‘I Call This A Ceasefire, Not A Peace Process’

‘I CALL THIS A CEASEFIRE, NOT A PEACE PROCESS’

Karin KarakaÅ~_lı 03.12.2015 09:58
NEWS

We spoke with journalist Fréderike Geerdink, whose book ‘Roboskî:
Gencler Oldu (Roboskî: The Young Died)’ has recently been published,
about many topics from State policies targeting struggles for identity
to most recent political developments.

Fréderike Geerdink, the only foreign journalist who is settled in
Diyarbakır, and who was lived in Turkey since 2006, has recently
published her book ‘Roboskî: Gencler Oldu (Roboskî: The Young
Died)’ on the massacre the families in Roboskî faced. Published
by İletiÅ~_im, the book focuses on this massacre to delve into
the history of the Kurdish question, and also follows Geerdink’s
personal story of confronting the issue as she lived for many months
with the Roboskî families. We spoke with Geerdink about many topics,
from State policies targeting struggles for identity to most recent
political developments.

The political scene of Turkey has a very unique character;
one frequently has to understand the underlying message through
implications. How do you follow the dynamics? Which obstacles did
you overcome in order to penetrate to the soul of this country?

I could not have written this book when I first came to Turkey. I
didn’t understand the country at all; it kept me awake at night
sometimes, to be honest. But in the years that I have been living in
Turkey now, since December 2006, I have learnt a lot, just by living
here but also, of course, by talking to many people from different
walks of life. People sometimes think I lived in Istanbul and then
in Amed/Diyarbakır/Digranakert and that I now travel in Kurdistan a
lot, but I have travelled all over Turkey. I haven’t only talked to
Kurds but to Turks, and from all political orientations. I like that,
and it’s essential for a journalist.

Eventually I understood that my concept of human rights, which
is often considered ‘Western’, is indeed applicable to Turkey too,
contrary to what some Turks may say, who see it as an imperialist kind
of thing. Human rights are about identity, and everybody in Turkey,
as well as everywhere in the world, has several identities in an
ever-changing balance; and you can only live your life in freedom if
you can live and express all your identities.

I have learned the most about Turkey from suppressed groups. But I
also think that people who are in some suppressed group themselves
get to know their country very well. I once talked to a colleague
in Istanbul; she was from a Kemalist family but very critical on the
issues of the State and Kemalism. So I asked her how this came about.

She replied: ‘I’m bisexual. Believe me, then you get to know the
dynamics in this country’. That was very enlightening for me.

Your recently published book ‘Roboskî: Gencler Oldu’ is not only
a witness account based on reports and interviews, but also your
personal confrontation with the Kurdish problem and State policies.

Despite all the censorship of the state and military, Roboskî has
turned into a very powerful symbol. How has Roboskî become a turning
point in terms of ‘awareness’?

I don’t know if it is a turning point in terms of awareness actually.

Kurds knew the State already, and people who don’t want to see the
real face of the state, haven’t opened their eyes because of Roboskî.

They say – and I have had this reaction more than once – that these
people were helping the PKK anyway, and ask what they were doing there
on that PKK route. They were not helping the PKK, of course, many of
them were actually village guards or related to village guards, and
so if they were helping anyone, it was the State, but not willingly.

Anyway, Roboskî has become a symbol of the ruthlessness of the State
and of how little it cares for human lives. But in Turkey, many people
open their eyes only when the lack of freedom in this country starts
affecting themselves. You see this with Gezi, for example. Many of
the Gezi protesters were not political at all before the Gezi uprising
started and they woke up to the realities of the State with violence.

So the situation is a bit complicated: I want people in Turkey to
open their eyes to the murderous character of the State; but at the
same time, I don’t wish anybody such a harsh, violent wake up call.

In your book there are a number of very impressive women and the
special connection between you and them stands out. How do you see
the situation of these women?

The most important woman in my book is Pakize. She is now 31 years old
and she has 5 children. Her husband Osman died in the massacre. Her
psychological problems after the massacre had psychical implications
too, like stomach aches. She now has to take care of her family by
herself, but of course she gets a lot of support from her relatives
and fellow villagers. And she had to open a bank account after the
massacre because some NGOs wanted to help her, and sometimes people
want to support her to help make ends meet. I asked her if she ever
thinks of marrying again, but no, she doesn’t want that ever in her
life any more. She was happy with Osman, they married very young but
their marriage was a good one.

Her children are important too, her two boys and three girls. I wonder
how they will grow up, and I intend to keep going to Roboskî for
years to come to see how the children will do later in life.

You, too, have been sued for allegedly ‘making terrorist propaganda’,
at a time when direct negotiations continue with Ocalan, the leader
of the PKK. How do you see this contradictory situation, what is the
‘message’ given to you?

