ARFD On Armenian Ex-Interior Minister Assault: Situation Exacerbates

ARFD ON ARMENIAN EX-INTERIOR MINISTER ASSAULT: SITUATION EXACERBATES AT PRE-ELECTION STAGES

Regnum, Russia
Oct 10 2006

"It should be taken into consideration that situation exacerbates at
pre-election stages; division of spheres and influences takes place;
at first, it happens quite and, then, openly; some boors become active
in the process, violating, at that, law," Armenian parliamentary
deputy speaker, Armenian revolutionary federation Dashnaktsutiun
(ARFD) bureau member Vahan Hovhannisyan stated.

It is worth reminding; recently, opposition Republic Party executive
committee member, Yerevan ex-mayor, Armenian ex-interior minister
Suren Abramyan was beaten by unknown persons. Being interviewed
by Armenian mass media, Suren Abramyan accused Prime Minister,
Republican Party chairman Andranik Margaryan, whom he recently
labeled as ‘corrupted person,’ of organizing the attack. According
to Mr. Abramyan, attackers demanded from him to go and to beg pardon,
not specifying whose one. Mr. Abramyan concluded that the attack had
been organized by Andranik Margaryan because he might hurt the prime
minister revealing his statement.

According to deputy speaker Vahan Hovhannisyan, it is unlikely that
authorities have lost control over situation. However, according to
him, parliamentary hearings should be conducted, during which heads
and representatives of law-enforcement institutions will inform on
level of control of criminal situation. "Also, the ARF Dashnaktsutiun
initiated draft law on body guards, which will regulate situation in
the sphere. Current so called body guards of certain oligarchs realizes
function, which is not allowed to them by law. It is just militarized
escort, which tries to gain its chief’s favor. Using appropriate law,
special selection will be carried out; people with a shady past will
not get there and they will be both responsible to their chief and
amenable to law," Vahan Hovhannisyan stated.

BAKU: Foreign Minister Meets With Pakistani Ambassador

FOREIGN MINISTER MEETS WITH PAKISTANI AMBASSADOR

AzerTag, Azerbaijan
Oct 11 2006

Azerbaijan’s Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov met with Pakistan’s
newly appointed Ambassador to the country Javed Qureshi, press service
of the Ministry said.

Mr. Qureshi said he is pleased he had been appointed the Ambassador
to Azerbaijan.

He stressed he will make all efforts to strengthen the bilateral ties
between the two countries.

Elmar Mammadyarov, in his turn, said he welcomes the bilateral
political, economic, cultural and other relations between Azerbaijan
and Pakistan.

On the Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh,
Mr. Mammadyarov stressed Armenia’s non-constructive stance on the
dispute.

The Azeri Minister noted the conflict should be solved in accordance
with international norms.

Elmar Mammadyarov also expressed his gratitude to Pakistan
for continuously supporting Azerbaijan within the international
organizations including the United Nations and Organization of the
Islamic Conference.

Mr. Mammadyarov stressed the importance of further enhancing the
political ties between the two countries.

Elmar Mammadyarov and Javed Qureshi also discussed a range of other
questions of mutual concern.

Information Day To Be Held In Yerevan On October 10

"INFORMATION DAY" TO BE HELD IN YEREVAN ON OCTOBER 10

ARKA News Agency, Armenia
Oct 10 2006

YEREVAN, October 10. /ARKA/. An event, titled "Information Day",
will be held within the scope of Tempus Tacis educational program in
Yerevan State University (YSU) on October 10.

According to the information provided to ARKA News Agency by the Tempus
National office in Armenia on Monday, the event is aimed at revealing
priorities of cooperation of Armenian universities with EU countries,
consulting for receiving educational grants, as well as distributing
information about new possibilities and criteria of choosing programs.

Programs director of the Representation of the Eurocommission in
Armenia Irina Movsesyan, representative of the European Commission
Directorate-General for Education and Culture, as well as RA Deputy
Minister of Science and Education Ara Avetisyan and Rector of the
YSU Aram Simonyan will make speeches during the event.

Head of the Tempus Tacis National Office Lana Karlova will present the
activities and priorities of the organization, headed by hear in 2006,
and a representative of the European Educational Fund will conduct
a seminar on the theme of "How to Make Successful Offer/Financial
Aspects".

