Russia sees no point in UN considering the Karabakh problem

Russia sees no point in UN considering the Karabakh problem – ministry

ITAR-TASS news agency
1 Nov 04

MOSCOW

The initiative to consider, in parallel with the OSCE, the issue of a
Nagornyy Karabakh settlement at a session of the UN General Assembly
“can hardly have a favourable effect on the talks process”.

This was stated today in the Russian Foreign Ministry in a comment on
Russia’s position on the issue of including in the session’s agenda
the item “the situation in the occupied territories of Azerbaijan”.

“Russia abstained during the voting, just like other co-chairmen of
the OSCE Minsk Group,” it was noted on Smolenskaya Ploshchad [Square,
location of Foreign Ministry]. “The results of the voting show that a
similar position is adhered to by the majority of the members of the
world community.”

“Russia is interested in a most rapid resolution of the Nagornyy
Karabakh problem and is promoting this in every way, be it on a
bilateral basis or as co-chairman of the OSCE Minsk Group,” it was
stressed in the Russian Foreign Ministry.

“The format of this group makes it possible to resolve any problems
connected with the conflict and to ensure progress in achieving
peace,” the ministry is convinced.

According to the Foreign Ministry, “apart from that, the recent
meeting between the presidents of Azerbaijan and Armenia established
prospects for resuming talks to find a mutually acceptable solution”.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

NKR FM Says Baku’s Move to Debate Karabakh in UN Not Genuine

NKR FM SAYS BAKU’S MOVE TO DEBATE KARABAKH IN UN NOT GENUINE

Mediamax news agency
2 Nov 04

YEREVAN

The foreign minister of the Nagornyy Karabakh Republic (NKR), Ashot
Gulyan, said in Stepanakert today that Azerbaijan’s initiative to
discuss “The status of occupied territories in Azerbaijan” at the UN
General Assembly “is fully within the Azerbaijani policy which is
aimed at diverting the attention of the international community from
the core of the Karabakh problem by means of propagandistic tricks”.

Ashot Gulyan said that “Azerbaijan knows perfectly well that these
territories are under the control of the Karabakh forces, and Armenia
has nothing to do with them”, Mediamax’s correspondent reports from
Stepanakert.

(Passage omitted: Azerbaijan has brought many accusations against
Karabakh for many years)

The NKR foreign minister confirmed Nagornyy Karabakh’s readiness to
discuss with Azerbaijan any complex issues, including those regarding
the territories.

At the same time, he pointed out that “Baku has always avoided such
discussions and is trying to wrest from the whole package only those
issues which meet its own interests to form an impression that it is
extremely interested in promoting the settlement process”.

Ashot Gulyan stressed that the shortest way to settle the conflict was
the resumption of the negotiating process in the full format with the
participation of Nagornyy Karabakh as a full party to the talks.

Synopsys Acquires Assets of LEDA Design

PR Newswire (press release)
Nov. 2, 2004

Synopsys Acquires Assets of LEDA Design

Experienced IP Engineers to Help Meet Demand for Synopsys’ DesignWare

MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif., Nov. 2 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ — Synopsys, Inc.
(Nasdaq: SNPS), the world leader in semiconductor design software,
today announced that it has acquired certain assets and hired the
engineering team of LEDA Design, a developer of mixed-signal
intellectual property (IP). LEDA Design has a team of more than 80
experienced digital and mixed-signal IP design engineers and support
personnel located in Yerevan, Armenia who will join the Synopsys
DesignWare(R) IP engineering team. These talented engineers have a
track record of successfully developing and delivering IP and will
help Synopsys meet increasing customer demand for Synopsys’ portfolio
of DesignWare IP. The LEDA Design team has worked together for more
than four years developing, marketing and selling silicon-verified
analog, digital and mixed-signal IP, as well as digital core and IO
libraries. The terms of the transaction are not being disclosed.
“Synopsys is committed to providing its customers with the most
comprehensive standards-based IP portfolio,” said John Chilton, senior
vice president and general manager of the Solutions Group at
Synopsys. “The addition of the LEDA Design team in Armenia to our
worldwide engineering team extends our expertise in IP and enables us
to address increasing customer demand.” Synopsys DesignWare IP is the
leading standards-based IP portfolio in the world. The DesignWare
portfolio includes a complete family of digital and mixed-signal IP
for widely used industry standard protocols, such as Universal Serial
Bus (USB) and PCI Express(TM).

