It’s Cold And Boring In Javakhk

It’s Cold And Boring In Javakhk

Youth Leaves for Russia

Azg/am
12 Oct 04

“There are many young people leaving Javakhk for Russia in search
of jobs and better life now-a-days. They don’t give their way of
“Javakhki” thinking in that country. There are many cases of mixed
marriages with Russians. They often leave their wives and children
here and start a new family abroad. There are villages in Javakhk
with only female population”, Samvel Babayan, priest of Surb Khach
church in Akhalkalak, says.

Vartan Hakobian, 26, has been in Russia for 4 years and now is back
in Akhalkalak (administrative center of Javakhk). “There are less
people able to leave for Russia now because of the visa regime but all
those who managed to cross the border do everything not to return”,
Vartan says.

Georgian “Rose Revolution” didn’t reach Javakhk. Although 98 percent of
Javakhk’s population voted for Saakashvili, they are not satisfied now.
Nothing has changed for good, people say.

Ararat Yesoyan is the head of the Center for Reforms’ Support and
Democratic Development. He points out that the former Georgian leader
Sheverdnadze used to act on the sly and kept everything under wraps
but Saakashvili is different, he is outspoken.

“There has always been discrimination but today it’s more obvious.
Compulsory learning of Georgian, absence of autonomous leadership,
keeping Armenians off ranks, absence of electricity and propped up
emigration are signs of discrimination. All the programs of social
and economic development Tbilisi draws up for Javakhk remain only
on paper. They were written only to throw dust in foreigners’ eyes”,
Yesoyan says.

“It’s not a problem to learn Georgian but if forced, it may cause in
assimilation. There are more than 100 thousand Armenians in Tbilisi
with brilliant knowledge of Georgian. How many of them are better
off? Georgian language is a means of keeping us off the jobs”, he adds.

Davit Rstakian is the co-chairman of Virk party of Javakhk. He says
that situation got even worse with Saakashvili in power. There is
no paved road, no investment, no electricity. “Armenia allocated $2
millions to construct Ashotsk-Ninotsminda medium-voltage line. Why
there is no electricity now?”, Rstakian says.

Artur Yeremian, head of Akhalkalak administration, says that many
things have changed since Saakashvili took the office. “Georgia makes
its first steps as a state. The government had a debt of 22 months’
salary to the budget employees, yet, today all the debts to teachers
are reimbursed. 2.7 kilometers of road have been paved this year. There
is also money allocated to rebuild 9 schools”, Yeremian says.

Javakhk has been Georgia’s most underdeveloped region for
decades. For Akhalkalak’s population, 95 percent of which are
Armenians, agriculture (potato growing) and cattle-breeding are the
main source of survival. Javakhk is Georgia’s Siberia with 7 months
of winter and 5 months of spring.

Levon Levanian is national plenipotentiary representative in the
regions of Akhalkalak and Nonotsminda. He says that there is no
apparent discrimination against Armenians, only some rules are written
without considering minority’s opinion. He reminded the educational
law project according to which all school subjects will be taught in
Georgian but Armenian language and literature. “If the law project
isn’t changed that will mean a discrimination”, Levanian said.

Levanian mentioned rise of the pension and reimbursement of wages
among the reforms. “It’s fine that there is no road police any more
and people are able to transfer their goods freely”, he added.

Head of Javakhk’s A-info news agency Khachatur Stepanian agrees that
most of the news coming from Javakhk is disturbing. “If Armenians
of Javakhk live on the same level as inhabitants of other Georgian
regions that is only due to our diligence”, Stepanian says.

Ararat Yesoyan suggested journalists from Armenia pay more attention
to Javakhk and organize disputes over certain issues. “We want to
know the attitude of the Armenian government and the parliament, what
Armenians think. Officials recall us only when they need us”, he says.

By Tatoul Hakobian from Akhalkalak

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Davit Shahnazarian: Armenian Authorities Are Pursuing Policy Aimed A

