Karabakh At An Intersection

KARABAKH AT AN INTERSECTION
Davit Gharabekyan – Independent analyst

KarabakhOpen
18-06-2007 11:42:32

The upcoming election again necessitates our society to take a test
on democracy. The hope for legality started fading away soon.

After the well-known letter of the director of the Civic Action Center
NGO the CEC gave a nervous and insulting response, which was followed
by "sudden" hindrances for the human rights defender to visit the
penitentiaries, while he used to monitor prisons before that. The
Demo Newspaper and KarabakhOpen.com were checked out of the list of
local media which get grants from the NKR government.

Avoiding details, I will say that the society is now in an atmosphere
which reminds of the times of Peter’s reforms: officials of different
ranks rush to take a test on loyalty to the likely presidential
candidate to hold on to their posts.

I nevertheless hope that the next leader (whoever is elected) will
display will and determination and will not let the pre-election
moods or any ends prevail over the national interests and long-term
programs of development.

The leaders of the surveys conducted by the abovementioned independent
media and NGOs have so far successfully avoided extremities, although
the psychological tension is tangibly growing as the election campaign
is drawing nearer.

However, the choice of ways of development depends on the society. If
it wishes to live in legality and share responsibility with its
leader for its future supporting it through the difficulties of
social transformation and consistently pursues its goal, the nation
will overcome the crisis.

How the government should agree with people

Fundamental changes in the society are facilitated by the gradual
replacement of a one-pole government by a bipolar government. People,
the society is becoming the second pole, the most active part of which
is the independent media and NGOs. I consciously rule out political
parties and the parliament.

First, because the parliament has lost the role of a representative
of people and a bridge between people and the executive.

Second, the majority of parties have become nominal
organizations. However, none of the parliament parties complies with
the classical definition of a party, and has not proved its right
to be considered as a party, taking a test in government, fame and
political struggle.

Meanwhile, a lot of journalists stood up for their rights with endless
reproaches from the people they criticize, including influential
officials.

They raised and covered sharp issues, despite difficulties, and
obviously there is more trust and interest in their reports that the
meetings and conferences of parties.

The appearance of an NGO or establishment of an open discussion on
a complicated and urgent issue on the eve of the election is now
fashionable to perceive as lobby for a presidential candidate. In
addition, it is now fashionable to discern plots or intrigues,
or backstage forces in the actions of the opponent. In addition,
the outside forces are associated with something negative, cunning,
destructive.

A show on the Public Channel last week suggested that the meetings of
NGOs are funded by organizations backed by Jewish-Masonic forces. So
shall we reject international cooperation? As to money, I have
never seen an independent reporter who, unlike their critiques, has
apartments outside NKR, realty for several hundreds of thousands of
dollars (minimum), expensive cars…

So where is the way out? How can we improve our lives? The dialogue
among the public forces will help transfer the discussion of the
abovementioned problems into a constructive framework and define
the primary internal and external problems, as well as to work out
mechanisms of solving them.

New Branch Of VTB Bank-Armenia Opens In Yerevan

NEW BRANCH OF VTB BANK-ARMENIA OPENS IN YEREVAN

Noyan Tapan
Jun 14 2007

YEREVAN, JUNE 14, NOYAN TAPAN. The opening of the new branch of VTB
Bank-Armenia CJSC owned by VTB Bank OJSC (Russia) in Yerevan symbolizes
the Armenian and Russian economies’ being integrated and the fact that
the financial sector must contribute to this integation. The Chairman
of the Central Bank of Armenia (CBA) Tigran Sargsian stated this on
June 14 during the opening ceremony of VTB Bank-Armenia’s branch in
"Moscow House" (Yerevan).

He expressed a hope that the bank will have a leading position in
Armenia and the "rapid implementation of the agreements reached will
be a new stimulus for integration of our economies."

Chairman of VTB Bank’s board Andrey Kostin said that they reached
an agreement with the CBA chairman on the programs of further
capitalization and development of the network of branches. According
to him, investment programs to be implemented in Armenia’s energy
sector, gas transportation, air transportation and metal mining have
been discussed with the Armenian prime minister Serge Sargsian.

It is noteworthy that VTB Bank envisages to increase the capital of
VTB Bank-Armenia up to 40 million dollars, and by this index it will
become the largest bank in Armenia.

Serge Amirkhanyan: There Are No Restricted Territories For Settlers

SERGE AMIRKHANYAN: THERE ARE NO RESTRICTED TERRITORIES FOR SETTLERS

KarabakhOpen
13-06-2007 11:53:43

There are no restricted territories for settlers, said the head of the
Department of Migration, Refugees and Resettlement Serge Amirkhanyan
in an interview with KarabakhOpen.com. The head of the department
commented on NKR President Ghukasyan’s statement that immense funds
are necessary for the settlement of the liberated territories.

Serge Amirkhanyan considers resettlement as a crucial task. "The
faster, the better. The solution of this problem depends on
resettlement. In 2001 when I was appointed adviser to prime minister on
resettlement, we worked out a 10-year program, which costs 110 million
dollars. 35 thousand refugees could settle in these territories on
these funds. Both now and then we expected to get funds through the
Armenians worldwide. The government funds the settlement of 130-150
families a year. On the whole, 3 million dollars is allocated,
which means the program will last for decades," Serge Amirkhanyan
said. The head of the department also said there are no obstacles to
resettlement except funding.

Azerbaijan demands from neighbor the land that had never belonged

Azerbaijan demands from its neighbor the land that had never belonged

Azat Artsakh Daily, Republic of Nagorno Karabakh [NKR]
09-06-200

The history of the modern Azerbaijan goes almost according to Orwell,
in spite of the historical facts and numerous confirmations about this
or that land’s belonging to various neighboring countries. To the
territorial claims against Armenia the story with the Georgian
monastery complex `Davit Garedji’ is added now. Who Azerbaijan will
sort out its relationship with next is hard to predict. It could be
Dagestan, Iran, or Turkey. But before making any demands it is better
to try and learn the history of the own nation and not to search any
family tree where it doesn’t exist; among Albanians, Persians, Turks
etc. /PanARMENIAN.Net/ In 1918 the Musafat party (Equality) first used
the term `Azerbaijan’ for the area situated on the territory of two
Transcaucasian historical areas; Shirvana and Arrana. Before that the
place-name `Azerbaijan’ only referred to the territories situated to
the south of the River Arax, in the area of Tebriz, Ardebil and Lake
Urmia. Later the land of Azerbaijan and Eastern Transcaucasia (modern
Azerbaijan) were populated with people of almost identical ethnic
origins. In 1936 Azerbaijan was integrated into USSR on the bases of
the Soviet Republic rights. The Azeri Turks were officially called
Azerbaijani; Azerbaijani was also the name of their official language.
It was then, when with the decision of the Soviet Government the Azeri
written language was translated from Latin to Cyrillic. This is how the
things had been before Heydar Aliyev came to power in Azerbaijan.
Taking the control of the country, he immediately decided to `revise’
the history of the country. It was then, when Farida Mamedov’s
notorious work `The Caucasian Albania’ appeared, Guliyev’s book about
medieval architecture of Albania where all the Armenian churches and
khachkars were announced to be Albanian, i.e. Azerbaijani. All this
enabled Baku to `revise’ the belonging of the territories included in
Az.USSR. The most interesting part is that the Deputy Minister of the
Foreign Affairs of Azerbaijan Khalaf Khalafov himself blurted out about
the boarders. `In its time the USSR authorities didn’t regard the issue
of delimitation of the administrative rights among the former Soviet
countries, which led to a number of problems in boarder delimitation.
According to his words, often different documents referring to the
issue of territories of this or that country contradict each other,’
says Day.az. Historian Jamil Hasanly is sure that, `Many native Azeri
territories have gone to the neighboring countries. Today we don’t have
to squander our territories. We must try to save what has been left to
us after giving out Azeri lands, and today we cannot lose a single
square meter’. The parties’ incapacity of finding a peaceful solution
of the controversies concerning the territorial integrity as well as
the right of nations’ self-determination leads to national conflicts
growing into military confrontation. The principle of territorial
integrity exclusively works for the protection of the country against
external aggression, and this is closely interconnected with its
formula in UNO Charter; `All the UN Members in their international
relations refrain from force or its implementation against the
territorial inviolability or political independence of any country, as
well as any other method incompatible with the objectives of the UNO’.
However the UNO Charter states that the principle of the territorial
integrity isn’t applicable for the countries which do not secure equal
rights for the nations and do not allow freedom of self-determination,
and this, perhaps, is the most essential point in the resolution of the
Karabakh Conflict. It should be reminded that the nation’s right on
self-determination is considered to be one of the universally
recognized principles of international law. It gained recognition in
the process of the colonial system breakdown and was toughened in the
Declaration of Independence of the colonial countries and nations (by
the Resolution N 1514 XV of the UN General Assembly adopted on December
14, 1960) and the consequent international pacts and declarations of
UNO. Creation of the multinational empires sooner or later brought to
their breakdown; the Roman Empire, the Golden Horde, the Ottoman
Empire, Austria-Hungary, USSR. Being one of the most significant
features of independence, territorial integrity became one of the
weakest points after the USSR breakdown. The main difficulty concerns
the change of the administrative bounds in the former Soviet Union into
public ones. But if Kosovo falls apart from Serbia why Nagorno-Karabakh
can’t be proclaimed an independent Republic? Maybe because Serbia is of
much less importance to the USA than Azerbaijan, yet for Russia
everything is just vise versa. Unfortunately once again Armenia has
found itself between two rocks, in spite of all international
principles and treaties.

09-06-2007

Territorial Dispute: Armenia, Azerbaijan Edge Towards Deal

TERRITORIAL DISPUTE: ARMENIA, AZERBAIJAN EDGE TOWARDS DEAL

Daily Times, Pakistan
June 8 2007

BAKU: A meeting this Saturday of the leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan
is raising hopes that a deal could be reached on a dispute over
the volatile territory of Nagorny Karabakh that has long disfigured
this region.

The two countries have been locked in a bitter stand-off over the
mountain territory for more than a decade, poisoning efforts to
bring stability to the strategic South Caucasus region, bordered
by Russia, Turkey and Iran. Having gone to war in the early 1990s,
their forces still clash sporadically and any escalation could derail
Western efforts to promote a corridor of oil and gas pipelines from
the Caspian Sea to Europe.

Russia and Turkey have a close interest. Ankara has closed its borders
with Armenia in support of Azerbaijan, while Moscow counts Armenia
as its closest ally among the ex-Soviet states on this southern
flank. Now however diplomats are saying that a meeting this weekend
in the Russian city of Saint Petersburg between Armenian President
Robert Kocharian and his Azerbaijani counterpart Ilham Aliyev could
herald a breakthrough.

No one is expecting a final settlement, but diplomats say an agreement
on basic principles could be reached by the end of this year. "If
they decide they want to resolve the last few issues on the table then
it’s realistic that you could anticipate the signing of an agreement
on the basic principles this year," US Deputy Assistant Secretary
of State Matthew Bryza, who is mediating in the talks, said in the
Azerbaijani capital Baku. The top French mediator, Bernard Fassier,
said that "never in the past have the two sides been this close to a
possible agreement," but cautioned that "this does not mean a deal
is at hand. It means that it is perhaps less far away than it was
before."French, Russian and US diplomats are mediating under the
auspices of the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe
(OSCE).Diplomats said the two sides could set aside the issue of the
final status of Nagorny Karabakh in favour of a step-by-step plan to
deal with other contentious matters.

Azerbaijan Would Start A War If Being Sure

AZERBAIJAN WOULD START A WAR IF BEING SURE
By Nana Petrosian

AZG Armenian Daily
08/06/20

"If the Azerbaijani authorities were sure if the perfection of their
armed forces, it would start a war at once," stated in an interview to
"Independent Artsakh" newspaper lieutenant-general Movses Hakobian,
Desense Minister of the Republic of Nagorno-Karabakh.

According to the Defense Minister, large expenses on the army are not
yet enough for successful military operations. During the war both
Armenia and Karabakh were under blockade, but neither the people nor
the army despaired and even won the war, he said.

Commenting on the Azerbaijani official statements that the Azerbaijani
forces are better equipped and are larger in numbers, Mr. Hakobian
assured that the army of Karabakh is provided with everything
necessary.

"Azerbaijan will face a catastrophe in case of unleashing the war,"
he assured.

OSCE CiO Urged Azeri President To Stop Persecution Of Media

OSCE CIO URGED AZERI PRESIDENT TO STOP PERSECUTION OF MEDIA

PanARMENIAN.Net
06.06.2007 14:23 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ During a visit to Baku OSCE Chairman-in-Office
Miguel Angel Moratinos urged the Azerbaijani President to put an end
to persecution of media.

The OSCE is ready to put efforts for normalization of situation
in Azerbaijan. The OSCE Baku office plans to implement a number of
projects targeted at improvement of freedom of speech and creation
of a new generation of journalists.

Earlier Miklos Haraszti, the OSCE representative for the freedom of
the media voiced concern over the arrest of 7 reporters in Azerbaijan
and called to the authorities to release them.

When speaking of the forthcoming presidential election Mr Moratinos
said the OSCE will do its utmost to assist in holding free and
democratic election, Zerkalo (mirror) newspaper reports.

Ukraine Should Strive To Become Regional Leader, Paper Says

UKRAINE SHOULD STRIVE TO BECOME REGIONAL LEADER, PAPER SAYS

Den, Kiev
1 Jun 07, p 4

As Ukraine’s domestic political scene settles down, the country needs
to improve it foreign policy image, an analytical daily has said. The
paper said Ukraine should strive to become a regional leader and make
the most of the GUAM organization. Ukrainian politicians should review
the number of missions around the world and concentrate on areas
where Kiev can lead. The author said Ukraine would certainly join
both the EU and NATO but wondered if it would be in his lifetime. The
following is an excerpt from the article by Andriy Skelya, entitled
"It’s time to get foreign policy sorted" and published in the Ukrainian
newspaper Den on 1 June, subheadings are the paper’s own:

Thankfully, Ukrainian domestic politics is beginning to even
out. People say not for long and not to its full depth and not
across the entire spectrum of issues, but [politicians] will not be
"wrenching" things to such an extent that it is impossible to think
about anything else. Consequently, the time has come to worry about the
country’s external image and to put things in order. In other words,
it’s time to pay attention to foreign priorities.

[Passage omitted: foreign policy is a reflection of domestic policy]

Coordination of foreign policy has a legal basis found in presidential
decree No 841 dated 1996. To a certain extent, it is reflected in
legislation (the law "On diplomatic service", the law "On diplomatic
rank", the law "On Ukraine’s international agreements" and so
forth). In practice, the decree and legislation is often violated. Both
the Cabinet of Ministers and the presidential secretariat, not to
mention the apparatus in parliament, often plan, organize and carry
out visits abroad or within Ukraine without taking into account
professional expertise from the Foreign Ministry. Decisions are
often made without any coordination. This happens not least of all
because of a lack of staff unity across the state’s bodies involved
in foreign relations.

For example, in Canada, France or Romania, there is only one state
protocol service. We, in addition to three services for each of the
three main state structures, also have ministerial, institutional,
external departmental and other "protocol people".

The French protocol chief (and he is not simply the person who sits
the prime minister at the table or places the president in line, he
is also the one who in reality organizes all aspects of international
contact) serves parliament today, the prosecutor-general tomorrow and
the next day works with diplomats in Argentina. Under these conditions
it is simply impossible for the Foreign Ministry to send analytical
material that will not be used in preparing a package of documents
for an official to use at negotiations.

It is also impossible for the prime minister’s apparatus to receive
material (messages), for example, from the Economics Ministry and
for the diplomatic corps to not know about it. In the same European
diplomatic services, the ambassador is the right hand man of the head
of the delegation (the president, prime minister or a minister). During
the visit he is obligated to be nearby in all circumstances. It is
impossible to imagine his absence at negotiations or meetings.

With us, that is possible. And so it happens that during the prime
minister’s visit, he offers to help modernize a partner country’s
domestic technology and it turns out there is no such technology in
that place.

Because the military attache at the embassy was not included in
preparations for the visit. Or the deputy prime minister meets
face-to-face, without the ambassador (confidential!) with a foreign
prime minister and afterwards he only recounts his meeting in part
(he didn’t remember everything).

Meanwhile, the foreign state relates things in its own way, after all –
there were no witnesses from our side! Departments in a rush, tiredness
and pseudo-confidentiality, in short – unstatesmanlike behaviour is
a big illness in the sphere of Ukrainian foreign relations and cannot
be liquidated without real, coordinated effort.

Let me say more. Realizing large investment projects abroad without
attracting diplomats is also an indirect but clear violation of
decree No 841. It is not important whether we are talking about the
Odessa port plant or the Luhansk locomotive plant. Diplomats with an
education in foreign economics who have come as aides in trade issues,
and the ambassadors in important states could give priceless advice
(that is advice which is possibly worth millions) and could protect
the state and its citizens from obvious financial losses.

Since coordination is limping, then it is clear the rule of common
work with the diplomatic corps is not being observed everywhere. And
to this day, many Ukrainian diplomatic missions have both a separate
trade and economic mission (TEM), made up by the Economics Ministry
and subordinate to it, and an economy advisory service formed by the
Foreign Ministry. This is explained by saying the former is foremost
engaged in "trade operations" and the latter studies the economic
potential of the country in which the mission is located. As if
the first can be successfully carried out without the latter on a
long-term basis!

And setting up a TEM to accompany even a large trade deal is a
primitive and unstatesmanlike policy. In normal foreign trade, the
institution of foreign representative offices for supplier companies
exists for that. If the contract ends and there is no prospect of
a new one, then head home guys (gals). But while you are there,
the diplomatic corps will help you if you allow yourself to forget
imaginary "confidentiality".

The way out is clear: a single economic service at the embassy should
include both analysts and executors. Then it can properly inform the
Ukrainian government and give practical advice to Ukrainian companies
active in the country.

Finally, order needs to be brought to both numbers and geographic
presence aboard.

Ukraine now has 87 embassies and permanent missions, and together with
consulates that number of "coloured pins" abroad is over 120. That
number is quite sufficient for a small to medium-size state. One could
probably do without an embassy in Gabon, which they decided to open
two years ago (in order not to provoke a formal discussion, the author
will refrain from naming another five places which could probably be
painlessly closed) and weed out diplomatic missions in Southeast Asia
(here we have Hanoi, Bangkok, Jakarta, Kuala Lumpur and Singapore and
they are dreaming of Rangoon). In terms of the number of places, we are
comparable to many larger states of the world. For example, there are
not many countries which have embassies in every country of the south
Mediterranean without exception from Morocco to Syria. Except perhaps
the United States, Russia, China, Great Britain France and Germany.

And it would not hurt to cut back staff in some places. Despite
the need for large teams in Moscow, Paris, Berlin and Washington,
we could operate like Sweden in many places: an ambassador, a second
person (politics and public liaison), and a third person (consular and
economic issues). And as for trade, the Swedes also have "company men"
who set up representation for the state or private export-oriented
companies when the need arises.

Let us sum up the organizational part. Ukraine is not a global or
continental state (in terms of determining events on a global or
continental scale), which has to firmly coordinate foreign relations
while playing a leading role in the foreign policy component of this
triad, but should soberly limit its network of missions and staff.

In terms of funding, I will keep my remarks to two facts. Ukrainian
diplomats are in second to fourth place from the end on the scale of
compensation, below the Belarusians by 30 to 60 per cent, one-third
as well off as the Hungarians and five to eight times worse off than
the English and 10 to 12 times worse off than the Americans. Ukrainian
missions have nearly the worst computers and living quarters and they
are very limited by the centre in decision-making and their budgets
are oriented towards getting by.

In other words, we look poor.

Think globally, act locally

But do not rush to accuse the author of a lack of patriotism,
especially those who love to repeat that "Ukraine is a large maritime
state". Foremost, Ukraine is a potential regional state. This is the
second, political conclusion. There is a lot of responsibility and
there are many prospects.

First, because in a globalizing world, global states objectively
begin to fade, but regionalism takes on its own expression and
measure. Neither the Boeing 747 nor the Airbus 380 determine the
flow of passengers. That is done by the hard-working 737 and the A
319 or A 320. And if our ("clean") hands were joined by a wise head,
then the An-148 would have joined them…

[ellipsis as published]

But let’s get back to regionalism. Turkey and Egypt are good examples
of regional states or Kazakhstan in Central Asia, which does not like
to be counted among them. The role of regional states is not so visible
in Europe, which is filled with continentals. Poland could play the
role of a regional state, but Brussels is suppressing it. That’s
good company for Ukraine, isn’t it? Yes, if not for that annoying
"potential".

Ukrainian regionalism demands care, intense, daily proof and provision.

Making claims without confirmation is just words. Confirmation of
Ukraine’s regional role should be the goal of Ukrainian foreign
affairs at this stage.

Naturally, regionalism is not liked by the continentals. The
United States needs a regional Mexico, but only one which supports
Washington’s globalism.

The Russian Federation does not mind the regionalism of Astana or
Kiev, but only on condition they recognize Moscow’s dominance in
the post-Soviet landscape and even better in Eurasia and Central
and Eastern Europe (and essentially, that is what claims to a global
position demand). The same can be said of China – Japan or China –
Vietnam and so forth. The law of force in international life is natural
and as in anything, it should not be taken as an offence. Just as this
law gives the little ones the right to protect their regionalism from
encroachment by the big players.

And what is "Ukraine’s region"? It would seem it could include Belarus,
Moldova, three nations in the south Caucasus – again we point out –
potentially. Because Turkey wants to include the latter three in its
own region, while Iran is competing for Armenia with Russia. Besides,
Russia does not want "to give up" Belarus to Ukrainian influence,
and part of the Romanian political elite plans to incorporate
Moldova. Consequently, the "Ukrainian region" is a conditional and
it is not a given – it is a task.

The existence of a region is possible only when it is beneficial
to all its participants. A region is a defence against globalism,
it is a mechanism for achieving regional projects and a means of
de-monopolization on the continental level. And the regional leader
must give more than it gets in terms of economics or security as it
gains somewhat in terms of status, that is, politically. Since some
regions are small (for example, Portugal has historically been the only
participant in the region along with Spain, except for little Andorra),
Ukraine does not need to worry itself about numbers, but rather concern
itself with quality (reliability). Today, the Ukrainian region is
expressed in the GUAM organization (the Organization for Democratic
and Economic Development – Georgia, Ukraine, Azerbaijan and Moldova,
also known as ODED-GUAM). Since Russia has built its own "CIS super
region" and built it unsuccessfully, and since after the collapse
of the Central Asia Union, GUAM remains the only alternative to the
CIS and the Eurasian Economic Community [EAEC], Russia is trying to
destroy GUAM.

We are not talking about the natural lack of desire a big player
has to allow little players to be out of its control (as discussed
above). On the world arena that is a mundane thing. But the methods
vary. For example, in a desire to "control" Canada and Mexico, the
United States created an economically-equal market, the North America
Free Trade Agreement.

In 1993-95, Russia offered exactly that to Ukraine in return for a
politicized CIS. It did not happen: Russia did not agree to a free
trade zone with no limits or exceptions, taking fuel and timber and so
forth off the table. One of the consequences was the formation of GUAM.

In contrast to the unequal EAEC, where a larger economy has a bigger
vote, GUAM is a consensual organization with a rotating chair. It
is gradually moving from making lots of papers and declarations,
to giving political weight to mutually-advantageous economic
projects. Foremost among these are energy, transport, infrastructure
and agriculture. GUAM needs to put in place privileged economic
relations with neighbouring regions such as Turkey, Poland and
Kazakhstan in order to be successful. Such a project would make it
possible to improve competition on the landscape stretching from
the Baltic to the Black and Caspian seas, it would deprive Russia
of its supremacy temptations (that is the Chinese term from the
1970s), and would bring the landscape between the EU and the Russian
federation to a modern business and political culture. Ukraine’s role
in achieving this is the determining factor. And it has every chance
of being achieved.

Recognition and movement are all that is needed.

And it that all? No, that is not all.

As in any article which is dedicated to the topic of Ukrainian foreign
relations, it is here that the moment arises to ask: and what about
Russia?

NATO? The EU? Where to go (this last question is accompanied by a
note of despair)? In other words, in what global coordinates does
Ukraine find itself?

Actually, as follows from the authors thoughts as expressed above,
there is no need to go anywhere. Or as the ancient Greeks said,
"Here is Rhodes, this is where you jump."

There is no reason to go, simply because "they" will come to us
themselves.

The history of the past 50 years, and especially the past 10, clearly
shows that both the EU and NATO are coming to us, eastward, while
we remain where we are. If we worked a bit better on ourselves,
they would already be at the door (of the president, speaker and
prime minister) and be offering us to join both NATO and the European
Commonwealth. But Ukrainians have their own special mistakes" as much
as "the Soviets have their own special pride". The author sincerely
believes Ukraine will be a member of both organizations, but he is
not holding his breath that it will happen during his lifetime.

And the same time, speeding up the movement of the EU and NATO east to
"Ukrainian region" territory can already be done today by washing away
some myths and creating some realities. And this is very important
to achieving Ukrainian interests in its relations with the world.

EU

We’ll begin with the European Union. Ukraine is now negotiating with
the EU on entering a New Intensified Agreement (a working title) in
place of the Agreement on Partnership and Cooperation (APC) from 1994.

Due to internal-organizational and national-political ("country")
reasons, the EU is not ready to give an affirmative answer to the
question of Ukrainian membership today, although in many parameters our
state is more "European" than some candidates and even members. It is
significantly lacking in just one area: the lack of supremacy of the
law (which can be divided into social corruption, economic corruption
or "bribes" and political corruption). The biggest task is to make
an obligatory agreement which would envision the EU side promising
to begin negotiations on Ukraine’s membership should the Ukrainian
side fulfil all the conditions of the agreement. And the conditions
should be approximately the same as for the last countries accepted
into the EU (Bulgaria and Romania in 2007).

Ukraine’s membership is good for both Brussels and Moscow. The first
gets 45m more consumers and significant production and infrastructure
resources.

The second, as an influential player on the Ukrainian market, gets
another channel of access for its manufacturers to the EU market via
Ukraine. This is important to Moscow because it is not planning to
join the EU in the foreseeable future.

NATO

Things are worse with NATO. Russia is categorically against Ukraine
joining NATO. Ukrainian diplomats have been trying to find arguments
to change Russia’s position. The author is aware of an argument that
by joining NATO, Ukraine would objectively put the brakes on any
aggressive moods in NATO (read Washington) with regard to Russia,
and consequently through Ukraine Russia would gain a "veto" vote on
NATO decisions. That is hard to believe.

First, NATO does not have aggressive intentions against Russia. NATO
is also Sweden, Slovakia and Greece, by the way. Have you ever heard
about their aggressive intentions towards Russia?

And neither Ukraine nor any other member of NATO can put the brakes
on "Washington’s aggressive intentions towards Russia" if you accept
that approach. Because what Washington now wants to achieve in the
world and what NATO is – those are two different things. The best
example of that is events in Iraq. NATO did not agree to go to Iraq,
and the United States went without NATO. Don’t forget that NATO was
established in 1949 foremost to protect West European countries from
being conquered by the Soviet Union.

After Germany was destroyed, the USSR had a huge continental army from
1946-49 and with a big enough desire, could have moved it west and
reached Brest in a few weeks (on the Atlantic coast of France). Things
changed, and now NATO drifts from being a military alliance towards
becoming a military-political union, and Russia is perfectly aware
of the lack of any threat from it. Another proof of this is the tale
of creating a global anti-missile defence system in the United States
of America is creating outside of NATO. Because it wants to have its
hands free, while NATO countries want to "compel" the United States to
give up control over the system to NATO. That is, Russia understands
NATO is not a threat, but rather probably the only structure which
restrains US decisions. And there you have your aggressive bloc,
"Ne Tak [Not Right]" people [the "Ne Tak" staged rallies against
NATO in summer 2006, notably in Crimea ahead of joint Ukraine-NATO
training exercises].

Sometimes a different argument is used. The past 15 years has shown the
Euro-Atlantic community has been able to play off Russia’s jealousy
regarding Ukraine’s intentions. Ukraine was the first to sign the
above-mentioned APC agreement with the EU and immediately Russia
followed suit. Then Ukraine was first to join the Partnership for
Peace programme offered by NATO to former members of the Warsaw Pact
and post-Soviet countries as a sign of the end of the cold war. Then
Russia followed. Then Ukraine was the first to begin the difficult
negotiation process on the Agreement of a Special Partnership
between Ukraine and NATO and create the Ukraine-NATO Commission,
which first provoked Russia’s resistance, and then its interest,
and in the end Russia signed similar agreements with the Alliance –
and did so demonstrably a day before Ukraine did (in 1997).

And finally, the newly worked out agreements on readmission and
on simplified visa regimes with Europe and the new intensified
agreement are under way in both the Slavic neighbours "as if in a
race". Consequently, sometimes people say that in accepting Ukraine,
NATO is giving Russia an incentive to join as well.

It is hard to agree with that. Because Moscow sees the possible
acceptance of any post-Soviet country into NATO as a threat to its
claims to be a global state. We are not talking about money and
economics (not about a serving of pottage), but about affairs with
the European Community, and the right of the first-born, which the
Kremlin believes was confirmed by its place on the UN security Council
and the G8 and reinforced by nuclear weapons.

Of course, this does not mean Ukraine has no road to NATO. If such is
decided by the president, the government and the majority in parliament
and confirmed in a national referendum, then all objections will be
ignored, as in the case of the Baltic states. But compared to the EU,
which Ukraine will take a long time to join but which is logical for
all three (the EU, Ukraine and Russia), Kiev’s membership in NATO
is not accepted by today’s political elite in Moscow. And it looks
like tomorrow will feel no different. And so it is in this issue
that the Ukrainian political elite must have a full-fledged internal
dialogue to determine its course. Something like the dialogue the
Romanian elite held in 1993, when they adopted a consensus among many
parties on foreign relations. A consensus upheld despite all internal
political conflicts and crises. Never, imagine this, never since 1993
did any single party in Romania use membership in the EU or NATO as
a political condition in internal disputes.

One thing should be added to the above: a strong and consistent
regional position is our biggest card in membership to both the EU
and NATO and it is authority on the continental level. It is regional
unity which made it possible for regional groups to climb the steps to
these organizations – the Visegrad four (Poland, the Czech Republic,
Slovakia and Hungary), the Baltic trio (Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia)
and the pair of Romania and Bulgaria.

[Passage omitted: Foreign policy tied to foreign economic policy.]

And so, three conclusions: organizational, political and economic. In
the post-Soviet landscape, in which Ukraine still resides and which
it will leave when negotiations begin on joining the EU, the role of
the state in general and the government in particular is much larger
in comparison than it is for European states.

I will not begin to argue whether Ukraine needs a deputy prime
minister for agriculture (not a specific person, but the post). But
it most certainly needs the post of deputy prime minister for foreign
relations, which would coordinate all three components and control the
problem of European integration. That does not mean I am suggesting
an administrative resolution to a systemic problem. Simply this is
the time "of temporary imperative mandates". And the challenges of
such a time need to be properly addressed.

PM Speaks Of ‘New Things In Political Culture’ Ahead

PM SPEAKS OF ‘NEW THINGS IN POLITICAL CULTURE’ AHEAD
By Anna Saghabalian

Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
June 4 2007

Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian stopped short of revealing any new
details about the ongoing negotiations over the new government while
meeting with media representatives on Monday, but he said there would
be "some things that perhaps have never existed in Armenian political
culture before."

Sarkisian confirmed that the opening meeting of the new National
Assembly will be held as scheduled on June 7 and that the new
government will be formed within the period of time envisaged by
the constitution.

"I think it [the composition of the new government] will be clear
on Thursday, but the public will know about it only when we will
officially send proposals from the government to the republic’s
president," Sarkisian said during the opening of a new government
press center on June 4.

Sarkisian said negotiations with the Armenian Revolutionary Federation
(ARF) are still continuing and according to him they will take a
maximum of a day or two more.

"I think the changes in the new government will be quite large-scale,
but on the other hand I am sure that our success will come not through
changing everything. The directions where we’ve had success, where
energy still can be seen will remain, and the directions that need
change will change," Sarkisian said, adding that "experience and the
aspirations of new people should be combined" in the government work.

The premier said that some people who are not connected with his
Republican Party, Prosperous Armenia or Dashnaktsutyun "are certain
to be in the new government," but stopped short of giving any names.

Industrial Production Grows By 1.7% In Armenia In January-April 2007

INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION GROWS BY 1.7% IN ARMENIA IN JANUARY-APRIL 2007 ON SAME PERIOD OF LAST YEAR

Noyan Tapan
Jun 05 2007

YEREVAN, JUNE 5, NOYAN TAPAN. In January-April 2007, industrial
production of 208 bln 502.1 mln drams (about 579.6 mln USD) was
made in Armenia (in current prices). Production of 210 bln 766.8
mln drams was sold, including production of 23 bln 335.5 mln drams –
in CIS countries and that of 50 bln 705 mln drams – in other countries.

According to the RA National Statistical Service, the index of
industrial production made 101.7% compared with January-April 2006,
the same index without production and distribution of electricity,
gas and water made 99.8%. In the first four months of 2007, industrial
production without diamond production grew by 7.8% on the same period
of alst year and made 206 bln 897.3 mln drams.