Washington Briefing: U.S. And Russia Detail Their Roles In Armenia-T

WASHINGTON BRIEFING: U.S. AND RUSSIA DETAIL THEIR ROLES IN ARMENIA-TURKEY DEAL
by Emil Sanamyan

0-17-u-s–and-russia-detail-their-roles-in-armenia -turkey-deal
Saturday October 17, 2009

Reports by U.S. and Russian officials played up their respective
interventions as decisive in getting Armenia and Turkey to sign the
protocols on bilateral relations.

The October 10 signing in Zurich, Switzerland, of the protocols,
which require parliamentary ratification to take effect, was delayed
by several hours after Armenian and Turkish foreign ministers Edward
Nalbandian and Ahmet Davutoglu took issue with each other’s proposed
post-signing statements.

En route from Zurich to London later that night, Secretary of
State Hillary Clinton revealed that she and Assistant Secretary for
Europe Phil Gordon "have been dealing with [Armenia-Turkey issues]
for months."

The United States initially had claimed no public role, with
Switzerland serving as the formal mediator.

Mrs. Clinton said she was on the phone with the Armenian and Turkish
foreign ministers "to get everybody in the same place." She also
talked to President Barack Obama "several times."

"So that’s when I went in and spent time talking through some of the
concerns that had been expressed, and brought Minister Nalbandian
with us back to the university," with other senior officials arriving
there for the delayed signing ceremony.

Meanwhile, citing an unnamed source in "one of the delegations,"
the Russian daily Kommersant gave credit for "saving the day" to
Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov.

"While Secretary Clinton was trying to convince the sides to avoid a
scandal, Lavrov, [European Union foreign affairs commissioner] Javier
Solana, French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner, and Slovenian Foreign
Minister [present on behalf of Council of Europe] Samuel Zbogar were
watching the Russia-Germany soccer game."

When the game was over, the Armenian and Turkish foreign ministers were
presented with an ultimatum and a deadline to sign, Kommersant claimed.

"At that moment Mr. Lavrov wrote a short note to Mr. Nalbandian. It had
six words ‘Edward! Agree to ceremony without statements,’" Kommersant’s
source reported. "The note was also co-signed by Kouchner, Solana,
and Zbogar."

The signing ceremony went ahead in silence, concluding with hugs,
kisses, and no comments.

Turkish leaders have since said they did not expect ratification any
time soon. Mrs. Clinton acknowledged that ratification is "going to
be difficult."

"There is a lot of very difficult, complex issues that have to
continually be discussed and worked out," she said following the
signing. "The Armenians, as we saw with President [Serge] Sargsian’s
tour, have people around the world with strong feelings."

http://www.reporter.am/go/article/2009-1

Authorities Make Use Of Controversy In Opposition

AUTHORITIES MAKE USE OF CONTROVERSY IN OPPOSITION

Aysor
Oct 19 2009
Armenia

"Armenia’s authorities not having any strong opposition in country
managed to reach or will manage to reach the realization of any
program," said at today’s press-conference head of Political
Studies Center Ruben Hakobyan adding that "the opposition became
a support-platform for authorities cause of its controversy and
internal break."

"Coalition is not a political support, it is a serious financial and
administrative platform, not political," he said.

The analyst shared his view that people don’t trust the opposition
as it is full of discord and disagreements inside, and the struggle
for leadership led to the situation when "it’s dangerous to trust
this opposition."

"This is exactly this vote of censure that the authorities make use
of." He believes that it is still possible to prevent the ratification
of Armenian-Turkish protocols.

"The only way to prevent this process is to depose the authorities," he
said adding that Armenian authorities set Armenian-Turkish relations
under pressure. It would be better if they resign under opposition’s
pressure than "sign that humiliating protocol under pressure of
superpowers."

Turkey Will Never Change Its Position On Occupied Azerbaijani Territ

TURKEY WILL NEVER CHANGE ITS POSITION ON OCCUPIED AZERBAIJANI TERRITORIES: DAVUTOGLU

ArmInfo
2009-10-19 21:19:00

ArmInfo. Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said Monday that
Turkey would never change its position "on Azerbaijani territories
occupied by Armenia."

Davutoglu said "saving Azerbaijani territories from occupation"
was one of the leading national matters for Turkey.

"Azerbaijani soil is as precious as Turkish soil," Davutoglu told a
joint press conference after his meeting with Czech Foreign Minister
and Deputy Prime Minister Jan Kohout.

Asked about his comments on hauling down of the Turkish flag in a
martyrdom in Azerbaijan, Davutoglu said Turkish and Azerbaijani flags
were both holy as flags of "a common nation."

"What we have been told was it was a temporary arrangement, a
measure for a restoration work," he said. "We have full confidence
in Azerbaijani people. We know their love to Turkey. We will never
allow attempts to cause discord between Turkey and Azerbaijan."

Arthur Abraham: Taylor Was Good, But I Was Better

ARTHUR ABRAHAM: TAYLOR WAS GOOD, BUT I WAS BETTER

PanARMENIAN.Net
19.10.2009 15:25 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ King Arthur Abraham (31-0, 25 KOs) opened the Super
Six World Boxing Classic in style on Saturday night when he knocked
out Jermain Taylor (28-4, 17 KOs) with six seconds to go in the 12th
round. Fighting in front of a boisterous sell-out crowd of 14.200
fans at the famed o2 World in Berlin, Abraham connected with a huge
right to the head to send the former undisputed middleweight champion
down and out. "He was good, but I was better," Abraham said. "It was
a great fight in front of a great audience. Now I look forward to
returning to America."

After a slow start, Abraham gained control of the contest and was ahead
on all three scorecards going into the final round. He hurt Taylor
with a big right in the ninth but the American superstar proved his
chin and continued. Just seconds before the final bell, King Arthur
then landed a devastating punch to clinch the first three points of
the tournament. "I had been waiting for a hole in his guard the whole
night," Abraham said. "I finally found it," Boxen.com reported.

BAKU: Azerbaijani politicians forecast rapid release of five regions

Trend, Azerbaijan
Oct 16 2009

Azerbaijani politicians forecast rapid release of five regions
occupied by Armenia

Azerbaijan, Baku, October 16 / Trend News T. Konyayeva /

Azerbaijani independent politicians forecast releasing of five regions
of Nagorno-Karabakh by Armenia soon.

"I think that there is certain agreement between Ankara and Yerevan to
return five Azerbaijani regions occupied by Armenia," Azerbaijani
independent politician, Rasim Aqayev, said at a meeting of
politicians’ discussion club ‘End of football diplomacy. What is the
next action?’ on October 16.

The conflict between the two South Caucasus countries began in 1988
when Armenia made territorial claims against Azerbaijan. Azerbaijan
lost all of Nagorno-Karabakh except for Shusha and Khojali in December
1991. In 1992-93, Armenian armed forces occupied Shusha, Khojali and 7
districts surrounding Nagorno-Karabakh. Azerbaijan and Armenia signed
a ceasefire in 1994. The co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group – Russia,
France, and the U.S. – are currently holding the peace negotiations.

Aqayev said that there is much vagueness in Armenia-Turkey relations.
Tractability and readiness of Armenian side to negotiate and obvious
coordination on this issue between the USA and Russia are surprising.
Politician said that perhaps, there is the agreement on return of five
Azerbaijani regions occupied by Armenia.

Signing of Turkey-Armenia protocols to resume diplomatic relations is
not initiative of only these two countries, other Azerbaijani
politician, Fikret Sadikhov, said. He said that Armenian and Turkish
parliaments will ratify these protocols. Five occupied regions of
Azerbaijan are likely to be released, he said.

Armenia and Turkey signed the protocols to resume diplomatic
relations, broken in 1993, in Zurich on October 10.

Five occupied regions of Azerbaijan will be released soon. Refugees
will return to their lands. Communications will be restored. Kalbajar
and Lachin will be returned in five years, independent politician,
Zardusht Alizade, said.

Armenia expects liberal prices of gas from Russia

Armenia expects liberal prices of gas from Russia

YEREVAN, October 16. /ARKA/. `Armenia expects liberal prices of gas
from Russia’, said Armen Movsisyan, Minister of Energy and Natural
Resources of Armenia to the journalists on Friday.

According to the newspaper `Commersant’, `Gasprom’ currently conducts
negotiations on decrease of prices of Russian gas for Yerevan. In 2010
the price of gas for Armenia can decrease from $200 for 1 thousand
cubic meters up to $180. `Armenia and Russia have certain appointments
for the change of price of gas in a certain period of time and we try
to negotiate with Russian party’, said Movsisyan. According to the
agreement about gas provision to Armenia, the price of gas for Armenia
makes 154 US dollars for 1 thousand cubic meters with VAT as of April
1, 2009 instead of 110 US dollars for 1 thousand cubic meters with
VAT.

Since April 1, 2010 the price of gas will make 200 US dollars for 1
thousand cubic meters with VAT and 169.5 US dollars without VAT. The
agreement was signed on the basis of mutually beneficial conditions
from 2009 to 2015. `We do not refuse from preliminary appointments,
but we try to get rather `soft’ and low gas price. We do not know yet
whether it is possible or not, because according to the appointments
the change in gas price enters into force since April 1.

We have still time till April 1 and we will see the results of
negotiations’, said Movsisyan. The company `ArmRosgasprom’ is a
monopolist in the provision and distribution of Russian natural gas in
the internal market of Armenia. CJSC `ArmRosgasprom’ is established in
1997. The share of `Gasprom in charter capital is 80%, and the share
of the Government of Armenia – 20%. Russian gas enters Armenia by
transit through Georgia. –0–

EU Lauds And Criticizes Turkey

EU LAUDS AND CRITICIZES TURKEY

United Press International
Oct. 15, 2009 at 11:50 AM

BRUSSELS, Oct. 15 (UPI) — The European Union lauded Turkey for
its foreign policy developments but urged Ankara to protect press
freedom in a generally upbeat progress report on the country’s EU
membership talks.

Every year, Brussels issues a report on how Turkey is doing in its bid
to join the 27-member EU. The latest progress report, issued Wednesday,
praises Turkey for its recent foreign policies: It lauds a recent deal
with Armenia to re-establish diplomatic ties and reopen the border
between the two countries; commends Ankara for its efforts to reach
out to its Kurdish minority and the Kurdish authorities in northern
Iraq; and commends Ankara’s role in the Middle East peace process.

But it also urges Turkey to normalize its relations with EU-member
Cyprus, to improve minority and women’s rights and to guarantee
freedom of the press.

The latter is threatened by a move made by Turkish tax authorities,
the EU feels.

Brussels criticized tax evasion fines and penalties over $4 billion
against Turkish media conglomerate Dogan Yayin that "potentially
undermine the economic viability of the group and therefore affect
freedom of the press in practice," the report said.

EU Enlargement Commissioner Olli Rehn said he had asked Turkish
authorities to re-evaluate the fine — which trumps the company’s
estimated value — as it felt to him like a political sanction.

Dogan, which owns prominent newspapers including Hurriyet, owns roughly
half of the Turkish media landscape and has been rather critical
of the current AK party government of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
Erdogan. Ankara has denied that the fine is politically motivated.

EU officials are also worried by the fact that Ankara and Cyprus seem
to be unable to bury their differences.

Cyprus, a popular Mediterranean tourist destination, has been
divided into a Republic of Cyprus — the Greek Cypriot south — and
a Turkish-occupied north since a 197 rkish invasion. Ankara does not
recognize the Republic of Cyprus, an EU member. Its ships and planes
are banned from Turkish ports and airports.

And another big problem is that out of the 35 negotiation chapters
Turkey needs to complete to join the bloc, Ankara has opened only
11, with 15 chapters frozen by the EU or by individual member states
opposed to Turkey’s bid.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel
have in the past advocated granting Turkey a privileged partnership
instead of full EU membership, citing the body’s expansion fatigue.

Supporters of the bid say Turkey, a country of nearly 80 million
Muslims, as an EU member could become a cultural bridge between the
West and the Muslim world.

Apart from Turkey, the EU looks at two more candidate countries,
Macedonia and Croatia, the latter being closest to becoming a full
member. Other potential members include Albania, Serbia and Bosnia
Herzegovina.

Q. & A: Mark Geragos

Q. & A: MARK GERAGOS
By Zain Shauk

Valley Sun
Oct 15, 2009

A set of news articles hangs on the walls of attorney Mark Geragos’
office, a record of the high-profile cases he has argued.set of
news articles hangs on the walls of attorney Mark Geragos’ office,
a record of the high-profile cases he has argued.

A New York Times story, enlarged and affixed to a shelf display,
bears the headline, "For Lawyer, It’s Michael Jackson on Line 1,
Scott Peterson on Line 2."

