AUA Law Department Plays Los Angeles

PRESS RELEASE

September 14, 2004

American University of Armenia Corporation
300 Lakeside Drive, 4th Floor
Oakland, CA 94612
Telephone: (510) 987-9452
Fax: (510) 208-3576

Contact: Gohar Momjian
E-mail: [email protected]

AUA LAW DEPARTMENT PLAYS LOS ANGELES

A standing-room-only crowd of almost 100 people were in attendance in
Pasadena, California, on August 20, as the Armenian Professional Society
presented a program entitled: “Current Issues in Armenia: Report from the
American University of Armenia Law Department.” Half-the-world away from
Yerevan, four members of the AUA administration were in Pasadena for the
event, which was generally acclaimed as a resounding success.

The program began with a thorough report on the current status of AUA by Dr.
Haroutune K. Armenian, President of AUA. Dr. Armenian spoke of many sides
of AUA, including its plans for expanding its role in international
education and its application for accreditation by the Western Association
of Schools and Colleges (WASC).

The Law Department’s two resident professors then spoke on how things are in
Armenia with respect to two social and legal problems. Associate Dean
Matthew Karanian spoke of Armenia’s environmental problems, including the
risk to Lake Sevan, and of the difference between the relevant law as
written and as applied on the ground.

Sara J. Anjargolian, Assistant Dean of the Law Department, spoke of the
status of women in Armenia and the differences in attitude and social
conventions between Armenian and American women.

A special guest, Judge (ret.) Aram Serverian of the Superior Court for San
Mateo County, California, who came from Northern California to attend the
event, spoke entertainingly of his experience as a visiting professor at
AUA, his highly favorable impressions of the Law Department students, and of
the Department’s need for financial support.

There followed a lively session of questions from the audience, followed in
turn by refreshments, conversations, and financial contributions to AUA.
The high and enthusiastic interest in AUA shown by the Armenian professional
community in Los Angeles — following a similar program presented in San
Francisco last January by the A.G.B.U. — may well stimulate future programs
of this nature.

The program was coordinated and m.c.’d by Professor Stephen Barnett, Dean of
the AUA Law Department. It was conceived and developed by Betty
Jamgotchian, Esq., director of the Armenian Professional Society, together
with Sara Anjargolian.

—————————————-

The American University of Armenia is registered as a non-profit educational
organization in both Armenia and the United States and is affiliated with
the Regents of the University of California. Receiving major support from
the AGBU, AUA offers instruction leading to the Masters Degree in eight
graduate programs. For more information about AUA, visit

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

www.aua.am.

BAKU: Russia interested in peace in the Caucasus

Azer Tag, Azerbaijan State Info Agency
Sept 13 2004

RUSSIA INTERESTED IN PEACE IN THE CAUCASUS
[September 13, 2004, 14:58:35]

It was told by the first deputy chief of the Staff on Coordination of
Military Cooperation of the CIS Ivan Babichev in his interview to
correspondent of AzerTAj, speaking on the military cooperation of the
member countries of the Commonwealth of Independent States, which is
carried out both on bilateral, and on multilateral basis. As he said,
the states of Commonwealth make a decision in what format to
cooperate with other countries of CIS, while the Staff on
coordination of military cooperation of the CIS states coordinates
the efforts of the states in this field.

I. Babichev also informed that Azerbaijan is not the participant of
the Organization of the Agreement on Collective Safety however, there
are common problems for all space of the CIS from which it is
impossible to remain aside. In particular, it is a common system of
air defense, which interests all states, and this is creation of
common system of communications, system of radiating chemical safety
for settlement of environmental problems and a number of others,
concerning all state of Commonwealth. “Though Azerbaijan also does
not enter this Agreement, nevertheless, and it participates in work
of development of common systems”, Ivan Babichev has told.

Answering the question on the position of Azerbaijan on non-alignment
to this Agreement and how is estimated it in the Staff on
Coordination of Military Cooperation of the CIS, that this military
block includes Armenia, the state conflicting with Azerbaijan
occupying a part of the Azerbaijan territories, I. Babichev has
stated that Russia stands on the position that any conflicts on space
of Commonwealth were not, and does very much that two fraternal
people were friends, found contacts points for this friendship.

Answering the question on escalating of military – technical
cooperation between Russia and Armenia, the Russian military has told
that “Here, it is impossible to say that Russia and Armenia increase
military – technical cooperation as Russia is open for all states, we
welcome all sides”. As he said, it is simple for those states, which
have signed the contract about military – technical cooperation, and
there are some advantages in sphere of purchase of the Russian
military technical equipment. The states, which have signed the
mentioned Agreement, can get the Russian technical equipment on the
in-Russian prices, and it is very favorable to many states of
Commonwealth.

