Expert: Kyrgyz Revolution Tastes Like Opium

RIA Novosti, Russia

2005-03-29 14:17

EXPERT: KYRGYZ REVOLUTION TASTES LIKE OPIUM

MOSCOW, March 29 (RIA-Novosti) – According to Nikolai Bordyuzha, the
secretary general of the Collective Security Council Organization (CSTO)
including Russia, Belarus, Armenia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan),
CSTO leaders had the necessary levers to influence the situation in
Kyrgyzstan ahead of the revolution, Izvestia reported.

Bordyuzha personally offered ousted President Askar Akayev consultations
with CSTO representatives to prevent pillage and lawlessness in the country.
The CSTO had no plans to keep Akayev in power to push a revolution. However,
Akayev said that the situation was still within the norm and thought it
premature to engage the CSTO.

“We can see the result – a revolution that, among other things, tastes like
opium,” Bordyuzha said.

The local administration office was already burning in Osh in southern
Kyrgyzstan. Yet, Akayev believed he could solve the problem. He might have
thought that if he had agreed to use the CSTO, it would have meant
acknowledging his own weakness. However, he did consult the EU and the U.S.
ambassadors.

“Perhaps, some of them were against assisting us,” he said.

The masses were the driving force behind the democratic opposition’s coup.
The opposition included two forces, one of them participated in the
presidential race last autumn, and the other, from Osh and from outside
Bishkek, went to destroy the offices of the government agencies and loot
local businesses.

But most alarming, Bordyuzha said, is what is happening in Osh where the
presence of “the drug mafia is very strong”. He believes that the Islamic
terrorist organization, Hizb-ut-Tahrir, “is working hard” in the region.

Bordyuzha said coordinated efforts are needed to prevent the drug cartel’s
spread to CSTO countries, noting that Article 2 of the Collective Security
Treaty provides for immediate consultations in case of escalation.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Russian head of ex-Soviet Mil. pact warns of radical Islamic threat

Pravda.RU:World

Russian head of ex-Soviet military pact warns of radical Islamic threat

12:29 2005-03-29

The Russian head of an ex-Soviet military pact that includes three Central
Asian nations warned Tuesday that the organization’s members must act
urgently to combat the threat of radical Islamic groups.

In the wake of the ousting of Kyrgyz leader Askar Akayev, observers have
said that such groups could step up activity as Krygyzstan’s new leaders try
to restore order, and suggest that religious militants in Central Asia could
find inspiration in the swift and almost effortless overthrow.

Nikolai Bordyuzha, secretary general of the six-nation Collective Security
Treaty – a pact that links Russia with Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan,
Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan – said in an interview with the Izvestia daily
that coordinated action was essential to stop the threat from spreading
further.

“We should take coordinated steps to counter the attempt of Islamic
extremists in all member states of the organization. I stress that the
efforts should be coordinated because these networks are like mercury that
flows from one country to another,” he said.

The radical group Hizb-ut-Tahrir, which advocates the creation of an Islamic
state in the Central Asian region, is a particular worry, he said.

“Hizb-ut-Tahrir is very active throughout Central Asia, damaging the
consciousness especially of young people, importing religious dogmas in a
bid to form a social base.

“We have to prevent this trend. Otherwise we will face a lot of problems,”
he said, warning of a “struggle based on religion that has no peaceful
resolution.”

Authorities in the Central Asian state of Uzbekistan – which is not a member
of the Moscow-led security pact – blame Hizb-ut-Tahrir for attacks there
last year that killed more than 50 people. The group, which is banned in
Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and in Russia, claims to reject violence.

Radical Islamic groups emerged in predominantly Muslim Central Asia after
the 1991 Soviet collapse. Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan have both seen bombings
and incursions blamed on extremist groups.

Associated Press

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Meeting for Demarcation of Border Between Azerbaijan and Georgia

MEETING OF BILATERAL COMMISSION FOR DEMARCATION OF BORDER BETWEEN
AZERBAIJAN AND GEORGIA

TBILISI. MARCH 28. ARMINFO-BLACK SEA PRESS. Today a two-day meeting of
the Azerbaijanian-Georgian Commission for Delimitation of the
Azerbaijan/Georgia border began in Tbilisi, the Azerbaijanian State
Committee for Land and Cartography reports. The sides will continue
working on coordinating the coordinates of the interstate border.
Garib Mamedov, the chairman of the State Committee for Land and
Cartography, said that the sides had prepared a topographic map of
border sections that had been discussed by the countries. He added
that of 24 sections on the Azerbaijanian-Georgian border under
discussion by the sides agreement had been achieved only on five of
them.

He said that part of the Keshish-Dag territory on which monastery
complex is belonged to Azerbaijan. Azerbaijan is not going to cede it
to Georgia, as it is of strategic importance. From there territories
of Azerbaijan, Georgia and Armenia are well seen. Presently the exact
border extension between Georgia and Azerbaijan had been coordinated
by about 40%.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

After Kyrgyzstan

The Messenger
Tuesday, March 29, 2005, #056 (0830)

After Kyrgyzstan

For Georgia, democratic change in other CIS countries can be regarded as
wholly positive

The recent upheaval in Kyrgyzstan cannot be described exactly as a velvet
revolution in the mold of the recent revolutions in Georgia and Ukraine,
although there were clearly some similarities, and the precedent set in
Tbilisi and Kiev doubtless played a part in the events that unfolded in
Bishkek.