Forward-Looking Statements

This press release contains forward-looking statements within the
meaning of the safe harbor provisions of Section 21E of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, including statements regarding the expected
benefits of the acquisition. These statements are based on Synopsys’
current expectations and beliefs. Actual results could differ
materially from the results implied by these statements as a result of
unforeseen difficulties in integrating LEDA Design’s engineering team
into Synopsys’ DesignWare(R) IP engineering team, as well as the
factors described in the section of Synopsys’ Quarterly Report on Form
10-Q for the fiscal quarter ended July 31, 2004 filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission entitled “Factors That May Affect
Future Results.”

About Synopsys

Synopsys, Inc. is the world leader in electronic design automation
(EDA) software for semiconductor design. The company delivers
technology-leading semiconductor design and verification platforms and
IC manufacturing software products to the global electronics market,
enabling the development and production of complex systems-on-chips
(SoCs). Synopsys also provides intellectual property and design
services to simplify the design process and accelerate time-to-market
for its customers. Synopsys is headquartered in Mountain View,
California and has offices in more than 60 locations throughout North
America, Europe, Japan and Asia. Visit Synopsys online at
.

NOTE: Synopsys and DesignWare are registered trademarks of
Synopsys, Inc. All other trademarks or registered trademarks
mentioned in this release are the intellectual property of their
respective owners.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.synopsys.com/

Time for a Change

Transitions on Line, Czechia
Nov. 1, 2004

Time for a Change

by TOL
1 November 2004

George Bush talks of the `transformational power of liberty.’ The
post-communist world needs a U.S. leader who would help liberty more.

Everywhere you go in our region there is an unprecedented interest in
the U.S. elections. Some commentators find the interest out of
proportion, arguing that the two presidential candidates’ foreign
policies do not differ vastly.

Their surprise is bizarre and their interpretation of the candidates’
foreign-policy differences probably too narrow. What would be more
amazing is if the world were not so interested. After all, the key
themes of the Bush presidency has been a global `war on terror’ and an
invasion underpinned by a belief in the `transformational power of
liberty’ – and if anyone over the past 15 years has been testing the
`transformational power of liberty’ it is the post-communist world.
Inevitable, then, that these elections are being viewed as crucial. And
for many, the candidates’ utterly different personalities and
approaches make not just for compelling viewing, but ultimately also
for different policies.

Since, in our own way, we monitor the strength and weakness of liberty
in 28 countries, we feel it worth taking this opportunity to consider
the approach and the man best suited to meet our hopes. Those hopes are
for the promotion of democracy, better governance, and accountability,
and for greater security.

Our region, of course, barely featured in the campaign. But in most
other respects, we are making a judgment in the same way as the
American people, based on the candidates’ personalities, approaches,
styles, credibility, and records. And while Bush, as president, has a
bigger record, the senator too has an interesting and important record.

BUSH’S RECORD

John Kerry would of course come to the presidency without a history of
executive power. But that isn’t much of a handicap. Because George
Bush’s list of achievements or policy initiatives in our region is not
very long, and some of it is distinctly disturbing.

The shortness is partly understandable. There is the war in Iraq to
attend to. In Clinton’s time, it was the war in the Balkans that
consumed attention. The United States no longer bears the main
diplomatic burden in the Balkans. Instead, it is the International
Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia and the European Union that
are forcing the region to deal with the past. It is Europe that can
offer a vision of the future (EU membership), and, militarily,
increasingly it is Europe that is taking responsibility.

In the `wider Europe’ – Ukraine, Belarus, and Moldova – the Bush
administration has held the presidents of Ukraine and Belarus
accountable and promoted cooperation with NATO. Zbigniew Brzezinski, an
adviser to ex-President Jimmy Carter, recently wrote that Bush’s
National Security Council has `studiously ignored’ Ukraine `while
naïvely courting’ Russia’s President Putin. That may be true, but the
vision deficit in this area is primarily Europe’s fault. (If Turkey
deserves special status in the EU’s eyes, so does Ukraine.) There are
question marks, too, over the State Department’s approach to Moldova,
but, overall, in Eastern Europe there has been nothing especially
notable about American activity these past four years.