Concerning settlement of the Armenia-Azerbaijan, Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict, the Russian officer has told, that Russia is interested
that there were peace on the Caucasus, and considers, that for the
settlement of the said problem, it is necessary to continue
negotiating process. “It is necessary to do everything to solve the
problem in a peace way”, has emphasized I. Babichev.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Glendale: Sending out smoke signals

Glendale News Press
LATimes.com
Sept 14 2004

Sending out smoke signals

County officials warn of secondhand smoke dangers, focusing on
Armenian community.

By Jackson Bell, News-Press

DOWNTOWN GLENDALE – Since Armenian immigrants are believed to use
tobacco products “well above” the county’s average of 15.6%, community
leaders and officials are promoting a campaign to extinguish smoking.

Before a small gathering Tuesday morning at Brand Boulevard and Harvard
Street, Linda Aragon of the Los Angeles County Department of Health
Services introduced the first initiative to educate the community on
the dangers of secondhand smoke.

“Although we don’t yet have specifics, we know anecdotally that the
Armenian community’s tobacco use is well above the county average,”
said Aragon, who is acting director of the department’s Tobacco Control
and Prevention branch. “What we’re trying to do is make people aware
that smoking is an issue … and it’s a lot of work because there is
still denial that secondhand smoke kills.”

Aragon said secondhand smoking is the third-leading cause of
preventable death in the United States. She added that for every eight
people who die from smoking, they take one secondhand smoker with them.

The city’s six-month, nearly $200,000 campaign is part of a larger
$1.1-million effort throughout the county to curb smoking among such
minority groups as blacks, Koreans and Latinos. It also targets the
lesbian and gay community.

“The U.S. has had a big head start in educating against smoking and
secondhand smoking,” said Greg Krikorian, whose Krikorian Marketing
Group is helping to run the health department campaign. “In foreign
countries, [tobacco education] is not a common practice.”

Krikorian, who serves as president of the Glendale Unified School
Board, added that smoking is such a tradition in the Armenian community
that cigarettes are commonly offered as hors d’oeuvres when welcoming
guests to homes.

The campaign, which began in May, features billboards throughout
the city along with print and television ads. One of the billboards
on Brand Boulevard – which was about 200 feet south of the news
conference – asks, “Who is your secondhand smoking harming?” in
Armenian and depicts a family frowning at a father who is smoking.

Also showing their support at the event were Glendale Adventist
Medical Center’s chief executive officer Scott Reiner and Los Angeles
County Supervisor Michael D. Antonovich. American Cancer Society
representatives passed out pamphlets about the ill effects of smoking.

“Secondhand smoke impacts children’s respiratory systems and their
overall health,” Antonovich said. “It’s an effort to make the public
more cognizant of the dangers of secondhand smoke.”

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

The Problem of Chechnya

The Problem of Chechnya
European Islam & the Caucasian “War on Terrorism”
By GARY LEUPP

CounterPunch
Sept 14 2004

Europe (Europe proper, the geographer’s Europe) is an odd thing,
curiously shaped and conceptualized since Herodotus invented it as
the object of Persian invasion 2500 years ago. As the concept grew,
Europe came to extend from Viking-settled Iceland in the mid-Atlantic
(to the northwest); to the Iberian peninsula (abutting Africa in the
southwest); and from the Kara Sea and the upper extremity of the
Urals (in the northeast), down the mountain range to the Ural River,
which avoiding all but a small slice of (Asian) Kazakhstan, defines
Europe to the Caspian Sea. Thence the borderline straddles the
Caucasus Mountains, from Baku on the Caspian to the Black Sea coast
and onto the Crimean Peninsula, making the Caucasus the southeastern
corner of the European continent, at least the European continent of
the stickler academic. (Some place the Caucasian countries in the
Middle East as well as Europe, rather like geographers count Vietnam
alternately as an East Asian and Southeast Asian country.)

Actually, no Europe makes sense as a “continent,” if the latter term
is to claim any consistency or analytical utility. Europe is not
surrounded by oceans, as are normal continents (Africa, North
America, South America, Australia and Antarctica)—and as Asia would
be if we simply included Europe, as Nietzsche once suggested, “as a
peninsula of the greater Eurasian super-continent.” Continental
Europe is the invention of people who wanted to be as special, and
separate as oceans can make you, but lacking the eastern ocean which
ought to be there to validate continental pretensions. South Asia
(India, Pakistan, Nepal, Bangladesh), surrounded by the Indian Ocean
and Himalayas, could make an equally valid case for continent-hood.
The concept is ultimately arbitrary.

But back to the southeastern corner of this imagined Eurocontinent:
the Caucasus. “Caucasian” is of course often used as a synonym for
“white” (as in white people), and has been used in that sense since
pioneer ethnologist Johann Friedrich Blumenbach, in 1775, pronounced
Caucasians (supposedly descended from Noah’s son Japeth after the Ark
landed on Mt. Ararat following the Flood) the “most beautiful race of
menthe primeval type [from which] others divergewhite in color, which
we may fairly assume to be the primitive color of mankind” But white
folks flattered by Blumenbach’s pseudo-science, and folks in general
outside the region, have little knowledge of this part of Europe. I
can think of various reasons why this unawareness is unfortunate:

(1) the Caucasus is a key site of Russian-U.S. contention concerning
the construction of oil pipelines from the Caspian oilfields (in
Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, and Azerbaijan) to Black Sea and
Mediterranean ports;

(2) it is a maze of new, weak nations with vigorous secessionist
movements;

(3) it is a region of centuries-old Muslim communities, from which
some “Islamic extremist” trends have emerged;

(4) it has, since the deployment of U.S. forces in the Pankisi Gorge
of Georgia in 2002, and the announcement of Russian President
Vladimir Putin around the same time that Chechen rebels are
al-Qaeda-like terrorists, been posited as a major theater in the “War
on Terror;” and

(5) given its record, the U.S. government might do something very
brutal and very stupid in the region. So one should pay attention. To
understand “ethnic conflict” in this area in the context of big-power
rivalry, one should brief oneself on the basics.

Compare the Balkans

The Caucasus embraces southern Russia (referring to the zone between
the Black and Caspian Seas), and the three nations of Georgia,
Armenia and Azerbaijan. This region is culturally linked to the west
and north by Orthodox Christianity (kindred Russian, Georgian and
Armenian varieties), and to the east by Islam (a legacy of past
encounters between Persians and Turks and the local peoples). In this
mix the Caucasus resembles the Balkans, where you have one more or
less Muslim nation (Albania, where religious practice was banned for
decades but which is officially now 70% Muslim); an
unusually-constructed Bosnia-Herzegovina in which about 40% of the
population (not all the Bosniaks) embrace Islam with varying degrees
of interest; and the de facto NATO protectorate of Kosovo, which is
about 90% Albanian Muslim. There are also longstanding Muslim
minorities in Macedonia (29%), Bulgaria (12%) and elsewhere in the
Balkans. The collapse of the Soviet bloc, the implosion of neutral
“socialist” Yugoslavia involving catastrophic ethno-religious strife,
and fall of the idiosyncratic Hoxhaite regime in Albania brought
Balkan Muslims onto the world stage, as recipients of religious
proselytization (by Arab “Wahhabis” in particular, backed up by Saudi
largesse) and as the beneficiaries (at least short term) of US-NATO
protection against the vilified Serbs and Croatians.

In the Balkans, Washington postures as the great friend of the Muslim
Bosnians and Kosovars, although its position is fraught with
contradictions. U.S. acquiescence to Helmut Kohl’s reunited Germany,
which unlike the U.S. State Department championed an independent
Slovenia in 1990, contributed to the disastrous dismantling of the
Yugoslav state. (This produced much ethnic conflict, including what
some term the “Bosnian holocaust.”) The U.S., having labeled the
Kosovo Liberation Army “terrorists” in 1999, made common cause with
the Kosovar Albanians against a Serbian foe whose atrocities were
wantonly exaggerated to justify the bombing of Milocevic’s
Yugoslavia. The Russians meanwhile posture as friends of the Serbs
and other Slavs aggrieved by Washington policy.

Across the Black Sea from the Balkans, in the Caucasus, we find
Armenia, ethnically homogeneous but abetting an Armenian secessionist
movement within the Armenian-peopled Nagorno-Karabakh region of
neighboring Azerbaijan. Armenia has occupied 16% of Azeri territory
since 1994. 94% of the population of Azerbaijan are Azeri, a Muslim
Turkish people. (That’s seven million Muslims, double the number of
Albanian Muslims; hence if Azerbaijan is in Europe, it is the largest
European Muslim country.) Fellow Azeris live across the border with
Georgia; 5.7% of Georgia’s 4.69 million people (668,000) live in the
Adhzaria region. In Abkhazia, in the north along the Black Sea, live
an additional 85,000 to 100,000 Muslims speaking a Causasian language
distantly related to Georgian. Altogether 11% of Georgia’s population
(over half a million) is Muslim. About 4% of the population of
Armenia are Kurds, mostly adherents of the Yezidi faith, which
reveres the Prophet Mohammed but is not commonly regarded as an
Islamic sect. So within the southern Caucasus, we have Azerbaijan,
Adhzaria, and Abkhazia as Muslim zones. In the northern (Russian)
Caucasus, we have in addition, lined up westward from the Caspian
coast, Daghestan, Chechnya, and Ingushetia, three republics in the
Russian Federation with predominantly Muslim populations. Daghestan
has about two and a half million people, of whom at least 90% are
Muslim. There aren’t good current figures for Chechnya and
Ingushetia, but in 1989, when they were united in the Chechen-Ingush
Autonomous Republic, there were 735,000 Muslim Chechens and 164,000
Muslim Ingush, together 71% of the republic’s population (the rest
being mostly Russian).

