No Reasons For "Color Revolutions" In Armenia – Minister

NO REASONS FOR "COLOR REVOLUTIONS" IN ARMENIA – MINISTER

ITAR-TASS, Russia
May 8 2007

YEREVAN, May 8 (Itar-Tass) – There are no objective reasons for
"color revolutions in Armenia," Justice Minister David Arutyunian said.

"The election campaign in the country has been quiet, the pre-election
struggle is being waged by more civilized methods than ever before,"
Arutyunian told Itar-Tass on Tuesday.

"All the parties freely express their views and positions, include
the most extreme ones," he noted.

"Everything will be done for the society to become convinced that
voting is honest, without hidden or illegal mechanisms," the minister
said.

In his opinion, if the parties forming the ruling coalition "win
several first places," the republic’s foreign policy will not undergo
considerable changes."

"Any major changes in the foreign policy are possible only after the
presidential election next year, because the head of state plays the
key role in shaping Armenia’s foreign policy," Arutyunian said.

Also on Tuesday, an Armenian lawmaker said relations between Yerevan
and Moscow would be making progress if the Republican Party was
represented in government.

"The strategic partnership between our countries retains its urgency in
many international and bilateral projects; Russia remains an important
political and economic partner of Armenia," Republican Party member
Armen Ashotian said in an interview with Itar-Tass.

Armenian Lawmaker On Relations With Russia

ARMENIAN LAWMAKER ON RELATIONS WITH RUSSIA

ITAR-TASS News Agency, Russia
May 8, 2007 Tuesday

Relations between Yerevan and Moscow will be making progress if
the Republican Party is represented in government, a lawmaker said
on Tuesday.

"The strategic partnership between our countries retains its urgency
in many international and bilateral projects; we’ve made certain
moves not toward each other, but together," Republican Party member
Armen Ashotian said in an interview with Itar-Tass.

"Russia remains an important political and economic partner of
Armenia, taking into account the presence of the Russian military
base in the republic and our membership in the Collective Security
Treaty Organization /CSTO/, as a guarantee of national security,"
Ashotian noted.

"Another important issue is RussEa’s role in settling the Karabakh
conflict, and its assistance in mitigating the consequences of the
transport blockade of Armenia.

Ashotian called for "the understanding, by Russia’s ruling elite,
of the fact that Armenia has its own interests, that Yerevan should
be guided by its own interests in foreign policy, building it upon
combined interests of the geopolitical centers in the region."

For example, a peaceful solution of the Karabakh conflict is Armenia’s
foremost interests, which also packs Russian, U.S. and EU interests.

"The development of Armenian-Russian relations should not depend on
Armenia’s relations with other countries – Georgia, Iran and the USA,"
Ashotian said.

Ashotian, 32, a candidate in the May 12 parliamentary election,
is on the party list of the Republican Party of Armenia under the
proportionate election system.

TOL: Experts Skeptical About Prospects For Karabakh Breakthrough

EXPERTS SKEPTICAL ABOUT PROSPECTS FOR KARABAKH BREAKTHROUGH
by Rovshan Ismayilov

Transitions OnLine, Czech Republic
May 9 2007

The Azeri leader claims Armenia will make concessions over the occupied
territory, but observers remain doubtful. From EurasiaNet.

Despite evidence of movement toward a settlement of the long-stalemated
Nagorno-Karabakh peace talks, Azeri experts remain skeptical that
Azerbaijan and Armenia will settle their differences in the near
future.

Mediators from the Organization for Security and Cooperation in
Europe’s Minsk Group have sounded optimistic notes of late about
progress in negotiations. U.S. Deputy Assistant Secretary of State and
Minsk Group co-chair Matthew Bryza indicated in an interview with Voice
of America that the two sides appeared on the verge of breakthroughs
in several areas. According to a transcript of Bryza’s comments
distributed by the Today.az website, Azeri and Armenian negotiators
were nearing agreement on the return of two Armenian-occupied regions
of Azerbaijan, Kalbajar and Lachin. In addition, the two sides were
making headway on perhaps the thorniest issue: Karabakh’s future
political status.

Following an OSCE Permanent Council session in mid-April, Armenian
Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanian was quoted as saying that, at least
on paper, "we have never been as close to a settlement," the Arminfo
news agency reported.

Elmar Mammadyarov, the Azeri foreign minister, was also cautiously
upbeat. Speaking to journalists in Baku on 26 April, Mammadyarov
hinted that progress had been made, but added that all the details
had not yet been worked out. "Negotiations have to continue," he said.

Armenian President Robert Kocharian recently revealed that he is
likely to meet with his Azeri counterpart, Ilham Aliev, early in June
in the Russian city of St. Petersburg. "After this meeting it will
be clear at which stage we are now," Kocharian said. Armenian leaders
are currently focused on that country’s parliamentary elections on 12
May. Pro-Kocharian parties are expected to maintain their solid hold
on power, thus it is likely that the vote’s outcome will not have a
significant impact on the Armenian negotiating position.

On 4 May, Aliev appeared to engage in a bit of negotiating gamesmanship
when he claimed during a public ceremony that Armenia had made
pivotal concessions. The Azeri president alleged that Armenia had
already agreed to withdraw from all seven of the occupied territories
surrounding Karabakh, including Kalbajar and Lachin, the two most
strategically sensitive areas under discussion. Yerevan had also
consented to withdraw troops from the occupied territories before
the establishment of a framework for the determination of Karabakh’s
status, Aliev said.

In addition, according to Aliev, internally displaced persons (IDPs)
in Azerbaijan would be permitted to return to their homes in the
conflict region as soon as Armenian troops withdrew from the occupied
territories. Armenia and Azerbaijan have both sanctioned the deployment
of an international peacekeeping force in the region for a limited
period of time, Aliev added.

Aliev’s statements run counter to the existing basic principles for an
agreement. Under those guidelines, the implementation of any portion
of a peace pact cannot begin until all outstanding issues are resolved.

Armenian leaders immediately denied making any negotiating
concessions. Meanwhile, Bryza indicated that the two sides remained
divided over the composition of a peacekeeping force. A means for
determining Karabakh’s final status also remains problematic. Azeri
officials have said that the return of Azerbaijani IDPs to Karabakh
must take place before any kind of vote or referendum on the
territory’s political status could be considered.

Political analysts in Baku remain unconvinced that a peace deal
is within reach. Referring to the recent string of optimistic
pronouncements from officials involved in the negotiations, Ilgar
Mammadov, Baku-based independent political analyst, said: "We have
already heard it in the past."

Alesker Mammadli, a Baku-based lawyer and political analyst (as well
as an IDP from the Agdam Region), expressed the belief that Yerevan’s
desire to negotiate would weaken after that country’s parliamentary
elections. Mammadli additionally voiced doubt that Armenia would agree
to withdraw from occupied Azeri territory unless firm guarantees were
in place concerning the determination of Karabakh’s status. "The
occupied territories are their [Armenia’s] main trump card at the
talks. From the other standpoint, Azerbaijan cannot give guarantees
over the status of Karabakh, as government officials [in Baku] always
have said that a settlement will maintain the country’s territorial
integrity," he said.

Mammadov said that the respective administrations of Aliev and
Kocharian were in relatively strong domestic political positions,
and thus had no incentive to budge from their current negotiating
stances. "Both countries are not weak now and there is no chance"
of pressuring them into making sizable concessions, Mammadov said.

"Therefore I do not expect anything serious from the upcoming meeting
of the presidents."

Experts’ pessimism is related in part to the instability of the
ceasefire regime at the frontline. Azeri and Armenian news outlets
both have reported widespread and frequent exchanges of gunfire
throughout April and into early May.

Rovshan Ismayilov is a freelance journalist based in Baku. This is
a partner post from EurasiaNet.

BAKU: Azeris Rally In Capital Marks Occupation Of Major Town In Kara

AZERIS RALLY IN CAPITAL MARKS OCCUPATION OF MAJOR TOWN IN KARABAKH – AGENCY

Day.az website, Baku
8 May 07

8 May: Today a rally was held in Baku to mark the 15th anniversary
of the Armenian occupation of Susa – an Azerbaijani town [in Nagornyy
Karabakh].

The rally was organized by the Karabakh Liberation Organization (KLO)
and several other public organizations. The protesters marched from
the Azizbayov monument to the Martyrs’ Avenue, where they held a rally.

Speakers in the rally criticized the Azerbaijani
authorities. Azerbaijani territories have been under Armenian
occupation for 15 years now, but the authorities have not done enough
to liberate the territories, they said.

"While Armenians are taking measures in various cities of the
world to present Susa as an old Armenian town, Azerbaijani diaspora
organizations abroad are busy with trivial things," KLO leader Akif
Nagi said.

Nagi also noted the low turnout of people and non-governmental
organizations in the protest rally.

Today the liberation of the Armenian-occupied territories fully
depends on the will of the Azerbaijani people, Nagi said.

"The people of the country are capable of liberating the occupied
territories within a short period, and we can make sure that the
international community also joins this process," the KLO leader said.

18 Convicts In Karabakh Receive Presidential Clemency

18 CONVICTS IN KARABAKH RECEIVE PRESIDENTIAL CLEMENCY

Arka News Agency, Armenia
May 7 2007

STEPANAKERT, May 7. /ARKA/. President of the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic
(NKR) Arkady Ghukasyan signed a decree on "Results of considering
appeals for clemency."

The NKR President’s press service said that 18 people received
presidential clemency, and 22 convicts were pardoned partially.

The appeals of 13 convicts were declined taking into account the
nature, graveness and scale of their crimes, threat to society,
as well as insignificant penitentiary service.

65 OSCE PA members to observe the parliamentary elections

65 OSCE PA members to observe the parliamentary elections

ArmRadio.am
07.05.2007 16:18

Around 65 members of the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly (OSCE PA) will
serve as election observers at the 12 May election in Armenia.

As Mediamax was told in the Press Service of the OSCE PA, the
Delegation will be headed by Tone Tingsgaard, the Vice President of
the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly, representing Sweden.

Representatives from Italy, Portugal, Spain, Russia, Poland, Norway,
Denmark, Germany, France, and Austria will be included in the
delegation.

The OSCE PA Delegation will enter the international observation
mission, in which observers from the Council of Europe, the European
Parliament, as well as from OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions
and Human Rights (ODIHR) will also be represented.

The formal statement from the international election observers will be
issued on Sunday, 13 May, the day after the election.

Yerevan and Vienna: Viewings

Yerevan and Vienna: Viewings

"Don Quixote" by the Armenian Ballet Theater
Yerevan, Armenia

"Walking Oscar" by ZOO
"Romeo und Julia" by Les Ballets de Monte Carlo
Vienna, Austria
March 2007
by George Jackson

Volume 5, No. 13
April 2, 2007
copyright C2007 by George Jackson

Yerevan, Armenia’s capital, is no exception: there as elsewhere the
Soviets saw to it that their cities had subway trains and a theater for
opera and ballet. Fortress-like, the "Operahouse" is one of Yerevan’s
dominant structures. Built in 1935, its central oblong rises above the
surrounding trees of a park and boulevard setting. On both long sides
are galleried semicircular projections. The one facing north is the
entrance, lobby hall and auditorium of the Aram Khachaturian Concert
Hall. The one facing south, towards the city’s center, is similarly part
of the lyric theater – the Alexander Spendiarian National Academic
Theater of Opera and Ballet. There’s also in this massive building a
nightclub tucked into the eastern shortside of the central oblong which
houses, back-to-back, the stages, behind-stage areas and offices
belonging to the two big auditoria. Outside, the Operahouse is of a
solid gray stone, unlike much of the rest of Yerevan which prefers to
build in a red, porous volcanic rock that is deployed rough, matt cut or
cut-and-polished to a marble sheen.

Unusual within the lyric theater (with its 1060 maroon seats, maroon
curtains, pink walls, beige ceiling plus white and gold trim) is the
stage set-up. The audience faces not one but three proscenia. It is like
viewing a triptych, the large proscenium being straight ahead with the
somewhat smaller ones angled forward on the sides. Three crystal
chandeliers are suspended from the ceiling, one for each of the
proscenia. At most performances, only the central stage is used and the
side ones remain curtained. So it was on March 10, 2007.

What a delight to find a ballet company of good caliber "off" the beaten
path! Armenia has cherished at least this heirloom from Soviet times.
The production was a three-act "Don Quixote", the "after Petipa" ballet
to Minkus music, staged by Vilen Galstian. His version wouldn’t
disappoint anyone used to "Don Quixote" by the Bolshoi or Kirov. It is
somewhat reduced in length – there is no gypsy camp scene (although a
gypsy dance is incorporated into the inn scene) and there is no ducal
entourage (at whose palace the Act 3 festivities take place is
unspecified). I particularly liked Galstian’s handling of the Gamache
character as nouveau riche rather than just a dandy. Kitri rebuffs
Gamache’s courtship for that reason, whereas she recognizes nobility in
the behavior of the old, impoverished Don. Also well and meaningfully
constructed in Galstian’s production is a courtly pas de six for the
Don, the plot’s principal lovers (Kitri and Basil), Gamache and Kitri’s
two Flower Girl friends. The style of the scenery is semi-modern.

Youth dominated this cast. 18-year old Mary Hovannisian, the evening’s
Kitri (one of four dancers currently in the role according to the
printed program), is petite yet strong. She’s fast, one or the other of
her pointes often reaches an ear, and long balances are no problem. Like
the Bolshoi’s Natalia Osipova, though, Hovannisian is at times a touch
hard. As the Basil, Ruben Muradian (one of three men currently in the
role) has not only technique but elegance. He’s tall and when he lifted
Hovanissian, her vigorous jumping became effortless gliding. At age 17,
Muradian is still growing. Kitri’s two Flower Girl friends (Ana
Gostanian and Lilit Asdvadatrian) seemed junior versions of Hovannisian,
as did some of the female corps. More senior and quite chic was Maria
Divanian as the Street Dancer, Mercedes. Espada, her Toreador, was short
wiry A. Gevorkian who looked past his peak. The dancing of the tall
Dryad Queen, Sona Arustanian, had downiness and the pert Cupid was J.
Sarkoshian. The mimes (Hracht Hovannisian as the Don, Razmig Gostanian
as Sancho Panza, Garoush Khunoyan as Gamache, et al.) were respectable.
The company numbers about 60 dancers. Directed by former singer Kamo
Hovhannisyan, the Armenian Opera and Ballet Theater schedules opera more
often than ballet.

During a stopover in Vienna, I saw no Viennese or even Austrian dance
but two imports. At the Tanzquartier’s Hall G on March 16 was a
dancicle, "Walking Oscar", by Thomas Hauert, a Swiss resident of
Belgium. To me, pop songs usually sound like noise and so did the whiney
ones of this production by Hauert’s troupe ZOO. The texts were by the
Netherlands author, Oscar van den Boogaard. I preferred Alejandro
Petrasso’s piano-only music to his tunes for the songs. As for movement,
this dancicle had a few intriguing moments of off-beat balancing but
that was it.

Les Ballets de Monte Carlo’s "Romeo und Julia" gave the impression that
Jean-Christophe Maillot, the company’s director and the work’s
choreographer, is fighting to find a distinctive language of motion. He
has based it on ballet but almost every move is forced. The dancers’
joints don’t articulate; rather, they snap open angrily. Stances are
provocatively belligerent. It seems what Maillot has achieved is a
jargon, a rather militant one. True languages are richer. As a
dramaturg, Maillot’s ideas were good and bad. His best divergence from
the traditional scenario for Prokofiev’s music was in Act 2, replacing
the street divertissements with a puppet play that foretells the fates
of Romeo and Juliet. Maillot’s worst alteration was omitting Lord
Capulet from the roster of characters. Without this fearsome father
figure our picture of a powerful Renaissance family is incomplete.
Juliet, as Bernice Coppieters presented her, was aggressive, gleefully
inquisitive and mature – in other words the antithesis of the girlish
Juliet, but for no apparent reason other than to be different. I’d like
to see the dramatic Coppieters in a suitable role. Francesco Nappa, a
brave last-minute substitute for the Romeo of injured Chris Roelandt,
would likely have made an imposing Tybalt, the part in which he was
originally cast. Samantha Allen was a young yet appropriate Nurse.
Without question, the cast worked hard but Maillot’s stilted
choreography didn’t give the dancers scope to show their broader
potentials.

This performance on March 17 was at the glassy Festspielhaus of St.
Poelten, about an hour’s drive from Vienna. Now in its 10th season, and
part of the Kulturbezirk St. Poelten (the "cultural district" also
includes a museum, archive, library, studios, a tone tower, an academy
etc.), the Festival Playhouse has become an active presenter of dance.
It has or had its own dance troupe, the ABCDancecompany, but that now
seems to be based in Switzerland. Busses for St. Poelten events depart
Vienna (from behind the Staatsoper) a couple of hours prior to starting
time and there also are busses from Krems.

Photos:
Top, the Opera House in Yerevan.
Bottom, Bernice Coppieters and Chris Roelanndt in "Romeo and Juliet."
Photo: Hans Gerritsen.

Volume 5, No. 13
April 2, 2007
copyright C2007 by George Jackson

www.danceviewtimes.com
www.danceviewtimes.com

"Some Oppositionists Have Just Understood How Good It Would Be If T

"SOME OPPOSITIONISTS HAVE JUST UNDERSTOOD HOW GOOD IT WOULD BE IF THEY UNITED," ARMEN ASHOTIAN SAYS

Noyan Tapan
May 04 2007

YEREVAN, MAY 4, NOYAN TAPAN. "The Republican Party of Armenia for sure
will have an absolute qualified majority in the new parliament." RA
MP Armen Ashotian, member of RPA Board, gave assurance at the May
4 press conference. In his words, today RPA is the political force,
which already has its elite.

"Representatives of our political elite have passed a long way and
are skilful," Armen Ashotian stated adding that the majority of voters
will vote for already formed and working political team.

Touching upon the election campaign, he said that "though some forces
wished to discredit the election campaign, it proceeds within civilized
limits." In A. Ashotian’s words, political forces taking part in the
election campaign can be divided into two groups. The representatives
of the first group being convinced that they will get over 5% barrier
carry out their campaign in the balanced way, without addressing
any accusations and insults to their competitors. The second group
includes forces which realize that they cannot get over that barrier,
therefore they try to criticize and even discredit anothers.

As regards opposition’s position, A. Ashotian said: "Some
oppositionists have just understood how good it would be if they
united," he said. At the same time, the member of RPA Board said that
the unification of Impeachment bloc, Hanrapetutiun and Nor Zhamanakner
parties took place not on the basis of ideology, but hatred.

British Bus To Encourage Schoolchildren To Have Positive Participati

BRITISH BUS TO ENCOURAGE SCHOOLCHILDREN TO HAVE POSITIVE PARTICIPATION AND BEAR RESPONSIBILITY IN PUBLIC LIFE

Noyan Tapan
May 03 2007

YEREVAN, MAY 3, NOYAN TAPAN. A project entitled the British Bus
was worked out on the initiative of the Embassy of Great Britain to
Armenia. The goal of the project is to encourage schoolchildren in
the issues of having positive participation in the public life and
undertaking responsibility in them. The Embassy of Great Britain to
Armenia envisaged to allocate about 7 mln drams (20.000 U.S. dollars)
for implementation of the programs of the initiative.

The official start of the British Bus project took place on May 2, at
Yerevan No114 school. Within the framework of the program, the Yerevan
Theater of Changes youth company performed a 20-minute theatrical
performance for schoolchildren in the basis of which educational
themes concerning cleanness of the environment, protection of the
users’ rights, keeping own hygiene, traffic rules and public services
were put.

As Nazaret Seferian, the coordinator of the British Bus project
mentioned, the theatrical performances will be shown till June 10 in
Yerevan schools and yards, and in future, in the case of financing,
the performances will be shown in the marzes of Armenia as well.

When Civil War Spreads

WHEN CIVIL WAR SPREADS

Story from BBC NEWS:
s/magazine/6614929.stm
Published: 2007/05/03 11:01:05 GMT

Iraq is in the midst of a civil war, but could the violence draw in
the rest of the Middle East? Here, in a personal opinion, historian
Niall Ferguson weighs the evidence.

As a consequence of a botched Anglo-American occupation, Iraq is now
in the midst of a civil war – already one of the biggest in the world
since 1945 – with the kind of escalating cycle of tit-for-tat killing
and ethnic cleansing that can last for years, even decades.

Debate currently centres on how quickly the United States can wind
down its involvement in Iraq and on whether or not neighbouring
countries can be persuaded to help stabilise it.

The really sobering lesson of the 20th Century is that some civil
wars can grow into more than just regional wars Niall Ferguson But
what if it’s Iraq that destabilises its neighbours? It, after all,
is not the only Middle Eastern state to have a mixed population of
Sunnis Muslims, Shias Muslims and other religious groups.

There are substantial numbers of Shias in Bahrain, Kuwait, Lebanon,
Saudi Arabia, Turkey and Yemen, to say nothing of Afghanistan and
Azerbaijan. Even predominantly Shia Iran has its Sunnis, among them
the persecuted Ahwazi Arabs who live in the strategically vital
south-western province of Khuzestan.

So how likely is the scenario of a regional civil war, beginning in
Iraq but eventually extending right across the greater Middle East?

Lessons from Rwanda

One obvious parallel is with Central Africa a decade ago. In 1994
extremists from the Hutu majority attempted to exterminate Rwanda’s
million or so Tutsis. In response, an army of Tutsi exiles invaded from
Uganda and drove the Hutu killers – and many other Hutus – across the
border into Congo and Tanzania. Soon nearly all of Congo’s neighbours
had become embroiled in a monstrous orgy of violence.

Altogether, it has been estimated that up to three million people
lost their lives in Central Africa’s great war, the majority from
starvation or disease as the entire region plunged into anarchy.

Not all civil wars spread in this way, admittedly. About the same
time as the genocide in Rwanda, a war raged between Serbs, Croats
and Muslims in a disintegrating Yugoslavia. But there was never much
danger this war would spread throughout the Balkans.

This was not just because of Western military intervention. It
was because Yugoslavia’s neighbours – Italy, Austria, Hungary,
Rumania, Bulgaria, Greece and Albania – were far less combustible
than Yugoslavia. More or less ethnically homogeneous in each case,
they never seemed remotely likely to go the way of Bosnia, the worst
affected of the former Yugoslavian republics.

The Balkan War was much smaller than the Central African war. The
most exhaustive database that has been compiled of all those killed
and missing in Bosnia – including members of all ethnic groups –
contains fewer than 100,000 names.

Seeds of war

Yet this can hardly be regarded as an encouraging story as far as
Iraq is concerned. For it was no accident of history that Yugoslavia’s
neighbours were so ethnically homogeneous. It was a direct consequence
of the prolonged and bloody wars of the mid-20th Century, which had
already destroyed most of the ethnic diversity of Central and Eastern
European countries.

Sixty years ago, Central and Eastern Europe was entering the final
phase of a succession of wars and civil wars that originated with
the disintegration of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. Prior to 1914,
the Habsburg lands had been characterised by high levels of ethnic
heterogeneity. Consequently, the transition from empire to the nation
states of the post-1918 era proved painful in the extreme.

Two minorities were especially ill-placed in the new order of the
1920s: the Germans and the Jews. The former fought back against
their minority status in places like Czechoslovakia and Poland
and, under the leadership of a messianic Austrian – Adolf Hitler –
temporarily created a Greater German empire. The latter were among
that bloodthirsty empire’s principal victims.

Only with the expulsion of the Germans from Central and Eastern Europe
and the creation of truly homogeneous – but Soviet-controlled nation
states – was peace restored. It is no coincidence the one country
that remained both heterogeneous and independent – Yugoslavia –
was the scene of Europe’s last great ethnic conflict in that century.

Empire breakers

The aftermath of the break-up of the Ottoman Empire (also dealt its
death blow during World War One) has taken a different, more protracted
course. The Turks did not submit to the break-up of their empire as
readily as the Austrians.

After the deaths of Armenian Christians under the Young Turk regime,
they expelled the Orthodox Greeks from Asia Minor and consolidated
their Turkish nation state (albeit with a few troublesome minorities
like the Kurds remaining, to whom they granted minimal concessions).

But the rest of what had been the Ottoman Empire did not immediately
adopt the model of the nation state. Unlike in Europe, the victors
of the WWI established "mandates" (de facto colonies) in the losers’
former possessions – Iraq, Jordan, Lebanon, Palestine, Syria.

Independence did not come to most of the Middle East until after 1945
and was seldom accompanied by democracy (Israel being the exception).

Instead the multi-ethnic states of the region were ruled either by
feudal monarchs or fascist strongmen.

And a new empire – which preferred to be known as a superpower –
generally helped keep these rulers in place, and the region static,
if only to keep another superpower at bay.

Only in our time, then, has the Middle East reached the stage that
Central and Eastern Europe reached after the WWI. Only now are
countries like Iraq and Lebanon experimenting with democracy.

Safety in numbers

The lesson of European history is that this experiment is a highly
dangerous one, particularly at times of economic volatility and
chronic insecurity, and particularly where tribes and peoples are
mixed up geographically, both within and across borders.

The minorities fear – with good reason – the tyranny of the
majorities. People vote on the basis of ethnicity, not class or
ideology. And even before the votes are counted, the shooting begins.

What will the US do if ethnic conflict continues to escalate in Iraq
and begins to spread across its borders? A cynical answer would be to
leave the people of the Middle East to kill and displace one another
until ethnic homogeneity has been established in the various states.

That has essentially been US policy in Central Africa.

The trouble, of course, is that Iraq matters more than Rwanda,
economically and strategically. Does anyone seriously believe that
a regional conflagration would leave Israel and Saudi Arabia – the
US’s most important allies in the Middle East – unscathed?

Ask a different question. Did anyone serious believe that a war in
Central and Eastern Europe in 1914 or 1939 would leave the UK and
France unaffected?

The really sobering lesson of the 20th Century is that some civil
wars can grow into more than just regional wars. If the stakes are
high enough, they have the potential to become world wars too.

Niall Ferguson’s is The War of the World: History’s Age of Hatred,
published by Penguin.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/uk_new