Several analysts suggested after Ukraine’s Orange Revolution that Kyrgyzstan
might be the next contender to be affected by the “wave of liberation” that
Saakashvili and Yushchenko described back in January as rolling across
post-Soviet space. And although instability and uncertainty have taken hold
of Kyrgyzstan and it is far from clear what will be the final outcome there,
already some commentators have turned their attention elsewhere and are
speculating which country will be next. Given that Armenia and Azerbaijan
have both been mentioned in this context, this is clearly of importance for
Georgia.

2003 was a year of elections for the three countries of the South Caucasus.
In Armenia President Kocharian won re-election in the presidential poll,
while his party came out on top in the parliamentary. In Azerbaijan,
meanwhile, the presidential election was won by Heidar Aliev’s son Ilham.
The opposition in both countries failed, and although election observers
condemned the elections as marred by irregularities, the results stood. The
same was expected in Georgia, but here the events developed very
differently, the people taking to the streets in protest at the falsified
elections, bringing about the first velvet revolution in post-Soviet space.

Since then governments relying on the falsification of elections to ensure
their longevity have been ousted in Ukraine and Kyrgyzstan, while democratic
steps have been taken in Moldova, and the possibility of change in other CIS
countries seems all the greater.

Many analysts believe that there is a real possibility of democratic change
in Armenia, where the 2003 elections were condemned as fraudulent. The
internal political situation there has changed as a direct result of the
revolutions in Ukraine and Georgia, and many believe that the government
will not again be able to get away with falsifying the elections, although
as German Foundation of Scientific and Political Development Uwe Halbach
notes, “The only problem in Armenia is that they do not have a Saakashvili
who will be able to mobilize the country and change it in a peaceful way,”
as quoted by Rezonansi. Should Armenia find an opposition leader behind whom
they can unite, this would pose a serious threat to the current
administration.

In Azerbaijan, meanwhile, the various opposition parties are planning to
unite to fight the parliamentary elections slated for this autumn. Ilham
Aliev, who was able to win the 2003 presidential election only by
manipulating the process, will be under severe pressure, although, as in
Armenia, whether the opposition will be able to organize themselves to
capitalize on the expected electoral irregularities remains to be seen. As
in Georgia and Ukraine, much will depend on Western election observers to
quickly provide an objective opinion on the fairness and openness of the
election process.

One important factor here is that the opposition parties in Ukraine and
Georgia were notably western-oriented, and both Yushchenko and Saakashvili
have expressed their desire to lead their countries into NATO and the
European Union. In Armenia, in particular, such a western-orientated
government coming to power is made less likely by the Nagorno-Karabakh
issue; but some analysts believe that the continuing existence of the frozen
conflict makes a velvet revolution less likely.

For Georgia, democratic change in other CIS countries can be regarded as
wholly positive. Following the Rose Revolution, Georgia was more or less
isolated within the CIS, but since the Orange revolution it has gained an
important ally with similar problems and goals in Ukraine. Velvet
revolutions elsewhere, Georgians hope, will lead to the creation of more
friends.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Micheline Calmy-Rey se rend cette semaine en Turquie

SwissInfo / Edicom , Suisse
28 mars 2005

Micheline Calmy-Rey se rend cette semaine en Turquie

BERNE – Le voyage de Micheline Calmy-Rey cette semaine en Turquie
suscite de lourdes attentes de la part des communautés dont le destin
est lié au pays. Les Arméniens et les Kurdes lui demandent notamment
de plaider leur cause auprès d’Ankara.
Amnesty International (AI) a adressé ces jours une lettre à la cheffe
du Département fédéral des affaires étrangères (DFAE). L’ONG y
déplore qu’Ankara n’ait pas signé le protocole facultatif à la
Convention de l’ONU contre la torture. «Nous apprécierions que vous
interveniez à ce propos auprès de votre homologue turc» Abdullah Gül,
dit la missive.
De même, AI lui demande d’attirer l’attention des autorités turques
sur le cas d’un avocat militant des droits de l’Homme dans la ville
de Tunceli, dans le sud-est kurde, victime de «menaces» de la part de
la gendarmerie locale. Mme Calmy-Rey se rendra dans cette région
mercredi, au deuxième jour de sa visite.
«Le voyage (dans le sud-est kurde) de Mme Calmy-Rey est très
important», relève Deniz Alkan, porte-parole du Centre kurde des
droits de l’homme de Genève. «Elle verra ainsi ce que les gens sur
place veulent vraiment», dit-il.
La conseillère fédérale pourrait aussi aborder la question du
génocide arménien avec son homologue turc. Mais Stefan Kristensen, de
l’Association Suisse-Arménie, est sceptique: «Le seul langage que la
Turquie comprenne est celui du rapport de force». A cet égard, l’UE a
un rôle important à jouer, selon lui, car elle détient la «carotte»
de l’ouverture des négociations d’adhésion.
A l’inverse, Hatice Yürütücü, représentante de la communauté turque
au sein de la Commission fédérale des étrangers, appelle à ne pas
réduire les problèmes de son pays à la question kurde ou arménienne.
«Il ne faut jamais oublier que la Turquie est plus grande que la
Suisse, que sa géographie et sa culture sont autres et que les
problèmes y sont différents», poursuit-elle.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

A1 Plus: On April 2

A1 Plus | 11:31:28 28-03-2005 | Social |

ON APRIL 2

The TV company “A1+” has been deprived of ether for 1090 days already.
April 2 is the 3rd anniversary of the illegal decision of the National
Committee of TV and Radio.

On the initiative of several non-governmental organizations on April 2
at 12 a.m. an act of complaint will start from the address Grigor
Lusavorich 15.

If the democratic values are important to you, defend you right of
expressing yourself and getting information.