It is in Russia, the Caucasus, and Central Asia that Bush has left his
mark and, occasionally, earned some points. In Georgia, Washington was
right to put President Eduard Shevardnadze under intense pressure
before and after fraudulent elections that eventually led to the rose
revolution. But it did dismally in Azerbaijan after rigged elections
and feebly in Armenia after deeply flawed votes.

After 9/11, we had expected a major inflow of cash and attention to
Central Asia (thanks to its proximity to Afghanistan) and to the
Caucasus (as a near neighbor of Iraq’s). But, outside the military
sphere, neither the international community nor the United States has
dedicated much in the way of cash or manpower. That is not entirely
their fault (Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan do not even yet allow the
World Bank to help gather statistics), but they have failed
intellectually to grapple with Central Asia’s problems, to push hard
enough for more economic development, and to uphold moral standards. To
be fair, the State Department has made a few good noises in public,
warning that crackdowns on dissent are counterproductive. It has also
said it will withhold a token amount in aid to Uzbekistan ($18
million). But that barely compares with inviting Uzbek President Islam
Karimov to Washington, the centrality of military concerns, and the
lawless example set by Guantanamo Bay and Abu Ghraib in a region where
the term `war on terror’ has been ritually abused and overused. All of
that, and the United States’ new military interests in the region,
leave us skeptical that the United States is working hard enough behind
the scenes to promote a more open society.

Perhaps we should we give Bush more benefit of the doubt. But in the
alacrity of its recognition of Azerbaijan’s `elections,’ Washington
showed how readily national interests – in that case, oil and gas – can
supersede national values. It has also been slow to see and worry about
anti-democratic tendencies, most importantly in Russia. When Bush
looked into Putin’s eyes he famously found love. Over these four years,
when we have looked at his actions, we have found an
authoritarian-in-waiting. Our judgement looks more accurate by the
month. That also strengthens our view on the greatest successes of the
Bush-Putin relationship: Putin’s relatively easy acceptance of NATO
expansion to the Baltics and the war in Afghanistan. Where some saw
great successes for Western diplomacy, we saw a man making a virtue out
of necessity. Putin deserved respect and appreciation for being
realistic but not love and accolades.

In short, in these four years the United States has maintained a
relatively low-key diplomatic approach, quietly completed the landmark
effort to expand NATO to the Baltics, made questionable progress with
Russia, and set a disturbing moral example. More should be expected
from the world’s leader.

Americans should also expect more. Looked at more broadly, Bush’s
presidency has fueled anti-American sentiment, increased cynicism, and
offered people with bad governments and an ugly past – chiefly in the
Balkans–an unhelpful type of comfort: if, in Iraq, the leader of the
greatest power in history can behave cynically and unaccountably (as
they see it), we do not have too much to feel ashamed about after all.
America needs to produce an antidote to such sentiments.

THE NEXT PRESIDENT’S AGENDA

Inevitably, our region has been of secondary importance to Bush. That
will remain the case. But an agenda filled with important issues is
beginning to form for the next president. The European Commission’s
recommendation to invite Turkey to become a member adds weight to the
cross-party U.S. desire to promote the Black Sea as an area of greater
stability. If the United States is serious about that (and, with an oil
pipeline due to run from the Caspian to the Black Sea, it should be),
it will need a more stable Caucasus. With a determined president in
Georgia, it will need to pay more attention to Georgia’s frozen
conflicts, which could in turn focus attention on Nagorno-Karabakh and
Transdniester (Bruce Jackson, chairman of the U.S. NATO Committee, said
on 21 October, that Transdniester is likely to be higher up the next
administration’s agenda). To deal with these issues, the United States
(and Europe) will have to challenge Russia over its role in these
areas.

And if it is serious about security in Central Asia, having beheaded
the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan during the war in Afghanistan, the
United States will have to look deeper at the social and political
problems that fuel unrest and at the drug trade that finances
criminals.

If any of that is to happen, more engagement, a willingness to address
some long-standing problems, a willingness to challenge some difficult
leaders, and a more sophisticated understanding of the `war on terror’
are all required. And since the EU is critically important
diplomatically and economically in the Balkans, the `wider Europe,’ and
Russia, a good relationship with the EU would help.

In other words, a broader understanding is critical, style is a major
tool–not just some embellishment–and a good partnership with Europe
serves U.S. interests.

THE SENATOR’S RECORD

Both style and approach are a problem for Bush. In the days before the
U.S. elections, Bush received a `ringing endorsement’ that he could
have done without–from Putin. The Russian president’s principal
reasoning is that, if Bush is not re-elected, international terrorists
`will celebrate a victory over America and over the entire anti-terror
coalition.’ That endorsement, of course, does not mean the two fully
agree on how to fight the `war on terror’: they disagreed on Iraq and
on Putin’s twisted logic that the Beslan tragedy somehow meant there
must be no local elections in Russia. What it more probably means is
that a man who turned Grozny into Stalingrad and allows his soldiers to
do anything in Chechnya feels happier with Bush’s record, personality,
and attitudes toward him, terrorism, and Chechnya. Not a desirable
commendation.

Kerry offers a better approach and a more promising record. In his 1997
book The New War, Kerry emphasized non-state actors as a source of
instability. As a district attorney, he is credited with major
successes against the local mafia. As a senator, he played a key role
in uncovering the Iran-Contra affair and in efforts to clamp down on
money-laundering and drug-trafficking. All that makes it possible that
he will understand some of the atypical security threats in Central
Asia, Transdniester, and the region as a whole. And with a record of
interest in these issues, there is more chance that he will be
interested in this region. All this also happens to make it likelier
that he will hold some leaders more accountable.

Leaders around the region might, then, not like him much. Russia, for
example, might not take easily to Kerry’s commitment, in a presidential
debate, that he would press Russia to secure its nuclear weapons. But
he also said he would ditch a new nuclear program that Bush is
developing. He has other things to offer as well: a greater willingness
to cooperate, to sign up to international agreements, and – critically – to
work closely with Europe. He would, too, suffer from less of a
credibility gap than Bush. When recently asked in the United States
whether he would send troops to Iraq knowing what he knows now,
Poland’s President Aleksander Kwasniewski, so often cited by Bush in
this campaign, simply replied, `Next question.’ Not a ringing
endorsement from a president whose endorsement is coveted.

A more multilateral approach would, intrinsically, make the United
States more accountable. Whether Kerry would sign up to the
International Criminal Court is another matter. But even if he is
unwilling to hold U.S. troops accountable internationally, he would be
more likely than Bush to bring them to book domestically. As a senator
he criticized the U.S. military’s actions in Vietnam and government
agencies’ relationships with drug-traffickers and gun-runners. Compare
that with a president who brought us Guantanamo Bay and never punished
the man ultimately responsible for the disgrace at Abu Ghraib, Donald
Rumsfeld.

THE VISION THING

Of course, the region will be competing for attention with more
pressing concerns in the Middle East. We do not expect too much (partly
because both houses of Congress may be controlled by the Republicans).
But that is also why we place an emphasis on an appreciation of the
importance of a more multilateral approach, a more nuanced view of
security, and a record of interest in these issues. Moreover, look
again at the agenda we see for the next president and it is clear we
see a problem that needs to be recognized (and that is not too distant
from the problems the United States faces in Iraq): the transition away
from authoritarianism is in trouble and needs help.

Despite a father who was a Cold War head of the CIA, Bush has failed to
recognize that problem – or, at least, to do much to help. Whether Kerry
has or will notice it is open to question. But, as the internationalist
son of a Cold War diplomat who spent a childhood in Europe and a
senator with an interesting record, there is at least a fair chance he
will.

In any case, over the past four years, in this region Bush has given us
little reason to commend him and much to worry about. Kerry offers a
promising alternative and less reason to worry. If Americans opt for a
change, we will be glad.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Taking a clue from Agatha Christie

The Gazette (Montreal)
October 30, 2004 Saturday
Final Edition

Taking a clue from Agatha Christie: Writer inspires andrew Eames to
take a trip on Orient Express

by PAUL CARBRAY, The Gazette

The 8:55 to Baghdad

Andrew Eames, Bantam Press, 401 pages, $37.95

In 1928, Agatha Christie, recovering from a failed marriage and already
a well-known mystery writer, decided to take a holiday.

