora loudly and clearly that
    that is what the Diaspora should do as well.

    Before I ask you to do more, and I'm going to do just that, let
    me thank you for all that you have done. The Armenia - Diaspora
    collaboration has been invaluable in this decade and a half of
    upheaval, confusion and learning. The value of the Diaspora is in
    its ingenuity, non-conformity, its belief in a dream, its access to
    networks, its ability to be international and national all at the
    same time, and its tremendous resources.

    I am now going to ask you to partner with Armenia - even more deeply
    and broadly and seriously than you have already done -in addressing
    Armenia's domestic and international challenges.

    Look, most of you have been to Armenia. It is clear that not all
    Armenians have been able to share in the double digit growth of which
    we are justifiably proud. As soon as one leaves Yerevan, the statistics
    become reality: One out of every two Armenians still lives in poverty,
    mostly in Armenia's rural areas. Half of those living in poverty,
    live on less than one dollar a day. Yet, these rural men and women
    represent a critical portion of Armenia's economy.

    If we want to ensure that these rural communities are not destined
    to remain stagnant, permanent pockets of poverty, that Armenians are
    not born into a cycle of poverty, then we cannot allow development to
    simply take its course. Even at this current fast pace, it will take
    decades before we reach the average European level of prosperity. We
    must take practical steps to intervene, to take a short-cut towards
    an improved quality of life for our rural citizens.

    This is the first time that I am announcing from a podium that at the
    next Armenia Diaspora Conference, we will be launching a Rural Poverty
    Eradication program - a kind of Diaspora Marshall Plan for Armenia.

    The Millennium Challenge Account has indeed taken on the renovation
    or construction of two of the most expensive infrastructure sectors -
    roads and irrigation canals.

    Imagine that a village will, in a few years, have irrigation water
    and roads.

    But imagine that there will be no drinking water, no health care,
    no school, no gas or electricity in that village.

    Imagine children growing up in a 21st century rural community without
    access to telephone, television or internet.

    Now imagine what we could do together if the Armenian government,
    Armenia's business community, international organizations, and you,
    the Armenian Diaspora came together to leverage the MCC contributions
    and to build on the MCC momentum. Imagine a country where development
    is comprehensive, even, fair and just.

    Imagine an Armenia whose borders are secure because its border
    communities are stable, where cross-border interaction is possible,
    where out-migration is minimal. Imagine a day in the village filled
    with pride and satisfaction, rather than tears and frustration.

    As investments and growth spread through Yerevan, this program will
    coordinate information about the many wonderful, generous programs
    that are already being implemented in rural Armenia by Armenian
    and international organizations and individuals. This program will
    work to remove the real and artificial obstacles to productivity,
    and will help identify access to markets and finance to make the
    village economically sustainable.

    If you are wondering whether those with personal interests will allow
    this kind of access and transparency, join me in challenging those
    who obstruct. Rally the forces of the diaspora and the international
    community and see if we can't replace obstacle with opportunity.

    Through this program, we will approach every individual, organization,
    parish, family and business in the Diaspora and will solicit your
    participation. Your time, your money, your expertise, your contacts
    - they are all needed so that the infrastructure is rebuilt and a
    village is reinvented. This program will strive to bring a new look,
    a new ethic, new hope to each rural community in Armenia, starting
    with the border villages first.

    In plain language, by eradicating poverty you will be eradicating
    hopelessness. You will bring prospect and possibility to
    the most vulnerable in our society. Hope, faith and confidence
    transform economically empowered citizens into politically empowered
    citizens. And it is they who will be the best defenders of their votes,
    their voices and their rights in meetings, elections and throughout
    the governing process.

    These are the major domestic challenges that Armenia faces
    today. But our foreign policy challenges are no less difficult and
    complicated. Fundamental among them are relations with our neighbors,
    transportation, energy diversification and conflict resolution.

    Our agenda with the US today is very broad and diversified. We have
    transcended from being a one issue country and our relations today
    are built on mutual respect and interest. Armenia needs America. And
    America needs Armenia as a reliable partner in the region.

    This year we'll be celebrating the 15th anniversary of Armenia's
    independence. 15 years of independence,15 years of statehood, 15 years
    that Armenians around the world have had an Armenia that is theirs,
    to which they belong, that they represent.

