Mary Yovanovich Prefers "Big Genocide" Term

MARY YOVANOVICH PREFERS "BIG GENOCIDE" TERM

Panorama.am
20:39 11/07/2008

Mary Yovanovich, the US Candidate of Ambassador to Armenia answered to
Barrack Obama request using "Big Genocide" term when talking about the
mass crime conducted by the ottoman Empire in 1915-1923 by bringing as
an argument that this is how Armenians name it, writes radio "Liberty"
referring to Armenian Attorney Office in Washington.

To Obama’s questions Yovanovich gave distinct answers. She said that
in case she is appointed as the Ambassador to Armenia she will keep
the tradition of visiting the Monument of Genocide to commemorate the
victims. She said that in order to use mass crime it would be better
to use "Big Genocide" as most Armenians do to describe what was done
by Ottoman Empire.

Information Warfare Requires Constant Attacks

INFORMATION WARFARE REQUIRES CONSTANT ATTACKS
Anahit Yesayan

Hayots Ashkhar Daily
Published on July 10, 2008
Armenia

"Protecting oneself in the information warfare is already a defeat. No
protection is allowed in this war; it is necessary to launch attacks
all the time. The party which protects itself is defeated by 90
percent," HAYK DEMOYAN, Head of the Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute
is convinced.

"From the very first day of its formation, the Third Republic of
Armenia announced on the level of the country’s top figures that it is
ready to establish good-neighborly relations with Turkey. Moreover,
our country did not set any preconditions for establishing such
relations. In contrast to this, the Turkish side has always advanced
preconditions for establishing and regulating the diplomatic relations
with the Republic of Armenia.

The first and principal precondition advanced by the Turkish side
has a direct bearing on the Armenia-NKR-Azerbaijan relations. This
is simply unacceptable in the present-day international relations. It
is unacceptable because conducting foreign policy against the ethnic
background and establishing relations with a third country does
not absolutely correspond to the spirit of international relations
and international law. Let alone the fact of keeping the border
closed. Closing the border with any state is equivalent to a step
preceding the act of declaring war.

=0 A At present, Turkey certainly enjoys its strategic position and
the status of being a superpower in the region, thus trying to achieve
the desired result by way of using pressures against Armenia. And
what’s more, it is doing so considering not only its own interests
but also the interests of Azerbaijan, an ally country with which it
has ethnic commonalities.

That’s to say, by way of exerting pressure upon Armenia, Turkey
is trying to achieve two results: first for Turkey and then for
Azerbaijan.

In this respect, Armenia seems to be in an advantageous position
because we do not advance any precondition, expressing willingness
to establish all kinds of relations and negotiate around any
issue. However, considering the juncture of international relations, we
can say that the proposals of the Armenian side, which seem pragmatic
at first sight, do not always receive a positive response."

"In this context, how would you comment upon the President’s most
recent statement made in Moscow?"

"I believe many people have not read the text of the statement
and interpret it in their own way. This is very regrettable. The
President announced that we are ready to discuss any fact with the
neighboring state.

The discussion of any fact does not yet mean that the historical
fact of the Genocide is going to be discussed even if they set up a
committee. The fact itself is a fact whi ch has been proven.

I don’t think the country’s leader had such intention, as many people
would desire. And it is very regrettable that guided by the mentality
of kicking the ball into our goal we are trying to rejoice, without
ever thinking of doing the contrary."

"By making a proposal to set up a committee, Turkey is trying to make
an impression on the European structures that it is going to initiate
a joint discussion and propose a dialogue etc. What is Armenia’s
attitude in this context?"

"My first response was the following: it is necessary to carry out
activities based purely on information technologies and the methodology
of work. We leave aside all the emotive expressions saying this
country recognized the Genocide and the other called the fact into
question. Thus, we fall into a trap. It is the right time for us to
have professionals specialized in setting such traps.

This is called information warfare in which the weapon of the soldiers
is quite different and the military operations are carried out by the
use of quite different methods. It is necessary to establish this
kind of school, and it is commendable that in his meeting with the
officials of the National Security Service, the President struck the
direct nerve, stressing the importance of being the first to launch
attack in the information warfare with the neighboring state.

By the way, t he statement of the Armenian President was followed by
Mr. Aliev’s meeting with his country’s ambassadors who were given an
instruction to undertake offensive steps.

If the Turkish side undertakes the initiative by making proposals
constantly, the Armenian side may, in turn, initiate such proposals
too, previously having a good idea about the further steps.

In particular, the Armenian party may launch the attack by advancing
three initial arguments. First, we have hundred and thousand proofs
(by the way, not of Armenian origin) that confirm the fact of the
Genocide in a direct and indirect manner.

The second most important argument is that the Armenian Genocide
has now gained an international recognition. It is recognized by
countries, authoritative international organizations, highly-reputable
professionals specialized in Genocide studies and the International
Association of Genocide Studies, involving almost all the Genocide
study specialists of the world.

The third argument is that Turkey’s denial policy is currently in a
state of fiasco, i.e. it is totally crushed."

To be continued

Komitas Statue Unveiled In Quebec

KOMITAS STATUE UNVEILED IN QUEBEC

armradio.am
11.07.2008 11:09

His Eminence, Archbishop Khajag Hagopian, Prelate of the Armenian
Prelacy of Canada, joined the Armenian community in Quebec City for
the official unveiling of Komitas Vartabed’s bust.

The special ceremony was under the auspices of Mr. Jacques Langlois,
president of the Commission of the National Capital of Quebec and
Quebec City’s Mayor Régis Labeaume. On behalf of the Commission,
Mr. Denis Angers presented the biography of Komitas Vartabed and his
significance as a cultural titan and a proud representative of the
Armenian people.

Mr. Angers then invited Mr. Viken Afarian, president of Montreal’s
Armenian Community Centre, to speak on behalf of the Armenian people,
and was followed by Archbishop Hagopian’s blessing of the bust. His
Eminence was accompanied by Archbishop Souren Kataroyan and the
Prelacy’s Executive Council chairperson Dr. Jean Arakelian.

The statue, a gift from the Armenian National Committee of Quebec to
Quebec City, is located on l’Allée des poètes, rue D’Auteuil, and
its erection made possible thanks to the Agreement for the enhancement
of the National Capital between Quebec City and the Commission of
the National Capital of Quebec.

More than 300 Armenian community members, as well as representatives
of sister organizations, were present for this milestone, organized
as part of the summ er-long events celebrating the 400th anniversary
of Quebec City.

–Boundary_(ID_FiNvOUwqD8y3vp9IVfNQxQ)–

UNDP Supports Socially Disadvantaged Communities in Armavir Region

PRESS RELEASE
United Nations Development Programme / Armenia
14 Petros Adamyan St., Yerevan 0010
Contact: Mr. Hovhannes Sarajyan, Communications Associate
Tel: +37410 566 073
E-mail: [email protected]
Web site:

UNDP Supports Socially Disadvantaged Communities in Armavir Region

United Nations, Yerevan – On 9 July, 2008 Ms. Consuelo Vidal, the
United Nations Resident Coordinator / UN Development Programme (UNDP)
Resident Representative in Armenia visited Karakert, Shenik and
Yervandashat rural communities in south-western Armavir region to
monitor on-site the community-based development projects implemented by
UNDP Community Development Project in partnership with the Children of
Armenia Fund (COAF) and the USAID Global Development Alliance. These
villages have been in the focus of UNDP since 2005 as they are among the
most socially disadvantaged in the region, with a high rate of
unemployment and poor conditions or lack of major socio-economic
infrastructure.

In cooperation with the USAID Global Alliance and the COAF, UNDP
renovated secondary school #2 in Karakert community, including
installation of a new heating system, which improved the quality and
accessibility of secondary education for 750 children in Karakert
community. In 2006-07, the same partners undertook the full
reconstruction of the local Community Center, which offers 4,150
residents of Karakert and neighboring villages with services and leisure
activities, such as the community library, Internet club, leisure room
for chess, table tennis, and a performance hall with a capacity of 320
seats.

In Shenik community, UNDP, together with COAF and the USAID Global
Development Alliance, fully renovated the secondary school, which in
December 2007 opened its doors to 176 children and the staff.

In 2006 UNDP helped Yervandashat community to produce its 2006-08
development plan, which resulted in prioritizing the implementation of
several projects. At the end of 2007, UNDP in partnership with the COAF,
completed the renovation of the community’s 5-kilometer long potable
water network, which serves 750 households of the community supplying
them with clean water round-the-clock.
The installation of a dried fruit vacuum packaging workshop in
Yervandashat supported the revival of the local private sector and the
creation of seasonal jobs for the local residents. As a result, the
annual volume of dried fruit production over the last two years
increased by 20%.
With technical assistance and guidance from UNDP, Yervandashat
Development Center NGO was established in 2006. The Center, in addition
to many other activities, tries to integrate socially vulnerable groups
by involving them in business sector activities. It also publishes a
local periodical on a quarterly basis highlighting the daily life of the
community. Financing of the periodical is organized through the leasing
mechanism of the dried fruit packaging workshop project.

——————-
UNDP is on ground in 166 countries, working with them on their own
solutions to global and national development challenges. UNDP in Armenia
was established in 1993 and supports the Government of Armenia to reach
its own development priorities and the Millennium Development Goals by
2015.

http://www.undp.am
http://www.un.am

Armenia Must Speed Up Military Reforms To Be Ready For Possibly Dang

ARMENIA MUST SPEED UP MILITARY REFORMS TO BE READY FOR POSSIBLY DANGEROUS DEVELOPMENT OF RUSSIAN-AZERI RELATIONS: POLITICAL EXPERT

ArmInfo
2008-07-08 17:43:00

Armenia is still a dominating military force in the South Caucasus
but it must speed up its military reforms not so much because of
the growing military potential of Azerbaijan but mostly to be ready
for possibly dangerous development of Russian-Azeri relations,
says the expert of the Center for Strategic Analysis "Spectrum"
Richard Giragosian.

Armenia relies on Russia much too heavily. Meanwhile, the memorandum
signed during the last visit of Russian President Dmitry Medvedev
to Azerbaijan implies a possible change in Russia’s policy on the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. Russian-Azeri relations are obviously
improving. But it was the first time that Russia had shown so
clearly that it was changing its traditional, responsible policy on
Nagorno-Karabakh. This policy is good for Baku and must be a signal
for Yerevan and Stepanakert.

Armenia’s key strategic mistake is that it attaches much too high
importance to Russia. Armenia is inclined to overestimate its own
significance for Russia and Russia’s significance for itself. So,
Armenia must adopt a new policy with respect to Russia – a policy
that will make it Russia’s equal ally rather than a country serving
Moscow’s interests.

Armenia’s Participation In European Neighborhood Policy Not Endanger

ARMENIA’S PARTICIPATION IN EUROPEAN NEIGHBORHOOD POLICY NOT ENDANGERED

NOYAN TAPAN

Ju ly 8
YEREVAN

Possible use of sanctions by PACE to Armenia cannot have an impact on
Armenia’s participation in the EU European Neighborhood Program. Raul
de Lutzenberger, the Head of the European Commission delegation in
Armenia, stated at the July 8 press conference.

According to him, EU has signed a detailed actions plan with
Armenia for several years, and according to the agreement with
the RA authorities, EU-Armenia relations’ progress will depend on
program’s proper implementation. "I do not consider that the the
European Neighborhood Program is endangered in connection with the PACE
Resolution, and further development of our relations will depend on the
speed and success of implementation of the actions plan’s provisions,"
the head of the European Commission delegation said.

According to Serge Smessov, the Ambassador Extraordinary and
Plenipotentiary of France to RA, no great events are expected in the
region during the EU chairmanship of France, but it does not mean
that nothing will take place.

According to him, the Individual Actions Plan will be outlined more
concretely in the coming 6 months and will be implemented in two
stages, implementation of technical support and twinning programs. It
means that administration and organization in certain spheres will
be brought in line with European standards under the control of the
European commission.

As regards Turkey’s membership to EU, according to the Ambassador,
"no great events are expected here, either," as this process is rather
long. S.

Smessov also reminded to those present that France has some
reservations in the issue of Turkey’s membership to EU.

http://www.nt.am/news.php?shownews=115411

Binghamton University Professor Resigns Over Dispute On Armenian Gen

BINGHAMTON UNIVERSITY PROFESSOR RESIGNS OVER DISPUTE ON ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

PanARMENIAN.Net
07.07.2008 17:49 GMT+04:00

The issue that has roiled U.S.-Turkish relations in recent months "how
to characterize the mass killings of Armenians in 1915" has set off
a dispute over politics and academic freedom at an institute housed
at Georgetown University. Several board members of the Institute of
Turkish Studies have resigned this summer, protesting the ouster of a
board chairman who wrote that scholars should research, rather than
avoid, what he characterized as Armenian Genocide, The Washington
Post reports.

"Within weeks of writing about the matter in late 2006, Binghamton
University professor Donald Quataert resigned from the board of
Governors, saying the Turkish ambassador to the United States told
him he had angered some political leaders in Ankara and that they
had threatened to revoke the institute’s funding.

After a prominent association of Middle Eastern scholars learned
about it, they wrote a letter in May to the institute, the Turkish
prime minister and other leaders asking that Quataert be reinstated
and money for the institute be put in an irrevocable trust to avoid
political influence.

The ambassador of the Republic of Turkey, H.E. Nabi Sensoy, denied that
he had any role in Quataert’s resignation. In a written statement,
he said that claims that he urged Quataert to leave are unfounded
and misleading.

The dispute shows the tensions between money and scholarship, and
the impact language can have on historical understanding.

Hundreds of thousands of Armenians were killed when the Ottoman Empire
collapsed after World War I. Armenians and Turks bitterly disagree
over whether it was a campaign of genocide, or a civil war in which
many Turks were also killed," the edition says.

The Turkish studies institute, founded in 1983, is independent from
Georgetown University, but Executive Director David Cuthell teaches
a course there in exchange for space on campus.

Julie Green Bataille, a university spokeswoman, wrote in an e-mail,
"We will review this matter consistent with the importance of academic
freedom and the fact that the institute is independently funded and
governed." The institute’s funding, a $3 million grant, is entirely
from Turkey.

Number Of Armenia’s Subscribed Gas Users Mount To 540,000

NUMBER OF ARMENIA’S SUBSCRIBED GAS USERS MOUNT TO 540,000

July 7
ARKA

As of July 1, 2008, there were 539,335 subscribed users of natural
gas in Armenia, Armrosgasprom has said.

23,063 new natural gas users joined the network during the past six
months with 3,594 of them registered in June.

ArmRosgasprom has a monopoly right to deliver and distribute
Russian natural gas on Armenian market. The company was founded in
1997. Its current capital totals 278bln drams (close to $900mln). The
shareholders are Gasprom (72.16%), the Ministry of Energy and Natural
Resources of Armenia (22.78%), and the Russian Itera oil and gas
company (5.06%).

Movsisyan Sparks RSL Reserves Win

Soccer365, AL

Movsisyan Sparks RSL Reserves Win

2008-07-05 13:07:37

The fireworks started early on this Independence Day for the Real Salt
Lake Reserves, who saw FW Yura Movsisyan pour in a second half hat
trick to go along with a pair of assists in leading RSL to a 5-3
victory over the Houston Dynamo Reserves at Quinn’s Junction in Park
City.

The result pushed the Western Conference-leading Dynamo Reserves
(4-1-1, 13 pts.) to their first defeat in six games this season, while
the RSL Reserves (3-1-1, 10 pts.) moved to within a three-point result
of Houston in the standings. The game was just the latest in a series
of offensive slugfests at the venue in the Wasatch Mountains, the Utah
side having now outscored its opposition by a 17-10 margin in four
entertaining affairs at Quinn’s Junction.

In a match that featured three ties, it was Dynamo DF Mike Chabala
getting the visitors on the board first just seven minutes in, as a MF
John Michael Hayden corner kick was deflected by DF Geoff Cameron to
the feet of Chabala, who took his chance surely from 10 yards out to
give Houston a 1-0 lead. Movsisyan was active early on and produced
two quality scoring chances in the opening half hour. However, it was
his low cross into the goal box in the 31st minute that would help RSL
even up at 1-1, as fellow FW Tino Nuñez slid around a Houston defender
at the doorstep to hook in a shot that Dynamo Reserves ‘keeper Corbin
Waller couldn’t keep from trickling over the goalline.

The RSL Reserves would taste the lead for the first time eight minutes
later on a play that started with an adventurous, 50-yard run straight
up the middle of the field by center back David Horst, who ended his
foray by slipping a pass towards the Dynamo arc. Movsisyan kept the
chance alive with a 50-50 challenge that popped the ball in the path
of a hard-charging Nunez who, with Waller retreating back to his line,
lashed the ball in first-time from 22 yards out to give RSL a 2-1
lead. RSL MF Alex Nimo was unlucky not to lengthen the RSL lead right
before the half, as the 18-year-old’s forceful blast from 20 yards
thumped off the underside of the crossbar in the 45th minute.

A turnover in the defensive third by Horst in the 49th minute would
allow Dynamo Reserves FW Kyle Brown a chance to seek revenge on his
old side, and the striker calmly carried into the area and finished
inside RSL netminder Chris Seitz’s right post to even things back up a
2-2. The tie would be short-lived, as four minutes later RSL Reserves
DF Dustin Kirby picked out Movsisyan at the top of the area with a
perfect lob, the striker able to all but set up camp before finishing
with authority from nine yards out to put RSL back up top 3-2. The
back-and-forth would continue at a furious pace, and Houston would
again bring things square just past the hour mark when FW Franco
Caraccio’s laid-off ball from the endline was met by DF Nick Hatzke,
who buried a shot past Seitz with a first-touch finish of his own to
bring the proceedings to 3-3.

Real Salt Lake would push back in front for good in the 73rd minute,
when RSL DF Tony Beltran pumped in a sublime cross towards the penalty
spot that Movsisyan met with a crashing header, beating Waller low
from 10 yards out. After going ahead for a third time on the morning,
this time the home side would be able to pad its cushion in the 81st
minute. It was RSL MF Adam Acosta this time playing the role of
provider for Movsisyan, as the Armenian striker nodded the
midfielder’s over-the-top ball towards goal with his first touch
before finishing with vigor from 20 yards out, bringing the match to
its eventual 5-3 finish.

Scoring Summary:
HOU – Mike Chabala 1 (Geoff Cameron 1, John Michael Hayden 3) 7
RSL – Tino Nunez 2 (Yura Movsisyan 1) 31
RSL – Tino Nunez 3 (Yura Movsisyan 2) 39
HOU – Kyle Brown 6 (unassisted) 49
RSL – Yura Movsisyan 4 (Dustin Kirby 1) 53
HOU – Nick Hatzke 2 (Franco Caraccio 1) 61
RSL – Yura Movsisyan 5 (Tony Beltran 1, Dustin Kirby 2) 73
RSL – Yura Movsisyan 6 (Adam Acosta 1) 81

Real Salt Lake Reserves Line-up (4-4-2): GK-Chris Seitz (Kyle Reynish
83); DF-Tony Beltran, DF-Matias Mantilla (Capt.), DF-David Horst,
DF-Dustin Kirby; MF-Adam Acosta, MF-Brad Earl (Richard Bindrup 61),
MF-Alex Nimo, MF-Kevin Reiman; FW-Yura Movsisyan, FW-Tino Nuñez

Substitutes not used: Matthew Johnson, Steve McMurdie, Zack DeFrancis

Houston Dynamo Reserves Line-up (4-4-2): GK-Corbin Waller; DF-Erik
Ustruck, DF-Stephen Wondolowski (Capt.), DF-Geoff Cameron, DF-Mike
Chabala; MF-Chris Wondolowski, MF-Nick Hatzke, MF-John Michael Hayden,
MF-Corey Ashe; FW-Kyle Brown, FW-Franco Caraccio (Johnny Alcaraz 62)

Sydney: Power among the few

Sydney Morning Herald, Australia

Power among the few

Email Printer friendly version Normal font Large font Future in
question ¦ Recep Tayyip Erdogan throws carnations to supporters at an
election rally last year.

July 5, 2008

A group of young factory owners and managers gather in the Boydak
family’s summer villa to explain to a foreign visitor how their
fast-transforming city fits into the changes of their homeland,
Turkey.

The setting is Kayseri, an Anatolian city known in Roman times as
Caesarea, and now a base for at least 1000 factories employing 112,000
workers, churning out products sent out across Europe, the Middle East
and Central Asia – a market of 800 million people within three days’
shipment.

The Boydaks’ are the biggest. From a local shop in 1957, the family
has built a furniture group with $US3 billion ($3.1 billion) annual
sales and 15,000 workers. It is now run by a third-generation scion,
Erol Boydak, 30.

Unlike their grandfathers and fathers, Erol Boydak and his
industrialist friends are worldly and English-speaking, in many cases
returned from universities in the United States or Turkey’s big
cities, but still conservative in lifestyle. No alcohol is served at
our gathering, and the wives, wearing headscarves, remain in the
kitchen, sending out an endless supply of pastries, nuts, fruits and
tea.

Located inland under a permanently snow-capped mountain, Kayseri is
baking hot in summer, freezing in winter. Boydak points to its
tradition as the western terminus of the Silk Road, now echoed in
Turkey’s advantage over distant East Asian rivals in an era of rising
transport costs and just-in-time logistics.

"It’s a tough area. The land is not very good. You need to work to
live; you have to get ready for the winter," adds Osman Koseoglu, the
factory manager for a telecom company, Kumtel. "Working is the
lifestyle here. Whenever you see someone is not working, he is
rejected from society."

The rise of industrial cities such as Kayseri, often called the
"Anatolian tigers", has created a wider transformation in
Turkey. Economic power has shifted from ancient Istanbul and the
temperate Sea of Marmara region, and political power has followed. A
new class of rich family industrialists and their workers moving into
the burgeoning high-rise apartments of places such as Kayseri are
tilting the politics of the secular republic founded by Kemal Ataturk
in 1923.

In the past month, the resulting conflict between old and new orders
has moved closer to boiling point, threatening turmoil in a country
regarded as a pro-Western pillar of stability for the Middle East.

In Turkey, the moderately Islamist government – elected by the rising
Anatolian middle class with a 46.5 per cent popular vote only a year
ago – is defending itself in a Constitutional Court stacked with
stalwarts of army-backed secularism. It faces a ruling that would see
its political vehicle, the Justice and Development Party, or AKP,
banned and 71 leading figures including the Prime Minister, Recep
Tayyip Erdogan, and the President, Abdullah Gul, barred from political
office for five years.

The court’s overturning last month of the parliament’s recent
legislation allowing female students to wear the Islamic headscarf at
government universities is widely regarded as an indication the court
will ban the party. "If they start this process, they will finish it,
and they will close down the AKP," says Bulent Kenes, the editor of
the English edition of Turkey’s biggest-selling newspaper, Zaman.

Another newspaper, Taraf, has published an apparent secret army
spreadsheet entitled "Comprehensive Plan of Action" outlining moves
involving the military, judiciary, university rectors and secularist
media to undermine what is called a "religious reactionary
movement". Earlier, it reported that the deputy chief justice of the
Constitutional Court, Osman Paksut, had secretly met Turkey’s land
forces commander, General Ilker Basbug, a few days before prosecutors
filed the case to ban the AKP.

Paksut at first denied the meeting, then said he had met Basbug, who
is widely expected to become chief of general staff next month, simply
to "congratulate" the army on its recent cross-border strikes against
Kurdish separatists in Iraq. Neither explained why the entire floor
around Basbug’s office had to be cleared for this innocent meeting and
security cameras turned off.

Many analysts paint the contest as one between "government" and
"state", which have diverged since the rise of widely based party
politics in the past couple of decades has challenged the guardians of
the state: principally the army – answerable only to military justice
– and judicial bodies that jail perceived challengers to secularism
and "Turkishness".

The AKP and its leaders, Erdogan and Gul (who comes from Kayseri),
reflect the small-town piety of their Anatolian base, rather than the
cosmopolitanism of Istanbul or Ankara. But they make unlikely
Islamists, as painted by prosecutors in their lengthy charge
sheet. Indeed, they have worked hard since first elected in 2002 to
shape up Turkey for entry to the European Union.

Sanar Yurdatapan, 67, composes popular music and is a veteran of
Turkey’s left. He spent 12 years exiled in Germany and now runs a
group called Initiative for Freedom of Expression. An atheist, he has
little sympathy for the AKP. "It’s impossible for such a mind to be
honest in human rights affairs," he says. "Their mind comes up to a
certain extent and then they stop, because they look at the Book, and
they say: The Book orders, I cannot discuss further."

But he argues that the party’s Islamism is a political
colouring. "They will not change the system," he says. "They’re using
religion to take votes but they’re ready to give it up in order to get
their position."

The real fight, he says, is about the loss of power faced by the old
elites, resulting from the collapse of Soviet communism, and the push
by business to join the EU.

An earlier attempt to derail the AKP failed last year. The army
promoted mass demonstrations against lifting the headscarf ban, and
the Constitutional Court blocked a move to appoint Gul as president on
a dubious ruling about parliamentary quorums. Erdogan called a general
election last July and won a bigger vote. Gul was made president in
August.

#Piqued generals initially refused to salute Gul, but have since
steadily undermined the Government indirectly. The cross-border
campaign in Iraq, to which Erdogan reluctantly agreed to avoid
appearing weak on national security, undermines the AKP’s substantial
Kurdish vote. A brutal police show of force at May 1 worker parades
alienated leftists.

An AKP ban would strengthen the view of Europe’s right that Turkey is
not democratic enough for the EU. "They are playing a football game
giving points to the other side," Yurdatapan says. "They are trying
their best so that Turkey will be out of Europe and they can keep
their controls on society."

Part of Erdogan’s response has been an investigation into an
ultra-nationalist group known as Ergenekon, named after the founding
myth of the Turks, which says they were led out of Central Asia to
their present homeland by a grey wolf. The group is said to originate
in the Turkish Army’s version of the "stay-behind" resistance
structures set up by several NATO countries in the 1950s in case of
Soviet invasion, and it is blamed for provocative attacks over the
years variously attributed to communists, Kurds or Islamists.

In January, prosecutors began waves of arrests that included retired
generals and colonels, a nationalist lawyer known for prosecuting
writers for questioning the official history of the 1915 massacre of
Armenians, an elder columnist for the secularist newspaper Cumhuriyet
(and said to be the ideologue of Ergenekon), and a retired Istanbul
University rector who has opposed a Cyprus settlement backed by
Erdogan, who wants Turkey’s 1974 invasion of the island removed as an
obstacle to EU membership.

One former colonel was alleged to have paid an assassin to kill the
Nobel laureate writer Orhan Pamuk. This week prosecutors arrested 21
others, including two former generals.

The army has toppled four civilian governments in the past 50 years,
the most recent a "soft coup" in 1997 that ousted another government
deemed too Islamist. So far, it seems to be relying on the
Constitutional Court to do the job. But that will not be the end of
it. The AKP is an avatar of an earlier Islamist party, Virtue, that
was also banned. Erdogan has kept parliament sitting through the
summer recess and is ready to call a snap election if there is a ban.

Most expect the party to rebadge, and few seem concerned at 71 of its
leaders being banned. "We chose the AKP and we will choose the new
party," says Huseyin Cahit Canitez, another Kayseri industrialist. "We
will find new leaders. If Abdullah Gul goes, we will find ‘Mustapha
Gul’."

Yet Turks are worried. "It it will be a big mistake if it happens,"
Canitez says. "Maybe it will set back Turkey by five years. That is
something people in the army and the judiciary may not understand. But
while they are only 4 or 5 per cent of the population, they have a lot
of power."

Hamish McDonald visited Turkey as guest of the business federation TUSKON.