BAKU: Armenia Cannot Prevent Azerbaijan’s Entrance To WTO – Azeri De

ARMENIA CANNOT PREVENT AZERBAIJAN’S ENTRANCE TO WTO – AZERI DEPUTY FM
Author: A.Ismayilova

TREND Information, Azerbaijan
Aug. 10, 2006

If Nagorno-Karabakh conflict isn’t settled until Azerbaijan’s entrance
to the World Trade Organization (WTO), according to the law of WTO,
Azerbaijan has the right not to establish economic relations with
Armenia, Mahmud Mammadguliyev, the deputy foreign minister of
Azerbaijan, told, Trend reports.

Touching on the present obligation of Azerbaijan before the WTO,
Mammadguliyev noted that Baku should undertake them until and after
entrance to WTO. However, there are several moments that Azerbaijan
cannot agree with them, and these are related with the service
sphere. This question requires several times, Mammadguliyev emphasized.

According to Mammadguliyev, Azerbaijan intensifies its activities
for entering WTO. The next meeting is planned to be held in Geneva
by tend of the year. It will be the first time that two meetings are
held annually with the participation of Azerbaijan.

BAKU: Second Azeri School To Be Opened In London

SECOND AZERI SCHOOL TO BE OPENED IN LONDON
Author: R.Agayev

TREND Information, Azerbaijan
Aug. 9, 2006

An Azerbaijani school is already functioning in London, and the second
one is intended to be opened, the chairman of London-Azerbaijani
Society Taleh Heydarov told Trend.

He stressed that the society has been functioning in London since
2004. "I think that such type of organization assumes a great
importance for Azerbaijan because there are few imagines about
Azerbaijan in the world, especially in Europe. Therefore, our goal
is to present Azerbaijan, its history, culture, etc to British people.

We have held many measures in this direction. Our first measures
was a cultural night of Azerbaijan and more than 200 British people,
including students got familiar with our national music and kitchen,"
Heydarov told.

The second measure was dedicated to Karabakh, to which we had invited
the American journalist Tomas Golth who has seen the horrors of
Khojali tragedy committed by Armenians in 1992. During the measures,
reports were delivered by Azerbaijani ambassador to Britain, former
British ambassador to Azerbaijan Rojer Tomas and Prof. of Edinburgh
University Gulam Rza Sabiri Tebrizi. Besides, the event brought
together more than 100 students, professors and politicians.

Heydarov pointed out that the society has very close relations with
Turkish, Russian and Iranian organizations which support each others.

"We participate in each other’s measures. Yet our relations with Moslem
organizations are inactive, but we will activate them," he said, adding
that together with many organizations, including Anglo-Azeri Society we
have provided assistance to refugees and orphan children in Azerbaijan.

Besides, the chairman of the society mentioned the intention of the
society to actively participate at the forum world Azerbaijani youths
scheduled for August 12 in Baku.

Miss Caucasus 2006 Beauty Contest To Be Conducted In Armenia And Kar

MISS CAUCASUS 2006 BEAUTY CONTEST TO BE CONDUCTED IN ARMENIA AND KARABAKH

Armenpress
Aug 09 2006

YEREVAN, AUGUST 9, ARMENPRESS: "Miss Caucasus 2006" annual beauty
contest will be conducted this year in Nagorno Karabakh and Armenia.

The main event will take place September 2 in Yerevan Opera and
Ballet National Academic Theatre after Spendiarian under the "Peace
in Caucasus" slogan.

Arman Antonian, the head of the "Miss Caucasus 2006" organizational
committee, told Armenpress that the sole goal of the contest is to
gather the peoples of Caucasus "under one general roof and propagate
the beauty and present the culture and coloring of each nation".

Beauties of South Caucasian and other countries will participate
in the contest. In 2003 the contest was held in Nalchik, in 2004 in
Vladikavkaz, and in 2005 in Yerevan.

Emergencies Went Up This Year

EMERGENCIES WENT UP THIS YEAR

Lragir.am
08 Aug 06

On August 7 the guest of briefings in the City Hall of Yerevan was
Vrej Gabrielyan, the assistant director of the Rescue Service of
Armenia. He presented the report on the first half of 2006 and dwelled
on the problems. The cases of fire increased compared with the same
period in 2005. 591 fires were reported in the city, including 17 on
lawns. Vrej Gabrielyan says these were not arsons, the citizens were
careless to throw burning cigarettes into the dry grass. The damage
caused by fires grew as well.

The cases of suicides increased, and the survey shows that these are
mainly people aged above 30.

The survey shows that the rate of car accidents grew in the first
half of 2006. Vrej Gabrielyan explains this fact by the increasing
number of cars in the city. In the first half of the current year 13
cases of assault were reported, fortunately, there were no victims.
There were no casualties in 3 cases of explosion either.

The special task force of the City Hall and community councils reported
86 wrecking buildings, mostly in Ajapniak. The assistant head of the
Rescue Service says this year it is planned to reinforce 11 wrecking
buildings, 2 were reinforced, 9 remain.

27 pedestrian subways will be repaired. The cleaning of Lake Yerevanian
started. Vrej Gabrielyan assures that within two years Lake Yerevanian
will be improved so that the citizens may prefer it to Lake Sevan or
the Black Sea.

Andre the Giant

Andre the Giant

Aug. 6, 2006. 08:58 AM
GARTH WOOLSEY

Hair today. Gone tomorrow.

How trite. But as Andre Agassi prepares for retirement, also how true.

Agassi has been the face, and the hairstyle, of men’s tennis for two
decades. From mullet to buzz cut, he has been the long and short of
a sport that rises and falls with the popularity of its stars.

Canadian tennis fans have watched Agassi grow up during his visits here
over the years and hoped to bid farewell to the 36-year-old native of
Las Vegas at the Rogers Cup this week. But Agassi, who will retire
following the U.S. Open later this month, pulled out of the Toronto
event on Friday after an embarrassing defeat in Washington last week
to a player ranked 246th in the world. Agassi said earlier in the
season he doesn’t want to play when he’s not competitive.

Agassi has always been about style, but it is underlying substance
that has allowed him to endure:

He is one of only five men ever to win all four Grand Slam events
(eight in total, plus seven runner-up finishes).

He has an Olympic gold medal from the Atlanta Games of 1996, plus a
30-6 record in Davis Cup play for the U.S.

His 60 titles (seventh most in the Open era) include three in 14
appearances at Canada’s premier event – over Ivan Lendl in 1992,
Jason Stoltenberg in 1994 and Pete Sampras in 1995. Last summer in
Montreal he lost the final, beaten by Rafael Nadal.

Asked recently what advice he might have for himself if he was starting
over again, Agassi replied with the sort of gentle good humour that
has contributed to his immense popularity: "First, tell him to cut
his hair. Then, laugh at him because he would have a long road ahead,
but I would wish him well."

Ah, yes, the hair. It was ’80s hair, the kind you’d find on stage
with a glam rock band, not on the tennis court, which back then was
still the preserve of mostly whites if not all whites. Agassi wore
denim shorts over spandex, wildly colourful tops, crazy headbands,
baseball caps (to hide the creeping baldness, it would turn out) and
(egad!) black socks with his white or whatever shoes. He lived on a
bowling-alley diet of cheeseburgers and Mountain Dew. But the girls
and the grandmas and the advertisers loved him – he was a natural
for the Canon Rebel camera ads that boasted: "Image is everything."

"He was very flamboyant and he cultivated that image, and the teenagers
were really drawn to it," Jim Courier, a French and Australian Open
champion, told reporters recently. "It was exciting to be around as
another player; it was exciting to come to a tournament and have the
kids screaming. That kind of energy is what you dream of playing in
front of."

His long-time trainer Gil Reyes said last year of Agassi’s
transformation into consummate professional and family man: "Andre
has chiselled away the things from his character he wished to get
out of the picture. He had to prove his substance, and he has."

One of his children with Steffi Graf (herself a courts legend),
5-year-old Jaden Gil, is named in honour of the trainer. The
Agassi-Graf doubles team has also produced a daughter, 3-year-old
Jaz Elle. Spending more time with the family is another reason for
the retirement timing. All kids, not just his own, seem to love him –
one of those guys they take to instantly. It makes all kinds of sense
that his major charitable work is with a school for underprivileged
kids in Las Vegas.

Before Graf there was a match-made-in-Hollywood marriage to actress
Brooke Shields. ‘Way back when there was a dalliance, too, with a
much older Barbara Streisand, who made the gossip as well as sports
pages with observations like: "He plays like a Zen master out there."

His critics, and there were a few, said Agassi at times seemed
to be on another planet if not another plane. Agassi was groomed
from birth (shades of Tiger Woods) by an obsessive father, Mike, an
ethnic Armenian who had himself competed in the Olympics, for Iran
in boxing. But young Andre had to work for his success and bottomed
out at least twice in his career.

A pro when barely 16, a winner of $2 million (U.S.) after only 43
tournaments, his first Grand Slam final in the books in 1990 and his
first win (Wimbledon) in 1992, Agassi seemed to have the tennis world
by the rat-tail. But he was having growing pains and his confidence
hit a low in 1993 and into ’94, when he came back from a serious wrist
injury and a severely beaten-up ego. Winning in Canada in 1994 would
prove to be an important boost and a repeat in Montreal in ’95 was,
too. He was mobbed by tennis fans, especially younger ones, at that
tournament. "When you take the time to be with them one-on-one or
in a group like that … a smile on their face is a great reward,"
he told the Toronto Star then. "It’s different with adults. Adults
get on your nerves."

Again in 1997, a year after his Olympic high and into his glittery
marriage to Shields, Agassi lost focus, fitness and confidence and
plunged to No. 141 in the rankings. A decade on and Agassi appears
comfortable in his (slightly) wrinkled skin.

He finished the year ranked No. 1 only once, in 1999 (after rising
from the depths, phoenix-like), winning both the French and U.S.
Opens – an indication of the strength of competition through his
career, spanning Connors, McEnroe, Lendl, Edberg, Becker, Sampras,
Courier, Chang, Federer, et al. But only Jimmy Connors finished in
the top 10 as many times as Agassi – 16.

His longer-term success has been based upon relentless training and
a competitive drive that simply wears down opponents, combined with
one of the best returns of service ever and an ability to not only
play from the baseline but mostly from just within it, employing a
deadly quick set-up.

Brad Gilbert recently asked Agassi to help him train Scottish
up-and-comer Andy Murray. "He will be able to see how hard Andre
still works at 36," said Gilbert. "He trains like an animal."

"He’s aggressive, non-stop," Roger Federer said at Wimbledon this
year. "That’s his game. That you have to admire."

Last week in Washington, D.C., at a tournament he had won five
times, Agassi was eliminated in the first round by qualifier Andrea
Stoppini. Agassi broke his racquet in frustration while afterward
Stoppini, 26 and ranked No. 246, said he’d first seen Agassi play on
TV when he was a kid. "He had more hair then."

The hair, always the hair.

"He’s done wonders for our sport right around the world," said
Lleyton Hewitt shortly after Agassi announced his retirement plans at
Wimbledon, where he lost to Nadal in the round of 32. "Out of anyone,
Andre Agassi, everyone knows him around the world even if you’re not
a huge tennis fan."

Andy Roddick: "Andre’s probably the biggest crossover star tennis
has ever had."

That’s saying a lot, putting him in the company of the likes of
Arthur Ashe. But Courier has said Agassi’s good works set him apart:
"Arthur Ashe is at the peak as far as someone transcending the game
to make a difference in the world. I think Andre is climbing up to
join him on that Mount Rushmore."

Part of the appeal comes from Agassi’s palpable openness, a willingness
to look people in the eye and cameras in the lens. His aura is
all-inclusive and when he delivers his trademark end-of-match bow
and kisses it is hard not to feel it is just for you.

A man who has won more than $31 million (U.S.), he still has the
common touch, qualities that emerged after his own struggles led to
a rededication to the basics.

Not all athletes go out gracefully or on their own terms. Nothing
would be better than one more win at Flushing Meadows. At the very
least, he seems determined to leave while he is still a force.

"I’d rather people have that conversation – saying, `He shouldn’t
stop!’ – than the alternative of playing through a time where it’s
as painful for everyone else as it is for me," Agassi said on one of
the stops on the summer’s farewell tour. "It’s a good situation to be
in if my game is meriting that sort of concern (prompting people to
suggest he reconsider). I feel comfortable with my decision. … The
last 20 years on the tennis court has all been practice for me for
tomorrow. I’ve spent a lifetime on the tennis court preparing myself
for the next battle."

The abiding image of Agassi will have colour in it. Intense colour and
penetrating looks. Early in his career he refused to play Wimbledon
because he didn’t want to wear the all whites. He didn’t want to
be a square peg in a round hole. But when he finally showed up, he
wore white. They loved him and the feelings were mutual. All these
years later, Agassi is establishment, the soft-spoken, been-there,
done-that personification of an era of tennis that is ending.

"I’m not really worried about retirement," he has said of these final
few weeks. "I don’t know quite what to expect, but being bored is
not on the list."

War profiteering around the imperium

War profiteering around the imperium

balkanalysis.com
August 3, 2006

by Christopher Deliso

What It’s All About

As bombs somehow continue to kill and maim ordinary Lebanese and
Israeli civilians, an extraordinary article from Reuters has revealed
the bottom line about what forces are really at work behind America’s
laissez-faire attitude toward the Israeli war on Lebanon:

"The Bush administration spelled out plans yesterday to sell $4.6bn
of arms to moderate Arab states, including battle tanks worth as much
as $2.9bn to protect critical Saudi infrastructure.

"The announcement came two weeks after the administration said it
would sell Israel its latest supply of JP-8 aviation fuel valued at
up to $210m to help Israeli warplanes ‘keep peace and security in
the region.’"

Indeed, there’s nothing like "peace and security." After all,
that’s what the whole ideological ferment now brewing among
neoconservatives is all about, right? To create nothing other than a
new and "democratic" Middle East through sustained warfare by proxy –
a plan now adopted by President Bush and Tony Blair, his evil little
helper elf from across the pond.

Fueling the Fire: Aid to Israel and the Arabs

Behind the democratic facade, of course, is sheer and simple greed:
the desire to maximize profit for the American weapons industry,
by fueling a regional arms race. America is now using the specter of
Israeli might to scare the hell out of its neighbors. Racketeering
on an epic scale, disguised by the occasional recourse to diplomacy,
is the ugly reality behind America’s Middle East policy.

The full facts recounted in the above article point to a specific
cause-and-effect relationship. Coming after its decision to rush
bunker-busting precision-guided bombs to Israel, the U.S. announcement
came as some mixture of a gesture of friendship, a consolation prize,
and a threat.

The upcoming sales are heavy on air power. According to Reuters,
$808 million of UH-60M Black Hawk helicopter gunships would go to the
United Arab Emirates. Another $400 million of AH-64 Apache helicopters
are promised to the Saudis, while Bahrain would get a $252 million
consignment of Black Hawks.

Don’t worry that Arab ground forces might feel left out. They will
also have something to cheer about, thanks to the U.S. beneficence.
Steadfast ally Jordan, for example, is in line for up to $156 million
in upgrades for 1,000 of its M113A1 APCs. Saudi Arabia is to get 58
"older-generation" M1A1 Abrams tanks, which would then be modernized;
plus, the 315 Abrams tanks the kingdom already possesses "would be
improved with such things as air-conditioning and infrared sights
for the commanders as well as the gunners." Finally, little Oman is
set to pick up $48 million of Javelin anti-tank missiles.

The tactic used with all these Arab lackey administrations is something
like this: go ahead, keep (some of) your oil billions, just keep
buying your security from us. Because we have Israel on a long,
long leash indeed…

And don’t the Arabs know it! A recent article from Foreign Policy
in Focus provides some statistics on U.S. military contributions
to Israel. In the decade between 1996-2005, Israel received $10.19
billion in U.S. weaponry and military equipment, "including more
than $8.58 billion through the Foreign Military Sales program,
and another $1.61 billion in Direct Commercial Sales." Some $10.5
billion was received between 2001-2005 in Foreign Military Financing,
"the Pentagon’s biggest military aid program." FMF could also stand
for "Fun Military Freebies," because it describes a program devised
to give outright grants of very expensive military hardware.

The article goes on to note that "the aid figure is larger than the
arms transfer figure because it includes financing for major arms
agreements for which the equipment has yet to be fully delivered. The
most prominent of these deals is a $4.5 billion sale of 102 Lockheed
Martin F-16s to Israel." Now, taking the new crisis into consideration,
U.S. military aid for Israel from 2001-2007 is set to amount to over
$19.5 billion. Yet there are concerns that by using its American-made
weaponry offensively, Israel is in violation of the law governing
military aid.

Confronted with such staggering figures, Arab regimes can do nothing
but try to rectify their security deficit by placating Uncle Sam
through suppliant foreign and domestic policies and hard-cash
purchases. As a recent IPS report put it, "armed mostly with
state-of-the-art U.S.-supplied fighter planes and combat helicopters,
the Israeli military is capable of matching a combination of all or
most of the armies in most Middle Eastern countries, including Iran,
Syria, Egypt, Jordan, and Saudi Arabia."

"Growth Markets"

It goes without saying, therefore, that the interests of politically
connected American arms dealers would definitely not be met by any
resolution of the Middle East armed conflicts. Thus the marked lack
of enthusiasm of American leaders for the proposal of UN chief Kofi
Annan and much of the rest of the world – an immediate cease-fire
between Israel and Hezbollah.

According to Reuters, the Arab aid deals are being masterminded by the
Pentagon’s Defense Security Cooperation Agency, "which administers
U.S. government-to-government arms sales." And the project’s prime
contractor would be the Land Systems business unit of Sterling Heights,
Mich.-based General Dynamics, a mammoth defense contractor that in
2005 spent almost $5 million on lobbying alone.

Since the "war on terror" began almost five years ago, firms such
as General Dynamics have enjoyed soaring profits and unprecedented
opportunities that "growth markets" such as Afghanistan, Iraq, and
now Lebanon have opened up for them. As the Arms Trade Resource Center
recounted in October 2004:

"[C]ontracts to the Pentagon’s top ten contractors jumped from $46
billion in 2001 to $80 billion in 2003, an increase of nearly 75%.
Halliburton’s contracts jumped more than nine times their 2001
levels by 2003, from $400 million to $3.9 billion. Northrop Grumman’s
contracts doubled, from $5.2 billion to $11.1 billion, over the same
time frame; and the nation’s largest weapons contractor, Lockheed
Martin, saw a 50% increase, from $14.7 billion to $21.9 billion."

Falling Into the Wrong Hands?

Putting aside for a moment the major moral objections and economic
ramifications of such "aid," there are two other concerns regarding
this deadly profligacy. First, since terrorist attacks and other
militant challenges have been witnessed in several of the countries
on the U.S. recipient list, one marvels at the wisdom of loading up
unstable Arab states with high-tech American weaponry – states which,
at present, have no foreign power to fear except, potentially, Israel.

Really, is anyone going to attack Oman? The government there probably
won’t need anti-tank missiles. Yet these are just the kind of toys
prized by insurgents and terrorists, of which the neighborhood has
many. What if corrupt elements in the armed forces of these "moderate"
Arab regimes decide to go freelance, selling to the highest bidder?

Further, an even more unsettling thought would be the complete
collapse of any of these countries’ governments under the weight
of a popular revolt. "Moderate" Arab leaders have made themselves
increasingly despised among the masses for allying with an America
that is allowing Israel to kill fellow Muslims in Lebanon, even
as it abets internecine warfare and kills Muslims in Iraq. As one
young and generally pro-Western Arab put it, "so many of us are just
waiting for a new leader in Egypt, who will stand up to Israel and
the Americans – Egypt is the only country that can save us!" While
Egypt has pledged to stay on the sidelines and not get involved,
how would the U.S. react if such a large and vital country (which
also receives plenty of U.S. military aid) were to undergo a coup
d’etat that brought militant anti-Israeli factions to power?

Such a hypothetical concern does not even need to be realized for the
American "military aid" to be dangerous enough already. As the British
also know, American experts concede that it is basically impossible
to guarantee the final destination of not only the military hardware
but also, and perhaps more importantly, the knowledge needed to make
it. The hemorrhaging of sensitive weapons-design information often is
due to espionage, aided by corruption in high places and expedited
by fraudulent end-user licenses. Yet this is just one of the ways
that foreign regimes get their hands on cutting-edge American weapons
technologies.

Outsourcing Everything

There are simpler, more direct methods too. The same corporate greed
that necessitates endless wars in the first place has also willingly
allowed these technologies to go "offshore." Industry giant General
Dynamics, for example, in the late 1980s sold Turkey 160 F-16 fighter
planes – and gladly accepted that government’s contractual stipulation
that the planes be mostly assembled in Turkey. Not only did the
company save money by hiring cheap foreign labor, it also gave the
buyer know-how for developing their own independent and competing
arms industry in the future.

This pattern has been repeated in many countries since. A more recent
example is of another deal between Turkey and a different company –
AM General of Indiana, for decades lavished with untold millions to
make the celebrated Humvee; this of course is the iconic APC that
has all too often proven vulnerable to insurgent bombs in Iraq,
with lethal results for American soldiers.

Now AM’s longtime foreign collaborator, Otokar, "the leading brand" in
Turkey’s defense contracting industry and a subsidiary of the nation’s
biggest company (Koc Holdings), is making a fortune exporting their
own homemade variety of the Humvee, the Cobra, to neighboring Arab
countries. Although the company does not disclose exactly which ones,
the visit last June of Bahrain’s minister of internal affairs to the
Otokar plant, a month before the company announced its largest-ever
order from abroad ($88.4 million for 600 vehicles) seems wonderfully
coincidental. (It is thus notable, perhaps, that Bahrain is going to
be receiving air, not ground, equipment according to the Pentagon’s
latest military aid announcement.)

According to Otokar, the Cobra was "a joint development with AM
General of USA [which] utilizes many common parts with HMMWV [the
Humvee]." In other words, American technology was shared with the
foreign company, leading to domestic production in Turkey, and finally
the establishment of a competitive Turkish defense industry. In May,
the Otokar general manager was happy to announce that "in 2005, we
increased our export by 230 percent and accomplished an 85 percent
growth in defense industry vehicles."

As with the fighter plane deal and countless others, more jobs in
America were lost. So much for that great argument of those who defend
the weapons industry’s culture of death by arguing that at least it
helps save American industry.

Case Studies: the Eastern Mediterranean and the Caucasus

There are other aspects of the U.S. defense industry in general and the
U.S.-Israeli relationship in particular, exacerbated by the present
conflict, that have contributed to making the world a more dangerous
place. U.S. oversight legislation (ignored, in Israel’s case) has it
that nations violating human rights and going on offensives should
not receive American weapons; Israel, being entitled to everything,
has thus become a conduit for interested third parties. As former
CIA officer Philip Giraldi stated about the Israeli-Turkish alliance
in a recent Balkanalysis.com interview, "the so-called ‘friendly’
relationship between the two countries is very narrowly focused. It is
largely the Turkish Army’s General Staff that keeps the relationship
going, because it provides access to U.S. military assistance and
weapons that would otherwise be embargoed."

Yet the Muslim Turkish population is naturally opposed to Israeli
suppression of their fellow Muslims in Palestine and Lebanon. The
outcry against the current war being felt in Turkey (among many other
places) can only feed into the inherent tensions between a secular
military and an Islamic-leaning government and population. Usually,
whenever such challenges to the secular order arise, the result is
vividly manifested in military crackdowns against the Kurds and
military provocations against Greece. The former option has the
possibility to directly affect U.S. interests in northern Iraq,
while the latter could have fateful repercussions for Turkey’s EU
bid and the always dangerous discord over Cyprus (which, by the way,
has suffered from the war already due to a very costly refugee influx).

Nevertheless, the U.S. will no doubt continue arming both sides in the
Greek-Turkish conflict, as it always has, resulting in ever greater
profits for the Washington lobbyists representing the two countries’
interests and the defense contractors who stock their arsenals.

The same danger of a regional arms race is being witnessed in a
nearby region, the Caucasus. Azerbaijan, itself a strong American
and Turkish ally and pivotal export hub for Caspian Sea oil and gas,
has also seen the light and publicly voiced its desire to deepen ties
with Israel. Funny that Azerbaijan, boosted by oil riches but still
not entirely immune to human rights violations itself, is at the
same time involved in an unprecedented military buildup for possible
offensive action against Armenia, to recover the disputed province
of Nagorno-Karabakh that lies between the two Caucasus states.

Nearby, in Georgia, nationalist President Mikhail Saakashvili is
again moving toward war to recover his own breakaway provinces,
Abkhazia and South Ossetia, both of which have sought support from
Russia. As an American client state receiving millions in military
aid and advice, Georgia is regarded as the front line in containing
Russia in the Caucasus, and also an energy corridor for the $3-billion
Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline that commences in Azerbaijan and
concludes in Turkey. Like Saudi Arabia, whose new military aid from
the U.S. is earmarked for protecting "critical infrastructure’ (i.e.,
Western oil interests), U.S. military aid in the Caucasus will no
doubt go toward protecting the pipeline.

Another Path

The same dynamic is in place all around the world, everywhere that
money can be made on exporting the instruments of death. All things
considered, it would seem obvious that journalists might ask government
officials just why their stated devotion to peace and stability has
to go hand in hand with ever greater arms buildups. Yet all too often,
they don’t.

President Bush and his officials talk about building a sustainable,
lasting peace in a new and reshaped Middle East. They talk
optimistically about a "final status" for Kosovo that will respect
and guarantee the rights of embattled minorities. They talk about
resolving the Caucasus frozen conflicts to everyone’s benefit. They
plead for peace and stability between the Greeks and Turks, between
Indians and Pakistanis, even as they keep loading up their arsenals
with increasingly deadly weapons. And so it goes, all around the world.

Despite the rhetoric, there is one thing every U.S. administration
has never tried to do in any of these conflicts. It is something that
leaders have never been able to do, for reasons of their own political
survival: to make peace through peaceful means, without even a word
being spoken about arms sales. Is this really too much to ask?

US Does Not Want Exacerbation of Relations with Turkey

US DOES NOT WANT EXACERBATION OF RELATIONS WITH TURKEY

PanARMENIAN.Net
03.08.2006 15:28 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ "Efforts by the White House to win quick approval
for its new ambassador to Armenia have hit a snag after a bipartisan
group of senators, who are members of Foreign Relations Committee,
moved to force the US government’s formal recognition that Turkey
committed the Armenian Genocide during World War I," writes commentator
of Agence France-Presse (AFP). AFP reminds that the move came as key
committee members expressed open consternation over the mysterious
"resignation" of the current US Ambassador to Armenia, John Evans
— after less than two years on the job. The cause of his premature
recall was his statement that he considers "events in Ottoman Turkey
in 1915 a Genocide."

In the opinion of the AFP commentator, the US does not want
exacerbation of relations with Turkey, the only Muslim NATO
ally. Turkey is already upset over cross-border raids by Kurdish
separatist rebels based in US-occupied Iraq, and is demanding resolute
action by the United States to halt the incursions. This is why the
term "Armenian Genocide" is not used by official Washington, the AFP
commentator supposes.

Historical Reconciliation of Peoples in Region Will Ensure Karabakh

Historical Reconciliation of Peoples in Region Will Ensure Karabakh Settlement

PanARMENIAN.Net
31.07.2006 13:59 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ July 29 NKR President Arkady Ghukasian received
the delegation of human rights activists from Armenia, Azerbaijan,
Georgia and some European states. Welcoming the guests Arkady Ghukasian
noted the importance of presence of the Azeri delegation what, in
his words, is a positive example for constructive dialogue between
the two publics divided by the war.

Coordinator of the Azerbaijani National Committee of the Helsinki
Citizens’ Assembly Azru Abdullayeba remarked that the Baku-based
Public Council on the Nagorno Karabakh Conflict Settlement stands
for immediate participation of the Karabakh side in the talks and
for establishment of constructive relations.

She said the Armenian, Azeri and NKR non-governmental organizations
enjoy warm relations and mutual understanding. "We would like this
atmosphere to transfer into the official circles," she said.

When answering the guests’ questions the NKR President remarked that
achievement of historical reconciliation between the peoples of the
region will ensure the settlement of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict
and establishment of peace. "Without reconciliation it will be hard
to implement any agreement, liquidate the consequences of the war
and open the way towards regional development," Ghukasian said.

ANKARA: Turkey to Try Elif Safak for Denigrating Turkishness

Zaman Online, Turkey
July 28, 2006

Turkey to Try Elif Safak for Denigrating Turkishness
By Cihan News Agency
Friday, July 28, 2006
zaman.com

An Istanbul court decided on Friday to open a case against author
Elif Safak on charges of denigrating Turkishness in the press.

In compiling its indictment file, Beyoglu Prosecution Office based
its accusation against Safak on remarks uttered by the Armenian
characters in her book, "The Bastard of Istanbul."

Safak’s trial is to open on September 21 at Beyoglu Court in
Istanbul. She could face up to 3 years in prison if found guilty.

The ultra-nationalist Turkish Lawyers Association Chairman Kemal
Kerincsiz, who is infamous for filing complaints against journalists
and authors, had filed the complaint against author Elif Safak

Kemal Kerincsiz has filed suits against famous Turkish novelist Orhan
Pamuk and ethnic-Armenian writer and journalist Hrant Dink.

Safak’s book, entitled "Baba and Pic" in Turkish, narrates the
relationship between an Armenian family and two Turkish families.

Elif Safak, who also writes for Zaman daily, has said that the
remarks of Diaspora Armenians in her book had wrongly been attributed
to her.

Earlier on Friday, a compensation case filed against well-known
Turkish novelist Orhan Pamuk was dropped by an Istanbul Court. The
Martyrs’ Mothers Association had opened the case against Pamuk for
allegedly vilifying Turkish dignity in an interview published in a
Swiss magazine. The association had sought 36,000 YTL ($24,000) in
compensation from Pamuk.

Speaker of Armenian NA makes high appraisal of Armenia-EU relations

SPEAKER OF ARMENIAN NA MAKES HIGH APPRAISAL OF ARMENIA-EU RELATIONS

ARKA News Agency, Armenia
June 26 2006

YEREVAN, July 26. /ARKA/. Speaker of the Armenian Parliament
Tigran Torosyan made a high appraisal of Armenia’s relations with
the European Union. The public relations department, RA National
Assembly, reports that at his meeting with EU Special Representative
for the South Caucasus peter Semneby pointed out that necessity of
further development of bilateral relations. He stressed that the
formation of a commission for cooperation with European structures
chaired by the Armenian President is another step on Armenia’s part
that re-affirms the priority of European integration in the country’s
foreign policy. Torosyan proposed that the EU be fully represented in
Armenia, which will allow issues of bilateral relations to be settled
in a more active and prompt manner. In his turn, Semneby pointed
out that a solid basis for the Armenia-EU relations is available,
which determines the quality and prospects of bilateral relations.

Speaking of the Armenia-EU individual program of action, Semneby
pointed out that Brussels is well aware of Armenia’s intents in its
relations with the European Union, and the program will be approved
after a number of amendments are made. P.T. -0–