    No longer are we just Armenian-Americans, but now, we are, whether we
    want it or not, whether we feel it or not, perceived as being piece
    of that country, that place. Our identity has changed.

    The Diaspora exists, it will continue to exist, and you will need
    Armenia, not to substitute but to complement what you have.

    The Republic of Armenia exists, it is independent, and it is ours. It
    still needs its Diaspora, more than ever. We must cooperate, not
    compete, in order to turn the Armenia of our dreams into the Armenia
    of our future.
    "All truth passes through three stages:
    First, it is ridiculed;
    Second, it is violently opposed; and
    Third, it is accepted as self-evident."

    Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860)

  • #2
    April 24th Interview with Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian

    Transcript of Exclusive Armenia TV April 24th Interview
    with Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian

    Interviewed by Paul Chaderjian for Armenia TV
    Airdate: Monday, April 24, 2006 @ 9:00 PM Yerevan / 9:00 AM Los Angeles

    Armenia TV: This is the 91st year that we commemorate the Genocide. What
    stands out in your mind as you think about this process?

    Minister Oskanian: It is humbling to think that today, the children of the
    survivors and the Government of Armenia, both, have been transformed from
    victims to activists working with the international community to right a
    historical wrong, to acknowledge a crime against humanity and to advocate
    prevention of such crimes in the future. We have the opportunity to do all
    of that because this process has evolved in ways that are both surprising
    and gratifying. Look at the history of the evolution: Up to 1965, there was
    no talk of recognition, there were only tortured, victimized survivors.
    >From 1965 to the 1980s, survivors, their descendants, a handful of political
    activists, and a few lone scholars, attempted to focus the world's attention
    on what was almost uniformly referred to as the 'alleged' genocide.

    Beginning in the 1990s, things changed dramatically. There were various
    overlapping factors -- A younger generation of survivors' descendants was
    more vocal and confident in using its political influence. The flow of
    information about yet new genocides piqued the interest of international
    scholars who also began to study the Armenian Genocide. As Europe and the US
    became more engaged in Turkey's modernization and inclusion in Euro-Atlantic
    structures, Turkey's own democratization process brought this taboo topic to
    the surface. Today, in its search for European Union membership, Turkey is
    having to deal history and memory and identity. And of course, the existence
    of an Armenian state means that we can raise these issues at an official
    government level.

    There can be no doubt that our search for genocide recognition has become
    internationalized. It is not an Armenian claim any longer. Today, this is an
    acknowledged historic reality by most of the scholarly world, and by most
    major media and journalists. Further, the international political community,
    too, knows well what happened in 1915, and together, we are seeking ways to
    enable more open discussion of why and how the Genocide happened, and its
    implications for members of the world community today - and most of all for
    Turks and Armenians.

    Armenia TV: Some think it is surprising, and perhaps even unwise, for the
    Government of Armenia to be engaged in this effort to achieve Genocide
    recognition, given its vulnerability. The Turks, too, would like to portray
    this as the Diaspora's cause, and keep wishing that the Armenian government
    would put this matter aside.

    Minister Oskanian: The Genocide affected every single Armenian. The
    responsibility to right the memory of that wrong rests with all of us. The
    Armenian Government has the moral responsibility to speak about the Genocide
    of the Armenians, and to call for Genocide recognition. This responsibility
    is one we fully acknowledge. In fact, the active involvement of the Armenian
    Government and its representatives has also played a role in the progress of
    the recognition process. The podiums and forums that are available to the
    representatives of a state are many and we use them to make our case to the
    international community. At the same time, as a responsible member of that
    community, we know that we cannot make Genocide recognition a pre-condition
    to our relationship with the Republic of Turkey. The irony is that we, the
    survivors and the victims of Genocide don't make normal relations
    conditional on its recognition, yet the Turkish side often suggests that
    Armenia should put Genocide recognition aside if it wants normal relations
    with Turkey. Clearly we cannot. The international community today considers
    the threat of Genocide a very real 21st century challenge. Our
    responsibility, together with the Diaspora, is to speak out against past and
    future uses of Genocide as a political tool by states.

    Armenia TV: What is the answer to the repeated charge that Armenians
    continue to focus on the past, that Armenians are trapped in the past?

