Azerbaijan Foils U.S. Embassy Attack By Islamic Group

AZERBAIJAN FOILS U.S. EMBASSY ATTACK BY ISLAMIC GROUP
By Henry Meyer

Bloomberg
Oct 29 2007

Oct. 29 (Bloomberg) — Security forces in oil-rich Azerbaijan
prevented a planned terrorist attack on the U.S. embassy in the
capital Baku by fundamentalist Islamic militants, officials said. An
Azerbaijani terrorist group aimed to attack government buildings and
the U.S. Embassy in Baku, National Security Ministry spokesman Arif
Babayev said in a telephone interview today.

Law enforcement officers killed one of suspected militants when he
resisted arrest and detained others during an early morning operation
outside the capital on Oct. 27, Babayev said. The United States and
the U.K. today closed their embassies in Baku in response to "security
concerns." The mainly Muslim Caspian Sea nation has sought closer ties
with the U.S., helping complete a U.S.-supported oil pipeline from the
Caspian to Turkey and sending troops to support military operations
in Iraq and Afghanistan. The militants included an army officer who
deserted from his unit a few days ago, taking a store of automatic
weapons and grenades with him, the security official said. Authorities
are searching for the officer, Babayev added. He provided no further
details about the group. U.S. officials in Baku late yesterday sent
a statement to Americans living there to be on guard and to bolster
their personal security. `Vigilance’ "While there is no information
at this time that other American or Western interests in Azerbaijan
are being targeted, the U.S. Embassy encourages Americans to maintain
a high level of vigilance and take appropriate steps to bolster their
own personal security," the message said. In Washington, U.S. State
Department spokesman Sean McCormack said the embassy had scaled back
operations while it works with Azerbaijani authorities on "threat
information" it received.

He gave no specifics of the threat. "I think we’re in a good posture
now," McCormack told reporters. "I would expect that they will
resume normal operations in the days to come." U.S. Embassy spokesman
Jonathan Henick said by telephone from Baku that only a few of the
400 U.S. and local staff at the embassy were working today. A British
Foreign Office spokeswoman said by telephone from London that, owing
to "local security concerns," the U.K. closed its embassy in Baku to
the public. The spokeswoman declined to be identified in line with
Foreign Office rules. BP Plc is a major foreign investor in Azerbaijan,
which has 0.58 percent of the world’s proven oil reserves and 47.7
trillion cubic feet of natural gas reserves, according to the BP
Statistical Review. Azerbaijan gained independence from the Soviet
Union in 1991. It borders Iran, Turkey and Russia as well as Armenia
and Georgia.

Divide and Conquer; The United States should be squeezing Turkey

Divide and Conquer

The United States should be squeezing Turkey, not the other way around

Fighting words: A Wartime Lexicon

Slate.com
Monday, October 29, 2007

By Christopher Hitchens

In the past century, the principal victims of genocide or attempted
genocide have been, or at least have prominently included, the
Armenians, the Jews, and the Kurds. During most of the month of October,
events and politicians both conspired to set these three peoples at one
another’s throats. What is there to be learned from this fiasco for
humanity?

To recapitulate: At the very suggestion that the U.S. House of
Representatives might finally pass a long-proposed resolution
recognizing the 1915 massacres in Armenia as a planned act of "race
murder" (that was U.S. Ambassador Henry Morgenthau’s term for it at a
time when the word genocide had not yet been coined), the Turkish
authorities redoubled their threat to invade the autonomous Kurdish-run
provinces of northern Iraq. And many American Jews found themselves
divided between their sympathy for the oppressed and the slaughtered and
their commitment to the state interest of Israel, which maintains a
strategic partnership with Turkey, and in particular with Turkey’s
highly politicized armed forces.

To illuminate this depressing picture, one might begin by offering a few
distinctions. In 1991, in northern Iraq, where you could still see and
smell the gassed and poisoned towns and villages of Kurdistan, I heard
Jalal Talabani of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan say that Kurds ought
to apologize to the Armenians for the role they had played as enforcers
for the Ottomans during the time of the genocide. Talabani, who has
often repeated that statement, is now president of Iraq. (I would regard
his unforced statement as evidence in itself, by the way, in that proud
peoples do not generally offer to apologize for revolting crimes that
they did not, in fact, commit.) So, of course, it was upon him, both as
an Iraqi and as a Kurd, that Turkish guns and missiles were trained last
month.

And here, a further distinction: Many of us who are ardent supporters of
Kurdish rights and aspirations have the gravest reservations about the
so-called Kurdistan Workers Party, or PKK. This is a Stalinist cult
organization, roughly akin to a Middle Eastern Shining Path group. (Its
story, and the story of its bizarre leader Abdullah Öcalan, are well
told in Aliza Marcus’ new book Blood And Belief: The PKK and the Kurdish
Fight for Independence.) The attempt of this thuggish faction to exploit
the new zone of freedom in Iraqi Kurdistan is highly irresponsible and
plays directly into the hands of those forces in the Turkish military
who want to resurrect Kemalist chauvinism as a weapon against Prime
Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s government, which it sees as soft on
Kurdish demands. There’s a paradox here, in that the uniformed satraps
who claim to defend Turkish secularism are often more reactionary than
the recently re-elected and broadly Islamist Justice and Development
Party. The generals vetoed a meeting earlier this year between Abdullah
Gul – now president of Turkey and then foreign minister – and the Kurdish
Regional Government in Iraq. This alone shows that they are using the
border question and the PKK as a wedge issue for domestic politics.

This is enough complexity to be going on with, but Congress and the
executive branch have been handling it with appalling amateurishness.
The Armenian resolution is an old story. I can remember when it was
sponsored by Sen. Robert Dole and stonewalled by President Bill Clinton.
What a shame that we didn’t get it firmly on the record decades ago. But
now a House and a White House that can barely bring themselves to utter
the word Kurdish are both acting as if nothing mattered except Turkish
amour-propre. And, as a consequence, the United States and its friends
are being squeezed by Ankara instead of – to put it shortly – the other way
around. This is disgracefully undignified.

In 2003, the Turkish authorities, who had been parasitic on American and
NATO support for several decades, refused to allow our bases in Turkey
to be employed for a "northern front" in the removal of Saddam Hussein
unless their own forces were allowed to follow us into Iraqi Kurdistan.
The Bush administration quite rightly refused this bargain. The damage
done by Turkey’s subsequent fit of pique was enormous – nobody ever
mentions it, but if the coalition had come at Baghdad from two
directions, a number of Sunni areas would have got the point (of
irreversible regime change) a lot sooner than they did. The rogue PKK
presence was not then a hot issue; Turkey simply wished to pre-empt the
emergence of any form of Iraqi Kurdish self-government that could be an
incitement or encouragement to its own huge Kurdish minority.

So, let us be clear on a few things. The European Union, to which Turkey
has applied for membership with warm American support, has insisted on
recognition of Kurdish language rights and political rights within
Turkey. We can hardly ask for less. If the Turks wish to continue lying
officially about what happened to the Armenians, then we cannot be
expected to oblige them by doing the same (and should certainly resent
and repudiate any threats against ourselves or our allies that would
ensue from our Congress affirming the truth). Then there remains the
question of Cyprus, where Turkey maintains an occupation force that has
repeatedly been condemned by a thesaurus of U.N. resolutions ever since
1974. It is not our conduct that should be modified by Turkey’s
arrogance; we do a favor to the democratization and modernization of
that country by insisting that it get its troops out of Cyprus, pull its
forces back from the border with Iraq, face the historic truth about
Armenia, and in other ways cease to act as if the Ottoman system were
still in operation.

*****

In Slate two weeks ago, I mentioned that security for Ayaan Hirsi Ali
might have to be paid for partly by private subscription. Here are the
details for all who may wish to contribute to this eminently deserving
cause. Checks should be made payable to the Ayaan Hirsi Ali Security
Trust and sent to the same trust in care of Bank of Georgetown, 1054
31st St., NW, Suite 18, Washington, D.C. 20007. The trust’s tax
identification number is 75-6826872. Those who prefer wire transfer
should use account number 1010054748 and bank routing number 054001712.
This appeal is a test of our seriousness in the face of theocracy and
its assassins.

Christopher Hitchens is a columnist for Vanity Fair and the author of
God Is Not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything.

Article URL:

http://www.slate.com/id/2176842/

The Karabakh Agreement May Be Signed Before Spring

THE KARABAKH AGREEMENT MAY BE SIGNED BEFORE SPRING

armradio.am
26.10.2007 16:30

OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs Matthew Bryza has declared that a framework
agreement on the resolution of the Karabakh conflict may be signed
between the Presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan by next spring.

"There is possibility that the Presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan
will sign a framework agreement on the settlement of the Karabakh
conflict before the presidential elections in Armenia next spring,"
Brayza told journalists at the international airport of Baku.

Prime Minister Meets Condoleezza Rice

PRIME MINISTER MEETS CONDOLEEZZA RICE

Hayots Ashkharh Daily, Armenia
Oct 25 2007

Prime Minister Serge Sargsyan had a meeting with the US Under-Secretary
of State Ruben Jeffrey in the morning of October 23, the last day of
his visit to the United States.

There was a discussion on issues concerning the current stage and
the future of the Armenian-American economic relations; the parties
thoroughly touched upon the activity of the Armenian-American working
group and issues concerning the further improvement of the investment
atmosphere in Armenia.

The Under-Secretary of State mentioned with satisfaction that the US
authorities were happy to see the serious results attained in Armenia
due to the American assistance.

PM Serge Sargsyan mentioned that during the recent years Armenia has
done considerable work towards creating strong grounds, and the task of
the Government is to speed up the development paces still further. The
parties shared the opinion that Armenia has to be competitive on the
world scale, in order to be a winner on the investment market.

Within the frameworks of his visit the Prime Minister had a meeting
with the US State Secretary Condoleezza Rice.

A wide scope of issues was discussed during the meeting. Touching
upon Armenia’s current democratic and economic reforms, Serge Sargsyan
introduced the RA authorities’ continuous efforts in that direction. In
particular, he mentioned that after the last parliamentary elections
Armenia established serious grounds for pursuing the initiatives
aimed at the improvement of the electoral processes.

Condoleezza Rice expressed willingness on behalf of the US Government
to assist Armenia in solving the technical problems that may emerge
while organizing the 2008 presidential elections. The parties also
discussed the current stage of the Karabakh peace settlement process,
stated the importance of speeding it up to the greatest possible
extent.

Serge Sargsyan particularly mentioned that Azerbaijan’s bellicose
statements (recently growing in number) do not absolutely contribute
to the peaceful settlement of the process.

The relations of Armenia with the other neighbors, security and energy
issues, Armenia’s participation in international peacekeeping missions
and other issues of mutual interest were discussed during the meeting.

During the second half the day PM Serge Sargsyan had a meeting with
the members of the Armenian Congress of America, under the leadership
of Hrayr Hovhannisyan. Issues concerning the organization’s further
activities and programs were discussed; ideas were exchanged with
regard to the challenges currently faced by Armenia.

3 Fighters Go Missing At World Boxing Championships

3 FIGHTERS GO MISSING AT WORLD BOXING CHAMPIONSHIPS
Agence France-Presse

Inquirer.net
Oct 26 2007
Philippines

CHICAGO — Two Ugandan fighters and one from Armenia were being
sought by Chicago police on Thursday after going missing from
their delegations at the World Boxing Championships, organizers
said. Doug Arnot of the organizing committee said the three fighters
had left their respective delegations, apparently voluntarily,
without contacting their trainers or team officials, and for that
reason the case had been turned over to police as a missing persons
search. "When the delegations from these countries told us of the
absences, we contacted the Chicago police department which will
investigate the matter," Arnot said. Chicago was given the job of
hosting the championships in May after the event was withdrawn
from Moscow. Amateur boxing powerhouse Cuba chose not to send a
team rather than risk fighters defecting. That decision came in
the wake of the attempted defections of two Cuban boxers during the
Pan American Games in July. Their attempted defection followed last
December’s loss of Olympic champions Odlanier Solis, Yan Barthelemi
and Yuriorquis Gamboa who quit the team while training in Venezuela
for the Pan American Games.

Genocide Should Be Recognized

GENOCIDE SHOULD BE RECOGNIZED
By Dr. Nicole Vartanian

Metro, NY
ocide_should_be_recognized/10466.html
Oct 25 2007

Recently, the House Foreign Affairs Committee passed a non-binding
resolution labeling as genocide the killing of 1.5 million Armenians
by Turkish forces of the Ottoman Empire beginning in 1915. In
response, the Republic of Turkey threatened to withdraw its support
for U.S. efforts in the Iraq war, thereby inciting calls for the
resolution to be blocked from a full House vote.

The next day Jon Stewart and "The Daily Show" crack writers noted
the apparent quid pro quo available for historical revisionism in
exchange for participation in the war coalition. They hit their mark
by conjecturing that if Germany would have joined the war on terror,
the U.S. "could have turned the Holocaust into a ‘Half-a-caust.’"

Stewart distilled the debate’s precise premise: If our politicians
concede to Turkey’s hyperbolic reactions toward our legislative
process, we will be complicit in selling history.

We even know what that price is. An article in last week’s New York
Times detailed the Turkish government’s vast payouts to Washington
lobbying firms – and the ex-Congressmen they employ – to fund genocide
denial, including contributions to members of Congress.

Guided by these tallies, we could prepare invoices for other
governments seeking a means of obfuscating their past transgressions.

In the face of this denial, 22 countries and 40 U.S. states have
officially recognized the Armenian Genocide. Still, some people
question the "relevance" of acknowledging the event as genocide
92 years later. To illustrate the significance, I would ask us to
fast forward 24 years and imagine if Jews were still fighting for
acknowledgement of the Holocaust.

Then, imagine the Republic of Germany funneling millions of dollars
into Washington to propagate this denial, imperiling access to U.S.

bases and threatening diplomatic relations. And please further imagine
our administration begging Congress not to set the historical record
straight. That is a world in which I most certainly would not want
to live.

However, this is the worldview we would endorse if we concede to those
who wish to prevent recognition of the Armenian Genocide. At stake are
both the sanctity of history and the sovereignty of our democracy –
two sacred principles whose value should exceed any offers made by
the highest bidder.

Dr. Vartanian is on the board of the Genocide Education Project,
a not-for-profit organization supporting the teaching of genocide
in schools.

http://ny.metro.us/metro/blog/my_view/entry/Gen

Iran Applies For The Armenian Black Church To Be Included In The UN

IRAN APPLIES FOR THE ARMENIAN BLACK CHURCH TO BE INCLUDED IN THE UN WORLD HERITAGE LIST

armradio.am
24.10.2007 16:49

Iran is applying for Qara Kelisa, or the Armenian Black Church,
to be recognized as a United Nations World Heritage site, Reuters
agency reports.

"This is a symbol of the co-existence of different religions and
ethnicities," said senior conservationist Khosro Farri of Iran’s
Cultural Heritage, Handicrafts and Tourism Organisation.

Located in tawny hills, the Black Church derives its name from the
volcanic stone used to build it in the early 14th century after an
older one was destroyed by an earthquake.

Armenians believe one of Jesus’ apostles, St. Jude, was martyred
and then buried where the church now stands. Its distinctive
black-and-white striped tower is visible from afar.

The church is now mostly empty of Christian worshippers, but thousands
of Armenians from around the world flock here every summer for
festivities to commemorate their patron saint, also known as Thaddeus.

Azerbaijan And Turkey Not Fraternal States Any More

AZERBAIJAN AND TURKEY NOT FRATERNAL STATES ANY MORE

PanARMENIAN.Net
23.10.2007 13:27 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Azerbaijan and Turkey have good potential of
cooperation, Azeri political scientist Hikmet Hajizadeh said.

"I would not like to enlarge on new fields but everyone knows
that during recent 10 years relations between our states cannot be
characterized as fraternal. Turkish businessmen abandon Azerbaijan. I
was informed that Azeri citizens have almost no possibility to purchase
realty in Turkey. Turkish officers who are training our personnel are
forced to leave Azerbaijan. Conclusion is not comforting: Azerbaijan
and Turkey are not fraternal states any more but partners with common
interests," Hajizadeh said.

When commenting on Turkey’s incursion into Iraq, the Azeri scholar
said, "The scenario is highly possible.

Moreover, Turkey used to carry out such operations in the past. If the
U.S. and Iraqi government fail to curb the PKK, Turkey should resort
to the move and intrude into the territory, which is out of control,"
Day.az reports.

Turkish Warplanes Attack Northern Iraq

TURKISH WARPLANES ATTACK NORTHERN IRAQ

PanARMENIAN.Net
24.10.2007 14:34 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Turkish warplanes and ground troops attacked Kurdish
rebel positions just inside northern Iraq between Sunday and Tuesday
evening, military sources told Reuters on Wednesday.

The warplanes flew as deep as 20 km (13 miles) into Iraqi territory
and some 300 ground troops advanced about 10 km, killing 34 rebels
of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), the sources said.

"Further ‘hot pursuit’ raids into northern Iraq can be expected, though
none have taken place so far today (Wednesday)," a military official
said, adding that all Turkish troops involved in the operations were
now back in Turkey, Reuters reports.

BAKU: President Of Iran Breaks Off His Visit To Armenia Not To Compl

PRESIDENT OF IRAN BREAKS OFF HIS VISIT TO ARMENIA NOT TO COMPLICATE IRANIAN-TURKISH RELATIONS: IRANIAN POLITICIAN

TREND Information, Azerbaijan
Oct 23 2007

Azerbaijan, Baku /corr. Trend D.Khatinoglu / The President of Iran
broke off his visit to Armenia and returned to Tehran in order not to
complicate the Iranian-Turkish relations, said the Iranian politician,
Alireza Nourizadeh.

The State Head of Iran, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, arrived in Armenia on
22 October. However, Ahmadinejad broke off his visit and returned to
Iran, not laying a wreath before the monument of so-called ‘Armenian
genocide’.

The visit of the Iranian President to Yerevan at the time of
discussions in the US Congress over the so-called ‘Armenian genocide’
may damage the Iranian-Turkish and Iranian-Azerbaijani relations, the
politician reported to Trend on 23 October by telephone from London.

"Establishing close political and economic relations with Armenia,
Ahmadinejad may bring harms to the Iranian-Azerbaijani relations
in the discussions regarding the legal status of Caspian Sea,"
Nourizadeh said.

According to him, in the Armenian-Azerbaijani Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict, Iran has always unambiguously supported Armenia. Iran
organized provocations in Azerbaijan during and after the war. There
are facts that the military groups ‘Sepah’, ‘Shimali Djeysh
Almehdi’ carried out espionage and provocations in the territory of
Azerbaijan. Due to ‘Sepah’, 16 people were arrested by Azerbaijan’s
Ministry of National Security.

During his visit to Armenia, Ahmadinejad repeatedly highlighted the
expression ‘Armenian genocide’. According to him, each year, actions
are held in Iran in this regard.

"Iranian president’s using the expression ‘Armenian genocide’ may
bring serious harms to the Iranian-Turkish and Iranian-Azerbaijani
relations. Despite this, Ahmadinejad states that his words have not
been directed against any countries," the politician said.

In addition, Nourizadeh expressed attitude towards Ahmadinejad’s
plans to construct a pipeline to Europe via Armenia. "In my opinion,
using the territory of Turkey for this purpose is more beneficial
for Iran. In addition, he spokes of plans to construct pipelines
via Azerbaijan, Armenia, Pakistan and Turkey. These plans require
billions. Iran itself has not such amounts of finance and no foreign
company is willing to invest in these plans. Thus, they will never
be realized," the politician said.