Among the participants of the event will be: teaching and
administrative staffs of universities, representatives of ministries,
local and international organizations, acting in the sphere of
education.

The event has been organized by the RA Ministry of Science and
Education, Representation of the European Commission and Tempus
National Office.

Mission Of Moscow Deptartment Of Academy Of Teutsches’ Ideal-Method

MISSION OF MOSCOW DEPARTMENT OF ACADEMY OF TEUTSCHES’ IDEAL-METHOD TO VISIT YEREVAN ON OCTOBER 15-18

ARKA News Agency, Armenia
Oct 10 2006

YEREVAN, October 10. /ARKA/. Mission of Moscow department of the
Academy of Teutsches’ Ideal-method is coming to Yerevan on October
15-18.

"Armenia will become one of the countries, where the Academy of
Teutsches’ Ideal-method will present its innovative scientific
approach towards the analysis of human behavior and state, as well as
towards the actions directed to elimination of problems and negative
phenomena", according to the information provided by the Moscow
department of the Academy.

According to the source, a press-conference on Teutsches’ Ideal-method
will be held in the House of Journalists in Yerevan on October 17.

Boris and Tatyana Sorin are president and vice-president of the Moscow
department of the Academy – experienced experts in psychogenetic
behavior of human being.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Genocide: Turk Premier Raps French Colonialism

GENOCIDE: TURK PREMIER RAPS FRENCH COLONIALISM

Gulf Times, Qatar
Oct 11 2006

Protesters stand under a banner that reads ‘French parliamentarians!

Respect historical truths. Say no to the blackmail of the Armenians’
during a demonstration in front of the French embassy in Ankara
yesterday

ANKARA: Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan told France yesterday
to examine its own colonial history instead of drawing up legislation
that will make it a crime to deny Armenians suffered genocide in
World War I.

Relations between Paris and Ankara have become increasingly strained as
the French parliament prepares to vote tomorrow on a bill that will
impose prison terms on anyone who questions the Armenian genocide
in 1915.

An eventual "yes" vote could also seriously damage Turkey’s ties
with the whole European Union at a time when it is negotiating to
join the 25-nation bloc.

Ankara strongly denies charges that some 1.5mn Armenians perished
in a systematic genocide last century, saying large numbers of both
Christian Armenians and Muslim Turks died in a partisan conflict
raging at that time.

"There can be no legal justification for making it a crime to say a
lie is a lie," Erdogan said in a speech.

"France must look at what has happened in Senegal, Tunisia, Djibouti,
Guinea, Algeria," he added, referring to the time when Paris controlled
large swathes of Africa.

Despite the anger in Ankara, the French parliament moved a step closer
yesterday to approving the bill after the ruling Union for a Popular
Movement (UMP) gave its parliamentarians a free rein in the vote.

The proposed law was drawn up by the opposition Socialist party
and the rightist UMP, which is close to President Jacques Chirac,
had previously snubbed the idea.

Some ministers publicly say there is no need for legislation over the
issue, but the mood within the UMP has toughened since Chirac paid
a state visit to Armenia last month and said Turkey should recognise
the genocide before joining the EU.

UMP party officials expect around 60 of their 362 parliamentarians
to back the motion, with most of the rest likely to skip the debate,
handing victory to the Socialists.

The French parliament has already approved a bill in 2001 which stated
that France recognised the genocide. tomorrow’s vote will strengthen
the bill, laying out a one year prison term and 45,000 euro ($56,570)
fine for anyone denying the massacre.

Around 400,000 people in France have Armenian roots, making it a
powerful lobby, particularly in the south of the country, and some
top French politicians belong to the Armenian diaspora.

In Turkey, the parliamentary justice committee is due to decide today
whether to retaliate by proposing a bill that would criminalise the
denial of genocide in Algeria, which Paris ruled from 1830 to 1962.

Algerian President Abdelaziz Bouteflika has repeatedly called on France
to admit its part in the massacre of 45,000 Algerians who took to the
streets to demand independence as Europe celebrated victory over Nazi
Germany in 1945.

However, Erdogan signalled that Turkey would not pursue a tit-for-tat
policy, although his government has already warned that the bill
would badly damage bilateral ties.

"Some of our friends say ‘France did this, so we should retaliate’.