    Minister Oskanian: One might accuse us of being trapped in the past if we
    made the present conditional on the past. But we do not. Instead, we are
    saying we must learn about the past, remember it, understand it, and move
    on. Armenians understand that the present is connected to the past, it's the
    consequence of the past. Otherwise why teach history? This is the purpose
    of learning and teaching history. The Turkish government, on the other hand,
    is demanding that today's relations be based on a specific interpretation of
    the past. Turkey's authorities and Turkish society do not fully comprehend
    or recognize what happened in the last days of the Ottoman Empire, why it
    happened, and they have not come to terms with those implications. They are
    the ones who are trapped in the past and are not ready to move on. There is
    perhaps a fear that entering this realm, embarking on a relationship with
    Armenians will place them in a morally uncomfortable and undesirable
    situation, and that they will be held responsible for those events. I cannot
    repeat this often enough: Armenians are able to distinguish between the
    perpetrators and today's Turkey. But Turks themselves must be willing to do
    what is morally right and reject and denounce the crimes of the Ottoman
    Empire. Otherwise, today's denial means implicit endorsement or acceptance
    of those past crimes.

    Armenia TV: Yet they are far from denouncing those crimes. On the contrary,
    they are using their educational system to teach that Armenians killed
    Turks, their historians are digging up bones and saying these are the bones
    of Turks killed by Armenians.

    Minister Oskanian: Justifying, even revering the genocidal state policy of
    one regime has become the state policy of another regime. Denial is state
    policy, just as genocide is state policy. It is today's Turkish state that
    is wasting money and credibility on denying, distorting, dismissing serious
    crimes against humanity committed during the Ottoman years. Not only are
    they denying history, they are also legislating denial by making it
    difficult, if not impossible, to actually dig into this painful issue and
    come face to face with difficult historic and political realities. It is
    safe to say that Turkish society - writers, historians, journalists - are in
    fact seeking and trying to reach their own conclusions about what really
    happened. It is the state that insists on rejecting those questions even.
    The people of Turkey are searching for answers. The memoir of US Ambassador
    Henry Morgenthau, the British Blue Book, the works of Vahakn Dadrian and
    Peter Balakian can be found in Turkish, in Turkey. We welcome this, because
    before there can be dialogue with Armenians, there must be internal
    questioning and dialogue in Turkey.

    Armenia TV: Will there really be dialogue between Turkey and Armenia? What
    happened to the Erdogan-Kocharian dialogue about dialogue?

    We want there to be dialogue about all of the issues that stand between us.
    Prime Minister Erdogan had suggested a commission to study history. But that
    suggestion comes at a time when the use of the term 'genocide' or even
    reference to certain facts and events in Turkish history are legally
    punishable. How can such a proposal be taken seriously? Further, the
    proposal is to convene a commission composed of historians from two
    countries with a closed border between them. In the absence of any relations
    whatsoever, in a political, social, economic vacuum, a commission is to be
    convened to thrash out issues and events that can't be discussed? That is
    why President Kocharian's response was that this kind of offer can be taken
    seriously only if there is som semblance of normalcy between our two
    countries. Then, discussions on all other aspects of our relations,
    including the border and genocide, can and should be carried out. We have
    not received an official response to that suggestion, but we still hope it
    will come. It has been nearly a century that we have had this impasse
    between our peoples and our societies. We don't want to spend another
    century trying to unravel this knot. Instead, we want our peoples to have
    the opportunities to have new experiences to replace the old ones. The
    longer we wait for this to happen, the longer it takes for Turks to
    repudiate those acts, the more today's Turks and yesterday's Ottomans will
    become synonymous in people's minds. On the other hand, with repudiation of
    those acts, with recognition of the crimes of the past, we can move on to a
    dialogue of reconciliation. That is the mandate of the 21st century, that is
    what our ancestors who did live together for centuries would want.

    Armenia TV: Minister Oskanian, thank you very much for taking the time to
    talk with Armenia TV. We look forward to having you visit again.

    Minister Oskanian: Thank you.
    "All truth passes through three stages:
    First, it is ridiculed;
    Second, it is violently opposed; and
    Third, it is accepted as self-evident."

    Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860)

    Comment


    • #3
      MFA of Armenia: Minister Oskanian's Remarks at InternationalConference in Vilnius

      MINISTRY OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS OF THE REPUBLIC OF ARMENIA
      ----------------------------------------------
      PRESS AND INFORMATION DEPARTMENT
      375010 Telephone: +37410. 544041 ext 202
      Fax: +37410. 562543
      Email: [email protected]


      PRESS RELEASE

      05-05-2006

      Minister Oskanian's Remarks at International Conference in Vilnius

      Let me join the others in expressing our appreciation to the Lithuanian
      and Polish presidents for organizing this conference and for inviting
      Armenia.

