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How Greeks’ attempt to send Cilician Armenians weapons failed in 1913

May 27, 2015 By administrator

192850An interesting episode in the history of Armenian-Greek friendship and military cooperation turned to be fatal on the threshold of the Armenian Genocide.

During that period in 1910-1915 prominent political figure Eleftherios Venizelos (1864 – 1936) was the Greek Prime Minister, who, being one of the best friends of the Armenian people, attached great importance to supporting and cooperating with them against the Turkish rule, armeniangenocide100.org reports.

According to Mshak newspaper, a Greek steamship, loaded with weapons and ammunition (some sources say 7000 rifles) departed for Cilicia in November 1913, to give them to Armenians. Learning about this, the commander of the German naval forces in the Mediterranean Sea left for Cilician coast to prevent the unloading. On the threshold of the World War I, Germany, the ally of the Ottoman Empire, could not allow armament of the Armenians.

But things did not lead to German intervention. According to Mshak, Armenians, “obeying their religious authorities’ warnings and not thinking about rebellion in general,” did not go to accept the weapons. Thus, the steamship approached the shores near Mersin and left as no one came to meet.

Before that, however, the local Turks had already learnt about the steamship’s arrival and its purpose and started to threaten Armenians: the latter were afraid that the 1909 Adana massacres could repeat. Although the German admiral could not stop the Greek steamer, he heard of Turks’ anti-Armenian activities, visited the governor of Adana and reportedly threatened to bombard the province in case Armenians were slaughtered and said “Germany will stop supporting Turkey against Russia.” It is unknown how the German command would really act in case Armenians were slaughtered then. However, in the period when the reforms in the Armenian provinces in Turkey were in the center of diplomatic dispute in European superpowers, Germany, previously passive and mainly supportingTurkey, came to support reforms. It aimed to bereave Russia, Great Britain and France to rule the reform process on the one hand, and to divert the Western Armenians’ sympathy to its side on the other. (The German-Armenian society was established in 1914 in Germany, presided over by prominent social activist and humanist Johannes Lepsius).

Already in 1915, Germany pursued a policy of indifference and permissiveness towards its military ally in the issue concerning the massacres and forced deportation of Armenians.

As Mshak reported, citing Greek sources, the ship conveying the weapons belonged to a private person and no political meaning was attached to it appearing on Mersin shores.

Although the fact of declining the Greek military support refutes one of the widely spread theses of Turkish denialism, i.e. the Armenians’ rebellion, it should be noted that the Armenians had the full moral and legal right to take up arms and fight against the Turkish dictatorship and the policy of extermination after the state anti-Armenian genocidal policy was implemented in the era of Abdul Hamid.

Events, however, took a different course and due to certain reasons the Armenians in the Ottoman Empire, including those in Cilicia chose to rely on authorities on the eve of the WWI in order not anger them and solve the Armenian Question through the implementation of reforms. And the incident in Cilicia only proves, unfortunately, that Armenians were not ready to protect themselves against physical extermination and deportations ahead of the impending Genocide.

Related links:

Armeniangenocide100. How Greeks’ attempt to send weapons to Cilician Armenians failed in 1913

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Armenian, Genocide, Greek, weapons

Libya’s PM says Turkey supplying weapons to rival Tripoli group

February 27, 2015 By administrator

Abdullah al-Thinni (Photo: Reuters)

Abdullah al-Thinni (Photo: Reuters)

libya‘s internationally recognized Prime Minister Abdullah al-Thinni said his government would stop dealing with Turkey as it was sending weapons to a rival group in tripoli so “the Libyan people kill each other,” ramping up his rhetoric against ankara.

Two administrations, one in the capital and Thinni’s in the east, have been vying for power since an armed group called Libya Dawn seized Tripoli in July 2014 — four years after Muammar Gaddafi’s ousting — and reinstated lawmakers from a previous assembly.

“Turkey is a state that is not dealing honestly with us. It’s exporting weapons to us so the Libyan people kill each other,” he told Egyptian TV channel CBC late on Thursday.

A spokesman for Turkey’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs strongly denied Thinni’s allegations. “Instead of repeating the same baseless and untrue allegations we advise them to support UN efforts for political dialog,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Tanju Bilgiç told Reuters.

“Our policy in relation to Libya is very clear. We are against any external intervention in Libya and we fully support the ongoing political dialog process under UN mediation,” he added.