DAVIT SHAHNAZARIAN: ARMENIAN AUTHORITIES ARE PURSUING POLICY AIMED AT
NON-SETTLEMENT OF KARABAKH CONFLICT

YEREVAN, October 11 (Noyan Tapan). The NKR authorities are now pursuing
a policy of non-settlement of the Karabakh conflict aiming to prolong
their tenure, ANM (Armenian national Movement) board member Davit
Shahnazarian made this statement during his October 9 meeting with
reporters at the “Azdak” (“Stimulus”) club of the “Constitutional
Right” Union. According to him, Robert Kocharian and Ilham Aliyev
are just making another attempt to “imitate” a settlement of the
Nagorno Karabakh conflict. Testifying to this are the agreements
reached between the two foreign ministers in Prague which were later
declined by the presidents. As for the Astana meeting held with the
mediation of Russia, it gave occasion to a tougher position on part of
both countries. According to the speaker, the solution to the problem
should be based on mutual compromise and aimed at ensuring territorial
integration, because it is impossible to increase the living standards
of the Armenian population whithout it. The conflict, according to him,
should be settled stage by stage, since “there is no other alternative,
and the package version is just a way of non-settlement.” That is to
say, “as long as we have a an opportunity to cede anyhting and get
something else instead we must agree to this kind of settlement.” The
territories surrounding Karabakh, Shahnazarian said, are solving the
problem of Karabakh’s security, “and if we cede anything, if we give
a small part of territory, we should get security guarantees instead,
and it is the international community rather than Azerbaijan that
should give those guarantees.” As a result, Azerbaijan returns some
territories, and returns refugees to those territories, instead the
blockade against Armenia is lifted and the country gets a chance to
participate in the regional integration processes, Karabakh receives
security guarantees, whereas the issue of its status is put off on an
unknown period of time. Both Kocharian’s and Aliyev’s positions over
the Karabakh settlement, Shahnazarian stated, are beyond real politics,
and the current situation seriously jeopardizes the security of both
Karabakh and Armenia. The non-settlement policy gives occasion to new
complications, especially, the possibility that Azerbaijan may shift
from the status of an agressor to that of a victim. In connection
with closing Verin Lars’s border-crossing point by Russia, Davit
Shahnazarian said Russia has taken this step in reply to Armenia’s
decision to send a military unit to Iraq. The speaker also said
Armenia should not obstruct Turkey’s accession to the EU and should
not make the Armenian Genocide a “small change” in the two countries’
relations. Turkey is playing quite a great role in ensuring security
in the Caucasian region and opening Armenian-Turkish border will have
a positive influence on the settlement of the Karabakh conflict.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Press Release: Young Faithful Ordained As Servants Of The Church

PRESS RELEASE
Diocese of the Armenian Church of Australia & New Zealand
10 Macquarie Street
Chatswood NSW 2067
AUSTRALIA
Contact: Laura Artinian
Tel: (02) 9419-8056
Fax: (02) 9904-8446
Email: [email protected]

12 October 2004

YOUNG FAITHFUL ORDAINED AS SERVANTS OF THE CHURCH

Sydney, Australia – Sunday, 10 October, 2004 was a historically significant
day for the Diocese of the Armenian Church of Australia and New Zealand when
the Primate of the Diocese, His Eminence Archbishop Aghan Baliozian
accompanied by the Reverend Fathers, Father Norayr Patanian and Father
Bartev Karakashian and Deacons ordained four young faithful servants as
Acolytes (Tbir) and blessed the veil of a fifth servant of the church, Miss
Arda Lepedjian who faithfully takes on the role of church organist week
after week and is the official accompanist to the Lousavorich Choir. The
ceremony took place at the Armenian Apostolic Church of Holy Resurrection in
Sydney.

The ordained Acolytes – Arman Lepedjian, Chris Nazarian, brothers Neshan and
Vatche Ansourian, have served the Church as altar boys over the past five to
ten years. Standing before the Holy Altar as young men of faith they will
now bring their service to the Church of Holy Resurrection at Chatswood and
the monthly worship service in the Western Suburbs of Sydney in their new
role.

It is our hope and prayer that the servanthood of these five young faithful
will be example for other youth to follow. Their dedication and
faithfulness to their mother Church is to be commended.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Russia-Georgia tensions worsen following Beslan siege

Russia-Georgia tensions worsen following Beslan siege
By Simon Wheelan

World Socialist
Oct 11 2004

The school siege at Beslan in the Russian republic of North Ossetia
has exacerbated tensions between Russia and Georgia, its neighbour
in the South Caucasus.

The Russian administration headed by President Vladimir Putin has
utilised the tragedy in a manner similar to that adopted by the
Republican administration in the US after the destruction of the
World Trade Centre on 9/11. The Kremlin has also threatened to
make pre-emptive military strikes outside its own borders against
its enemies. Yuri Baluyevsky, Russia’s top general, declared that
military forces “will carry out all measures to liquidate terrorist
bases in any region of the world.”

The shift towards pre-emptive strikes outside of Russia is not an
idle threat. It already carries out an assassination policy like that
employed by the Israeli government of Ariel Sharon and endorsed by
Washington. In February Russian agents assassinated the prominent
Chechen Zelimkhan Yandarbiyev whilst he was residing on the Arabian
Peninsula in Doha, Qatar. The murder was in response to a previous
bomb attack on the Moscow metro, which the Kremlin blames on Chechen
separatists.

Sentencing two Russian agents to 25 years in jail this week, a Qatari
judge stated, “The Russian leadership issued an order to assassinate
the former Chechen leader Yandarbiyev.”

The Russian government has denied any knowledge of the attack.

Putin and other leading government figures have identified Georgia’s
Pankisi Gorge as a possible target for pre-emptive attacks. Thousands
of Chechen refugees live in wretched conditions after having fled
Russian atrocities and are currently seek shelter in the difficult
to penetrate region.

Russian sources claim the refugee community provides the ideal cover
for Chechen rebels to enter Georgia from the Russian republic and to
re-enter other Russian provinces like North Ossetia through Georgia’s
porous and frequently lawless northern borders. Georgia shares its
borders with the impoverished and troubled republics of Ingushetia,
Dagestan, Chechnya and North Ossetia. Russia has since closed all
its borders with Georgia.