But we’re not among those who clean dirt with dirt. We’re among those
who clean off the dirt with clean water."

Bilateral trade amounted to nearly $10bn in 2005.

Some politicians have called for the expulsion of Armenians working
illegally in Turkey. Other measures mooted include boycotting French
products and freezing military co-operation.

Fearing a backlash, the spiritual leader of Turkey’s small Armenian
community, Patriarch Mesrob II, urged French restraint.

"All initiatives that prevent freedom of expression will strike a
blow to the process of dialogue between the Turkish and Armenian
communities and will strengthen excessive nationalist and racist
factors on both sides," he said.

Last year, Erdogan proposed a joint commission of Turkish and
Armenian historians to examine what really happened during World War
One. Armenia did not accept the proposal. – Agencies.

Turkish-French Ties At Risk Over Genocide Bill

TURKISH-FRENCH TIES AT RISK OVER GENOCIDE BILL
Hande Culpan

Middle East Times, Egypt
AFP
Oct 10 2006

ATTACK: Turkish PM Recep Tayyip Erdogan addresses his ruling Justice
and Development Party MPs at the Turkish parliament in Ankara October
10. Erdogan called on France to look to its own colonial past instead
of attacking Turkey over an alleged genocide of Armenians during WWI.

(REUTERS)

ANKARA — Ankara launched a scathing attack against Paris Tuesday,
accusing it of losing its reason over a draft law on the World War
I massacres of Armenians and warning that bilateral ties will suffer
if the bill is enacted.

The draft, scheduled for debate and a vote before the French National
Assembly Thursday, calls for one year in prison and a ~@45,000
($57,000) fine for anyone who denies that Armenians were the victims of
a genocide under the Ottoman Empire, the predecessor of modern Turkey.

"We expect Paris to avoid this blunder, this political accident
that will harm Turkish-French relations," Turkish Prime Minister
Recep Tayyip Erdogan told the parliamentary group of his Justice and
Development Party in a speech interrupted by applause. "The EU must
absolutely take a stand against this eclipse of reason in France,"
he said, charging that the bill would violate freedom of expression,
a basic EU norm that Turkey itself is under pressure to respect.

Drawn up by the Socialist opposition, the bill was first submitted
in May, but the debate ran out of time after filibustering from the
ruling UMP party bloc.

Turkish officials believe that it stands a good chance of being voted
Thursday – as a gesture to France’s large Armenian community ahead
of legislative elections next year – as many lawmakers opposed to
the bill will be away in their constituencies.

Ankara has warned that French firms will be barred from major tenders,
including one for the planned construction of the country’s first
nuclear power plant, if the bill is accepted.

"The French will lose Turkey," foreign minister Abdullah Gul warned
Sunday.

The Ankara Chamber of Commerce, which groups some 3,200 businesses,
and the Consumers’ Union, a nongovernmental consumer rights group,
have threatened to boycott French goods.

In 2001, Turkey sidelined French companies from public tenders and
canceled projects awarded to French firms when parliament adopted a
resolution recognizing the massacres as genocide.

At stake now is a flourishing trade between the two countries that
totaled [email protected] billion ($10 billion) in 2005.

About 250 French firms are active in Turkey, providing employment
for about 65,000 people.

France also plays a leading role in foreign direct investment in
Turkey with $2.1 billion last year and $328 million in the first
seven months of 2006.

But some commentators have warned that suspending economic ties with
France would have a bruising affect on Turkey, for which foreign
investment is vital as it recovers from two severe financial crises.

Turkey could also retaliate politically, keeping bilateral contacts
at a minimum and at the lowest diplomatic level and possibly canceling
bilateral visits.

One senior lawmaker warned that the Turkish parliament could retaliate
with a law proclaiming the killing of Algerians under French colonial
rule as genocide and its denial a jailable offense, but Erdogan
rejected the suggestion. "No," he said, "we will not retaliate in
kind – we do not clean filth with filth."

The Armenian massacres are one of most controversial episodes in
Turkish history and open debate on the issue has only recently begun
in Turkey, often sending nationalist sentiment into frenzy.

Armenians claim that up to 1.5 million of their kin were slaughtered
in orchestrated killings between 1915 and 1917.

Turkey categorically rejects the genocide label, arguing that
300,000 Armenians and at least as many Turks died in civil strife
when Armenians rose for independence in eastern Anatolia and sided
with invading Russian troops as the Ottoman Empire fell apart.

Grigor Badalyan: The "Dutch Disease" Of The Armenian Economy: Diagno

GRIGOR BADALYAN: THE "DUTCH DISEASE" OF THE ARMENIAN ECONOMY: DIAGNOSIS AND TREATMENT

Regnum, Russia
Oct 11 2006

Grigor Badalyan – expert on financial and economic problems of Akos
research group specially for REGNUM

The AMD appreciation in the last two years has long ceased to be
just a topic of narrowly professional interest: for economists and
economy-related government executives only. Today, it is a topic for
all people in Armenia – from top officials down to shopkeepers.

However, collective brain-storming brings little clarity to the matter:
if you read what media write and listen to what politicians say about
the matter, you may get an impression that what they are talking about
is not the specific macroeconomics of a small country but something
from astrology, magic and sorcery.

The most probable reason is that most of the discussants are
ignorant of macroeconomics – be they journalists trying to quickly
cope with the subject they have known nothing about before, or
parliamentarians crying about some global plot and blaming executives,
or top government officials appearing at briefings with the hackneyed
monetarist mantras they in the IMF and WB have successfully used –
for many decades already – for hypnotizing the world community.

Probably, some people think that the present-day Armenian economy
is some anomaly – when statistics keep reporting an economic magic
(that’s exactly how they in the world call over 10% GDP growth), while
specific people and specific companies are finding it increasingly
hard to make both ends meet.

Diagnosis

However, we see no paradox in all that we see: this situation has long
been scientifically described and can be found in any macroeconomic
text-book termed as "Dutch Disease" – the negative long-term impact
a disproportional explosion in one economy sector has on the other
ones. You could see such a situation in the Netherlands in the 1960s:
the active development of oil-gas deposits on the Northern Sea shelf
boosted an explosive growth in fuel exports and put the other economy
sectors – industry, agriculture, tourism – on the verge of collapse.

Almost the same is going on in the Armenian economy, today: an
export-oriented explosive growth in the industrial sector (let’s call
it provocateur-sector) is provoking a mass inflow of currency.

Without state interference, the national currency rate is beginning
to grow. As a result, profitability is declining, and the national
producers working outside the provocateur-sector are beginning to lose
their price competitiveness. This situation is hitting not only at
the exporters of finished products but also at the companies selling
goods exclusively inside the country: their products will be gradually
replaced by cheaper counterparts from abroad.

Declining output in processing sectors will logically bring to dropping
budgetary revenues, growing unemployment, stagnating productions, etc..

Only the provocateur-sector companies and importers will benefit
from this situation, but, in the long run, they too would see their
profitability curbed by steadily climbing exchange rate.

That’s exactly what we could see in Russia in 1988: a currency corridor
policy made it unprofitable for local oil companies to sell their
oil abroad – their costs in "expensive" RUR were bigger than their
profits in USD.

And now, let’s look at the Armenian economy and try to draw
parallels. In Armenia the provocateur-sector is construction
(all-time high 42% real growth last year). De facto, this sector is
export-oriented as the key buyers are residents of foreign states
who pay for realty in foreign currency.

Besides the autochthonous, "normal" growth in the Diaspora’s demand for
realty, there is an additional demand, caused by the war in Lebanon,
the expectations of the US military operation in Iran, the tensions in
Georgia and other factors. Consequently, the Armenians living in those
countries are beginning to increasingly often consider repatriation
as a way to ensure their personal security.

The growing demand for realty is generating big foreign currency
inflows, which, in their turn, are raising the demand for AMD. Since
the AMD supply is not changing, this tendency is inevitably leading
to sharp AMD appreciation.

The rest happens according to the above scenario: output declines in
all export-oriented sectors, in agriculture and also in the industries
working for the home market. Today, not only information technologies
– proclaimed by the government as a priority sector – but also light
and food industries and services are faced with a growing snowball
of problems.