Bordering Ingushetia is North Ossetia, a predominantly (80%)
Christian republic in the Russian Federation, with an Ingush
minority. (Among the ethnic Ossetians themselves, some 20% practice
Sunni Islam.) Then to the west, bordering Georgia, are the
predominantly Muslim republics of Kabardino-Balkaria (Kabardins
mostly Sunni Muslims, Balkarians mostly Orthodox Christian) and
Karachayevo-Cherkessia, whose Muslim populations together number
maybe a million. In other words, in the Caucasus you have in addition
to the seven or eight million Azeri Muslims, four or five million
other Muslims, living in historically Muslim districts in the
Christian-majority behemoth that is Russia, and in the ancient
Christian land of Georgia.

Some of these Muslims, since the breakup of the Soviet Union, have
become involved in violent secessionist movements. Moscow and Tblisi,
who have differences between themselves, have both become inclined
since 9-11 to depict their response to such movements as
counter-terrorist in character, to represent the secessionists as
ideological soul-mates of al-Qaeda, and to manipulate the “War on
Terror” paradigm to justify their repressive measures and to even
threaten “pre-emptive” actions. Putin like Bush vows to strike at
terrorists “wherever they may be” (which might mean, say, striking at
Chechens in the Pankisi Gorge in Georgia). Thus in the Caucasus, the
implosion of the USSR, like the implosion of Yugoslavia in the
Balkans, produces a welter of nationalist strivings, coupled with
long-dormant religious sensibilities, that both the hyperpuissance
U.S. and the weakened regional hegemon Russia seek to exploit. They
do so now in the context of Bush’s eternal war project, which
exploits anti-Islamic sentiment in the U.S. (drawing especially on
the most ignorant varieties of Christian fundamentalist intolerance),
even as the administration insists before the global audience that
the U.S. respects Islam as “a religion of peace.” Putin, powerless to
prevent the U.S.’s projection of power into formerly Soviet territory
from Central Asia to Georgia, applies an “If you can’t beat ’em, join
’em” policy, depicting his own measures against unruly Muslims in
Russia as part of the global Terror War.

Chechnya

Of Muslims seeking independence from Russia, the Chechens receive the
most attention. Their secessionist movement has been the bloodiest in
the region, and exacted a most grotesque toll on Russians, in
particular, from the Caucasus to Moscow. The small Chechen homeland
has had a very bad press, internationally, and most Americans who’ve
heard of Chechnya no doubt by this point associate its people with
Islamic terrorism. The recent school hostage episode in Beslan, in
Russia’s North Ossetia, presented the world with the most nightmarish
spectacle: a school commandeered, children specifically targeted,
seized, terrified, shot in the back as they attempted to escape.
About 330 Christians, half of them kids, killed by Muslims from
Chechya, and the adjoining Muslim republic of Ingushetia, and (if one
believes an early Russian report uncorroborated by reporters) Muslim
Arabs. (I seriously doubt any Arab participation, simply because it
too obviously serves Putin’s wish to depict his repression of the
Chechen independence movement as part of the global Bush-war project
targeting Arabs.) Anyway, a horrible, unforgivable scenario, which
some may see as Russia’s 9-11.

One might suppose that, as Putin seeks to link Chechen rebels to
al-Qaeda, the U.S. would support the Russian leader in his moves
against Chechen separatism, rather as it endorses every single move
the Likud regime in Israel takes against the cause of the
Palestinians (a “terrorist” cause to the Likudists in the Bush
administration), or that President Arroyo in the Philippines takes
against the Moro. But no, not quite. Just as Washington found it
useful to validate Bosnian and Kosovar nationalism in the Balkans
(entrenching its expanding NATO-self into what was once proudly
non-aligned European territory), so it has (under the Clinton and
Bush administrations alike) found it useful to promote Muslim
separatisms in southern Russia, to better destabilize the Russian
Federation. Why? Because Russia seeks to thwart U.S. oil pipeline
ambitions and the U.S.’s general pursuit of geopolitical advantage in
the Caucasus. Ruling circles in both the U.S. and Russia are acting
rationally in pursuit of their ends. Those anti-people ends are the
problem.