Not for her the usual English vacation in Blackpool, Torquay or the
south of France. Instead, Christie travelled on the Orient Express to
Istanbul, then on to Baghdad, where she set out on a tour of Iraq.

Certainly not the vacation spot that the usual traveller in 2004 would
choose. Even in comparatively benign 1928, when Iraq was under a
British mandate, it was hardly a hot destination.

Nonetheless, Christie, a 30something single mother, travelled there,
and her journey had a happy ending. It was in Iraq that Christie met
archeologist Max Mallowan on a dig at the ancient site of Ur. The two
married and lived, from all accounts, happily ever after.

Andrew Eames, an English journalist, was unaware of Christie’s journey
until he travelled to Aleppo, Syria, where he wanted to visit the souk,
the city’s ancient covered market.

“I’d heard that the longest roofed market in the world was still a
scene out of Aladdin or Indiana Jones, and I wanted to see it for
myself,” he says.

In Aleppo, Eames stayed at a well-known hotel run by an Armenian, Armen
Masloumian. While chatting, Masloumian tells Eames about the famous
people who have stayed in the hotel, including Lawrence of Arabia,
Theodore Roosevelt, Kemal Ataturk (the founder of modern Turkey) and,
of course, Agatha Christie.

Later, at dinner with the owner and his mother, Sally, “a cool
septuagenarian with an unwavering gaze,” Eames returns to the subject
of the hotel’s famous guests, and Christie is mentioned.

Probably researching her mystery novel Murder on the Orient Express,
Eames suggests.

“Mrs. Masloumian quickly set me right. ‘No,’ she said, ‘she used to
come here to do her shopping. And to get her hair done. From Nineveh.
With Max.’ ”

Nineveh? Max? Eames, unaware of Christie’s story, is intrigued and
begins to investigate. Soon, he is hooked by the idea of the author of
the quintessentially English drawing-room mystery travelling to the
exotic Middle East, and decides to trace the path of Christie’s
journey.

It’s late 2002 when Eames sets out on his trip, and war clouds are
gathering over Iraq. Nonetheless, he boards a train from the London
suburb of Sunningdale, “not because I knew for sure that Agatha had
travelled on it back in 1928, but because it got me to Victoria (train
station in London) in plenty of time for a train I knew for sure she
had.”

That train is the reconstituted – and considerably less glamorous –
Orient Express.

Eames soon learns that in 2002, “there are few journeys which are far
more complex and difficult than they were 75 years ago, but to travel
from London to Baghdad, by train, is one of them.”

But part of the romance of travel is not in arriving, but in getting
there, and that’s true of Eames’s book.

For much of the journey, through Italy, Slovenia, Croatia, Serbia and
on to Turkey, Eames meets some fascinating locals and delves lightly
into their history.

Wisely, Eames doesn’t overdo the Christie quest while on his travels,
but concentrates on the cities and countries along the way and the
people he meets.

It is only on arrival in Aleppo, where he revisits the steely-eyed Mrs.
Masloumian, that he picks up the Christie story again.

Then it’s on to Iraq, where he arrives at the border at the same time
as the United Nations weapons inspectors. He travels with a disparate
group on a bus tour, who provide comic fodder and speculations about
what would prompt seemingly ordinary people, many of them pensioners,
to travel to a country on the brink of war.

Surprisingly, Eames is welcomed by Iraqis and brings his Christie tale
to a close by visiting the archeological sites she and Mallowan visited
for several decades.

Albert Bazeyan: Opposition Will Become More Active Sooner or Later

ALBERT BAZEYAN “OPPOSITION WILL BECOME MORE ACTIVE SOONER OR LATER”

Azg
2 Nov 04

The opposition needs time and money for arranging its activities. Time
is needed for the people to rebel, while money is required to cover
everyday needs of the people. Albert Bazeyan, chairman of
Hanrapetutiun (Republic) party’s political board, expressed this
opinion during the press conference held at National Press Club.

They aren’t concerned about the time, but they have difficulties
ingetting financial sources, as, according to Bazeyan, all the
administrative, financial, propaganda and power means are grasped by
the current authorities. The same situation was in April, but the
opposition made an attempt of a power shift, taking into account the
demands of the society. According to Bazeyan, even if no power shift
is possible in the Republic of Armenia through the constitution, it
doesn’t mean that it is impossible at all.

The opposition accepts only that way and it will never yield the
provocations of armed struggle. As for the pre-election and
parliamentary Justice union, it will function till the end of this
parliament’s term. Besides, Justice union has promises to fulfill,
Albert Bazeyan says.

Bazeyan informed that Hanrapetutiun party is ready to join any logical
initiative taken by National Unity or Justice union. Sooner or later
the opposition will awake the people and make a power shift though
constitutional means, to secure legitimate power, Bazeyan says. He
sees no danger in the existence of artificially created opposition.

As for the announcement made by Armen Sargsian, saying that Robert
Kocharian and Vazgen Sargsian were friends, Albert Bazeyan said that
the latter has subjective views. And if there is a possibility to be
released that is the choice and right of Armen Sargsian.

By Nana Petrosian

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

54 countries at Short Film Event

54 countries at Short Film Event
Monday, November 01, 2004 – 2004 IranMania.com

LONDON, Nov 1 (IranMania) -The Ninth International Festival of Short Films
due to be held on November 17-22 will host 54 countries, secretariat of the
festival said in a press release.
Armenia, Egypt, Kuwait and Burkina Faso will take part in the festival in
addition to 50 countries which had taken part in the international short
film festival.
Meanwhile, a producer of animation films Vahid Nassirian said that public
screening of short films concurrently with features films in the cinema
should become a convention.
He said that public screening of short films does not generate income for
the producer, but it boosts the spirit of the filmmaker.
Nassirian noted that in other countries, screen short films are usually
screened before a feature film and hoped that the Iranian cinemas would
follow suit.
He said that the producers of short films have established themselves in the
cinema sector.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

BAKU: Russian Mediator: UN Debate on Karabakh to Hurt Peace Process

RUSSIAN MEDIATOR SAYS UN DEBATE ON KARABAKH TO HURT PEACE PROCESS

Azad Azarbaycan TV, Baku
1 Nov 04

(Presenter) Baku’s raising of the Nagornyy Karabakh problem with the
UN is seriously disturbing the OSCE Minsk Group. The Russian
co-chairman of the Minsk Group, Yuriy Merzlyakov, openly announced
today that this initiative would deal a serious blow to the peace
process.

Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov, in turn, has said that
there is nothing extraordinary in the fact that the United Nations,
which has adopted four resolutions on Nagornyy Karabakh, will
reconsider the issue.

(Correspondent over video footage of New York, the UN building) There
was no need for Baku to include the issue of the Nagornyy Karabakh
conflict on the agenda of the UN General Assembly. This is the opinion
of the Russian co-chairman of the Minsk Group, Yuriy Merzlyakov. The
Russian diplomat has told “Son Xabar” that the opposition to the issue
by France, a country also co-chairing the OSCE Minsk Group, which was
voiced during discussions at the UN, reflected not only the view of
Paris but also the positions of Washington and Moscow.

(Merzlyakov, captioned, shown talking to microphone) This is an
untimely step. At a time when everyone is looking forward to the
restoration of the peace process, there is no need for such an
initiative. On the other hand, the UN is not the organization to
discuss the Nagornyy Karabakh conflict because the OSCE is dealing
with this problem. Therefore, the representative of France made the
statement after consultations with representatives of the USA and
Russia.

(Correspondent) Saying that the tabling of the issue at the UN will
fail to facilitate a solution to the Karabakh conflict and that it
will actually exacerbate it even more, Merzlyakov noted that the
co-chairmen did not support Azerbaijan’s suggestion and abstained from
voting on it at all. Merzlyakov explained the move by the fact that
the co-chairmen wanted to prevent a split in the UN. He added that
from a legal standpoint, this initiative of Azerbaijan was
ineffective, too.

(Merzlyakov) Resolutions of the UN General Assembly are not the same
as resolutions of the UN Security Council. Resolutions of the General
Assembly are of a consultative nature.

(Correspondent) The spokesman for the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry,
Matin Mirza, does not agree with the Russian diplomat. He says that by
having adopted four resolutions on the Nagornyy Karabakh conflict, the
UN actually intervened in the process of settlement. Therefore, there
is nothing out of the ordinary in bringing the issue to its attention
again.

Matin Mirza added that the fact that 43 out of 143 countries that took
part in the discussion supported Azerbaijan’s suggestion and 99
abstained from voting suggests that these countries are beginning to
develop an objective opinion about the conflict.

Qalib Sukurov, “Son Xabar”.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

The correct answer to the questions

The correct answer to the questions

Editorial

Yerkir/arm
October 29, 2004

Periodically, the question of objective analysis of this or that issue
is brought up in our society. Each of the parties participating in the
discussion tends to present its approach and analysis as
objective. However, in reality no analysis can be objective
irrespective of whether we mean conscious or subconscious objectivity.

Analysis cannot be an end in itself. Any conscious analysis is
influenced by a certain ideology. Moreover, strange as it might seem,
ideologization of the analysis up to a certain level benefits the
quality of the analysis performed.

Consciously ideologized analysis allows for a vision of the future and
prognosis that can be realized not through calculation of objective
circumstances and facts but through the consideration of subjective
human factors incorporated in the prognosis such as will, desire,
confidence.

In this way analysis becomes not merely mathematical calculation but
planning and even set-up of the future. The prognosis becomes prophecy
with the probability level of its realization being dependent on the
will and confidence of the person making the prognosis.

Such analysis also becomes a means to impose one’s own ideological
will upon others, to explain one’s own vision of the future and
proximate this vision to the reality. The future depends not only on
objective circumstances and arbitraries of fate.

The future is shaped and realized through human perception, visions,
ideals and will. From many possible futures, the one that succeeds in
creating a stronger and more emotionally influential vision will
prevail. Out of two possible scenarios, the one in which its author
subjectively incorporated more confidence, more will and a greater
desire will be realized.

This is why the seemingly objective political analyses and prognoses
of the future are a tool for making one’s desirable vision of the
future dominant and imposing it upon others. It is interesting that
political analysis is more ideologized in countries that have a
stronger and better defined political line.

For instance in Russia especially in the 1990’s, policy analysts used
to present their analysis under the disguise of neutral and objective
scientific observations. They did this not so much with the purpose of
concealing their true interests but because they really suffered from
the objectivity syndrome and did not feel comfortable with being
ideologized.

As opposed to this, political analysis and ideology are extremely
interconnected in USA. And this interconnection is not
secret. Analysis andprognosis made by American sources are very often
not so much scientifically grounded prognoses as visions of future
based on specific ideological views.

The complexity of political and geopolitical problems facing the
country cannot be presented as a set of issues requiring merely
technical, expert solutions that can be developed by a group of
professionals.

The thing is that not all the problems have only one correct
solution. The` correct’ solution can be largely based on ideological,
value-derived, political and other choices and not objective `facts’.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Kerry Better for Turkey ‘2-1’

Kerry Better for Turkey
‘2-1’

Zaman
10.31.2004 Sunday

Although the views of the two candidates in the US preidential
elections are similar, there are critical differences on three
important issues for Turkey. Bush’s policies on Iraq and the European
Union (EU) and Kerry’s Armenian policy would be disadvantageous for
Turkey.

EU: Both Bush and Kerry give full support to Turkey’s membership to
EU. However, the support of the Kerry administration would be more
beneficial for Turkey as Bush has lost the support of most European
countries after the Iraqi war. Pressure from the Bush administration
on the EU would likely result in a negative outcome.

Iraq: Bush supports ‘general autonomy’ for the Kurds within a federal
structure in Iraq; also he does not actively push for the elimination
of the terrorist organization PKK. Kerry’s policy is not known;
however, it is noted that Kerry will not be as flexible as Bush about
the autonomy issue since he aims to have large international support
for Iraq. It is also indicated that the Kurds are concerned because of
the situation.

The Alleged Armenian Genocide: Kerry’s much publicized statement that
he would recognize the so-called Armenian genocide is confusing. It is
expected that Kerry would not risk losing a key NATO ally like Turkey,
over such claims.