For example, if, as a result of continuing national currency growth,
the price difference between Kotayk and Budweiser beers grows smaller
or disappears at all, the native consumer will certainly prefer
the famous western brand. Or, sooner or later, if not now, the rest
in native Tsaghkadzor or Sevan will become more expensive than the
rest in Egypt, Bulgaria or Turkey, not mentioning Georgia. And this
problem is equally topical for all home producers: exporters and home
market-oriented companies. Already today, we can see this happening:
the export is falling, the trade gap has swollen to all time high
30% of GDP, almost all industries and services are on decline
(including the high-tech sector so much cherished by the people and
the government) – and all this because of the rapid growth of one
sector – construction.

Aggregately, this has resulted in an 11% economic growth in the past
months of this year. We can’t help being glad at the "quantity" of
this growth, but, on the other hand, we can’t help being concerned
for its "quality" and internal structure: the economic blossom of not
so very promising sector leads to the economic fading of the sectors
our nation relies on in XXI.

Treatment

The first question that comes to mind after the analysis of the
situation is: is there a cure for the "Dutch Disease" or not? In other
words, what should the state do in such a situation? Is it Adam Smith’s
"night watchman" dolefully watching how things are getting worse
and just shrugging his shoulders, existing just for recording and
publishing statistics; or is it a complex organism bestowed with the
sovereignty of a nation for solving (i.e. actively acting rather than
passively watching) specific problems the nation cannot solve alone?

The advocates of the former approach represent the long-out-of-fashion
neo-classical model of economy and can be found in the IMF, WB
and other structures trying hard "to drag" lagging economies onto
"development road."

I think there is no need to remind you once again of the general
opinion about the counter-productivity of the IMF and WB policies.

Their former executives have written lots of books, where they
shamelessly confess that their key mission was not to provide their
"protege" countries with access to the "golden billion," but, on the
contrary, to actively prevent this "undesirable" scenario. You don’t
even have to read those books, it’ll be enough for you just to look
at the IMF and WB "board of honor": those countries who happened to
accept their recommendations all, sooner or later, got on the verge
of economic collapse: Argentina with its thriving economy, Russia in
1998, Thailand during the Asian Crisis of 1997 and many others. On
the other hand, those who rejected the IMF "help," like Malaysia and
its Prime Minister Mohathir Mohammad (who had immediately become non
grata for the West), have independently achieved the best possible
results and the highest possible economic growth.

Unfortunately, our top executives from the Armenian government and
Central Bank think in other categories. The followers of those theories
are religiously fanatic in their attitude to inflation (the legacy
of Milton Friedman’s monetarist views): they are ready to fight this
"disease" even if it kills the patient.

We, on the contrary, believe that the state should smooth over
the disproportions in the uncontrollable, spontaneously-chaotic
development of the Armenian economy. First, we can and must carry out
a currency policy in order to support the strategic economy sectors,
and the Central Bank, with its full kit of necessary instruments,
can well do it.

Second, we should slightly cool the overheat construction sector –
which is the prerogative of the government and, more specifically,
tax bodies.

The goal of the first – monetary – direction is to bring AMD to the
basket of foreign currencies – to the level acceptable for home
producers and exporters, for example, 500-550 AMD/1 USD. One way
to attain this goal is to increase liquidity. First, the CB can buy
USD directly on the currency market. Second, it can use the generally
applied, traditional mechanisms to subtly tune the monetary market by,
say, changing the discount or REPO rates (the rate of refinancing;
the lower the rate the more accessible the sources of crediting),
by reserving or by carrying out operations with the national debt.

In our opinion, the most natural and adequate way to increase
AMD liquidity is to pay AMD to buy foreign currency. By the way,
the Constitution of Armenia gives the CB the right to issue AMD in
unlimited quantity (if need be).

This measure would automatically bring the exchange rate back into
the limits acceptable for all – the secondary sector, services,
population and, why not, the selfsame construction. The only victim
would be importers (including petrol and similar monopolies).

Meanwhile, highly experienced in "saving" developing economies, IMF
experts are strongly warning the seemingly independent authorities
of the seemingly independent Armenia against inflation that will
inevitably follow the CB activity on the currency market.

Such statements remind me of the well-known anecdote that "the best
way to fight dandruff is to cut off the head." Yes, there will be no
inflation, but there will be no economy either.

Even more, the current inflation is due not at all to the excessive
demand but to the growing costs of enterprises: rising gas and
electricity prices, unprecedented oil market situation, consequent
growth in petrol prices and so on and so forth. Under such conditions,
the CB can in no way curb the growth of prices.

On the contrary, our government should do its best to support the
export-oriented industries, like they in China do: for many years
already the Chinese CB has been maintaining the fixed, artificially
undervalued rate of Yuan against USD. Despite the US’ urgent demands
to give up this policy, they seem to be reluctant to let Yuan "afloat"
and will continue preventing Yuan appreciation. Their point is simple:
only with low Yuan rate can China keep its cheap export further
competitive in the US and Western Europe and continue surprising the
world community with the pace of its growing expansion.

Generally, only countries with stable economies and reserve currencies
– the US, the EU, the UK, Switzerland, Japan – can afford tough
currency policy, while the countries with catch-up development policy
– China and very many other developing countries – on the contrary,
prefer to have weak currency for stimulating economy growth.

The logical question is: can it be so that something that is right
for China, Malaysia or India is wrong for Armenia? Or, perhaps, our
leaders see our country among Switzerland, Kuwait or Japan? Patriotic
as we are, we are still far from such thoughts.

We dare to disagree with some top economic officials and IMF and
WB executives. We believe that sensible policy of fixed exchange
rate and moderate AMD depreciation cannot be a strong stimulus for
inflation but can be a new strength for the much wasted promising
industries. The side effect of this policy will be quick accumulation
of currency reserves by the CB – which is quite good.

This solution is right on the surface and we are puzzled to see that
our monetary authorities have not applied it, to date.

Macroeconomically, this solution is absolutely logical, but it seems
that our CB has some non-economic reasons for disregarding it.

We would like to remind you that the foreign debt of Armenia consists
mostly of liabilities to the WB and IMF. And everybody knows that
those organizations lend money upon quite tough conditions. And it
is not a secret that in some countries they even approve or reject
national budgets, not mentioning "less" important documents, like
CB monetary-credit policies, for example. Even vast Russia had to
reckon with them, in its time; no surprise that those "agents" of
globalization can easily keep small Armenia on a short leash.

And so, our government officials may have "secretly" pledged to follow
the IMF and/or WB recommendations – guidelines that are quite dubious
for Armenia’s national interests and priorities.

Unfortunately, Armenia is not the first or the last in the IMF/WB
list of subdued countries.

If our fears are well-grounded and the monetary authorities keep AMD
high just because they have some "secret" commitments to international
financial organizations, our public should do its best to restore
the national sovereignty in the monetary sphere – or, we may lose the
competitiveness of our economy and the economic welfare and security
of our country.

The most essential and urgent steps we should take are as follows:

1. We should liquidate the CB monopoly over deep macroeconomic
analysis. In fact, they in the CE have in hand all the facts and can
see the most comprehensive picture of the economy, and any opponents
trying to dispute with them are doomed to failure because of being less
informed. So, it is necessary to recruit (or hire) an independent group
of researchers who would give an unbiased assessment of the existing
monetary policy in the light of the Armenian people’s strategic goals
for ensuring the long-term development of promising economy sectors.

2. It is necessary to work out a complex of measures to cool the
overheat construction industry. This policy can be carried out by
purely fiscal means: for example, by increasing the taxes on the sale
of primary housing, on land, on the sale of land for construction,
etc. The general logic is – to artificially increase the construction
costs for decreasing the potential demand.

3. It is expedient to enroll representatives of all native sectors
into an action group so they can thoroughly examine the problem and
inform the public, the parliament and the president of the private
sector’s single position on the matter.

Life Between The Commas

LIFE BETWEEN THE COMMAS

Times Herald-Record, NY
Oct 11 2006

On the day The Washington Post carried a story about how President
Bush had characterized the present difficult period in Iraq as "just a
comma," Matt Mendelsohn called me. He is a photographer who took the
pictures for a new book by his brother Daniel, "The Lost." It is an
attempt to find out what happened to six members of the Mendelsohn
family who perished in the Holocaust – the family of great-uncle
Shmiel Jager, "killed by the Nazis," of which almost nothing else was
known. There: You went right by it. Shmiel lived between the commas.

In between those commas, of course, is the life of a man. He was
scared and he was brave, he was proud and he was shamed, he headed a
family and ran a business and then hid from the Nazis until he, along
with four daughters and his wife, was betrayed and shot right on the
spot. Don’t think of the bullet as a period. It was, worse, a comma.

So Daniel Mendelsohn set out to expand the commas, to push them
open and let in a life. From what the reviewers say, he succeeded
brilliantly, so when someone says 6 million Jews died in the Holocaust
or if someone mentions Auschwitz, you can understand that it is not a
number that died, but a person who was murdered. I say that also about
Rwanda in 1994, or what happened to the Armenians in Turkey in 1915,
or what is happening in Darfur today.

Commas imprison us all. You see them in the headlines of obituaries:
Joseph Smith, accountant, 81; Mildred Jones, housewife, 87; Frank
Miller, longtime resident, dies. The brevity of it all, the compression
of a life into a clause, is appalling, yet an unalterable fact. This
is the way not just of newspapers, but of history, too.

You come across the mention of a war – the Crimean, the Civil, the
Vietnam, the Boer, the Algerian – and then, like a cemetery dangling
from two commas, comes a mention of the number of dead. They get the
same prominence – sometimes less – as the amount of ordnance used or
ships sunk or airplanes built.

Wars are fought with commas. They are essential. Here and there is
a world leader who does not care about human life, but most do. The
only way they can function is to plant commas around the misery they
cause, to subordinate the loss of life to a supposedly greater cause.

This is what Bush is doing. If he did not think he is on his way to
something grand, that he is doing immense good, then he could not
face what is between those two commas – almost 3,000 American lives
and immense suffering. He is not a man given to introspection. Still,
he could not live without the succor of cliches: breaking eggs to
make an omelet and all of that. In between his commas are all those
broken eggs. As yet, there is no omelet.

Not too long ago, I embraced the commas myself. I favored this idiotic
war because I thought that the deaths of some would improve – even
save – the lives of many. I likened the about-to-die soldiers to
firemen or cops, the people we summon to risk or lose their lives
in the common good. I had the common good in mind when I supported
the war and I did not expect much space between the commas. Now, the
space expands and expands, one comma marching away from the other. It
seems we will need room for all of Iraq.

When he was alive, I didn’t much care for Menachem Begin, the
hard-line Israeli prime minister. But when he retired after the 1982
war in Lebanon and showed his grief, my view of him changed. He was
despondent over all the lives wasted, and he went into seclusion. For
Begin, somehow, the commas evaporated and the immensity of his mistake
pitched him into a depression relieved only by death. Other world
leaders, in similar circumstances, join consulting firms. The bigger
their mistakes, it appears, the higher their fees.

Most of us yearn to escape our commas, to become something more than a
profession (longtime lawyer) or resident (Washington native), to make
our mark on the world. A president who has ineptly waged a foolish
war instead seeks the solace of commas. It is not so much where he
has deposited the wounded and dead, but where he hopes he can hide
from history. It can’t be done, though: George W. Bush comma – and
then his failure in Iraq. The comma is his epitaph.

Richard Cohen is a syndicated columnist. His e-mail address is
[email protected].

Patronising Turkey Is A Dangerous Game For Europe

PATRONISING TURKEY IS A DANGEROUS GAME FOR EUROPE
By Denis MacShane

Financial Times, UK
Oct 11 2006

Europe is doing its level best to tell Turkey it is no longer wanted
as part of the European Union. It is a high-risk game with little to
gain and a great deal to lose. How much longer will this sec-ular,
democratic, Muslim country look westwards to a European future,
instead of turning east?

Take the proclamation by Jacques Chirac, president of France, on
a recent visit to Armenia. Indulging his hosts and delighting the
politically active Armenian diaspora in France, Mr Chirac said Turkey
should recognise the massacre of hundreds of thousands of Armenians
in the turmoil of the first world war as "genocide". In doing so,
he unilaterally created a new condition of EU membership for Turkey.

This is rather like Tony Blair popping up in Madagascar or Algeria
and telling France to apologise for the postwar massacres undertaken
by French soldiers as they put down uprisings.

ADVERTISEMENT The Armenian massacres are a dreadful scar in the
memory of that proud people, torn apart by the many wars and foreign
interventions of the 20th century. But it was the decaying elements
of the Ottoman Empire that killed the Armenians, not the modern
Turkish Republic. If the EU is to demand apologies for historic
misdeeds from its existing members, let alone potential members,
then it may as well dissolve itself.

After Mr Chirac’s statement, Olli Rehn, EU enlargement commissioner,
reiterated that recognition of a genocide is not an official
precondition of membership. It was a welcome correction. But how do you
explain away the European Commission president, Jose Manuel Barroso,
saying that the era of EU enlargement is over?

This problem goes beyond the bluster of bureaucrats in Brussels or
an elderly French president on his way out of office. In April 2004,
European foreign ministers solemnly agreed to open trade links with
northern Cyprus. They have broken that promise. I took part in that
negotiation, and I find it shameful that powerful European states
are unable to enforce their own decisions.

Turkey wakes up almost every month to find a new hurdle on its path to
Europe. The mishandling of "the Turkish question" would seem laugh-able
were it not so important. The implicit repudiation of its European
ambitions is already fuelling support for radical groups in Turkish
domestic politics who argue that Europe is reneging on its pledge to
negotiate seriously. This matters because Turkey is pivotal to Britain
and other European states realising their interests overseas. Today,
scores of thousands of Europe’s best soldiers are fighting the
anti-democratic forces of jihadist terror networks from the shores
of Lebanon to the frontier mountains of Pakistan. If Europe wants to
promote democracy in the region, Turkey is an indispensable ally.

Turkey, of course, does much to drive its friends in the west quite
mad. The trials of writers and journalists are an insult to any
notion of democracy. The occupation of northern Cyprus and refusal
to normalise relations with Nicosia is intolerable – but is likely to
last forever if Europe continues to patronise the Turks. However, the
enormous progress in rule of law, freedom of intellectual activity
and the defence of the secular state against illiberal religious
fundamentalism remains an important advance in the struggle to defend
democracy.

Europe cannot rely on its loyalty because Turkey has alternatives. It
can create a Black Sea alliance with Vladimir Putin’s increasingly
authoritarian Russia. It could even forge a coalition with a
nuclear-armed Iran; the neighbours have rarely threatened each other in
the past. There are energy-rich republics to Turkey’s east that share
its language and culture. Islamists in Turkey have long advocated a
rapprochement with Pakistan to create a crescent of influence and power
linking a series of Islamic states governed by strong semi-military
regimes. An independent Turkey, free of ties to the EU, could also
clash with European foreign policy goals by aggressively pursuing
its interests in the Mediterranean or the Middle East.

Turkey’s friends need to lead a diplomatic offensive to ensure the EU
honours its obligations. Leaving Turkey turning on the spit of European
debate – roasted by condescension, ignorance and hostility – will
transform one of Europe’s greatest assets into a source of conflict
and tension. For good or ill Europe is now intervening in a region
full of problems in Iran, Iraq and Israel-Palestine. Making an enemy
of Turkey will make solving any of these problems far more difficult.

Should Turkey’s friends to rally round and prevent it being shut out
of the EU? Denis MacShane will answer your questions in a live Q&A
on Thursday from 11am BST. Post a question now

The writer is Labour MP for Rotherham. He was Britain’s Europe minister
between 2002 and 2005.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

BAKU: OSCE Urges Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry To Resume Direct Talks

OSCE URGES AZERBAIJANI FOREIGN MINISTRY TO RESUME DIRECT TALKS WITH YEREVAN

Baku Today, Azerbaijan
Oct 11 2006

Today OSCE Minsk Group co-chairmen Matthew Bryza (U.S.), Yurii
Merzlyakov (Russia) and Bernard Fasye (France) have held talks with
administration of Azerbaijan Foreign Ministry.

"We had a very useful and interesting conversation with Foreign
Minister Elmar Mamedyarov and his Deputy Araz Azimov. We spoke about
resumption of direct contacts between the sides in the near future,"
said Russian co-chairman Merzlyakov after the meeting.

Merzlyakov told Turan news agency that "some additional elements
could be regarded as new ones." "There are such elements, we have
discussed them and will continue work on them," added diplomat.

Questioned when Azerbaijani and Armenian Foreign Ministers will hold
a meeting, Merzlyakov said "in the near future." Speaking about
perspectives of the meeting between the two presidents at the CIS
summit in Minsk, Merzlyakov said "we need to wait until the summit
first."

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress