WikiLeaks: Turkish Undersecretary Complains To U.S. About Aliyev

WIKILEAKS: TURKISH UNDERSECRETARY COMPLAINS TO U.S. ABOUT ALIYEV

news.am
Nov 29 2010
Armenia

On November 28, scandalous WikiLeaks website published secret
documents revealing U.S. foreign strategy. Turkish officials were
also targeted. Information is available in such sources as El Pais, Le
Monde, Der Spiegel, The Guardian E The New York Times. NEWS.am posts
the excerpts from the document disclosing details of the meeting
between U.S. Undersecretary Burns and Turkish Foreign Ministry
Undersecretary Feridun Sinirlioglu.

“Sinirlioglu appealed for ‘simultaneity’ between Armenian Protocols
ratification and the Minsk Process. He emphasized ‘a strong
reaction’ against the protocols among ruling party MPs had to be
overcome before the government would hazard a ratification effort. He
warned Congressional passage of an Armenian genocide resolution would
‘complicate’ his government’s domestic political calculations regarding
ratification. He said if something acceptable to Azerbaijani President
Aliyev can found, then ‘we can move’ the protocols forward.

Sinirlioglu suggested Azerbaijan and Armenia’s announcement of an
agreed framework for Minsk Group progress would provide the GoT with
the necessary political cover. Burns inquired about the prospect for
progress on a natural gas deal between Turkey and Azerbaijan.

Sinirlioglu implied Aliyev is holding an agreement hostage to Turkey’s
handling of the protocols: “He doesn’t trust us.”

From: A. Papazian

AMD Revaluation Thanks To De-Dollarization

AMD REVALUATION THANKS TO DE-DOLLARIZATION
By Samvel Avagyan

news.am
Nov 29 2010
Armenia

According to the data published by the Central Bank of Armenia (CBA),
the de-dollarization tendencies in the Armenian economy are the main
cause of AMD revaluation.

The demand for AMD loans is growing. November 15 to 21, AMD loans
totaled 16.6 billion AMD (about U.S. $46 million), while USD loans
total 40 million. This October AMD loans showed an upward tendency.

Over 50% of the issued loans were in USD terms before.

Deposits showed a de-dollarization tendency. However, according to the
information at our disposal, USD deposits exceed AMD deposits. Banks
accept less AMD deposits than issue loans, which causes AMD “hunger”
and AMD revaluation. On the other hand, exchange offices register
additional demand for U.S. dollars. Last week, purchases totaled U.S.

$70 million, and sales U.S. $77 million. This means that citizens
and economic entities still expect AMD devaluation and they prefer
purchasing U.S. dollars.

Over the pas week the CBA has reduced the monetary base, especially
cash funds, thereby contributing to the AMD “hunger.” At present, the
monetary base is about 451 billion AMD (about U.S. $1.2), with cash
funds totaling 316 billion AMD (about U.S. $880 million). This is not
the minimum level over the recent months. So it is yet early to speak
of any AMD deficit in the context of general economic situation. The
monetary base is likely to increase as holiday trade is nearing. Late
in 2009, the AMD base exceeded 500 billion AMD. Such fluctuations are
the main cause of the holiday price rise, as a surplus is formed in
the economy.

This year, the monetary base has undergone de-dollarization as well.

The share of required currency reserves in the monetary base has
sharply decreased. By November 26, the required currency reserves
had constituted about 14.5% against 31% early this year.

Thus, de-dollarization is the main cause of AMD revaluation and further
expectations of price rise. The CBA’s containment policy contributes
to AMD revaluation as well.

From: A. Papazian

System Of A Down End Hiatus, Announce European Tour Dates

SYSTEM OF A DOWN END HIATUS, ANNOUNCE EUROPEAN TOUR DATES
By David Buchanan

Consequence of Sound

Nov 29 2010

System of a Down was a sonically unique beast during its heyday,
but after five studio albums, the Armenian-American Californians
brought their brand of protest rock, sporadic musical arrangements,
and lyrical surrealism to an unexpected halt on August 13th, 2006.

Fans in West Palm Beach, FL witnessed what was rumored, for a time, to
be System Of A Down’s final performance. Members graciously announced
only an indefinite hiatus (which we missed upon blinking), but side
project after side project kept them busy otherwise, further fanning
flames: guitarist Daron Malakian and drummer John Dolmayan pursued
Scars On Broadway, lead vocalist Serj Tankian followed up his poetry
collection Cool Gardens with two solo albums, and bassist Shavo
Odadjian collaborated with Wu-Tang member The RZA, among other things.

I have persisted, since reviewing Scars On Broadway, that the so-called
hiatus was merely temporary, as has the band itself; I believed it
to merely be everyone’s opportunity for new endeavors, each with a
varying degree of notoriety. On that note, in a long overdue followup
to this January tweet, November 29th, 2010 (according to Blabbermouth)
marks the announcement of a European tour return from the four-year
rest period. The reinvigorated rock act has snagged spots at the
2011 editions of Rock am Ring and Rock im Park in Germany, Download
Festival in England, and Nova Rock in Sweden, as well as headlining
dates in Milan, Paris, and Berlin.

The band says they have “no master plan of sorts,” so we’re not
sure if the future also holds North American tour dates or a new
studio album. While we wait to find out, you can find a listing of
all confirmed European tour dates below. Complete ticket on-sale
information can be found on the band’s website.

System of a Down 2011 Tour Dates: 06/02- Milan, IT @ Fiera Arena
06/04 – Nurnberg, DE @ Rock im Park 06/05 – Nurburgring, DE @ Rock am
Ring 06/06 – Paris, FR @ Omnisports de Bercy 06/09 – Interlaken, SZ @
Greenfield Festival 06/11 – Donington, UK @ Download Festival 06/13 –
Nickelsdorf, AT @ Nova Rock 06/15 – Berlin, DE @ Wuhlheide 06/17 –
Gothenburg, SE @ Metaltown Festival 06/19 – Turku, FI @ Provinssirock

From: A. Papazian

http://consequenceofsound.net/2010/11/29/system-of-a-down-end-hiatus-announce-european-tour-dates/

Peter Semneby, "Heritage" Reps Discuss Armenia’s Domestic Developmen

PETER SEMNEBY, “HERITAGE” REPS DISCUSS ARMENIA’S DOMESTIC DEVELOPMENTS AND 2012 ELECTIONS

news.am
Nov 29 2010
Armenia

On November 29, Deputy Head of “Heritage” party Ruben Hakobyan and
Head of “Heritage” parliamentary faction Stepan Safaryan met with
EU Special Representative for the South Caucasus Peter Semneby,
his political advisers Mark Fawcett and Andrei Didenko.

The officials discussed resolution of the Karabakh conflict, as well as
issues on regional security, Armenia’s domestic political developments
and 2012 elections, “Heritage” press service informed NEWS.am.

“Heritage” representatives expressed their concern over the current
situation in the Karabakh peace process, Azerbaijan’s warlike
statements and frequent ceasefire violations by Azerbaijani armed
forces in the Karabakh conflict zone. They also presented “Heritage”
faction’s stance on Karabakh’s independence to EU envoy.

The party members highly appreciated EU’s assistance to Armenian
domestic political and pre-electoral processes. However, they
expressed concern over some European agencies’ position on amendments
to Electoral Code, being an obstacle to free and transparent elections
in Armenia.

Semneby made a point of the meeting with “Heritage” party members to
present their standpoints to the EU member states. The meeting was
held on EU official’s initiative.

From: A. Papazian

ISTANBUL: Wikileaks unveils largest US diplomatic cables, Turkey…

Wikileaks unveils largest US diplomatic cables, Turkey makes up second
biggest share

29 November 2010, Monday / TODAY’S ZAMAN, İSTANBUL

Hundreds of thousands of State Department documents leaked Sunday
revealed a hidden world of backstage international diplomacy,
divulging candid comments from world leaders and detailing occasional
US pressure tactics aimed at hot spots in Afghanistan, Iran and North
Korea.

The classified diplomatic cables released by online whistle-blower
WikiLeaks and reported on by news organizations in the United States
and Europe provided often unflattering assessments of foreign leaders,
ranging from US allies such as Germany and Italy to other nations like
Turkey, Libya, Iran and Afghanistan.

German Der Spiegel reported on Sunday that the leaked diplomatic
cables reveal that US diplomats are skeptical about Turkey’s
dependability as a partner. The leadership in Ankara is depicted as
divided and permeated by Islamists, the report said.

According to Der Spiegel, US diplomats have grave doubts about
Turkey’s dependability. Secret or confidential cables from the US
Embassy in Ankara describe Islamist tendencies in the government of
Prime Minister Recep Tayyip ErdoÄ?an.

The US diplomats’ verdict on the NATO partner with the second biggest
army in the alliance is devastating. The Turkish leadership is
depicted as divided, and ErdoÄ?an’s advisers, as well as Foreign
Minister Ahmet DavutoÄ?lu, are portrayed as having little understanding
of politics beyond Ankara.

The Americans are also worried about DavutoÄ?lu’s alleged neo-Ottoman
visions. A high-ranking government adviser warned in discussions,
quoted by the US diplomats, that DavutoÄ?lu would use his Islamist
influence on ErdoÄ?an, describing him as “exceptionally dangerous.”
According to the US document, another adviser to the ruling AK Party
remarked, probably ironically, that Turkey wanted “to take back
Andalusia and avenge the defeat at the siege of Vienna in 1683.”

The US diplomats write that many leading figures in the AK Party were
members of a Muslim fraternity and that ErdoÄ?an had appointed Islamist
bankers to influential positions. He gets his information almost
exclusively from newspapers with close links to Islamists, they
reported. The prime minister, the cables continue, has surrounded
himself with an “iron ring of sycophantic (but contemptuous) advisors”
and presents himself as the “Tribune of Anatolia.”

US steps up pressure on Turkey over Iran

UK’s The Guardian, in leaked documents published on late Sunday said,
in a tense conversation, a senior US envoy presses Turkish officials
to support US-led action to convince the Iranian government that it is
on the wrong course. The Turks insist their mediation efforts are the
best way forward but are forced to concede that most countries in the
region see Iran as a threat.

According to the daily, the great Iranian-American struggle for
control and influence in the Middle East is far from over ` and may in
fact be hotting up ` and it was made plain again when US
under-secretary William Burns held yet another meeting with the
reluctant Turks in Ankara in February 2010. Burns insists Washington
would prefer a negotiated settlement with Iran. Then, like Gates, he
uses the spectre of an Israeli military attack to dramatise his
arguments and unsettle the Turks.

“Burns strongly urged [Turkish foreign ministry under-secretary
Feridun] SinirlioÄ?lu to support action to convince the Iranian
government it is on the wrong course. SinirlioÄ?lu reaffirmed the GoT’s
[government of Turkey] opposition to a nuclear Iran; however, he
registered fear about the collateral impact military action might have
on Turkey and contended sanctions would unite Iranians behind the
regime and harm the opposition.

“Burns acknowledged Turkey’s exposure to the economic effects of
sanctions as a neighbour to Iran, but reminded SinirlioÄ?lu Turkish
interests would suffer if Israel were to act militarily to forestall
Iran’s acquisition of nuclear weapons or if Egypt and Saudi Arabia
were to seek nuclear arsenals of their own. ‘We’ll keep the door open
to engagement,’ he [Burns] stressed.”

And for once, it appears he has made some headway, the Guardian
interpreted. “A visibly disheartened SinirlioÄ?lu conceded a unified
message is important. He acknowledged the countries of the region
perceive Iran as a growing threat: ‘Alarm bells are ringing even in
Damascus.’ ”

The report also said in Nov. 2009 that DavutoÄ?lu, reportedly told US
envoy Phillip Gordon that Iran cannot be bullied into compliance with
western demands.

According to The Guardian, when Gordon says Ankara should send a stern
public message to Tehran about the consequences of ignoring UN
resolutions, DavutoÄ?lu replies that [Turkish prime minister Recep
Tayyip] ErdoÄ?an made just such a statement during a recent visit to
Tehran. “Only Turkey can speak bluntly and critically to the Iranians,
DavutoÄ?lu contended, but only because Ankara is showing public
messages of friendship.”

The exchange continues: “Noting that DavutoÄ?lu had only addressed the
negative consequences of sanctions or the use of military force,
Gordon pressed DavutoÄ?lu on Ankara’s assessment of the consequences if
Iran gets a nuclear weapon. DavutoÄ?lu gave a spirited reply, that ‘of
course’ Turkey was aware of this risk. ‘This is precisely why Turkey
is working so hard with the Iranians.’ ”

French and Americans exchange views on Turkey

During Assistant Secretary Gordon’s visit to Paris on September 11, he
met with a number of French policy-makers including Elysee Diplomatic
Advisors Jean-David Levitte, Damien Loras, and Francois Richier,
Assistant Secretary equivalent for Continental Europe Roland
Galharague, and Acting Director of Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Strategic Affairs bureau Jean-Hugues Simon-Michel to discuss Turkey’s
EU accesion, among other important topics.

According to the leaked documents, unveiled by the Guardian, Levitte
informed Gordon that there had been no change in the French position
advocating a “privileged partnership” between the European Union and
Turkey, in lieu of EU membership. However, he emphasized that France
was not preventing accession negotiations from progressing on all the
EU chapters that do not pre-suppose membership. There remain plenty of
chapters of the acquis to open, so if progress is not being made, the
fault lies with Turkish intransigence on Greek Cyprus. Unfortunately,
Ankara is not completing the required necessary reforms and progress
has stalled. Levitte anticipated a negative report this fall on
Turkey’s failure to fulfill the Ankara Protocol. Gordon said that
Turkey was caught in a vicious cycle and it is not completing
necessary reforms because the Turks do not believe that their EU
candidacy will be allowed to progress, and at the same time, their
negotiations are not progressing because they aren’t completing the
required reforms. He noted that in the latest German Marshall Fund
polls in Turkey, fewer that 30% of the Turkish public believes they
will succeed in getting EU membership.

Levitte agreed, according to the leaked information, but noted that
Paris hopes that it will be the Turks themselves who realize that
their role is best played as a bridge between the two worlds of Europe
and Asia, rather than anchored in Europe itself. He stated that Turkey
is in a difficult position as it wants to enter the EU but has refused
to accept one of the other EU member states. Levitte predicted that a
worse case scenario would be if Turkey finally manages to complete the
acquis and end negotiations and a public referendum is held in France
which is finally opposed to their membership. Despite all of these
problems, Levitte claimed that President Sarkozy is a friend of Turkey
and has visited the country at least 10 times in his life.

Elderly American’s escape from Iran to Turkey

In a series of leaked documents, The Guardian also chronicled the
story of elderly American’s escape from Iran to Turkey. The story
goes: When Hossein Ghanbarzadeh Vahedi, a 75-year-old American of
Iranian descent, decided to visit relatives in Tehran in May 2008, he
took a flight from Los Angeles in the normal way. When he returned
home, his means of transport was somewhat less orthodox.

After seven months in which he was prevented from leaving Iran, had
his passport confiscated and saw his appeals ignored by the
revolutionary courts, Vahedi took matters into his own hands. In a
daring escape, he mounted a horse, hired two guides, and began a
perilous 14-hour overnight climb across the freezing mountains of
north-western Iran into eastern Turkey. After that he took a bus.

On 9 January 2009, Vahedi turned up at the consular section of the US
embassy in Ankara and asked for assistance. To the evident
astonishment of American diplomats, Vahedi appeared in good health,
but for “a few aches and pains” caused by a fall.

Vahedi’s previously untold ordeal, and its happy conclusion, is
related in a confidential diplomatic cable from the Ankara embassy
seen by the Guardian. In it Vahedi, who left Iran during the 1979
Islamic revolution, tells how his sojourn to his parents’ graves and
ancestral home turned into a nightmare. His passport was confiscated
at Tehran airport as he was about to fly home and the Iranian
authorities repeatedly refused to return it, he said. There appeared
to be two reasons. One was “simple extortion”: it was made clear, he
said, that $150,000 (£92,000) would facilitate his departure.

Second, Vahedi said, Iranian government officials told him that he
should tell his LA-based sons to stop promoting concerts in the Gulf
by Persian pop singers that were considered “anti-regime”. He replied
that his sons were typical “strong, independent” Americans who would
do no such thing.

Of the four commonly used illegal escape routes, he opted for the
mountain trail into Turkey. “At one point during the 14-hour ride, the
escorts had to physically hug him to keep him warm,” the cable
recounted. “As an inexperienced rider, hours into the climb, Vahedi
lost his concentration and fell off the horse, tumbling into the
woods. He told [diplomats] that at this point he really believed he
was going to die by freezing to death on a mountainside.”

Even when he reached the other side of the border, Vahedi’s ordeal was
not over. Turkish officials declared him an illegal immigrant and
ordered his deportation back to Iran. Luckily for him, US embassy
officials had a quiet word with the Turkish foreign ministry ` and he
was allowed to fly home.

Leaked Documents disseminate information about ErdoÄ?an’s aides, cabinet

With the dismissal of Güçlü and these appointments, the leaked
documents claim, ErdoÄ?an has shown more clearly that he intends to
whittle down Gül’s influence. By dismissing AkÅ?it and Ergezen and
appointing Eker, whose family status in Diyarbakır makes him a
powerful rival to Interior Minister Aksu, ErdoÄ?an has also drawn the
noose around Aksu. Aksu has most recently served ErdoÄ?an’s purposes by
dismissing Hanefi Avcı, an leading Gülenist, according to the leaks,
who as National Police (TNP) department head for organized crime was
starting to push corruption investigations that were leading to the
heart of AK Party. However, ErdoÄ?an has long been troubled by Aksu,
whom he suspects of being ready to bolt from AK Party with a number of
disgruntled Member of Parliaments. Aksu’s Kurdish favoritism, reported
ties to the heroin trade, well-known predilection for teenage girls,
and his son’s open Mafia links make him a weak link in the Cabinet,
one ErdoÄ?an knows the core institutions of the Turkish State could
exploit at any time.

In the leaked documents, ErdoÄ?an was described as the glue of AK
Party. The documents classified 60 deputies of AK Party as
southeastern and Kurdish origin. The document claimed AK Party’s
Kurdish deputies are extraordinarily passive on Kurdish issues. The
second highest number of documents are from Turkey after Iraq,
according to the leaked documents.

Education Minister Nimet �ubukçu was described as focused, highly
ambitious in the leaked documents. It says “Ã?ubukçu is focused, highly
ambitious, and months ago made clear to us she sought the state
minister position. She has ensured that she stays close to Erdogan’s
wife Emine, which appears to have been a major factor in her
selection, according to what party deputy chairman Å?aban DiÅ?li told us
June 7.”

According to a broad range of our contacts, ErdoÄ?an reads minimally,
mainly the Islamist-leaning press. According to others with broad and
deep contacts throughout the establishment, ErdoÄ?an refuses to draw on
the analyses of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and the military and
National Intelligence Organization have cut him off from their
reports. He never had a realistic world view, but one key touchstone
is a fear of being outmaneuvered on the Islamist side by `Hoca’
Erbakan’s Saadet Party. Instead, he relies on his charisma, instincts,
and the filterings of advisors who pull conspiracy theories off the
Web or are lost in neo-Ottoman Islamist fantasies, e.g., Islamist
foreign policy advisor and Gül ally Ahmet DavutoÄ?lu.

The cables also contained new revelations about long-simmering nuclear
trouble spots, detailing US, Israeli and Arab world fears of Iran’s
growing nuclear program, American concerns about Pakistan’s atomic
arsenal and US discussions about a united Korean peninsula as a
long-term solution to North Korean aggression.

There are also American memos encouraging US diplomats at the United
Nations to collect detailed data about the UN secretary-general, his
team and foreign diplomats — going beyond what is considered the
normal run of information-gathering expected in diplomatic circles.

None of the revelations is particularly explosive, but their
publication could prove problematic for the officials concerned.

The documents published by The New York Times, France’s Le Monde,
Britain’s Guardian newspaper, German magazine Der Spiegel and others
laid out the behind-the-scenes conduct of Washington’s international
relations, shrouded in public by platitudes, smiles and handshakes at
photo sessions among senior officials.

The White House immediately condemned the release of the WikiLeaks
documents, saying `such disclosures put at risk our diplomats,
intelligence professionals, and people around the world who come to
the United States for assistance in promoting democracy and open
government.’

It also noted that `by its very nature, field reporting to Washington
is candid and often incomplete information. It is not an expression of
policy, nor does it always shape final policy decisions.”

“Nevertheless, these cables could compromise private discussions with
foreign governments and opposition leaders, and when the substance of
private conversations is printed on the front pages of newspapers
across the world, it can deeply impact not only US foreign policy
interests, but those of our allies and friends around the world,” the
White House said.

On its website, The New York Times said “the documents serve an
important public interest, illuminating the goals, successes,
compromises and frustrations of American diplomacy in a way that other
accounts cannot match.”

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange claimed the administration was trying
to cover up alleged evidence of serious “human rights abuse and other
criminal behavior” by the US government.

The WikiLeaks website was not accessible Sunday and the group claimed
it was under a cyberattack.

But extracts of the more than 250,000 cables posted online by news
outlets that had been given advance copies of the documents showed
deep US concerns about Iranian and North Korean nuclear programs along
with fears about regime collapse in Pyongyang.

The Times highlighted documents that indicated the US and South Korea
were “gaming out an eventual collapse of North Korea” and discussing
the prospects for a unified country if the isolated, communist North’s
economic troubles and political transition lead it to implode.

The paper also cited documents showing the US used hardline tactics to
win approval from countries to accept freed detainees from Guantanamo
Bay. It said Slovenia was told to take a prisoner if its president
wanted to meet with President Barack Obama and said the Pacific island
of Kiribati was offered millions of dollars to take in a group of
detainees.

It also cited a cable from the US Embassy in Beijing that included
allegations from a Chinese contact that China’s Politburo directed a
cyber intrusion into Google’s computer systems as part of a
“coordinated campaign of computer sabotage carried out by government
operatives, private security experts and Internet outlaws.”

Le Monde said another memo asked US diplomats to collect basic contact
information about UN officials that included Internet passwords,
credit card numbers and frequent flyer numbers. They were asked to
obtain fingerprints, ID photos, DNA and iris scans of people of
interest to the United States, Le Monde said.

The Guardian said some cables showed King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia
repeatedly urging the United States to attack Iran to destroy its
nuclear program. The newspaper also said officials in Jordan and
Bahrain have openly called for Iran’s nuclear program to be stopped by
any means and that leaders of Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates
and Egypt referred to Iran “as ‘evil,’ an ‘existential threat’ and a
power that ‘is going to take us to war,”‘ The Guardian said.

The Times said another batch of documents raised questions about
Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi and his relationship with
Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin. One cable said Berlusconi
“appears increasingly to be the mouthpiece of Putin” in Europe, the
Times reported.

Italy’s Foreign Minister Franco Frattini on Sunday called the release
the “Sept. 11 of world diplomacy,” in that everything that had once
been accepted as normal has now changed.

Der Spiegel reported that the cables portrayed German Chancellor
Angela Merkel and Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle in unflattering
terms. It said American diplomats saw Merkel as risk-averse and
Westerwelle as largely powerless.

The Obama administration has been bracing for the release for the past
week. Top officials have notified allies that the contents of the
diplomatic cables could prove embarrassing because they contain candid
assessments of foreign leaders and their governments, as well as
details of American policy.

The State Department’s top lawyer warned Assange late Saturday that
lives and military operations would be put at risk if the cables were
released. Legal adviser Harold Koh said WikiLeaks would be breaking
the law if it went ahead. He also rejected a request from Assange to
cooperate in removing sensitive details from the documents.

Assange, in a response released Sunday by his London lawyer, said he
had no intention of halting the release.

The New York Times said the documents involved 250,000 cables — the
daily message traffic between the State Department and more than 270
US diplomatic outposts around the world. The newspaper said that in
its reporting, it attempted to exclude information that would endanger
confidential informants or compromise national security.

The Times said that after its own redactions, it sent Obama
administration officials the cables it planned to post and invited
them to challenge publication of any information they deemed would
harm the national interest. After reviewing the cables, the officials
suggested additional redactions, the Times said. The newspaper said it
agreed to some, but not all.

From: A. Papazian

http://www.todayszaman.com/news-228225-wikileaks-unveils-largest-us-diplomatic-cables-turkey-makes-up-second-biggest-share.html

NATO leaders rebuff Medvedev’s proposal?

NATO leaders rebuff Medvedev’s proposal?

10:53 – 27.11.10

Leaders of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization have rebuffed a
proposal from Russian President Dmitry Medvedev to unite Russia’s
missile defenses with those of the West, said diplomats and NATO
officials, The Wall Street Journal reported.

At a closed-door meeting with NATO leaders in Lisbon Saturday, Mr.
Medvedev suggested uniting a missile shield being built by the 28
allies with Russia’s own missile defense system.

People attending the summit said President Barack Obama and other
leaders diplomatically rejected the Russian leader’s proposal, saying
the issue should be looked at by the countries’ technical experts. The
experts will look at ways the two systems can cooperate and report to
a meeting of NATO and Russian defense ministers in Brussels in June.

NATO diplomats said the Medvedev proposal goes way beyond what the
alliance envisages, which is cooperation and information sharing
between two systems rather than a single system. “We’re looking at two
different systems linked up,” said a NATO spokeswoman.

Mr. Medvedev’s told a news conference afterward that his proposal was
for “sectoral missile defense.” Russian officials later said Mr.
Medvedev proposed that Russia and NATO countries would be responsible
for shooting down missiles flying over their own territories and
Russia would destroy missiles headed for NATO territory.

Dmitry Rogozin, Russia’s ambassador to NATO, said in an interview with
the Russian website Vzglyad that Mr. Medvedev’s proposal “goes much
further than NATO’s fantasies” of limited cooperation.

“Medvedev is effectively proposing to create a collective
missile-defense system along the perimeter of the Euro-Atlantic
region. It roughly amounts to agreeing not to keep missile-defense
systems inside the region – something that raises our suspicions – and
arrange for the system to be pointed outwards.”

The proposal would mean the NATO system’s sensors wouldn’t be pointed
toward Russia, which is sensitive that the system could blunt its own
nuclear deterrent.

Mr. Rogozin “tweeted” from the summit that the Russian approach was
“reminiscent of two knights who, defending themselves from attackers,
stand back-to-back.”

Governments were left puzzling about whether Mr. Medvedev’s proposal
was an initial negotiating position or a spoiling gesture, diplomats
said. But NATO leaders reacted diplomatically because most welcome the
prospect of improved security cooperation with Russia, and that
missile-defense cooperation offers benefits to both sides.

President Barack Obama publicly welcomed Mr. Medvedev”s presence at
the meeting, describing him as “my friend and partner.” The decision
to cooperate on missile defense “turns a source of past tension into a
source of potential cooperation against a shared threat,” he said.

Skepticism over the proposal isn’t limited to NATO governments.
Nikolai Makarov, chief of Russia’s General Staff, said in the official
Rossiiskaya Gazeta newspaper that the idea of Russia shooting down
missiles headed over its territory for Europe and vice versa was
simplistic.

“For military men on both sides, this supposition looks, to put it
gently, far-fetched. The fact is that any country with missile-defense
systems would shoot down missiles approaching its borders without any
international agreements.”

Alexander Golts, an independent military analyst and deputy editor of
the Russian news weekly Yezhenedelny Zhurnal, wrote that Russia isn’t
currently capable of mass producing suitable ballistic missile
interceptor systems. Russia only has the S-400 system, of which it has
only two batteries, just outside Moscow.

“If this is the case, then Moscow has practically asked NATO to drop
missile defense,” he wrote.

Despite the apparently conciliatory signs on missile defense, the
Kremlin hasn’t given up its goal of expanding its global military
reach. On a visit to a base in central Russia Thursday, Mr. Medvedev
said the government is looking for ways to build new military bases
abroad to support its navy on long-distance missions.

“I won’t hide it from you, we have some ideas about this,” Mr.
Medvedev said in comments carried on state television. “Unfortunately,
it turned out that a series of our country’s previous capabilities
disappeared,” he added, an apparent reference to Soviet-era bases in
Cuba and Vietnam that Moscow gave up about a decade ago.

Tert.am

From: A. Papazian

Beirut: Torsarkissian: à propos de la visite d’Erdogan

ILoubnan , Liban
25 Nov 2010

Torsarkissian: à propos de la visite d’Erdogan: Les Libanais doivent
s’attacher à leur nationalité libanaise en premier lieu, spécialement
les Arméniens

iloubnan.info – Le 25 novembre 2010 BEYROUTH – Le député du Futur
Serge Torsarkissian a refusé de qualifier la visite du P.M. turc
Erdogan au Liban d'”appui à une seule confession”.

“Les Libanais doivent s’attacher à leur nationalité libanaise en
premier lieu, spécialement les Arméniens”, a souligné M. Torsarkissian
jeudi à la télévision NTV.

Il a affirmé que la confession arménienne ne sera pas contre l’intérêt
du Liban vis-à-vis des relations avec la Turquie ou autres pays. “Elle
respectera sa position historique”, a-t-il ajouté.

Le jour de l’arrivée d’Erdogan, une centaine de Libanais arméniens ont
manifesté à l’extérieur de l’aéroport de Beyrouth pour protester
contre cette visite. La communauté arménienne au Liban s’élève à 140
000 personnes, dont la plupart sont des descendants des Arméniens
ayant survécu aux massacres perpétrés en Anatolie de l’Est sous le
règne Ottoman il y a près d’un siècle. Les Arméniens estiment qu’1,5
millions d’entre eux ont été systématiquement tués entre 1915 et 1917,
alors que l’Empire Ottoman s’effondrait.

La Turquie rejette le terme de génocide, et affirme que 300 000 à 500
000 Arménies et au moins autant de Turcs sont morts durant les
affrontements civils, quand les Arméniens ont pris les armes contre
leurs dirigeants ottomans en s’alignant sur les troupes russes.

‘Erdogan:-Les-Libanais-doivent-s’attacher-%C3%A0-leur-nationalit%C3%A9-libanaise-en-premier-lieu,-sp%C3%A9cialement-les-Arm%C3%A9niens

From: A. Papazian

http://www.iloubnan.info/politique/actualite/id/52591/titre/Torsarkissian:-%C3%A0-propos-de-la-visite-d

Iranian, Turkish And Azerbaijani FMs to Meet in Tehran

IRANIAN, TURKISH AND AZERBAIJANI FMS TO MEET IN TEHRAN

AZG DAILY #219, 27-11-2010

Iran’s ambassador to Azerbaijan said that the three ministers would
meet in the near future.

Mohammad Baqer Bahrami said that Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar
Mammadyarov and his Iranian counterpart, Manouchehr Mottaki, had
reached agreement on the Tehran meeting during President Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad’s visit to Baku last week.

According to Azerbaijani sources, regional security issues will be
discussed at the meeting.

From: A. Papazian

BEIRUT: Geagea visits Tashnaq headquarters

NowLebanon.com
Nov 25 2010

Geagea visits Tashnaq headquarters
November 25, 2010

Lebanese Forces leader Samir Geagea visited on Thursday the
headquarters of the Tashnaq Party in Bourj Hammoud to meet with
officials from the party.

According to a statement issued by the LF, Geagea was accompanied by
Culture Minister Salim Wardeh -who represents the LF in the cabinet –
as well as LF bloc MP Farid Hariri and party officials Eddy Abi Lamaa
and Imad Wakim.

-NOW Lebanon

From: A. Papazian

http://www.nowlebanon.com/NewsArticleDetails.aspx?ID=218521

Turkish Court Calls for Merger in Dink Murder Trial

Turkish Court Calls for Merger in Dink Murder Trial

hetq
[ 2010/11/26 | 13:23 ]
region
The Second Magistrate Criminal Court in Trabzon has called for merging
the trial of Colonel Ali Oz, one of the key figures in the Hrant Dink
murder case, with that of seven gendarmerie officers also implicated.
The officers are being tried in the First High Criminal Court of
Trabzon.

Oz is currently being tried for disregarding crucial information
leading up to the murder of Hrant Dink. If the High Criminal Court
accepts the merger request, Oz will be tried by it only.
The hearings for both the new trial at the High Criminal Court and
that of the Magistrate Court are scheduled for December 9.

Oz and the seven officers have been charges with `misconduct in office
by negligence of duty’.

Lawyers for the Dink family have demanded that Oz and the officers be
prosecuted for `voluntary manslaughter as a result of negligence’.

From: A. Papazian