Azerbaijan: An American Ally In A Sea Of Threats

AZERBAIJAN: AN AMERICAN ALLY IN A SEA OF THREATS

Washington Times
Oct 8 2013

By Ashish Kumar Sen

In an increasingly polarized world, the small Caspian Sea nation of
Azerbaijan is a tantalizing study in contradictions.

It’s a staunch American ally sandwiched between the U.S. nemeses of
Iran and Russia, providing a critical transit for U.S. troops and
supplies in and out of Afghanistan. Yet most Americans probably can’t
spell the country’s name on first chance or pinpoint its location on
a map.

It’s also a Shiite Muslim country that rejects the theocracy of Tehran
in favor of a secular government while expanding its already friendly
relationship with Israel.

It’s also a former Soviet republic that has cast off the shackles of
its once socialist economy to experience significant growth around
its booming oil industry.

All that makes Wednesday’s election in Azerbaijan of keen interest
to U.S. diplomatic, intelligence and military circles even though
there’s little suspense: President Ilham Aliyev is widely expected
to win his third five-year term.

“It is the only country that borders both Russia and Iran. Therefore,
it becomes a pivotal state when it comes to issues such as containment
of Iran, as well as access for Americans, not only into the Caucasus,
but also into Central Asia,” said Michael Rubin, a former Pentagon
official who is now a resident scholar at the American Enterprise
Institute.

“If Azerbaijan weren’t resource-rich and if it didn’t have the
geopolitical position it has, I don’t imagine that so many Americans
would be increasingly interested in the former Soviet republic.”

The U.S.-Azerbaijani relationship is based on cooperation in several
areas, including regional security and energy. Azerbaijan has supplied
troops to work with U.S. forces in Kosovo, Iraq and Afghanistan.

Since 1988, Azerbaijan has been mired in a conflict with Armenia over
Nagorno-Karabakh, a primarily Armenian-populated landlocked region
in Azerbaijan that is held by ethnic Armenian forces and unilaterally
declared itself an independent republic in 1991.

While Armenia, once a powerful lobby in Washington, has embraced
Russia, Azerbaijan has leaned toward the West.

“There is a sense that if Azerbaijan changes its orientation, American
influence will be checkmated in the region,” Mr. Rubin said.

“Political stability in Azerbaijan is to the benefit of America’s
strategic interests.”

Crackdown on the opposition Those interests have left the Obama
administration to wrestle with concerns about what critics say is
Azerbaijan’s authoritarian rule. A monthslong crackdown on political
opposition and a clampdown on freedoms of expression and assembly
has concerned some human rights groups.

The National Assembly has passed measures that increase prison
sentences and fines for public-order offenses. In June, Mr. Aliyev
signed legislation that criminalizes defamatory views posted on the
Internet and allows prison sentences of up to three years.

The Azerbaijani government is engaged in a “deliberate, abusive
strategy to limit dissent,” Human Rights Watch said in a report
in September.

The crackdown is aimed at silencing government critics and often
uses “trumped up” charges, including hooliganism, weapons and drugs
possession, said Giorgi Gogia, a senior researcher at Human Rights
Watch.

“The government has had a poor human rights record for a while, but
for the past year and a half, we have seen a change for the worse,”
Mr. Gogia said. “The government is tightening the screws. Little by
little, the islands of freedom are disappearing.”

Azerbaijani officials brush off the criticisms, pointing to their
strong support of American interests in the region and their friendly
relations with Israel.

The Obama administration is monitoring developments in Azerbaijan,
straddling a careful line of embracing an ally in a critical region
while prodding it behind closed doors and in public to enhance
freedoms.

On July 16, Thomas Melia, deputy assistant secretary of state for
democracy, human rights and labor, testified before the Commission
on Security and Cooperation in Europe, also known as the Helsinki
Commission, at a hearing titled “Troubled Partner: Growing
Authoritarianism in Azerbaijan.”

The “political environment for human rights and fundamental freedoms
more broadly has worsened since at least last November, when the
[national assembly] passed amendments significantly increasing fines
on participants and organizers of unauthorized protests,” Mr. Melia
told the panel.

In September, the Aliyev government barred a delegation led by Mr.

Melia from traveling to Azerbaijan to observe preparations for the
presidential election.

“We will continue to urge respect for fundamental freedoms and the
rule of law, including due process before, during and after the
presidential contest,” a U.S. official said, speaking only on the
condition of anonymity.

The official said the administration has called on Azerbaijan to ensure
“a free, fair, and transparent electoral process that reflects the
will of the people.”

‘We are not perfect’ Azerbaijan’s leadership bristles at suggestions
it is unfriendly to freedom.

At the Helsinki Commission hearing in July, for instance, the
Azerbaijani ambassador to the United States took strong exception to
his president being labeled authoritarian.

“I respectfully reject the wrongful claim about going to
authoritarianism in Azerbaijan,” Ambassador Elin Suleymanov
said. “We do not accept that. What is going on in Azerbaijan is
a truly independent nation with a vibrant political system and a
free-market economy.”

He conceded that there is room for improvement: “Just like every
nation on Earth, we are not perfect.”

Azerbaijan won independence from the former Soviet Union in 1991. In
1993, Mr. Aliyev’s father, Heydar Aliyev, was elected president. A
decade later, in October 2003, the younger Mr. Aliyev was elected to
succeed his ailing father.

He inherited a nation on the cusp of major oil revenues and plagued by
corruption. In the ensuing years, the economy improved, and with it,
the standard of living.

“Hopes were quite high when Mr. Aliyev came to power,” Mr. Gogia said.

“Here was an energetic, young leader who could modernize the country.

But these hopes wound down quite soon after he came to power.”

The pro-democracy Arab Spring protests that have embroiled parts of the
Middle East and North Africa and toppled dictators since 2010 appear
to have spooked the Aliyev government, especially as it related to
social media.

The Azerbaijani government has imprisoned youth activists with
large numbers of followers on social media sites such as Facebook
and Twitter. More than half a dozen activists from NIDA, a youth
opposition movement active on social media and critical of the
government, have been arrested.

The opposition claims it has been hamstrung by such tactics,
especially in a country where broadcast media are still controlled
by the government.

Stability versus democracy Besides Mr. Aliyev, 51, there are nine
registered presidential candidates. The opposition’s main candidate,
Jamil Hasanli, is a historian who represents the National Council of
Democratic Forces, a coalition of opposition parties and groups.

Oscar-winning screenwriter Rustam Ibragimbekov was the National
Council’s original candidate, but election officials rejected his
candidacy on the grounds that he is a dual citizen of Azerbaijan
and Russia.

Another presidential aspirant, Ilgar Mammadov, was arrested in February
on charges of instigating civil unrest and has been awaiting trial
in prison.

Its human rights record aside, Azerbaijan has plenty of advocates
inside the United States, including former Rep. Dan Burton, an Indiana
Republican who wrote in a Washington Times op-ed last month that
America must be patient with its Caspian ally.

“I know that Azerbaijan is not perfect. The Azerbaijani government
is often criticized over its human rights record,” Mr. Burton wrote.

“However, considering that Azerbaijan – like other former Soviet
republics – has scant experience with democracy, its human rights
record is better than most. In fact, Azerbaijan’s religious tolerance,
inclusiveness and protection of women’s rights should be recognized.”

Mr. Burton is chairman of the board of the Azerbaijan America Alliance,
which promotes Azerbaijan’s interests in the U.S.

Mr. Burton also stressed Azerbaijan’s increasing ties with Israel.

Azerbaijan’s bilateral trade with Israel reached $4 billion last year
and about 40 percent of Israel’s oil imports come from Azerbaijan,
he noted. And when Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov
visited Israel in May, Israeli President Shimon Peres described the
trip as historic.

Mr. Mammadyarov was also the only Muslim foreign minister to address
the 2013 American Jewish Committee Global Forum in Washington.

Others see an evolution of a Soviet republic seeking stability and
economic prosperity first before freedom can be achieved.

“I am not one who would say that Aliyev is a democrat. He is not,”
said Mr. Rubin of the American Enterprise Institute, who visited
Azerbaijan in June. “While the negative side of Aliyev has been
the lack of full democratization, the positive side has been the
development of the economy.

“One of the reasons why I am willing to cut Aliyev some slack is
because I don’t believe a stable democracy is possible in Azerbaijan
without a larger middle class and it seems Aliyev’s plan is to build
up that middle class first,” Mr. Rubin explained. “So while I believe
in reforms, I also believe that we need to time those reforms properly;
otherwise, we throw the baby out with the bathwater.”

http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2013/oct/7/azerbaijan-an-american-ally-in-a-sea-of-threats/?utm_source=RSS_Feed&utm_medium=RSS

Armenian Starts Response-2013 Military Drills

ARMENIAN STARTS RESPONSE-2013 MILITARY DRILLS

Vestnik Kavkaza, Russia
Oct 7 2013

7 October 2013 – 3:22pm
The Armenian Staff has started the Response-2013 military drills
today, which will continue until October 9, the Armenian Defense
Ministry reports.

State structures will gain experience in evaluating the political
situation, conclusions and presentation of reports to military
authorities, coordination of state and military structures,
implementation of efficient management methods.

Fifteen People Hospitalized With Anthrax In Armenia

FIFTEEN PEOPLE HOSPITALIZED WITH ANTHRAX IN ARMENIA

Vestnik Kavkaza, Russia
Oct 7 2013

7 October 2013 – 8:30pm
Fifteen cases of infection with anthrax have been detected in Armenia.

Patients have been hospitalized and are now receiving treatment. Their
condition is assessed as moderate.

———————– Vestnik Kavkaza, Russia Oct 8 2013

Anthrax found in meat in Armenia

8 October 2013 – 2:12pm 15 people were hospitalized with anthrax
symptoms at Artagukh in the Lori Region of Armenia yesterday after
eating infected meat, RIA Novosti reports.

Sanitary inspectors killed four cows in the area on September 23-24
and confiscated 50kg of meat. Inspections continue in the Lori and
Shirak Regions.

The Men From Moush

THE MEN FROM MOUSH

Maria Titizian

BY MARIA TITIZIAN

Developing complex models and postulating theories, writing academic
papers, organizing high-level conferences and advancing policies
to address some of the most pressing issues facing the Armenian
nation is typically the method we employ. We discuss and analyze,
argue incessantly, lose our composure in the melee of verbal and
pseudo-intellectual traffic and usually end up nowhere.

One of the most crippling problems in contemporary Armenian life is
the divide or disconnect between our two selves – the homeland and
the Diaspora. We have yet to find the right formula that will help
us to see the world and ourselves with a common vision and end game.

Sometimes the answers are so very simple. Case in point, the men
from Moush.

I have had many incredible experiences in Armenia. A few nights ago,
I was blessed to experience yet another. Friends visiting from abroad
wanted to take a group of us out for their last night in Yerevan. They
had one condition – the restaurant should have a band that played
traditional Armenian instruments. You would think that this wouldn’t
be a problem in the homeland but sometimes it is. Nonetheless, we
discussed the list of possibilities and agreed to go to a restaurant
called Noyan Tapan.

My girlfriend was commissioned with making the reservations. She
called me early Saturday morning to say that the arrangements were
made and we should all be at the restaurant at 7:30. That night,
my husband and I picked up some of the guests and made our way down
to the city. En route, we got a phone call to say that the plans had
changed and we were to go to another restaurant, Ayas, instead. It’s
Armenia, we don’t ask a lot of questions, we just change our route.

However, before we got to Ayas, we received yet another call to say
that there were no tables available at Ayas.

Imagine if you will the situation… three cars full of repatriates,
plus a couple of tourists, trying to figure out where to go to listen
to some traditional Armenian music live. So, as we were driving the
streets of Yerevan, we were thinking about alternative locations. A
few minutes later another call was received to say that Hin Yerevan
had an available table for our group. There was a collective groan
in the car as we protested but we didn’t have much of a choice. Our
hosts wanted a place with traditional Armenian music, so off we went.

When we arrived we inquired as to why Noyan Tapan fell through. This
is how the story goes – my friend calls Spyur, an information service,
to get the number for the restaurant. The operator at Spyur gives
her the number for Noyan Tun, not Noyan Tapan and when they arrive
at Noyan Tapan, they realize it has closed down. My friend calls the
number she’s gotten from Spyur, purportedly for Noyan Tapan, only to
realize that she’s made reservations at Noyan Tun instead. Because
Noyan Tun doesn’t have live music, the erroneously made reservations
are cancelled.

So we arrived at Hin Yerevan, not looking forward to it because we had
had some bad experiences there but we kept an open mind. We walked
in, the place was full save for our table and the band was playing
the right kind of music. So far, so good. We said things happen for
a reason but we had no idea they really do.

The evening started out pleasant enough, the food was mediocre,
the music was just fine, and the alcohol was flowing.

Right next to our table was a group of men, singing, drinking,
toasting and making requests for songs. We kept hearing toasts to
Moush, the ancient Armenian city which is now in present-day Turkey.

They were all Mshetsis. My husband, who was at this point in high
spirits, no pun intended, decided to walk over to their table and drink
a toast to Moush and told the group of men that one day we would all
return there. Well, this was the ice breaker. For the next several
hours the two tables became one, literally and figuratively. Their
table, Hayastantsis whose grandfathers were from Moush, and our table,
repatriates who had been living in the homeland for more than a decade
and some Diaspora tourists.

We sang together, danced together, made toasts together and in the
end, some even cried together. It will remain one of the highlights
of my life here in Armenia for so many reasons. These men who called
themselves Mshetsis had never been to Moush. The ancestry of our
table was a mixture from Kharpert, Aynteb, Musa Ler, Yozgat, Kessab
and Garin, places in Western Armenia where our grandparents were from
but which most of us hadn’t been to before either.

It didn’t matter and yet it did.

Those connections to our ghostly past, to the places on maps which no
longer said Armenia, meant something to us. It meant that our lineage
didn’t end or begin with 1915 when we were driven from those lands. It
meant traditions and heritage and ties that could be traced back for
centuries if not millennia. It meant that we were all connected to
each other regardless of geography. It meant a fusion of Eastern and
Western Armenia and Armenians. The lines of division between homeland
and Diaspora blurred and we were just a group of Armenians singing,
laughing and dancing together.

The evening spent with the men from Moush taught all of us there
an important lesson – if you’re Armenian, it doesn’t matter where
you’re born, what matters is what you do with that birthright and
how you decide to live your life. It reinforced the power of shared
memory and a rootedness to a particular place and most importantly,
it underscored how powerful human connections can be in forging
understanding, tolerance and comradery.

Luckily for us, the operator at Spyur inadvertently played an important
role in that journey of discovery.

http://asbarez.com/114756/the-men-from-moush/

Armenia To Compete For A Berth At The 2014 Youth Olympic Games

ARMENIA TO COMPETE FOR A BERTH AT THE 2014 YOUTH OLYMPIC GAMES

13:46 08.10.2013

Iceland, Finland, Moldova and Armenia will compete next week for a
berth at the 2014 Youth Olympic Games boys’ football tournament in
Nanjing as their Under-15 sides face off in the qualifiers in Nyon,
UEFA’s official website reports.

The Colovray Stadium, opposite UEFA’s Swiss headquarters, will
stage both the semi-finals on Saturday 19 October and the third-place
play-off and final two days later, following on from similar qualifiers
for the women’s event. In the semis, Iceland play Finland and Moldova
meet Armenia, with the eventual final winner travelling to China for
the six-team event from 15 to 27 August.

The four UEFA qualifying entrants were the highest associations on
the Respect fair play rankings for all editions of the UEFA European
Under-17 and U19 Championship since 2010/11, excluding the 2012/13
U19 final tournament.

http://www.armradio.am/en/2013/10/08/armenia-to-compete-for-a-berth-at-the-2014-youth-olympic-games/

New Armenian Church To Be Consecrated In Yekaterinburg

NEW ARMENIAN CHURCH TO BE CONSECRATED IN YEKATERINBURG

October 8, 2013 – 15:27 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – A newly-built Armenian church will be consecrated
in Russia’s Yekaterinburg on October 12.

The consecration ceremony will be held by the Catholicos of All
Armenians Karekin II and Bishop Ezras Nersisyan, primate of the New
Nakhichevan and Russian Diocese of the Armenian Apostolic Church. The
ceremony will host politicians, religious, public and cultural figures,
among others.

In 2003, Bishop Ezras Nersisyan consecrated the foundations of
the church.

The church construction was sponsored by Masis Nazaryan, the head of
Sverdlovsk-based Ani-Hayastan NGO, the chair of the Armenian community
since 1996.

The church was designed by architect Hakob Gasparyan, armenianchurch.ru
reported.

Photo:armenianchurch.ru

http://www.panarmenian.net/eng/news/170968/New_Armenian_church_to_be_consecrated_in_Yekaterinburg

Majority Of Turks Don’t Believe Their Country Will Join EU

MAJORITY OF TURKS DON’T BELIEVE THEIR COUNTRY WILL JOIN EU

October 8, 2013 – 14:39 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – According to a poll conducted by the German-Turkish
Foundation for Education and Scientific Research (TAVAK), around 74
percent of Turkish people do not believe the country will become a
member of the European Union, Hurriyet Daily News reports.

The number of people who say “Turkey will join the EU” witnessed a
steep fall in 2012, decreasing from 34.8 percent to 17 percent in
just a year.

The biggest reason behind the Turkish people’s loss of belief is their
increasing economic confidence. Around two-thirds of respondents
responded “no,” when they were asked whether Turkey economically
needs the EU.

Both Turkey’s eye-catching success in diversifying export markets
to unburden its reliance on the European market and the eurozone’s
unrelieved financial troubles, which have taken the wind out of its
sails, have impacted that, the report said.

European Union countries, which accounted for some 64 percent of
Turkey’s exports in 2012, received only 34 percent of Turkish goods
sent abroad in 2012. The EU is still the largest export partner of
the country, but being able to raise its exports to new regions such
as Africa, the share of which jumped to 34 percent last year from 2
percent in 2002, has boosted the country’s confidence.

In line with this perception, the emergence of the possibility
of joining alternative organizations, such as the Shanghai Five,
and creating new economic alliances, have reduced the EU’s lure for
Turkey even further.

Moreover, the reluctance of several powerful EU member countries,
with Angela Merkel’s Germany at the top, has heightened the skepticism
among the Turkish public, the poll results showed. In addition to this,
growing Islamophobia and racism are other reservations, the HDN says.

Some 64 percent of the respondents said they see Germany as the
largest obstacle in front of Turkey’s EU accession. While around a
quarter of respondents see France as the biggest one, Greek Cyprus
and Greece followed them at 5 and 4 percent, respectively.

Turkey’s membership bid has been virtually frozen for three years,
held back by political obstacles and resistance of some EU countries,
including German conservatives who object to Turkey’s accession on
the grounds that its size would “overburden” the bloc.

The poll was conducted among 1,210 people between Aug 20 and Sept 2
in Istanbul, Ankara, Izmir, Kayseri, Diyarbakır and Artvin.

http://www.panarmenian.net/eng/news/170977/

Turkey Returning Land To Syriac Monastery

TURKEY RETURNING LAND TO SYRIAC MONASTERY

October 8, 2013 – 16:11 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – Turkey is returning a 12-acre parcel of land
that belongs to a Syriac monastery which was seized from Mardin’s
Syriac community in 2005 by the Treasury, a move that came after the
government launched landmark reforms as part of a democratization
package in a bid to extend the democratic rights of certain social
and religious groups, Today’s Zaman reports.

Deputy Prime Minister Bulent Arınc said on Monday, Oct 7, that the
Directorate General for Foundations (VGM) had agreed to return the
land that belongs to the Mor Gabriel Monastery, ending an extended
saga over the property rights of the Syriac community regarding the
monastery and its surrounding area.

Last year, Turkey’s Aramean (Syriac) community was disappointed
by a Supreme Court of Appeals rejection of a plea to overturn an
earlier judgment that gave the land of the Mor Gabriel Monastery to
the Treasury.

The conflict over Mor Gabriel began when land officials for the
Turkish government redrew the boundaries around the monastery and
surrounding villages in 2008 in order to update the national land
registry as part of a cadastre modernization project in compliance
with European Union instructions.

The officials finished this work across nearly half the country in less
than five years. In addition, several new laws have been passed that
require the transfer of uncultivated land to the Treasury and, in some
cases, that re-zone other land, such as forest land, transferring it
to the jurisdiction of the Forestry Directorate.

http://www.panarmenian.net/eng/news/170981/

Zhamanak: U.S. Embassy To Review Expenses Due To Govt. Shutdown

ZHAMANAK: U.S. EMBASSY TO REVIEW EXPENSES DUE TO GOVT. SHUTDOWN

11:27 08/10/2013 ” Daily press

The U.S. Embassy in Armenia is likely to review some expenses and
events due to the government shutdown.

“The Embassy continues to work stemming from the necessity of
protecting the interests of the U.S. However, the Embassy may review
some expenses and events,” Taguhi Jahukyan, a spokeswoman for the
Embassy, told Zhamanak daily.

She added that the Embassy will not be shut down.

http://www.panorama.am/en/society/2013/10/08/jamanak/

Armenian Parliament Speaker Attends IPU Assembly In Geneva

ARMENIAN PARLIAMENT SPEAKER ATTENDS IPU ASSEMBLY IN GENEVA

16:55 08.10.13

The delegation led by President of Armenia’s National Assembly Hovik
Abrahamyan attended on Monday the Inter-Parliamentary Union’s assembly
in the Swiss capital, Geneva.

The meeting focused on the procedures of membership in the
organization, as well as the reports by its president and secretary
general. The participants also introduced a plan of actions and a
draft budget for 2014.

The Armenian delegation included the parliament members Karen
Cshmarityan (Republican Party), Heghine Bisharyan (Rule of Law party),
Karine Achemyan (Republican Party) and Martin Sargsyan (Republican
Party).

The IPU’s 129th assembly has brought together 1200 delegates from
125 countries and parliament speakers from 45 states.

IPU President Abdelwahed Radi delivered an opening speech to welcome
the participants.

On the first day of the meeting, the participants discussed
parliaments’ role in the global efforts towards creating a nuclear-free
world. Subsequent committee meetings addressed the protection
of children’s rights (especially those of migrant children) and
the prevention of child labor in times of war and conflicts. The
implications of the Arms Trade Treaty were also on the discussion
agenda.

Later in the day, Abrahamyan met with the speaker of Lebanon’s
parliament, Nabih Berri.

According to the National Assembly’s Press Service, discussion
between Armenia’s top lawmaker and his Lebanese counterpart focused on
bilateral cooperation issues. Abrahamyan told Mr Barri that Armenia,
which shares a common history of traditions with Lebanon, attaches
a major importance to developing a bilateral cooperation with the
country.

The sides further talked of regional issues, focusing particularly
the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. They both stressed the importance of
peaceful negotiations over the land dispute.

A wide range of other questions of mutual interest were also discussed
at the meeting.

http://www.tert.am/en/news/2013/10/08/hovik-abrahamyan-geneva/