Attempting to deflect criticism and avoid a confrontation with superior
Russian military forces, the Georgian authorities have repeatedly
claimed that the Pankisi no longer harbours Chechen rebels. The
current government led by Mikhail Saakashvili blames the deposed
administration of Eduard Shevardnadze for previous incursions by
rebels into and out of Georgia.

The Bush administration in Washington has sent out conflicting
signals. The US State Department backed the claims of the Tbilisi
administration, stating that the Pankisi Gorge was free from rebel
activity. Spokesman Richard Boucher said the Pankisi Gorge “is no
longer a haven for terrorists.” But the US ambassador to Georgia,
Richard Miles, says some international terrorists are still present
in the Gorge.

Seeking to link Georgia to the Beslan tragedy, Russia’s Foreign
Minister Sergei Lavrov suggested that events in South Ossetia, where
the two countries have recently come to blows in a series of military
skirmishes, might well be connected to the school siege. The Russian
media has also sought to draw in the other breakaway Georgian republic
of Abkhazia by suggesting that one of the Beslan hostage takers
is hiding in an area on the border between the two warring parties
controlled by Georgian forces. The Kodori Gorge is held by the Georgian
military and Abkhazian ethnic Georgian forces loyal to Tbilisi.

Presently Russia is on the offensive, but the situation prior to the
Beslan siege was somewhat different. Saakashvili, fresh from wresting
back control of the coastal region of Adjaria from the regional warlord
Aslan Abashidze, decided to chance his luck on the weaker of the two
remaining breakaway republics—South Ossetia.

But just days after entering South Ossetian territory and mounting
repeated exchanges with Russian and South Ossetian troops, Georgian
forces withdrew. Saakashvili tried to rally nationalist sentiment
by warning of a possible war with Russia. But the rout of his South
Ossetian campaign is now derided in parliament as a “fiasco” by the
opposition. Newsweek magazine, which had previously sang Saakashvili’s
praises, predicted that the new president’s star may have already
waned and the opportunity to unify Georgia vanished.

Putin has framed the conflict over South Ossetia as a threat to Russian
sovereignty. But since Beslan, he has gone further and questioned the
very geographical viability of Georgia. Putin declared that Georgia was
“put together very artificially in a similar manner as other creations
in the former Soviet Union”, before blaming Tbilisi for “unfreezing”
the South Ossetian conflict. He added, “No one asked Ossetians and
the Abkhaz whether they want to stay in Georgia.”

In addition to the recent skirmishes over South Ossetia, Moscow has
further enraged the Saakashvili government by reopening train links
between the Russian capital and the Abkhazian capital Sukhumi for
the first time in 11 years. Russia has also stopped Georgian airlines
from using its airspace until some $3.6 million in debts is paid. The
essentially bankrupt state of Georgia was underlined by its recent
loss of voting rights at the United Nations because of unpaid bills.

Meanwhile, Tbilisi continues to strengthen ties with the western
powers and to push for eventual membership of NATO and the European
Union. Robert Simmons, the newly appointed Special Representative for
the Caucasus and Central Asia, recently announced that a NATO liaison
officer will be stationed in Tbilisi and will work closely with the
Defence Ministry “to assist with their defence reform.” European
Commission President Romano Prodi recently encouraged Georgia and
the other Trans-Caucasus nations Armenia and Azerbaijan to continue
their pursuit of EU membership.

Since the ignominious retreat from South Ossetia, Saakashvili has
sought to internationalise the conflict by drawing upon support from
his Western sponsors. In the immediate aftermath of the Beslan siege,
few wished to be seen openly supporting Russia’s enemies. Britain’s
Home Secretary Jack Straw, for example, described the Russian desire
for pre-emptive strikes as “understandable” in the circumstances.
But in contrast, the Bush administration has developed a bellicose
response both to Russia’s policy in Chechnya and in Georgia.

Washington has reiterated its calls for Russia to withdraw its troops
from Georgia, continues to train and equip Georgian forces and is
set to increase its financial assistance to Georgia threefold. In
return Georgian Defence Minister Giorgi Baramidze announced that more
Georgian troops would possibly be sent to bolster American forces
occupying Iraq.

Russia has a vital strategic interest in maintaining control over the
northern Caucasus region and extending its influence into the southern
Caucasus to break a possible US encirclement through its support for
Saakashvili’s Georgian administration and the ruling Aliyev dynasty
in Azerbaijan. Russia aims to thwart US attempts at monopolising the
vital Caspian Sea oil reserves and it should not be forgotten that
Chechnya also possesses significant oil reserves.

America has long sought control over oil supplies from the Caspian
Sea by installing or cultivating compliant regimes in the southern
Caucasus, including Azerbaijan, where the oil is extracted, and
Georgia, across which the $1.5 billion Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline
passes. Consequently the US government is committed to thwarting any
attempt by Russia to expand its influence in the Caucasus. Therefore
while the Bush administration has in the past made a show of supporting
Russian efforts to “curb terrorism”, its essential policy is hostility
to all attempts by Russia to dominate the region.