There is nothing contradictory here. The case against me just shows,
once again, that the government is not serious in this so-called peace
process. There are no negotiations going on, they are just talking to
each other and we are still waiting for the actual negotiations. So I
don’t call this a peace process, I call it a ceasefire. And I support
the ceasefire whole-heartedly, since ever since it started no soldiers
and no PKK fighters have died and that is truly great. But, let us
consider how many civilians have been murdered by the State since
Newroz 2013? We are now commemorating the death of Berkin Elvan a
year ago. And in the southeast, at least thirty people were killed
by the State, mostly young people.

I am not sure what the message for me is: Go home (I feel at home
already, so I’m not going anywhere), or stop writing (which I won’t
do), or stop explaining the Kurdish struggle properly (which I can’t
do, since this is my job and I love it). Maybe they just want to
intimidate me. They are unsuccessful, I am not scared.

‘Kurds and Armenians will not accept these policies any longer’

You frequently underline the importance of identity and how horrifying
its denial can be. Denial is strongly associated with the Armenian
Genocide and the denial of the existence and the collective rights
of the Kurdish people. What do you think is the correlation between
these two impasses of the State of Turkey?

The position of the Armenians and Kurds perfectly explains the
foundations of the State of Turkey. The imposed Turkish identity is
of both an inclusive and exclusive character. The policy towards the
Kurds has always been forcefully inclusive: you HAVE TO be one of us,
you have to be a Turk, and this is because Kurds too are Muslims.

Towards the Armenians the policy was explicitly exclusive: You are
not Muslims, so you can never be a part of us. Not only with concrete
measures like the Wealth Tax, but also with psychological warfare,
picturing Armenians as traitors, as enemies within.

I learned about this in the days after the murder of Hrant Dink. He
was murdered when I had been in Turkey for only a month, and I spent
days in front of Agos, making one of my first big stories as a Turkey
correspondent, for which I talked to many Armenians. I was so impressed
by this grief, and the people I talked to were so good in explaining
the situation of Armenians in Turkey, it was like a crash course for
me. I still get goose bumps when I think back to those days.

But both Kurds and Armenians have decided not to accept these policies
any longer. Hrant Dink did so much to make Armenians more visible, to
take away their fear of showing themselves, and the Kurdish movement
has done the same for Kurds. Both groups are making huge contributions
in helping break down the State system that cares only for the State
and not for the people. One day this will lead to, I hope, a beautiful
result, a democratic Turkey. When that is reached, all other groups who
are suppressed in Turkey will have their fundamental rights as well,
like LGBT people, Alevis, Arabs, Assyrians, you name them. And then,
let’s not forget them, Turks will have their democratic rights as well.

http://www.agos.com.tr/en/article/10843/i-call-this-a-ceasefire-not-a-peace-process

Putin To Meet Kyrgyz Leader Monday

PUTIN TO MEET KYRGYZ LEADER MONDAY

15:15, 13 Mar 2015
Siranush Ghazanchyan

The Kremlin says Russian President Vladimir Putin, who has been out
of public view for more than a week, is to meet on Monday with the
president of Kyrgyzstan, AP reports.

Putin earlier this week postponed a planned summit with the leaders of
Kazakhstan and Belarus, drawing attention to his unusual long hiatus
of public appearances and raising speculation that he was ill.

His spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, told The Associated Press on Thursday
that Putin’s “health is really perfect.”

The planned meeting on Monday in St. Petersburg with Almazbek Atambaev
is to discuss Kyrgyzstan’s joining the Eurasian Economic Union, a
nascent Moscow-led trade bloc that also includes Belarus, Kazakhstan
and Armenia, the Kremlin said in a Friday statement.

http://www.armradio.am/en/2015/03/13/putin-to-meet-kyrgyz-leader-monday/

Travel: When You Can’t Go Home: My Last Visit To Syria Before ISIS

WHEN YOU CAN’T GO HOME: MY LAST VISIT TO SYRIA BEFORE ISIS

Yahoo! Travel
March 12 2015

Greg Keraghosian, Associate Travel Editor

When I think of Syria, of the place where I was baptized, where
my parents were born, where my grandparents escaped to during the
Armenian genocide, where I’ll probably never visit again, I think of
The Great Gatsby: “Can’t repeat the past? Why of course you can!”î~B~@

Gatsby was proved wrong about that, and I’m not about to try waving
his flag. My mother and I spent three weeks visiting family in Syria
in May 2008, and I couldn’t possibly replicate that experience now —
not when the historical sites I photographed are damaged by war or
too dangerous to approach, not when my family has once again had to
flee their country in a hail of death, not when my mother has since
developed dementia that prevents her from travel, and the list goes on.

Then again, isn’t the point of travel to absorb everything as if you’ll
never see it again? Because you just might not? If each trip is a
trophy, this one goes on my top shelf — out of reach, irreplaceable,
and beautiful to look at. I’m lucky I got to see that country when
I did, because precious pages of history and a part of my identity
have since been torn to shreds there in the civil war that erupted in
2011 and hasn’t settled down yet. All six of Syria’s World Heritage
Sites have been damaged or destroyed, and once-popular destinations
are off limits to tourists now.