As the Soviet Union broke up in 1991, Chechens, having resented
Russian domination for a century and a half, under the leadership of
air force general Dzhokar Dudayev declared independence.
Russian President
Boris Yeltsin refused to grant this, and Russian forces invaded in
1994 to reestablish central government authority. The invasion met
with fierce resistance, prompting a withdrawal in 1996 and a peace
agreement in 1997. A new Chechen government, headed by Aslan
Maskhadov, failed to acquire international recognition, or to contain
rampant crime, corruption, and warlordism. “Islamic extremism”
flourished and spread into neighboring Ingushetia and elsewhere. In
October 1992, Ingush militias clashed with Russian-backed North
Ossetian security forces, paramilitaries and army troops in the
disputed region of Prigorodnyi. This is 978 square kilometers of
once-Ingush land given North Ossetia during the Stalin years. This
land dispute is at the heart of Christian Ossetian-Muslim Ingush
animosity, and the Ingush and Chechens, whose languages are mutually
comprehensible, identify with one anothers’ struggles. (The Beslan
school seizure was a joint operation involving Chechens and Ingush
militants.)

Thousands of Ingush homes were destroyed in 1992, and the bulk of the
Ingush population in North Ossetia (46,000 by official Russian count)
displaced. Complicating matters, South Ossetia, in the Republic of
Georgia, attempted to succeed from Georgia and unite with North
Ossetia. In response, the new Georgian government sent in troops,
leveling 100 Ossetian villages and producing 100,000 refugees, many
of whom wound up in Prigordnyi, seizing Ingush homes. (Tit for tat,
Moscow tilted towards Abkhazia as fighting there killed 16,000 and
drove 300,000 ethnic Georgians from their homes.)

Following bombings in North Ossetia that killed 53, an attack on a
Russian military barracks in Daghestan, and the bombing of two Moscow
apartment buildings in1999 that killed over 300, the government of
President Putin resumed the war with Chechnya, forcing Maskhadov
underground. Moscow blamed Chechens for the Moscow attacks, although
rebel leader Shamil Basayev disclaimed responsibility, and skeptics
claim the attacks were staged to justify renewed Russian
intervention. When Putin succeeded Yeltsin as Russian president on
December 31, 1999, his military was bogged down in an unwinnable
guerrilla war in Chechnya, and cutting its losses, the Putin
administration simply proclaimed victory, turning over power to a
Chechen puppet (recently assassinated) in 2002. Russian troops
remain, harassed by forces loyal to Basayev, whom Moscow says it
knows “for certain” was behind the Beslan school attack. (A Russian
daily has claimed that in a message signed by Basayev, he demanded an
end to the war in Chechnya, the withdrawal of Russian troops,
autonomy for Chechnya within the Commonwealth of Independent States,
Chechnya’s continued inclusion in the ruble zone, and CIS
peacekeepers for the region.) Some of Basayev’s forces, Moscow
claims, operate out of bases in Georgia, and since 2002 Russia has
threatened to take action against Chechen militants in that country.
Washington warns against this.

The Neocons’ Role

For over a decade, U.S. policy has been to criticize Russian actions
against Chechen and Ingush rebels, while discouraging Russian support
for all three separatist movements in Georgia. In 1999, many key
players in the current administration formed an “American Committee
for Peace in Chechnya” (ACPC), whose membership roster includes
omnipresent neocon operator Richard Perle, Elliott Abrams, Kenneth
Adelman, Elliot Cohen, Midge Decter, Frank Gaffney, Glen Howard,
Robert Kagan, William Kristol, Michael Ledeen, Bruce Jackson, James
Woolsey, and Caspar Weinberger. Since 9-11, while insisting on
al-Qaeda links to Muslim terrorism everywhere else (from the
Philippines to Palestine), they have pronounced any Chechen-al-Qaeda
link “overstated.” ACPC has successfully campaigned for the U.S. to
provide political asylum to Ilyas Akhmadov, foreign minister in
Maskhadov’s toppled regime and considered a terrorist by Moscow. Bush
policy was expressed by Steven Pifer, deputy assistant secretary of
state for European and Eurasian affairs, in an appearance before the
Congressional Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe in
2003: “[We] do not share the Russian assessment that the Chechen
conflict is simply and solely a counterterrorism effort. . . . While
there are terrorist elements fighting in Chechnya, we do not agree
that all separatists can be equated as terrorists.” According to John
Laughland in the Guardian (Sept. 8), “US pressure will now increase
on Moscow to achieve a political, rather than military, solution – in
other words to negotiate with terrorists, a policy the US resolutely
rejects elsewhere.” Putin’s Chechnya war, that is to say, is not, as
the Russian leader wants to paint it, part and parcel of the global
War on Terrorism initially focused on al-Qaeda. It is an ongoing
statement of Russia’s still-brutal, dictatorial character, and hence
an encouragement for the Caucasian nations to strengthen ties with
the U.S.