Other articles touch on his defense of Greg Anderson, a personal
trainer caught up in a performance-enhancing drug investigation
related to Barry Bonds and the Bay Area Laboratory Cooperative, and
actress Winona Ryder, who was arrested on shoplifting charges in 2001.

The La Cañada Flintridge resident recently defended singer Chris
Brown, in a domestic violence case involving singer Rihanna, and is
representing actress Nicole Richie in her suit involving a paparazzo
who rear-ended her.

But for all of his headline-grabbing appearances alongside celebrities,
Geragos says his passion has been fighting on behalf of Armenian
Genocide victims.

advertisement He has fought more than 15 cases related to the
genocide. Two recent cases sought payment from life insurance companies
to descendants of genocide victims who held policies. Geragos and his
team were able to negotiate settlements earning a combined total of
$37 million, from AXA and New York Life Insurance Co.

A third case against German insurers Victoria Versicherung and
Ergo Versicherungsgruppe, as well as parent company Munchener
Ruckversicherungs-Gesellschaft AG, hit a major setback Aug. 20, when
the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled the descendants of the
genocide victims could not seek payments on the policies.

Two of the three judges on the appellate panel argued the claims would
interfere with U.S. foreign policy, since the federal government has
not officially recognized the Armenian Genocide.

â~@~B

Zain Shauk: Your career has been defined largely by your work defending
high-profile clien cide-related case rank for you?

Mike Geragos: I could give you a laundry list of the people I’ve
represented, but the cases I’m most proud of are the genocide
litigation cases. All four of my grandparents are survivors and fled
the genocide.

Q: Why have you been so invested in this cause?

A: My feeling is that this is a real way to make a difference in
being a lawyer with something I feel passionately about as a human
being. I could take any number of cases, and fortunately I can pick
and choose what kinds of cases I want to take now, but a lot of them
revolve around these Armenian insurance cases, Armenian bank cases
and defending what they call the hai tahd, the Armenian cause.

Q: How do you hope to make a difference from these cases?

A: Well, I think there’s been a fight, rightly or wrongly, for years
over the genocide. Ronald Reagan called it a genocide. Congress passed
two genocide resolutions. It’s only recent generations of politicians
that have kind of gone backward on this and that’s because of the
Turkish lobby and so I feel like that’s really an affront. It’s an
affront to my grandparents’ memory. It’s an affront to what it is to
be an Armenian and if I can do something in a legal forum I’m going
to do it.

Q: You mentioned presidents and their stances on the
genocide. President Obama, as you know on his campaign to be elected,
he was very pro-genocide recognition —

A: And he said if he was elected he would make sure it passed. He
said on April 24 he would call it a genocide. He came close. He used
the Armenian words, Meds Yeghern, but he did not say that it was a
genocide. He did, however, say that his opinion has not changed.

Q: What was your reaction when you didn’t hear the word genocide?

A: My reaction was a fairly impassioned speech at Times Square to
probably about 15,000 people that were there about "Shame on him."

Q: How do you feel about President Obama winning the Nobel Peace Prize,
in light of his decision to not recognize the Armenian Genocide?

A: I th all it for what it is. It’s a historical fact that it is a
genocide. America loses its moral standing when we don’t embrace that
and we start to talk about shades of gray.

Q: You’ve had more than 5,000 claims made in the AXA case and about
10,000 claims are being evaluated by authorities, how much will
each earn?

A: It varies depending on what their policy was. So if you had a
policy that was 500 francs, that would get valued differently than
if you had one that was 1,000 francs or if you had one that was 2,000
francs. Some people would make up to $20,000.

Q: Twenty thousand dollars per claim, or in total?

A: It depended. It could be as low as $500. It could be as high as
$20,000. For a family it could be as much as $50,000 if a number of
family members had claims.

Q: That seems low for a life insurance claim. What has been your
motivation in pursuing these relatively small payments?

A: Remember back then, those were small amounts of policies for
people who weren’t making that much on a yearly basis. I mean,
if they had a 500-franc policy, these were people who might have
been making 500 francs in two years. Back then it would have been
a monumental amount of money. Twenty-thousand dollars before 1920,
as my father used to say, was real money. Back then, in the 1920s,
and leading up to the Depression, you were considered practically a
millionaire if you made $10,000 in a year. So those were huge numbers
back then, when you look at it.

The other thing is that out of the almost $40 million we’ve recovered
so far, probably $12 to $13 million of that has gone straight to
charities. And the reason for that is, interestingly, 40 to 45%
of the policies have no claims whatsoever against them, which means
that the Turks had completely wiped out the entire lineage of that
family. In fact, if you went and looked at the policy cards–I was a
sociology and anthropology major in college and my father used to say
it was useless, but the one thing it did teach me is I would look and
I would notice the name of t ou know butcher or baker, and it would
have the wife and kids’ names. And then it would show the village
that they were from and the dates that their premiums were paid,
and their premiums were usually paid in gold coins.

I actually at one point could track village-by-village when the
payments stopped being made and you could see the progression of the
genocide through the insurance policy cards and it was a stunning
thing to see.

Q: When two of three federal appellate court judges ruled against
you, they argued that your case shouldn’t interfere with U.S. foreign
policy. If the government hasn’t taken a stance on the genocide can
you successfully sue on the grounds that a genocide took place?

A: Absolutely. It’s just kind of a beside the point argument. The
dissent got it right. The dissent said what difference does it make
what the American policy is toward Turkey? These are lawsuits against
a German company and the German company should be held accountable.

Q: It doesn’t matter whether a genocide occurred or not, you’re saying.

A: I mean the fact is the genocide did happen, but to inject that
into the lawsuit, in some ways, I think, is a red herring in order to
try to defend on that basis. I mean it’s like somebody saying, "Hey,
you owe me money." And me bringing up some completely irrelevant fact
and saying, "I’m not going to pay you because the Dodgers won last
night." What does that have to do with anything?

Q: Are you hoping this case influences foreign policy?

A: Yes, I think it goes a long way toward galvanizing public opinion
on foreign policy.

Q: You’ve represented a number of celebrities and a lot of them were
being ridiculed in tabloids as the cases were underway. What was the
most circus-like atmosphere that you’ve experienced?

A: That is a good question. Actually, each time one of these cases
happens it gets more circus-like. And the most recent, obviously,
was Chris Brown and that’s obviously the most circus-like atmosphere
I’ve ever seen.

Q: How so?

A: T e completely surrounded by thousands of people. The amount
of security that we needed to get in and out of the courthouse was
astronomical. The day that Rihanna was there it was the same thing. I
mean, it was just an unbelievable melee, in terms of the amount of
people that were there, that were watching, that were focused on it.

Q: Your career of high-profile cases began with the defense of Susan
McDougal, related to the Whitewater scandal involving Bill Clinton. How
did you get to that point and beyond?

A: The Susan McDougal case, it was someone from the Women Lawyers
Assn. in Los Angeles called me up. I was actually representing four
different women who were charged with murder in the 1990s. She was
being held in a place called Civil Brand. I visited her one day and
we hit it off. I just thought I could help her get it resolved. She
just had a little case out here. That was when nobody knew who Susan
McDougal was. The next thing you know, it became an international
sensation with Whitewater and she got indicted on that. We won those
cases, those back-to-back trials, got acquittals on both of them,
and it just kind of snowballed from there.

Q: What is it like representing celebrities that vary so much in
their backgrounds, from a personal trainer to the king of pop?

A: They’re like everybody else, in the sense that they’ve got hopes,
they’ve got fears and they want to be reassured. People really are
not all that different. Everybody’s got the same anxieties about
what they’re facing and that’s part of our job is to try and reduce
that anxiety, find some way to get them extricated out of a difficult
situation.

Q: How do you deal with media criticism of your clients?

A: I’m very protective of my clients. I don’t stand for it at all. It’s
one of the reasons that sometimes I become polarizing is because I
will defend those clients until my last breath. Nobody messes with
my clients.

Q: When would you say you were polarizing?

A: I would say the Scott Peterson case was a very polarizing case
They didn’t like the fact that I defended him. People wanted him
to fry. It was the greatest prejudgment of guilt that I’ve seen in
any case in the last 30 years, but I don’t have any apologies for
that. I mean when I represent a client and I believe in my client,
I’ll do whatever it takes to defend them.

Q: You also defended a USC student who was accused of murdering her
newborn child when she left it in a trash bin behind a restaurant.

A: Yes, Holly Ashcraft in a murder case, which we got dismissed five
times. That was a very polarizing case as well and I have no apologies
for that. I love Holly to death and her mother, her sister and I
did everything ethically and legally possible to get those charges
dismissed and we prevailed. Three straight times we got the murder
charges thrown out.

Q: You think that was the right thing to do?

A: It was the absolute right thing to do.

Q: Do you sometimes hear criticisms from people who you wouldn’t
expect to be critical?

A: Yeah, all the time. But you know, a lot of that is jealousy and
I understand that. A lot of that is ignorance and I understand that,
but if you don’t have thick skin, you can’t do what I do.

RA Prosecutor General Receives Kharkov Governor

RA PROSECUTOR GENERAL RECEIVES KHARKOV GOVERNOR

Noyan Tapan
Oct 15, 2009

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 15, NOYAN TAPAN. RA Prosecutor General Aghvan
Hovsepian received a delegation led by Ukrainian Kharkov region
Governor Arsen Avakov on October 15. Deputy Prosecutor of Kharkov
Sergey Khachatrian also took part in the meeting.

A. Hovsepian attached importance to mutually beneficial cooperation
between the two countries mentioning that close cooperation has been
established between the Prosecutors Offices, and the agreement on
cooperation signed in 2008 in Kiev creates a wide possibility to
develop the cooperation.

According to RA Prosecutor General’s Press Service, at the meeting the
sides discussed issues regarding concrete directions of cooperation, in
particular, lawyers’ retraining, cooperation between Kharkov Academy
of Lawyers and Armenian Prosecutor’s School. Concrete agreements
were reached.

Europeans Criticize Turkey Over Threats To Media Freedoms

EUROPEANS CRITICIZE TURKEY OVER THREATS TO MEDIA FREEDOMS
STEPHEN CASTLE and SEBNEM ARSU

New York Times
October 14, 2009

BRUSSELS — European officials gave Turkey new warnings on Wednesday
over threats to freedom of expression in the country as part of an
annual progress report on its efforts to join the European Union.

Skip to next paragraph Related Times Topics: Turkey

The European enlargement commissioner, Olli Rehn, in particular
criticized the Turkish tax ministry’s recent move to impose a fine of
5.7 billion liras — roughly $3.9 billion — on the country’s biggest
media conglomerate, Dogan Yayin, whose affiliates and ownership have
been critical of the governing party. The government reiterated on
Wednesday that the issue was purely a tax matter, but Mr. Rehn argued
that it seemed politically motivated.

"If a tax fine is worth the annual turnover of the company," he said,
"it is quite a strong sanction, and it may not only be a fiscal
sanction but also it feels like a political sanction."

Mr. Rehn also criticized efforts to take legal action against
journalists and writers, including the Nobel laureate Orhan Pamuk. And
the report listed Turkey’s refusal to open its ports to vessels from
Cyprus, a European government that Turkey does not recognize because
of a longstanding territorial dispute over the island, as a continuing
factor hurting Turkey’s efforts to join.

In general, the progress report, composed by the European Commission
and including assessments of seven Balkan nations also seeking to join
the European Union, did not close the door on Turkish membership. It
praised several developments over the past year, including government
efforts to end decades of hostilities with Armenia and open borders,
and to ease tensions with the Kurdish minority in Turkey.

The Turkish minister in charge of negotiations with Europe, Egemen
Bagis, called the reports a balanced document and said that the
detailed nature of the criticism was a good sign for Turkey.

"The precis oach in the comments show that Turkey has entered an
advanced phase in negotiations," he said. "It tells us to keep up
the good work, and continue with reforms, a message that we will be
following in future."

Still, the public criticism underlined the fragility of Turkey’s
efforts to join. France’s and Germany’s outspoken opposition to full
membership for Turkey have raised doubts both in Europe and within
Turkey itself that a deal can be reached any time soon.

Sinan Ulgen, chairman of the Center for Economic and Foreign Policy
Studies, an Istanbul-based research group, said that the European
Commission appeared to be putting a positive gloss on the talks to
try to keep the process alive.

"There has been a conscious effort on the part of the commission to
appear a bit more positive than the situation warrants," he said,
"in view of the fact that there is a lot of opposition in Europe
about Turkish accession."

Mr. Ulgen added that France’s opposition, in particular, has given
"the impression in Turkey that no matter what we do we will never
get to the E.U."

Stephen Castle reported from Brussels, and Sebnem Arsu from Bursa,
Turkey.