President Kocharian received UN Secretary General’s…

PRESIDENT KOCHARIAN RECEIVES UN SECRETARY GENERAL’S ADVISOR ON GENOCIDE PREVENTION ISSUES

Armenpress

YEREVAN, APRIL 20, ARMENPRESS: President Robert Kocharian received
today Juan Mendez, a special advisor to UN Secretary General on
genocide prevention issues.

Kocharian’s press office quoted Mendez as saying that his participation
in an international conference in Yerevan dedicated to the 90-th
anniversary of the Armenian genocide is evidence of a great desire
to understand and assess what happened to the Armenian nation at the
beginning of the 19-th century. He said people’s memory is a good
assistant in this issue enabling the international community to fully
explain the crime.

President Kocharian noted that eyewitnesses of the genocide never
questioned its essence and “now the Armenian people are refreshing
the international community’s memory.”

Kocharian thanked Juan Mendeza for participation in the conference
noting that Armenian continues to expect the international community
to give a just assessment to the Armenian genocide.

Armenian president off to Paris on working visit

Armenian president off to Paris on working visit

Mediamax news agency
20 Apr 05

Yerevan, 20 April: Armenian President Robert Kocharyan today left
for Paris on a working visit, during which he is to meet his French
counterpart Jacques Chirac and the chairmen of both chambers of the
French parliament.

On 23 April, Robert Kocharyan will return to Yerevan, the presidential
press service told Mediamax today.

Application Deadlines for Travel Fellowships to Armenia Approaching

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Linda Yepoyan
April 19, 2005
Phone: 610-642-6633
[email protected]

APPLICATION DEADLINES FOR TRAVEL FELLOWSHIPS TO ARMENIA APPROACHING

Following its inaugural success in 2004, Birthright Armenia is
currently ramping up for another summer filled with educational
activities in Armenia for diasporan youth worldwide. Birthright
Armenia is planning a very rich and exciting summer calendar of
support services for the eligible volunteers it will be sponsoring.
This sponsorship is available to any young diasporan, 18-32 years old,
who is traveling to Armenia with one of 24 different youth-oriented
programs, and is willing to meet a minimum threshold of an eight-week
stay.

Birthright’s sponsorship includes weekly forums and excursions,
Armenian language instruction and united “havak” sessions at no cost
to participants, plus reimbursement of each volunteer’s roundtrip
airfare to Armenia, all in exchange for an eight week commitment of
community service in the Homeland.

>>From day one, Birthright Armenia’s goal was not only to support
existing organizations offering youth programs in Armenia, but also
to encourage the creation of new programs, in order to increase
the numbers of youth experiencing the Homeland for work and study
opportunities. Already from the original seven programs that were part
of the inaugural year of Birthright Armenia, the number of programs
has grown to 24.

“We generated a lot of publicity this past winter for all the
youth-oriented programs currently available in Armenia, and raised
young people’s consciousness in terms of better understanding the
importance and timeliness of their active involvement in the Homeland,”
says Linda Yepoyan, executive director of Birthright Armenia. “We’ve
already received applications from diasporan youth in Australia,
Canada, England, France and the U.S., who want to be a part of the
movement to Armenia this summer,” she added.

A list of all organizations offering youth oriented programs in Armenia
is available at Each
organization has its own eligibility criteria, application procedures
and deadlines, and associated costs, all of which are listed in
summary form on the Birthright Armenia site. Once accepted into one
of the programs on the list, volunteers can then apply to Birthright
Armenia to become eligible for a travel fellowship, which constitutes
a reimbursement of their roundtrip airfare once they have successfully
completed their program.

For anyone interested in applying for a travel fellowship from
Birthright Armenia, applications must be received by the May 15,
2005 deadline. Applications are currently being accepted by email,
fax or by mail.

All students who are applying to the California State University
Fresno (CSUF) study abroad program at Yerevan State University
are also eligible for travel fellowships from Birthright Armenia.
For this maiden program, scheduled to launch in September, there is
a deadline for applications of June 1, 2005.

For those interested in learning more about Birthright Armenia, please
visit or email: [email protected].

# # #

http://www.birthrightarmenia.org/opps.html.
www.birthrightarmenia.org

‘Armenians Killed 523 Thousand Turks In 1910-1922’

‘ARMENIANS KILLED 523 THOUSAND TURKS IN 1910-1922’

AZG Armenian Daily #070, 20/04/2005

Armenian Genocide

Turks Panicking

The State Archive of Turkey published last week “the list of more than
523 thousand Turks that were killed in Turkey by Armenians between
1910-1922”. Besides the Turkish printed media, American influential
The New York Times also posted this information in its April 17 issue.

Turk journalist Sebnum Arsun wrote: “Turkey fears that the 90th
anniversary of violence that the Armenians and their supporters are
planning to mark on April 24 will spur anti-Turkish sentiments”.

This is not the first time that the Turks hold forth with forgery,
and a Turkish historian, Yusuf Halacoglu, had earlier conducted a
“study”. The fraud missed the target and Ankara forgot it.

Reactions

Libération , France
15 avril 2005

Réactions

Plusieurs organisations arméniennes françaises dénoncent la
proposition d’Ankara. “C’est une tentative de diversion qui, sous
l’apparence d’ouverture, rĂ©affirme la nĂ©gation du gĂ©nocide”, dit
Harout Mardirossian, président du Comité de défense de la cause
arménienne.

“L’ONU et l’Europarlement ont reconnu le gĂ©nocide armĂ©nien. Toute
mise en cause de ces conclusions s’apparente Ă  une dĂ©marche
nĂ©gationniste”, affirme Mourad Papazian, prĂ©sident du Parti
socialiste arménien.

Armenians march toward recognition

Burbank Leader
April 16 2005

Armenians march toward recognition

Students and young adults travel to Fresno to join 215-mile walk that
aims to raise awareness of the Armenian Genocide.
By Jackson Bell, The Leader

When Shaghik Aghakhani first asked her parents if she could join a
symbolic march that spotlights the Armenian Genocide’s anniversary,
they didn’t want her walking several miles a day through the Central
Valley.

But for the Burbank 17-year-old, being a part of the event was just
too important to back down. So one day she sat her parents down and
explained just how much it meant for her to be part of the 19-day,
215-mile trek from Fresno to Sacramento.

Though still worried about her safety, her parents reluctantly agreed
to let her go, Shaghik said.

“I had to do this because I didn’t know in what other way I could
help the Armenian community,” she said. “I have to relieve the pains
of not getting recognition by walking.

“I hope our government takes the side of human rights and
acknowledges what happened, because I don’t want something like the
Armenian Genocide to ever happen again.”

Shaghik was among more than 40 area teens and young adults of
Armenian descent who boarded rental vans Friday afternoon in Glendale
and drove north of Fresno to join others already participating in the
“March for Humanity.”

The march’s aim is to raise awareness of the Armenian Genocide on the
eve of its 90th anniversary and push the United States and Turkish
governments to recognize the mass slayings, said Vicken Sosikian,
director of the event.

More than 1.5 million Armenians were killed in what many consider the
first genocide of the 20th century.

“The fact is that from 1915 to 1921, our forefathers were sent into
forced marches,” said Sosikian, 25, of Glendale. “And by us marching,
we want to show our solidarity for them.”

A core group of 14 people began marching on April 2 and plan to reach
the state Capitol on Thursday.

Scores of others have come and gone according to their schedules —
many of them joining on weekends.

Sosikian expects more than 100 people from across California to join
this weekend.

Armed with sleeping bags and little else, marchers have walked about
15 miles a day — regardless of the weather — and slept on church
floors at night. The Armenian Relief Society provides meals, and vans
keep pace to scout road conditions and provide water and first aid.

The event will culminate Thursday with “Rally for Humanity,” when the
marchers reach the Capitol to thank state legislators for recognizing
the genocide and to also further promote their cause, Sosikian said.

“We want to express that repercussions exist when such a criminal
action happens, and reparations must be made by those who have done
wrong,” he said. “The fact that the Turkish government does not
recognize this is possibly why the world has seen so many genocidal
crimes, from Cambodia to Rwanda.”

Narbeh Aboolian, who walked in the march last weekend and set out
again Friday, said this was the most meaningful thing he has ever
done.

“It has changed me to know that I’m doing something big and getting
our message across to the whole world, not just California,” the
18-year-old Hoover High School student said.

Narah Saghatelian, 19, of Glendale was also with the group that
headed off Friday. She will come home Sunday but plans to return
Thursday for the rally.

“The fact that I’m part of something that is trying to get the
genocide recognized is gratifying,” said Saghatelian, a Glendale
Community College student.

* JACKSON BELL covers public safety and courts. He may be reached at
(818) 637-3232 or by e-mail at jackson.belllatimes.com.

Waiting for the denial to end

Ha’aretz, Israel
April 17 2005

Waiting for the denial to end

By Dalia Shehori

How long will Turkey continue to deny the Armenian genocide, and why
is Israel helping it?

Next week marks the 90th anniversary of the Armenian genocide in
Turkey. On April 24, 1915, some 300 Armenian leaders – authors,
intellectuals and professionals – were arrested in Constantinople,
deported and eventually exterminated. On that day, 5,000 more
Armenians were murdered in the capital of the Ottoman empire. In the
following years, 1.5 million of the 2.5 million Armenians living in
Turkey were liquidated.

Although the Turkish prime minister acknowledged recently the need to
reexamine the issue, Turkey’s official stand has not changed. It
persists in stating that there was no genocide.

The denial angers the Armenians. Not only is it not true, they argue,
but it does not enable them to grieve for the extermination of their
people. As long as the Turks deny it, the Armenians say, we must
devote all our resources to convince the world that genocide did take
place in the years 1915-1918, and the Ottoman Empire and its heir,
the Turkish government, bear the blame.

Every year, as April 24 approaches, the Turkish government tensely
checks various parliaments in the world for resolutions recognizing
the Armenian genocide. If such a decision is made, Turkey exerts
steamroller pressure on the adopting state to change it.

Two years ago a member of the Armenian community in Israel, Naomi
Nalbandian, was chosen to light a torch on Mount Herzl on Memorial
Day as the representative of the rehabilitation ward of Hadassah
Hospital on Mount Scopus. She was forced – following the Turkish
government’s insistent demand to the Foreign Ministry – to change the
text she intended to read at the ceremony. Instead of “third
generation of survivors of the Armenian holocaust, which took place
in 1915” in the original text, Nalbandian presented herself as
“daughter of the long-suffering Armenian nation.” Incidentally, the
use of the word “holocaust” in the Armenian context raises objections
in another quarter – Yad Vashem and other Jewish organizations object
to it, wishing to preserve the Holocaust as a unique term to mark the
Nazi liquidation of the Jews.

Expulsion and murder

The Turks’ denial of the genocide is the focal point of a study day
entitled “Genocide in the 20th century – 90 years to the Armenian
genocide,” held at Jerusalem’s Van Leer Institute 10 days ago with
the participation of Israeli and Armenian historians. One of the
participants was Dr. Ara Sarafian, head of the Gomidas Institute in
London, which promotes and disseminates research, scholarship and
analysis of the modern Armenian experience. Sarafian brought books
published last year at the institute’s initiative about the Armenian
genocide, including “Ambassador Morgenthau’s Story,” based on the
diaries of Henry Morgenthau, the American ambassador to Turkey from
1913-1916. Another book was the memoirs of Abram I. Elkus, who
succeeded Morgenthau in the years 1916 and 1917.

“Ambassador Morgenthau’s Story” was first published in 1918, but
Sarafian says, “We find ourselves having to prove that the genocide
took place, so we published again a series of documents and memoirs.
Quoting archival material is not enough. The denial will persist.
Therefore it is necessary to publish memoirs, diaries, letters and
documents systematically.”

Sarafian preferred to focus on American documents because they are in
English and accessible to all. The United States was not involved in
World War II until April 1917; consequently Americans – consuls,
missionaries and citizens – were present at various places where
Armenians were murdered and briefed the State Department regularly.
At the end of 1915 they served as the only authorized source of
information in the Western world on the Armenian genocide.

Sarafian cites, for example, the reports of American consul Leslie
Davis on the gathering, deportation and extermination of Armenians –
men, women and children – in the Harput area in central Turkey. He
says these deportations were systematic. “The state officials had a
list of names. They would read out your name, put you in a caravan
and deport you. Then came the reports about the murder of these
people. Consul Davis personally investigated a few places where the
murder was committed and reported to the State Department … he
described the valleys where the deportees were taken and murdered. He
talks of thousands of people and says things like: `I knew there were
several caravans in a certain valley, because the corpses were in
various stages of rot.'”

Sarafian says that although all the murder victims’ personal effects
had been taken from them before their murder, Davis knew they were
Armenian because their personal papers were found at the murder site.

Ambassador Morgenthau “was the first person to notice that what
happened at Harput was happening in other places throughout the
empire…if you read his diaries after April 1915, you will see that
the word `Armenian’ becomes the most commonly used noun. He was
obsessive about this issue. As he related in a private letter to his
son, Henry Morgenthau Jr., `Ottoman Armenians were like the people of
Israel in captivity, though they did not have a Moses to lead them
out of their predicament.’ This is very moving. There is a place in
our heart for Morgenthau as a righteous non-Armenian, who did much to
save Armenians.”

Morgenthau also wrote his son that the Turkish government was using
the fact that there was a state of war to wipe out the Armenian
people.

Together with the diaries of the American diplomats, Sarafian says
there is no substitute for the testimonies of Armenian survivors
“because they were there, they were the victims, and they are very
articulate.”

These testimonies are written in Armenian, and it is necessary to
publish at least some of them in English to answer the skeptics who
ask how Morgenthau could have known what was happening, if he was
based in Constantinople. We must publish everything possible, says
Sarafian, for “if we give the Turks a chance to get away not merely
with the slaughter but with the denial – it would serve as a
precedent for future denials … it’s very troubling that a state
with a population of 60 million refuses to confront history and make
the required concession to solve this issue once and for all.”

Israel is still denying

Professor Yair Auon of the Open University, author of the recently
published “The Banality of Denial: Israel and the Armenian Genocide,”
expressed disappointment that Israel, as a state that represents the
Holocaust survivors and is supposed to be more sensitive than other
countries to the suffering of other nations, does not recognize the
Armenian genocide.

“Israel’s approach to other nations’ genocide, and especially the
Armenian genocide, harms our struggle to make the Holocaust part of
the collective memory of human society. While we help Turkey deny the
genocide – and Israel has regrettably become Turkey’s staunchest aide
in its denial policy – we are in fact desecrating the Holocaust’s
memory,” he says.

Auron and Yona Weitz, a Hebrew University anthropologist, quoted
Shimon Peres’ statements about the Armenian genocide. In 2001, when
he was foreign minister, Peres told Turkish Daily News that, “It is a
tragedy what the Armenians went through, but not a genocide.” Auron
said Peres’ position reflects Israel’s official stand today as well.
He added that the Education Ministry has been saying since 1994 that
the Armenian genocide would be taught in schools “this year or next
year” but in the schoolbooks it is referred to as a “tragedy,”
“pogroms,” “slaughter” – and not a genocide. Even university students
hardly know anything about the Armenian genocide.

Auron spoke of Yossi Sarid’s abortive effort to legitimize the
Armenian genocide when he was education minister. Five years ago, on
the 85th anniversary of the genocide, Sarid was invited to speak in
the Armenian church in the Old City. Sarid affirmed the genocide and
concluded his statement with a promise to include the Armenian
genocide in Israel’s secondary school history curriculum. But Ehud
Barak’s government hastened to express reservations about his
statement and explain to the Turks that Sarid was merely expressing
his own opinion.

Auron also criticized Israeli academia, noting that senior members of
it deny that a genocide took place and even doubt the reliability of
Morgenthau’s diaries. “They use the Turkish denial literature as
though it were the only literature dealing with the Armenian
genocide, and on that basis they claim there is no evidence that
Morgenthau’s diaries are not forged,” he said.

One of the Armenian genocide’s prominent deniers is Islam researcher
Professor Bernard Lewis. Lewis says the Armenians suffered terrible
massacres, but these were not committed as a result of a deliberate,
preconceived decision of the Ottoman government. In an interview with
the American Web site Book TV, Lewis said about three years ago:
“What happened to the Armenians was the result of a massive Armenian
armed rebellion against the Turks, which began even before war broke
out, and continued on a larger scale. Great numbers of Armenians,
including members of the armed forces, deserted, crossed the frontier
and joined the Russian forces invading Turkey. Armenian rebels
actually seized the city of Van and held it for a while, intending to
hand it over to the invaders. There was guerrilla warfare all over
Anatolia.”

He says there is proof that the Turkish government planned to deport
the Armenians from the sensitive areas but “no evidence of a decision
to massacre.” On the contrary, there is evidence of an unsuccessful
attempt to prevent it. He says appalling massacres were committed by
irregular soldiers and local villagers, who were reacting to what had
been done to them. Claiming that the numbers of Armenian dead are
uncertain, he acknowledged that 1 million deaths were likely.

Historian Dr. Claude Mutafian of the University of Paris said Turkey
is not willing to recognize the Armenian genocide because it was
based on ethnic cleansing, not only of the Armenians, but also of
other groups. Therefore it has been trying to rewrite history since
Ataturk’s days and claim that only Turks have lived in Turkey since
the beginning of time. Today Turkey is fighting for this more
intensely than ever because it wants to join the European Union, “and
this provides us with a new weapon to force the Turks to accept
history the way it was.”

BAKU: EU-Azerbaijan parliament coop committee’s sitting due in Baku

AzerTag, Azerbaijan
April 15 2005

EU-AZERBAIJAN: PARLIAMENT COOPERATION COMMITTEE’S SITTING DUE IN BAKU

[April 15, 2005, 20:56:55]

The European Union-Azerbaijan Parliament Cooperation Committee is to
hold a sitting in Baku on April 18-21, press service of Milli Majlis
said.

The action, co-chairs of which are head of the human rights standing
committee of Azerbaijan Parliament Sirus Tebrizli and chairperson of
the EU environment, health and food safety standing committee Ms.
Maria Ishler Beguin, discussed are expected state of cooperation
between the European Union and Azerbaijan, the Armenian-Azerbaijan,
Nagorno Karabakh conflict, human rights in Azerbaijan, freedom of
speech and expression, democratic development, preparation for the
forthcoming parliamentary elections in November 2005, regional
cooperation and other questions.

During the visit, members of the EU delegation will meet with
President of the Azerbaijan Republic, Speaker of Azerbaijan
Parliament, foreign minister and Ombudsman of the Republic.

Orange County: Hambarian lawyer tries to discredit accusers

Orange County Register, CA
April 15 2005

Hambarian lawyer tries to discredit accusers

Geragos, as fraud trial opens, says ex-trash king cut Orange good
deals.

By JIT FONG CHIN
The Orange County Register

SANTA ANA – Former trash-company executive Jeffrey Hambarian
negotiated good deals for the city of Orange and was wrongly accused
of crime by unreliable people, his attorney told jurors Thursday.

Defense attorney Mark Geragos, the high-profile lawyer whose clients
have included Scott Peterson and Winona Ryder, gave a 50-minute
opening statement that strove to improve Hambarian’s image by
comparing him to his parents, Sam and Alyce Hambarian.

Jurors then started listening to 20 hours of taped testimony from Pat
Augimeri, a key witness who apparently cashed hundreds of checks for
Hambarian and agreed that their interaction was “shady.”

Hambarian’s late father, Sam, was an Orange County pioneer who built
a trash empire over 45 years on the values of hard work and
frugality, the defense said.

“There’s an old Armenian expression: ‘Falls out of your father’s
nose.’ And Jeff was just like his dad, just like his dad,” Geragos
said.

Hambarian, arrested in 1998, is accused of defrauding Orange of $4.3
million by underreporting revenue and inflating costs when he was an
executive at Orange Disposal Service and Orange Resource Recovery
Systems.

He has pleaded not guilty to 57 charges, including fraud, money
laundering and commercial bribery.

Sam Hambarian had three passions: garbage, the Angels and his family,
Geragos told 12 jurors and six alternates.

The business failed to excite his two older sons, Michael and Donald.
But Jeffrey Hambarian latched on and started helping his parents at
age 13 or 14, Geragos said.

Sam Hambarian did business with the city on a handshake. Even when
contracts were later written, the terms were “always subject to
dispute,” Geragos said.

Over several decades, the Hambarians’ business grew to extend outside
Orange.

Phil Pierce, an Orange street division manager who “didn’t like the
fact that Sam was getting progressively wealthier,” started accusing
the Hambarians of not sending all recyclables revenue to Orange, even
though the family also collected recyclables from outside the city,
Geragos said.

Geragos said Hambarian might have negotiated a lower fee for dumping
trash with BKK Landfill in West Covina than what he charged Orange,
but that was simply good business. Orange residents still paid less
than if Hambarian had used an Orange County landfill, Geragos said.

The defense also denied that Hambarian diverted money to dummy
accounts. Sam and Alyce Hambarian knew about the accounts, and urged
their son to set aside money in a trust for their grandson. Some
money was used to buy Alyce Hambarian jewelry – “her one
extravagance,” Geragos said.

Several accusers changed their testimonies and agreed to support the
prosecution because they were frightened, Geragos said.

After Hambarian resigned and the family businesses were sold to Waste
Management in 1999, city trash rates rose – proof of the benefits of
the Hambarians’ frugality, Geragos said.

Witness Pat Augimeri talked about how he cashed checks for Hambarian
at a bank and check-cashing stores owned by Augimeri and his
relatives. The interviews were taped in 2000, ahead of the trial
because of Augimeri’s poor health.

“He was taking money from his company and putting it in his pocket,
as far as I could see,” said Augimeri, then 87.

Augimeri said he drove from Huntington Park to meet Hambarian at
different locations in Orange County, where he would get into
Hambarian’s pickups to receive the checks.

Augimeri said he then left to cash the checks – sometimes endorsing
them with made-up names such as “Don Williams” and “Jack Adams” – and
returned the money to Hambarian, minus a 2 percent commission, on the
same day.

He was granted immunity from prosecution for his cooperation.

Turkey? No problem

Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, PA
April 13 2005

Turkey? No problem

By Graham Fuller
Thursday, April 14, 2005

Who lost Turkey? That’s the theme of a rash of articles in the U.S.
media over the past two months. Apparently, there’s a growing
consensus in Washington that our old ally has been gradually becoming
more anti-American.
In 2003, Turkey denied Washington the use of Turkish bases only
months before the war on Iraq began. Just recently, Defense Secretary
Donald Rumsfeld blamed Turkey’s noncooperation for many of the
problems today with Iraqi insurgents.

A number of critics have pointed to the rise of anti-American public
sentiment in Turkey over the past two years. The Marshall Fund found
that 82 percent of the Turkish public was hostile to the United
States, one of the highest figures anywhere, especially for a NATO
ally. The Islam-oriented government in Ankara has harshly criticized
close U.S. ally Israel for its occupation policies in the West Bank.
And Turkey does not concur with Washington’s efforts to pressure Iran
and Syria.

Although these events indeed represent a new Turkish reality, it
would be erroneous — indeed dangerous — to assume that Turkey’s
widespread opposition to many of the Bush administration’s policies
are symptomatic of a broader strategic hostility.

In reality, U.S. interests have been exceptionally well-served by
this Turkish government, which has brought broad democratic reforms
to the country as part of its explicit commitment to gain European
Union membership. Turkey has taken positive steps toward relieving
Kurdish dissatisfaction and has moved to improve relations with all
its neighbors, including longtime opponent Armenia. The economy is
moving forward, and inflation is way down.

The Turkish public, including those with no special desire for
Islamist policies, find the performance of this government to be
generally on the right track; politics have been more stable than at
any other time in the past decade. Most interesting, several of
Turkey’s Arab neighbors are paying attention to its experience in
producing a competent Islam-oriented government — one that can be
proudly independent yet democratic, reformist and a candidate for EU
membership. Nothing could be a more positive model for the rest of
the region.

Ankara no longer is automatically acquiescent to following the U.S.
lead, especially when it believes that U.S. policies run counter to
Turkish national interests. U.S. policy in Iraq, Iran and Syria is
seen by Turkey as adventuristic and needlessly destabilizing to
Turkish interests.

Right now, opposition to U.S. policies is the nearest thing to a
national consensus in Turkey. Major elements across the political
spectrum — Turkey’s strong secularists, nationalists, Kemalists and
leftists — are even more harshly critical of Washington than the
government of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

Efforts by Washington to intimidate a popular, representative Turkish
government or to bring it in line with U.S. government policies will
almost surely backfire. In the new world order, unilateralism has its
limits.

Turkey is not lost to us; we just need to take a more realistic view
of the limits of our own power, be sensitive to the risks of ignoring
other states’ nationalist feelings and interests, and adopt a
longer-term, more enlightened view of our own interests.

Turkey is doing fine.

Graham Fuller is a former chairman of the National Intelligence
Council at the CIA. His latest book is “The Future of Political
Islam.”