EC Delegation To Armenia To Open New Premises

EC DELEGATION TO ARMENIA TO OPEN NEW PREMISES

PanARMENIAN.Net
04.02.2008 14:55 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ European Commissioner for External Relations and
European Neighbourhood Policy, Benita Ferrero-Waldner and Armenian
Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian, will open the new premises of the
EC Delegation to Armenia on February 5, 2008.

Commissioner Benita Ferrero-Waldner will also introduce the new
Head of Delegation that will lead the full-fledged EC Delegation to
Armenia. The Commissioner together with Dimitrij Rupel, Minister for
Foreign Affairs of Slovenia and EU Special Representative for the
Southern Caucasus, Ambassador Peter Semneby, will participate in the
Ministerial EU Troika visit to Azerbaijan, Georgia, and Armenia on
4-6 February 2008.

Wall Street Journal Published Brian Ardouny’s Letter

WALL STREET JOURNAL PUBLISHED BRIAN ARDOUNY’S LETTER

Panorama.am
19:11 04/02/2008

The Wall Street Journal Europe published a letter sent to the reporter
of Armenian Assembly of America. The letter, in fact, is the answer
to Elmar Mamediarov’s article on "The Caspian Moment".

"Don’t Blame Armenia

The Wall Street Journal Europe Elmar Mammadyarov speaks about the
need for, and benefits of a negotiated settlement in Nagorno-Karabakh
("The Caspian Moment," State of the Union, Jan. 21). But he refers
to the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe’s Minsk
process — the negotiating framework for the Nagorno-Karabakh peace
process — only in passing.

Mr. Mammadyarov overlooks the fact that in the past 13 years,
Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh have accepted numerous proposals as
basis for negotiations — only to be rebuffed by Azerbaijan, which
also refuses to undertake confidence-building measures. Instead,
Azeri President Ilham Aliyev publicly stated earlier this month that
"the war has not ended.

Furthermore, Mr. Mammadyarov asserts that "regional integration is
a priority for Azerbaijan." In reality, Baku persists in its policy
to isolate Armenia — from its continuing blockade in coordination
with Turkey to a pipeline that circumvents Armenia.

Rather than torpedo the recently intensified efforts by the
mediators to reach a settlement, Azerbaijan should take these
talks seriously, end the blockade, cease its bellicose statements
and agree to confidence-building measures and direct contact with
Nagorno-Karabakh. "

Note: Armenian Assembly of America is a powerful organization which
contributes to the coverage and commenting Armenian question in
the USA.

Senator Clinton Pledges To Recognize Genocide If Elected

SENATOR CLINTON PLEDGES TO RECOGNIZE GENOCIDE IF ELECTED

armradio.am
04.02.2008 10:25

Senator Hillary Clinton (D-NY), a cosponsor of the Armenian Genocide
Resolution (S. Res. 106), urged Congress to adopt this critical
human rights legislation, saying if elected president, she would
speak candidly about the events of 1915.

Clinton is the second presidential candidate, following Senator
Barack Obama (D-IL), to issue a statement on the Armenian Genocide
in the past week. She is currently the only presidential candidate
to cosponsor the resolution.

Clinton said she has twice written to President Bush urging him
to properly characterize the crimes as genocide in his annual
commemorative statement.

"Our common morality and our nation’s credibility as a voice for
human rights challenge us to ensure that the Armenian Genocide be
recognized and remembered by the Congress and the President of the
United States," Clinton stated.

"If the mass atrocities of the 20th Century have taught us anything
it is that we must honestly look the facts of history in the face in
order to learn their lessons, and ensure they will not happen again,"
she continued.

"It is not just about the past, but about our future."

Turning to the atrocities in Darfur, Clinton said that the U.S. "must
close the gap between words and deeds" to prevent such modern-day
crimes, adding, "As President, I will work to build and enhance
U.S. and international capacity to act early and effectively to
prevent mass atrocities."

Clinton also pledged to improve U.S.-Armenia relations and address the
issues facing the two nations including, increasing trade, fostering
closer economic ties, fighting terrorism, strengthening democratic
institutions, pursuing military partnership and deepening Armenia’s
cooperation with NATO.

If elected, she would expand assistance programs to Armenia and
Nagorno Karabakh, and increase cooperation on regional concerns,
such as a fair and democratic resolution of the Karabakh conflict.

"The Assembly thanks Senator Clinton for her longstanding support
of the Armenian Genocide Resolution and for calling on Congress to
adopt legislation properly recognizing the first genocide of the 20th
century," said Executive Director Bryan Ardouny. "It is in the best
interest of this country, and the entire global community, to remember
the terrible lessons of 1915 and ensure they are never repeated."

Varvitsiotes Vs. Gedeon: Debating An Article On The Holocaust In Gre

VARVITSIOTES VS. GEDEON: DEBATING AN ARTICLE ON THE HOLOCAUST IN GREECE

Greek News
me=News&file=article&sid=8031
Feb 4 2008
New York

New York.- Orestes Varvitsiotesʼ featured article "The tragic
events of the Holocaust and Greek Christiansʼ help to the Jews",
published in the GreekNews (1/21/2008) was received warmly by all our
readers, who praised the writer for a very balanced description and
analysis of the tragic events of that period. All but one; Mr George
Gedeon, "a Canadian news and current affairs video editor of Greek
(non-Jewish) descent. Mr Gedeon – whose articles are frequently
used to support criticism against Greece and Greeks for not doing
enough on the issue of anti-Semitism by the Helsinki Watch and other
organizations – in a comment widely distributed criticizes Orestes
Varvitsiotesʼ article as "feel good article about one side of
the Holocaust in Greece.

George Gideonʼs views received some very negative comments from
prominent Greek Jews who think that "we better ignore his obsession".

Greek News feels that because of the extensive debate thatʼs
already taken place on the internet, we should at least publish Mr
Gedeonʼs comments and Mr Varvitsiotesʼ reply.

GEORGE GEDEON This is a "nice" and "feel-good" article about one
side of the Holocaust in Greece. It also puts most of the blame on
the Jewish leadership while over all exonerates the responsibility
of many gentile Greeks for the economic and physical destruction of
Greek Jewry.

I also noticed that most of the author’s research comes from
non-critical sources-with the exception of In Memoriam. He never read
Mazower’s 3 books on the topic, Fred Reed’s "Salonika Terminus",
Caplan’s "Balkan Ghosts", Matsas’ "Illusion of Safety" or Yamtov
Yakoel’s diary.

Although he does mention Simeonidis and the Mayor of Kerkyra, he does
not tell us that most Greek Jews were rounded up, guarded and put on
trains and trucks with the co-operation of Greek gendarmes. He also
does not mention that no Greek politician resigned over the Eleftherias
Square events or deportations all over Greece, nor gives us details
of the vast and shameful exploitation of Jewish businesses by locals.

Under "Other events" he mentions something about the destruction of
the Salonika Jewish cemetery, but no details… It was the Germans
that "recommended" and the Greeks that accepted the vast real estate
as a ransom for the release of Jewish slave labourers inside Greece.

It was also Greek municipal crews that dug-up the cemetery and used
its stones for the construction and repairs of homes, churches and
sidewalks, many still visible in the city.

Most of the article involves Thessaloniki, an easy target for
"feel-good", mainstream Greek historians because of Koretz, the Jewish
civil police and lack of integration, but does not explain how and
why did the Romaniote (Greek speaking) Jews got it almost as bad as
the Sephardim (exceptions of Volos, Trikala, Larissa and Zakynthos)

Yes, some Jewish leaders co-operated with the Germans because : 1)
The Germans and the Greek authorities had them convinced they were
going to live in a Polish "Jewish town".

2) They had no choice. They were constantly warned of "extreme
consequences" for themselves and their communities.

3) They had no solid advice or support from the collaborationist
politicians and mass media.

In my opinion, this article is another attempt to excuse Greek
gentiles, especially those with the means and authority, for what
they did or did not do to help.

It is time that we began to include in our discussions, commemorations
and literature the other side of the coin. It serves no purpose to
hide our heads in the sand. We owe it to the 60,000 Jewish Greeks that
perished in the death camps and the new generations of Greeks of all
faiths. If they are to understand how that human catastrophe could have
happened in Europe, then we must include all its embarrassing details.

Respectfully George Gedeon Toronto.

Orestes Varvitsiotes >>From my previous dealings with George Gedeon,
I have come to wonder not only as to his motives, but also of his
ability to judge correctly. And I am very pleased that this time he
did not insinuate that I am an anti-Semite!

To begin with, what I wrote is an article (not a book) about a specific
subject with limited and well defined parameters: The Tragic Events
of the Holocaust and the Greek Christians Help to the Jews.

Period. So let us see what he is talking about here:

No one in his right mind will call my article a "feel-good", and
neither do I put the blame for what happened on the Jewish leadership,
beyond the fact that I mention the way they decided to act in the
face of their predicament. He would have preferred me not to allude
to it, as some Greek-Americans scolded me for mentioning the incident
at Kerkyra, because, they say, it was not indicative of the Greek
people but only of a bunch of Nazi collaborators. Mr.

Gedeon, however, shifts the blame to the Greek population at large! A
friend of mine, a Jewish professor, even thought I came down too hard
on Simonides who used the empty Jewish houses to shelter the Greek
refugees from the Bulgarian Sector.

He states that my sources are not to his liking and he mentions some
books of his own. I can claim I have read more books that Mr. Gedeon: I
just donated 45 books about the Greek Jewry to the Center of Byzantine
and Modern Greek Studies at Queens College, where Professor Bowman
teaches a course. Rae Dalvenʼs book on the Jews of Ioannina is
by far the best, and Nikos Stravroulakis has spent his entire life
researching on the Jews of Greece (and not only Crete).

Instead, Mr. Gedeon suggests the book Robert Kaplan wrote, which
I have read and is pure trash; As for Mr. Kaplan himself, he is so
enamored with Ataturk and the Turkish Generals that he urged General
Musharaff of Pakistan to emulate him. He did, and look what is
happening to Pakistan now! As for Yakoelʼs diary (which I have
read) itʼs nothing but a condemnation of Rabbi Koretz policies,
and this is long before their catastrophic results became evident. I
have also read Matsasʼ book, but not the other he mentions.

Therefore, my sources are as authoritative as they could be, and let
Mr. Gedeon tell us why they are not.

The Greek police also rounded Greeks of the Resistance, including
my mother, following German orders. This may not be an excuse,
but there were Greek collaborators as well as Jewish collaborators,
and there is no difference between them. Yakoel and his family were
betrayed by a Jew. On the other hand, it was the chief of police
at Katerini who saved the Jews! Now how can I answer that no Greek
politician resigned…is he for real? The Quisling Prime Minister,
Logothetopoulos, however, did try to intervene on behalf of the Jews,
which is very unusual (and commendable) for a man in his position.

Contrast this with General Petainʼs government at Vichy.

The Germans dug up the cemetery; what did he expect-the Greeks to put
it back? (To turn the tables) Did the Jewish communities in Istanbul,
New York or Toronto protest the Turkish pogrom in Istanbul on September
6, 1955, when 73 churches, 8 cemeteries, 26 schools, 1,004 homes,
4,212 shops and stores, 21 factories, 12 hotels, 97 restaurants,
and 23 warehouses were destroyed?

The article involves Thessaloniki not because "it is an easy target",
as Mr Gedeon purports in an attempt to twist my motives, but because
it is there where out of 46,000 people only 1950 survived! The
Jews at Jannina got it as badly, and for the same reasons as in
Thessaloniki-and it is mentioned in the article. Contrast this with the
Warsaw Ghetto uprising and the prisonersʼ uprising in Auschwitz
(or is it Birkenau?).

This article had no ulterior motives to please or displease anyone,
Greek or Jew. I honestly tried to recreate for the general public
these horrific events, to impart the meaning and the lessons of
the Holocaust.

Mr Gedeon absurdly refuses to accept the fact that those Jews who
survived, survived due to the assistance they received from their
fellow Greek Christians-a very shameful position. Let Mr. Gedeon tell
us: In what other country did the Church and Resistance do more for
the Jews than in Greece?

It is obvious that what displeases Mr. Gedeon is that my article is at
odds with the agenda of an influential segment of the Jewish-American
elites, who have become the mouthpieces of the Turkish Generals in
the Halls of Congress and elsewhere. It is they who shamefully have
been instrumental in the denial of the Pontian and Armenian Genocides,
an insult and a dishonor to the memory of the Jewish victims of the
Holocaust themselves. Mr. Gedeon has appointed himself as the arbiter
of what is politically-correct (according to his agenda), not what
is factually true. His anti-Hellenism is obvious, as it is odious!

http://www.greeknewsonline.com/modules.php?na

Anti-Propaganda Reduces On TV Air And Increases In Printed And Elect

ANTI-PROPAGANDA REDUCES ON TV AIR AND INCREASES IN PRINTED AND ELECTRONIC NEWSPAPERS, RADIOLUR’S DIRECTOR CONSIDERS

Noyan Tapan
Feb 4, 2008

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 4, NOYAN TAPAN. The coverage of the election campaign
of the 2008 presidential elections, in difference of the election
campaign of 2007, is done more correctly and professionally. Artur
Sahakian, the Director of the Radiolur program of Public Radio Company,
gave assurance at the February 4 discussion. In his words, in that
respect the journalists’ work has improved though "some forces"
and, in particular, RA presidential candidate, first President Levon
Ter-Petrosian try to cast a shadow on it by avoiding interviews. The
impartiality of the election campaign’s coverage, in A. Sahakian’s
words, in noticeable especially on television, while many newspapers
seem to "have given up their professional functions and to have
turned into political subjects." According to his information, the
use of black technologies, anti-propaganda, is gradually reducing on
television and increasing in printed and electronic media.

Vasak Darbinian, the editor of the Hayk periodical and Taregir
electronic periodical, stated that L. Ter-Petrosian refuses to
answer journalists’ questions, as "he has already answered all
questions they are anxious about and there is no issue he has not
touched upon." V. Darbinian said that in the newspapers edited
by him he does not touch upon all candidates equally and covers
Ter-Petrosian’s campaign more, as there is much difference of levels
between L. Ter-Petrosian and the others.

ODIHR Says Media Coverage Of Armenian Candidates Disproportionate

ODIHR SAYS MEDIA COVERAGE OF ARMENIAN CANDIDATES DISPROPORTIONATE

Russia & CIS General Newswire
January 31, 2008 Thursday 4:59 PM MSK

The election observation mission of the OSCE Office for Democratic
Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR) has called the media coverage
of the activity of presidential candidates disproportionate.

Three out of seven television channels were focused on Republican
Party candidate, Prime Minister Serzh Sargsyan, says a report posted
in Yerevan on Thursday.

"The amount of time received by Mr. Sargsyan, on privately owned H2,
Kentron, Shant and Armenia TV, even taking into account the execution
of his official duties, exceeded what could be reasonably considered
appropriate," the report said.

"However, in contrast to the almost exclusively positive or neutral
coverage afforded to Serzh Sargsyan, Levon Ter-Petrossian was regularly
portrayed in a negative light. On two TV channels, H2 and ALM, the
volume of ‘negative’ coverage of Levon Ter-Petrossian exceed the
combined amount of ‘positive’ and ‘neutral’ coverage," the report said.

"The radio stations monitored by the OSHR EOM presented Serzh Sargsyan
more frequently as a candidate than in his official role.

The monitoring results (11-20 January) reveal that Public Radio
was, in general, more balanced in the amount of time allocated
to the prospective candidates than TV channels. The broadcasts of
RFE included greater diversity in their coverage of the nominees,
including presenting Serzh Sargsyan and Levon Ter-Petrossian in
positive, negative and neutral tones," the report said.

The delegation started working in Armenia on January 15. Armenia will
hold the election on February 19.

Armenian National Team To Receive Turkey’s Team At Start Of Group To

ARMENIAN NATIONAL TEAM TO RECEIVE TURKEY’S TEAM AT START OF GROUP TOURNAMENT OF FOOTBALL WORLD 2010 CHAMPIONSHIP’S ELIMINATION TOUR

Noyan Tapan
Jan 31, 2008

YEREVAN, JANUARY 31, NOYAN TAPAN. The drawing of lots of the 5th
group of Football World 2010 Championship’s elimination tour took
place on January 30 in the capital of Croatia, Zagreb. The schedule
of the current contest season is the following:

Armenia – Turkey on September 6,

Spain – Armenia on September 10,

Belgium – Armenia on October 11,

Bosnia – Armenia on October 15.

Sarkisian Vows To Improve Business Climate

SARKISIAN VOWS TO IMPROVE BUSINESS CLIMATE
By Emil Danielyan

Radio Liberty, Czech Republic
Jan 30 2008

Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian pledged to improve Armenia’s
problematic investment climate and, in particular, tackle harassment
of businesspeople by corrupt tax officials on an election campaign
trip to the central Aragatsotn region on Wednesday.

Speaking before hundreds of people in the regional capital Ashtarak,
Sarkisian said a better business environment is vital for stimulating
the Armenian economy and creating new jobs.

"We have only one source of [budgetary] revenue: taxes," he said. "We
must be able to improve our business environment to make it easy for
businessmen to make money and pay money to the state."

Sarkisian acknowledged that corruption among tax officials is a major
problem hampering economic activity in the country. He said he has
instructed the head of the State Tax Service (STS) to open a special
hotline for entrepreneurs harassed by unscrupulous employees of the
feared government agency.

Sarkisian’s election manifesto likewise stresses the need to create
"the best conditions" for anyone doing business in Armenia. It commits
outgoing President Robert Kocharian’s favored successor to implementing
"second-generation reforms" that would not only strengthen the rule
of law but protect fair business competition.

Government critics say Sarkisian, who has long wielded substantial
influence on economic life, himself is responsible for the fact that
government connections remain essential for engaging in large-scale
economic activity in the country. They accuse him as well as Kocharian
of sponsoring a handful of millionaire businessmen who enjoy a de
facto monopoly on imports of fuel and basic foodstuffs.

Unlike in his previous campaign speeches, Sarkisian avoided attacking
his most formidable challenger, former President Levon Ter-Petrosian,
and only briefly criticized other opposition presidential candidates,
notably Artur Baghdasarian, who promise sweeping tax cuts. "They
may say that they would cut taxes and raise pensions," he said. "But
miracles happen only in fairy tales."

For the first time during the election campaign, Sarkisian publicly
took a swipe at the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun),
a junior partner in his governing coalition which is contesting the
February 19 election with its own candidate, Vahan Hovannisian. Without
naming names, the prime minister slammed Dashnaktsutyun leaders for
saying that his victory would be bad for Armenian as it would mean
that virtually all branches of government are controlled by Sarkisian’s
Republican Party (HHK).

"They say that if the president too is a member of the Republican Party
the country will have a one-polar government and nobody in the country
will be able to prod the president to do a better job with criticism,"
said Sarkisian. "But you all know that I am the candidate of not only
the Republican Party but also the Prosperous Armenia Party and many
other parties and compatriots’ unions."

As always, Sarkisian’s campaign rally featured only himself and
performances by Armenian pop stars. Other prominent HHK figures such
as Deputy Prime Minister Hovik Abrahamian and parliament speaker Tigran
Torosian again did not accompany the candidate on the campaign trail.

Many in the crowd that gathered in Ashtarak’s central square appeared
to be residents of nearby villages bused to the small town 25
kilometers northwest of Yerevan. Norayr Muradian, the mayor of Ujan,
one of the region’s largest villages, was also there, expressing
confidence that most of his fellow villagers will vote for Sarkisian
come February 19. "People respect the prime minister," he told RFE/RL.

"I want a bright future for our country," said Rshtuni Hakobian,
another Ujan resident and a veteran of the Nagorno-Karabakh war.

"Only the path chosen by Serzh Sarkisian will lead us there."

Robert Hakobian, an elderly university professor who also lives in
the area, agreed. "Only a blind person won’t see the achievements
Armenia has had in the past ten years," he said. "New buildings,
bridges, canals have been constructed. Teachers used to make 5,000
drams but now get 70,000 drams ($230) a month."

But other participants of the rally were more ambivalent towards the
Armenian premier. "I’m still familiarizing myself with candidates,"
one middle-aged woman, who works part-time at an Ashtarak policlinic,
told RFE/RL, holding a small white flag of the Sarkisian campaign in
her hand.

Another, older woman said her main preoccupation now is how to
privatize a tiny apartment which she shares with her unmarried son.

She said her government employer has promised to help her do that if
she votes for Sarkisian.

Both in Ashtarak and Oshakan, a nearby big village plastered with
Ter-Petrosian’s campaign posters, Sarkisian was mobbed by people keen
to hand him letters or inform him about their grievances orally.

About one hundred people, many of them teachers and students of the
two village schools, gathered outside Oshakan’s famous church to
listen to his planned speech. However, the rally was cancelled at
the last minute for unknown reasons, with Sarkisian only visiting
the church and briefly talking to some locals afterwards.

"The classes were cancelled today because of the rally," said one
teenage girl. "We want to see the prime minister. We hope he will
become our president.’

But one of her teachers was less certain about that as she awaited
Sarkisian’s arrival. "To he honest, I’ve still not made a final
decision," she told RFE/RL.

Yerevan Not Officially Informed Of Lord Russell-Johnston Visit Yet

YEREVAN NOT OFFICIALLY INFORMED OF LORD RUSSELL-JOHNSTON VISIT YET

PanARMENIAN.Net
30.01.2008 18:16 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenia has not received an official notice about
the visit of Lord Russell-Johnston, head of the PACE ad hoc committee
on Karabakh, said Davit Harutyunyan, head of the RA delegation to
the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe.

"Lord Russell-Johnston undertook to meet with the Armenian and
Azerbaijani leadership to discuss further activities of the
committee. However, we have not received official notification
yet. Lord Russell-Johnston is likely to pay his regional visit
as member of the PACE observation mission and head of the ad hoc
committee on Karabakh," Mr Harutyunyan said, Novosti Armenia reports.

Grievance-Based Terrorism

GRIEVANCE-BASED TERRORISM

Assyrian International News Agency
Jan 25 2008

The fundamental premise of much scholarly examination and public
discourse is that grievances with U.S. policies in the Middle East
motivate Islamist terrorism. Such assumptions, though, misunderstand
the enemy and its nature. In reality, the conflict is sparked not by
grievance but rather by incompatibility between Islamist ideology and
the natural rights articulated during the European Enlightenment and
incorporated into U.S. political culture. Acquiescing to political
grievances will not alter the fundamental incompatibility between
Lockean precepts of tolerance and current interpretations of Islam:
Only Islam’s fundamental reform will resolve the conflict.

Many scholars mark the post-World War I partition of the Ottoman Empire
as the origin of Islamist opposition to the West.[1] The idea that
the Middle East would be a tolerant, prosperous contributor to the
global environment today if World War I victors had left intact the
Ottoman Empire is a premise in the literature accompanying the rise
of twentieth-century jihadism. Historian David Fromkin argued in his
influential A Peace to End All Peace that present day Muslim unrest
is the direct result of Winston Churchill’s early twentieth-century
decisions.[2] British journalist Robert Fisk also holds British
officials responsible although he prefers to blame Arthur Balfour,
foreign secretary between 1916 and 1919.[3] Both authors are wrong,
though, to base their theories of grievance on such arbitrary
demarcation of eras. The roots of jihadism and its opposition to the
United States as part of the non-Muslim West were cast long before
World War I erupted. The interaction between the United States and
Muslim states and societies dates back to American independence.[4]
Contemporary jihadism is not the result of accumulated grievance;
rather it has for cultural reasons been an integral factor in Islamic
societies’ interaction with the United States.

The Die is Cast

Almost immediately after independence, the U.S. government found itself
in conflict with the Barbary sheikhdoms of Morocco, Tunis, Algiers, and
Tripoli. For centuries, these states filled their coffers by piracy,
stealing cargoes, enslaving crew, and collecting ransom. European
sea-going nations often entered into treaty and tribute arrangements
with the Barbary leaders in order to buy immunity and curtail
competition.[5] In 1784, Moroccan pirates hijacked the U.S. merchant
ship Betsy in the Mediterranean and enslaved her crew. A year later,
Algerine pirates seized two more vessels, the Maria from Boston
and the Dauphin from Philadelphia. The U.S. ministers to England
and France, John Adams and Benjamin Franklin, and Thomas Jefferson
oversaw a peace treaty with Morocco, but the Algerine leadership
refused any accommodation. In 1796, President George Washington
ordered construction of six warships to form a U.S. navy and to
protect U.S. shipping from Barbary pirates.

In 1801, in the wake of an upsurge in piracy, President Thomas
Jefferson entered into war with Tripoli, bombarding the city
three years later and winning the release of American hostages.[6]
Peace did not last. With the U.S. military embroiled in the War of
1812, Algerine pirates again began terrorizing American crewmen and
disrupting U.S. trade. They miscalculated. In 1815, President James
Madison dispatched a squadron of U.S. Navy frigates, which defeated the
pirate fleet and won reparations from Algiers, Tunis, and Tripoli.[7]

Many historians consider the Barbary wars a sideshow relative to
contemporaneous events such as the French Revolution, Napoleon’s
conquests, and the War of 1812, but the Barbary wars are significant
to today’s conflict. Franklin, Washington, Adams, Jefferson, and
Madison each believed the Barbary wars to be a continuation of the
American Revolution. The ground war in North America may have freed
the United States from British tyranny, but the Barbary campaign was
necessary to win the same freedom of action and commerce within the
international community.[8] The episode also crystallized perceptions
of Islam and the Ottoman Empire in the American mind. While Americans
did not perceive the Barbary wars as a conflict between Christianity
and Islam per se, religion was an issue. The two sides fought, not
over theological differences, but rather as a result of the divergent
ideologies enabled by the two faiths.[9] Washington and Adams referred
to the Muslim leaders as "nests of banditti" while Jefferson’s and
Madison’s campaign literature called them "petty tyrants."[10] The
"despotic Turk" became the antithesis of early American republican
identity.

What Americans and Europeans saw as piracy, Barbary leaders justified
as legitimate jihad. Jefferson related a conversation he had in Paris
with Ambassador Abdrahaman of Tripoli who told him that all Christians
are sinners in the context of the Qur’an and that it was a Muslim’s
"right and duty to make war upon them wherever they could be found,
and to enslave as many as they could take as prisoners."[11] Islam gave
great incentive to fighting infidels, Abdrahaman explained, because
the Qur’an promised that making war against infidels ensured a Muslim
paradise after death.[12] Richard O’Brien, the imprisoned captain of
the Philadelphia merchantman Dauphin and later the U.S. consul to
Algiers, related similar conversations with `Ali Hasan, the ruler
of Algiers.[13] Ottoman leaders used the same rationale to justify
the enslavement and trading of captives from the Balkans, Caucasus,
and Ukraine.[14]

The role that jihadi ideology played in the Barbary wars is documented
with explicit references to jihad and holy war in the treaties that
U.S. officials entered into with Muslim rulers. Tunis and Algiers, as
the western outposts of the Ottoman Empire, even described themselves
to American envoys as the "frontier posts of jihad against European
Christianity."[15]

U.S. officials took a conciliatory attitude. Realizing that the North
Africans were hypersensitive to the historic conflict between Islam
and European Christianity, especially in the context of the expulsion
of the Moors from Spain, U.S. officials bent over backwards to deny
the religious and ideological nature of the conflict, especially to
the Muslims themselves. They realized that religious conflict might
jeopardize the commerce that the United States still hoped to find
in the Mediterranean. In 1821, President John Quincy Adams was barely
able to resist assisting the Greeks in their war of independence when
both the American and European publics urged war with the Ottoman
Empire.[16] The founders possessed a deep conviction for religious
tolerance and proudly explained in the short-lived 1797 treaty with
Tripoli that the U.S. was not a Christian state at all but rather one
which had no official religion and maintained laws forbidding the
prohibition of religion.[17] Perhaps their denial of the religious
and ideological nature of the conflict foreshadowed the attitude many
Washington policymakers adopt today. Then as now, it has become the
basis of a fundamental misunderstanding of the root of the conflict.

The Barbary conflict was the beginning of continuous U.S. interaction
with the Muslim Near and Middle East. While Jefferson and Madison
believed that a continuous U.S. military presence in the Mediterranean
was necessary to protect U.S. national interests, in 1831, President
Andrew Jackson secured a treaty of amity and free trade with the
Ottoman Empire leading the secretary of the navy to report seven years
later that it was no longer necessary to keep a U.S. fleet in the
Mediterranean.[18] Three years after Washington withdrew the
squadron, Ottoman privateers began raiding U.S. shipping, forcing
the reconstitution of the fleet after the U.S. Civil War.

No longer, though, did the U.S. government feel content to view
relations with Muslim governments only through a commercial lens. The
Civil War interjected discussion of natural law and freedom into
U.S. policy formulation. American missionaries increased their presence
in the Muslim Middle East throughout the nineteenth century although
Muslim prohibitions on conversion to Christianity led them to focus
their efforts more on aid and education than on proselytization.

Simultaneously, the Ottoman sultan and other Muslim rulers began
to pursue more pronounced repression against both Christians and
Jews.[19] Intolerant, fundamentalist strains of Islam gained ground
on the Arabian Peninsula and in North Africa.[20]

By 1840, the final year of his administration, and again during his
unsuccessful campaign for a second term in 1848, Martin Van Buren
expressed concern for the plight of Jews in the Ottoman Empire, which
he called "the most anti-Semitic of countries."[21] In the last quarter
of the nineteenth century, strife between Muslims and Christians in
the Balkans and in Istanbul led President Ulysses Grant to dispatch
six warships to the waterways around the city to ensure the safety
of Americans.[22] In 1882, President Chester Arthur dispatched the
Mediterranean Squadron to Alexandria to help evacuate Americans and
Europeans following anti-Christian violence in the city. President
Grover Cleveland even proposed an Anglo-American intervention in
the Ottoman Empire to assist Armenian Christians against Muslim
violence.[23] In 1903, an assassination attempt on the U.S. consul in
Beirut amid anti-Christian rioting led President Theodore Roosevelt
to dispatch marines to the city. A few months later, marines landed
in Tangiers after the kidnapping of a Greek businessman from the
U.S. consulate there.[24] Behind each incident was Muslim violence
toward minority Christian and Jewish communities.

The nineteenth century foreshadowed increasing conflict between
the United States and Muslim Middle Eastern countries. The failure
of effective Ottoman political reform coupled with the evolution
of Islamic reform toward greater Islamism and less tolerance set
up a conflict between the American notion that governments rule at
the consent of the governed and the dominant attitude among Muslim
potentates who subscribed to an intolerant, coercive, anti-Semitic,
and anti-Christian ideology.

Twentieth-century Continuity

Into the early twentieth century, successive U.S. administrations
sought to remain aloof from Arab and Ottoman politics. President
Woodrow Wilson did not include the Ottoman Empire in the U.S.

declaration of war against Germany and the Austro-Hungarian Empire,
an omission he said was to mitigate the risk of Ottoman retaliation
against its Christian or Jewish populations, thereby implying his
sense that the Porte saw the United States through a religious rather
than just diplomatic lens.[25]

The U.S. government sought to remain detached in all but the commercial
sphere. The U.S. trade relationship with the Middle East expanded
exponentially in the mid-twentieth century. In the decade following
the end of World War II, U.S. commerce increased 167 percent. The
next decade saw a 226 percent rise, and the following decade a 321
percent increase in absolute terms.[26] Such involvement, though,
had diplomatic and strategic overtones.

During the Cold War, "armed neutrality" could no longer protect
U.S. strategic interests. Successive administrations and the State
Department pursued a "pro-Arab" policy in the region to stymie the
expansion of Soviet influence into those countries. In a January 1945
correspondence, Dean Acheson, secretary of state and chief architect
of the U.S. Cold War Soviet containment policy, argued for a pro-Arab
tilt to U.S. policy in order to deny the Soviet Union any possible
inroads into the region.[27] Successive administrations embraced the
policy. Dwight D. Eisenhower sided with Gamal Abdul Nasser against
Israel, France, and Great Britain during the 1956 Suez crisis. While
the U.S. government often stayed on the sidelines, in eleven of the
twelve major Cold War and immediate post-Cold War conflicts between
Muslims and non-Muslims, Muslims and secular forces, or Arabs and
non-Arabs, the U.S. government supported the former group.[28]
Washington, for example, backed the Afghan mujahideen against the
Soviet Red Army in the 1980s and supported Bosnian Muslims against
Serbs and Croats. U.S. administrations have even leaned hard on Israel,
preventing the Jewish state’s destruction of the Egyptian, Jordanian,
and Syrian armies in 1967; ignoring the Israeli government’s pleas
not to sell state-of-the-art weaponry to Saudi Arabia; and pressuring
for concessions to the Palestinian Authority despite its embrace
of terrorism. The only exception to Washington’s pro-Arab tilt has
been U.S. diplomatic intervention in support of Israel at the United
Nations and White House commitment to maintain Israel’s qualitative
military edge.

During the six decades since Washington abandoned its "armed
neutrality" policy in favor of deeper relations with Arab states,
friction has increased between U.S. officials and Islamist
ideologues. The pro-Arab tilt Washington pursued during the Cold
War to stymie Soviet intrigues and maintain energy security, meant
partnership with non-democratic regimes and often corrupt rulers
in Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Egypt, Tunisia, Morocco, and the Persian
Gulf emirates. Islamists and other opposition groups argued that
Washington should support the people and not autocrats. But such
rhetoric is laid bare by the antagonism that U.S. support for Israel
engendered among many of these self-professed democrats. Israel is the
only democracy in the region. Its citizens, 17 percent of whom are
Muslim, enjoy basic civil liberties regardless of their faith and,
even in the West Bank, enjoy a standard of living far superior to
that of Egyptians and Jordanians.[29]

Jihadi Antipathy

Both the United States and Jews have become the focus of Islamists’
irrational enmity as Islamist thinkers and Arab demagogues deflect any
internal responsibility for Muslim countries’ woes. This was a common
theme both of Sayyid Qutb, the leading Muslim Brotherhood ideologue
and, later, Al-Qaeda founder Osama bin Laden.[30] In Knowing the
Enemy, Mary Habeck, a professor of military history at Johns Hopkins
University’s School of Advanced International Studies, documents
how Qutb and bin Laden spread a message that the decline of majority
Muslim polities is not the result of flaws within Islam itself but is
instead the deliberate effort of the United States and the Jews.[31]
Today Pakistani madrasas (Islamic schools) alone spin out more than
one million graduates per year steeped in jihadi ideology.[32]

Underlying much jihadi thought is antipathy toward democracy. Both Qutb
and bin Laden argued that democracy is not a solution to inequity
and corruption in Islamic societies.[33] In a video that marked
the sixth anniversary of the 9-11 attacks, bin Laden said, "It has
now become clear to you and the entire world the impotence of the
democratic system and how it plays with the interest of the peoples
and their bloody sacrificing of soldiers and populations to achieve
the interests of major corporations."[34] While some Islamists-such as
the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt or Muhammad Khatami in Iran[35]-speak
of their embrace of democracy, seldom do they include Enlightenment
concepts such as tolerance, rule-of-law, and property rights. They do
not accept, as did the U.S. founding fathers, that people are endowed
with both the natural right to freedom from coercion and the liberty to
improve their lives. In practice, then, regardless of their rhetoric,
they eschew democracy.

The failure of Islamic states to incorporate the Enlightenment’s
advances in thought has caused their stagnation, if not decline,
over the last several centuries. In contrast, the incorporation of
Enlightenment and democratic principles into Western governance has
resulted in history’s most rapid improvement in the human condition.

Only those Muslim countries that have embraced, in some fashion,
Western principles of democracy, free markets, property rights,
tolerance, and the rule of law have prospered. Most Arab states
refuse. Bernard Lewis, perhaps the doyen of Middle East studies in the
Western world, explained, "By all indicators from the United Nations,
the World Bank, and other authorities, Muslim countries-in matters
such as job creation, education, technology, and productivity-lag ever
further behind the West. Even worse, the Arab nations also lag behind
the more recent recruits to Western style modernity, such as Korea,
Taiwan, and Singapore."[36] All majority Muslim countries except
Qatar, Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, and Turkey, which have recently adopted
significant free market and democratic reforms, rank in the bottom
half of world productivity; of the rest, only Morocco, Indonesia,
Saudi Arabia, and Bangladesh reach the third quartile.[37] According
to the World Bank, the average per capita income of all majority
Muslim countries collectively is less than half of the average for the
globe. Only Kuwait approaches the global average life expectancy;[38]
all other Muslim majority states lag in the bottom half of the world
in this important measure of health.

Jihadis thrive in such stagnated conditions. This leads to negative
annuity: Jihadism both grows amid stagnation and fuels stagnation. It
accelerated coincident with the European Enlightenment and the
relative decline of the Muslim Middle East. At its core, jihadism
is a violent rejection of many of the fundamental principles of
the European Enlightenment. Democracy, free markets, tolerance and
freedom of religion, secular government, and separation between
the religious, the political, and the individual spark religious
fury. It is no coincidence, then, that jihadis, under the banner of
cleansing their religion of evil Western influence, have focused
their attentions on the United States, the clearest manifestation
of the European Enlightenment today. They will continue to threaten
Western civilization until they are checked.

Fumbled Strategy

One of the greatest challenges facing strategic leaders today is
objectively examining the centuries-old roots of Islamic jihadism and
developing a strategy that will lead to a lasting solution to the
Western conflict with it. Many Western policymakers fail to assess
realistically why Arab and Islamic governments have been unable to
improve the condition of their populations, especially in contrast
to the West. This inability to grasp the root of Islamic jihadism is
the result of a moral relativism prominent in modern Western liberal
thought. For example, over the last few decades, it has become common
to value diversity and multiculturalism above societal well-being
and improvements in the human condition.

It is not, as Thomas Friedman argues in The World Is Flat, that the
fruits of the American experiment-free markets, property rights,
tolerance, democracy, and the rule of law-have left Islam behind.[39]
On the contrary, it is Islam that has opted out of progress by
allowing, promoting, and embracing centuries of reactionary and
retrospective reforms that rejected the idea that humans can indeed
improve their condition through reason and rationality. Muslim clerics
and leaders within the impoverished nations of the Islamic world need
to understand that they are responsible for the condition and grief
of their people. It is Islamism’s rejection of religious tolerance,
democracy, and the rule of law, in conjunction with its embrace of
anti-Semitism, theocracy, and sectarian strongmen exempt from law
and privileged by the authority they have usurped, that is the real
enemy in the Islamic world’s centuries-long interaction with the
United States. While Islamists skillfully manipulate the Western mass
media to enunciate an … la carte menu of grievances, eighteenth-
and nineteenth-century interactions show these are not the root cause
of jihadi terror. Indeed, a U.S. intelligence assessment, published two
years before Israel’s independence and any subsequent jihadi grievance,
already highlighted Islamist terrorism as a long-term threat.[40]
So long as Western officials adopt a nearsighted, grievance-based
view of the roots of Islamist terror, they will embolden jihadis
through appeasement.

It is essential that the grand strategy of the United States
addresses this basic conflict of interest. The present conflict is
not new. And it is religious. Believing that only a few "rogues" have
misappropriated religion is both na~Kve and counterfactual. U.S. and
Western leaders must confront the reality that jihadism is a religious
phenomenon that has grown popular and powerful enough to threaten
the continued progress of the American experiment and the European
Enlightenment. In the new grand strategy to defeat Islamic jihadism,
America must campaign, through its scholars and theologians if
appropriate, to encourage and facilitate imams and other Islamic
religious authority figures to reform Islam in a forward direction,
one that breaks from the past and encourages tolerance, the rule
of law, free inquiry, and free markets. Imams who support, either
passively or actively, jihadism should be undermined and exposed.

How should the United States revitalize its strategy? At home, the
U.S. government must better educate and explain the conflict to the
general audience. Education at all levels should inculcate U.S.

citizens in the history, philosophy, mechanics, virtues,
responsibilities, and achievements of the Western approach to freedom,
liberty, and the free market. Tolerance and diversity need not mean
acceptance of oppression and tyranny. Such an effort would entail
reinstalling this subject matter into the curricula of public
schools. The strategic leadership of the nation should drive the
public education effort, much as the founders did in the eighteenth
century. The Federalist Papers, generally attributed to James Madison,
Alexander Hamilton, and John Jay, are prototypical examples of
effective strategic communications that aimed, among other things,
to create a government strong enough to defend itself against the
Barbary pirates.

Internationally, U.S. foreign policy should reflect U.S. national
values and long-term objectives rather than near-term expediencies
devoid of the principles enumerated by the founding fathers. U.S.

foreign aid programs need reform.[41] Washington should set a visible
standard by supporting non-corrupt democracies, rather than funding
kleptocracies. Rather than fund short-term stability in regimes where
power is centrally concentrated, Washington should promote trade and
development in Islamic nations supporting the rule of law, tolerance,
and democracy. Trade and development in these nations empowers people
and entrepreneurs, catalyzes economic progress, and decentralizes
power in a culture that has deep tendencies toward autocracy.[42]

The half-century-long policy of supporting Arab state stability
regardless of its governance is a relic of the Cold War. In order
to defeat jihadism, U.S. foreign policy should marginalize Muslim
nations that are not supportive of the development of the rule of
law, tolerance, and democracy. Washington should not apologize for
supporting regional countries that seek peace, prosperity, and the
improved well-being of their citizens. To do otherwise fuels jihadi
rhetoric that the U.S. government seeks to oppress Muslims throughout
the world.

Another requirement is for the West to embark on a radical program
to redefine how its economies obtain and distribute energy. Former
director of Central Intelligence R. James Woolsey argues that denying
jihadis the use of oil as a weapon against the United States and the
West should be Washington’s highest priority.[43]

Finally, the history of U.S. interaction with Muslim polities shows
that "diplomacy backed by force" is the only effective approach to
relations with them.[44] Diplomacy is essential to ensure intentions
are understood. Consistent diplomacy is essential to build the trust
that majority Muslim countries need to support U.S. aims to advance
Enlightenment ideals. Military weakness and the inability to project
U.S. power have consistently led jihadis and Muslim kleptocrats to
launch attacks against U.S. interests.

[1] Ussama Makdisi, "`Anti-Americanism’ in the Arab World: An
Interpretation of a Brief History," Journal of American History,
Sept. 2002, p. 546.

[2] David Fromkin, A Peace to End All Peace: The Fall of the Ottoman
Empire and the Creation of the Modern Middle East (New York: Henry
Holt, 1989), pp. 23-62.

[3] Robert Fisk, The Great War for Civilization: The Conquest of the
Middle East (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2005), pp. 305-15.

[4] Michael Oren, Power, Faith, and Fantasy: America in the Middle
East, 1776 to the Present (New York: Oxford University Press, 2006).

[5] Frank Lambert, The Barbary Wars: American Independence in the
Atlantic World (New York: Hill and Wang, 2005), pp. 106-9.

[6] Richard B. Parker, Uncle Sam in Barbary: A Diplomatic History
(Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 2004), pp. 103-30; Lambert,
The Barbary Wars, pp. 49-78.

[7] Kevin Baker, "The Shores of Tripoli," American Heritage,
Feb./Mar. 2002, p. 21.

[8] James A. Field, "Novus Ordo Seclorum," America and the
Mediterranean World, 1776-1882 (Princeton: Princeton University Press,
1969), pp. 3-26; Lambert, The Barbary Wars, pp. 15-28.

[9] Lambert, The Barbary Wars, pp. 106, 112-4.

[10] Ibid., pp. 110, 123.

[11] Thomas Jefferson, "`The American Commissioners’ Report to John
Jay," in Paul L. Ford, ed., The Works of Thomas Jefferson, vol. 9
(New York and London: G.P. Putnam’s Sons, 1904-5), p. 358; quoted in
Lambert, The Barbary Wars, p. 116.

[12] Thomas Jefferson, "The American Commissioners’ Report to John
Jay," p. 358; quoted in Lambert, The Barbary Wars, p. 117.

[13] Lambert, The Barbary Wars, p. 110-1.

[14] Bernard Lewis, The Middle East: A Brief History of the Last
2,000 Years (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1995), p. 175.

[15] "The Truce with Tunis," Naval Documents Related to the United
States Wars with the Barbary Powers, vol. 1 (Washington, D.C.:
Government Printing Office, 1939), pp. 158-9; quoted in Lambert,
The Barbary Wars, p. 117.

[16] Field, America and the Mediterranean World, pp. 133-40.

[17] Parker, Uncle Sam in Barbary, pp. 134-5.

[18] Field, America and the Mediterranean World, p. 209.

[19] Ibid., pp. 345-73.

[20] Ahmad Dallal, "The Origins and Objectives of Islamic Revivalist
Thought, 1750-1850," Journal of the American Oriental Society,
July-Sept. 1993, p. 352.

[21] Field, America and the Mediterranean World, pp. 345-73.

[22] Ibid., pp. 368-70.

[23] Ibid., pp. 445-7.

[24] Anne Cipriano Venzon, "Gunboat Diplomacy in the Med," Proceedings
of the U.S. Naval Institute, Apr. 1985, pp. 26-31.

[25] Fromkin, A Peace to End All Peace, pp. 259-60.

[26] Bernard Lewis, The Crisis of Islam, Holy War and Unholy Terror
(New York: Random House, 2003), pp. 126-8.

[27] Dean Acheson, "Internal Correspondence of the U. S. Department of
State, January 1945," quoted in Robert Baer, Sleeping with the Devil
(New York: Crown, 2003), p. 79.

[28] Barry Rubin, "The Real Roots of Arab Anti-Americanism," Foreign
Affairs, Nov.-Dec. 2002, p. 75.

[29] R. James Woolsey, "Grand Strategy in the Middle East: The Long
War of the 21st Century," in K. M. Campbell, ed., An American Grand
Strategy for the Middle East (Washington, D.C.: Aspen Institute,
2004), p. 37.

[30] Richard W. Bulliet, "The Crisis within Islam," The Wilson
Quarterly, Winter 2002, p. 15.

[31] Mary R. Habeck, Knowing the Enemy: Jihadi Ideology and the War
on Terror (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2006), p. 12.

[32] Michael G. Knapp, "The Concept and Practice of Jihad in Islam,"
Parameters, Spring 2003, p. 92.

[33] Reza Aslan, No God but God: The Origins, Evolution, and Future
of Islam (New York: Random House, 2005), p. 138; Habeck, Knowing the
Enemy, p. 162; Lewis, The Crisis of Islam, p. 159.

[34] Anderson Cooper 360 Degrees, CNN, Sept. 7, 2007; United Press
International, Sept. 7, 2007.

[35] Muhammad Khatami, "Islamic Civil Society," speech to the eighth
session of the Islamic Summit Conference, Tehran, Radio Islam, Dec.

9, 1997.

[36] Lewis, The Crisis of Islam, p. 114.

[37] James Gwartney, Robert Lawson, and William Easterly, Economic
Freedom of the World, 2006 Annual Report (Vancouver: Fraser Institute,
2006), p. 39.

[38] Lewis, The Crisis of Islam, p. 113-9.

[39] Thomas L. Friedman, The World Is Flat: A Brief History of the
Twenty-first Century (New York: Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, 2005),
pp. 470-9.

[40] "Assessing the Islamist Threat, Circa 1946," Middle East
Quarterly, Summer 2006, pp. 76-82.

[41] Alberto Alesina and Beatrice Weder, "Do Corrupt Governments
Receive Less Foreign Aid?," American Economic Review, Sept. 2002, pp.

1126-38.

[42] Iqbal Z. Quadir, "The Bottleneck Is at the Top of the Bottle,"
The Fletcher Forum of World Affairs, Summer/Fall 2002, pp. 86-8.

[43] Woolsey, "Grand Strategy in the Middle East," pp. 33-4.

[44] Parker, Uncle Sam in Barbary, p. 160.

By Melvin E. Lee Middle East Quarterly

Melvin E. Lee is a sea captain and a nuclear engineer in the United
States Navy. He serves as special operations officer for the commander,
U.S. Naval Forces Europe, and commander, U.S. 6th Fleet.

The views expressed in this article are those of the author and do
not necessarily reflect the policy or position of the Department of
the Navy or U.S. government.