Baku: Armenia Has Opportunity To Establish Relations With Turkey: US

ARMENIA HAS OPPORTUNITY TO ESTABLISH RELATIONS WITH TURKEY: US AMBASSADOR

Trend News Agency
02.10.08 18:41
Azerbaijan

Presently Armenia has the "historical opportunity" to establish
relations with Turkey and to advance the process of Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict settlement, the US Ambassador to Armenia Maria Yovanovich
stated.

Maria Yovanovich assured at her first press-conference in Yerevan
that she will make efforts to unblock the Armenian-Turkish border,
achieve settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and further
development of the Armenian-American relations, Mediamax reports.

"Details of initiative are still not clear and it is hard to comment
them, but the United States were always welcoming the initiatives on
strengthening of regional stability, integration and cooperation,"
Maria Yovanovich said. She was commenting on the question about
the US attitude towards Turkey’s initiative on establishment of the
"Platform of stability and cooperation in the Caucasus"

Each conflict is unique and should be solved in its own way, the
US Ambassador said with respect to the perspectives of the Karabakh
settlement amid the US support of Azerbaijani territorial integrity.

"Besides the principle of territorial integrity, which is very
important, there are also the principles of non-use of force and
self-determination. In the Nagorno-Karabakh case the process is
running, it is advancing and we hope to positive development," Maria
Yovanovich said.

Baku: USA Supports Territorial Integrity Of Azerbaijan And Georgia:

USA SUPPORTS TERRITORIAL INTEGRITY OF AZERBAIJAN AND GEORGIA: U.S. DEPUTY SECRETARY OF STATE
[email protected]

Trend News Agency
02.10.08 19:04
Azerbaijan

Azerbaijan, Baku, 2 October /corr. Trend News R.Novruzov / The
USA supports territorial integrity of Azerbaijan and Georgia, the
U.S. Deputy Secretary of State, John D. Negroponte, said to press
conference in Baku.

"The United States, as a member of the OSCE Minsk Group, makes
big efforts to settle the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. The conflict
settlement may be achieved through talks," he said.

The conflict between the two South Caucasus countries appeared in 1988
due to Armenian territorial claims against Azerbaijan. Armenia has
occupied 20% of the Azerbaijani lands including the Nagorno-Karabakh
region and its seven surrounding districts. Since 1992 to the present
time, these territories have been under Armenian occupation. In 1994,
Azerbaijan and Armenia signed a cease-fire agreement at which time
the active hostilities ended. The Co-Chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group
(Russia, France and USA) are holding peaceful negotiations.

In addition, Negroponte condemned the actions of Russia with regards
to South Ossetia conflict. "We and the European friends rendered
big assistance to Georgia. We hope that taking into consideration
the cost, which paid for its actions, Russia will twice think before
again acting in this way," the U.S. Deputy Secretary of State said.

According to Negroponte, during the dialogue, the USA told Russia that
its actions with regards to Georgia do not provide an opportunity to
ensure peace and are not suitable for the 21st century.

Iran Denies Charges Of Religious Discrimination

IRAN DENIES CHARGES OF RELIGIOUS DISCRIMINATION

SINDH TODAY
Oct 2nd, 2008
Pakistan

Tehran, Oct 2 (IANS) Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad Thursday
rejected the allegations of discrimination towards religious minorities
in Iran, saying the whole Islamic country is a big unified family,
the official IRNA news agency reported.

‘Religious minorities enjoy full legal rights in Iran,’ Ahmadinejad
said in a meeting with Majlis (parliament) deputies representing
religious minorities in Iran.

‘We all are Iranian and our relations are based on humanitarian
principle. Religious minorities have lived in peace with us and even
they have dedicated martyrs to the Islamic Revolution.’

‘We are a big and unified family and seditious plots of the enemies
cannot affect our relationships,’ the Iranian leader said, dismissing
the charges by the West of discriminatory policies by Iran towards
religious minorities.

‘The enemies (of Iran) play some games by claiming discord between
Iran and religious minorities but these games will have no impacts
as we are all part of the grand Iranian family,’ he said.

Shia Muslims constitute the majority of Iran population, while
Christian Armenians, Zoroasters, Assyrians and Jews are acknowledged
as the religious minorities in the country.

The minorities also have five seats in the parliament, two for
Armenians and the remaining three for Zoroasters, Assyrians and Jews.

Among the minorities, Jews have biggest challenge in Iran because
of the country’s anti-Israeli stance and its denial of the historic
dimensions of the Holocaust during the Second World War.

Tehran: EU, U.S. Conduct Two-Pronged Diplomacy In Caucasus

EU, U.S. CONDUCT TWO-PRONGED DIPLOMACY IN CAUCASUS
By Ahto Lobjakas

Payvand’s Iran News
10/02/08
Iran

BRUSSELS (RFE/RL) — The two-pronged diplomatic strategy by the EU
and the United States is very evident in the South Caucasus this week
and shows what the division of labor between Brussels and Washington
will be.

The EU has its sights set on the short term. Trying to exploit whatever
influence it has with Moscow, Brussels’ aim is to get the Russian
troops to pull back from as much of Georgian territory as possible.

The United States, on the other hand, is focusing on the longer-term
objective of shoring up the resolve of the governments in the region
to stand up to Moscow. It believes Azerbaijan is key to this effort.

The EU on October 1 formally launched its 340-strong monitoring
mission in Georgia. Armored cars carrying unarmed EU observers set
out from their bases with the aim of entering the so-called buffer
zone set up by Russian troops outside the administrative borders of
South Ossetia and Abkhazia.

In Tbilisi for the inauguration of the monitoring mission, EU
foreign-policy chief Javier Solana on September 30 reiterated the
bloc’s view that Russia has committed itself to withdrawing its troops
from the "buffer zone" within 10 days of the observers’ deployment.

"I hope very much that by the end of [October 10] that Russian forces
will be withdrawn," Solana said. "That is the aim that we have, and
that is, at least for the first part, the obligation that we have
from the agreement. And we’d like very much to see that done."

Complications From Both Sides

Unfortunately for the EU, its observer mission had trouble gaining
access to the areas in Georgian proper that are still controlled by
Russian soldiers.

Moscow is obliged to cease all military activity outside Abkhazia
and South Ossetia under the terms of an agreement it signed with
the EU on September 8. That agreement modifies an earlier accord,
reached on August 12, which allowed Russia to carry out "additional
security measures" in Georgia outside Abkhazia and South Ossetia.

The August 12 agreement also stipulates that an international
conference will be convened in Geneva on October 15 to discuss the
"stability" and "security" of South Ossetia and Abkhazia.

Preparations for the conference have been fraught with
difficulty. Russia insists on the full presence of the Abkhaz and
South Ossetian authorities — both of which it has recognized as
independent countries. Georgia, on the other hand, vehemently rejects
any arrangements that could be seen as conferring independent status
on either region.

As a result, the first talks on October 15 will be low-key, featuring
junior ministers from Georgia and Russia as well as mediators from
the EU. They will be preceded on October 14 — also in Geneva —
by a summit of top officials from the United Nations, OSCE, EU,
and the United States.

President Mikheil Saakashvili indicated last month that Tbilisi is
prepared to talk to the separatists about refugees, but not the status
of the regions.

"The next stage is, and a parallel stage is returning [internally
displaced persons] in secure and dignified conditions, getting
internationalization of the process — but not of the status, I
have to say the process — and getting Russians out of Georgia’s
territory, deoccupation of Georgia, because these are, right now,
territories occupied by a foreign military power against the will of
the government of a sovereign, independent country," Saakashvili said.

To complicate matters further, Georgia has launched criminal
proceedings against the Abkhaz and South Ossetian leaderships,
accusing them of high treason and banditry.

Regional Confidence-Building

While the United States has remained on the sidelines in Georgia,
Deputy Undersecretary of State John Negroponte’s visit to Azerbaijan
is the second in recent weeks by a senior U.S. official. In early
September, Vice President Dick Cheney was reportedly given a cool
reception by Baku, but this appears not to have put off Washington.

With considerable gas and oil reserves of its own, Azerbaijan holds
the only viable transit route between Central Asia and Europe that
bypasses Russia. Without Baku’s cooperation, the EU’s projected
Nabucco pipeline between bringing Caspian hydrocarbons through Turkey
to Austria would be doomed — and Russia’s grip on the EU’s energy
supplies would tighten.

Azerbaijan and Armenia have adopted a wait-and-see posture in the
aftermath of the Russian tour de force in Georgia in early August.

Western diplomats say Azerbaijan’s self-confidence, which had been
buoyed by the huge windfall profits it was making from oil and gas,
has been visibly dented. Along with it were the short-term hopes it may
have entertained about retaking Nagorno-Karabakh from Armenia by force.

Armenia, forced into an uneasy alliance with Russia because of its
standoff with Azerbaijan, is now worried it may itself become a
target for Moscow. Yerevan has in recent weeks taken steps to break
out of the regional isolation it finds itself in. On September 6,
Turkish President Abdullah Gul paid a landmark visit to Yerevan. On
September 30, Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian arrived in Tbilisi
for his first visit to Georgia since the war.

Diplomats in the region say Yerevan is pressing Turkey to open up the
mutual border, which has been closed since 1993. Western officials
say there are rumors that in order to secure a breakthrough in
relations with Turkey, Armenia may consider returning to Azerbaijan
five of the seven Azerbaijani provinces it currently occupies around
Nagorno-Karabakh.

Currently, Georgia provides the only overland access route between
Armenia and the outside world, and maintaining good relations with
Tbilisi remains a must for Yerevan.

The delicate interdependence between the three countries will be
brought into sharp relief this winter. Like last winter, Georgia
will need Azerbaijani gas to survive. Aside from Iran, Armenia can
only turn to Georgia in its quest for gas as it lacks a border with
Russia and remains on nontrading terms with both Azerbaijan and Turkey.

Meanwhile, Russia is actively seeking to reestablish control over the
region. Moscow is said to be intent on frustrating any rapprochement
between Yerevan and Ankara, and has blocked Armenian attempts to
restore a key railway link to Turkey that is owned by a Russian
company.

Russia is also putting pressure on Baku. Russia has offered to buy all
of Azerbaijan’s gas and oil exports at world prices. There are also
reports that Russian passports are being handed out in Azerbaijan’s
restive north, bordering Daghestan, which could serve as a warning for
Baku and certainly evokes uneasy parallels with the Russian action
in the Georgia’s breakaway regions of South Ossetia and Abkhazia
in August.

Copyright (c) 2008 RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio
Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington
DC 20036.

Economist, UK – Right Royal

ECONOMIST, UK – RIGHT ROYAL

Economist
Oct 2nd 2008
UK

THE Saudi kings have been a mixed bunch, ranging from the savvy to
the dissolute. But by common consent the one who set his country
on the road to modernity was Faisal, who reigned from 1964 until
his assassination by a nephew in 1975. It was Faisal who created a
bureaucracy, organised the oil industry and launched a development
plan that included the radical innovation of schools for girls.

Joseph Kéchichian is an American scholar of Lebanese-Armenian
descent. Though no stylist, he knows Arabia and its princes well. His
portrait does not dwell on Faisal the man–the frugal figure who
lived in a modest house, drove himself to the office and displayed
an almost puritan disdain for princely profligacy–but on Faisal the
policy practitioner. Hence two episodes dominate the story.

The first is Saudi Arabia’s bitter quarrel with Nasser’s Egypt, in
particular over the civil war in Yemen, in which they took opposing
sides. The second is the crucial period of 1973-74, when the habitually
cautious king threw in his lot with Egypt and Syria as they launched
their war on Israel, in the full knowledge that this would severely
strain his ties with America. The war and the subsequent oil embargo
brought to the Middle East a reluctant secretary of state, Henry
Kissinger, whose relations with Faisal were less than cordial.

Mr Kéchichian does not gloss over the rifts within the House of Saud
which accompanied Faisal’s ascent to the throne. Only when the family
and the ulema (religious establishment) finally lost patience with
his spendthrift brother, King Saud, did Faisal replace him. His task
was to restore unity to the family, order to the kingdom’s finances
and consistency to policymaking. The author also deals candidly with
internal unrest, in particular the coup attempts by air-force officers
and others inspired by Nasser’s pan-Arabist gospel.

But in other respects the book verges on hagiography. Faisal may indeed
have been a wise leader with a noble vision, but Mr Kéchichian is
rather too fulsome in saying so. Moreover he states categorically
that Faisal was not an anti-Semite, despite the testimony of Mr
Kissinger and others who were obliged to sit through royal rants
about the communist-Jewish conspiracy. For those left hungry for more,
a biography of Faisal by a Russian Arabist, Alexei Vassiliev, is due
out next year.

–Boundary_(ID_Muu6buh5pXqsgB9zA0x4+w)–

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Top Dog Awards Honor Distinguished Fresno State Alumni

TOP DOG AWARDS HONOR DISTINGUISHED FRESNO STATE ALUMNI

KSEE
Oct 2, 2008 at 1:52 PM EDT
CA

Some of California State University, Fresno’s most-accomplished alumni
will be in the spotlight Oct. 10 for the annual Top Dog Alumni Awards
Gala at the Save Mart Center.

Nat DiBuduo (Class of 1972), president of Allied Grape Growers, will
receive the Distinguished Alumnus Award and Dr. Arnold Gazarian and
Dianne Gazarian will receive the Arthur Safstrom Service Award for
their many contributions to the university.

DiBuduo has been an active volunteer since he attended Fresno State
and was elected student vice president. His alma mater has been one of
the biggest beneficiaries of DiBuduo’s community service, including
membership on the boards of the Ag One Foundation and Fresno State
Alumni Association. And DiBuduo counts more than 50 relatives who
have attended Fresno State since the 1940s.

The Gazarians’ philanthropy has included gifts to Fresno State’s
Smittcamp Alumni House, the Friends of the Madden Library, the
President’s Fund and the Craig School of Business to establish the
Arnold and Dianne Gazarian Real Estate Center. They also provided
incentives to attract others’ gifts for the Haig and Isabel Berberian
Endowed Chair in Armenian Studies. Arnold Gazarian is an alumnus of
Fresno State.

Their generosity doesn’t stop on campus. The Gazarians are benefactors
of the Berberian Community Hospice Patient Services Center and Homeless
and Transitional Living Center in Modesto.

Top Dog Outstanding Alumni Awards will be presented the same evening
to the following, who represent the university’s colleges, schools
and divisions:

College of Agricultural Sciences and Technology – Dr. Robert C. Cannell
(1986), who is the supply chain director for McDonald’s USA (NYSE:
MCD), responsible for the quality and safety of the restaurant chain’s
beef and pork.

College of Arts and Humanities – Brad Lewis (1980), a Pixar Animation
Studios producer, whose "Ratatouille" received Oscar, Golden Globe,
Grammy and Clio awards. Pixar is a division of the Walt Disney
Co. (NYSE: DIS).

Athletics – Kerri Donis (1991), a Bulldog softball star who played
for two national titles and now is deputy chief for the Fresno Fire
Department.

Craig School of Business – Steve Heinrichs (1968), managing partner of
Bulldog Capital Partners, a venture fund that invests in new business
ideas and companies with potential to contribute to the central San
Joaquin Valley economy.

Kremen School of Education and Human Development – Darlene Spano
(1969), an elementary school teacher in Fresno for 32 years, who
embraced computer technology early and helped her students and teaching
colleagues learn.

College of Engineering – Dr. Vida Ilderem (1982), vice president of
physical and digital realization research at Motorola Laboratories,
the applied research arm of Motorola (NYSE: MOT).

Division of Graduate Studies – Mabelle Selland (1950, 1972), whose
community service includes preservation of the old Administration
Building at Fresno City College, the Veterans Memorial Auditorium
restoration and active participation in numerous organizations.

College of Health and Human Services – Pamela A. Loewen (1966), who
has followed a career in military and public health nursing with
extensive service to the university’s Department of Nursing as it
celebrates its 50th anniversary.

Henry Madden Library – Kendall Manock (1951), an attorney who has
been instrumental in obtaining materials for the Library’s Central
Valley Political Archive and on many other library initiatives.

College of Science and Mathematics – Dr. Roy James Shlemon (1958),
who has a consulting geological practice focusing on sites for
nuclear power plants and waste facilities, large dams and residential
developments throughout the world.

College of Social Sciences – Thomas L. Williams (1970), chairman and
CEO of Universal Parks & Resorts, part of the NBC Universal division
of GE (NYSE: GE).

Division of Student Affairs – Ambassador Phillip V. Sanchez (1957,
1972), retired as a newspaper publisher after government service
including two ambassadorships and directing the War on Poverty as
the nation’s highest-ranking Latino government official.

The Top Dog Alumni Awards ceremony begins at 5:30 p.m. Oct. 10 with
a no-host reception, followed by dinner at 6:30 and the presentation
at 7:30. Fresno County Superior Court Judge Robert Oliver (1966)
will emcee the event.

Tickets to the gala are $100 each and sponsorship options ranging
from $500 to $5,000 are available through Sept. 8.

Top Art Events Oct. 3-10 – Isabel Bayrakdarian

TOP ART EVENTS OCT. 3-10 – ISABEL BAYRAKDARYAN

OCRegister
Thursday, October 2, 2008
CA

Upcoming classical music, dance, theater and visual art events.

Isabel Bayrakdarian, soprano – The acclaimed Canadian singer of
Armenian heritage brings a program celebrating her ancestral home,
specifically with the songs of Gomidas Vartabed (1869-1935), Armenia’s
national composer. Music by Bartok, Ravel, Gorecki and Skalkottas is
also performed, the Mantitoba Chamber Orchestra provides support. 7
p.m. October 5. Tickets are $30-$195. Renee and Henry Segerstrom
Concert Hall, 615 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa. 949-553-2422.