View photos at

https://www.yahoo.com/travel/throwback-thursday-visiting-syria-before-the-war-113412677122.html

Lecture by Armen Kazaryan, Thursday March 26, at 7:00 PM

The Armenian Museum of America

The National Association for Armenian Studies and Research

The Dadian Oztemel Chair of Armenian Art at Tufts University

Proudly Present

A Lecture by Armen Kazaryan

“The Armenian Architectural School of Ani:

Creating Medieval Order”

Thursday, March 26, 2015

7:00 PM – 9:00 PM

Adele & Haig Der Manuelian Galleries, 3rd floor

Dr. Armen Kazaryan is the author of a four-volume work on Armenian
architecture which recently won the Europa Nostra award. His original
scholarship includes a reconstruction of the liturgical layout of
Zuart’noc’ and redating of the Cathedral of Echmiadzin. A brilliant
scholar and preservationist, Dr. Kazaryan is now the department head
at the Russian Academy of Architecture in Moscow.

Light refreshments will be served
Free Admission
Donations kindly accepted

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BAKU: Pakistani President: We Do Not Recognize Armenia As A State

PAKISTANI PRESIDENT: WE DO NOT RECOGNIZE ARMENIA AS A STATE

AzerTac, Azerbaijan
March 12 2015

12.03.2015 [16:00]

Baku, March 12, AZERTAC

President of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan Mamnoon Hussain
has said his country does not consider Armenia a state. “We have
always backed Azerbaijan`s fair position on the Armenian-Azerbaijani
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. Pakistan does not recognize Armenia as
a state,” he told chairman of Azerbaijan`s parliament Ogtay Asadov
on the second day of his official visit to Baku.”The Upper House of
Pakistan`s parliament, Senate, recognized what happened in Khojaly as
genocide.”President Hussain hailed Azerbaijan`s providing assistance
to Pakistan.He also noted the importance of reciprocal visits by the
two countries` business communities, saying “this will contribute to
developing our ties even further”.Parliament Speaker Asadov described
Azerbaijan and Pakistan as “friendly and brotherly countries”. “We
enjoy excellent relations. This visit will elevate our bilateral ties
to a qualitatively new level. The people of Azerbaijan and Pakistan
share common values, religion.”Mr Asadov said: “Pakistan is one of the
first countries that recognized Azerbaijan`s independence. Azerbaijan
and Pakistan have maintained diplomatic relations for 24 years.”He
hailed Pakistan`s backing official Baku`s position in international
organizations, particularly related to the Armenian-Azerbaijani
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. “Official Islamabad has not built any
relations with Yerevan because of Armenia`s occupying Azerbaijani
lands.” “And this is a sign of a friendly, brotherly attitude,”
Mr Asadov added.

http://azertag.az/en/xeber/Pakistani_President_We_do_not_recognize_Armenia_as_a_state-838811

The U.S.-Turkey Partnership: One Step Forward, Three Steps Back

The U.S.-Turkey Partnership: One Step Forward, Three Steps Back
By Michael Werz and Max Hoffman
March 12, 2015

President Barack Obama made a large political investment in Turkey in
2009 for a series of compelling reasons, which he laid out in a speech
to the Turkish parliament during his first overseas trip as president.
His administration recognized that Turkey’s role would be essential to
tackling a series of challenges important to the United States,
including stabilizing Iraq, solidifying a sanctions regime to pressure
Iran to negotiate on its nuclear ambitions, and combating terrorism.

Through this investment, President Obama sought to strengthen the
three pillars of the U.S.-Turkey partnership that were referenced in
his Ankara speech: Turkey’s status as a “strong, vibrant, secular
democracy” and its commitment to the rule of law; Turkey’s important
role in the NATO alliance and its push for membership in the European
Union, both of which bind it firmly to the West; and Turkey’s
potential to serve as an interlocutor and a model to the Middle East
and the broader Muslim world as part of President Obama’s efforts to
patch up America’s image in the Muslim world.

But this investment has not been reciprocated. The ruling Justice and
Development Party, or AKP, and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan
have handled domestic and regional developments in a way that has
raised doubts about each of these pillars. Few observers would count
Turkey as a vibrant democracy. Turkey’s bid for EU membership has
stalled, and its role as a reliable NATO ally has been questioned.
Moreover, the country’s appeal as a model for the region has eroded
significantly, and its ability to influence regional dynamics has
decreased as Syria and Iraq have spun out of control.

There are many reasons for the deterioration on each of these
fronts–including domestic political pressures on the AKP, the
ideological positions of its leadership and the political
constituencies on which it relies, and remarkable regional
upheaval–but the end result is that Turkey has distanced itself from
the West and from Western values.

The bottom line is that the United States’ investment in Erdogan and
the AKP has not worked, and the United States should try a new
approach. The Turkish government seems determined to crack down on
dissent. It has signed energy and defense accords with Russia and
China that undermine NATO positions, and it routinely bargains with
the United States over what should be basic transactions between
allies in the fight against the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham, or
ISIS. Additionally, the AKP leadership has repeatedly resorted to
rhetorical attacks on the United States, the European Union, and
Israel, which only increase latent anti-Americanism in Turkish
society. It is time for the United States to try a new policy and to
bring its considerable leverage to bear. The United States should let
the AKP enjoy what pro-government voices have called the country’s
“precious loneliness.”