Thinni’s government said this week it would exclude companies from future deals, accusing Ankara of backing the Tripoli government and its allied armed groups. He repeated that Turkish firms would be excluded from contracts in territory controlled by his government in the CBC interview, noting that any outstanding bills would be paid. “We don’t say we are hostile to Turkey but we say we won’t deal with it,” he said.

Turkey is one of a handful of countries that has publicly received officials from the Tripoli government and parliament. Critics of Ankara say its Libya policy is an extension of a pro-Islamist agenda that has already seen relations sour with other former regional allies, notably Egypt.

Thinni also accused Qatar of giving “material” support to the rival side in the Libyan conflict. He did not elaborate.

Army general Khalifa Haftar, who merged his forces with the army in the east to fight Islamist militants, is seen as a potential rival to Thinni. While the alliance between the groups has enabled them to win back territory, Haftar has been criticized for air strikes on civilian airports and seaports.

On Wednesday, a spokesman for Thinni’s parliament said the assembly’s president would appoint Haftar as top army commander.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Ankara, Libya, tripoli, weapons

Dink drew weapons to mother

January 19, 2015 By administrator

malatyaHrant Dink memorial march held in Malatya identity drew an uncertain young gun community. The intervention by the police defused without being able young fire.

According to Dogan News Agency, journalist Hrant Dink memorial march held in Malatya murder in the death anniversary of the Vocational School for Girls began in front. Hand in Hrant Dink’s pictures and found the majority of carnations Education-Sen neighborhood of about 100 people group with members who marched to the birthplace of Hrant Dink, Cavusoglu neighborhood.

The Group slogan Based Turgut Street intersection in the time of the identity of the group continued removing weapons from a young waist öğrenilemeyen weapons were headed. Thereupon followed the march and armed police officers close to the young person defuses the weapons they received from young hands. Detained persons were removed from the scene quickly.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Hrant dink, Turkey, weapons

Turkey’s intelligence service (MIT) shipped weapons to al-Qaeda, military says

January 15, 2015 By administrator

Fehim Taştekin – Al Monitor
P1080768Secret official documents about the searching of three trucks belonging to Turkey’s national intelligence service (MIT) have been leaked online, once again corroborating suspicions that Ankara has not been playing a clean game in Syria. According to the authenticated documents, the trucks were found to be transporting missiles, mortars and anti-aircraft ammunition. The Gendarmerie General Command, which authored the reports, alleged, “The trucks were carrying weapons and supplies to the al-Qaeda terror organization.” But Turkish readers could not see the documents in the news bulletins and newspapers that shared them, because the government immediately obtained a court injunction banning all reporting about the affair.

When President Recep Tayyip Erdogan was prime minister, he had said, “You cannot stop the MIT truck. You cannot search it. You don’t have the authority. These trucks were taking humanitarian assistance to Turkmens.”

Since then, Erdogan and his hand-picked new Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu have repeated at every opportunity that the trucks were carrying assistance to Turkmens. Public prosecutor Aziz Takci, who had ordered the trucks to be searched, was removed from his post and 13 soldiers involved in the search were taken to court on charges of espionage. Their indictments call for prison terms of up to 20 years.

In scores of documents leaked by a group of hackers, the Gendarmerie Command notes that rocket warheads were found in the trucks’ cargo.

According to the documents that circulated on the Internet before the ban came into effect, this was the summary of the incident:

-On Jan. 19, 2014, after receiving a tip that three trucks were carrying weapons and explosives to al-Qaeda in Syria, the Adana Provincial Gendarmerie Command obtained search warrants.

-The Adana prosecutor called for the search and seizure of all evidence.

-Security forces stropped the trucks at the Ceyhan toll gates, where MIT personnel tried to prevent the search.-While the trucks were being escorted to Seyhan Gendarmerie Command for an extensive search, MIT personnel accompanying the trucks in an Audi vehicle blocked the road to stop the trucks. When MIT personnel seized the keys from the trucks’ ignitions, an altercation ensued. MIT personnel instructed the truck drivers to pretend their trucks had malfunctioned and committed physical violence against gendarmerie personnel.-The search was carried out and videotaped despite the efforts of the governor and MIT personnel to prevent it.

-Six metallic containers were found in the three trucks. In the first container, 25-30 missiles or rockets and 10-15 crates loaded with ammunition were found. In the second container, 20-25 missiles or rockets, 20-25 crates of mortar ammunition and Douchka anti-aircraft ammunition in five or six sacks were discovered. The boxes had markings in the Cyrillic alphabet.

-It was noted that the MIT personnel swore at the prosecutor and denigrated the gendarmerie soldiers doing the search, saying, “Look at those idiots. They are looking for ammunition with picks and shovels. Let someone who knows how to do it. Trucks are full of bombs that might explode.”

-The governor of Adana Huseyin Avni Cos arrived at the scene and declared, “The trucks are moving with the prime minister’s orders” and vowed not to let them be interfered with no matter what.

-With a letter of guarantee sent by the regional director of MIT, co-signed by the governor, the trucks were handed back to MIT.

-Driver Murat Kislakci said in his deposition, “This cargo was loaded into our trucks from a foreign airplane at Ankara Esenboga Airport. We are taking them to Reyhanli [on the Syrian border]. Two men [MIT personnel] in the Audi are accompanying us. At Reyhanli, we hand over the trucks to two people in the Audi. They check us into a hotel. The trucks move to cross the border. We carried similar loads several times before. We were working for the state. In Ankara, we were leaving our trucks at an MIT location. They used to tell us to come back at 7 a.m. I know the cargo belongs to MIT. We were at ease; this was an affair of state. This was the first time we collected cargo from the airport and for the first time we were allowed to stand by our trucks during the loading.”

-After accusations of espionage by the government and pro-government media, the chief of general staff ordered the military prosecutor to investigate,. On July 21, the military prosecutor declared the operation was not espionage. The same prosecutor said this incident was a military affair and should be investigated not by the public prosecutor, but the military. The civilian court did not retract its decision.

The government cover-up

Though the scandal is tearing the country apart, the government opted for its favorite tactic of covering it up. A court in Adana banned written, visual and Internet media outlets from any reporting and commenting on the stopping of the trucks and the search. All online content about the incident has been deleted.

The court case against the 13 gendarmerie elements accused of espionage has also been controversial. The public prosecutor, who in his indictment said the accused were involved in a plot to have Turkey tried at International Criminal Court, veered off course. Without citing any evidence, the indictment charged that there was collusion between the Syrian government, al-Qaeda and the Islamic State (IS). The prosecutor deviated from the case at hand and charged that the killing by IS of three people at Nigde last year was actually carried out by the Syrian state.

At the moment, a total blackout prevails over revelations, which are bound to have serious international repercussions.

Fehim Taştekin is a columnist and chief editor of foreign news at the Turkish newspaper Radikal, based in Istanbul.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Al Qaeda, Turkey, weapons

Kobani: US drops weapons to Kurds in Syria

October 20, 2014 By administrator

Kobani air drops likely to anger Turkish government, which opposes sending arms to Kurdish rebels in Syria,

Associated Press

kobani-mapSmoke rises following a strike in Kobani, Syria, during fighting between Syrian Kurds and Islamic State militants. Photograph: Lefteris Pitarakis/AP

The US military says it has airdropped weapons, ammunition and medical supplies to Kurdish forces defending the Syrian city of Kobani against Islamic State militants.

The air drops on Sunday were the first of their kind and followed weeks of US and coalition air strikes in and near Kobani, near the Turkish border. The US earlier said it had launched 11 air strikes overnight in the Kobani area.

Meanwhile Turkish foreign minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said on Monday that Turkey was facilitating the passage of Iraqi Kurdish peshmerga fighters to Kobani. Cavusoglu did not provide details on the transfer of the fighters.

In a statement on Sunday night, US Central Command said US C-130 cargo planes made multiple drops of arms and supplies provided by Kurdish authorities in Iraq. It said they were intended to enable continued resistance to Islamic State efforts to take full control of Kobani.

The air drops are almost certain to anger the Turkish government, which has said it would oppose any US arms transfers to the Kurdish rebels in Syria. Turkey views the main Kurdish group in Syria as an extension of the Turkish Kurd group known as the PKK, which has waged a 30-year insurgency in Turkey and is designated a terror group by the US and by Nato.

Senior US administration officials said three C-130 planes dropped 27 bundles of small arms, ammunition and medical supplies. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity under ground rules set by the White House.

One official said that while the results of the mission were still being assessed, it appeared that “the vast majority” of the supplies reached the intended Kurdish fighters.

The official also said the C-130s encountered no resistance from the ground in Syria during their flights in and out of Syrian airspace.

In a written statement, Central Command said its forces had conducted more than 135 air strikes against Islamic State forces in Kobani.

Central Command said: “Combined with continued resistance to Isil on the ground, indications are that these strikes have slowed Isil advances into the city, killed hundreds of their fighters and destroyed or damaged scores of pieces of Isil combat equipment and fighting positions.”

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: drop, kobani, US, weapons

Turkey may be developing nuclear weapons

October 2, 2014 By administrator

24 September 2014 – 1:06pm

129ombuAccording to Die Welt, Turkey is developing nuclear weapons using a nuclear program similar to Iran’s. The source adds that Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan ordered the construction of uranium-enriching machines in 2010.

source: vestnikkavkaza.net

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: nuclear, Turkey, weapons

Stone Age Weapons-Making Technology Discovered in Armenia

September 27, 2014 By administrator

Levallois-PerretNOR GEGHI, Armenia (OTC Capital)—Thousands of tools from the Paleolithic era have been discovered from a site in Armenia.

The latest discovery gives scientists a better insight into how technological developments evolved and spread in the world. The research teams which included scientists from across the world and a team from Royal Holloway, University of London believe that they have unearthed evidence that the ancient technique of Levallois which is used for making hunting weapons was actually invented in Africa and later spread across the world. Details of the study were published in the journal Science.

The Paleolithic era is a period of human history which is characterized by the development of primitive stone tools which was developed for hunting. The period covers a major portion of human pre historic technology.

The levallois technique is type of stone knapping which was developed by the ancestors of modern humans for making hunting tools. It is a more sophisticated method for making hunting tools. Levallois technique has been named after the discovery of flint tools in the French province of Levallois-Perret

The evidence of the theory that these tools originated in Africa and spread to other parts is available at a site in Armenia. The archaeologist believes that the technology was a part of these Armenian communities which thrived 325,000 to 335,000 years ago.

“The discovery of thousands of stone artefacts preserved at this unique site provides a major new insight into how Stone Age tools developed during a period of profound human behavioural and biological change,” researcher Simon Blockley, from the Royal Holloway geography department of the University of London, said.

Together with fellow researcher Alison MacLeod and an international team from across the United States and Europe, Blockley analysed volcanic material from the site around Nor Geghi, in the Kotayk province of Armenia.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenian, Stone Age, weapons

Armenia will soon purchase new long-range weapons

September 12, 2014 By administrator

longrange-weaponsYEREVAN. – Armenian armed forces will soon purchase new long-range weapons, Defense Minister Seyran Ohanyan said during his meeting with professors and students of the Yerevan State University of Economics.

However, later talking to reporters, Ohanyan did not specify what weapons will be bought, adding it was “a military secret”.

“Day by day we are enhancing defense and technical cooperation, in particular with our strategic partners, namely Russia, and are updating the weapons,” he said.

Asked about the sale of Russian arms to Azerbaijan, the minister said that everything regarding development of defense capabilities of the neighboring state is always the focus of the Armenian side.

“We have expressed our point of view and our concerns in all platforms,” he emphasized.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenia, weapons

The Ministry of Defence may authorize population Karvadjar to carry weapons

July 18, 2014 By administrator

The military commander of Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh) is currently considering the possibility of allowing the carrying of weapons from the population Karvadjar who was the target last week of the infiltration of arton101682-480x269Azerbaijani commando who was killed two Armenians. Armenian Defense Minister Seyran Ohanian, in a statement said that “this area is special because of its population is composed of members who are all armed. Currently the Department of Defense is studying the possibility of allowing the soldiers to carry weapons with them into their homes so they can respond quickly in case of necessity.

“Note that the region Karvadjar, heavily wooded and mountainous with Mount Mrav the highest peak of Nagorno-Karabakh is sparsely populated. About 2 500 people inhabit. The authorities of Nagorno Karabakh, the expectation that this mountain was almost impassable Mrav natural border had lightened to the extreme presence of his soldiers to the border. Azeris took the opportunity to send a commando that has infiltrated and committed crimes before being neutralized by Armenian forces.

Krikor Amirzayan

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: 000 Trees Throughout Armenia in 2013, Armenia, Karvadjar, weapons

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