Citruses Imported To Armenia Mainly From Greece And Egypt

CITRUSES IMPORTED TO ARMENIA MAINLY FROM GREECE AND EGYPT

09:48, 17 September, 2013

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 17, ARMENPRESS: The volumes of the fresh or dried
citruses imported to the Republic of Armenia during the first six
months of 2013 have increased by about 53% in comparison with the same
period of the previous year and made 7 thousand 123,9 tons. According
to the data provided by the State Revenue Committee of the Government
of the Republic of Armenia, during the first six months of 2012 4
thousand 661 tons of fresh or dried citruses were imported to our
Republic.

The citruses imported to Armenia during the first six months of 2013
are mainly from Greece (4 thousand 404,5 tons, that is about 62%
of the total volume). The average customs value of one kilogram of
the citrus fruits imported from Greece made $1,21.

As reported by Armenpress, during the first six months of 2013 citrus
fruits were imported to Armenia also from Egypt (1234,4 tons), Iran
(562,3 tons), Georgia (436,7 tons), Pakistan (320,1 tons), South Africa
(76,4 tons), Israel (66 tons) and China (23,1 tons).

Hakob Vardanyan

© 2009 ARMENPRESS.am

http://armenpress.am/eng/news/733127/citruses-imported-to-armenia-mainly-from-greece-and-egypt.html

St. Gregory The Illuminator Cathedral Opens In Moscow

ST. GREGORY THE ILLUMINATOR CATHEDRAL OPENS IN MOSCOW

September 17, 2013 – 12:41 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – The consecration of St. Gregory the Illuminator
Cathedral is ongoing Tuesday, September 17 in Moscow, with Catholicos
of All Armenians Karekin II, President Serzh Sargsyan, representatives
of Russia’s Armenian Diaspora, and high-ranking officials attending
the opening.

The consecration is performed by the Catholicos of All Armenians and
the primate of the New Nakhichevan and Russian Diocese of the Armenian
Apostolic Church.

The ceremony will be followed by the opening of exhibits titled
Armenians of Moscow and Historic Journey as well as a Love and
Fraternity theatrical performance.

Its construction launched back in 2008, the cathedral will serve as
a residence to Bishop Ezras Nersisyan, primate of the New Nakhichevan
and Russian Diocese of the Armenian Apostolic Church.

http://www.panarmenian.net/eng/news/170063/

Compensation For Bank Deposits: Freedom-Fighters In The Highlight

COMPENSATION FOR BANK DEPOSITS: FREEDOM-FIGHTERS IN THE HIGHLIGHT

13:13 17.09.13

Hovhannes Margaryan, a Rule of Law parliamentary group member, told
journalists on Tuesday that, with respect to compensations for deposits
at the USSR Savings Bank, the group has focused on freedom-fighters
or veterans of the Nagorno-Karabakh war of liberation.

“We are going to ensure compensation for Nagorno-Karabakh war veterans
just as we did in the case of veterans of the Great Patriotic War,”
Margaryan said. He reported that more than 60,000 people have received
compensations for their deposits.

“We will do our best to resolve this social problem as soon as
possible. We are now identifying the freedom-fighters that had deposits
in the USSR Savings Bank,” Margaryan said.

He also reported an intention to draft a package of measures to
resolve freedom-fighters’ social problems.

Armenian News – Tert.am

Azeri president urges officials to show modesty

ANS TV, Azerbaijan
Sept 11 2013

Azeri president urges officials to show modesty

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev has urged government officials to
show modesty in their work, private ANS TV channel reported on 11
September.

“Officials must be modest, serve the people and be loyal to the state
and the statehood,” ANS showed Aliyev saying.

The president further said: “If the state has entrusted them with the
responsibility or the president has appointed them to certain posts,
in any sphere they must set an example for the society and guide
people – through their work, their capabilities and their attitude
towards people. This is how it should be. Otherwise, they should not
be in these positions.”

Aliyev also called on officials to educate their own children in
Azerbaijan, rather than in foreign countries.

“I want the Azerbaijani youth to receive education in Azerbaijan. My
son went to high school in Baku. He will also receive higher education
in Azerbaijan. The level of education in Azerbaijan must be so high
that no-one goes abroad for education, so that there is no need for
this. We are reaching these goals gradually. I am glad that as a
president, I am setting an example in this. There are advantages and
disadvantages to studying abroad. I believe that officials will learn
a lesson from this,” the president said.

Aliyev made the remarks in Barda city at a meeting with IDPs from the
Armenian-controlled Azerbaijani territories.

The president made similar remarks in August in northern Ismayilli District.

Meanwhile, APA news agency quoted the president as saying at the same
meeting that he had warned officials against holding expensive wedding
ceremonies.

[Translated from Azeri]

From: Baghdasarian

Braes girl is Guiding light in Armenia

Falkirk Herald, UK
Sept 15 2013

Braes girl is Guiding light in Armenia

by Scott McAngus
[email protected]

A trainee solicitor from the Braes set the bar high after spreading
the word about Girlguides on a brief visit to a former Soviet state.

Emma Guthrie, from Shieldhill, has just returned from a three-week
trip to Armenia with five other leaders when they trained young girls
in new Guiding skills.

The 23-year-old, who is training to become a lawyer with Edinburgh
firm Shepherd and Wedderburn LLP, said: `It’s an amazing country, one
I never expected I would ever visit. We spent a lot of time in the
capital Yerevan and went out to a mixture of towns and rural places.
In many ways we are very similar, particularly the stuff we do through
the Guides, but the women there were quite surprised at the
independence we, as young women, have.

`I think that’s something the Guides is helping them with, which is an
amazing thing because there aren’t a lot of things just for women in
Armenia.’

Former Braes High School pupil Emma has been in the Girlguides since
she was seven and is now the assistant leader of the 1st Shieldhill
Guides and leader of the 1st Braes Senior Section for girls aged
14-26.

She was in Armenia on the Guiding Overseas Linked with Development
(GOLD) scheme organising training sessions for Armenian leaders and
encouraging young Brownie and Guide-aged girls to join local groups.
Part of the trip included a camping trip.

The once-in-a-lifetime adventure has now whetted her appetite for more
travel to explore other cultures.

`The people are really friendly, kind and helpful and I have made some
friends for life. We’re keeping in touch through Facebook. They’re
very big on Facebook in Armenia. Camping with them for a week gave me
the opportunity to really find out about their lives, culture and
explore their language. In future I would like to explore other
countries in a similar way to get a real connection to the country.’

While Guiding trips are designed to be challenging to build character,
some are harder than others as Emma found out when she returned home.

She added: `When we got back we did an evaluation with other leaders
who were in other countries like Guyana. So while I was moaning about
toilet facilities and no shower when we were camping, the other girls
had to deal with big cockroaches and snakes, so I think I had a touch
of luxury in comparison.’

http://www.falkirkherald.co.uk/news/community/braes-girl-is-guiding-light-in-armenia-1-3090171

May peace reign in Syria

Juneau Empire, AK
sept 15 2013

May peace reign in Syria

By BISHOP EDWARD J. BURNS

Two weeks ago I celebrated the final Mass of the summer season at the
Shrine of St. Therese. After Mass I met a group of about 25 Armenian
Christian pilgrims who had come to the Shrine to pray. They shared
with me that about half their number had emigrated from Syria, which
has a small but ancient Armenian community.

My brief encounter with these good people was a reminder to me not to
lose sight of the human dimension of the current Syria crisis. Over
100,000 Syrians have been killed in the past two years of civil war.
An estimated 2 million Syrian refugees have sought refuge in the
countries that border Syria – in desperate need of food, water,
shelter, medicine and above all, in need of an end to the conflict so
they can return home.

The intensifying conflict between the dictatorship of Bashar al-Assad
and the various groups that have risen up in rebellion against his
regime has been a tragedy of violence and destruction that has
affected all of the various religious and ethnic communities that make
up the Syrian nation.

The conflict escalated on Aug. 21 with the presumed use of sarin nerve
gas, a chemical weapon, by the Assad forces against neighborhoods in
Damascus held by rebel forces. A thousand or more civilians, many of
whom were children, were killed and many more were poisoned with these
horrific weapons.

This attack, in turn, has led President Obama and his administration
to threaten a military assault against Syria, both to punish the Assad
regime’s use of chemical weapons and to deter the future use of these
internationally outlawed weapons by countries that continue to possess
them.

Military action by our country, however, carries with it the real
possibility of a wider regional conflict that could involve both the
United States and some or all of the states that border Syria, some of
which, like Turkey, Saudi Arabia and the Gulf States support the
rebels; and others, such as Iran, Russia and Iraq, support the Assad
government.

Catholic moral teaching absolutely condemns the production, possession
and use of chemical weapons, which by their nature cannot discriminate
between innocent civilians and legitimate military targets. While
Catholic moral teaching always favors peace between nations, it also
recognizes that in some very limited circumstances the resort to
military force may be justified.

I am grateful that Pope Francis responded to the threat of an
escalation of the war in Syria by calling on Catholics around the
world to a day of prayer and fasting for peace – this took place last
Saturday on Sept. 7. He invited members of other Christian communities
and other faiths, as well as all men and women of goodwill, to join us
in this spiritual endeavor. Although his call to prayer came at very
short notice, I was moved by the generous response to his call for
prayer and fasting here in Southeast Alaska and around the world.

An integral aspect of the call of the Church, as expressed by the Holy
Father in this critical moment, has been the summons that the
international community makes a renewed effort toward a peaceful
solution rather than a military one in Syria. The Church, following
the guidance of the Holy Father, desires to be a catalyst for a
non-violent solution to the crisis in Syria; a solution that is just,
respects the dignity of persons, and is careful not to deepen the
tensions that exist.

Fortunately, in the past week, the possibility of a peaceful solution
to the crisis has developed. The Russian government proposed that
Syria agree to give up its chemical weapons. Syria has admitted its
possession of chemical weapons, has expressed its desire to sign the
treaty banning them and has said it is willing to place them under
international control. In response, President Obama has postponed
seeking Congressional authorization for military action while pursuing
a diplomatic solution that would lead to the destruction of all Syrian
chemical weapons and the dismantling of production facilities.

Last Saturday’s day of prayer and fasting was a timely reminder that
peace, whether in the individual heart, in families or between
nations, depends upon our openness to the divine will of God – the
very source of compassion, mercy, forgiveness and sacrificial love. As
this crisis continues to unfold, it is important that we continue to
pray that peace may reign in Syria, the Middle East and throughout
world.

http://juneauempire.com/opinion/2013-09-15/may-peace-reign-syria#.UjZgEcRzZMs

Book: Author to visit Grand Forks

Grand Forks Herald, North Dakota
Sept 15 2013

AREA BOOKS: Author to visit Grand Forks

Anna Astvatsaturian Turcotte, author of `Nowhere, a Story of Exile,’
will be visiting the Grand Forks area Oct. 3 and 4. Turcotte is an
Armenian refugee from Baku, Azerbaijan, whose family settled in
Wahpeton, N.D., in 1992.

By: Accent staff report, Grand Forks Herald

`Nowhere, a Story of Exile’ by Anna Astvatsaturian Turcotte;
hybooksonline.com, 2013, 310 pages.

Anna Astvatsaturian Turcotte, author of `Nowhere, a Story of Exile,’
will be visiting the Grand Forks area Oct. 3 and 4. Turcotte is an
Armenian refugee from Baku, Azerbaijan, whose family settled in
Wahpeton, N.D., in 1992. She attended UND and received degrees in
English & Literature and Philosophy & Religion before attending law
school at the University of Maine School of Law in Portland, Maine.
She now lives in Maine with her husband and two children.

`Nowhere, a Story of Exile’ was published in June 2012. Through the
diary entries of a young girl, the story documents the organized
terror in Baku, her life as a refugee, and her struggle to find
herself, all against the backdrop of the collapse of the Soviet Union.
It is based on the childhood diaries Turcotte kept as a refugee from
Baku, Azerbaijan.

Turcotte will speak the morning of Oct. 3 at Mayville (N.D.) State
University, and again that afternoon at 4:30 at the North Dakota
Museum of Art, 2611 Centennial Drive, Grand Forks. On Oct. 4, she will
speak at 11 a.m. at the UND School of Law and at 1 p.m. at the UND
Women and Gender Studies Conference in the Memorial Union.

http://www.grandforksherald.com/event/article/id/273268/group/homepage/

Book: Come Back Moon

Kirkus Reviews (Print)
September 15, 2013, Sunday

COME BACK, MOON

PICTURE BOOKS

Poet and Newbery Honoree Kherdian (The Road from Home: The Story of an
Armenian Girl, 1979) teams again with his wife, distinguished two-time
Caldecott-winning illustrator and author Hogrogian, for this gentle
animal fable (Lullaby for Emily, 1995, etc.). “Bear couldn’t sleep and
blamed the light of the moon.”

He steals it and stuffs it into his pillowcase. Other animals–Fox,
Skunk, Opossum and Raccoon–miss the moon and speculate as to its
whereabouts. Crow says to Fox, “You’re the clever one. Where did it
go?” Fox suggests asking wise Owl. Hogrogian’s soft, muted
watercolors, further grayed by pencil, depict the parade of woodland
creatures en route to Owl’s perch, trailing behind Fox’s white-tipped
tail. When Owl fingers Bear, Fox and Crow hatch a plan. Crow tells
Bear a slumber-inducing story, then he and Fox snatch the pillowcase
and release the moon. The happy ending reveals the animals dancing by
moonlight while Bear sleeps contentedly on. Within plainspoken text
and dialogue, Kherdian weaves a folkloric motif–the moon’s theft and
restoration–with child-resonant tropes: mistaken judgment, compelling
curiosity and cooperation to right wrongs. Hogrogian subtly
characterizes the animals’ emotions and responses without
anthropomorphizing them unduly. The keen tilt of Fox’s head indicates
acute observation, while Bear’s heavy-lidded eyes and relaxed pose
telegraph imminent napping. (Incidentally, only Bear’s gender is
conveyed, permitting diverse interpretations for the other creatures.)
Charming. (Picture book. 3-7)

Publication Date: 2013-10-15
Publisher: Beach Lane/Simon & Schuster
Stage: Children’s
ISBN: 978-1-4424-5887-1
Price: $16.99
Author: Kherdian, David

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

ISTANBUL: Russia plays, Europe pays: Armenia’s Customs Union adventu

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
Sept 15 2013

Russia plays, Europe pays: Armenia’s Customs Union adventure (1)

ZAUR SHIRIYEV
[email protected]

Armenian President Serzh Sarksyan’s declaration that Yerevan will join
the Russian-led Customs Union (CU) has unseated an enduring and
continuing debate both domestically and internationally.

Undoubtedly, the decision has come as a surprise to the wider public
— but not to high-level European Union officials. As stated by EU
Commissioner for Enlargement and European Neighborhood Policy Stefan
Füle, Armenia only informed the EU about the possibility of its
accession to the CU on Aug. 31, just three days before the official
declaration of the decision. It seems likely that President Sarksyan
made his final decision during an unexpected visit to Croatia on Aug.
28, where he met with Ara Abrahamyan, a Russian-Armenian businessman
and president of the Union of Russian Armenians. According to
speculation in the Armenian media, Abrahamyan arranged for Sarksyan to
meet with Putin, and while still in Croatia, Sarksyan notified the EU
of his decision.

What is now clear is that an EU Association Agreement is no longer on
the table with Yerevan at the November Vilnius Summit. Armenia’s
decision will have important consequences for both the EU and the
South Caucasus region.

>From the EU’s perspective, Armenia has ended its `either-or’ dilemma
between the EU and the Russian-sponsored CU and Eurasian Union. On
Sept. 12, the European Parliament passed a resolution proclaiming
Russia’s actions towards the Eastern Partnership (EaP) countries
`unacceptable,’ and called upon the European Commission to take
definite action. In reality, this resolution is merely a demonstration
of political frustration and is unlikely to influence Moscow’s
behavior. In another statement, the EU has said that it is trying to
draft a workable road map for EaP countries to finalize an agreement
with the EU while also meeting Moscow’s demands.

According to Füle, `it may certainly be possible for members of the
EaP to increase their cooperation with the CU, perhaps as observers;
and participation in Deep and Comprehensive Free Trade Area (DCFTA)
agreements is of course fully compatible with our partners’ existing
free trade agreements with others in the Commonwealth of Independent
States (CIS).’ Ukraine has already taken this middle path by signing a
deal to become an observer in the CU trade bloc while still hoping to
finalize an EU Association Agreement in Vilnius.

Armenia has not yet declared the specifics of its CU alignment, i.e.,
whether it will hold observer status, or full membership — but the
latter seems more likely.

However, the EU has not abandoned all hope. During his visit to
Armenia on Sept. 12-14, Füle insisted that the EU will seek
possibilities for a continued partnership with Yerevan through a new
legal framework for cooperation.

Armenia has long struggled with the EU-Russia dilemma; Yerevan found
itself in a situation wherein `Russia plays, Europe pays.’ It relied
on the EU’s high-profile financial support in harsh economic
conditions, while at the same time Russia continued to bolster its
political and economic influence in the country.

On the eve of the Vilnius Summit in November, the EU-Russia-Armenia
triangle looks set to open up several short and long-term political
questions.

First of all, Armenia may suggest that it can still sign the
Association Agreement without its economic component, and, apparently,
the EU might agree to this solution to avoid losing all ties with
Armenia. Armenia in this regard is likely to play for time, because
under normal regulations, such agreements — including CU accession or
EU alignment — must be approved by parliament. And for now, no formal
agreement has yet been negotiated on the CU accession, which requires
a full assessment of the current customs regulations before the CU
regulations can be implemented. President Sarksyan is unlikely to risk
his personal reputation and relationship with Moscow by putting the
decision on CU membership to referendum, but he could arrange this by
some behind-the-scenes management of political groups in parliament.
By doing this, Sarksyan could avoid burning his political capital,
allowing him to say that the decision was reached democratically, by
the public.

The second possibility, which is unlikely, is that Armenia will rely
on dissent from the current members of the CU, Kazakhstan and Belarus.
However, there is no obvious argument that Belarus or Kazakhstan could
or would raise, and the timeline is very short: In October the CU
summit will take place, during which its three members are supposed to
approve Armenia’s membership. But it will not be a final decision;
Armenian Speaker of the National Assembly Hovik Abrahamyan announced
that the possible dates for signing the Treaty of Accession to the CU
could be arranged for 2014. Not surprisingly, as stated above,
Abrahamyan also acknowledged that there is still no final text of the
treaty, and it is likely that Armenia will not accept the text or that
parliament will vote against it.

The third possibility, which was on the European agenda, is to win
Armenia back to EU orientation by revitalizing the Turkish-Armenian
rapprochement process, which collapsed in 2009 for various reasons,
but mainly the unresolved Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. Some political
experts have suggested that the last-ditch attempt to rescue Yerevan
from Moscow’s domination will be by trying to open the
Turkish-Armenian border. But taking into account the stalemate on the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, the current passivity in the
conflict-resolution process, and the fact that after its CU decision
Armenia is more dependent on Moscow, the unfortunate conclusion is
that the conflict-resolution process has ended up in the hands of
Russia. This will affect Azerbaijan’s role and strategy towards Russia
as well as the conflict-resolution process itself.

In the next section of this column, I will discuss the potential
impact of Armenia’s CU decision on Yerevan’s domestic policy along
with the Azerbaijani and Georgian positions.

http://www.todayszaman.com/columnistDetail_getNewsById.action?newsId=326433

ISTANBUL: Former FM Türkmen: Ankara has not calculated well regardi

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
Sept 15 2013

Former FM Türkmen: Ankara has not calculated well regarding Syria

Former Turkish Foreign Minister İlterk Türkmen speaks to Today’s Zaman
in an exlusive interview. (Photo: Today’s Zaman, İsa Şimşek)
15 September 2013 /YONCA POYRAZ DOĞAN, İSTANBUL
This week’s guest for Monday Talk has said that Ankara has not made
its calculations well in regards to Syria, although the government’s
standing has been righteous, and it was a mistake that Ankara has
built all of its policies on the assumption that Syrian President
Bashar al-Assad will fall.

“But there is also the need to take into consideration the national
interests; that’s how politics work. Talking about democratic
governance in Syria is quite righteous, but how this democracy is
going to be put into practice is another question,” said Ambassador
İlter Türkmen, former foreign minister of Turkey.

After days of intense negotiations, the United States and Russia
reached agreement on Saturday in Geneva on a framework to secure and
destroy Syria’s chemical weapons and impose UN penalties if the Assad
government fails to comply.

“If Syria really cedes control of its chemical weapons to the
international community, Assad will gain certain legitimacy. There
will be less willingness to use force against Assad. In reality, the
Russian initiative, in one way or another, will create a larger field
of maneuver for Syria and to a certain extent demoralize the
opposition,” he also said.

Reports of a chemical attack in a Damascus suburb on Aug. 21 marked a
turning point in the attitude of the United States and its allies
toward the Syrian government. According to US-based Human Rights
Watch, evidence strongly suggests that Syrian government forces were
responsible for a poison gas attack that killed more than 1,400
people, contradicting repeated denials by Syrian President Assad.

Meanwhile, Turkey deployed tanks and anti-aircraft guns to reinforce
its military units on the Syrian border. Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
Erdoğan vowed to respond to any attack from its southern neighbor.
Turkey, which has sided with the opposition to oust Assad, has a
border with Syria that stretches for more than 900 kilometers (559
miles). More than 100,000 people have died in the conflict and
millions have fled their homes for Turkey, Lebanon, Jordan and Iraq
since March 2011.

Answering most of our questions before Moscow and Washington reached
agreement on Syrian chemical weapons arsenal, Türkmen elaborated on
the issue.

As people all over the world have been holding their breath for an
expected US air strike against the Syrian regime, diplomatic efforts
have intensified towards placing Syria’s chemical weapons under
international control. How have we come to this point?

The United States administration has not been willing to interfere in
Syria from the beginning, but because of the use of the chemical
weapons by the Syrian regime, the Obama administration felt like it
had to respond to the Assad regime. President Barack Obama first gave
the impression that the US will interfere in the situation, and then
he referred the issue to the US Congress. And recently a diplomatic
initiative emerged. It is not clear if it was Moscow or Washington
that created this opportunity. [US Secretary of State John] Kerry made
a statement about the planned attack on Syria responding to a question
from the press, and he said that if the chemical weapons can be put
under international observation, there may be no need to do that.
Russia jumped on this idea immediately — a very successful initiative
for the Russian diplomacy as Moscow has been supporting the Assad
regime, which has already killed 100,000 of its citizens. We will see
how this initiative will develop, whether or not Assad will surrender
its chemical weapons. Meanwhile, Obama said important things.

You refer to his speech to the nation in Washington on Syria.

Yes, he said the United States cannot be the world’s policeman. This is true.

He also said that the US can save Syrian children from being gassed to death.

Yes, he is trying to do something, trying not to use force, and the
Russian initiative gave Obama this chance. We have to remember what
Obama’s position was in regards to the war in Iraq. When he was a
senator, he was among few politicians in the US who opposed the war in
Iraq. His stance proved to be right. The war in Afghanistan seemed
more legitimate because of 9/11. The United States has understood now
that it cannot pull its forces easily from a country once it sends its
troops there. The US should have understood this after the Vietnam
War, but there have been more lessons after that.

‘Elections do not necessarily bring democratic rulers’

Prime Minister Erdoğan has said the Russian initiative has given Assad
the opportunity he was seeking. Do you think that’s what’s happened?

Of course, the Turkish government wanted Assad to take a hit. Ankara
has built all of its policies on the assumption that Assad will fall.

Was this the right approach?

This was not the right approach. Assad has blood in his hands, it
could have been better if he fell, but we should have seen that he
would not fall easily. Turkey’s assumption was that Assad would fall
and be replaced with the Muslim Brotherhood of Syria.

There are a lot of countries fearing the rule of radical Islamists in
the Middle East. How has Ankara been so sure that a new government in
Syria will not be malignant?

I don’t think Ankara has made its calculations well. The Turkish
government’s standing has been righteous. But there is also the need
to take into consideration the national interests; that’s how politics
work. Talking about democratic governance in Syria is quite righteous,
but how this democracy is going to be put into practice is another
question.

If Assad falls, shall we expect a democratic government in Syria?

Some kind of democratic process will probably be applied, but we can
expect an autocratic rule. Elections do not necessarily bring
democratic rulers. Politicians who can garner more than 50 percent of
the votes come to power and tend to rule autocratically pressuring the
rest of the population. Some democracies are not truly democratic.
After the Arab Spring, we have seen parties with strong religious
affiliation taking prominent roles in governments. This was the case
in Egypt. Egypt is a homogenous society, but Syria is different; there
is a possibility that the Syrian society could disintegrate. In Syria,
there are Kurds, Alevis and Sunnis. When we look at the Middle East,
we should also take into account the considerations of the countries
of the Middle East. For most of the Arab countries, Iran is the most
important threat. Even the Palestinian issue does not seem to take
priority. However, for Turkey, the Palestinians are important. No
country in the Middle East places this much importance on the
Palestinians. When it comes to Syria, its regime is considered a
threat to other Arab countries because it is allied with Tehran.

If the US chooses to strike Syria at the end, do you think this will
force Assad to leave?

The US plans to strike Syria seemed to be limited in time and scope
aiming at punishing Assad for the use of chemical weapons. Even if the
US hits some military targets of the Assad regime, these are not
likely to force Assad to leave. Assad has had military gains; he has a
regular army, weapons and fighter planes. On the other hand, the
opposition is divided. If Syria really cedes control of its chemical
weapons to the international community, Assad will gain certain
legitimacy. There will be less willingness to use force against Assad.
In reality, the Russian initiative, in one way or another, will create
a larger field of maneuver for Syria and to a certain extent
demoralize the opposition.

‘Turkey has long been ignoring its relations with EU’

How would you evaluate Turkish foreign policy of recent years?

There have been areas in which Turkey has followed the right policies
and there have been some areas in which the policies have not been
successful. Until very recently, Turkish foreign policy decisions have
been good in many areas — until the Arab Spring — except the
European Union. Turkey has long been ignoring its relations with the
European Union – in particular, Turkish EU Affairs Minister [Egemen
Bağış] obviously does not have much sympathy for the EU. Turkey’s
Middle East and Africa policies have been good and led to economic
presence in those countries. After the Arab Spring started, Turkey has
not been able to evaluate the developments rationally. In regards to
Egypt, Erdoğan had taken a good step by going to Cairo and calling for
secularism. We still have somewhat good relations with Tunisia. But
when it comes to Syria, we failed; we could not see what was coming.

How would you analyze this? Some observers put the blame on Erdoğan’s
advisors, and especially on Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu, for some
foreign policy decisions which have not been wise. What do you think?

There have been some grave mistakes such as not being in good terms
with Israel. This mistake was done before the Arab Spring. Turkey was
an influential country in the Middle East because it was on good terms
with both Israel and the Arab countries, so it could play an important
role. After the Arab Spring, Turkey started to get too much involved
in the domestic policies of the countries of the Middle East. One of
the most important problems that Turkey needs to solve is its Kurdish
issue; Turkey cannot be perceived as a strong country as long as its
Kurdish problem persists. Additionally, having good relations with the
EU is very important. The rhetoric among some Turkish politicians in
Turkey is that the EU has been failing economically, but this is not
true; both the EU and the United States still hold 50 percent of the
world trade. We’ve almost forgotten about our membership process in
the EU. Yes, the EU has not been opening some of the chapters in the
negotiations process, but there is the issue of Cyprus waiting to be
solved. Yes, the Cyprus issue has no urgency, but there are new
developments in the area. Important gas deposits have been found in
the Mediterranean Sea near Cyprus, and if the Cyprus dispute had been
solved, the Turkish Cypriots would have been able to take advantage of
the economic benefits of exporting the gas.

Then there is the issue of Armenia. Even though good steps were taken
in regards to Armenia, efforts failed. Having good relations with
Armenia was important for Turkey as it would have to a certain extent
reduced the zeal of Yerevan regarding the propaganda campaign against
Turkey. Turkey would have been also able to play a more active role on
the search for a solution to the Karabakh problem.

________________________________

‘No Kurds in Turkey should be envious of lives of other Kurds in region’

Do you think Turkey has been taking the necessary steps to solve its
Kurdish issue?

There is a debate going on for the government’s new democratization
package. We will see very soon what substance the democratic package
has. People of the Southeast have been optimistic in regards to the
recent process and the government should take advantage of it and
speed up the solution process. Regardless of what the Kurdistan
Workers’ Party [PKK] does, whether or not it pulls out, Turkey needs
to take the democratic steps it needs to take, such as reducing or
removing the election threshold, providing within certain limits
education in mother tongue, etc. Solving Turkey’s Kurdish problem is
also important with regards to its relations with its immediate
neighbors in the Southeast. If Syria disintegrates, there may be a
Kurdish state at Turkey’s southern border and there is already the
Kurdish Regional Government [KRG] in northern Iraq. No Kurds in Turkey
should be envious of the lives of their fellow Kurds in those areas.
Plus, Turkey’s Kurds live all over Turkey, especially in the west of
Turkey.

There are some conspiracy-theory holders in Turkey saying that the
United States has long desired to establish an independent Kurdish
state in Turkey’s South, and this is what is happening. Do you agree
with this view?

Why the US would like to have an independent Kurdish state is hard to
understand. The US is trying to withdraw entirely from the Middle
East. Now the US has more gas and oil, it does not even need the oil
it used to need from the Middle East. If Israel were not there, the US
would not even have the presence it has now in the Middle East.

________________________________

‘Turkey cannot act as if there is no Egypt’

A delegation from the main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP)
paid a visit to Egypt to mend ties with officials from the coup
administration and leaders of various political groups. Their visit
was criticized by Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan. Both opposition
and government had called what happened in Egypt to oust the Muslim
Brotherhood a military coup d’état. What is your comment on the CHP
delegation’s visit?

It’s been a very good initiative by the CHP officials. It shows
Turkey’s interest in Egypt. The Turkish government has been a harsh
critic of the military regime in Egypt, but the visit shows that
Turkey has interest in Egypt and the Egyptian people. We need to have
really good relations with Egypt. Turkish businesspeople have serious
investments in that country. Turkey and Egypt have mutual interests in
the region. There is no need to have tension between Turkey and Egypt.
Turkey has had harsh reactions in regards to the coup, recalled the
Turkish ambassador in Egypt, called for [ousted President Mohammed]
Morsi’s immediate release, etc. These are interferences into Egypt’s
internal politics. In the world there are many democracies, but it can
be discussed how much democracy is practiced in many countries. We
have to see that in Egypt there has been strong opposition to the
Muslim Brotherhood, but it may be small. Even Saudi Arabia was not
happy with the Muslim Brotherhood. Egypt is a country of 85 million
people with historical ties to Turkey. Turkey cannot act as if there
is no Egypt because the government has changed there, but of course,
we can call for a return to democratic governance in Egypt; we have a
right to say that, too.

PROFILE

Ambassador İlter Türkmen

A former Turkish foreign minister (1980-1983), Türkmen was general
commissioner of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for
Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) from 1991 to 1996.
Previously he was Turkey’s ambassador to France. He also represented
Turkey at the UN in New York (1975-1978 and 1984-1988). He was
ambassador to Greece from 1968 to 1972 and to the former Soviet Union
from 1972 to 1975.

From: Baghdasarian

http://www.todayszaman.com/news-326450-former-fm-turkmen-ankara-has-not-calculated-well-regarding-syria.html