Schulweis Selected For L.A. County Humanitarian Award

SCHULWEIS SELECTED FOR L.A. COUNTY HUMANITARIAN AWARD
By Brad A. Greenberg

The Jewish Journal of greater L.A
October 1, 2008
CA

Rabbi Harold Schulweis of Valley Beth Shalom in Encino will be
honored Oct. 23 with the John Allen Buggs Humanitarian Award, given
out annually by the Los Angeles County Commission on Human Relations.

Schulweis, who will receive the prize during the John Anson Ford
Human Relations Awards luncheon, is best known today for delivering
a Rosh Hashanah sermon four years ago that laid the groundwork for
his human-rights organization, Jewish World Watch, which has been a
leading voice in fighting the genocide in Darfur.

"In as much as God created every human being, every race, every
color in his image, then they are His children and they are our
brothers and sisters," the 83-year-old rabbi said recently in a brief
interview. "We have an obligation to care for them, to heal their sick,
to feed their hungry and to lift up their fallen."

Schulweis came to Valley Beth Shalom in 1970 and has long been one
of the most influential rabbis in the country. Throughout the years
he has pushed for broader recognition of the Armenian genocide,
and in 1986 he started the Jewish Foundation for the Righteous,
which provides financial support to non-Jews who helped endangered
Jews during the Holocaust but now find themselves in need.

"Rabbi Schulweis has been the spokesperson for our greatest moral
causes," L.A. Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa said in a statement. "And
he has never ceased to remind us that silence in the face of genocide
is inexcusable, and rhetoric without action is unacceptable."

After War, Russia’s Influence Expands

AFTER WAR, RUSSIA’S INFLUENCE EXPANDS
By Fred Weir

The Christian Science Monitor
October 3, 2008

The war with Georgia has many calling for North and South Ossetia
to unite.

Vladikavkaz, Russia – Boris Samoyev, a driver from war-torn South
Ossetian capital of Tskhinvali, pulls his car over to allow a convoy
of Russian military trucks to roll past. The trucks are heading
south into the Roki Tunnel, which connects the republics of North
and South Ossetia.

"The Russians have helped us so much. They came when the Georgians
were beating our door down, and drove them back," Mr. Samoyev says. "We
Ossetians have always been loyal to Russia, and they have proven that
we made the right choice."

Though Moscow threw relations with the West into crisis by striking
with massive force when Georgia attempted to seize breakaway South
Ossetia in August, the impact in Russia’s turbulent, multiethnic
northern Caucasus appears to be in the Kremlin’s favor – at least
for now.

Many experts in North Ossetia, the most important of the seven ethnic
republics in this troubled region because of its historic and current
loyalty to Moscow, say Russia would have risked disaffection if it
hadn’t acted to protect South Ossetia.

Some add that the Kremlin should now allow North and South Ossetia
to unite, creating a pro-Moscow Ossetian republic that straddles the
Caucasus Mountains, to enhan ce stability in the whole region.

"This war showed that Russia is strong and a force to be reckoned
with. In one stroke, Moscow reassured its friends in the region and
warned its enemies. This will have a calming effect throughout the
Caucasus," says Nodar Taberti, a South Ossetian economist.

During the war, thousands of North Ossetians besieged military
recruitment stations, demanding to be sent to the front lines, experts
here say. "If the Russian Army hadn’t marched, thousands of Ossetian
men would have gone in on their own to fight the Georgians," says
Khasan Dzutsev, director of the official Center for Social Research
in Vladikavkaz. "Especially since [the terrorist school massacre
in] Beslan, people here have wondered whether Moscow would protect
them. This was the moment of truth."

But critics argue that Moscow has set a baneful precedent by
recognizing the independence of South Ossetia, and another breakaway
Georgian region, Abkhazia, and may pay a heavy price for it down
the road.

"All the arguments that [President Dmitry] Medvedev used to justify
Russia’s recognition of South Ossetia can apply in equal measure to
Chechnya, or other republics of the north Caucasus," says Nikolai
Petrov, an expert with the Carnegie Center in Moscow. "Since Moscow
has granted special status to two Caucasian republics – South Ossetia
and Abkhazia – it’s only a matter of time before others start demanding
the same treatment."

The northern Caucasus is often called "Russia’s Balkans," because its
knot of often mutually hostile nationalities. The mainly Orthodox
Christian Ossetians joined the Russian Empire voluntarily two
centuries ago. Others, like the mainly Muslim Chechens, were subdued
in 19th-century wars, and have risen up in rebellion when Moscow’s
grip has faltered.

Soviet social engineers awarded a quasi-statehood to the many smaller
nationalities, grouping them in "autonomous republics," most of which
were placed inside the larger "union republic" of Russia. But Soviet
dictator Joseph Stalin, an ethnic Georgian, folded South Ossetia and
Abkhazia into Georgia. That had unintended consequences when the USSR
collapsed in 1991, triggering separatist rebellions in both republics.

The biggest winners in Russia’s war against Georgia may turn out
to be the Ossetians, who number less than 1 million, in the two
republics. Many here believe it’s a matter of time before their
divided nation is united under a 2001 Russian law that permits outside
territories to join the Russian Federation. Unification would make the
Ossetians Moscow’s bridgehead into the energy-rich and strategically
important south Caucasus, which includes independent Georgia,
Azerbaijan, and Armenia.

"A divided nation has the right to reunite," says Stanislav Kesayev,
deputy speaker of North Ossetia’s parliament. "It may not happen
tomorrow, but after a period of consolidating its i ndependence,
South Ossetia will raise this request. Everyone in both north and
south parts of our nation desires this."

After the war, South Ossetian President Eduard Kokoity suggested
amalgamation was imminent. But now Mr. Kokoity says that "the issue of
joining Russia is not on the agenda today. Russia has put it clearly
that it is not going to annex other countries’ territories." But he
adds, "Our people want to join with North Ossetia, and we already
consider ourselves to be united [in many ways]."

But most analysts don’t think Russia wants North and South Ossetia
unified.

"It would look to the world like Russian annexation. Russia wants South
Ossetia to be independent … because it keeps the instability factor
going in Georgia. Also, the Kremlin worries about the implications
of creating a ‘greater Ossetia’ in the Caucasus, because it might
set up similar pressures among other republics who have territorial
aspirations beyond their current borders," says Alexei Mukhin,
director of the independent Center for Political Information in Moscow.

Despite the pro-Russian feelings here, some remain deeply skeptical
of Moscow’s intentions. In Beslan, where 330 people, mostly children,
were killed in a school siege four years ago, some recall that it
was the 58th Russian Army that shot first.

"It’s hard to welcome the sight of the 58th Army storming into a
neighboring territory and killing people, just as they did he re in
Beslan," says Ella Kesayeva, cochair of Voice of Beslan, a group
representing the victims’ relatives. "We fear that Russia wants
something on this territory and is using the suffering of people as
a means to get what it wants."

â~@¢ Olga Podolskaya contributed from Tskinvali, South
Ossetia. Yesterday: Who started the war in Georgia?

–Boundary_(ID_qe1QmKxShfEqge35xjtQ0w)–

Mystery, Alaska

MYSTERY, ALASKA

The National
October 03. 2008 12:09AM
United Arab Emirates

"Palin has a way of transcending the obstacles that come her way,
gently bypassing possible scandals with apparent ease and little
damage to her sky-high approval ratings in Alaska." Stephen Collins
for The National David Gargill travels to Anchorage to examine the
roots of Sarah Palin’s spectacular and sudden ascent from the depths
of obscurity to the heat of the national spotlight.

By mid-September the freakishly robust growing season in the
Matanuska-Sustina Valley was winding down. Home to some of the
world’s deepest topsoil, and blessed with 20 hours of sunshine on
long summer days, the Valley is renowned for the oddities of scale
that sprout from its earth. 90-pound cabbages are commonplace at the
State Fair in Palmer, a sleepy agrarian hamlet at the foot of Pioneer
Peak. During America’s Great Depression, Franklin Delano Roosevelt
uprooted struggling Midwestern farmers and transplanted them atop
the rich soil of the valley, hoping to engender civilisation in a
landscape both lush and forbidding.

These days the Mat-Su is also fertile terrain for the cultivation
of myths, and ever since John McCain selected Sarah Palin as his
running mate on August 29th, a great many concerning the Wasilla
native have blossomed here. Palin stormed onto the national scene like
few American politicians before her, a self-professed "hockey mom"
who single-handedly saved the Republican convention amid torrents of
press attention and a swooning embrace from movement conservatives. Her
debut took the nation’s eye off the storms battering its Gulf Coast,
reenergised a Republican base leery of the Senate’s Maverick,
and catapulted the obscure former mayor and city councilwoman to
international rock-star status as fast as bloggers could post.

But ignorance is bliss, and as this unknown was cast in greater relief
by each datelined detail, the bloom wore off the rose – if only by
a few points – and suddenly, Palin’s place on the ticket posed more
questions for the McCain camp than it answered. The national and
international media departed en masse for points north to vet the
Vice Presidential candidate, perhaps for the first time. Her broad,
smiling face and signature upsweep graced every glossy in the country
while her record in Alaska was ruthlessly dissected in the broadsheets.

Palin merchandise – and reindeer dogs – priced to move at the Day
Break Espresso Stand in Wasilla. Rob Stapleton for The National
The slow drip of unflattering news from the north and a handful of
disastrous media appearances sent Palin’s poll numbers tumbling,
but she continued to attract record crowds of fervent admirers to the
previously somnambulant McCain roadshow. But for a candidate thrust
into stardom fuelled by her folksy authenticity, the real Sarah Palin
remained an enigma, cloaked in the protective embrace of a campaign
determined to shield her from scrutiny.

Was she a moral paragon ready to "clean up Washington" – or an abuser
of power who conducted state business on private e-mail accounts
to avoid oversight and used her office to settle family vendettas,
dismissing Alaska’s respected Public Safety Commissioner because he
refused to fire her sister’s ex-husband?

Was she a woman of faith and family to whom the majority of Americans
could relate – or an End Times-awaiting creationist book-banner? The
archetype of Alaska’s fabled frontier spirit – or a pork-barrel
grifter in the mould of Alaska pols like Congressman Don Young and
Senator Ted Stevens, both under investigation for corruption?

The truth was protean and elusive, lost somewhere in the great divide
that separates Alaska from what its residents still call "outside"
– the rest of the United States.

When I set out for the Valley a few weeks ago, Palin had just stumbled
through an interview with ABC’s Charles Gibson – but her drawing
power endured, as 10 million people tuned in. The big papers unloaded
their lengthy reports from Wasilla and Anchorage ("Once Elected,
Palin Hired Friends and Lashed Foes" was The New York Times headline)
but the base remained besotted.

In the last week, however, a stream of high-profile conservative
apostates have soured on Palin, the last straw apparently a
disastrous interview with Katie Couric that stretched over three
nights of national news like a slow-motion car crash. To David Frum,
the former Bush speechwriter who coined the phrase "Axis of Evil",
Palin had "proven pretty thoroughly… that she is not up to the job",
while another prominent right-wing columnist suggested Palin withdraw
herself now to save McCain’s chances.

It was a startlingly fast journey from saviour to scourge – with
the final chapter still unwritten: will Palin’s inexperience sandbag
McCain? Or will her ineffable appeal to hard-working "regular folks"
save the day?

In Alaska, people are uneasy about their state’s new status as a hub
of partisan chicanery and intrigue, and ambivalent at best about all
this attention from the lower 48. They now have a horse in this race
and mere loyalty would usually lead most folks to stand and cheer,
or simply clam up and ride the bandwagon home for The Big Win. But in
what they like to call "the world’s biggest small town", anyone who
wants to know the dirt on Sarah Palin can find it. Kinship has its
limits, and for Palin, who has thrown more than her share of sharp
elbows in state politics, negative stories heading downstream – from
sources in both political parties – now threatened the seaworthiness
of McCain’s vessel. The only question remaining was whether the flow
could be staunched before the old Navy man at the helm was forced to
toss her into the drink.

******************

"But what’s Wasilla? It’s a series of pretty good sized national
stores. Wal-Mart, Target, so on, then there’s housing around the
edges, helter-skelter. It’s an oddity." Rob Stapleton for The National
When I arrived the Governor was the literal talk of every town, and
every TV set – muted in a briny smoke-filled bar, or presiding over a
disappointing hotel continental breakfast – was tuned to some conduit
offering news of her exploits. She was the subject or subtext of every
conversation, and since the majority of Alaskans knew her personally –
or felt they did (a testimony to her considerable political skills)
– facts and opinions regarding her past were being everywhere
disseminated, rarely without some hack reporter within earshot to
absorb them.

These notebook-wielding Huns had so tenderised the populace that all
but the most hostile natives by now proved pliant and yielding, and so
I sought out a few people who witnessed Palin’s rise first hand and a
few who admired it from afar in an attempt to understand her unlikely
ascent to power, her troubles in office, and the irresistible sway
she still seemed to have, a magnetic hold on voters that even some
of her estranged allies could neither shake nor fathom.

I couldn’t see out the window of the aeroplane that brought me into
Anchorage, and so it was in the queue for a rental car that I got
my first impression. The panorama looked like a blast site, as if
the range of jagged brown seismic cones had not been hewn by the
implacable advance of glaciers or tectonic pressure, but by a sudden
violence far beyond the human scale.

On the majestic drive north from Anchorage to the Mat-Su, the frontage
roads fall away with the brief wooded and wood-sided suburbias of
Eagle River and Chugiak, and soon the vast tidal plane of the Knik Arm
presents itself, peeling off into the western distance. The lowlands
have gone maize and duelling shades of green in an early autumn
flourish. Past the Knik, termination dust – the lovely Alaskan term
for the first light touches of snow that "terminate" the summer –
painted the massifs to an even level across the eastern side of
the Valley. The sight of things so huge soaring so high filled
me with a sense of impending, of peril and awe. Their astounding
permanence, the impossible finality and atemporal aspect of them
struck a near-spiritual chord. Eternity felt undeniable in a place
like this. And Jalmer Kerttula had been active in Valley politics for
about that long, witness to a (relatively) brief but eventful epoch.

He arrived in 1935, 14 years before statehood, and served as a
legislator for over thirty years, presiding over the house and
the senate – a living reminder of the hardscrabble men and women
whose tenacity (with a generous assist from Washington’s largesse)
made Alaska.

"My father had been here before," Kerttula told me as we sat in
his living room, "he was first mate on a ship that got iced in
out of Point Clarence in 1921." Kerttula, known to all as Jay,
left the legislature in 1994, after being ousted by Lyda Green,
the current senate president. He’s dressed in old grey flannels,
a striped button-down shirt and broad suspenders, his jawline lost
behind a full-on beard in the style of Reagan’s surgeon general,
C Everett Koop. Jay, the first Jalmer I’ve ever met, seems to have
less nostalgia for the years he spent in power than for the rough
place where he came of age.

"The federal government purchased all the homesteads in the area and
then sold them at thirty years and three per cent," he tells me,
"deep soil but windy." I crack a smile because I’m reminded of a
piece of local wit I’ve picked up, "Wasilla sucks but Palmer blows,"
but it’s not the moment for me to share it.

"Wasilla was the inheritor of a tiny community at Knik. That was where
Joe Palmer brought his three mast schooner in, and he had a drugstore,
a hotel and several things. Slowly the railway came in on the way to
the mines and Wasilla essentially had an old sales & service store,
Hearning’s, a grocery, a hardware store and a hotel. Down by the
lake you had some other properties, some whorehouses and stuff,
but you don’t mention that. Years later, a post office."

"But what’s Wasilla?" Kerttula asked rhetorically, tracing what
registers as the arc of the Valley’s squandered promise, "It’s a
series of pretty good sized national stores, Wal-Mart, Target, so
on, then there’s housing around the edges, helter-skelter. It’s an
oddity. It’s not like a normal city with one street after another,
but you’ve been there, so you know what it is. I don’t see it as a
good training ground for anybody."

I had been to Wasilla. It didn’t come highly recommended, and for
the most part the town failed to exceed expectation. The New York
Times columnist Maureen Dowd dubbed the town "a soulless strip mall,"
but that seemed a facile dismissal of this grim warren of sanitised
neon storefronts glinting in the utter dark, nondescript clutches of
buildings as disposable as the items dispensed through their doors
and drive-through windows, dwarfed by the snow-crowned mountain peaks
that disapprovingly framed the distance. The trivial held in the palm
of the profound.

Inside the local Taco Bell, I slunk back to my seat with my trove of
novelty food and sat by the window. Mall-dwelling teenagers laughed,
shouted and generally had a tough time sitting still, while joylessly
attired farmers ate in silence, soundlessly grinding their fair share
of boiled ground beef and milled corn with their jawbone beards. (This
C Everett Koop look was apparently hanging on strong with the Valley’s
gentlemen farmers). Perhaps kids got married a little earlier up here;
maybe gun ownership was less dangerous than going without; but those
differences aside, the view was indistinguishable from that of any
Taco Bell in Ohio or Pennsylvania.

At times Alaska seems almost Soviet – sloughing off rugged
individualism for annual dividend checks from the permanent fund –
but it is indelibly American, and the McCain camp is counting on the
fact that Palin could mount a strong showing in towns like Wasilla
in the lower 48. From where I sat, they were legion.

****************** When I walked into Lisa Catlett’s house, out near
mile marker seven on the Wasilla Fishhook Road, she’d seemed busier
than I’d ever been in my ever-loving life. Her four children swarmed
around her and the house, three boys and a girl ranging in age from
eight to two. She was dealing with the thirty-odd salmon fillets she’d
just brought in from the smokehouse for canning and vacuum sealing. On
top of that there was the unwanted journalist who’d insinuated himself
into spending the afternoon with her and her family to see how real
Valley people got on.

At first I walked up to the wrong door, past several four-wheel drive
vehicles and drooling hounds. After introducing myself to the man of
the house, I asked if he was Rob. He said no. I asked for Lisa. He
asked who I was, warily: "You trying to collect a debt?" We sorted
it out but the message was clear: people look out for their own here.

The Catlett clan had a serious spread. A creek ran from the road up the
left edge of the property, past a trampoline, back into the forest. The
lane led toward a large clearing hewn out of the cottonwood, birch,
aspen, brambles and underbrush, where there stood a matching house and
guesthouse, with dark wood siding and green roofs. The smokehouse,
with huge metal doors borrowed from a meat locker, stood between
them. Outbuildings were in abundance: tree houses, a skate shack,
chicken coops.

Lisa spent the summer between high school and college here, "just to
get an Alaska experience," and after meeting and marrying her husband
Rob, an electrician, in the lower 48, returned to Alaska to raise a
family. The children are all home schooled. "I went to a great books
college," Lisa says, as her kids port ducks around the property,
arguing about their names, "and that really changed my perspective
on what I wanted my kids to learn. I want them to read all the great
books and speak a couple of languages, and I thought they probably
wouldn’t get that in the public schools."

Rob woke her at 6am on August 29th to tell her the news about Sarah
Palin. "I was like, no way! That’s so awesome!"

Lisa, neither partisan nor intensely engaged with politics, had
no doubts about the scope of Palin’s personal appeal. She had once
voted for the famously unpopular former governor, Frank Murkowski –
who Palin later unseated – and almost instantly regretted it. "I’m
tired of the good old boys – they’re so removed from us. And that’s
what I think Sarah’s appeal is, she’s like us. She does get her own
caribou, make moose burger, that kind of stuff, that seems Alaskan. I
don’t need somebody to cook for me. I have to haul my own wood inside
when it’s cold."

"When Obama came out I made it a point to watch him," she
continued. "He was on some talk show telling some story about how
he didn’t like Grey Poupon, he liked mustard, and the whole thing
seemed like a charade, you know? I thought even this attempt to be an
everyman was fake, you’re a fake in a different way but you’re still
a fake and I don’t buy it and I love Sarah Palin! I just think she’ll
tell it like it is and doesn’t care if it upsets people."

I ask Lisa what she makes of the stories detailing Palin’s spotted
record as a reformer in Alaska, but she’s undeterred. "I don’t
know," she says, "that may be true. Maybe I’m jaded but I think all
politicians are politicians, I just think it’s different degrees. I
still like Sarah, I think maybe she’s the least tainted that I’ve
ever seen."

****************** Andrée McLeod is shouting into the phone from a
desk set up in her bedroom as I wait for her at a kitchen table annexed
by stacks of paper. "She’s only powerful if you think she is! This
right here, if it turns out to be true, is a bunch of bull****!"

It is because of McLeod, a lovably obstreperous woman of Armenian
descent somewhere in her fifties, that the world knows of Governor
Palin’s preference for Yahoo over .gov – one of the little details
from Alaska that suggest uncomfortable parallels between the modus
operandi of the Palin State House and the Bush White House, which
also liked to transact government business on private e-mail accounts.

The stacks covering the table are the fruits of McLeod’s request
for e-mails and phone calls between Palin and two aides, whom McLeod
suspected of working in concert to oust the Alaska Republican Party
chair, Randy Ruedrich – a violation of the state executive ethics
code, which forbids conducting party business on state time. It might
seem a venial sin – but it was also precisely the accusation Palin
had earlier wielded to eject Ruedrich from the Alaska Oil and Gas
Conservation Commission- with the help of Andree McLeod herself.

McLeod emigrated from Beirut with her family in 1963, and moved to
Alaska from Long Island thirty years ago. She was apolitical until
1995, when she spied an opportunity to earn money for grad school by
operating a falafel cart in Anchorage. The town fathers squashed her
plans, declaring fried chickpeas "potentially hazardous." She took
the fight to city hall, wound up running for mayor, and her local
state house seat twice, losing the last time in a tight race that
required a recount.

McLeod told me that she’d met Palin shortly after her own failed
state house bid in 2002. They’d stuck up an unlikely friendship, the
home-grown beauty queen and the cerebral but scrappy and energetic
import. Palin complained to McLeod about Ruedrich’s penchant for doing
party work from his office at the AOGCC, where Palin also served –
appointed by Murkowski after her losing bid for Lt. Governor marked
her as a "comer" in the state party. McLeod got tired of Sarah’s
ceaseless complaints and told her to do something about it already.

"She didn’t know how to go about it," McLeod says. "I would guide. So
that reporters would ask her, but there was a role I played in the
background, making sure all the information was correct. But she did
the exact same thing she accused Randy of doing. Had I known that I
wouldn’t have given her the time of day."

The takedown of Randy Ruedrich was Palin’s first public scalping
(of a fellow Republican, no less) and it helped cast her as a dogged
reformer.

"It’s true, Andrée’s almost responsible for creating Sarah Palin,"
Rick Rydell, an Anchorage talk radio host and 2004 Alaska Republican
Man of the Year, tells me over sushi a few days later. Rydell has
just finished his show, which airs weekdays from six to nine in the
morning. His Harley is parked out front and we’re sampling some
hijiki and gyoza, talking about the Palinistas – his disparaging
moniker for those still "drinking the kool-aid."

He’s been in the business twenty-seven years, first in Juneau,
then Portland, getting as far east as Cleveland before returning to
Alaska eighteen years ago. "Being here the day Sarah was announced
as McCain’s VP pick," he recalled as he tossed slabs of raw fish
under his thick handlebar moustache, "was like being at the centre
of a nuclear explosion, just like all eyes were turning and looking
right where you’re sitting." But McCain’s pick didn’t impress him. "I
said this on the air the first day: this looks like a Hail Mary pass
downfield into heavy coverage. And I still think it holds pretty true."

Rydell had been a friend and confidant of Palin’s over the years;
she and her husband Todd – the self-styled "First Dude" – had even
attended his wedding. Yet Rydell was not the only prominent Alaska
Republican to break with the Governor. She still has a glut of fans
and political allies in the state, but does appear to have alienated
an alarming number of those who have been allowed behind the curtain
– among whom it is said that even in Palin’s crusades for ethics,
ambition has often trumped principle.

****************** Laura Chase has a message for the world: "There
isn’t a day that goes by that I don’t wish I hadn’t done my job
so damned effectively." The job in question was managing Palin’s
successful campaign for mayor of Wasilla in 1996. Palin ousted
three-term incumbent John Stein in a rough campaign; she secured the
endorsement of the National Rifle Association and injected hot-button
"wedge" issues like abortion into the race for what had previously been
a non-partisan office, affixing to Stein the label Palin would later
use so effectively statewide to bring down entrenched Republican pols –
"Good Old Boy".

Chase was born in Palo Alto and moved to Alaska before statehood. She,
like Palin, holds a degree in communications from the University
of Idaho. "She was viewed very positively," Chase said, recalling
Palin’s arrival on the Wasilla City Council. "First of all, she’s
a really attractive young lady, and to get involved on the council,
which was full of a bunch of old folks, was a real shake up."

Palin later asked Chase to run her campaign for mayor, and after
overcoming reservations about unseating "a good man" like Stein,
she accepted. "She said that if she won she would hire me as the city
administrator," confides Chase, still incredulous, "and that the two of
us would provide leadership for Wasilla. The second she won, she didn’t
even remember who I was." The fact that she remains crushed is clear.

"I’m still proud of Sarah," Chase confessed to The New York Times, "but
she scares the bejeebers out of me." When I asked her to elaborate, she
mentioned Palin’s effort to remove books from the public library, which
Chase claims she witnessed first hand. "There’s no place in the world,"
Chase says today, "for people who don’t believe what she believes."

There was a knock at the door – and a reporter from American Media –
publishers of quality supermarket checkout titles like Star and the
National Enquirer – came in to take Chase’s picture. The reporter
asked Chase if "she still had the letter," but Chase told him it had
been shredded. He quickly took his leave, and it was just us and the
awkward silence.

After a few moments I asked about the mysterious letter. "Oh," Chase
sighed, "a week after she won the mayor’s job she dropped by my house
and handed me a check for $1,000" – intended to compensate for the
job that had failed to materialise. "I tore it up, handed it back,
and told her she was lucky that Todd put up with her. A few days
later I received a three-page hand written letter saying, ‘How dare
you? You don’t know anything about mine and Todd’s relationship."

Chase tells me she shredded the letter because "If I kept it I’d never
be able to let it go. It’s kind of a love-hate thing, you know?" And
I did know, because over the course of the hour I’d spent there,
I was shown at least two hulking Palin scrapbooks that were still
very much intact. If anything, I suspected, the letter was purged
because it severed once and for all her connection to the warm fuzzy
she clearly derived from the news clippings and other Palin campaign
kitsch she so obviously prized. We found ourselves in silence again.

"I just wish I didn’t feel this way," she told me, her oval face more
dour now, "because I am so proud of her."

I asked her about this pride – since she had evidently soured on Palin
– and suggested it might relate to the wave of "local girl done good"
and "she’s one of us" feelings washing over Alaska.

"She’s nothing like us!" she stammered, "she doesn’t know what it’s
like to not be able to pay the bills, to not be able to get credit
cards or health insurance for the kids. Not everyone has what they
have; that image is a lie. And it’s not that she’s like us. We’d like
to believe that. People are living vicariously through her. They feel
they’re missing something in life. But she has that way where she
can impact someone in that manner; its like you feel you’re living
that life, and that’s why she can say ‘Oh, I’m just one of them,’
because we’re desperately trying to live vicariously through her
energetic and determined lifestyle. Maybe that’s why I’m so damned
proud of her – I’m doing it too."

As Palin prepared to meet Joe Biden in this week’s vice presidential
debate – and Republican cadres worried publicly about a repeat of
Palin’s recent public missteps – I wondered if Palin’s ineffable
appeal insulated her against even the worst performance she could
deliver. Consider that Laura Chase and Andrée McLeod, former intimates
of Palin turned vocal critics, both offered their services to the
Governor after their disenchantment with her. It seemed as though
she had kindled a faith – perhaps borne of idealism – that exceeded
anything they had known before or since, and a certain nostalgia
for that earlier moment posed a constant temptation to return to the
Palin camp.

Palin has a way of transcending the obstacles that come her way,
gently bypassing possible scandals with apparent ease and little
damage to her sky-high approval ratings in Alaska. "Troopergate" –
with its allegations that Palin fired Public Safety Commissioner Walt
Monegan when he failed to dismiss the Governor’s ex-brother-in-law,
a state trooper – would likely have felled a lesser personality,
but Palin seems to have evaded censure, particularly now that the
McCain campaign has devoted its substantial resources to quashing
the investigation.

State Senate President Lyda Green told me she knows full well the
"Troopergate" allegations were substantial, because she knew the
trooper in question, Mike Wooten. When he told her details from
his confidential personnel file were being used against him by the
lawyer for his ex-wife, Palin’s sister, Green says she contacted a
friend at the appropriate state agency. "I made inquiries," she said,
"and the guy who I talked to happens to be a friend, and he said,
yeah, we’re having a little problem with that.’"

But that inquiry has been stalled by a Republican lawsuit and Palin has
begun to take on a Teflon sheen to which nothing can stick. Before I
left Alaska, I learnt that the local papers had indeed reported on the
substance of McLeod’s allegations against Palin – that she committed
the same offences for which she persecuted Randy Ruedrich – but Palin
waved them away with a brief response: "For any mistakes like that,
that were made, I apologise."

None of this stopped Palin from coasting into the Governor’s mansion,
and her approval rating – even with the additional pressure of national
scrutiny – is still near a robust 70 per cent.

"It’s almost to the point now where people don’t care about her
politics," Democratic State Sen. Bill Wielechowski admitted, "this
is such a small state that it’s like a family, and you want to see
family members succeed. People are just so proud of her and maybe
she had to throw a few people under the bus, but she’s still ours
and she’s making us proud."

David Gargill’s work has appeared in Harper’s, GQ, and several other
publications. He last wrote for The Review on the artist Wafaa Bilal.

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