The State Department criticised the August 29 Chechen elections
as being “neither free nor fair” and it has granted asylum to
Ilyas Akhmadov, the foreign minister of Ivan Maskhadov’s opposition
government. Such support has allowed Akhmadov to pursue diplomatic
relations aimed at winning international support for a Republic
of Ichkeria.

Both the US and the EU have called for Russia to negotiate with what
they often describe as the “moderate” Chechen separatists. But France
and Germany are seeking to distance themselves from the US by endorsing
the validity of the August 29 election whilst simultaneously urging
negotiation. Their ambivalence is based on their desire for stronger
relations with Russia to counter American influence in Eastern Europe
and to build lucrative economic relations, particularly in the oil
sector. But they too must seek to free Caspian Sea oil from Russian
hegemony.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Oil Wars: U.S. military is being remolded into an oil-protection for

Oil Wars: U.S. military is being remolded into an oil-protection force
By Michael T. Klare

Oct 11, 2004, 09:34

Under the pressure of Bush administration energy geopolitics (and
under the guise of anti-terrorism), the U.S. military is being remolded
into an oil-protection force.

In the first U.S. combat operation of the war in Iraq, Navy commandos
stormed an offshore oil-loading platform. “Swooping silently out of
the Persian Gulf night,” an overexcited reporter for the New York Times
wrote on March 22, “Navy Seals seized two Iraqi oil terminals in bold
raids that ended early this morning, overwhelming lightly-armed Iraqi
guards and claiming a bloodless victory in the battle for Iraq’s vast
oil empire.”

A year and a half later, American soldiers are still struggling to
maintain control over these vital petroleum facilities â^À^Ó and the
fighting is no longer bloodless. On April 24, two American sailors and
a Coast Guardsman were killed when a boat they sought to intercept,
presumably carrying suicide bombers, exploded near the Khor al-Amaya
loading platform. Other Americans have come under fire while protecting
some of the many installations in Iraq’s “oil empire.”

Indeed, Iraq has developed into a two-front war: the battles for
control over Iraq’s cities and the constant struggle to protect its
far-flung petroleum infrastructure against sabotage and attack. The
first contest has been widely reported in the American press;
the second has received far less attention. Yet the fate of Iraq’s
oil infrastructure could prove no less significant than that of its
embattled cities. A failure to prevail in this contest would eliminate
the economic basis upon which a stable Iraqi government could someday
emerge. “In the grand scheme of things,” a senior officer told the
New York Times, “there may be no other place where our armed forces
are deployed that has a greater strategic importance.” In recognition
of this, significant numbers of U.S. soldiers have been assigned to
oil-security functions.

Top officials insist that these duties will eventually be taken
over by Iraqi forces, but day by day this glorious moment seems to
recede ever further into the distance. So long as American forces
remain in Iraq, a significant number of them will undoubtedly spend
their time guarding highly vulnerable pipelines, refineries, loading
facilities, and other petroleum installations. With thousands of
miles of pipeline and hundreds of major facilities at risk, this task
will prove endlessly demanding – and unrelievedly hazardous. At the
moment, the guerrillas seem capable of striking the country’s oil
lines at times and places of their choosing, their attacks often
sparking massive explosions and fires.

Guarding the Pipelines

It has been argued that our oil-protection role is a peculiar feature
of the war in Iraq, where petroleum installations are strewn about
and the national economy is largely dependent on oil revenues. But
Iraq is hardly the only country where American troops are risking
their lives on a daily basis to protect the flow of petroleum. In
Colombia, Saudi Arabia, and the Republic of Georgia, U.S. personnel
are also spending their days and nights protecting pipelines and
refineries, or supervising the local forces assigned to this mission.
American sailors are now on oil-protection patrol in the Persian
Gulf, the Arabian Sea, the South China Sea, and along other sea
routes that deliver oil to the United States and its allies. In fact,
the American military is increasingly being converted into a global
oil-protection service.

The situation in the Republic of Georgia is a perfect example of
this trend. Ever since the Soviet Union broke apart in 1992, American
oil companies and government officials have sought to gain access to
the huge oil and natural gas reserves of the Caspian Sea basin â^À^Ó
especially in Azerbaijan, Iran, Kazakhstan, and Turkmenistan. Some
experts believe that as many as 200 billion barrels of untapped oil
lie ready to be discovered in the Caspian area, about seven times the
amount left in the United States. But the Caspian itself is landlocked
and so the only way to transport its oil to market in the West is by
pipelines crossing the Caucasus region â^À^Ó the area encompassing
Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, and the war-torn Russian republics of
Chechnya, Dagestan, Ingushetia, and North Ossetia.

American firms are now building a major pipeline through this volatile
area. Stretching a perilous 1,000 miles from Baku in Azerbaijan
through Tbilisi in Georgia to Ceyhan in Turkey, it is eventually
slated to carry one million barrels of oil a day to the West; but will
face the constant threat of sabotage by Islamic militants and ethnic
separatists along its entire length. The United States has already
assumed significant responsibility for its protection, providing
millions of dollars in arms and equipment to the Georgian military
and deploying military specialists in Tbilisi to train and advise the
Georgian troops assigned to protect this vital conduit. This American
presence is only likely to expand in 2005 or 2006 when the pipeline
begins to transport oil and fighting in the area intensifies.

Or take embattled Colombia, where U.S. forces are increasingly assuming
responsibility for the protection of that country’s vulnerable oil
pipelines. These vital conduits carry crude petroleum from fields in
the interior, where a guerrilla war boils, to ports on the Caribbean
coast from which it can be shipped to buyers in the United States
and elsewhere. For years, left-wing guerrillas have sabotaged the
pipelines â^À^Ó portraying them as concrete expressions of foreign
exploitation and elitist rule in Bogota, the capital â^À^Ó to deprive
the Colombian government of desperately needed income. Seeking to prop
up the government and enhance its capacity to fight the guerrillas,
Washington is already spending hundreds of millions of dollars to
enhance oil-infrastructure security, beginning with the Cano-Limon
pipeline, the sole conduit connecting Occidental Petroleum’s prolific
fields in Arauca province with the Caribbean coast. As part of this
effort, U.S. Army Special Forces personnel from Fort Bragg, North
Carolina are now helping to train, equip, and guide a new contingent
of Colombian forces whose sole mission will be to guard the pipeline
and fight the guerrillas along its 480-mile route.

Oil and Instability

The use of American military personnel to help protect vulnerable
oil installations in conflict-prone, chronically unstable countries
is certain to expand given three critical factors: America’s
ever-increasing dependence on imported petroleum, a global shift in
oil production from the developed to the developing world, and the
growing militarization of our foreign energy policy.

America’s dependence on imported petroleum has been growing steadily
since 1972, when domestic output reached its maximum (or “peak”) output
of 11.6 million barrels per day (mbd). Domestic production is now
running at about 9 mbd and is expected to continue to decline as older
fields are depleted. (Even if some oil is eventually extracted from the
Arctic National Wildlife Refuge in Alaska, as the Bush administration
desires, this downward trend will not be reversed.) Yet our total oil
consumption remains on an upward course; now approximating 20 mbd,
it’s projected to reach 29 mbd by 2025. This means ever more of the
nation’s total petroleum supply will have to be imported â^À^Ó 11
mbd today (about 55% of total U.S. consumption) but 20 mbd in 2025
(69% of consumption).

More significant than this growing reliance on foreign oil,
an increasing share of that oil will come from hostile, war-torn
countries in the developing world, not from friendly, stable
countries like Canada or Norway. This is the case because the older
industrialized countries have already consumed a large share of their
oil inheritance, while many producers in the developing world still
possess vast reserves of untapped petroleum. As a result, we are seeing
a historic shift in the center of gravity for world oil production
â^À^Ó from the industrialized countries of the global North to the
developing nations of the global South, which are often politically
unstable, torn by ethnic and religious conflicts, home to extremist
organizations, or some combination of all three.

Whatever deeply-rooted historical antagonisms exist in these countries,
oil production itself usually acts as a further destabilizing
influence. Sudden infusions of petroleum wealth in otherwise poor
and underdeveloped countries tend to deepen divides between rich
and poor that often fall along ethnic or religious lines, leading to
persistent conflict over the distribution of petroleum revenues. To
prevent such turbulence, ruling elites like the royal family in
Saudi Arabia or the new oil potentates of Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan
restrict or prohibit public expressions of dissent and rely on the
repressive machinery of state security forces to crush opposition
movements. With legal, peaceful expressions of dissent foreclosed in
this manner, opposition forces soon see no options but to engage in
armed rebellion or terrorism.

There is another aspect of this situation that bears examination. Many
of the emerging oil producers in the developing world were once
colonies of and harbor deep hostility toward the former imperial powers
of Europe. The United States is seen by many in these countries as
the modern inheritor of this imperial tradition. Growing resentment
over social and economic traumas induced by globalization is aimed
at the United States. Because oil is viewed as the primary motive
for American involvement in these areas, and because the giant U.S.
oil corporations are seen as the very embodiment of American power,
anything to do with oil â^À^Ó pipelines, wells, refineries, loading
platforms â^À^Ó is seen by insurgents as a legitimate and attractive
target for attack; hence the raids on pipelines in Iraq, on oil
company offices in Saudi Arabia, and on oil tankers in Yemen.

Militarizing Energy Policy

American leaders have responded to this systemic challenge to stability
in oil-producing areas in a consistent fashion: by employing military
means to guarantee the unhindered flow of petroleum. This approach
was first adopted by the Truman and Eisenhower administrations after
World War II, when Soviet adventurism in Iran and pan-Arab upheavals
in the Middle East seemed to threaten the safety of Persian Gulf
oil deliveries. It was given formal expression by President Carter in
January 1980, when, in response to the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan
and the Islamic revolution in Iran, he announced that the secure flow
of Persian Gulf oil was in “the vital interests of the United States
of America,” and that in protecting this interest we would use “any
means necessary, including military force.” Carter’s principle of
using force to protect the flow of oil was later cited by President
Bush the elder to justify American intervention in the Persian Gulf
War of 1990-91, and it provided the underlying strategic rationale
for our recent invasion of Iraq.