Early optimism for a new partnership

According to a famous Kemalist mantra, “Turkey is a country surrounded
by seas on three sides, and by enemies on four sides.” This perception
informed generations of Turkish students and policymakers, reflecting
the limits placed on Turkish political vision by the Cold War era.
More than any other country in the Western alliance, Turkey was frozen
into a geopolitical box by a bipolar world. For much of the 20th
century, the country was surrounded by members of the Soviet-allied
Warsaw Pact, authoritarian regimes of Baathist or Islamist
orientation, or nations with which it had deep historical animosities,
such as Greece.

This siege mentality began to soften in the 1990s and underwent a more
thorough change with the electoral victory of the conservative AKP in
2002. Then-Prime Minister Erdogan declared in September 2008 that this
“Turkish complex ¦ is behind us” after President Abdullah Gul
concluded a historic visit to long-estranged Armenia. These
shifts–both real and rhetorical–were part of an important attempt to
overcome the widespread Turkish misconception that other nations were
trying to hold the country down. Later, in 2009 and 2010, Foreign
Minister Ahmet Davutoglu’s “zero problems with our neighbors” policy
built upon this premise, aiming to turn old enemies into friends and
becoming the catchphrase of Turkish diplomacy. Davutoglu’s approach,
outlined during the years he spent in an advisory role before assuming
the position of foreign minister, sought to reinvigorate Turkey’s bid
for EU membership, normalize relations with Syria and Armenia, take
steps to resolve the Cyprus dispute, and boost trade ties with the
Middle East and Africa. While this approach was perhaps
deterministic–relying on Turkey’s geography as something of a crutch
to ensure and explain its relevance–it was an important step forward.

This new outlook prompted great optimism among Western observers and
friends of Turkey, who hoped that it would render obsolete the
stubborn Turkish conspiracy theories that saw Western imperialism
behind every regional dynamic. The new approach seemed to offer a
modern, rational position–albeit one defined within a conservative
perspective and with universalist ingredients–that sought engagement
with the Levant alongside a push for membership in the European Union.

The “Kurdish opening” in 2009 was the domestic counterpart to this
policy. It was a genuine attempt to demilitarize Turkish politics and
society and to end a conflict that had left tens of thousands of
people dead over the previous three decades, most of them Kurdish
citizens of Turkey. Implicitly, the outreach and rhetorical shift
around the opening began to reverse the vague and archaic preamble of
the Turkish Constitution, which categorically prohibits “activity
contrary to ¦ [the] historical and moral values of Turkishness.” For
example, state-run television and radio stations began to broadcast
extended Kurdish-language programming–something that was unthinkable
for years in Turkey. Explicitly, the opening was an acknowledgment of
the country’s diversity and a shift away from its ethnic definition of
citizenship.

Based on these advances and as part of his effort to recast U.S.
relations with the region in the wake of the Bush administration, as
mentioned above, President Obama visited Ankara during his first
overseas trip in 2009–a presidential first and a demonstration of the
importance he placed on the relationship. In his speech before the
Grand National Assembly of Turkey, President Obama emphasized,
“Turkey’s democracy is your own achievement. It was not forced upon
you by any outside power.” He also stressed the need for cooperation
between the United States and Turkey.

The Ankara speech inaugurated five years of serious investment of
political capital in Turkey by the Obama administration. This
investment continued despite increasingly discordant signals from the
Turkish side, where Prime Minister–now President–Erdogan often
succumbed to the temptation to use the United States as a populist
punching bag in his domestic politics. But the investment was the
right move at the time. The United States sought to elevate its
relationship with Turkey above the countless day-to-day transactions
between the two governments. By doing this, it hoped to create a
durable partnership that would increase Turkish domestic legitimacy
through democratic reforms; contribute to regional stability through
Turkish economic and political engagement with the Levant; and help
shape increasingly turbulent regional transformations in a democratic,
pluralistic way.

However, the past two years have made it painfully obvious that these
expectations are unrealistic. Perhaps the U.S.-Turkey partnership is
yet another victim of the unprecedented upheaval sweeping the region,
but it is clear that the relationship has reached and passed an
important turning point. Far from moving beyond the transactional,
U.S.-Turkish interactions are now testy, hard-bargaining affairs. The
U.S. policy of political investment has not paid off with Turkey–or
at least not with its current government. Now–as Omer Taspinar, an
expert on Turkey and a professor at the National War College, has
suggested–is the time to try a policy of “benign neglect” and let the
government in Ankara decide if it is prepared to engage in
reciprocity.

Moments of transformation

Three moments capture the trajectory of this transformation in the
U.S.-Turkey relationship and define the limits of Turkish capability
and influence. These moments are tied to three famous sites in three
troubled countries: Gezi Park in Turkey; Mosul in Iraq; and Kobani in
Syria.

Gezi Park

In May 2013, a small protest movement to save a city park in Istanbul
became an illustration of Turkish society’s transformation and the
Turkish government’s inability to respond with political flexibility.
The park was seized upon as a symbol by Turkey’s diverse, urban middle
class, which was chafing under the assertion of political and cultural
dominance by the previously marginalized Islamist working class–a
current that took political form in the AKP. The protests also showed
the world a detached, vindictive government that mismanaged a
legitimate protest and escalated the confrontation into a month-long
street fight that left five people dead, more than 8,000 people
injured, and substantially deepened polarization within Turkish
society.

>From a U.S. perspective, the lack of political responsiveness and
restraint from the AKP crystallized long-term concerns about the
deterioration of press freedom, soft and hard censorship, government
suppression of social media, new surveillance laws, and frequent
interference in the judicial process through the reassignment of
police and prosecutors. Over the course of the events at Gezi and
around the country, and in their aftermath, the Turkish government
pivoted decisively away from efforts to establish greater legitimacy
through democratic reforms, thus weakening an important pillar of the
U.S.-Turkish partnership.

Mosul

On June 11, 2014, one year after the protests in Gezi Park, ISIS
militants overran the Iraqi city of Mosul, taking Turkish Consul
General Ozturk Yilmaz and 49 other Turks hostage. This disaster was
the result of a chain of events that underlined Turkey’s lack of
strategic foresight and limited tactical capabilities, shaking the
second pillar of Turkey’s cooperation with the United States: positive
regional engagement.

On June 6, when it became clear that ISIS was about to take over the
city, Mosul Governor Atheel al-Nujaifi began making emergency calls to
regional political leaders to warn of the impending dangers. Despite
these calls, then-Foreign Minister Davutoglu declared on June 10 that
there was no threat to Turkey’s consul general or his staff. One day
later, contrary to Davutoglu’s statements, ISIS took Yilmaz and his
colleagues hostage.

However, it was the Turkish government’s reaction to the kidnapping
that was most telling. Instead of reviewing what went wrong to ensure
that it would not occur again–as the United States did after
Benghazi–on June 15, then-Prime Minister Erdogan asked the Turkish
media not to report on the incident. The next day, Deputy Prime
Minister Bulent Arinc echoed Erdogan’s call, and a court in Ankara
“issued ¦ a gag order ruling that `all kinds of print, visual and
Internet media are banned from writing and commenting on the
situation'” in Mosul. On June 17, the Supreme Board of Radio and
Television, or RTUK, delivered the decision of the 9th Heavy Penal
Courtto all media executives, giving the ban legal effect. Meanwhile,
the Turkish Ministry of Foreign Affairs insisted that those taken by
ISIS were “not hostages” but rather “Turkish citizens taken to an
unknown location.”

The Turkish government had become so focused on overthrowing Syrian
President Bashar al-Assad that they were unable to anticipate the
malignant spread of ISIS or to comprehend that the group might target
Turkish citizens. This is not the sort of regional engagement the
United States sought when it invested anew in the Turkish partnership
in 2009.

Kobani

The most telling turning point in the U.S.-Turkish relationship was
the disagreement over Kobani, a Kurdish enclave in northern Syria
along the Turkish border. Beginning in summer 2014 under the eyes of
the international media, control of the town became a major goal for
both ISIS and the coalition arrayed against it. This political
importance led to a desperate struggle between the Kurdish People’s
Protection Units, or YPG, that were defending the city and waves of
better-equipped ISIS fighters. Kobani–despite the efforts of Turkish
officials to downplay the town’s importance–become a symbol of
resistance against ISIS and a test case for whether the U.S.-led
coalition’s aerial strategy in support of indigenous ground forces
could hold off a concerted ISIS attack.

However, the Turkish government was deeply reluctant to help secure
this important military and propaganda victory for the anti-ISIS
coalition. Indeed, Turkey seemed more concerned with undermining
Kurdish autonomy in northern Syria than with confronting the threat
from ISIS. When the United States pressured Turkey to help the Kurds,
President Erdogan used the negotiations to try to extract concessions
from the United States on other aspects of Syria policy–primarily the
targeting of the Assad regime. Of course, the Turkish government did
accept and care for the tens of thousands of refugees who fled Kobani
in the wake of the ISIS attack and deserves credit for its
hospitality. But these people likely would not have had to flee Kobani
if the Turkish government had allowed supplies to reach the Kurdish
defenders instead of blocking resupply in the early stages of the ISIS
attack, effectively completing the ISIS siege.

While few serious observers expected or wanted Turkey to intervene
militarily in Syria without international backing, the Turkish role in
completing the siege of Kobani–along with anti-Kurdish rhetoric from
Turkish leaders–led to the perception that the AKP was more
interested in the destruction of a quasi-autonomous Kurdish region
along Turkey’s southern border than in preventing a humanitarian
catastrophe or cooperating with its NATO partners and the
international coalition in the fight against ISIS.

This policy of blocking supplies to Kobani led to widespread Kurdish
protests in major Turkish cities on October 6 and 7 that left up to 37
citizens dead, mostly in clashes between Kurdish sympathizers and
Islamist factions. The intense reaction elicited by the fighting in
Kobani demonstrated that the peace process between Ankara and the
Kurdistan Workers’ Party, or PKK–a militant armed group that has
waged an intermittent war against the Turkish state–is now driven as
much by regional events as by the situation inside Turkey, which is an
important development. However, Ankara has been slow to recognize the
reality of a new, more interconnected, regional Kurdish body politic.
It is another indication of the Turkish government’s inability to
anticipate or react to shifting regional dynamics.

The AKP seeks to keep the Kurdish question a domestic issue, refusing
to acknowledge the development of a public sphere and political
discourse shared by Kurds inside and outside Turkey. The AKP’s
reluctant and belated support for the transit of a small detachment of
Kurdish Peshmerga–the military forces of Iraqi Kurdistan–from
northern Iraq to Kobani was its first concession to the reality that
the borders between northern Iraq, Turkey, and Syria have become less
relevant. It is unlikely to be the last such policy adjustment forced
on Turkey.

While Deputy Prime Minister Yalcin Akdogan recently contended that
“Syrian Kurds are our natural ally,” many in his party disagree. This
leaves the AKP pursuing contradictory policy goals: seeking to
undermine Kurdish autonomy in northern Syria while trying to keep the
domestic peace negotiations with PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan on track.
This ambiguity has damaged the peace process in Turkey and has made it
impossible for the government to function as a regional mediator–the
role the United States would favor for its ally–in the near future.

In addition, the AKP’s handling of Kobani raises questions about the
current government’s ability to adequately assess regional
transformations and devise reliable policy responses. The U.S.
decision to airdrop ammunition and humanitarian aid into Kobani on
October 19 was a remarkable departure from past U.S. deference to
Turkish wishes on Kurdish issues. The White House ordered a major
shift in the U.S. approach to events along the Turkish border against
Turkey’s wishes and only informed President Erdogan one day in
advance, after the decision had been made. This action was not taken
lightly and was the culmination of months of growing frustration about
Turkey’s incessant bargaining over its participation in the anti-ISIS
coalition. American policymakers were well aware of Turkey’s concerns
about the objectives and character of the Democratic Union Party, or
PYD–a Syrian Kurdish political party. They were equally cognizant of
the AKP’s desire to broaden the international campaign against ISIS to
include the targeting of Syrian President Assad. However, for a NATO
ally to tie cooperation of almost any kind to fulfillment of all ofits
demands–demands that would have resulted in U.S. ownership of another
war in the Middle East–seemed unreasonable to American policymakers.
White House frustration about Turkey’s approach and President
Erdogan’s constant public sniping and populist demagoguery provide
some context for the military and strategic decision to save Kobani.

The future of the U.S.-Turkey partnership

After years of U.S. political investment in the Turkish partnership,
the two nations’ differences have become impossible to ignore. Close
cooperation with the United States has helped bolster Erdogan in his
roles as prime minister and president, but the United States has not
gotten much in return. In fact, this investment has often been met
with insults or conspiracy theories–for example, Erdogan’s absurd
statement implying that U.S. Ambassador Francis Ricciardone was
“engaging in some provocative actions” in Turkey or AKP member and
Ankara Mayor Melih Gokcek’s comment, referring to the United States,
that “These barons and neocons have decided to redesign Turkey to
govern it.” The rhetoric from Turkey’s leaders has gone back to the
bad old days but is now accompanied by strategic dissonance and
impotence rather than cooperation.

This is not to say that Turkey must blindly follow America’s lead on
Syria or anything else. But differences in approach do not excuse
cynical bargaining for advantage–at least not between allies. Just as
importantly, the United States is not responsible for Turkey’s
problems, and many in the U.S. administration seem tired of being
blamed for them. Turkey is an advanced country and should give up
hiding behind the trope of American imperialist meddling.

Finally, the AKP has demonstrated a vindictive, authoritarian streak
and a lack of political acumen that combine to make it a
less-than-valuable partner. For a relationship of marginal value, the
United States is sure putting up with a lot. Behlul Ozkan, an
assistant professor at Marmara University and the author of From the
Abode of Islam to the Turkish Vatan: The Making of a National Homeland
in Turkey, described the AKP’s reluctance to accept criticism as a
structural problem within the party: “More worrying than Davutoglu’s
failures as a policymaker,” he wrote in 2014, “is the fact that he
does not see his critics as legitimate. Both he and his supporters
believe him to be infallible.”*

The same is true for President Erdogan, who has jettisoned his earlier
efforts at reform and broader political inclusion to focus on divisive
identity politics and a fifty-percent-plus-one approach to consolidate
control. He made this trend clear in the nomination speech that opened
his presidential campaign in July. The speech was saturated with
religious metaphors and half-baked claims to both Islamic and
anti-colonial traditions. “For 200 years,” Erdogan said, “they tried
to tear us away from our history and from our ancestors. They tried to
get us to disown our claim.” He seemed to suggest that his presidency
would restore a vague, glorious Turkish state–but one predicated
against Western meddling. In Erdogan’s telling, then, Turkey is once
again threatened by enemies from outside and within–a far cry from
the hopes of the early AKP years. But beyond their dubious historical
legitimacy, such ideological delusions are causing significant damage
to Turkey’s foreign policy interests and its relations with the United
States.

Today, due in part to the AKP’s authoritarian and anti-Western shift,
Turkey is more isolated and less able to shape regional policy than at
any time since the end of the Cold War. Offers of cooperation from the
United States and the European Union are now more often dismissed than
accepted. One of the important lessons from the turning points that
have shaped the past two years is that Turkey’s geography is both an
asset and a liability. Geography can ensure relevance, but genuine
influence should be built upon reliable capabilities, a strong
understanding of regional shifts, and policies driven by national
interest and democratic convictions rather than religious paradigms.

Michael Werz is a Senior Fellow at the Center for American Progress.
Max Hoffman is a Policy Analyst at the Center.

* Correction, March 12, 2015: This brief incorrectly identified Behlul
Ozkan. He is an assistant professor at Marmara University and the
author of From the Abode of Islam to the Turkish Vatan: The Making of
a National Homeland in Turkey.

https://www.americanprogress.org/issues/security/report/2015/03/12/108448/the-u-s-turkey-partnership-one-step-forward-three-steps-back/

Bronze Age Bones Offer Evidence Of Political Divination

BRONZE AGE BONES OFFER EVIDENCE OF POLITICAL DIVINATION

Cornell Chronicle, Cornell University
March 12 2015

By H. Roger Segelken

Adam T. Smith, right, and his Armenian colleague, Dr. Ruben Badalyan,
excavate the Gegharot site.

Artifacts uncovered at one of the Gegharot citadel shines are evidence
of political divination, archaeologist say.

Trying to divine the future of a precarious administration, “House
of Cards” President Frank Underwood enters the inner sanctum with a
trusted adviser. “It’s really a crapshoot,” the adviser says, and the
president nods. The bourbon is drained, cigars are snuffed, and the
political leader emerges with a more confident sense of what’s to come.

‘Twas ever thus.

“It really was a crapshoot, with very high stakes for sovereign rulers
in a turbulent time,” says Cornell archaeologist Adam T. Smith,
interpreting evidence from 3,300-year-old Bronze Age shrines,
ensconced within a hilltop fortress on the Tsaghkahovit Plain of
central Armenia. Smith, a professor of anthropology in the College
of Arts and Sciences, studies the role that the material world –
everyday objects, representational media, natural and built landscapes
– plays in the political lives of ancient and modern-day people.

Dice-like knucklebones used for osteomancy and colored stones used for
lithomancy (divination with bones and stones, respectively) were found
deep within the ruins of the fallen citadel of Gegharot. Aleuromancy
(divination with freshly ground flour) is a likely explanation for
implements found in one of three shrines, Smith and Cornell Ph.D.

candidate Jeffrey F. Leon report in their October 2014 American Journal
of Archaeology article, “Divination and Sovereignty: The Late Bronze
Age Shrines at Gegharot, Armenia.”

Excavations conducted at Gegharot since 2002 have turned up a variety
of ceremonial, iconic and fortune-telling objects:

censers and basins for burning aromatic plant materials that could
induce a trance state; covered storage containers made of clay where
pollen analysis found evidence of wheat; drinking vessels, probably
for long-gone wine; sculpted clay idols “with vaguely anthropomorphic
features and hornlike protrusions” and stele (standing blocks) the
archaeologists say “likely served as focal point for ritual attention”;
grain-grinding implements and stamp seals to make impressions in
flour dough; dozens of knucklebones (also called astragali) of cattle,
sheep and goats with certain sides blackened like the markings on dice;
and polished stones in colors ranging from black and dark grey to red,
green and white.

The Tsaghkahovit Plain was sparsely populated until around 1500 B.C.

when a nameless people (they left no written record of what they called
themselves) began to build strongholds and new institutions of rule
there. “It was a time of radical inequality and centralized practices
of economic redistribution,” Smith says, “and the political leaders
were scrambling to hold on to their power. Knowing what the future
held was critically important.” The diviner, Smith says, was a kind of
primordial actuary, assessing risks and advising on pathways forward.

“We call them ‘shrines’ because of two distinctive qualities of
the spaces: They were quite intimate in scale, with not much room
for public spectacle,” Smith explains, “yet they appear to have been
religiously charged places, designed and built to host esoteric rituals
with consecrated objects – secretive rites focused on managing risks
by diagnosing present conditions and prognosticating futures.”

The Bronze Age people who tried to predict futures there had a
quarter-millennium run, until about 1150 B.C. Their divination
paraphernalia, meticulously unearthed by the archaeologists, looks
as if it had been abandoned in place, moments before the inhabitants
fled some cataclysm.

Without Bronze Age mystics to interpret the bones and stones, it’s
hard to know whether the citadel’s demise was presciently foreseen. As
the fictional President Underwood said: “It’s not the beginning of
the story I fear; it’s not knowing how it will end.”

Support for the study came, in part, from the National Science
Foundation and other organizations. The study was conducted under the
auspices of Project ArAGATS, the joint Armenian-American Project for
the Archaeology and Geography of Ancient Transcaucasian Societies.

http://www.news.cornell.edu/stories/2015/03/bronze-age-bones-offer-evidence-political-divination

Mutually Acceptable Way To Further Armenia-EU Dialogue Can Be Found

MUTUALLY ACCEPTABLE WAY TO FURTHER ARMENIA-EU DIALOGUE CAN BE FOUND – ARTAK ZAKARYAN

21:49 * 12.03.15

In an interview with Tert.am, Chairman of the Standing Committee on
Foreign Relations, Parliament of Armenia, Artak Zakaryan commented
on Polish Ambassador to Armenia Jerzy Nowakowski’s statement that
he expects the current round of the EU-Armenia negotiations to end
in the signing of the Association Agreement’s political component,
without the economic one.

Mr Zakaryan noted that the European Union (EU) has first of all to get
a right to start negotiations by means of a relevant mechanism in Riga.

“Naturally, we stated that the previously agreed document could be
a basis for launching negotiations. And it is too early to speak of
what kind of final document it is going to be and what agreements
will be reached.

I know discussions are in progress to determine the framework of the
legal document,” Mr Zakaryan said.

The duration of reforms remains the focus of attention: development
of democratic institutions, judicial system, education, scientific
and technical cooperation.

“These issues are on the agenda of the Armenia-EU dialogue – both now
and in the future. However, I think it is too early to speak of what
kind of document it is going to be in terms of its name and content.”

As to any contradictions to the Eurasian Economic Union (EEU)
principles in the political component, Mr Zakaryan said:

“We have noted on several occasions that it would be right to show
individual approach to European Partnership member-states, and such
a political approach seems to be shown now. This makes the dialogue
more active over specific issues, considering national interests.”

Mr Zakaryan believes the new approach will give new impetus to Eastern
Partnership in the future.

“And we are doing our best not to discuss the issue in the context of
contradictions. Rather, it should be considered in the context of our
commitments to the EEU, which stems from our economic and security
problems. I think a mutually acceptable approach can be found, which
will give a new impetus to active cooperation and political dialogue
between Armenia and the European Union.”

http://www.tert.am/en/news/2015/03/12/artakzakarian/1615603

BAKU: US Ambassador Did Not Comment On Closing Of Radio Azadlig

US AMBASSADOR DID NOT COMMENT ON CLOSING OF RADIO AZADLIG

Turan Information Agency, Azerbaijan
March 11, 2015 Wednesday

Baku / 11.03.15 / Turan: The US Ambassador to Azerbaijan Robert Secuta
called for the release of Dilgam Askerov and Shahbaz Guliyev convicted
by the Karabakh separatists on charges of sabotage and espionage.

In an interview with reporters Secuta stressed that a similar appeal
was made by US Assistant Secretary Victoria Nuland and the US co-chair
of OSCE Minsk Group James Warlick in Yerevan last month.

According to the Ambassador, the US, along with other co-MG calls
for an early peaceful settlement of the conflict. One of the ways to
resolve the conflict is humanitarian gestures, including the release
of prisoners.

When asked what steps the United States take in connection with the
bad situation of democracy and human rights in Azerbaijan, and in
particular in connection with the closing of the Bureau of Radio
Azadlig, Secuta said that discussions are held with the authorities
on these issues.

“We are currently working on these issues and we should continue to
work in this direction with the government of Azerbaijan,” said the
Ambassador, not answering the part of the question about the situation
around Radio Azadlig. -03B-

Putin And Sargsyan Agree On Plans For Future Contacts

PUTIN AND SARGSYAN AGREE ON PLANS FOR FUTURE CONTACTS

Vestnik Kavkaza, Russia
March 12 2015

12 March 2015 – 4:20pm

Russian president Vladimir Putin and his Armenian counterpart Serzh
Sargsyan discussed by telephone the plans for upcoming personal
contacts, the press service of Kremlin said.

“Putin and Sargsyan coordinated the plans on contacts,” RIA Novosti
cited the message.

They also discussed the key issues in the Russia-Armenia allied
partnership and touched upon the cooperation in peaceful nuclear use
and the oil and gas industry.

“Given that the agreement on Armenia’s accession to the Eurasian
Economic Union entered into force on January 2, 2015, the two
countries’ heads exchanged views on the further development of the
integration processes,” the press service added.

http://vestnikkavkaza.net/news/politics/67747.html