Reversal Of Fortune: Should Russia Be Booted Out Of The West’sExclus

REVERSAL OF FORTUNE: SHOULD RUSSIA BE BOOTED OUT OF THE WEST’S EXCLUSIVE CLUB, THE G8? OF COURSE NOT
By Owen Matthews
Newsweek International

Newsweek
April 2 2006

April 10-17, 2006 issue – Peter the Great built St. Petersburg in hopes
that its sweeping neoclassical boulevards would prove to a skeptical
Europe that Russia was no longer a barbarous Asian principality but
part of mainstream Western civilization. As Vladimir Putin prepares
to host this summer’s G8 summit in the old imperial capital, he
faces a similar challenge. Buoyed by a windfall of petrodollars,
Russia’s president has transformed his country from a dysfunctional,
debt-ridden post-Soviet wasteland into a major world economic and
political player. All that’s missing is recognition from his peers
that Russia is a full member in the club of the world’s leading
industrialized, democratic nations.

He’s likely to be kept waiting. Instead of a triumph, the St
Petersburg summit is fast shaping up as the biggest rethink of
Russia’s relationship with the West since the collapse of the Soviet
Union. Rather than the recognition that Putin craves, there’s talk of
diluting Russia’s G8 membership with a revival of the old G7. Just last
week, his old friend George W. Bush responded to calls to boycott the
summit, after it was alleged that Russia had passed military secrets
to Saddam, with a less-than-ringing endorsement: “I haven’t given up
on Russia.” Give up on Russia? It was only eight years ago that Russia
was ceremoniously welcomed into the G8. Yet now, critics in Brussels
and Washington seem to talk of it as a borderline outlaw nation.

Russia’s reversal of fortune¡ªin the eyes of the West¡ªhas been swift
and remarkable. Europeans’ confidence was shaken this winter, when
the Kremlin cut off gas supplies to Ukraine just as much of Europe
was finalizing long-term energy strategies tied to Russia. Then came
a new Kremlin law restricting foreign NGOs working to build civil
society in Russia¡ªreceiving, for their pains, a barrage of hostility
and accusations of espionage. In recent weeks Europe’s last dictator,
Aleksandr Lukashenka of Belarus, was re-elected amid police brutality
and heavy support from Moscow. Now, NEWSWEEK has learned, the European
Court of Human Rights (already reviewing hundreds of other human-rights
complaints concerning Russia) has fast-tracked a complaint by the
former Yukos Oil oligarch Mikhail Khodorkovsky, jailed on charges
of tax evasion and fraud after he challenged Putin politically. Soon
European judges will have their say on the fairness of a case that,
to many, has come to symbolize the Kremlin’s abuse of power.

Nowhere has the shift been sharper than in America. A tipping
point came late last month, when the Pentagon claimed that Russia’s
ambassador to Iraq had passed U.S. war plans to Saddam Hussein on
the eve of the invasion. That sparked a chorus of denunciations from
Congress. “They’ve endangered American lives,” thundered Sen. Edward
Kennedy. “I think you’d have to rethink whether we’re going to the
G8 conference.” More, the news set off a mini-avalanche of criticism
of Russia’s sins, from Putin’s steady repression of civil society at
home to his support of obnoxious dictators in Russia’s near abroad.

The new thinking is clearly set out in the White House’s latest
national-security strategy, issued last month. Washington’s principal
foreign policy objective, the paper said, was now the “support of
democratic movements and institutions around the world.” And U.S.

Under-Secretary of State Nicholas Burns didn’t mince words, either,
when he spoke of exactly which regions of the world Washington has in
mind. The United States would make a point of “encouraging democracy
and withstanding oppression in Central Asia and the Caucasus,” said
Burns, as well as urging “Ukraine and Georgia to work toward ties
with NATO and the EU.” In the U.S. view, it seems, Russia has become
a major obstacle to America’s geostrategic interests.

What a change from 2000, when Bush famously looked into Putin’s
“soul” at a meeting in Slovenia and found a reliable partner. Putin
subsequently wasted little time engineering his vision of
“democracy”¡ªdismantling any sources of opposition, closing down
independent TV stations and scrapping elections for regional governors,
as well as waging a bloody war in Chechnya. But here’s the rub. Much of
Putin’s anti-democratic crackdown took place in his first term, when he
was still in good odor in Washington. So what’s changed? The answer,
says Alexei Arbatov, former chairman of the national Parliament’s
Defense Committee, is that “Russia is becoming more independent in
its foreign policy; it’s becoming more actively assertive in the
former Soviet Union.”

>From the Kremlin’s point of view, the “rethink” of Russian relations
is sheer hypocrisy, sparked by perceptions that Russia is crossing
U.S. interests. It began, perhaps, with the Kremlin’s opposition to
a U.S. war in Iraq. It grew with the ongoing nuclear confrontation
with Iran. More recently, when Moscow invited Hamas representatives
to Russia in the wake of their election victory, Washington complained
that the Kremlin was abetting terrorism. “From now on the main criteria
in the relationship between the United States and other countries will
be their conformity to American notions of democracy,” a spokesman
for Russia’s Foreign ministry said in an indignant rebuttal. And
indeed, why shouldn’t Russia pursue independent policies, its elites
ask. After the mess the United States has made in Iraq, is Moscow
supposed to stand idly by as, for example, Washington puts pressure
on Tehran and the Palestinians?

For all the hoopla surrounding the G8, and whether Russia should be
considered a member in good standing, Moscow has ready and often
reasonable answers to most of the charges against it. Clearly,
democracy is in retreat under Putin, much as he tries to deny it. Yet
it is also true that the Russian president has not been alone. His
predecessor, Boris Yeltsin, long Washington’s darling, was no slouch
in browbeating practically all of Russia’s media into supporting him
when he was up for re-election in 1996. Yet when Putin did the same
in 2004, the U.S. NGO Freedom House downgraded Russia’s status from
“partially free” to “unfree.” (U.S. allies Jordan, Kuwait and Yemen,
however, remained “partially free.”) By the same token, Russia has
been condemned in Europe and the United States for intriguing in its
near abroad, from meddling in Ukraine’s 2004 elections to backing
repressive regimes from Belarus to Uzbekistan. Yet here, too, not
only did Yeltsin support Lukashenka, but he also sponsored separatist
wars in Abkhazia, Transdnistr, South Ossetia and Nagorno-Karabakh¡ª
specifically to punish breakaway republics for disloyalty to Moscow.

Putin has rightly been tarred with Chechnya, but he inherited that
war from none other than Boris Yeltsin.

Perhaps nothing symbolizes Russia’s new anti-democratic era more
than the Khodorkovsky affair. Seen from the West, it’s the case of a
modern, reform-minded businessman cum dissident taken down by jealous
bureaucrats threatened by his power. The charges against him¡ªfrom
tax evasion to fraud and money-laundering¡ªhave been dismissed
as exaggerated if not trumped up. But while there’s little doubt
that the decision to prosecute Khodorkovsky was indeed politically
motivated, the lesser-known truth is that the case against him was
also deserved. As the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg
prepares to hear a complaint by the oligarch’s lawyers that the state
“persecuted” their client, they would do well to heed such attorneys
as Peter Clateman, a lawyer for Renaissance Capital in Moscow who
has been following the case closely. As he tells it, the prosecutors’
case was not only well put together but proved its claims beyond any
reasonable doubt. “Khodorkovsky is guilty as charged,” he says. The
Yukos magnate went to extraordinary lengths to evade Russian laws
and bilk the country of hundreds of millions (if not billions) of
dollars. “You can’t prevent a country from enforcing its own laws,”
says Clateman. Indeed, even the CIA listed Khodorkovsky’s Menatep
Bank as one of Russia’s most criminal in the late 1990s.

Now come other flaps. In late March Putin accused Washington of
“artificially pushing back” Russian accession to the World Trade
Organization. “We have received a list of questions from our American
colleagues requiring additional agreement which we considered settled
long ago,” complained Putin. And he has a point. Russia’s the only
major economy outside the 149-member WTO, and it has been trying to
gain admission for 13 years. Washington says Russia needs to open up
its banking sector and cut down on DVD piracy. Yet WTO member China
has stricter controls on foreign banks and, admits Dan Glickman,
president of the Motion Picture Association of America, pirates more
DVDs. As if to add insult to injury, Ukraine, a major intellectual
property infringer, is on the verge of WTO membership, thanks to U.S.
support.

It remains to be seen how reports that Russia’s ambassador to
Baghdad, Vladimir Titorenko, passed sensitive war intelligence
to Iraqi officials will play out. Russian officials say they have
nothing to hide. “It was no secret that we maintained diplomatic
relations right up to the end,” says one Russian diplomat in Moscow,
speaking on background. “In the framework of those relations, there
were extensive briefings and exchanges of analysis.” Both the Kremlin
and the Bush administration seem determined to keep such tensions
from escalating. But there’s no mistaking the chill in the air. A
recent report by the influential Council on Foreign Relations in
New York urges “the democratic members of the G8, including the
United States,” to “protect the credibility of the organization” by
“effectively reviving the G7 within the G8.” The purpose: to “convince
Russia’s leaders that ground that has been won can also be lost.”

Is Russia’s membership in the Western club really so precarious? Of
course not. President Bush, for one, hasn’t even flirted with the idea
of not going to St Petersburg. But Russia-baiting is a dangerous
game, even so, for it risks alienating the West’s main ally in
Russia¡ªPutin himself. For all his faults, he is a modernizer and
far more benignly disposed toward Europe and the United States than
most in the Kremlin¡ªor the Russian population. “Being valued by the
West is very important to Putin,” says Arbatov. “He considers Russia
a great Western power¡ªthat’s the basis of his world view. Excluding
him would be a personal insult, like spitting in his face.” As if
sensing that danger, Bush tried to tone down the rhetoric: “I still
think Russia understands that it’s in her interest to be West, to work
with the West, and to act in concert with the West.” Fair enough. But
having to say so only testifies to how wide the divide has grown.

–Boundary_(ID_6LOFC0GOkJ1ntXZ8sos5Rg)–

Azerbaijan is Ready to Negotiate with Karabakh …

AZERBAIJAN IS READY TO NEGOTIATE WITH KARABAKH…

A1+
[04:19 pm] 31 March, 2006

“The Azeri side is ready to negotiate with the Armenian community of
the Nagorno Karabakh only if they recognize themselves as citizens
of Azerbaijan”, the Azeri Foreign Minister Elmar Mamedyarov announced
today.

According to the latter, the negotiations with the Armenian community
of Nagorno Karabakh will be possible if Armenia withdraws from
the negotiation process and the Armenians of Karabakh accept the
territorial integrity of Azerbaijan. “But I am afraid Armenia does
not want Azerbaijan to directly negotiate with the Armenian community
of Karabakh”, Mamedyarov said.

The Azeri Foreign Minister also mentioned that if there is not progress
in the peaceful settlement of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict, Azerbaijan
will liberate its territories by force, “Regnum” agency reports.

TBILISI: Opinion Polls Show Wide Russian Public Support BreakawayReg

OPINION POLLS SHOW WIDE RUSSIAN PUBLIC SUPPORT BREAKAWAY REGIONS

Prime News
Mar 30 2006

Tbilisi. March 30 (Prime-News) – The opinion polls show that the
major part of the Russian population supports crave for independence
of the breakaway region in the CIS countries.

The corresponding opinion poll was conducted by the All-Russia Public
Opinion Research Centre in 46 regions, Russian mass media says.

According to it, 40% of respondents say that the Russian party must
render assistance to the de facto republics of South Ossetia, Abkhazia,
Nagorno-Karabakh and Prednestrovie in their struggle for independence.

23% of respondents simply agree with the opinion that all nations
must have right of self-determination and 26% speaks for return of
the breakaway territories within the original borders.

Richard Hovannisin Discusses Armenian Genocide At University Of Utah

RICHARD HOVANNISIN DISCUSSES ARMENIAN GENOCIDE AT UNIVERSITY OF UTAH

Noyan Tapan
Armenians Today
Mar 30 2006

SALT LAKE CITY, MARCH 30, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. The Turkish
government refuses to acknowledge the genocide committed against
the Armenians, said Richard Hovannisian, professor of Armenian
and near-eastern history at the University of California at Los
Angeles. According to Daily Utah Chronicle, Hovannisian commented
on the contemporary interpretations of the Armenian genocide at the
University of Utah Hinckley Institute of Politics on March 23.

Hovannisian’s talk focused on the scholarly debate over whether
the genocide was premeditated or a “crime of passion” that occurred
suddenly during the tense conditions of war. He expressed his opinion
that the elimination of the Armenians had been contemplated by
the Ottoman government before the outbreak of war, but that it was
wartime conditions that allowed it to turn a “final solution into
an accomplished fact.” The Ottoman Empire distrusted the Armenians,
in part because they were a tight-knit Christian ethnic group in
the middle of a mostly Muslim empire, Hovannisian said. “They were
an ethnic group seen as potentially troublesome to an authoritarian
state at war,” he said. No official government document specifically
outlining the Ottoman plan to eliminate Armenians has been found,
although there is overwhelming evidence that the massacres occurred,
he said. There may be a “smoking gun” somewhere in Turkish archives
proving that the Ottomans premeditated the Armenian genocide,
Hovannisian said, but the nation’s government does not provide
Western historians with access to those materials. He said there
are psychological reasons that Turkey refuses to admit the genocide
occurred. “They don’t want to believe that their grandparents could’ve
been murderers,” Hovannisian explained. “They also don’t want to
deal with the consequences of recognition, including contrition and
restitution.”

Oskanian:”Looking Back, I Cannot Say Where Armenia Would Be Without

OSKANIAN: “LOOKING BACK, I CANNOT SAY WHERE ARMENIA WOULD BE WITHOUT DIASPORA”

PanARMENIAN.Net
29.03.2006 00:39 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Since declaring independence Armenia made much
progress: US providing considerable assistance to Armenia, trade
privileges, equal military aid, progress in Armenian Genocide
recognition, clear perception of the geographic, historical
and economic limitation of Armenia by persons forming its public
opinion. Armenian FM Vartan Oskanian stated it when addressing a forum
on Armenian issues in Washington. He specifically noted, “Looking back,
I cannot say where Armenia would be today without the Diaspora. The
Diaspora can promote Armenia, which will a demonstration of its
dreams, values. The Armenian community of the US will contribute to
Armenia, which will be an ally of the United States. And we are friends
indeed. We are partners in fighting terror, non-proliferation of arms,
providing for regional security, rule of law, democratic and economic
freedom. We are not mere ideological partners, we share values America
is based on.” Speaking of the development of democracy in Armenia,
Oskanian said, “State building was different for Armenia than it was
to the US, as we had to break the previously functioning system and
to build a new one. Owing to that we welcome various US programs. We
also appreciate the fact of offering additional, targeted assistance
for holding normal elections in 2007 and 2008. However, democracy is
more than elections. Democratic institutions and processes are not an
ultimate aim. They are also a tool to form the necessary political and
economic atmosphere, which will result in a proportional growth. Thus,
democracy is a tool for development, just like development stimulates
democratization.”

Oskanian: Armenia And Armenian Diaspora Demand Recognition AndDenoun

OSKANIAN: ARMENIA AND ARMENIAN DIASPORA DEMAND RECOGNITION AND DENOUNCING EVENTS IN 1915

PanARMENIAN.Net
28.03.2006 20:03 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ If there were no events in 1915, there would have
been no concept of “Armenian Diaspora”, Armenian FM Vartan Oskanian
stated in an interview with Turkish Hyurriet newspaper. In his words,
Armenia and the Diaspora demand that the events in 1915 be recognized
and denounced. On the other hand, V. Oskanian added, the closing
of the borders and absence of relations between Yerevan and Ankara
deepens the gap between the two countries. “Thus Armenian and Turkish
peoples do not have an opportunity to replace old memories by new
ones. The Armenian Diaspora wishes the best to Armenia: establishment
of good relations with neighbors. We hope that the Turkish people
also wish to establish good relations with the neighboring country,”
the Armenian FM said.

New Job For Oleg Yesayan

NEW JOB FOR OLEG YESAYAN

Lragir.am
27 March 06

The former speaker of the NKR National Assembly will be appointed
ambassador of Armenia to Belarus, informed our source, adding that
prior to this Oleg Yesayan had been offered the position of the
executive manager of Armenia Fund. But Oleg Yesayan declined. Oleg
Yesayan’s wife is from Belarus, probably therefore Oleg Yesayan
decided to live part of his family life in his wife’s native country.

In 2005 Oleg Yesayan moved to Armenia from Karabakh and was appointed
president of the Stock Commission, but the commission was dissolved
in several months, for its functions are further performed by the
Central Bank. In this sense the government morally owes to Oleg
Yesayan. Nevertheless, it should be noted that the dissolution of
the Stock Commission was already known at the time of his appointment.

Armenian Figure Skaters Have To Stop Performing In World Championshi

ARMENIAN FIGURE SKATERS HAVE TO STOP PERFORMING IN WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP

Noyan Tapan
Mar 27 2006

CALGARY, MARCH 27, NOYAN TAPAN. A regular World Figure Skating
Championship was held in the Canadian city of Calgary. Representatives
of Armenia Anastasia Grebyonkina and Vazgen Azroyan also took part
in the championship. The Armenian figure skaters took the 25th place
(among 30 pairs) in the compulsory program of ice dancing. But then
they had to stop performing as Grebyonkina had injured her leg. Albena
Denkova and Maxim Stavinski (Bulgaria) became world champions in the
competitions of ice dancing.

An Evocative Tour Of All That Is Istanbul

AN EVOCATIVE TOUR OF ALL THAT IS ISTANBUL
By Keith Monroe

The Virginian-Pilot(Norfolk, VA.)
March 19, 2006 Sunday
The Virginian-Pilot Edition

ISTANBUL Memories and the City
ORHAN PAMUK
Knopf. 373 pp. $26.95.

SOME WRITERS flee home – Hemingway, Shakespeare, Zola. Others stay
home and cultivate their own little patch – Faulkner and Austen.

Orhan Pamuk is one of the latter. He grew up in the family’s Pamuk
Apartments where a grandmother or uncle was only a flight of stairs
away. Nearing 60, he still lives in the Pamuk Apartments.

Such rootedness can smack of the ingrown – Dickinson in Amherst,
Flaubert in provincial Rouen. But Pamuk inhabits a city so fascinating
and multifarious, it hardly seems eccentric to burrow deep.

This book begins at the beginning, and few writers have ever captured
the hothouse of childhood so well. Pamuk’s recollections are vivid
and deeply felt, and only gradually does he iris out from his family
– where a beloved mother feuds with a ne’er-do-well father who is
squandering the family fortune through ill-conceived business ventures.

As Pamuk learns about a wider world, we learn with him about his
adored city, often through the works of those who depicted it: The 18th
century German artist Memling, the French writers Nerval and Flaubert
and four melancholy Turks whom he counts as spiritual guides – Kemal,
Kocu, Hisar, and Tanipar.

This mixture of Western and Turkish influences is appropriate
in a Turkish writer who was raised as an unbelieving Muslim in a
westernized, bourgeois family. He observes of his Turkish artistic
forebears: “After long deliberation they found an important and
authentic subject, the decline and fall of the great empire into
which they were born.”

Pamuk himself was born a half century or more after these men,
in 1952. He has seen the crumbling city of his youth (population 1
million) metastasize into a sprawling 10-million-person megalopolis.

He mourns the replacement of much dilapidated ancient beauty with
even more dilapidated modern ugliness.

He could undoubtedly say a good deal about the decline of comity
as well in a city that has replaced habitual melancholy with rising
militancy. Pamuk was threatened with jail in 2005 for discussing the
brutal treatment of Armenians by Turks a century ago. But this book
stops long before the present.

In fact, it ends around 1970, with Pamuk as a lackadaisical student
of architecture who also paints. His distraught mother fears he’ll
try to make a living as an artist. “In a country as poor as ours,
around so many weak, defeated, semiliterate people, to have the sort
of life you deserve … you have to be rich.”

To which, with the comical, cocksure obliviousness of youth, he offers
Mom this reassurance: “I don’t want to be an artist. I’m going to be
a writer.”

It’s not exactly Joyce’s megalomaniac boast that he will forge the
uncreated conscience of his race in the smithy of his soul, but it
does show that “Istanbul’s” submerged theme is “A Portrait of the
Young Artist Discovering his Vocation.”

Since Pamuk is Turkey’s leading novelist and on the Nobel short list,
it seems to have worked out. Since the tale of his entire adulthood and
working life remains to be told, it also suggests that this luminous
book is only the first volume of memoirs we might expect >From him.

Almost half of the book’s page count is devoted to dozens of
astonishing photos by Ara Guler. He deserves to be regarded as the
Eugene Atget of Istanbul, and his cityscapes alone are worth the
price of admission.

They help make this book wonderfully evocative of a unique place –
part “Arabian Nights,” part Third World trash heap, part first world
capital.

* Keith Monroe lives in Greensboro, N.C.