      It's been an illuminating and inspiring day. I also would like
      to thank President Adamkus and the Lithuanian government for the
      wonderful reception and also for everyone's expression of sympathy
      with regard to the tragic airplane accident yesterday morning.

      Mr. President, your visit to Armenia is still fresh in our minds,
      and the message that you brought - the message of democracy, peace and
      cooperation - still reverberates in my mind. We've always appreciated
      the leadership that Lithuania has shown with regard to bridging our two
      regions - the Baltics and the Caucasus - and making your experience
      available to us to develop our region and to develop cooperation
      among our countries. Your efforts fall within a similar, and broader,
      effort by transatlantic organizations. With the benefit of hindsight,
      we wonder where we, the countries of the Caucasus, would have been
      had there not been the vision demonstrated by the leadership of
      these structures to make their knowledge and practice available to
      countries like ours in the post-soviet space. Organizations like
      the OSCE, the Council of Europe and others opened up and shared
      their experience. Even more, there was the foresight to create new
      structures, such as EAPC within NATO, to embrace these countries,
      to provide a framework for our development.

      We, the countries which have been the beneficiaries of those
      organizations and the processes created around them, want you to know
      that this guidance has been very helpful and useful.

      Still, each of us in the post-soviet space, has chosen a different way
      to benefit (or not benefit) from the varying options made available
      to us.

      Those different options fall into three categories:

      First, there are those who have chosen the more abrupt and
      revolutionary path to reform; then, there are those who have chosen
      the more incremental and evolutionary path, and third, there are those
      who have dug-in their heels and are not moving in a new direction.

      Armenia has chosen the second path - the evolutionary, incremental
      approach - because we believe in two principles.

      Firstly, as Javier Solana said, democracy is not a one-shot deal, it
      does not happen overnight. We know that, and we believe that as long
      as you know that you are on the right track and are confident that
      you are moving forward and not backtracking, then the evolutionary
      and incremental approach to democracy is more effective and enduring.

      Secondly, we understand that democracy is a tool for development,
      that there is clear linkage between democracy and prosperity. As
      much as democracy is a tool for development, we know that economic
      development is a facilitator of democratization. I want to emphasize
      the EU's enhanced role in these interconnected processes through
      the creation of a new program and a new instrument - the European
      Neighborhood Policy and the Action Plan. We are currently negotiating
      the Action Plan, the process will be concluded soon, and it will
      elevate the level of our relations with the EU to new heights.

      It will reinforce the reforms and make them irreversible. Further,
      it will increase the integrational options and make available new
      possibilities.

      Now Mr. Chairman, my second topic: unresolved conflicts. First,
      let me address the charges leveled at Armenia by the Azerbaijani
      Prime Minister. He basically called Armenia an aggressor, and
      called the Armenians inhabiting Nagorno Karabakh terrorists and
      drug traffickers. Given the overall spirit of the talks which
      are taking place at the highest level, between the presidents,
      and given the positive elements that exist at this moment, such
      inaccurate and inflammatory comments are not understandable. Nor are
      they justified. Especially since territories under Armenian control
      today are the consequences of Azerbaijan's aggression toward people
      it considered its own citizens. I don't think that Javier Solana was
      overly optimistic when he said there are positive aspects in this
      process, but Mr. Solana, those positive elements can be transformed
      to encouraging developments only if the Azerbaijani side is clearly
      told and finally understands that they don't have a military option
      here. With their oil resources and with high oil prices, they have
      unfortunately come to believe, or at least they publicly proclaim
      that there is a military option available to them. With that kind of
      thinking, it will not be easy to compromise. But they need to be told
      very clearly by the EU and others, that there is no military option,
      so that they make the necessary compromises, as Armenia has already
      done, to reach a peaceful resolution. Only then, Mr. Chairman, do
      we stand a chance of making further progress this year, eventually
      bringing peace and stability to this region.
      "All truth passes through three stages:
      First, it is ridiculed;
      Second, it is violently opposed; and
      Third, it is accepted as self-evident."

      Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860)

      Comment

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