Dear Parliamentarian,

Armenians have killed more than 70 Turkish diplomats in the last 30 years... Most of these assassinations and bombings took place "deep in the heart of Europe". In broad daylight. during business hours. in the middle of large cities. Are we going to tolerate terrorism, if it comes from Armenians?

Is terrorism welcome if it victimizes only Turks?

Before you rush to a judgement, please consider the following facts. Very few Armenians terrorists were ever caught. Even fewer were convicted. Those convicted got very lenient sentences. And some of those who were convicted were already released, before they served their time and before the blood of their victims dried(!). Many more suspects were released on minor technicalities.

Is it any wonder, therefore, that some of KNOWN TERRORISTS have legitimately established functioning OFFICES (!) in Europe?
They quietly conduct BUSINESS there, plotting their next hate crime, which can be next week, next month, or next decade. Just like, it seems, those terrorists managed to stay out of the reach of law in the United States of America until September 11, 2001…

These facts speak for themselves and, no matter how one slices it, It is not a pretty picture.

Armenian terrorists base their hate crimes on allegations that a genocide was committed against their ancestors in the Ottoman Empire during World War I . These claims are not based on facts, but on deliberately distorted history.

The facts are, the Armenians resorted to wide scale, bloody uprisings during World war when the Ottoman Empire was fighting for its survival. The Armenians sided with invading enemy armies (Russians) in 1914 which made Ottomans lose trust in them.

Since it was not possible to distinguish between who betrayed and who didn't, the Ottoman Empire decided to relocate the Armenian population of Eastern Anatolia, which posed a serious threat to Ottoman security and war effort, to non-war zones of the empire, such as Iraq and Syria.
Armenians of Istanbul, the capital of the Ottoman Empire, was not affected by this wartime measure and they remained throughout the war and still are there today.

Likewise, the Armenians of Izmir and Edirne, both in the Western parts of the Empire, were allowed to stay, because these Armenians were not judged to pose a "threat" to the Ottoman war effort.

Most of those who were relocated, did make it to their destinations, where they were cared for by the Ottoman governors with limited resources at a wartime. Ottoman government records clearly show that the intention was to remove, not eradicate, Armenians, as alleged.

Due to limited resources and supplies available at a wartime, disease and famine, took more lives than bullets and battles.