While seeking regime change throughout the Muslim Middle East,
inventing facts to achieve that end, the Bush administration (pleased
with the new U.S.-educated president Mikheil Saakashvili of Georgia,
which it helped place in power; pleased to have military forces
training troops in Azerbaijan; grateful to Armenia for its 50 troops
in Iraq; planning on bringing these all into NATO) wants the status
quo in the southern Caucasus (except for the remaining Russian bases
in Georgia, which it wants to replace with its own). It also desires
the advance of Muslim separatism in the northern (Russian) Caucasus.
Should southern Russia decompose into a series of small, weak nations
(from Daghestan to Karachayevo-Cherkessia), this part of Muslim
Europe will fall firmly into the U.S. lap, terrorizing nobody and
happily cooperating with U.S. energy corporations. This, at least, is
the neocon hope, which is why they so embrace, even after the Beslan
attack, what they imagine to be the Chechen cause. Meanwhile Moscow,
repressing Muslim separatism at home, courts Muslim separatists in
Georgia’s Adzharia and Abhkazia. Thus the main issue in the Caucasus
is not Islam, or Chechen terrorism, but geopolitical control, with
the U.S. and Russia competing to depict their competition as a War on
Terror.

To this the world should simply say, with Bertolt Brecht, “The valley
to the waterers, that it yield fruit.” (Caucasian Chalk Circle, Act
V)

Gary Leupp is Professor of History at Tufts University, and Adjunct
Professor of Comparative Religion. He is the author of Servants,
Shophands and Laborers in in the Cities of Tokugawa Japan; Male
Colors: The Construction of Homosexuality in Tokugawa Japan; and
Interracial Intimacy in Japan: Western Men and Japanese Women,
1543-1900. He is also a contributor to CounterPunch’s merciless
chronicle of the wars on Iraq, Afghanistan and Yugoslavia, Imperial
Crusades.

He can be reached at: [email protected]

http://www.infoplease.com/spot/chechnyatime1.html

Armenian paper says cancellation of NATO war games might angerAzerba

Armenian paper says cancellation of NATO war games might anger Azerbaijan

Ayots Ashkar, Yerevan
14 Sep 04

Text of Vardan Grigoryan’s report by Armenian newspaper Ayots Ashkar
on 14 September headlined “Cold shower for Azerbaijan”

We can state without exaggeration that the cancellation of the
Cooperative Best Effort 2004 exercises scheduled for 13-26 September
in Baku within the framework of the NATO Partnership for Peace
programme is a severe blow to the international rating and authority
of Azerbaijan.

The policy of constant blackmail that continued for a year, by means
of which the leadership of Azerbaijan was trying to prevent Armenian
servicemen from taking part in preparations for and in the conduct of
the NATO exercises, has finally resulted in the fact that yesterday,
on 13 September, the leadership of the most powerful geopolitical
organization cancelled the exercises in Baku in response to the gross
violation of the principles and spirit of the Partnership for Peace
programme. Baku thought that since Armenia is a member of the CIS
Collective Security Treaty Organization [CSTO] and Russia’s partner,
NATO would unconditionally fulfil its caprices. But thanks to its
flexible foreign policy, while being a member of the CSTO, Armenia
at the same time has obtained the same status as Azerbaijan within
the framework of the Partnership for Peace programme. Thus, Armenia
could on time foil Azerbaijan’s attempts to use NATO to change the
geopolitical balance in the region.

But taking the desired for reality, over the last year the
leadership of Azerbaijan hoped in vain that NATO would prefer it
to Armenia. However, Armenia, unlike Azerbaijan, has been gradually
using the opening opportunity of mutual cooperation because of the
improvement in NATO-Russia relations. We needed enormous tact and
restraint to confront constant caprices of Azerbaijan within the
framework of Partnership for Peace and to become a reliable partner
of NATO.

Over the past year Armenia, which always came across artificial
obstacles set by Azerbaijan at the preparation stage of the
Cooperative Best Effort 2004 exercises, proved to NATO and the
world community that it was doing its best to remain devoted to the
principles of partnership. On the one hand, [Azerbaijani President]
Ilham Aliyev promised and assured NATO generals that his country
would ensure the participation of Armenian servicemen, on the other,
he provoked anti-Armenian moods in Azerbaijan. Whereas in ensuring
the participation of all NATO partner countries, in fact, Azerbaijan
was dealing not with Armenia but with NATO.

So, the policy of blackmail against Armenia at some point turned
into obvious encroachment upon the main principles of NATO, and this
cannot but be punished. As a result, the Cooperative Best Effort 2004
exercises were cancelled. What happened will undoubtedly come as a
cold shower to Azerbaijan promoting the strengthening of anti-West
and anti-American moods in the country.

At the same time, this legal decision of the NATO leadership
is not only a serious victory of the principles adopted by the
geopolitical leadership of our country, but also an open warning
of new challenges to Armenia. We should avoid euphoria and fully
understand that Azerbaijan, which ran away from Russia towards the USA
and NATO but did not find treatment for its “Karabakh abnormality”,
is becoming more unpredictable because of this failure. The reason
is obvious: while it maintains the dangerous idea that the war has
not yet finished, there is only one step for Azerbaijan from a new
failure and new disappointment to a military campaign.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

BAKU: Baku denies Azeri, Armenian foreign ministers to meet at NATO

Baku denies Azeri, Armenian foreign ministers to meet at NATO HQ

Ekspress, Baku
14 Sep 04

Text of Alakbar Raufoglu report by Azerbaijani newspaper Ekspress
on 14 September entitled “Unexpected visit. Mammadyarov and Oskanyan
are in Brussels”

Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov flew to Brussels
yesterday. Ekspress newspaper has learnt from diplomatic sources
that, during a two-day visit, the foreign minister will have a series
of meetings with the European Union’s enlargement commissioner and
attend a sitting of the EU-Azerbaijan cooperation commission due to
start today.

The minister is also expected to join discussions at NATO headquarters.
Mammadyarov will debate Azerbaijani-NATO cooperation within the
framework of the Partnership for Peace programme with the alliance
leadership.

“The minister is paying a working visit and, therefore, no precise
topic or principal issue is on the agenda,” Foreign Ministry spokesman
Matin Mirza told Ekspress yesterday. He said that Mammadyarov’s
attendance at the sitting of the EU-Azerbaijan commission had been
scheduled in advance and the visit had nothing to do with NATO.

In the meantime, Armenian sources report that Armenian Foreign Minister
Vardan Oskanyan, who was on a visit to Poland, went unexpectedly to
Brussels yesterday. “Mammadyarov and Oskanyan were suddenly invited
to Brussels yesterday to have consultations on the participation
of the Armenian officers in the Cooperative Best Effort – 2004
exercises,” Armenia’s Arka news agency reported. The source claims
that the Brussels talks between Azerbaijani and Armenian experts
on the possibility of the Armenian officers participating in the
Baku-hosted NATO exercises failed. So during Saturday’s discussions,
the representatives of the two countries left the debates and
“therefore, the alliance’s leadership decided to thrash out this
issue at ministerial level”.

“The reports are wide of the mark. There is no way that the Azerbaijani
and Armenian foreign ministers will meet in Brussels in any form,”
Mirza said.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

BAKU: Azeri MPs happy about cancellation of NATO war games

Azeri MPs happy about cancellation of NATO war games

Turan news agency
14 Sep 04

Baku, 14 September: The cancellation of NATO’s Cooperative Best
Effort 2004 exercises in Azerbaijan was discussed at the Milli Maclis
[parliament] session today.

MP Ibrahim Isayev was the first to speak on the issue. He expressed
his regret at the fact that NATO was led by the nose by the Armenians
and had cancelled the exercises in Baku.

“At the same time, we have succeeded in barring Armenians from Baku,
so let me congratulate you on that,” the MP said.

Qudrat Hasanquliyev, chairman of the United People’s Front of
Azerbaijan Party, described what happened as a “major achievement”.

“Our people have shown their unity,” he said with satisfaction.

Hasanquliyev called on everyone to be “on alert” to the people and
companies maintaining “contacts” with Armenia, saying that such
cooperation was unacceptable.

At the same time, MP Musa Musayev expressed his doubt that the
disruption of the NATO exercises was a positive achievement. He
recalled that a great deal of effort was taken by Azerbaijan to become
an associated member of the NATO Parliamentary Assembly. If Azerbaijan
is aspiring to a negotiated solution to the Karabakh problem, it has
to cooperate with NATO, Musayev said.

Parliament Speaker Murtuz Alasgarov said summing up the debate that
in some sense the NATO decision was an answer to the Azerbaijani
parliament’s address.

“We protested at the visit of those who have occupied our lands and
shed the blood of our people, and we have achieved our goal,” he said.

[Passage to end omitted: parliament session’s agenda]

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Iran’s President Khatami Returns Home From Tajikistan

IRAN’S PRESIDENT KHATAMI RETURNS HOME FROM TAJIKISTAN

Tehran, 14 September: President Mohammad Khatami arrived in Tehran
later in the day ending his three-nation tour which took him from
Yerevan to Dushanbe after Minsk.

Upon his arrival at Mehrabad International Airport, Khatami talked
to reporters on his seven-day visits to the Republics of Armenia,
Belarus and Tajikistan.

On the last leg of his tour, Khatami took part in the summit of
Economic Cooperation Organization (ECO) heads of state held in
Dushanbe, Tajikistan.

Source: IRNA web site, Tehran, in English 1525 gmt 14 Sep 04

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Azeri political analysts react to NATO decision to cancel PfP exerci

AZERI POLITICAL ANALYSTS REACT TO NATO DECISION TO CANCEL PfP EXERCISES

ArmenPress
Sept 14 2004

BAKU, SEPTEMBER 14, ARMENPRESS: Azerbaijani political experts reacted
swiftly to the decision of NATO’s Supreme Command to cancel the
exercises, dubbed Cooperative Best Effort 2004 that were scheduled
to start today in Azerbaijan as part of Partnership for Peace program
(PfP) after the official Baku refused entry visas to Armenian officers
to travel to Azerbaijan’s capital.

Last Friday, the Azeri parliament sent a message to NATO Secretary
General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer protesting the inclusion of Armenian
soldiers and warning it could inflame tensions in the region and harm
relations between Azerbaijan and the Atlantic alliance. President
Ilham Aliyev also reportedly opposed the inclusion of the soldiers.

An ex-foreign minister Tofik Zulfugarov argued that NATO’s decision
was “biased” and was taken without taking into account the existing
realities of the region. “Though the decision is an unpleasant event
for Azerbaijan it has prompted decision-makers to once again think
about specific conditions of the region … Azerbaijan is the victim
of Armenia’s aggression and this fact should not be ignored by those
organizations, which are trying to create an illusion that there is
no occupation and no refugees” he was quoted by Turan news agency
as saying.

According to another political analyst, Zardusht Alizade, all the
clamor around the exercises has in fact no relation to patriotism and
struggle for liberation of Karabagh and furthermore, it will sustain
huge damages to Azerbaijan. He said that the arrival of Armenian
officers would have no impact on the Karabagh problem. “Azeris should
not have raised all this noise, it was a stupid and absolutely
non-constructive position.” He said that Azerbaijan has lost all
opportunities to express its positions internationally, implicating
also that the country’s leadership is trying to please Russia to
prove its ability to keep the conflict frozen.

Eldar Namazov, another political analysts, said the refusal of
Azerbaijan to accept Armenian officers was regretful, adding that
its aftereffects will eventually affect Azerbaijan’s image.

According to an independent military observer, Uzeir Jafarov, the
first such incident in the history of PfP exercises is evidence that
NATO will revise Azerbaijan’s participation in its programs.

But according to political analyst Vafa Quluzada, the cancellation
of the exercises will not affect Azerbaijani-NATO relations.
“Azerbaijan and Armenia are at war and this is obvious to NATO that
failed to realize that the Azerbaijani people would not be indifferent
to this,” he said, adding that NATO will respect Azerbaijan even more
and understand that the two countries should not be kept in a state of
war. “NATO enjoys big powers and can play an important role in putting
an end to this aggression against Azerbaijan immediately,” he said.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Putin to bring together Azerbaijani, Armenian leaders in Astana

Putin to bring together Azerbaijani, Armenian leaders in Astana
By Viktoria Sokolova

ITAR-TASS News Agency
September 14, 2004

MOSCOW, September 15 — President Vladimir Putin will hold a tripartite
meeting in Astana on Wednesday evening with Armenian President Robert
Kocharyan and Azerbaijani President Ilkham Aliyev.

“The format of such a meeting has proven to be correct,” presidential
aide Sergei Prikhodko told Itar-Tass.

The Kremlin assumes that the presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan
“should reach an accord between themselves,” while Russia “can make
its contribution to the development and deepening of dialogue,”
Prikhodko said.

The new tripartite meeting will be held on Moscow’s proposal, a source
in the presidential administration told Itar-Tass. The Kremlin does
not rule out that Kocharyan and Aliyev will have a one-on-one meeting
in Astana.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress