Living In Jerusalem’s Old City

LIVING IN JERUSALEM’S OLD CITY

BBC NEWS
iddle_east/7566775.stm
2008/08/29 07:00:34 GMT

The Old City of Jerusalem – containing sites sacred to Judaism,
Christianity and Islam – is often viewed as being at the heart of
the Arab-Israeli conflict. Divided into Jewish, Christian, Muslim and
Armenian quarters, it is an ethnic, cultural, political and religious
mix. Here, some of the Old City’s residents describe life behind its
ancient walls.

ELI GEORGE KOUZ, 55, SHOP OWNER, CHRISTIAN QUARTER The Old City is
full of crazy and fanatical people, and the Jews and Muslims are
getting more and more fundamentalist.

You see them walking round in their costumes, as if their way of life
is the only right one. I don’t like that. We should all be the same.

I belong to the Syrian Orthodox Church but life in the Old City can
be very difficult for Christians. The fighting is between Jews and
Muslims but the Christians get caught in the middle. It is far better
to keep out of it.

I don’t like living in the Old City – it’s very difficult to make
a living.

People here depend on tourism. It’s okay if you’re a tour guide –
you get a big commission – but there are too many store owners who
work like gangsters. Because of them tourists are scared to enter my
shop because they think they’re going to get hassled.

I work 12 hours a day because you don’t know when customers are going
to come and buy. In the Old City business is bad, but if you go outside
the walls to the new part, the shops there are doing really well.

Life here is not good either – there’s too much hatred between Muslims
and Jews. I have to pass through all the other quarters to get to my
house and I have to hope I’m not going to get caught up in any trouble.

In the future I’d hate to see the Old City divided. It should be an
open place, with no shops or houses even – like the Vatican – just a
place for tourists to visit. But how can it be the City of God when
there are police, soldiers and weapons everywhere, and people are
always getting pushed around?

ADNAN AWEIDH, 53, HOTEL WORKER, MUSLIM QUARTER I was born in the Old
City and my family here goes back 700 years.

It’s such an important place for Muslims – it’s the second holiest
place after Mecca. Jerusalem is like our water and we are like its
fish – we can’t live outside it.

The Muslim Quarter is very special but it can sometimes be like a
big prison – it was more open and free in the 1960s and 70s.

We don’t feel very safe here. Violence can happen here anytime, even
with the police – if you even look like an Arab they will always ask
you for your ID and question you, and if you don’t have your ID card
they will take you away.

Apart from that, life is very good here. I have my coffee and nargillah
and sit with my friends. I go to all the different quarters and I
have a lot of friends in the Armenian Quarter in particular.

Relations are also very good with the Christians – we eat and socialise
together – but it’s not so good with the Jews. Politics makes a
difference between people here. Before 1948 we lived with the Jews
like one big family, but since then there has been a lot of hatred.

I like living in the Muslim Quarter – it’s always busy and everyone
from around the world passes through.

We have everything we need here, nothing is missing. But it’s very
expensive in the Old City – you have to have at least two jobs and
your wife must also work just to make ends meet.

GARO SANDROUNI, 53, SHOP OWNER, ARMENIAN QUARTER The Armenian community
has been in Jerusalem since the fourth century.

There are only about 1,500 Armenians here now but the advantage of
that is everyone knows everyone else.

We have schools, museums, churches, seminaries and institutions here –
we’re very well-organised for such a small community.

Living in the Old City has got worse and worse. It’s attractive to
three major religions but there’s not enough space. Whenever there
are religious festivals – which is all the time – thousands of people
come here, which makes life difficult. You can’t move, you can’t take
your car out and you really have to plan in advance how you’re going
to get around.

I have seen lots of changes here in my lifetime. There have been too
many renovations in the Old City. It was completely different when
I was young.

Even the entrances to the Old City were different in those days.

There have been political changes too – the intifadas [Palestinian
uprisings] changed the atmosphere here. People went on strike and
shops closed down.

It has become more and more tense, people have become more fanatic
and everyone is pouring towards the Old City – so we end up getting
all the problems here.

We can live freely as Armenians though – there is no problem with
worshipping, for instance.

The Armenians are friendly with all the other quarters – we border
the Jewish and Christian Quarters and we have good relations with them.

Of course, everyone tries to get you on their side – sometimes we
sympathise with the Arabs, sometimes with the Jews, but as Armenians
we always try to stay neutral.

KITTY SEVILLA, 80, RESTAURANT OWNER, JEWISH QUARTER I moved here from
Tel Aviv in 1976. My father was born in the Old City and had always
told us what it was like, but we couldn’t visit here before 1967.

I love everything about living here. It’s a very special place because
it is where Jews had the Biblical temples. Being here now goes all
the way back to our ancestors and you really feel that. We can be
free and be Jewish here.

The only problem with living here is the restrictions during festivals.

Sometimes it’s difficult to get around.

We don’t keep separate from the other quarters. We used to go to the
other parts a lot but what we don’t like is the threat of terrorism,
so now we only go when we have to. There’s no hostility between Jews
and Arabs here but you never know when something might happen.

The Old City has changed a lot in the 30 years I have been here. In
1976 they were building a lot in the Jewish Quarter – there were lots
of donkeys carrying the materials because in those days the streets
here were very narrow. It’s also become a lot more expensive to buy
property here.

There are many more people here now too. Even just 10 years ago a
lot of people were too afraid to come here, but that’s changed now.

I feel safe living here – there are lots of police and soldiers around,
but that’s not unique to the Old City – it’s the same all over Israel.

I like the different people in the Old City. It’s a peaceful place to
live – all the nationalities get on here. I don’t want to see Jerusalem
divided, regardless of what other people say. If you want peace here,
things should stay the way they are.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/world/m

Russia’s Intermediation In Georgian-South Ossetian Conflict Closes

RUSSIA’S INTERMEDIATION IN GEORGIAN-SOUTH OSSETIAN CONFLICT CLOSES PANDORA’S BOX IN REGION, EXPERT SAYS

ARKA
Aug 27, 2008

YEREVAN, August 27. /ARKA/. Russia has closed Pandora’s Box in the
South Caucasus acting as a mediator between Georgia and South Ossetia,
Levon Melik-Shahnazaryan, political expert, said today at the Novosti
International Press-Center in Yerevan.

"Azerbaijan knows perfectly well that the conflict is being settled
not in the way they have expected, and even the politicians with an
extremist ideology take a different line," he added. "It is obvious
that they hate Russia much more than their Georgian colleagues."

The political expert believes Azerbaijan cannot use force to settle
the Karabakh conflict.

The Karabakh conflict broke out in 1988 when Artsakh, mainly populated
by Armenians, declared its independence from Azerbaijan.

On December 10, 1991, a few days after the collapse of the Soviet
Union, a referendum took place in Nagorno-Karabakh, and the majority
of the population (99.89%) voted for independence from Azerbaijan.

Afterwards, large-scale military operations began, as a result of
which Azerbaijan lost control over Nagorno-Karabakh and the seven
regions adjacent to it.

On May 12, 1994 after the signing of the Bishkek cease-fire agreement,
the military operations were stopped.

Since 1992, negotiations over the peaceful settlement of the conflict
have been carried out within the OSCE Minsk Group, co-chaired by the
USA, Russia and France.

Ossetia War: Lessons For Armenia

OSSETIA WAR: LESSONS FOR ARMENIA
by Emil Sanamyan

AZG Armenian Daily
26/08/2008

Regional

WASHINGTON – Within hours the long-running stand-off between Georgia
and Russia-backed South Ossetia became a full-blown war causing
hundreds of deaths and thousands of injuries, primarily among Ossetians
but also among the now-decimated Georgian army.

The fighting took place less than 100 miles from Armenia and had an
immediate impact on it. Above all, it exposed the security vacuum in
the region, of which Armenia is also a part.

Is Armenia ready for a repetition of a similar scenario in Karabakh?

Immediate consequences of Ossetia fighting

Half the world away – on the other end of Asia – most of the world
leaders, including President George Bush and Russia’s Prime Minister
Vladimir Putin, gathered for the opening of the Olympic Games. As
they sat in the VIP seats of the Beijing stadium, Georgia’s President
Mikheil Saakashvili, longtouted as Mr. Bush’s foreign policy "success
story" and a thorn in Mr. Putin’s side, threw most of his U.S.-trained
army into a savage attack on South Ossetia.

That happened just hours after the Georgian leader, in a televised
address, promised to cease shelling of the Ossetian capital of
Tskhinvali, which was surrounded on nearly all sides by Georgian
military positions. As events unfolded, it became clear that the
Georgian operation was planned in advance, but its planners had failed
to anticipate what came next.

Russia intervened within hours and on a massive scale. Had it
not been for that intervention, which resulted in a defeat of the
"NATO standard" Georgian army within 48 hours, and subsequent Western
diplomacy to check Russian military moves within Georgia, large-scale
fighting might well have claimed even more lives.

Nevertheless, the three days of shelling and shooting resulted in
nearly a wholesale destruction of Tskhinvali – a town about the size
of Stepanakert – and displacement of close to 100,000 people, both
Ossetians and Georgians.

The rapid pace of these events, the human toll involved, the apparent
shifts in the regional balance of forces and, above all, Armenians’
security predicament in Nagorno-Karabakh necessitate an urgent review
of Yerevan’s policies.

Lesson 1: Ethnic hatreds and advanced weapons make for a deadly mix

Mr. Saakashvili studied in some of the best schools in Europe and the
United States. He has made it clear that he wants Georgia to be part
of Europe. Georgia has already adopted the European Union flag. While
his record on corruption and democracy in Georgia is checkered,
under the Saakashvili presidency, Georgia has made obvious progress.

None of this stopped the Georgian president from launching a massive
indiscriminate bombardment of South Ossetia and an attempt to wipe
out both its small self-defense forces and, effectively, the fewer
than 70,000 ethnic Ossetians living in the area.

Now let’s look at Azerbaijan. It has much more money and more deadly
firepower than Georgia did before this week. Azerbaijan’s ruling family
does not care much for promoting democratic facades or currying Western
favor, and it has repeatedly for years threatened to attack Armenia
(including the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic).

This combination of capability and stated intent creates an immediate
present danger to Armenian lives and must be appreciated more
seriously and addressed more effectively than has happened to date
both in Armenia and the diaspora.

The quick and devastating defeat of a country that, like Azerbaijan,
sought to "restore its territorial integrity," or more accurately
avenge old grievances through fresh violence only to bring new
humiliation upon itself, should serve as a cold shower for Azerbaijan.

But Armenians cannot rely on President Ilham Aliyev’s rational
cost-benefit calculation. The risks are just too high. Considering the
levels of anti-Armenian rhetoric – which are beyond anything Georgia’s
leaders have ever employed vis-a-vis Ossetians, Abkhaz, or Russians –
Mr. Aliyev or, to borrow from the words of the Russian president,
another "lunatic" Azerbaijani leader may feel the "need to shed
[Armenian] blood" overwhelm other cares he or she might have.

The threat is real and must be addressed.

Lesson 2: Crisis preparations are necessary before a crisis arrives

Still, most Armenians – and this is especially true for the diaspora
and Yerevan – live in a blissful ignorance of threats their homeland
and their lives are facing.

Even among professional individuals whose job it is to protect Armenia
and neutralize its enemies, one frequently observes the attitude that
Azerbaijan either "doesn’t have the balls," "doesn’t have the army,"
"won’t risk losing oil," or "the United States and Russia won’t stand
for it."

After the Georgian attack on Ossetia, the Armenian government needs
to answer a number of key questions.

Does it consider losing hundreds, if not thousands of civilians
within a matter of hours, an acceptable risk? Azerbaijan today has
the capability to cause such destruction.

What is it doing to stop the flow of weapon systems to Azerbaijan –
particularly the type of weapons that can cause such devastating
harm? Like Georgia, Azerbaijan gets most of its weapons, including
the more deadly ones, from one state – another Western darling,
Ukraine. What has Armenia done to try to stop and reverse this process?

Has the Armenian government made it clear to Azerbaijan that it
would too pay a disproportionate price for causing Armenian civilian
deaths? How has that been demonstrated?

What has the Armenian government done to prepare its population for
a possible attack?

Do Armenians sitting in Yerevan cafés, chewing sunflower seeds at
opposition rallies, or watching television in their homes know the
location of the nearest bomb shelter?

When were Armenian reservists last gathered on any significant
scale? When were they last trained or tested? Do they know where to
report in case of war?

Crisis requires more than planning for immediate security and military
operations. Considering the rapid nature of warfare today, once again
demonstrated in Ossetia, and the role public opinion plays in shaping
policy, preparations for crisis management must include a strong
media component.

Are Armenian-Americans ready for such a crisis?

Lesson 3: External guarantees carry unacceptable risks

The main reason Georgians thought they could attack Ossetia with
impunity is because as part of the peace agreement the parties signed
after their brief 1991-92 war, Ossetians had to yield firing positions
they captured from Georgians to Russian peacekeepers.

Before the August 8 Georgian assault, Russian peacekeepers repeatedly
failed to address recurring violations by Georgia of its agreements
and provide for the security of the Ossetian population. As a result,
even if Russia intervened faster than anticipated, Ossetian civilians
bore the brunt of human casualties and material losses, with their
community devastated.

Armenia too experienced "peacekeeping" of Soviet Russian forces when
they were sent to "protect" the Armenian-Azerbaijani border in the
late 1980s. By 1991, on orders from Moscow, went as far as to help
Azerbaijan expel Armenians from parts of Karabakh.

But this is not a Russia-specific problem.

Too many United Nations peacekeeping operations in recent years –
from Croatia and Rwanda in the mid-1990s, to more recent NATO policing
in Kosovo and African Union operations in Sudan have failed in their
stated effort to protect populations whose lives are threatened.

The reality is the peacekeepers and the countries that dispatch them
care more about their own security than a foreign country they have
pledged to protect.

Armenians are fortunate that foreign peacekeepers were never introduced
after the Karabakh war ended in 1994. Combat capabilities of the
Armenian Armed Forces along with the territories they currently
hold in and around Nagorno Karabakh form two basic foundations of
Armenian security.

Lesson 4: The "peace process" must be about strengthening peace and
preventing war

Exchanging territories under Armenian control for promises of
foreign protection without a clear and unambiguous resolution of the
Armenian-Azerbaijan dispute carries deadly risks for Armenians.

But, with the possible exception of the 2001 Key West deal, this is
exactly what mediators have proposed throughout the conflict mediation
efforts that followed the 1994 cease-fire.

This clear and unambiguous document must establish a new border
between the two countries and a transparent process of disarmament
and demilitarization. Clearly at this time Azerbaijan is not ready for
such a resolution and would rather protract the status quo. But, under
such circumstances, neither should it receive any of the territories
now under Armenian control.

In fact, in recent years, in addition to a refusal to talk peace
seriously, Azerbaijan has been following a policy of provocations
and testing Armenian positions along the Line of Contact, just as
Georgia had in South Ossetia and Abkhazia.

The central focus of Armenia’s foreign policy should not be the
endless search for a "mutually acceptable" settlement with Azerbaijan,
but urgent measures to prevent a repetition of the Ossetia events,
only on a more devastating scale between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

This must include strengthening of the cease-fire with Azerbaijan
through an expansion of the unarmed international monitoring mission;
enforcement of the 1995 agreement on preventing violations of the
ceasefire; Azerbaijani pull-out from the no-man’s lands it occupied
in recent years dangerously nearing Armenian defense lines; and
development of an agreement on the peaceful settlement of the conflict
that would include specific disarmament clauses.

As Russia’s retired Ambassador Vladimir Kazimirov has warned
repeatedly, and most recently just three months ago at a conference
in Stepanakert, an Armenian campaign for peace, involving the elements
listed, is urgently needed.

Lesson 5: The regional balance of forces has shifted

After years of confused and contradictory policies and an often simply
disinterested attitude toward the Caucasus, Russia is back with guns
blazing. This is not a Soviet monster, but a new country that very
much is trying to be a copycat of the United States, at least in its
foreign policy.

Russian propaganda about Ossetia in recent weeks would remind American
viewers of what they saw on the eve of and during the Iraq war,
including references to humanitarian causes and legal grounding for
the intervention, and demonization of the opponent’s leadership.

In another sign of increased sophistication, Russian armed forces in
their Georgia operations have succeeded in limiting the "collateral
damage" the air strikes inevitably cause.

The Russian command even accommodated the request of the local
officials in the town of Poti, and instead of air strikes on the U.S.-
and European-equipped Georgian navy, Russian military men arrived in
person to dynamite and sink Georgian naval vessels at sea at a safe
distance away from the port.

Even more impressive was Russia’s ability to deceive Mr. Saakashvili
and his U.S. supporters. The apparent trap Russia set for the Georgian
army in Ossetia followed by a wholesale dismantlement of the Georgian
military – for which the United States spent a billion dollars or
more since 2001 – showed the Russian leadership’s new-found ability
to fuse its resource-driven enrichment with inherited intellectual
capacities into an effective conduct of war.

Signs that the United States is losing its "unipolar moment," as some
U.S. commentators have described America’s dominance in world affairs
since the collapse of the USSR, have been there for some time.

After becoming bogged down in Afghanistan and Iraq, the Bush
Administration has so far failed to achieve its goal of confronting
Iran effectively. Iran’s neighbors, even the two occupied by the United
States, have publicly declined involvement in anti-Iranian policies.

And earlier this year even Israel has for the first time began direct
contacts with Iranbacked Hezbollah in Lebanon and, through Turkey’s
mediation, resumed talks with Syria.

And this week Turkey, a longtime, but by now apparently former
U.S. ally, reportedly declined access to U.S. naval vessels into the
Black Sea to deliver aid to Georgia.

Armenia has benefited greatly from its relations with the United
States.

But America’s contribution to Georgia’s assault on Ossetia raises
troubling questions. In fact, as the Ossetians were being devastated
on the night of August 8, Assistant Secretary of State Dan Fried
accused them of "provoking" the Georgian aggression and to this day
there has been no clear American condemnation of the Georgian action.

The major lesson of Ossetia war is that Russia, Armenia’s strategic
partner, is capable of conducting destructive military operations
against a purported U.S. ally in the Caucasus, and U.S. is powerless
to stop Russia.

Armenia’s relationship with Russia has been longer and, on the balance,
may be even more positive than with the U.S. But Armenia is also
troubled that Russia is now essentially dismantling the Georgian
state – one of Armenia’s two oldest and friendliest neighbors.

In these unfortunate circumstances, Armenia should try to contribute to
normalization of Russian-Georgian relations by all possible means. But
more importantly it should act on lessons learned from this crisis
to safeguard Armenians.

–Boundary_(ID_dYDXaJTHU2h/4XPmPFa1yA) —

Russia-led defense bloc to hold regular drills: official

Xinhua General News Service
August 23, 2008 Saturday 11:40 AM EST

Russia-led defense bloc to hold regular drills: official

MOSCOW Aug. 23

The Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) is to hold
large-scale military exercises every two years, including those in the
hot spot region of Caucasus, a senior official said on Saturday.

"The participants of a meeting of the CSTO defense ministers decided
to hold large-scale exercises every two years. Thus, the next
exercises will take place in 2010," Interfax news agency quoted CSTO
Deputy Secretary General Valery Semerikov as saying.

Those war games will be held with the situation in the region to be
taken into consideration, including the Caucasus, he said.

The CSTO defense ministers met on Thursday in the Armenian capital of
Yerevan to discuss the military and political situation in the region,
the military cooperation of the member states, as well as their
foreign and defense policies.

The Russia-led bloc has held four-stage military exercises in Russia
and the Caucasus state of Armenia in July and August, involving about
4,000 troops from Armenia, Russia and Tajikistan. Military staff from
the other CSTO member states also joined the exercises.

The seven-member organization was renamed in October 2002 on the basis
of the Collective Security Treaty, which was signed in Mary 1992
within the framework of the Commonwealth of Independent States. The
current members of the CSTO include Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan,
Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Russia and Uzbekistan.

Academic Mergelyan died

Academic Mergelyan died

armradio.am
23.08.2008 17:19

After long illness famous scientist, academic Sergey Mergelyan died in
Los Angeles in August 20.

The RA National Academy of Science and the State Committee of Science
expressed their condolence connected with the death of the famous
academic. His death was a great loss for the whole Armenian nation.

At the age of 19 the academic extern graduated the physics-mathematics
faculty of the Yerevan State University. Soon he found his place near
the famous mathematics.

At 21 Mergelyan became a doctor of sciences, at 25 he was chosen the
member of USSR and SSRA, at 28 he was academic of the Academy of
Sciences.

Thanked to the academic Armenia became the science-organizing centre of
the USSR.

The nation still remembers the name of the famous scientist and he is
one of the well know persons.

The services of academic to the Academy of Sciences and the Yerevan
State University are very valuable.

He had been the vice president of the Academy of Sciences, director of
the department in the University. His students will always remember his
excellent lectures and seminars.

The RA Government also appreciated the great work of the scientist. In
2008 he was awarded by the medal of Mesrop Mashtots.

The death of academic Mergelyan is a great loss for the whole Armenia
and Armenian nation.

HH Karekin II receives President of the PACE

PRESS RELEASE
Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin, Information Services
Address:  Vagharshapat, Republic of Armenia
Contact:  Rev. Fr. Ktrij Devejian
Tel:  +374-10-517163
Fax:  +374-10-517301
E-Mail:  [email protected]
Website: 
August 21, 2008

His Holiness Karekin II receives President
of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe

On July 24, His Holiness Karekin II, Supreme Catholicos of All Armenians,
received Lluis Maria de Puig, President of the Parliamentary Assembly of the
Council of Europe (PACE).

His Holiness welcomed the visit of President Puig to the Mother See of Holy
Etchmiadzin and wished him success in his mission.  The PACE president
introduced His Holiness to the goals of his visit to Armenia and
specifically highlighted the role of the Armenian Catholicos in the
establishment of stability and peace in the region.

During their conversation, the discussion also focused on the current
political situation in the country, and the importance of easing the level
of public tension as part of ongoing developments.  The Catholicos of All
Armenians stressed that the representatives and followers of the authorities
and the opposition are all sons and daughters of the Armenian Church and
that the Church hierarchy is concerned with the welfare and life of every
Armenian, in the homeland and throughout the Diaspora.

The Catholicos and the PACE president also discussed the current status of
the Karabagh conflict, and His Holiness expressed his deep concern over the
aggressive and bellicose statements made by the authorities of Azerbaijan,
even at times by the spiritual leader of the Muslims of the Caucasus, which
have become increasingly alarming and more frequent.  Finally, the Pontiff
of the Armenians conveyed his amazement at the lack of international outrage
regarding the vandalism and obvious state policy of destruction directed at
Armenian cultural and spiritual monuments on the territory of Azerbaijan,
especially in light of the overwhelming evidence of the barbaric and
complete elimination of thousands of khatchkars (stone-crosses) in
Nakhijevan.

##

www.armenianchurch.org

Georgia And The Renewed US-Russian Rivalry

GEORGIA AND THE RENEWED US-RUSSIAN RIVALRY

Business Line
August 21, 2008 Thursday

One of the major premises of American foreign policy has been that,
with the disintegration of the Soviet Union, a policy of "containment"
of a weakened, impoverished and dispirited Russia could succeed, by
an aggressive expansion of the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation
(NATO) alliance to Russia’s borders, accompanied by domination
of the oil and gas resources not only of Russia, but also of the
former Soviet Republics in Central Asia and the Caucasian regions,
by American and western oil companies. The aim was to integrate the
Caucasian Republics – Georgia, Armenia and Azerbaijan – into NATO
and construct pipelines bypassing Russia, to carry oil and gas from
countries such as Kazakhstan and Azerbaijan to ports like Ceyhan in
Turkey, for onward shipment to America’s NATO partners in Europe.

Strategic objectives The American strategy for access to Caucasian
energy resources was spelt out by Ariel Cohen, a leading analyst of the
Washington-based neo-conservative think-tank, the Heritage Foundation
in 1999. Cohen then proclaimed: "US interests in the Caucasus boil
down to providing guarantees of greater independence to Georgia,
Armenia and Azerbaijan; controlling Iran; ensuring access to energy
resources and precluding the possible revival of Russian imperial
ambitions in the region".

To achieve these objectives, Cohen urged more political support for
an oil pipeline project bypassing the Russian pipeline networks, from
Azerbaijan to the Turkish port of Ceyhan. He argued that if this was
not done, Russia and Iran would control access to and investment in a
major part of the Caucasian energy resources, making the West dependent
on Russia and Iran. As the pipeline was to be constructed through
Georgia, Cohen urged the promotion of "security collaboration with
Georgia" and expanding ties with Azerbaijan and Armenia as a "signal"
to Moscow that its support for separatism in South Caucasus would
lead to an end of US economic assistance. Worse still, Cohen urged
that for the US to achieve its strategic objectives, it should open
talks with leaders of North Caucasian ethnic groups – a euphemism for
promoting Muslim separatism in Russia’s Chechen and Dagestan Regions.

Russia’s power potential What Cohen and US policymakers failed to
anticipate was that under the leadership of Vladimir Putin, Russia
would stage a remarkable economic recovery. In less than a decade,
Russia emerged as a global player, shrewdly using its position as
holding the world’s largest resources of natural gas, the second
largest resources of coal and as the world’s second biggest producer
of oil, to effectively make America’s European allies look to it with
respect and realism. Under Putin’s leadership, Russia’s economy has
grown at over 7 per cent annually since the year 2000.

Russia has wielded diplomatic clout as a Permanent Member of the UN
Security Council and its participation in groupings like the G-8,
The Middle East Quartet, the Six Power initiative on North Korea’s
nuclear programme, APEC, OSCE and in the Russia-NATO Council. Russia
has also expanded its power potential in crucial areas such as its
Defence and space industries. Moreover, with significant Russian
minorities in former Soviet Republics such as Kazakhstan and Ukraine,
Moscow has signalled that it will not remain unconcerned about how
ethnic Russians are treated in these countries.

Unmindful of these changes in power equations, the Americans have
attempted to virtually encircle Russia by proposing missile defences
in former Warsaw Pact members and by encouraging Russia’s neighbours
such as Ukraine and Georgia to join NATO. On the eve of the last
NATO Summit in Bucharest in April 2008, President Bush commended
the "bold decision" of the Ukrainian President, Viktor Yuschenko,
to apply for NATO membership and dispatching Ukrainian troops to Iraq
and Afghanistan. Bush added: "In Bucharest this week I will continue
to make our position clear about our support for MAP (NATO membership)
for Ukraine and Georgia".

Recognition of Georgia The Kremlin strongly opposed NATO expansion and
warned that it could lead to Moscow’s recognition of the breakaway
regions of Abhkazia and South Ossetia in Georgia which had asserted
their independence and were protected by Russian peacekeepers. While
the US and the European Union were opposed to independence for these
regions, Russia’s Parliament proclaimed that if the western powers
could recognise the independence of Kosovo after military intervention,
there was no reason Russia could not do likewise in Georgia.

Georgia’s immature US educated President, Mikhail Sakashvili, gave
the Russians the opening they seized when, bolstered by arms supplies
from Ukraine and expectations of full-scale American support, he
mounted a military operation to establish control over South Ossetia
on August 8. Within days, the Georgians were humiliatingly defeated
by the Russians and forced to accept EU mediation by French President,
Nicholas Sarkozy. The proposals agreed to between Sarkozy and Russian
President, Dmitri Medvedev, include a provision for "international
talks on the future status of Abhkazia and South Ossetia and ways to
provide for their security".

Russia views this as EU acceptance of the impossibility of return
to the pre-war status quo. With Chancellor Merkel of Germany and
the French Prime Minister, Francois Fallon, having opposed NATO
membership for Ukraine and Georgia, the US now finds that apart from
support from the ever-loyal British, its other major partners in NATO
such as Germany, France and Italy, which are increasingly dependent
on Russian oil and natural gas, have no desire to embark on another
Cold war against Russia.

Global implications These developments are going to have profound
implications on global politics in coming years. The Americans are
not going to give up their attempts to encircle Russia. The Russians,
in turn, could make American diplomacy on issues like the nuclear
programmes of North Korea and Iran very difficult, should the Americans
become confrontational.

Former Soviet Republics like Kazakhstan, which have huge energy
resources, will now become more cautious in their dealings with
the US out of fear of Russian reaction. In the face of such rivalry
from Russia, the Americans will now seek closer ties with Beijing –
a development of some importance for India and the balance of power in
Asia. Like in the Nixon and Clinton years, China will seek to prove
that it is a useful partner to the US and endeavour to isolate India
diplomatically, skilfully using our Communist Parties to undermine
India-US relations, as they have done in recent times.

India has traditionally had close relations with Russia. Even today,
Russian supply of enriched uranium keeps the Tarapur Nuclear Power
Plant functioning in the face of an American embargo, and crucial
areas of Defence requirements like the acquisition of cruise missiles
and futuristic fifth generation fighter aircraft are based on joint
collaboration and development with the Russians. New Delhi would be
well advised to ensure that on energy-related issues such as the
proposed pipelines with Iran and Turkmenistan and developments in
Central Asia, it pays greater attention to Russian policies. Moreover,
Indian diplomacy should seek to promote a dialogue between the US,
on the one hand, and Russia and Iran, on the other, on issues like
the resurgence of the Taliban in Afghanistan, where US policy has
been to exclude these countries, as far as possible. Even though the
Americans were inclined to show accommodation of Chechen separatism
earlier, they now have a better understanding of Russian imperatives,
after the terrorist strikes of 9/11.

ANKARA: Turkey’s Under-21 Team Plays In Yerevan

TURKEY’S UNDER-21 TEAM PLAYS IN YEREVAN

Today’s Zaman
Aug 20 2008
Turkey

The Turkish National Under-21 Football Team departed yesterday for the
Armenian capital to play today with the Armenian National Under-21
Football Team, as both are members of the Second Selection Group in
the 17th Under-21 European Championship.

The match between the two teams will kick off at 7 p.m. Turkey time
at Yerevan’s Hrazdan Stadium.

Armenia decided on Thursday to unilaterally suspend its visa regime
with Turkey to facilitate the arrival of Turkish fans for the upcoming
first-ever match between the two countries’ national football teams,
in a fresh overture to Ankara. The Armenian government stated that
Turkish citizens traveling to Armenia from Sept. 1-6 would not be
required to obtain entry visas. Armenian President Serzh Sarksyan
invited President Abdullah Gul to a World Cup qualifying match between
the national soccer teams of the two countries in Yerevan on Sept. 6,
calling for dialogue to help normalize ties and saying this would
be mutually beneficial. Over the weekend, Gul said that he was still
assessing whether to respond positively to the invitation.

Both diplomats at the Foreign Ministry and officials close to the
Cankaya Presidential Palace are tight-lipped on whether Gul will
accept Sarksyan’s invitation, which has prompted international media
to refer to the current state of affairs as "soccer diplomacy."

What Does Russia Want In The West Part Of The Caucasus?

WHAT DOES RUSSIA WANT IN THE WEST PART OF THE CAUCASUS?
by Igor Chirnov-Rezakin

Center for Research on Globalization
hp?context=va&aid=9886
Global Research
Aug 20 2008
Canada

Global Research Editor’s Note:

This article was published prior to the Georgian attack on South
Ossetia on August 7, 2008

——————————————– ————————————

Russia should concentrate on promoting the idea of making Georgia
a confederation.

Summer’2008 in the west part of the Caucasus began traditionally –
with provocations against Russian peacekeepers, explosions in Gagry,
ritual aggressive statements from Tbilisi…

According to special services, what Georgia procured in terms
of military hardware (or what it received as a gift from Russia’s
"partners") over the years include almost 400 armored vehicles (half
of them tanks), almost 200 artillery pieces and mortars (including
volley-fire rocket launchers and Howitzers 152 mm caliber), 25
antiaircraft complexes and 200 portable missile launchers, 45 aircraft
and helicopters (eight of them drones), 10 boats, light weapons,
radios, earth-moving machinery for military engineers, uniforms,
munitions by the ton… Georgia has no external enemies and nobody
aspires to its territory or part of it, but arms expenditures grow
with each passing year.

The Hard facts:

Russia withdrew its troops from Georgia by late 2007;

Euro-Atlantic crisis-resolution specialists frantically chart the
plans to integrate the Caucasus into NATO and "united" Europe. All
these plans stand for absorption of Abkhazia and South Ossetia by
Georgia but also include some attractive (or so they authors think)
offers to Abkhazian and South Ossetian leaders.

And what about Russia? What does it need in and from the west part
of the Caucasus?

First, it must be made quite plain to everyone that Russia does not
want a single square meter of the former Georgian Soviet Socialist
Republic! Strategically speaking, any part of Georgia is nothing
Russia needs.

Second (but much more significantly), Russia cannot permit
the transformation of the neighbor territory into a multipurpose
anti-Russian bridgehead: with separatist bases, velvet revolutions lab,
GUAM’s locomotive force, and NATO barracks all rolled into one.

What Russia needs is:

A safe transit route to Armenia by land. Now that Adjaria is lost
(actually, abandoned) and Russian troops no longer man the Batumi
-Akhalkalaki line, strategic transit to Armenia as Russia’s only ally
in the Caucasus depends on Armenia’s neighbors. These latter include
hostile Azerbaijan, neutral Iran, NATO member Turkey, and fiercely
pro-NATO Georgia. The Karabakh conflict settlement plan one of NATO’s
"experts" charted involved exchange of territories between Armenia and
Azerbaijan so as to cut the former off Iran. Air ferry service is not
an option because Russia’s transport aviation is not up to it. Even
Russian trucks with relief aid barely make it across civilized Europe
to Serbia. Armenia meanwhile is where Russia has the 102nd Military
Base and some strategic enterprises under its control and management.

Poti is out of the question as a base for the Russian Black Sea Fleet
no matter how it ends with Ukraine (the so called 2017 problem). It
is clear that neither Poti not revamped Novorossiisk will do even if
the Black Sea Fleet is downsized to a mere flotilla!

Prices in the global oil and gas market draw attention to oil and
gas exports from the Caspian basin to the West bypassing the Russian
territory. Georgia is playing a central part in these plans. Baku-Supsa
and Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipelines are already running. Whenever they
recall it, Russian state officials get mad and regularly deploy the so
called "administrative resource" even though every such attempt costs
Russia dearly. Suspend the transit so as to change the anti-Russian
vector? But why? Oil export is business. One may make money in oil
fields development or in shipment or oil refining – as long as the
terms are acceptable (which is always easier to assure than enforcing
of the ban).

The safety of transit pipelines may be turned over to "private
armies". Why wouldn’t we draw on our Anglo-Saxon "partners"
‘experience?

The attempt in the early 1990s to rebuild the Georgian micro-empire,
an analog of the one remembered from 1918, created a crisis that
continues to this day.

A confederation as the natural – is not only – solution is not
something anybody has been giving a thought to. This state of affairs
offers Russia a chance to become the settlement leader in the region
with an emphasis on precisely this idea.

Seizing the initiative in the west part of the Caucasus, Russia may
even rejuvenate integration all over the rest of the Commonwealth and
elevate these processes to another level. Consider Europe. It never
occurs to Georgia to return Alsatia and Lorraine. It never occurs to
Italy to part with Nice or Austria with South Tirol.

Russia’s success in the Caucasus will put an end to development of
"sanitary cordons" along its own borders. Success in the Crimea and
Ukraine will even wreck beyond repair NATO’s and European Union’s
plans to expand eastward, into the zone of Russia’s national interests.

http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.p

American Jewish Committee to Lobby for Azeri Interests – Director

WordPress.com
American Jewish Committee to Lobby for Azeri Interests, Announces Director
August 19, 2008, 7:51 am

jewish-committee-to-lobby-for-azeri-interests-anno unces-director/

BAKU (Asbarez)-The Executive Director of the American Jewish
Committee,David Harris, was in Baku Saturday where he told journalists
at a pressconference that his organization would lobby on behalf of
Azerbaijan’sinterests in the United States.Harris was visiting
Azerbaijan on the invitation of Azeri President IlhamAliyev. During
his two-day visit he met with the President, ForeignMinister, Prime
Minister and other officials.`[The] AJC has long appreciated the
importance of Azerbaijan as an exampleof religious tolerance and a
proven friend of the United States and Israel,’Harris said. `We valued
this opportunity to learn more about this strongally in a challenging
and critical region. We look forward to sharing ourviews about
Azerbaijan’s key role when we return to the United States.’However,
Harris’ remarks stand in stark contrast to significant
documentedevidence to the contrary. Azerbaijan’s numerous political as
well as socialhuman rights abuses both against its Azeri majority as
well as its ethnicminorities, including Armenians and have been widely
reported in US press aswell as international human rights bodies.But
according to the Harris, `Azerbaijan is critical to Western
energysecurity and to the avoidance of a potentially dangerous
monopoly in themarket for natural gas.’ The South Caucusus, he
explained, is witnessing ahistoric event in Georgia because the recent
outbreak of fighting in SouthOssetia is important not only for
Georgia, but also the whole region,including Azerbaijan and its
territorial integrity.The AJC will lobby for the US Government to pay
more attention to the workof the OSCE Minsk Group, mediating the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict betweenArmenia and Azerbaijan, Harris said,
adding `the Nagorno-Karabakh conflictwas the key issue of discussion
during my visit to Baku. We will work toimprove the OSCE Minsk Group’s
mission in the settlement of the conflict.’The Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict, which has yet to be resolved, is in danger oferupting as
Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev continues to make loudercalls for
renewed war to `take back’ Karabakh by force. Making the situationin
Azerbaijan more tense is the growing uncertainty over the outcome
ofAzerbaijan’s upcoming Presidential elections, slated for October
15.There is a definite cult of personality that is being established
thatthreatens the viability of democratic development in
Azerbaijan. Aliyev hasbeen propping up billboards throughout the
country, depicting his father,the late president Haydar Aliyev and
himself in a manner reminiscent of theStalinist Soviet Union and 1980s
Iraq under Sadam Hussein.Aliyev has faced persistent criticism over
his heavy-handed treatment ofindependent media and opposition
parties. Meanwhile, over a million Azerirefugees from the Karabakh
Conflict still live in shantytowns and abandonedtrain carts. Human
rights violations are at an all time high, as severemedia restrictions
continue to result in the imprisonment and torture ofjournalists and
opposition activists. According to Eurasianet, Aliyev’srecent claims
that his government allegedly oversaw the creation of 650,000new jobs
by the end of 2007 are not being received well by most ofAzerbaijan’s
population, which has yet to feel the affects of the country’smassive
oil revenues.With less than three months to go until elections are
held in Azerbaijan,controversy is looming over President Ilham
Aliyev’s failure to solve manyof the country’s social ills. With
Karabakh a major election issue inAzerbaijan, Aliyev has sought to
exploit nationalist fervor surrounding theunresolved conflict to
detract from his administrations failures at home. Inrecent months, he
has been touring the country and delivering, publiclycalling for a new
war and threatening to take Karabakh back by force.On June 26, Aliyev
staged the country’s first military parade in 16 years,and announced
his intentions to build a military industrial complex thatwould
support a second round war with neighboring Armenia
andNagorno-Karabakh.Azerbaijan ethnically cleansed its Christian
Armenian minority in a seriesof pogroms and massacres as the Soviet
Union was collapsing, forcing theArmenians of Nagorno-Karabakh, an
Armenian enclave forced into Azerbaijan,to declare
independence. Karabakh’s democracy movement, legal by thestatutes of
the Soviet Constitution, triggered a brutal military attack onthe
enclave by Azerbaijan, sparking a conflict that ended with a
Russianbrokered ceasefire in 1994.Azerbaijan has been using
petrodollars from the BTC pipeline to beef up itsmilitary, purchasing
armaments and vehicles from France, the United Statesor the former
Warsaw Pact. According to Stratfor, `Azerbaijan’s armament nowhas many
wondering if Baku is planning another conflict against a neighborthat
has been cut out of the region’s recent energy wealth.’A renewed
conflict would halt any possibility of Caspian energy reaching
thewest, and be a direct threat to U.S. and European interests in the
region.Following an unprecedented violation of the Nagorno-Karabakh
ceasefire byAzeri forces on March 5, Stratfor intelligence wrote in an
analysis piececiting the growing threat to regional security of a
richer and strongerAzerbaijan.`Azerbaijan has grown stronger and
richer following the 2006 completion ofthe Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC)
oil pipeline, which Western companiesdeveloped to feed oil to Europe,’
it said. `The BTC led to a morepro-Western Azerbaijan, and the
tremendous new wealth it generated hashelped the country increase its
defense spending from $175 million in 2004to more than $1 billion at
the start of 2008.’ Azerbaijan’s military budgethas since reached $2
billion.’Energy wealth has doubled Azerbaijan’s gross domestic
product;Azerbaijan’sdefense budget has jumped from just a few hundred
million a year to abillion this past year,’ Stratfor wrote earlier in
2007. `The country isarming itself, and neighboring Armenia is closely
watching. The twocountries have been deadlocked over the Azerbaijani
secessionist region ofNagorno-Karabakh – a conflict that has flared
into a war in the past.Azerbaijan’s armament now has many wondering if
Baku is planning anotherconflict against a neighbor that has been cut
out of the region’s recentenergy wealth.’Meanwhile, Azerbaijan’s
longstanding insistence to isolate fellow US AllyArmenia, from
regional development projects, namely the BTC pipeline, andthe
Baku-Tbilisi-Kars Ralway, have further jeopardized the security
andstability of US interests in the South Caucasus.During the planning
stages of the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) pipeline,Azerbaijan pressured
British Petroleum to bypass a more economic acommercially secure route
that went through Armenia, a fellow US partner inthe region. In 2003,
New York Congressman Joseph Crowley (NY-07) criticized the routing of
the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil and gas pipeline during the
HouseInternational Relations Committee markup of the reauthorization
for theOverseas Private Investment Corporation (OPIC). The Committee
wasconsidering the OPIC’s application for political risk insurance
inconnection with construction of the BTC pipeline.At the
markup’sCongressman Crowley stated: `American taxpayers are beingasked
to help cover hundreds of million of dollars in increased costs forthe
BTC pipeline route that would bypass the more economic and
commerciallyviable route through Armenia. If the Caucasus region’sin
my opinion’sis tomove forward’swe must ensure that all countries move
forward together at thesame time. Choosing favorites in the Caucasus
will not promote regionalstability’seconomic integration’sand
peace.’Despite all this, Harris assured Azerbaijan’s leadership that
hisorganization would work for the interests of Azerbaijan in the
UnitedStates.`As your friends, we will try to do something for this
but it mostly dependson Azerbaijan itself. Americans shouldn’t only
know Azerbaijan as anenergy-rich country but also as a country that
made important contributionsto peacekeeping efforts in Iraq and
Afghanistan,’ he said, promising to takesteps towards the
strengthening of relations between Azerbaijan and theUnited State.`We
will work to improve the relations between the United States
andAzerbaijan,’ he said. `We will also pay attention to Americans’
education[of Azerbaijan] to convey to them the basic knowledge about
Azerbaijan andto inform the political circles and U.S. presidential
contenders aboutAzerbaijan.’Meanwhile, the Azerbaijan Press Agency
reported on Monday that theIzmir-based Azerbaijan Culture Center has
began a petition drive demandingthat the Turkish-Armenian border
remain closed until the withdrawal ofArmenians from the
Nagorno-Karabakh Republic.The head of the Center, Jamal
Mammadkhanoglu, underscored that the bordersshould not open without an
`Armenian withdrawal from Azerbaijani lands.’`Turkey has to maintain
its embargo against Armenia for that,’ he said.`Otherwise, Azerbaijan
has no other option but to liberate its lands throughmilitary
force.’Azerbaijan and Turkey must unite as one nation, like `a
clenched fist,’ hesaid.

http://ayekikan.wordpress.com/2008/08/19/american-