For information write to [email protected]

Thank you for your support.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

BAKU: `Major results in conflict settlement not expected soon’

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
March 29 2005

`Major results in conflict settlement not expected soon’

Baku, March 28, AssA-Irada
The positions of Armenia and Azerbaijan on the Upper Garabagh
conflict settlement have not drawn closer thus far and no major
results should not be expected in this area soon, the Armenian
President’s adviser on national security Garnik Isagulian told
Interfax news agency.
Isagulian said Azerbaijan sees the conflict resolution in the context
of its territorial integrity, while Armenia insists on Upper
Garabagh’s gaining independence.
`The truce agreement was signed by three parties: Azerbaijan,
Garabagh and Armenia, with the latter signing the document as a
guarantor of Garabagh’s security’, Isagulian alleged.
The next meeting of the Azerbaijani and Armenian foreign ministers,
which is a continuation of the `Prague talks’ on settling the Upper
Garabagh conflict, which started in 2004, is scheduled for April.*

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

An Improbable War and Turkey’s New Opportunities

Antiwar.com, CA
March 29 2005

An Improbable War and Turkey’s New Opportunities

by Christopher Deliso
balkanalysis.com

“We want dialogue with the U.S., not war,” says Turkish author Burak
Turna. “We have written this book to prevent a war.”

The book of which Turna speaks, Metal Firtina (“Metal Storm” in
Turkish) has become a runaway bestseller in Turkey over the past
couple months. A thriller in the style of Tom Clancy, the novel (by
Turkish authors Turna and Orkun Uçar) has been attacked for its
alleged anti-American elements and conspiracy theorizing. The plot
describes how a flare-up between Turkish and American troops in
northern Iraq leads to an out-and-out war, resulting in the American
bombing of Istanbul and Ankara and a Turkish detonation of a nuclear
bomb in Washington in response.

Is such a war possible? And is there any precedent for U.S.-Turkish
hostilities? Very few would wager money on the former scenario. It is
far more likely that any future disaster in Istanbul, at least, would
be caused by an earthquake or accident in the congested Bosporus. But
Burak Turna does believe there is an example of the latter. “We
foresaw that American policy is turning against Turkey, which would
lead to a clash between sides,” he told me recently. “Such an event
occurred after we started to write the book – in Sulaymaniyah
[northern Iraq], where U.S. soldiers captured 11 Turkish soldiers. If
we had resisted, a war would have broken out.”

The event of which Turna speaks caused indignation across Turkey. On
July 4, 2003, around 100 U.S. soldiers “stormed the barracks,”
arresting 11 Turkish soldiers who were allegedly planning to
assassinate the Kurdish governor of Kirkuk. Turks were outraged not
only by this aggression from a longtime ally, but also because the
Americans had actually handcuffed the soldiers and put bags over
their heads “as if they were al-Qaeda terrorists.” This incident had
been preceded by a similar (but hushed-up) one on April 22, which saw
the U.S. arrest Turkish soldiers in civilian clothes who were
escorting an arms shipment into northern Iraq. Such ugly events go a
long way toward explaining why such distrust has arisen.

Could tranquil, age-old Istanbul come under American bombardment?

Fiction and Fact

According to the VOA, Metal Storm has “an outrageous plot that
somehow strikes a responsive chord [among Turks]” and reveals “a
startling shift of opinion.” Yet there is a lot of presupposition
latent behind words like “outrageous,” “somehow,” and “startling.”
It’s strange that the U.S. government’s media wing can express
surprise here, since after all the same article mentions that the
Turkish people have been adamantly opposed to the Iraq war since the
beginning – some on grounds of religion, others out of stability
fears, others out of mistrust of American designs on the region.

But Metal Storm can hardly be blamed for creating “anti-Americanism”
among the Turks. Rather, the fact that the book is so popular should
be seen as more of a rare barometer of not only public opinion but
also imagination. After all, if people didn’t love high-firepower,
cloak-and-dagger geopolitical thrillers, how could authors from Ian
Fleming to John Le Carré to Tom Clancy have made industries out of
their works? No one thinks twice when the enemies in such a book (the
Western “good guys” are always a given) happen to be dastardly
Soviets or North Koreans, Arabs or Cubans or whoever. And, if the
reader also finds works in which their nation is an actor more
relevant, why shouldn’t the Turkish imagination be struck by a book
which features their own country? And is it not rather chauvinistic,
anyway, to assume that we in the West can enjoy a work of fiction for
what it is, whereas other lesser peoples run the risk of taking it
for gospel truth? A Turkish commentator (who also did not discern
much anti-Americanism in the book’s popularity) pointed out that “any
human wanting to escape from the issues of every day life can easily
do so by reading [Metal Storm]. Within that same logic the humans
that read the Da Vinci Code were not against the Catholic Church but
they read it because it had an intriguing theme.”

Most recent Western articles about Metal Storm have centered simply
on the fact that it has sold over 150,000 copies – but not bothered
to get the feedback of anyone who actually read it. This leads to
sweeping generalizations and deceptive juxtapositions. For example,
much has been made of a recent BBC poll that “indicates Turkey is now
the most anti-American nation on earth,” with 82 percent allegedly
hating America. But this is laughable. There are plenty of other
nations more “anti-American” than Turkey. And if one looks at the
original article, it seems the only specific question that the BBC
asked was whether or not the reelection of George W. Bush had made
the world a more dangerous place. A full 21 out of the 24 countries
surveyed agreed with this statement; only a few percentage points
after Turkey were citizens from a couple other key (and non-Muslim)
U.S. allies, Argentina and Brazil. Of course, none of these facts
have stopped neocon mouthpieces like FrontPageMag from tarring Turkey
as “a new al-Qaeda state.” Very helpful.

