ANKARA: Dilemmas Of Peace And War

DILEMMAS OF PEACE AND WAR

Today’s Zaman
June 19 2012
Turkey

The world has become “more peaceful” for the first time since 2009,
according to the 2012 Global Peace Index. This assessment might
seem surprising — but the reality is that in some parts of the
world, peace can be seen in terms of the ongoing debates. Indeed,
in the Caucasus region, local and international level discussions on
peacemaking have made tremendous progress in the past years, and this
trend is continuing.

Recent deadly clashes between Armenia and Azerbaijan along the line
of contact (LOC) have increased the risk of an “accidental” war, as
predicted by political analysts and pundits. The Caucasus has long
faced this threat, and the recent tensions with Iran have added a
new dimension to security concerns. What these debates demonstrate
is that peace is not merely the absence of violence. However, there
has been a general failure to identify the particular dilemmas along
the path to peace.

What is it that makes it easier to predict war rather than peace for
the Caucasus? A century ago Russian scientist V.L. Velichko observed,
“The Caucasus had never had peace, neither internal, nor external.”

(“The Caucasus: Russian Affairs and Intertribal Problems,” St.

Petersburg, 1904.) It is not easy to suggest such things — and in
fact, our recent history suggests that we have come close to peace.

Taking an example from 1997, Armenia’s first post-independence
president, Levon Ter-Petrossian, who, following his acceptance of
a peaceful resolution plan for the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict was
forced to resign by the diaspora and other political groups, wrote
an insightful article titled “War or Peace: Time for Thoughtfulness.”

Even in his resignation speech, he put forth the pragmatic observation
that “it is not possible to maintain the status quo for a long period
of time because neither the international community nor Armenia’s
economic capabilities will permit it.” This is still true.

The next golden moment in the Nagorno-Karabakh peaceful resolution
came in 1999: It was said that Armenian President Robert Kocharian
and his then-counterpart Heydar Aliyev were due to sign a peace deal
at the December 1999 OSCE summit in İstanbul. This was thwarted by
the October 1999 attack on the Armenian parliament by a local former
journalist, which left eight political leaders dead.

We can look to other examples of peaceful resolutions to security
challenges in which the immediate dilemmas of peace were not discussed,
which in turn jeopardized the long-term success of the agreement. This
illustrates not simply the dilemma of peace, but the larger
concern that peace is in dilemma. Until now, most commentators have
misunderstood Karl von Clausewitz’s famous line that “war is merely a
continuation of politics.” This is particularly true in the case of
the South Caucasus conflicts, where analysis is conducted along the
axis of “neither war, nor peace,” concluding with the observation that
“war is close.” To paraphrase Clausewitz on the Caucasus, maintaining
the status quo essentially supports the continuation of a non-solution.

In the short term, the dilemmas the region faces before peaceful
resolution is achieved are as follows. First of all, what is the price
of peace? How far should the conflicting parties compromise? This is a
question that sometimes deadlocks negotiations. The second dilemma is
whose peace it will be; in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, for example,
will peace be brought by the OSCE Minsk Group as the neutral mediator
or by the parties themselves?

The dilemmas of war pose similar challenges; if there is no peaceful
resolution, in the event of war, what will be the price of war? Again,
taking the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict as an example, the consequences
for the region will certainly be negative. What kind of conflict will
follow the end of the current war? The main question for Baku since
the 1994 ceasefire agreement has been how to buy Russia’s “positive
neutrality” in the event that Azerbaijan decides to liberate the
occupied territories.

The dilemmas of peace are multidimensional and constantly shifting. If
the conflicting parties are truly committed to finding a peaceful
solution, there will be four dilemmas:

The first dilemma is the parallel dilemma — the tension between
inclusion and exclusion of the leadership of de-facto authorities
and interested parties. While inclusion can facilitate — indeed,
may even be necessary for a peace agreement, it may also be taken as
a validation of past violence and could prevent any agreement.

The second, the perpendicular dilemma, relates to the decision of
how much of the mass population to include in the peace-making process.

Involving more people and more groups at all levels of politics is
better for the legitimacy of the process, but ultimately can prove
too unwieldy.

The third is the efficiency dilemma, i.e. whether the guarantee of
peace should be controlled by third party nations or an international
organization. In the case of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, the
big debate has not yet begun — but it is clear that some regional
players adamantly oppose NATO peacekeepers, other factions demand the
involvement of the OSCE, still more are asking for a UN peacekeeping
mission. This is a reminder that the post-conflict resolution process
is one of the crucial challenges in play.

The fourth, temporal dilemma focuses on the conflict between long-
and short-term effects of peaceful resolution. The timing of the
post-conflict process and the length of international peace-building
missions can affect levels of violence and the transition to the
post-conflict period.

The concept of peace is easy to grasp; the dilemmas of peace are more
complex, and the implementation of peace even harder.

Turkey, France to mend ties after genocide row June 22, 2012 01:28 A

TURKEY, FRANCE TO MEND TIES AFTER GENOCIDE ROW JUNE 22, 2012 01:28 AM

The Daily Star
June 22 2012
Lebanon

ANKARA: Turkey has agreed to restore all ties with France, Foreign
Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said Thursday, following a breakdown in
relations last year prompted by a simmering dispute over the 1915
mass killing of Armenians by Ottoman Turks.

Ankara canceled all economic, political and military meetings with
Paris in December after France’s lower house of parliament voted
overwhelmingly in favor of a draft law to make it illegal to deny
that the killings amounted to genocide.

France’s highest court overturned the law two months later but the
Turkish measures taken against France, which included restrictions on
French military aircraft and ships landing or docking on its territory,
have remained in place.

Speaking live on Turkish television, Davutoglu said Turkey’s Prime
Minister Tayyip Erdogan had ordered the sanctions to be lifted after
a positive meeting with France’s new President Francois Hollande at
a world summit in Brazil.

“The prime minister gave the necessary instructions after meeting with
Hollande. Because of this new attitude from France, these sanctions
will be dropped,” he said during an interview with news broadcaster
CNN Turk.

Davutoglu said he would travel to Paris on July 5 for bilateral
meetings where they would discuss taking additional “positive steps”
in the future.

Relations between the countries became strained under former French
President Nicolas Sarkozy and his election defeat earlier this year
was viewed in Ankara as a chance to start a new phase.

Muslim Turkey accused the former French president, whose UMP party
put forward the bill, of trying to win the votes of 500,000 ethnic
Armenians in the two-round presidential vote on April 22 and May 6.

Sarkozy had also been one of the most vocal opponents of Turkish
European Union membership.

Armenia, backed by many historians and parliaments, says about 1.5
million Christian Armenians were killed in what is now eastern Turkey
during World War One in a deliberate policy of genocide ordered by
the Ottoman government.

Turkey says there was a heavy loss of life on both sides during the
fighting in which Armenian partisans supported invading Russian forces.

The Ottoman Empire collapsed after the end of the war, but successive
Turkish governments and the vast majority of Turks feel the charge
of genocide is a direct insult to their nation.

Casinos May Pay Less Fees In Armenia

CASINOS MAY PAY LESS FEES IN ARMENIA

news.am
June 21, 2012 | 23:49

YEREVAN. – In 2012 casinos in Armenia may pay fee not for the entire
year but for those months which they will operate after the regular
fee payment before January 1, 2013.

The bill intending amendments for the law on State Payment is submitted
to the Parliament snap session by the Ministry of Finance.

Annual payment for organizing games with win makes AMD 5 million
($12,500), while organizing casinos AMD 25 million ($60,000).

Military Prosecutor G. Kostanyan Comments On Harsnakar Case

MILITARY PROSECUTOR G. KOSTANYAN COMMENTS ON HARSNAKAR CASE

18:50 . 21/06

Vahe Avetyan who suffered in the violence in Harsnakar Restaurant
Complex is still in an extremely grave health state and Artak Bayadyan
is said to be in a stable grave health state. To note, Defense Minister
Seyran Ohanyan recently visited the Central Clinical Hospital to meet
the victims and familiarized himself with their health state.

High-rank military men of military medicine sphere have also visited
the hospital.

Meanwhile, the number of the people arrested in the case has reached
7, Head of Public Relations Department of the Police Ashot Aharonyan
told us. To recall, one of the arrested first four people was the
restaurant’s security worker Garik Margaryan, the other three included
a security coworker, a waiter and manager of the restaurant. The PR
department of the police told us the details of the arrest.

The RA Military Prosecutor of Armenia Gevorg Kostanyan commented on
the incident in Harsnakar Restaurant Complex in his talk to Yerkirn
Aysor [The country today].

“Violence and such a behavior against not only an officer, but
any person, any citizen are unacceptable. I consider principally
unacceptable especially violence against Armenian officers instead
of respect and dignified attitude towards them,” Gevorg Kostanyan
has said.

http://www.yerkirmedia.am/?act=news&lan=en&id=8001

Cancer Cases Up In Armenia

CANCER CASES UP IN ARMENIA

tert.am
21.06.12

The number of cancer cases, as well as that of victims, is growing
throughout the world, Hayrapet Galstyan, Director of the National
Center of Oncology of Armenia, told journalists on Thursday.

He reported a 2.4% annual increase in cancer cases in the world.

“In 1997, a total of 4,709 cancer patients were registered in Armenia,
whereas this number reached 7,750 last year, 129 cases per 100,000
in 1997 against 239 per 100,000 in 2011,” Galstyan said.

The environment is the primary cause of cancer. Socio-economic problems
and genetic factors can cause cancer as well.

The Oncological Center is Armenia’s only medical institution
specializing in treating cancer patients. Although the center is
regularly provided with up-to-date equipment and medicines, budgetary
financing is insufficient, Galstyan said.

“Hospitals are in constant need of funds for purchasing medicines,”
he added.

In this context Galstyan pointed out the importance of medical
insurance.

Armen Muradyan, Deputy Director for Treatment, pointed out
the importance of diagnosis. The center has been provided with
state-of-the-art equipment, he added.

Sergey Seinyan, Head of the Osseous Pathology Department, pointed
out essential progress in treatment of extremities, which prevents
amputation.

Armenia’s Deputy Prime Minister Receives Delegation Of Kfw Bank Grou

ARMENIA’S DEPUTY PRIME MINISTER RECEIVES DELEGATION OF KFW BANK GROUP

ARMENPRESS
21 June, 2012
YEREVAN

YEREVAN, JUNE 21, ARMENPRESS: Deputy Prime Minister of Armenia,
Minister of Territorial Administration Armen Gevorgyan received
the delegation of German Development Bank (KFW), headed by German
Ambassador to Armenia Hans-Johan Schmidt, press service of RA Ministry
of Territorial Administration told Armenpress.

While discussing the programs implemented in Armenia with the funding
of KfW bank, Hans-Johan Schmidt said that now when he is completing
his diplomatic mission in Armenia, he is glad to be sure that the
programs implemented within Germany-Armenia financial cooperation,
will continue. The German Ambassador to Armenia thanked for the
support shown during his diplomatic activity in Armenia.

The Deputy Prime Minister said Armenia’s government highlights
relations with Germany both in bilateral format and in the framework
of cooperation with the European Union, and added that the government’s
successes are also conditioned by a similar productive activity.

Mr Gevorgyan noted that Germany is one of the most important partners
of Armenia, conditioned by the multifaceted programs and the potential
of expanding them.

The interlocutors also discussed various issues related to
Armenian-German cooperation.

Keghi Interrupted: Treasuring Moments In Manure

KEGHI INTERRUPTED: TREASURING MOMENTS IN MANURE
by Nanore Barsoumian

June 21, 2012

I took each step with caution, placing one foot in front of the
other with the precision of a tightrope dancer. I carefully traced
the edge of the crumbling wall, where the earth was dry. Just a
few inches to my right was the stew of mud, manure, and urine that
carpeted the interior of what was once a church, today a barn. We
were in Baglarpinar, once called Darman. I could hear men talking
in Turkish behind me. At that moment, I did not care who they were,
how they had congregated there that fast, or what was being said. I
needed to walk alongside those walls. Later, Khatchig would tell me,
“They were asking, ‘Why is that woman in there?'”

I carefully traced the edge of the crumbling wall, where the earth
was dry. Just a few inches to my right was the stew of mud, manure,
and urine that carpeted the interior of what was once a church,
today a barn.

Why was I in there? It was silly, really. One wrong step and I would
have been ankle deep in feces. Why were we driving through these
villages in search of anything from our past, anything Armenian? Only
an hour earlier, as we had entered Adakli-known to us as the fortress
of the stars, Asdghapert-we had been given a warning by an old man. We
had asked whether any Armenian churches still stood, in Adakli. “If
you ask such questions here, they will throw you off a cliff,” he had
told us before jumping in the front seat of our van and directing us
to the old Armenian fountain in town.

We saw the fountain, and the spray painted sign-MHP-the acronym for
the ultra-nationalist party in Turkey. We saw the small monastery
attached to the fountain, and the new mosque that was built on top.

Inside the monastery, we saw crosses engraved in the walls, and a
book-size fragment of a cross-stone (khatchkar). We had to leave fast.

Our presence was raising suspicion. This was Bingol province, where
clashes between PKK fighters and the Turkish Army are far too common.

The hostility level towards us was also markedly higher than anywhere
else we had been to so far.

As we left Baglarpinar, Khatchig’s voice pulled me out of the maze
of questions my mind had wandered into. “Perhaps they’ll think you
know where gold was hidden…maybe it’ll prompt them to dig. In the
process, they’ll clean the filth,” he said. We smiled sadly. “Do I
look like someone who’s here to dig for gold?” I murmured.

Apparently, I did. Why else would two Armenians search for crumbling
churches? It soon became clear how suspicious we had seemed, when
in Keghi we were confronted by two Turkish military officers who
pulled up next to us in an armored vehicle. Someone in Adakli had
reported us, said the tall man clad in a bullet-proof vest, as his
smaller companion stood by his side, machine-gun in hand. After a
brief interrogation, and after they inspected our passports, we were
allowed to leave. Before we could even begin to discuss what had
just happened, we were stopped by yet another vehicle. This time it
was the chief of police, and another officer-both clean-shaven, and
in plainclothes. They wanted to check my camera. They zipped through
the donkey pictures, the pictures of us standing next to the walls of
houses, the old stonewall by a garden, and the stream with the floating
trash. He handed the camera back to me, and with a few words of advice
(and after telling us that there were those who dig for gold in the
area, and that it was his job to stop them), he let us go.

I wanted to hand him back the camera. I wanted to zoom into my pictures
to show him how on the walls of the houses, the Armenian cross-stones
had survived. You could clearly see the crosses! The massive column
supporting that village house most likely bore the weight of the
church at one time. The stone wall enclosing the garden?

That was the church! Wasn’t it obvious? We were hunting for treasure!

We were guilty!

We left Keghi, drove through the mountains, back-tracking our nearly
five-hour long journey from Diyarbakir. We drove through and by
villages. We saw old and new structures. I wanted to stop at every
turn, see every stone.

The sun was falling fast. We had been warned against lingering in
the area after dark. The stones called me back. I know it won’t be
long before I answer their call-even if that means falling into shit.

http://www.armenianweekly.com/2012/06/21/keghi-interrupted-treasuring-moments-in-manure/

Armenian Ambassador To France Visits Rhone-Alpes Region

ARMENIAN AMBASSADOR TO FRANCE VISITS RHONE-ALPES REGION

news.am
June 21, 2012 | 17:57

Armenian Ambassador to France Vigen Chitechyan visited on June 15-16
the region of Rhone-Alpes, one of France’s major regions in terms of
economic and political potential.

Ambassador met with vice mayor of Lyon, mayor of Villeurbanne, local
MPs and officials.

Ambassador and regional president Jean-Jack Queyranne discussed
results of work carried out within the framework of the convention
on cooperation signed by the Union of Communities of Armenia and
Rhone-Alpes.

Vigen Chitechyan, together with the representatives of local Armenian
communities and Lyon officials, visited memorial to the Armenian
Genocide victims.

He also discussed programs jointly implemented by Armenia and the
local Armenian communities.

"There’s Nobody To Implement The Plan"

“THERE’S NOBODY TO IMPLEMENT THE PLAN”

03:35 pm | Today | Politics

Member of Heritage Party Armen Martirosyan is certain that the
government won’t be able to carry out the provisions stated in
its plan.

“The government won’t be able to implement its plan simply because
the indicators are far-fetched and because there is no government
official that will implement this plan,” vice-chairman of the board of
Heritage Party Armen Martirosyan said during a press conference today.

The former deputy says the first thing that the government needs to
do in order to implement the plan is to create a free market economy.

“Can there be a free and competitive market economy in a country where
oligopoly has been initially rooted and is deepening more and more?”

asked Armen Martirosyan.

As an example, Martirosyan mentioned the damages that HHK deputy
Samvel Alexanyan’s Natali Pharm’s illegitimate actions caused to the
Azni Company, which is a representative of small and medium businesses
involved in importing drugs to Armenia.

“Today, Head of Azni Garnik Sahakyan is selling all of his belongings,”
said Arman Martirosyan.

The vice-chairman of the board of Heritage Party also touched upon
the position of the Prosperous Armenia Party (BHK) and mentioned that
the BHK was against the government, not power as a whole.

“I think the BHK is going against the prime minister. Regardless of
the outcome of the elections, it is clear that they most probably
assume that they can be a contender for the prime minister’s office,”
said Armen Martirosyan.

The former deputy says the BHK is taking this step to not join the
coalition.

http://www.a1plus.am/en/politics/2012/06/21/armen-martirosyan

Homenetmen Athletic Games Due July 4-8 In Washington

HOMENETMEN ATHLETIC GAMES DUE JULY 4-8 IN WASHINGTON

PanARMENIAN.Net
June 21, 2012 – 15:39 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – The Homenetmen Eastern Regional’s 22nd Annual
Athletic Games will be held this year from July 4-8 in Washington,
D.C., with the Homenetmen of Greater Washington as the proud hosts,
The Armenian Weekly reported.

Athletes from the 10 Eastern Region chapters – Albany, Boston, Chicago,
Detroit, Florida, New Jersey, New York, Philadelphia, Providence,
and Washington – along with invited guests from Montreal and Toronto,
will gather at the Wardman Park Marriott in Washington.

Starting early on July 5, the soccer, volleyball, and basketball teams,
as well as the athletes participating in the swimming and track events,
will compete at the Maryland Discovery Zone Soccerplex in Boyds, Md.

Singer Tata Simonyan and his band from Armenia, and Harout Bedrossian
and his band from Montreal, will be held at the Wardman Park Marriott
in D.C. on the evenings of July 6 and 7, respectively.