Slovenian, Czech And Latvian PMs Stand For South Caucasus Integratio

SLOVENIAN, CZECH AND LATVIAN PMS STAND FOR SOUTH CAUCASUS INTEGRATION INTO EU

PanARMENIAN.Net
01.09.2008 16:33 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ During the Bled Strategic Forum, Prime Minister
Janez Jansa of Slovenia, Mirek Topolanek of the Czech Republic and
Ivars Godmanis of Latvia made a joint statement on restoration of
peace and stability in the Caucasus and integration of the region
into the European Union, RIA Novosti reports.

"Peace, stability and territorial integrity should be ensured
in Georgia and in the entire region, which should be offered a
European perspective," Jansa told journalists after a trilateral
meeting. However, he opposed the initiative to impose sanctions
against Russia.

Prime Ministers said the international community should interfere to
prevent escalation of the conflict.

Latvian PM Godmanis said "Russia and Georgia’s being in a state of
war represents a serious problem for the EU."

Tensions In Russia-NATO Relations To Affect Armenia

TENSIONS IN RUSSIA-NATO RELATIONS TO AFFECT ARMENIA

PanARMENIAN.Net
01.09.2008 12:58 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Tensions in Russia-NATO relations will inevitably
affect Armenia, specifically the IPAP implementation, Executive
Director of the Armenian Atlantic Association Tevan Poghosyan told
a PanARMENIAN.Net reporter. "Realization of reforms provided by the
IPAP will be decelerated," he said.

Russia has always been jealous about the NATO-Armenia cooperation,
according to him.

"At the same time, NATO’s presence in the Black Sea is not a
novelty. Turkey is a mature NATO member state. Bulgaria and Romania
also joined the Alliance, whose presence will not provoke incidents. I
don’t think NATO wants a confrontation. It will act as mechanism of
restraint and stabilization," Poghosyan said.

The Victims of The `Peaceful Demonstrators’

THE VICTIMS OF THE `PEACEFUL DEMONSTRATORS’
GEVORG HARUTYUNYAN

Hayots Ashkhar Daily
30 Aug 2008
Armenia

During its yesterday’s session the NA Temporary Committee investigating
the results of March 1-2 developments touched upon the circumstances of
the death cases and the results of the forensic expertise. For that
purpose the committee invited the Director of the Scientific-Practical
Center of Forensic Expertise Shota Vardanyan.

The latter firstly announced that by now the structure headed by him
has made an examination of 125 ambulatory, 140 stationary and 10 dead
bodies. As a consequence of what has happened only two have died in the
hospital, 40 days after the tragic events, because they got brain and
spinal cord injuries. Medical interference is helpless in such cases.

Four of the ten victims died because of gun injuries. Three of them are
policemen. The other six have died because of the stroke of a blunt
tool.

Shota Vardanyan also said: `It is a metallic tool, 9 centimeters long
about which we have only a theoretical knowledge. And it is only after
a complex expertise that we can give the concrete shape of the tool,
which we haven’t done yet.’

According to the Director of the center 25 people got injuries because
of blasts, from which six ` of serious gravity. None of the citizens
has received gun injuries. From the 111 policemen who appeale
d for
medical help, 93 were injured by a blunt metallic tool. Only 1 citizen
was injured by a blunt metallic tool, another 5 citizens got not very
serious injuries. 87 policemen got injuries of different types of
serious gravity.

Touching upon the rumors saying that the number of the victims was much
more than it has been officially announced Shota Vardanyan said: `We
are all from Armenian families and we all know our local traditions. As
you know we can’t hide the dead bodies, because we must complete all
the traditions. European experts also asked this question. It took us
two days to explain them that in Armenia we respect dead bodies more
than live people. They also stated that there were 38 dead bodies in
the morgue.

But that day people didn’t die only because of that tragic event. There
were cases of natural death as well. We had only eight dead bodies
linked with March 1-2 developments. All the data are registered in the
morgue, the ambulance service, funeral bureau, and police.’

The director of the center didn’t exclude that three of the eight
victims could have died because of `hedgehogs’. And there are many
testimonies and witnesses who can prove that the demonstrators have
used `hedgehogs’ in the Theatrical Square.

Shota Vardanyan also stated that: `Our center has the opportunity to
make any type of forensic expertise. Even the European experts state
that we make swifter and better expertise. It is a fact that the
demonstrators have used grenades and guns.’

Tajikistan To Let Russian Military Use Airport – Medvedev

TAJIKISTAN TO LET RUSSIAN MILITARY USE AIRPORT – MEDVEDEV

RIA Novosti
21:36 | 29/ 08/ 2008

DUSHANBE, August 29 (RIA Novosti) – Tajikistan has agreed to allow
the Russian military to use an airport in the western city of Gissar,
Russia’s president said on Friday.

Dmitry Medvedev said after a meeting with his Tajik counterpart,
Emomali Rakhmon, that the two leaders had agreed that the Gissar
airfield, located around 20 km west of the capital Dushanbe, would
be used by the Russian Defense Ministry.

"Russia will also complete the construction of some partially-built
facilities," he said.

The meeting, which followed a two-day summit of the Shanghai
Cooperation Organization recently held in the Tajik capital, is also
reported to have resulted in a joint statement on further expansion
of military ties between the two countries.

Russia and Tajikistan are members of the Collective Security Treaty
Organization (CSTO) also comprising Armenia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan,
Uzbekistan, and Belarus.

The post-Soviet security alliance is scheduled to meet on September 5,
where the parties are widely expected to work out a joint position
on the latest conflict.

ANKARA: Fatih Cekirge: U.S. Likely To Demand New Arrangement For Tur

FATIH CEKIRGE: U.S. LIKELY TO DEMAND NEW ARRANGEMENT FOR TURKISH STRAITS

Hurriyet
Aug 25 2008
Turkey

Turkey’s state-run Anatolian Agency Friday had published a "warning"
story, which contradicted with its news style. However it was well
prepared and based on concrete facts.

AA was issuing an official warning:

"Turkey should be prepared that the U.S. would demand the amendment
of the Montreux Convention…"

This statement was told by Hasan Kanbolat, an expert with Turkish
think tank, ASAM, was a signal of a concern which had been recently
dominated Ankara.

The real question is:

– Was the war on Georgia a plan to open the Black Sea to NATO forces?

The whole world had asked the same question after the war erupted:
Is the Georgian leader, Saakashvili, a mad man, who held a military
operation in South Ossetia despite Russia?

Now this question has a possible answer: This war had sped up Georgia’s
NATO membership process, moreover turned into an urgent requirement.

So Saakashvili is not a mad man.

If we go back to the straits issue. In the short term the U.S. would
propose Turkey make a new arrangement on its straits. And it would
ask for an easing on the arrangements for the passage of warships,
including American ones (possibly on the condition of a NATO decision).

It is for this reason that the Black Sea is no longer an internal
sea and had become the waterway of the world’s most important energy
lines. And Russia does not want any other country’s hegemony here.

This is the main reason for the Georgia war, Russia’s greenlight to
the invasion of Azerbaijan by Armenia and the increased partnership
of Moscow-Tehran-Damascus-Beijing.

The Montreux Convention was signed in 1936 and the NATO was established
in 1949. The U.S. did not sign the Montreux Convention and NATO was
born afterwards, meaning they could demand a new arrangement. Moreover,
the new members of NATO, Romania and Bulgaria, also have coasts
bordering the Black Sea.

In the Bucharest summit of NATO in April, Georgia’s NATO membership
caused widespread debate. If Georgia was a NATO member, then
U.S. warships would have been deployed to the Black Sea under the
NATO umbrella. Or they were about to.

Moreover as a NATO member, Turkey was likely to support this. So the
"operation on South Ossetia" could well be a part of a larger to move
to make Georgia a NATO member.

The real question for Turkey still lies ahead; because the Black Sea
is now an "energy sea" and neither the U.S. nor Russia would want to
leave it alone.

Therefore, in the short term, a debate could be opened on the Montreux
Convention at a NATO meeting. The process to water down the Montreux
Convention may have already started. The U.S. and NATO could ask
for new arrangements on the status of the Turkish Straits. Turkey,
of course, would resist this. This serious question has been debated
in the strategic rooms and corridors of diplomacy in Ankara.

Russia’s Agression And A World Of Unforeseen Consequences

RUSSIA’S AGRESSION AND A WORLD OF UNFORESEEN CONSEQUENCES

World Tribune
TARC/2008/s0462_8_25.asp
Aug 25 2008

A fortnight can be a century in international geopolitics – but only
after the fact.

The effects of the Russian aggression – and that was what it was,
apologists of all stripe notwithstanding – in the Caucuses will have
profound effects to Russia’s east. But they may be slower in becoming
apparent than in Moscow’s relations with the U.S. and the Europeans
in the West.

It is very unclear at this writing what are – or even if he knows –
Russian President Vladimir Putin’s intentions. It seems unlikely
that the myriad conflicting statements by Russian spokesmen all
are "disnformatsi". So one has to be persuaded that strategy and
policy-making in the Kremlin is formulated in the haphazard way it
has been since the implosion of the Soviet Union in 1990.

Putin’s seemingly personalized decision-making builds on the old
Russian tradition of "if the Tsar only knew" reflected in the churlish
way in which statements and policies are spit out.

It is clear, however, that the attack on Georgia was anticipated
in Moscow. And in so far as the Russian military in the Caucuses
is capable of it, given its long record of disaster in Chechnya,
carefully planned for weeks if not months. [see Russia’s Preventitive
War Planning]

But does Putin really intend to begin a series of such adventures
in the half dozen or so territorial disputes Russia has with its
former satellites and subjugated territories around its borders? Is
there a long-term Russian strategy of "Finlandization"? [as it used
to be called] of Russia’s former satellites? That would be using a
combination of Soviet-style military aggression, subversion, and
"active measures" to intimidate bordering states into accepting
Soviet suzerainty.

It is clear that U.S. policy has sustained at least a temporary
strategic defeat. But for a minimum, with the outgoing Bush
Adminsitration and probably with either of the incoming presidential
candidates, the U.S. has little alternative than to try to restore
Georgia’s budding economic development. Destroying that along with
"the energy corridor" through Georgia to the Mediterranean and world
markets for Central Asian hydrocarbons which the U.S. was successful
building has been a major target of the Russian Occupation.

Whatever Moscow’s intentions – and if the U.S. and its faint-hearted
European allies cannot euchre the Russians out of the two separatist
enclaves, and perhaps even "peacekeeping" activities inside the
rest of Georgia – that would be a strategic minimum. Putin’s aim –
and various Russian spokesmen have said it – is for "regime change"
in the Georgian capital with the toppling of President Mikheil
Saakashvili. If Moscow is able to accomplish that, Putin would have
won an overwhelming strategic victory. It would send an important
signal to all the former Central and East European states and the
Central Asian republics Moscow once dominated that crippled as it is,
the Russian Empire was on the march again.

On a still broader plane it’s extremely unlikely that a clearcut
realignment of nation states – in other words, a new Cold War – is
developing. There will be no gaggle of Third World wannabees trailing
behind Moscow as they did during much of the late unpleasantness
between the U.S. and NATO on the one side and Russia on the other
from 1948 to 1990.

Globalization and the continued paramountcy of the U.S. as the only
superpower, however much Russian President Vladimir Putin may have
temporarily outmaneuvered Washington, dictate that.

The Soviet Union’s old friends, if they are still around, know full
well Putin has not rebuilt the Russian military back to its glory
days. Taking on a minor little country of five million struggling to
modernize was hardly a Napoleonic feat, especially since preparation
obviously took weeks if not months.

There are other issues, too, not known in the Cold War days.

The autarky of the Communist years is no more [as it is, of course,
even more so in its erstwhile Cold War ally, China]. Ironically,
that makes Russia more susceptible to economic pressures, even if a
reluctant Berlin and the Europeans fear sanctions might be cutting
off their noses to spite their face.

For example, Russia is breathing heavily now as it has had a run on
finances. Moscow has had to throw tens of billions of its reserves
into the currency black hole. There has been a flight of capital
to more secure havens in Europe and the U.S. That is because unlike
the Soviet Union of old, its very strength in hydrocarbon exports –
as well as its weakness in a heavy dependence on imported capital
tied to technology – makes it a different animal. And though the
Russians have the third largest hoard of foreign reserves in the
world, a few billions spent here, and a few billions spent there,
and you are dealing with real money.

Depending almost totally on its oil and gas exports at a time of a
faltering world economy and lowering energy demand could well puncture
the oil price bubble for Moscow. Russian oil production – which has
been falling – is not competitive with Mideast costs in a weakening
market and its gas production has seen insufficient reinvestment
in exploration, exploitation and in its decrepit pipelines. That
means European exports could come a cropper if there is a very cold
European winter.

All this is something that must be keeping Putin’s more learned
money managers awake nights. They had just stopped worrying about the
falling value of the dollar, about half their reserves, as it turned
around against the other half in Euros and gold they had swung into
two years ago.

Those who know Russia best, former members of the Soviet empire, have
been restrained in their comments on the situation – even Moscow’s
look alike tyranny in Belorus. Nursultan Nazarbayev, the president
of Kazakhstan, expressed sympathy for the victims but stopped short
of endorsing Moscow’s view that pro-Russian separatist territories
should never return to Georgian control. [Half his population are
ethnic Slavs and Russia has claims there too.] Armenia, Russia’s
most slavish ally in the Caucasus, has said little publicly – not
mysteriously since Yerevan’s impoverished trade travels through
Georgian ports now bombed and blocked by the Russians.

However, a read of an only slightly disguised racist screed by
Singapore’s self-appointed leading intellectual, Kishore Mahbubani [
The west is strategically wrong on Georgia] is a reminder. Mahbubani,
whose most recent thrust into the limelight was as a defender of his
master, Lee Kwan Yew’s rationale for autocracy, ‘Asian values", takes
the jackal’s view that the Georgians brought it all on themselves,
aided and abetted, of course, by the Americans. He forgets that it
is U.S. power which assures his little city-state, living off the
ill-begotten gains of corruption among its neighbors, that its very
existence, too, depends on the U.S. Navy shield. The long history
of hypocritical fellow-traveling with Communist power in the Soviet
Union will always find an echo among such spokesmen.

The truth is that much of Asia is as much more preoccupied with
domestic crises as the U.S. is at this moment with its annual four-ring
circus of presidential campaigns.

China is concluding an expensive Olympics. It remains to be seen
whether the enormous political commitment Beijing made for the games
was worth the risks. The Games have not demonstrated to the rest of
the world an unvarnished image of "a rising China" ready to become
a member of the great powers. The atmospherics – from environmental
pollution to niggardly cheating around the edges – have soured the
product. Security concerns limited the actual access for Chinese
as well as foreigners. And not all the carefully contrived digital
makeovers would have obscured it. Beijing policymakers, after all the
medals are polished and hung away for 2012 in London, will have to
return to a series of growing economic and political problems. Moscow’s
[at least temporary] dynamiting of the energy corridor Washington
was trying to construct through Georgia to world markets for Central
Asian hydrocarbons has raised China’s costs just as the world economy
has turned down with an almost immediate effect on its export-driven
economy. Moscow’s purposeful aggravation of the energy price bubble
finds China as a growing importer at the wrong end of the transaction
– and the continuing argument about pricing Siberian fuel from Moscow
to China is likely to get even more bitter.

India’s domestic scene is increasingly dominated by the coming
elections. The Communist parties and other assorted fellow-travelers
[only in India could there still be large and influential Communist
parties!] have withdrawn their backing for Prime Minister Manmohan
Singh’s coalition over the issue of the U.S. nuclear agreement. And
that agreement is meeting opposition in the U.S. and from of the
other "nuclear club" states, with China still not heard from. The
Indian left will now try to prove that their instinctive [can it
be called that?] anti-Americanism was correct going into elections
next year. For after all, hasn’t their old sponsor, the Russians,
just given the U.S.. a black eye in the Caucuses? In a sop to the
left and the old Soviet lobby in the Indian foreign ministry, New
Delhi has just placed a multi-billion dollar order for new weapons
with the Russians. But that doesn’t obscure the continued failure of
delivery and pricing on earlier purchases or a sad tale without end
of a reconstructed aircraft carrier.

Nor can New Delhi ignore the political vaccum created next door in
its Siamese-twin of Pakistan. Increasing penetration of India’s huge
Muslim minority by Islamic fundamentalists has created new problems
of terrorism. Growing turmoil in Kashmir could at any moment spill
over into Indo-Pakistan relations, with the ghosts of 3 and a half
wars between the two, in part over that issue, hanging over them. The
coalition of so-called democratic parties which have pushed President
Gen. Pervez Musharraf out of office are hanging together by a thread,
over issues that go back to the corruption and incompetence that marked
their terms in power before the military coup. Meanwhile, the running
sore of Muslim militancy and terrorism on the Afghanistan-Pakitan
border is turning in a cancer that threats civil life in Pakistan as
well as defeating the U.S.-NATO effort to stabilize Afghanistan itself.

Now, we must sit back and wait for the unforeseen consequences. There
is no law of nature that says some of them, repeat some of them,
might not be helpful.

Sol W. Sanders, ([email protected]), is an Asian specialist with more
than 25 years in the region, and a former correspondent for Business
Week, U.S. News & World Report and United Press International. He
writes weekly for World Tribune.com and East-Asia-Intel.com.

http://www.worldtribune.com/worldtribune/W

ANKARA: Diplomats to lay blueprint for Babacan-Lavrov talks

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
Aug 25 2008

Diplomats to lay blueprint for Babacan-Lavrov talks

Russian and Turkish diplomats will meet this week in order to lay the
groundwork for a planned meeting between foreign ministers of the two
countries that will focus on Ankara’s proposal for establishing a
Caucasus Stability and Cooperation Platform which will gather Armenia,
Azerbaijan, Georgia, Russia and Turkey under the same roof.

Foreign Minister Ali Babacan initiated a phone conversation with his
Russian counterpart, Sergey Lavrov, on Friday and the two discussed
the proposed platform amidst reports that Turkey will include its
estranged neighbor Armenia in regional peace efforts via Russia.

Babacan conveyed a set of "concrete proposals" to Lavrov during the
conversation, Foreign Ministry spokesman Burak Özügergin said, without
elaborating. Officials from the Turkish and Russian foreign ministries
will meet next week to work on the proposals. Babacan and Lavrov will
also meet in early September to review progress in the technical
talks. Foreign Ministry officials, approached by Today’s Zaman
yesterday, were not able to provide information on the venue and exact
date of the talks. However, sources involved in the issue said
Ambassador Ünal Çeviköz, the deputy undersecretary responsible for the
Caucasus and Central Asia affairs, will lead the Foreign Ministry
delegation during talks.

25 August 2008, Monday
TODAY’S ZAMAN ANKARA

Academician Sergei Mergelian Dies

ACADEMICIAN SERGEI MERGELIAN DIES

Noyan Tapan

Au g 22, 2008

YEREVAN, AUGUST 22, NOYAN TAPAN. The RA National Academy of Sciences
and the RA State Science Committee inform that the prominent scientist
and citizen, a classic of the Armenian science, Academician Sergei
Mergelian passed away at the age of 81.

Taking an external degree of Yerevan State University’s
Physico-Mathematical Department, the talented youth became actively
engaged in creative work at the age of 19 and soon occupied his place
in the constellation of distinguished modern mathematicians. Aged 21,
he became a Doctor of Sciences, at 25 he was elected a corresponding
member of the Academy of Sciences of the USSR and the Academy of
Sciences of the Armenian SSR, while at 28 he was elected an academician
of the Academy of Sciences of the Armenian SSR. In that period he
received a Stalin Award.

In the mid 1950s S. Mergelian performed a real feat by creating
a new scientific and technical direction in applied mathematics
and computer engineering of Armenia, which later brought great
fame to our country. Under his direction, the Yerevan Research
Institute of Mathematical Machines was founded, and later some
production enterprises were set up and the production of computers
launched. Thanks to the scientific and organizational talent of
Academician Mergelian, Armenia became one of the USSR’s major centers
in this field.

S. Mergelian’s services to the Academy of Sciences and Yerevan State
University (YSU) are of great value. He was the vice president of
the Academy of Sciences, the founder and first director of the Data
Center of the Academy of Sciences and YSU, and the head of a YSU chair.

S. Mergelian was also the founder and head of the Complex Analysis
Unit of the Institute of Mathematics after Steklov of the USSR Academy
of Sciences.

His contribution to the training of qualified personnel is invaluable.

His services were appreciated by the government of independent Armenia
as well: in 2008 he was awarded a Mesrop Mashtots order, the highest
award of the Republic of Armenia.

The death of Academician Sergei Mergelian is an irrecoverable loss
for the Armenian people, first of all, Armenia’s scientific community
and intellectuals.

http://www.nt.am/news.php?shownews=116616

ANKARA: Why Did PD Wait For Six Months?

WHY DID PD WAIT FOR SIX MONTHS?

Sabah
Aug 23 2008
Turkey

The police department took action about the information in the file
on Osman Hayal obtained by Dink’s family after six months.

Dink’s family detected that Osman Hayal’s mobile phone gave signals
from Istanbul while going over electronic records six months ago. The
situation was communicated to the police department but the brother
of Yasin Hayal was seized only several days ago.

Dink’s family: "Why did they wait for six months?"

Dink’s family criticized the fact that the Police Department seized
Osman Hayal six months after finding out Hayal’s mobile phone signaling
from Uskudar.

Family of Hrant Dink, assassinated chief editor of Agos newspaper,
criticized the police department for seizing Osman Hayal six months
after finding out that his mobile phone gave signals from Istanbul
on the incident day. Dink’s family and their attorneys made the proof
examination themselves after the murder which took place on January,
19th, 2007. They detected that the gunman Ogun Samast was not alone
by tracking the camera footage.

NKR: President Of The NKR Visited "Artsakh Fruit" Company

PRESIDENT OF THE NKR VISITED "ARTSAKH FRUIT" COMPANY

Azat Artsakh Daily
21 Aug 08
Republic of Nagorno Karabakh [NKR]

On 21 August President of the Nagorno Karabagh Republic Bako Sahakyan
visited "Artsakh Fruit" company operating in capital Stepanakert.

The President got acquainted on-site with processing of agricultural
products, carried out by the company as well as plans and problems
of "Artsakh Fruit". The Head of the State expressed his satisfaction
with the work of the company, stressing the importance of guaranteeing
high quality and wide range of products, as well as social protection
of workers.

NKR premier Ara Haroutyunyan and other officials accompanied the
President during the visit.