Indeed, my frequent trips to the country over the past six years have
shown me that in the vast majority of cases, any American, so long as
they act sensibly and respectfully, will be treated well by most
Turks. And a recent AP report conceded as much: “while criticism of
Bush and U.S. policy has skyrocketed, there is little hostility
toward Americans on the streets.”

Isolating the Real Enemy

For the authors of Metal Storm, in fact, part of the task was to
point out the real enemy from the American side. “Our book reveals,”
says Turna, “that Turkey should not be anti-American, but [rather]
harshly criticize Bush and his neocon politics.”

That said, it is truly remarkable (but not very surprising) that the
ever aware U.S. government is trying to bury the problem, while also
attacking the phenomenon of Metal Storm. Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice, meeting recently with Turkish leaders, “raised
concerns about the negative image of the United States in Turkey.”
According to Burak Turna, “U.S. officials made comments on the book
to [the Turkish] media … some U.S. diplomats are very angry with us.”
And an unnamed U.S. diplomat in Turkey cited by the CSM in
mid-February stated in exasperation that “we’re really pulling our
hair out trying to figure how to deal with this.”

Really, it’s not so difficult, as William S. Lind subsequently
pointed out. Rice and the diplomats should have considered which
Americans and which policies in particular are responsible for
Turkish unease. But the neocons have never been very interested in
introspection.

That’s the unbelievable scenario described in Metal Storm

The Neocons Step Up Anti-Turkish Aggression

At the same time, the neocon-driven Bush administration is also
pushing the Turkish government to grant it unpopular military
concessions – something that can only increase Turkish hostility
toward the U.S. But what else could be expected of them? Now the
neocons are clamping down and tightening the screws. A recent AEI
event called “Can the U.S.-Turkish Relationship be Repaired?” was
attended by in-house notables such as Richard Perle and Robert
Pollock, “who wrote the Wall Street Journal op-ed painting Turkey as
rapidly turning into a hotbed of vicious anti-American attitudes,” as
well as Middle East Forum editor (and former Office of Special Plans
disinformation specialist) Michael Rubin, “who recently questioned
[the ruling Turkish party] AKP’s links to Islamic capital.” A partial
report of the proceedings shows that these overblown demagogues were
quite vicious themselves in attacking the Turks from all sides –
something which would have been inconceivable until the Iraq war.

Why all the intimidation? The AEI event seems to have been backup for
the Bush administration’s “proposal to use the southern air base of
Incirlik as a cargo hub for U.S. forces operating in the region.”
Now, the U.S. has been using Incirlik, near the southern city of
Adana, for a long time already, but the current proposal would see it
become a vital center for the U.S. war effort in Iraq – something the
Turks vetoed in a March 1, 2003 parliamentary vote that was
incidentally a rare victory for democracy. But the decision also
caused immense displeasure among the neocons, who had counted on
Turkey to be faithful as ever and expedite the war.

Any decision to increase American use of the air base will be an
unpopular one in Turkey, but probably not a devastating one for
relations. However, there is now a real risk that the administration
might go all the way in alienating the Turks, whether or not an
“agreement” is reached. Turkey’s NTV television is cited as reporting

“[T]he government might officially reply to Washington over the
Incirlik proposal in the coming weeks, before the 90th anniversary of
an alleged Armenian genocide at the hands of the late Ottoman Empire
arrives on April 24.

“A powerful Armenian lobby in the U.S. Congress is expected to push
for a resolution recognizing the alleged genocide as part of an
anniversary campaign. U.S. administrations have opposed such attempts
in Congress in the past but observers say this year the George W.
Bush administration may not be as willing to prevent such a move as
it was in the past, given the growing mistrust of the Turkish
government.”

The Turks Ask: What Is the U.S. Really Up To?

While I guess we can learn something from “focus groups” held in
American-style bagel factories and the Istanbul Ritz-Carlton, it’s
not the way I chose to do it on this month’s visit to Istanbul. I was
not particularly interested in dismissing the Turks as adherents of
“mad conspiracy theories” or in making haughty and sweeping
news-speak statements like “the real battle for Turkey is the battle
for Turkish hearts and minds.” Rather than interview Turkey’s
“pro-Western” elite, the kind of people whose voices are already
heard in the media anyway, I sought out young Turks and Kurds who are
far from influential but who have plenty of education and experience
working with and for Westerners. People some of whom come from the
“fundamentalist” places that the elite look down upon with fear and
disdain, but who also understand well the differing mindsets of
everyone from America to Germany to Japan.

According to them, the growing wariness of America owes specifically
to Turkish observance of the American war machine in action. “People
in Turkey are starting to talk about things in a new way,” says
Enver, a 24-year-old Turkish tour operator from the Aegean coastal
city of Izmir. “If they [the U.S.] attacked Afghanistan, and then
Iraq, and now are talking about Syria or Iran, who will be next?”

Kamer, a 32-year-old hotel manager and Kurdish Turk from the
southeastern town of Mardin, nods in agreement. “Now, everything is
changing. Even the people who used to say ‘yeah, America!’ no longer
trust them. There is a feeling that the Americans screwed up big time
in Iraq – so, many people are laughing at them, but they are also a
little afraid of what they will do next.”

Their view is shared by another Kurd originally from the Batman area,
Apo, who now works as a bartender in a pub popular with American,
Australian, and British tourists. “I’ve been in 23 countries, and met
people from many more,” he says. “The most common criticism of the
U.S. is not against the [American] people but against the war
policies of George Bush. I have friends and family in America, and I
would like to visit there someday. So we Turks are not against
America – but after seeing these wars against Muslim countries
continue to unfold, we have for the first time become a bit
mistrustful: what is Bush really up to? Is it all about Middle
Eastern oil and control of Central Asia, like the book [Metal Storm]
says? And what country will be next?”

A colleague of his, Fatih, adds that some Turks fear there is a
religious dimension to this as well. “We can see clearly who supports
Bush’s wars: Israel and the Christian fundamentalists in America.
These people are like crusaders. They want to make the whole world
like them. It is true, Turkey is a secular Muslim state, but it is a
Muslim state [nonetheless], and religious people here are afraid that
they would like to ‘convert’ us someday.”

The Self-Sufficiency Argument and the EU Backlash

It is interesting that many of these views are shared by the Turkish
“elite.” The Australian article, for example, cites young Turks who
point out America’s support for Israel as a prime factor behind
tensions in the region. And the author cites a young academic who
says, “[W]e’re worried about the way America is attacking countries
in the region and we might be on the list.”

On a second front, the complex issue of potential EU membership,
Turks are again leery. A young airline executive cited denounces the
EU countries as “liars and hypocrites” bent on denying Turkey EU
membership through subterfuge and deception. “Of course they are
racist and prejudiced against us. We don’t need Europe.”

I have noticed these attitude growing for the past couple years, as
Turkish-EU negotiations have intensified and Turkish exasperation
with the union has grown. As the European states wound Turkish pride
by threatening to keep them out, Turks are beginning to invoke the
argument for self-sufficiency and national pride. Turkey is a major
textiles and agricultural exporter; has developed industries in areas
such as chemicals, pharmaceuticals, and automobiles; and boasts a
growing tourism industry as well. As for mineral resources, the
country possesses the world’s largest boron reserves (64 percent), as
well as 40 percent of the world’s marble and large quantities of
other natural resources, including magnesites, coal, chromite, and
copper. Urban Turkey offers shopping malls, airports, hotels, and
convention centers as modern as anywhere in the world. Don’t these
things count for anything, Turks ask?

Says Enver, “Turkey has everything it needs to be one of the richest
countries in Europe. It doesn’t need the EU, though the politicians
keep saying that this is our only choice.”

Apo agrees. “Turkish people want to live well, but they have been
brainwashed by the media to believe that only the EU can help. Yet
now is coming a generation of young people, many from western Turkey,
who are not so sure. They have educated themselves about the issue.
They know what’s going on. They know what we can expect to gain from
the EU – but also what we can lose.”

A Future Superpower Role for Turkey?

Distaste with the EU’s prevarications and tricks, mistrust with
America’s incessant warmongering, and a new sense of self-confidence
could conceivably lead the Turks to seek a more active role in world
leadership. How might this play out? “My friend, there is too much
support for an all-Turkish alliance,” says Enver. He is referring to
a possible scenario long considered, which would see Turks create
some kind of union with their ethnic kin in Azerbaijan and the
Central Asian states. While such a possibility is popular, at least
among a certain percentage of the population, Kamer avers, “our
politicians are very pro-Europe, and want to keep the people down. So
they haven’t moved very strongly in this direction.”

It is in this context that Apo recounts the pan-Turkic dream of
Turgut Ozal. A towering figure in modern Turkish politics, Ozal
served as prime minister from 1983-1989, and thereafter became
president until his death in 1993 of a heart attack. Ozal was
enthusiastic about creating a Turkish sphere of influence, one that
would stretch “from the Adriatic to the Great Wall of China.”

With the fall of the Soviet Union, Turkey began energetically seeking
out new allies among its ethnic peers in Central Asia. In 2004,
former Indian Ambassador to Turkey and Azerbaijan K. Gajendra Singh
credited “the dynamic leadership” of Ozal for a plan that provided
training, loans, and investments into the billions of dollars for the
Central Asian republics after 1991. However, following Ozal’s death
in 1993, the pan-Turkic project was put on the back burner.
Subsequent governments showed less interest in ethnic projects than
in religious ones, and despite various resumptions of interest, a
pan-Turkic alliance never really got off the ground.

Until recently, the primary opposition to Turkish influence in
Central Asia has come from the Russians, who wished to retain their
influence over military and energy affairs. However, now that
increased American intransigence has driven the two ancient enemies
closer together than ever before, things are changing. And America’s
frenetic democracy-building adventures in Central Asia are also
proving a headache for the Turkish government, as it tries to decide
how to react to events such as the destructive coup in Kyrgyzstan,
which has revealed a vacuum of power that perhaps neither Russia nor
America can adequately fill. Is it possible that Turkey could
exercise some influence, here and in the other republics America is
seeking to revolutionize?

It is clear that adventures such as Kyrgyzstan reveal the U.S. to be
just as obsessed with limiting the influence of Russia and China as
it is with controlling energy sources and pipeline routes. However,
it has shown relatively little awareness of other unifying regional
factors, most importantly the shared Turkic background of the Central
Asian states, which, if augmented by Azerbaijan and Turkey, could
make up one of the largest and richest ethnic blocs in the world. Is
it just possible that continuing neocon intransigence could drive
Turkey to assert itself more forcefully, both as a leader of allies
and in its budding friendship with ancient antagonist Russia?

This is a very large and complex subject, one well beyond the scope
of the present article. But it is worth speculating for a moment over
what the “map” could look like if, after a few years, oafish neocon
belligerence backfires and Russia and China are joined by the Turkic
bloc in an alliance fundamentally hostile to American interests. To
some, it might sound as ridiculous as the plot of Metal Storm. But
then again, none of the U.S. government’s adventures in this part of
the world have materialized quite as the “experts” expected. No
doubt, the world has more surprises in store for them yet.

Inevitably… the Sequels

So what happens next? The road ahead is clear for the authors of
Metal Storm, at least. In true American style, they are franchising
their product. While 37-year-old co-author Orkun Uçar forges ahead on
Metal Storm 2, 30-year-old Turna is working on Metal Storm 3, as well
as another novel on a similar theme, World War 3. In the latter work,
he tells me, the scenario of a future pan-Turkic alliance figures
strongly in the plot. It sounds like it will be another rousing
bestseller.

What is most remarkable is the degree to which the authors’ viewpoint
coincides with that of the public at large. Turna echoes the
mentality of Turks I and others have spoken to recently when he
declares that

“Turkey can be and should be a superpower in the world. We have all
the resources and historical background for that. The EU would
benefit from us but there is little benefit we can take from them.
Turkey is a must for Europe’s future, if they want to stay as one,
but they are not a must for us.”

As every reader of futuristic, high-velocity fiction knows, only time
will tell.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

California Courier Online, March 31, 2005

California Courier Online, March 31, 2005

1 – Commentary
Turks Are Biggest Boosters of
90th Anniversary Commemoration
By Harut Sassounian
California Courier Publisher
2 – Jews in Armenia Asks Worldwide
Jewry to Recognize 1915 Genocide
3 – Amirian is Among
30 Semi-Finalists
In L.A. County
4 – Dr. Kalayjian’s Team Returns
From Treating Tsunami Victims
5 – Sacramento Ceremony Honors
AFI Chair Maria Mehranian
6 – UC Berkeley Armenian Studies Program,
AGBU Co-host April 9 Genocide Symposium

*************************************************************************
1 – Commentary

Turks Are Biggest Boosters of
90th Anniversary Commemoration
By Harut Sassounian
Publisher, The California Courier

Several months ago, when Armenians started planning commemorative
activities for the 90th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, little did
they know that the biggest boost for their efforts would come from the
Turks themselves!
Long before the upcoming observances on April 24, Turkish journalists
started publishing articles with ominous headlines such as, “The
Approaching Armenian Tsunami” or “The Anniversary of the Armenian Genocide
Would Be a Big Nightmare for Turkey.” Knowing full well the extent of their
guilt and the fact that no amount of denial had succeeded in covering up
the crimes committed in 1915, the Turkish leaders thought it wise to make a
pre-emptive strike in order to undermine the planned Armenian commemorative
activities.
The Turks did not realize that their actions were effectively helping to
publicize the Armenian Genocide to millions of their own citizens, many of
whom know little or nothing about these crimes, and to millions of other
people around the world.
The Turkish government enthusiastically embarked on forming so-called
“expert committees” and allocated huge sums of money for their revisionist
activities. As a result, before the Armenians organized a single
commemorative event, the Turks had already made the entire world aware that
this year was the 90th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide.
Here are a few examples of recent Turkish contributions to the
commemoration of the Armenian Genocide:
* Prof. Justin McCarthy of the University of Louisville was invited
toTurkey last week to deliver a series of lectures on the Armenian Genocide
and meet with the local media. Zaman newspaper reported that he spoke about
“The Reality of the Armenian Genocide,” at a conference held in the Turkish
Parliament. Prof. McCarthy, a revisionist historian who is well known to
his Turkish masters and unknown to everyone else, told the Turks that his
recent book on this issue “should be thrown from the air by plane.” When
the Turks
realize that they have been wasting their money on this charlatan, they may
decide to dump him along with his book.
* The Assembly of Turkish American Associations (ATAA), with the assistance
of the handsomely compensated Livingston Group lobbying firm, organized a
“Capitol Forum” on the Armenian Genocide, at the Rayburn Building of the
House of Representatives, on March 22. The guest speaker was Prof. Turkkaya
Ataov, another charlatan whom I confronted at the United Nations in Geneva
some 20 years ago. The Turkish Forum was trying to imitate the Armenian
Genocide commemorations organized by Armenians in April of every year in
the same congressional building. The logical outcome of this Turkish event
was the propagation of the Armenian Genocide in Washington without any
effort or expense from Armenians.
* Prof. Yusuf Halajoglu, the President of the Turkish Historical Society,
suggested during a university lecture that Turkey demand the re-trial of
Soghomon Tehlirian who was set free by a German court in 1921, after
assassinating Talaat Pasha, the mastermind of the Armenian Genocide.
General Kilinc Tuncer, the Secretary of Turkey’s powerful National Security
Council, who was present at the lecture, put an immediate stop to this
counter-productive idea by pointing out that during the original trial, the
Ottoman government’s crimes came under scrutiny, rather than Tehlirian’s
act. He cautioned that re-opening the court case would end up putting
Turkey
on trial!
* After the world-renowned Turkish novelist Orhan Pamuk told a foreign
journalist that Turks had killed one million Armenians in 1915, scenes
reminiscent of the Nazi era were repeated on Turkish streets last Sunday.
Pamuk’s books were collected and burned in a public ceremony, attended by
Turkish parliamentarians. No wonder Hitler’s book is a best-seller in
Turkey these days. Such Nazi tactics, reported by the Turkish Daily News,
helped further publicize the fact that a prominent Turkish writer had
acknowledged
the Armenian Genocide. It is ironic that while the Turks are trying to
convince the Europeans that they are ready to join the EU, they are
shooting themselves in the foot, by threatening a prominent writer and
burning his
books!
It is expected that in the coming weeks, the Turks would continue doing
their share in publicizing the Armenian Genocide. Hurriyet reported about
Turkish plans to hold a protest in front of the White House on April 24.
Armenians should not only welcome such an initiative, but also do
everything possible to assist the Turks to ensure such a gathering takes
place. Just imagine the worldwide media coverage generated by the
confrontation between Turks and Armenians in front of the White House on
April 24.
Armenians should be grateful for all the Turkish endeavors in the
globalization of the 90th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide.
**************************************************************************
2 – Jews in Armenia Asks Worldwide
Jewry to Recognize 1915 Genocide
YEREVAN (Armenpress) – The Jewish community of Armenia called Tuesday on
all Jewish organizations worldwide urging them to recognize the Armenian
genocide.
A statement by the community says the government of the Ottoman Turkey
committed a horrible crime by exterminating 1.5 million of Armenians who
were its citizens. It says this fact was silenced for decades and was not
condemned by the international community.
The Holocaust would have never taken place had the peoples of the world
condemned the Armenian genocide at that time, as they have now risen to
fight the terrorism,” the statement says.
It also says governments should put aside their political or economic
interests and condemn the Armenian genocide. It says the recognition of the
Armenian genocide will not be aimed against the Turkish people and quite
the contrary, it will do it a credit in the eyes of the civilized humanity,
as was the case with Germany, when its government recognized the fact of
elimination of 6 million Jews during World War II.
“On the eve of the 90th anniversary of this horrible crime we call on those
who emphasize the acknowledgment of the historical truth and ask them to
pay tribute to the memory of the innocent
victims,” the statement says.
*****************************************************************
3 – Amirian is Among
30 Semi-Finalists
In L.A. County
LOS ANGELES – Dro Amirian, 17, of La Crescenta, Calif., was named one of
the 30 semi-finalists in the 2005 Spotlight Awards Visual Arts Competition
of the Music Center of Los Angeles County. The 30 semi-finalists were
selected from nearly 5,000 high school student artists in photography and
two-dimensional design.
Amirian is a student at Clark Magnet High School in the Glendale Unified
School District. He participated in the 2-Dimensional Design category.
All the semifinalists will have their works of art displayed at the Bobbie
Greefield Gallery in Bergamot Station in Santa Monia.
As part of the Spotlight Award program, semifinalists attend master classes
with nationally and internationally recognized artists and attend private
museum tours in the Southland.
The submissions were reviewed by leading artists and arts professionals. In
making their selections, the judges considered the technical expertise
involved in each work including its craft and visual quality.
The winners will receive their trophies during a sold-out evening at the
Dorothy Chandler Pavilion on April 16.
**************************************************************************
4 – Dr. Kalayjian’s Team Returns
From Treating Tsunami Victims
BATTICALOA, SRI LANKA – Mental Health Outreach Project (MHOP), a disaster
relief organization of Association for Disaster & Mass Trauma Studies,
headed by Adjunct Professor of Psychology at Fordham University, Dr. Anie
Kalayjian, organized teams of professional volunteers to go to Sri Lanka to
deliver psychological first aid, training, and counseling to the thousands
impacted by the tsunami.
The first team has just returned from its mission after working with
hundreds of survivors in camps, refugee settlements, schools, and colleges.
Hosted by the UNITED SIKHS, a worldwide humanitarian organization, MHOP has
collaborated with the local Sri Lankan authorities and psychosocial workers
to provide ongoing psychological support to the thousands of people
affected by the disaster.
Members of the clinical team were Dr. Kalayjian, team coordinator &
Director, Dr. Kuriansky of Columbia University, Nancy Moore, Fordham
University, and Hishara Godanka, University of Texas. Other team members
were Drs. Christina Hoven and Donald Mendall, Columbia University and
Lousine Shamamian, a documentarian.
The second team of the MHOP met with the first team in Colombo, before
their departure to Batticaloa. They received training, orientation, and
assignment from Dr. Kalayjian. Team three left on March 8.
Those interested in sending funding or getting involved as a volunteer may
contact Dr. Kalayjian at [email protected], WWWMeaningfulworld.com, or
(201)941-2266.
**************************************************************************
5 – Sacramento Ceremony Honors
AFI Chair Maria Mehranian
GLENDALE – Maria Mehranian, Chair of Armenia Fund Inc., was named the Woman
of the Year for the 44th California State District by Assemblymember Carol
Liu (D-Pasadena) during a special ceremony at the State Assembly chambers
in Sacramento.
Chosen by the Legislative Women’s Caucus, Mehranian was one of 80 women
honored for making significant contributions to their respective
communities. “Maria is a role-model for all women, both for her business
leadership and her extraordinary contributions to the Armenian and La
Cañada Flintridge communities,” Liu said in a prepared statement.
Partnering with the California Museum for History, Women and Arts,
California’s First Lady, Maria Shriver, and the State Assembly unveiled an
exhibit entitled Serving California: 2005 Woman of the Year Honorees.
“Every one of these women and everything they do makes our state a better
place to live,” said Shriver in a prepared statement. The exhibit, on
display through April 30, features pictures and biographies of the women
honored by the Legislature.
Mehranian is managing partner at Cordoba Corporation, an international
planning and development company based in Los Angeles. In addition to
Armenia Fund, Mehranian’s community involvement includes chairing the La
Cañada Flintridge Planning Commission. In 2004 Armenia Fund, Inc., with its
affiliates around the world, raised over $11.5 million for infrastructure
development and humanitarian aid projects in Armenia and Nagorno Karabagh.
For more information on Armenia Fund, Inc., visit or
call 818.243.6222.
**************************************************************************
6 – UC Berkeley Armenian Studies Program,
AGBU Co-host April 9 Genocide Symposium
SAN FRANCISCO – On April 9, from 2 pm to 6 p.m., five renowned scholars
from around the United States will participate in a panel on the Armenian
Genocide at the UC Berkeley at 125 Dwinelle
Hall. Co-sponsored by the UC Berkeley Armenian Studies Program and AGBU
Silicon Valley, the Symposium will focus on “The Past as Present:
Representations and Consequences of the Armenian Genocide” and will feature
Professor Margaret Anderson (UC Berkeley), Professor Stephan Astourian (UC
Berkeley), Professor Levon Marashlian (Glendale Community College),
Professor Marc Nichanian (Wesleyan University), and Jack Weinstein
(Director, Facing History and Ourselves).
The workshop will focus on the contemporary issues stemming from the
genocide rather than the genocide itself, as summed up by its title,
“Representations and Consequences of the Armenian Genocide.” The speakers
will discuss the memoirs dealing with the catastrophe and provide an
assessment of the historiography of that event. They will talk about what
can be learned from Holocaust studies and the denial of the genocide, and
how the Armenian diaspora has formed and evolved as a result of its
occurrence. Finally, the workshop will talk about the necessity of genocide
education in modern-day societies.
Established in 1995 by the William Saroyan and Krouzian Endowments, the
Armenian Studies Program initially supported a visiting professorship in
Contemporary Armenian Studies. In 2002, Dr. Astourian was appointed as
Executive Director of the ASP and Assistant Adjunct Professor in History at
UC Berkeley. Currently, a $2M fundraising campaign is underway to raise the
endowment to $3M, enabling Dr. Astourian to increase the number of courses
offered and expand the scope of the ASP within the Slavic-Eurasian
institute at UC Berkeley.
At the completion of the campaign, the Armenian Studies Program at Berkeley
will offer three-level language courses, one one-semester course with
visiting professor in such fields as anthropology and art history, and
conferences and lectures throughout the year. In reaching this $3-million
goal, the ASP aims to become the leading Contemporary Armenian Studies
Program in the United States, producing strong professional and academic
leaders in the community and bringing to the forefront the significance of
modern Armenian history and politics.
***************************************************************************
**************************************************************************
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From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

www.armeniafund.org

Georgia swaps bases for apartments

Agency WPS
DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
March 28, 2005, Monday

GEORGIA SWAPS BASES FOR APARTMENTS

SOURCE: Kommersant, March 24, 2005, p. 10

by Vladimir Novikov

Russian-Georgian consultations on the level of foreign ministries
with regard to withdrawal of Russian military bases from Batumi and
Akhalkalaki began in Moscow on March 24. The day before Georgia’s
Foreign Minister Salome Zourabichvili stated that incidents similar
to the incident, which happened on the Georgian-Abkhazian
administrative border, might frustrate the process of negotiations.

Mrs. Zourabichvili implied the incident which occurred in the village
of Ganmukhuri (Georgia) in the zone of Georgian-Abkhazian conflict
last Tuesday. A large group of the Russian peacekeepers entered the
village. They surrounded the building in which a unit of the Georgian
MVD’s special forces had settled, and demanded them to surrender
their weapons. They were given a refusal. UN military mediators
interfered in the situation. As a result of the talks between Russian
peacekeepers with Gigi Ugulava, governor of the Samegrelo district,
the tension was relieved.

According to Russian peacekeepers, conducting an exercise in their
responsibility area they accidentally faced a unit of the Georgian
MVD’s special forces and decided to verify the legality of its stay
there. Georgia’s Foreign Minister Vano Merabichvili stressed that
taking a Spetsnaz into the village of Ganmukhuri at request of the
local Georgians was a forced measure, because the Abkhazian police
had held a cleanup there, as a result of which locals were injured.

This incident may affect the process of talks on the problem, which
doesn’t directly concern the Georgian-Abkhazian conflict. Discussed
at the consultations are the terms and conditions of withdrawing the
Russian military bases; responsible for the Russian side is Igor
Savolsky, an ambassador on special errands, while Deputy Foreign
Minister of Georgia Merab Antadze is head of the Georgian delegation.

Tbilisi has taken the following stand: Georgia is ready to accept
withdrawal of the Russian forces within 4 years (by January 1, 2009),
with the stipulation that the troops are present “in the withdrawal
mode” during this entire period, i.e. no exercises are to be held and
no new military hardware is introduced, against the background of
personnel cutbacks. Georgia is also ready to present Russian officers
apartments in downtown Tbilisi, which they would be able to sell with
profit before their leave to Russia; this is the maximal compensation
Georgia can offer.

Besides, Georgia is ready to find $10-15 million (it hopes to get
this money from international donors) to transport the personnel and
the military equipment to Russia. Georgia’s Foreign Minister Salome
Zourabichvili thinks the figure of $300-350 million announced by
Moscow is unreal. However, most important in the position of Moscow
is not the demand for money, but the circumstance that Russia flatly
refuses to take the troops “into the withdrawal mode.” Even if Moscow
agrees to the four-year period, the Defense Ministry insists that the
bases be functioning in the common mode within this period.

Georgian experts fear that Moscow will procrastinate again and when
the timeframe elapses it would refer to resistance of locals – as is
now happening in Transnistria and might occur in Samtskhe-Dzhavakheti
(of south Georgia where a base is stationed) populated by Armenians.

Translated by Andrei Ryabochkin

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress