Expert: "Recognition Of So-Called Unrecognized States Is Not Far Off

EXPERT: "RECOGNITION OF SO-CALLED UNRECOGNIZED STATES IS NOT FAR OFF"

Regnum, Russia
Oct 2 2006

"Russia has always stuck to the principle of territorial integrity
in conflict settlement in the post-Soviet territories; however, as
time goes by, we have come to understanding that settlement of those
conflicts on the ground of the territorial integrity concept without
infringing upon the right for self-determination is impossible. Today
we can see a drastic turn in attitudes of policymakers towards
necessity to respect the right for self-determination and people’s
will," Head of the Institute for CIS Countries, MP Konstantin Zatulin,
who has visited recently Stepanakert, is quoted as saying on air of
Nagorno Karabakh Public Television.

As a REGNUM correspondent in Stepanakert reports, at the same time
Zatulin added that Russia considers ceasefire as the main achievement
and nonrenewal of operations in conflict zones. "Recognition of the
so-called unrecognized states is not far off. Unrecognized republics
have all attributes of state system and stable democratic system,"
Konstantin Zatulin is quoted as saying.

Speaking on the referendum in Transdnestr, the MP noted: "If the
West considers it appropriate to hold another referendum in Nagorno
Karabakh, why doesn’t it recognize the outcome of the referendum
in Transdnestr?" At the same time, he noted that in Russia the
struggle of opinions has continued over the issue of recognizing
the Transdnestr independence. According to the expert, recognition
of Kosovo independence can become a precedent for recognizing newly
established countries in the post-Soviet territory, particularly,
for Nagorno Karabakh.

Chirac Calls For Turkey To Recognise WW1 Armenian Genocide

CHIRAC CALLS FOR TURKEY TO RECOGNISE WW1 ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

EuroNews – English Version
September 30, 2006

President Jacques Chirac has begun a two day visit to Armenia. The
French leader paid his respects at a monument to thousands of people
who were killed in the area during the World War One. Chirac used the
occasion to urge Turkey to recognise the 1915 to 1919 massacres at
the hands of the former Ottoman Turk regime. He said "All countries
grow up acknowledging their dramas and their errors."

According to Armenian sources, more than 1.5 million people died
in mass killings and deportations. They claim the deaths amounted
to genocide. But Turkey, which wants to be a member of the EU,
continues to reject this and says the total number of deaths were
nearer a quarter- of- million and sparked by an internal conflict.

Law On Armenian Genocide Is Equal For All: French President

LAW ON ARMENIAN GENOCIDE IS EQUAL FOR ALL: FRENCH PRESIDENT

ARMINFO News Agency
September 30, 2006 Saturday

ArmInFO. France has recognized the Armenian Genocide on a legislative
level and this law is equal for all, French President Jacques Chirac
said during a joint press-conference with Armenian President Robert
Kocharyan.

Commenting on the initiative of the Socialist Party of France to
adopt a law providing for criminal responsibility for denying the
Armenian Genocide, Chirac said that France is a legal state and in
a legal state calls for hatred and racism must be punished.

BAKU: Aliyev Hopes Peace Talks To Resolve NK Conflict

AZERI LEADER HOPES PEACE TALKS TO RESOLVE NK CONFLICT

Lider TV, Baku,
2 Oct 06

[Presenter] We reported earlier that Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev
has touched upon the resolution of the Nagornyy Karabakh conflict
between Armenia and Azerbaijan during his speech in the Milli Maclis
[parliament]. Now we present you with a brief report on this.

[Aliyev] We are not thinking of giving up the format of the OSCE
Minsk Group [which mediates between the two countries in the Karabakh
peace process]. At the same time, we think that other organizations’
participation may help resolve the issue too. True, Armenia is trying
to use the discussion of the issue at the UN as a ground to break the
[Karabakh peace] talks. However, this is their own business. They
may break the talks. If they are looking for a pretext, it is not
to difficult to find that pretext. Azerbaijan acts in a constructive
way, is involved in the talks and hopes the issue can be resolved as
a result of the talks.

[The president was speaking at the autumn session of the Azerbaijani
parliament which started on 2 October]

ANKARA: Chirac Meets With Armenian Patriarch Katekin II

CHIRAC MEETS WITH ARMENIAN PATRIARCH KATEKIN II

Hurriyet, Turkey
Oct 2 2006

French President Jazques Chirac met with the leader of the Armenian
Orthodox Church yesterday on the final day of his two day visit to
Armenia. Chirac and Patriarch Karekin II came together to take a tour
of Armenia’s Etchmiadzine Cathedral yesterday, with Chirac writing
the following in the cathedral’s guest book:

"In memory of my visit to the spiritual heart of the Armenians,
and the touching visit I have had with the great Armenian people……"

At a visit to a memorial for the so-called Armenian genocide in
Yerevan two days ago, Chirac was asked by a reporter whether he thought
Turkey should be forced to recognize Armenian claims of genocide as
a pre-condition for EU membership. The French president responded:

"If we are going to speak honestly, yes, I do believe this is
necessary."

Jacques Chirac En Armenie Pour Un "Voyage De Memoire"

JACQUES CHIRAC EN ARMENIE POUR UN "VOYAGE DE MEMOIRE"
par Alain Barluet

Le Figaro, France
30 septembre 2006

CERTAINS VOYAGES officiels promettent plus d’emotion que d’autres.

Cette visite d’Etat de deux jours, la première d’un president francais
en Armenie, s’annonce chargee de symboles. Arrive hier soir a Erevan,
Jacques Chirac rendra hommage ce matin au million et demi d’Armeniens
massacres par l’Empire ottoman entre 1915 et 1917. Dans l’entourage de
Jacques Chirac, on parle d’un "voyage de memoire et de retrouvailles
entre deux peuples". En Armenie, il entend apporter le soutien d’une
"vieille nation", la France a une "jeune republique independante
(depuis septembre 1991, NDLR) ". Cette visite est aussi pour le
chef d’Etat l’occasion de corriger son image "pro-turque", alors
que la perspective d’une entree d’Ankara dans l’Union europeenne
suscite toujours une large hostilite dans la classe politique et
dans l’opinion.

Pour Paris, comme pour l’Union europeenne, il n’existe aucun lien
direct entre l’adhesion turque et la reconnaissance du genocide,
un terme recuse par Ankara qui soutient que des massacres, commis
de part et d’autre, ont fait de 300 a 500 000 morts. A Strasbourg,
mercredi, les eurodeputes ont d’ailleurs refuse de considerer cette
reconnaissance comme un prealable a l’adhesion. Jacques Chirac
vient toutefois de souligner la conditionnalite implicite entre les
deux demarches. Interviewe cette semaine par le magazine Nouvelles
d’Armenie, le chef de l’Etat reaffirme qu’il est "essentiel" a ses
yeux de voir la Turquie arrimee a l’Occident. Mais il relève aussi
que "l’Europe, c’est d’abord un effort de reconciliation, de paix,
de respect et d’ouverture aux autres", ajoutant que cela "s’est
traduit toujours et partout par un effort de memoire". "L’adhesion a
l’UE est une adhesion a des valeurs", resume-t-on a l’Elysee où l’on
estime que les Turcs sont maintenant disposes a engager une reflexion
sur l’histoire qui prendra necessairement du temps. Voyage très
suivi par Ankara Ce voyage sera suivi très attentivement a Ankara,
d’autant qu’une autre echeance se profile. Le 12 octobre prochain,
les deputes francais devraient reprendre l’examen d’un projet de loi
socialiste visant a sanctionner la negation du genocide armenien. Ce
texte, destine a completer la loi du 29 janvier 2001 par laquelle la
France reconnaissait le genocide, prevoit de penaliser a hauteur de 45
000 euros et d’un an d’emprisonnement les propos negationnistes. La
proposition de loi avait deja ete examinee en mai dernier et suscite
de fortes divisions a gauche comme a droite. A cause d’une bataille
de procedure et du peu d’empressement du president de l’Assemblee,
Jean-Louis Debre, elle n’avait finalement pas ete soumise au vote.

L’affaire avait surtout provoque la colère de la Turquie qui y avait
vu un nouveau "coup bas" pour lui barrer la route de l’Europe. Ankara
avait meme brandi la menace de represailles economiques contre la
France. L’issue du vote, s’il a lieu, est incertaine, nombre de deputes
UMP etant favorables au texte. L’ire d’Ankara pourrait etre ravivee.

–Boundary_(ID_bFiq8BZdiKTHLUtYvFhlsA)–

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

"We Should Double Our Efforts And Carry Out More Delicate Diplomacy,

"WE SHOULD DOUBLE OUR EFFORTS AND CARRY ON MORE DELICATE DIPLOMACY," VARTAN OSKANIAN SAYS

Noyan Tapan News Agency, Armenia
Sept 29 2006

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 29, NOYAN TAPAN. "Placing of the issue on protracted
conflicts in the post-Soviet area on the agenda of UN General Assembly
on the initiative of GUAM is not Azerbaijan’s diplomatic victory
and does not cause our anxiety." RA Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian
declared this at the September 29 press conference.

At the same time, he emphasized that this policy of Azerbaijan is
unequivocally a new challenge for the Armenian side: "One thing is
when you fight one country and another thing is four countries at the
same international instance and in this sense this is a new challenge,
but this does not intimidate us. We should double our efforts and
carry on more delicate diplomacy," Vartan Oskanian declared adding:
"I cannot make prognoses, but we have no problems connected with
processes in UN."

The Minister emphasized that Nagorno Karabakh Republic’s participation
is always on the agenda of the negotiations process. At the same
time, if the resolution on protracted conflicts is approved by the
General Assembly, NKR’s participation in the negotiations will become a
necessity and Armenia remaining in the negotiations process "will throw
off from itself the main burden of conducting the negotiations." He
again reminded that the decisions of UN General Assembly have only
a consultation character and are not subject, in difference to the
decisions of UN Security Council, to obligatory fulfilment.

Touching upon the forthcoming visit of French President Jacques Chirac
to Armenia, Vartan Oskanian declared that this is a historical and very
important visit having a very important political significance. Issues
of political, economic and cultural cooperation will be discussed
within the framework of the visit. The Minister reminded that France
is one of the OSCE Minsk Group country co-chairs and President
Chirac himself takes an active part in the peaceful settlement of
the conflict.

The Minister did not exclude Armenian servicemen’s possible
participation in the peacekeeping mission in Lebanon. However, for
this, in his words, we should wait until Israel gives maps of mine
fields. The Minister declared that the issue on sending sappers
"is on our agenda."

Amnesty International : Hrant Dink Is A "Prisoner Of Conscience"

AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL¯: HRANT DINK IS "PRISONER OF CONSCIENCE"

Noyan Tapan News Agency, Armenia
Sept 28 2006

WASHINGTON, SEPTEMBER 28, NOYAN TAPAN. The American ®Amnesty
International¯ organization expressed its indignation on the occasion
that a criminal action was brought already for the third time with
accusation of "humiliating the Turk" against Hrant Dink, the editor
of the Armenian "Akos" newspaper of Istanbul. "Article 310 must not
only be changed but comletely be taken out of the Criminal Code,"
is said in the statement of the organization.

According to the "Turkish Weekly" periodical, the American organization
believes that this prosecution towards Dink is a bright example
of those pressures which are used against journalists peacefully
making use of their liberty of expression. And Turkey as a state
singed the European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights
and Fundamental Freedoms as well as the International Covenant on
Civil and Political Right, has a legal commitment to carry out them,"
the statement authors emphasized.

The organization that considered Dink to be "a prisoner of conscience"
demands from the Turkish judicial system to justify him.

–Boundary_(ID_j7xw95CMiBQmRecCbdyMKQ)–

Is Bush A Revolutionary?

IS BUSH A REVOLUTIONARY?
By Lee P. Ruddin

History News Network, WA
Oct 1 2006

Mr. Ruddin holds an LL.B; MRes (International Security) and a PgCert
(History: Imperialism and Culture).

Many detractors have berated President George W. Bush, condemning
him for jettisoning two centuries of custom. Lafayette History
Professor Arnold Offner was just one who asserted that Bush’s
new policy (the ‘Bush Doctrine’) was an extremely radical–indeed
revolutionary–departure from American practice. National Security
Tsar Stephen Hadley has even weighed in (though not intending to
disparage his chief) underlining the revolutionary ethos of his boss’s
doctrine. Across the pond too, commentators have drained their pen
cartridges accentuating the steroid-driven American exceptionalism
reigning over contemporary US foreign policy.

Undergirding such ‘knowledgeable ignorance’ lay in the cavalier
dismissal of ‘Dubya’ as brainless or as non-compos mentis as King
George III. Put simply, this apocalyptic tsunami of ink projects that
Bush is a Czarina Alexandra-like vacant vassal hijacked by a baleful
neo-conservative cabal-anguished by the worst case of Stockholm
syndrome-who are executing their revolutionary manifesto.

The magnetism of employing history to resolve foreign dilemmas
remains a subject of ongoing contestation. Ernest May has carried
out the most sustained exploration of the phenomenon. In Lessons of
the Past: The Use and Misuse of History in American Foreign Policy,
May effectively argues that to a large extent, America’s Cold War
strategy was supported by analogies to the appeasement policies of
the 1930s and the necessity of avoiding a repeat of history.

Inspired by the British-born Harvard don Niall Ferguson, I illumine the
telestorian’s (my word) affirmation, whereby "the terrorist attacks
of September 11 and the invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq-in their
long-run historical context, suggest … that they represent less
of a break with the past than is commonly believed." Unlike former
Secretary of State Dean Acheson, I do not seek precedents to refute
any allegations of wrongdoing; rather I refute the revolutionary brand.

"The [9/11] terrorist attacks influenced Bush the way Pearl Harbour
affected Franklin Delano Roosevelt (FDR) and the way the advance of
the Communists in Greece and Turkey after World War II affected Harry
Truman." So stated Fred Barnes, author of the recent dazzling book
entitled Rebel-in-Chief: Inside the Bold and Controversial Presidency
of George W. Bush. From FDR to Truman, a novel policy backing the
use of military force seeking to substitute tyranny was executed.

However, on national security, the executive editor of the Weekly
Standard professed that "Bush is indisputably Reagan’s successor.

Like Reagan, Bush is a moralist and an idealist" (on steroids)
vigorously tackling the gravest threat to US security in his respective
time.

However, is Reagan the most fitting suitor for Bush? By the time Reagan
became President, the US had been fighting World War III (Cold War)
for 33 years; by contrast, World War IV (as named by Norman Podhoretz)
started only after Bush entered the White House. "In this respect,"
Podhoretz states "it is not Reagan to whom Bush should be compared,
but Harry Truman." In 1947, at a time when countless commentators
pooh-poohed the Soviet menace, Truman believed it was an aggressive
totalitarian force, which was plunging the world into a disparate world
war. Of similar ilk, Bush understood that (Islamo) Bolshevism was "the
heir of all the murderous ideologies of the 20th century." However,
such scholarly analogies can be rapidly dismissed when just simply
quoting the President. It would appear that Bush does not seem to be
concerned about his place in history. "History.

We won’t know," he told the journalist Bob Woodward in 2003. "We’ll all
be dead." The philosophy of John Buchan is apposite at this juncture:
"If the past to a man is nothing but a dead hand, then in common
honesty he must be an advocate of revolution."

Actually, the scaffolding of President Bush’s National Security
Strategy (NSS) was constructed by another president, President
Eisenhower, practically five decades previously. The liaison is
all too evident. Both Presidents announced their doctrine before
a joint session of congress. Together they stressed that Middle
Easterners could no longer remain on the sidelines-they had to
declare themselves in the contest between freedom and Bolshevism
(both conventional and Ferguson’s ‘Islamo’)–"to stand up and be
counted," and "you are either with us or against us." Furthermore,
both doctrines were borne by the catalysing events orchestrated by
quasi-Caliphs: Gamal Abdel Nasser and Osama Bin Laden.

In the wake of the (initial) astoundingly clear-cut victory in
Afghanistan, Bush, Cheney and Pentagon officials experienced an
indistinguishable rush of national power and corresponding illusion
of omnipotence that the McKinley administration had experienced
after the "splendid little war" against Spain. In 1899, the McKinley
administration set aside qualms regarding overseas expansion and
annexed the Philippines. In 2002, the Bush administration sidetracked
objections to invade Iraq. Niall Ferguson cites Mark Twain who
described McKinley as the man, "who had sent US troops to fight with
a disgraced musket under a polluted flag and suggested that the flag
in question should have the white stripes painted black and the stars
and stripes replaced by the skull and bones."

Despite the vast repertoire of historical continuity in US foreign
policy-both venerable and ominous-history does not always bequeath
laudable precedents. However, when overruled is this revolutionary? I
would concede that the fundamental departure of the Bush Doctrine
was not so much the theory as the practice. When Bush stated that he
was "prepared to fight for freedom in every corner of the world," he
actually meant it-bizarrely enough. This is conflicting with Woodrow
Wilson’s empty universal rhetoric. The 28th President was unwilling
to intervene in the Middle Eastern expanse to prevent the Armenian
genocide at the hand of the Ottoman Turks. Moreover, Bush’s 2002 State
of the Union address cast aside the 70 year-old American policy of
supporting stable but friendly dictatorships in the Arab world.

The 43rd President confirmed that, "for decades, free nations have
tolerated oppression in the Middle East for the sake of stability. In
practice, this approach has brought little stability and much
oppression. I have changed this policy." Readers must comprehend that
advancing national interests by overturning a deteriorating status
quo is not revolutionary-or nihil novi.

As Frederick Jackson Turner spoke upon Woodrow Wilson’s death,
"fate has dealt hardly with him, but time, the great restorer, and
let us believe, history, will do him justice." Conversely, history may
illuminate that the Iraq war is comparable to Germany’s annexation of
Alsace-Lorraine in 1871, as an event that set the world on a downward
trajectory. So far as the implementation of Bush’s strategy goes,
it is still, according to Podhoretz, "early days-roughly comparable
to 1952 in the history of the Truman Doctrine. As with the Truman
Doctrine then, the Bush Doctrine has thus far acted only in the first
few scenes" of the morality play on the global stage.

"George W. Bush’s presidency appears headed for colossal historical
disgrace." These were the opening words in Sean Wilentz’s article in
a recent edition of Rolling Stone. The Princeton historian further
questioned whether Bush "will be remembered as the very worst president
in all of American history." Well, there have been presidents-Harry
Truman was indeed one-who have left the Oval office in ostensible
ignominy, only to rebound in the estimates of later academics. Let
us trust Bush is next in line.

http://www.hnn.us/articles/30045.html

French Socialists: Genocide Recognition Should Be Precondition For T

FRENCH SOCIALISTS: GENOCIDE RECOGNITION SHOULD BE PRECONDITION FOR TURKEY EU ACCESSION

PanARMENIAN.Net
02.10.2006 14:35 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The Socialist Party of France shares the opinion of
President Chirac that Turkey should recognize the Armenian Genocide
before accession to the EU, a leader of the party, former Finance
Minister of France Dominique Strauss-Kahn, who is going to run for the
President next year, stated yesterday. Friday in Yerevan J. Chirac
stated that Turkey should recognize the Armenian Genocide if it
wants to join the EU. "The stance of the Socialist Party of France
lies in it as well. We believe that acknowledgement of the Armenian
Genocide should be precondition for Turkey’s accession to the EU,"
Dominique Strauss-Kahn noted. He added, that this precondition is a
symbolical one, reports RFE/RL.