Originally, this policy was largely confined to the world’s most
important oil-producing region, the Persian Gulf. But given America’s
ever-growing requirement for imported petroleum, U.S. officials
have begun to extend it to other major producing zones, including
the Caspian Sea basin, Africa, and Latin America. The initial step
in this direction was taken by President Clinton, who sought to
exploit the energy potential of the Caspian basin and, worrying
about instability in the area, established military ties with future
suppliers, including Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan, and with the pivotal
transit state of Georgia. It was Clinton who first championed the
construction of a pipeline from Baku to Ceyhan and who initially took
steps to protect that conduit by boosting the military capabilities of
the countries involved. President Bush junior has built on this effort,
increasing military aid to these states and deploying American combat
advisers in Georgia; Bush is also considering the establishment of
permanent U.S. military bases in the Caspian region.

Typically, such moves are justified as being crucial to the “war
on terror.” A close reading of Pentagon and State Department
documents shows, however, that anti-terrorism and the protection of
oil supplies are closely related in administration thinking. When
requesting funds in 2004 to establish a “rapid-reaction brigade”
in Kazakhstan, for example, the State Department told Congress that
such a force is needed to “enhance Kazakhstan’s capability to respond
to major terrorist threats to oil platforms” in the Caspian Sea.

As noted, a very similar trajectory is now under way in Colombia. The
American military presence in oil-producing areas of Africa,
though less conspicuous, is growing rapidly. The Department of
Defense has stepped up its arms deliveries to military forces
in Angola and Nigeria, and is helping to train their officers and
enlisted personnel; meanwhile, Pentagon officials have begun to look
for permanent U.S. bases in the area, focusing on Senegal, Ghana,
Mali, Uganda, and Kenya. Although these officials tend to talk only
about terrorism when explaining the need for such facilities, one
officer told Greg Jaffe of the Wall Street Journal in June 2003 that
“a key mission for U.S. forces [in Africa] would be to ensure that
Nigeria’s oil fields, which in the future could account for as much
as 25 percent of all U.S. oil imports, are secure.”

An increasing share of our naval forces is also being committed to the
protection of foreign oil shipments. The Navy’s Fifth Fleet, based at
the island state of Bahrain, now spends much of its time patrolling
the vital tanker lanes of the Persian Gulf and the Strait of Hormuz
â^À^Ó the narrow waterway connecting the Gulf to the Arabian Sea and
the larger oceans beyond. The Navy has also beefed up its ability
to protect vital sea lanes in the South China Sea â^À^Ó the site of
promising oil fields claimed by China, Vietnam, the Philippines, and
Malaysia â^À^Ó and in the Strait of Malacca, the critical sea-link
between the Persian Gulf and America’s allies in East Asia. Even
Africa has come in for increased attention from the Navy. In order to
increase the U.S. naval presence in waters adjoining Nigeria and other
key producers, carrier battle groups assigned to the European Command
(which controls the South Atlantic) will shorten their future visits
to the Mediterranean “and spend half the time going down the west
coast of Africa,” the command’s top officer, General James Jones,
announced in May 2003.

This, then, is the future of U.S. military involvement abroad. While
anti-terrorism and traditional national security rhetoric will be
employed to explain risky deployments abroad, a growing number of
American soldiers and sailors will be committed to the protection
of overseas oil fields, pipeline, refineries, and tanker routes. And
because these facilities are likely to come under increasing attack
from guerrillas and terrorists, the risk to American lives will grow
accordingly. Inevitably, we will pay a higher price in blood for
every additional gallon of oil we obtain from abroad.

Michael T. Klare is a professor of peace and world security studies
at Hampshire College. This article is based on his new book, ‘Blood
and Oil: The Dangers and Consequences of America’s Growing Petroleum
Dependency’ (Metropolitan / Henry Holt

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

www.axisoflogic.com

Turkey’s EU bid haunted by Armenian ghosts

Turkey’s EU bid haunted by Armenian ghosts
Daily Editorial

The Tufts Daily, MA
Oct 12 2004

Turkey’s desire to join the EU was boosted last week, when the European
Commission recommended opening membership talks with the country. EU
membership promises increased foreign investment and expanded trade
within Europe for Turkey.

The EU must hold Turkey to strict human rights standards, as Dr.
Glendale-Hilmar Kaiser’s speech on the Armenian genocide reminded
students. The Turkish government continues to refuse to recognize
that there was a state-sponsored genocide against the Armenians at
the beginning of the 20th century.

Additionally, Turkey has not won praises for the treatment of its
Kurdish minority. It has recently been easing its restrictions on the
group – it is no longer illegal to broadcast the Kurdish language on
television, and some Kurdish leaders are able to call for more rights
without being thrown in jail. But there is still a way to go.

Fears have recently risen that Turkey may move in the wrong
direction. Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan wanted to re-criminalize
adultery, which drew enough European criticism to drop the efforts
in the 23rd hour. The country has been condemned for a poor record
on religious freedom and women’s rights. Turkey will have to meet
stiff economic and legal criteria to gain admission to the EU.

The prospect of joining the EU will be an impetus for Turkey to
modernize both its economy and legal system. Entrance into Europe’s
elite club is a popular goal with the Turkish population, if the
press is anything to go by, and politicians can find support to pass
the necessary measures.

Adding Turkey would reflect well on the EU, if only because it
will show that the EU is not a Christian organization. Millions of
Muslims already live within the EU, but Turkey would be the first
majority-Muslim nation to join the Union. It is quite a secular nation,
but it would be a step towards proving that liberal democracy and
Islamic cultures can mix.

Critics of Turkey’s admission cite fears that large numbers of poor
Turks will flood into Western Europe. The free movement of people,
however, is a necessary tenant of the EU to allow for complete
economic integration. However, there were similar fears concerning
the 10 Eastern European countries that joined this past May. Western
Europe was not swamped with economic migrants from Eastern Europe,
nor were they inundated with those from Turkey.

Others fear the economic ramifications of inviting in a poor
country like Turkey, where nearly a third of the population works in
agriculture. The point of the EU is to benefit all of the countries
that join, not just rich ones like France and Germany. Membership
turned Ireland and Spain into strong economies, and will hopefully
do the same to new member countries. Turkey’s large population and
resources show that there is potential for growth.

The biggest obstacle that could block Turkey’s EU bid is its human
rights record. It needs to continue easing up on the Kurds and
expanding women’s rights. It also needs to admit its involvement
with the Armenian genocide once and for all. If Turkey is to spend
its future in the EU, it needs to come clean about its past.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Armenian FM against Turkey’s EU membership

ARMENIAN FM AGAINST TURKEY’S EU MEMBERSHIP

ArmenPress
Oct 11 2004

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 11, ARMENPRESS: Armenian Foreign Minister Vartan
Oskanian disapproved today the European Union’s intention to start
talks on Turkey’s accession process, saying it did not deserve the
membership. Speaking at a joint news conference with the visiting
foreign minister of Norway, Jan Petersen, Oskanian blamed Turkey
for the continued closure of its border with Armenia and a law that
criminalizes mentioning of the Armenian Genocide. Oskanian also
rejected any possibility of Turkey’s involvement in the Karabagh
regulation, proposed lately by a Russian co-chairmen of the OSCE Minsk
group, but admitted that Turkey is one of the major regional countries.

Jan Petersen, who is the Council of Europe’s chairman of the Committee
of Ministers, said his government could not express an opinion on
Turkey’s membership since Norway is not an EU member.

Norway’s foreign minister also said his government will continue its
projects in Armenia, singling out the Norwegian Refugee Council’s
project of building houses for refugees. He then said Armenia
and Norway should work hard to raise their relations to a higher
level. He said Norway can help Armenia develop its energy system,
particularly, hydro-power stations.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Indian products & services on display in Yerevan

INDIAN PRODUCTS AND SERVICES ARE ON DISPLAY IN YEREVAN

ArmenPress
Oct 11 2004

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 11, ARMENPRESS: An exhibition of Indian products and
services opened in the Armenian capital Yerevan on October 10 featuring
products and services of 17 companies, engaged in manufacturing of
garments, pharmaceuticals, Ayurvedic medicines, jewelry, tea, coffee,
herbal cosmetic products, engine mounting and others.

Parallel to the exhibition Armenian and Indian businessmen will
meet to look into possibilities for establishing new contacts. The
exhibition is organized by the Confederation of Indian Industry,
Indian embassy in Yerevan and Armenian Commerce and Industry Chamber.

Speaking to reporters India’s ambassador to Armenia, Deepak Vohra, said
Indian capital is safe in Armenia thanks to its political stability and
friendly and open trade legislation. He said many Indian businessmen
want to start business in Armenia. He added that Armenia is becoming
one of the biggest India’s trade partner in CIS.

According to the ambassador, Armenian-Indian trade grows annually by
30-40 percent. “These are the official figures, but Indian products
arrive here also from Russia, United Arab Emirates and other countries
and the real trade volume is bigger, “he said.

According to figures of Armenian statistics committee, Indian-Armenian
trade in the first six months of this year went up 47 percent, mainly
due to Indian exports to Armenia. Armenian exports are still very
small, mainly synthetic rubber and medications.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Minister Oskanian Receives Members of Eurasia Foundation Board ofTru

MINISTRY OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS OF THE REPUBLIC OF ARMENIA
—————————————— —-

PRESS AND INFORMATION DEPARTMENT

375010 Telephone: +3741. 544041 ext 202

Fax: +3741. .562543
Email: [email protected]:

PRESS RELEASE

11 October 2004

Minister Oskanian Receives Members of Eurasia Foundation Board of Trustees

On 11 October, Minister Oskanian received Eurasia Foundation’s President
Charles Maynes and members of the Board of Trustees.

The Eurasia Foundation board members noted that a 10-year grants programme
in Armenia covers almost all aspects of civil society development. The
Foundation supported numerous pioneering initiatives including development
of university curriculum for business administration, the first large scale
municipal development program, the first small enterprise lending program,
the first public dialogue campaign and pioneering support for independent
print media.

Minister Oskanian welcomed the Foundation’s mission in Armenia and
acknowledged the importance of its operations in the context of Armenia’s
transition to market economy and democratic society.

Upon request of Eurasia Foundation Board members, Minister Oskanian briefed
them on the current situation in the region focusing on the status of the
Nagorno Karabagh conflict settlement and regulation of Armenia – Turkey
relations.

Eurasia Foundation (with headquarters in Washington) operates in Armenia,
Azerbaijan, Belarus, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgystan, Moldova, Russia and
Tajikistan. The Foundation started its program in Armenia in 1995. The key
programs implemented by the Foundation include Izmirlyan – Eurasia Small
Business Loan Program, Public Dialogue, Media Strengthening Program, South
Caucasus Cooperation Program and Caucasus Research Resource Centers.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

www.armeniaforeignministry.am

About 100 AGBU Members In NKR

ABOUT 100 AGBU MEMBERS IN NKR

Azat Artsakh – Nagorno Karabakh Republic (NKR)
11 Oct 04

On October 8 at the meeting hall of the government about a hundred
members of the Armenian General Benevolent Union met with the NKR
president and the speaker of the National Assembly. Addressing
the guests who represent 24 countries, president Arkady Ghukassian
mentioned that the people of Karabakh won the war owing to the powerful
backing of Armenia and the Diaspora. However, the war still goes on
in the economic, cultural and finally political spheres, and in this
context the role of the Armenian Diaspora is increasingly important.
â^À^ÜIf the recognized countries can have only one ambassador in
one country, the unrecognized countries, including Karabakh may have
thousands of ambassadors. I appoint you ambassadors of Karabakh in your
countries,â^À^Ý stated Arkady Ghukassian. In the current political
situation he pointed out the importance of lobbing mentioning that
the Armenians of the Diaspora should do their best to make the
governments of their countries recognize that if they act against
Karabakh they will have to deal with the entire Armenian nation. Arkady
Ghukassian emphasized that it is not necessary that the visits of
the Diaspora Armenians to Artsakh be connected with some program,
connected with material. â^À^ÜThe people of Karabakh need to feel
that they are not alone in their struggle,â^À^Ý said the president of
NKR. Speaking about the activities of the AGBU in Karabakh, the head
of the country mentioned that during the war Stepanakert was bombed
from five directions and almost all the buildings of the town were
damaged. Today the traces of war have been removed but historic Shoushi
and thr regions of Artsakh need to be restored. â^À^ÜToday you visited
Gandzassar, as well as the far-away village of Norashen in Hadrout. You
drove both on repaired and ruined roads. You saw that Artsakh needs
your assistance,â^À^Ý mentioned A. Ghukassian. Answering the question
of Ashkhen Muradian (San Francisco) whether the reason for unsettled
areas in Karabakh is the lack of financing, the NKR president said that
both financial and human resources are needed. He mentioned that even
if all the villages are restored, people are needed to settle down
there, which in its turn requires providing certain conditions. In
this reference he mentioned that Karabakh with a state budget of 27
million dollars cannot afford to restore Shoushi, which requires 100
million dollars, the irrigation system which costs 60 million dollars,
build 60 schools in villages, repair all the roads. And in this matter
the Diaspora should have an essential role. During the meeting Arkady
Ghukassian also spoke about the necessity of propagating Karabakh
by the Armenians of the Diaspora. He mentioned that the Azerbaijani
propaganda is very active although they do not have a diaspora. At
the same time the guests emphasized that Karabakh needs to present
its problems in a proper manner. â^À^Ü Karabakh must raise the entire
Diaspora on their feet. Whereas this work is not done actively,â^À^Ý
said Ashkhen Muradian to â^À^ÜAzat Artsakhâ^À^Ý. And this despite the
fact that, as Arkady Ghukassian mentioned, NKR has representations in
the USA, Russia, France, the Near East, Australia, soon in Germany
too. Answering the question of the AGBU representative concerning
the talks for the Karabakh problem, Arkady Ghukassian noticed that
the process had been frozen in the recent years. â^À^ÜThe regular
meetings of the presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan and the visits
of the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairmen to the region cannot substitute
for a complete negotiation process in which Nagorni Karabakh also
participated as a conflict party in the years of 1992-1997. But the
alternative to the negotiation process is the war, and Karabakh will
do its best to prevent war. We are ready to discuss any question
without preconditions,â^À^Ý said Arkady Ghukassian, emphasizing
that the Armenian side recognizes the impossibility of a decision
without compromise. Arkady Ghukassian emphasized the role of the
Diaspora in the conflict settlement saying that it is necessary to
influence through political lobbing the international community which
should recognize that the independence of Karabakh is the only fair
settlement of the confrontation. The AGBU representative in Armenia
Ashot Ghazarian thanked the NKR president for the warm welcome and
mentioned that the members of the organization already have certain
programs. Among the Armenians who visited Karabakh was also the wife
of the chairman of the AGBU V. Sedrakian.

NAIRA HAYRUMIAN. 11-10-2004

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress