Armenian President: Yerevan Doesn’t Refuse OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chair

ARMENIAN PRESIDENT: YEREVAN DOESN’T REFUSE OSCE MINSK GROUP CO-CHAIRS’ PROPOSAL TO HOLD A MEETING OF ARMENIAN AND AZERBAIJANI PRESIDENTS IN PRAGUE ON MAY 7

ArmInfo
2009-04-10 20:31:00

ArmInfo. Armenia will continue the Karabakh peace process, Armenian
President Serzh Sargsyan said at today’s press-conference.

According to him, official Yerevan doesn’t refuse the OSCE Minsk Group
co-chairs’ proposal to hold a meeting of the Armenian and Azerbaijani
presidents in Prague on May 7. "However, I can’t say anything specific
about this",- Sargsyan said. He pointed out that he sees a very good
prospect for the South Caucasus. "I am sure that my Azeri counterpart
also wants the conflict to be settled peacefully. He is also a normal
person who doesn’t want military actions causing human victims, losses,
devastation",- Sargsyan said and added that he is not a pessimist
and believes that the problem can be settled. The Armenian president
also recalled the Azeri mass media’s attacks on him and said that
they do wrong.

Today The Business Support Council (BSC) Has Met, Chaired By Chair,

TODAY THE BUSINESS SUPPORT COUNCIL (BSC) HAS MET, CHAIRED BY CHAIR, RA PRIME MINISTER TIGRAN SARGSYAN.

We dnesday, 8 April 2009

The Council only had the time to review the status of about a dozen
of directives issued at the previous meeting. Council Secretary,
Director General of Armenian Development Agency CJSC Robert Harutunyan
reported that the bulk of these directives have been fulfilled in a
timely manner. It has been noted that in particular that the Ministry
of Finance deems it expedient to further improve the regulations
concerning the settlement of import-related VAT arrears. As a priority
task, the Ministry suggested to take up the matter under the draft
Special Part of the RA Tax Code.

Regarding a second proposal made by the Director General of
Electro-Device OJSC and the Executive Director of Armenia Copper
Program CJSC, RA Deputy Minister of Finance Suren Karayan was
instructed to hold another discussion with the authors of the proposal
and report back its outcome to the Council during the next meeting.

Suren Karayan and Deputy Head of State Revenue Committee by the
Government Armen Alaverdyan were told to discuss once again the
proposals submitted by the Executive Director of Armenia Copper
Program CJSC concerning the process of providing incentives for tax and
customs officers, as well as regarding the question of eliminating the
existing direct correlation between the20sums collected as a result
of irregularities identified with taxpayers and the proceeds of tax
inspectors’ material incentive fund.

With reference to the package of research-based proposals on improved
VAT application procedures within the banking system, the President
of the Armenian Bankers’ Union was told to take up the matter once
again with the Ministry of Justice, the State Committee on Immovable
Property Cadastre by the Government and the RA Police in order to
report back the outcome during the next meeting.

It has been decided to postpone the discussion of other agenda items
until the next meeting of the Council.

http://www.gov.am/en/news/item/4557/

RA Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian To Be In Turkmenistan On A Vis

RA FOREIGN MINISTER EDWARD NALBANDIAN TO BE IN TURKMENISTAN ON A VISIT ON APRIL 9-11

Noyan Tapan
Apr 9, 2009

YEREVAN, APRIL 9, NOYAN TAPAN. RA Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian
will be in Ashgabad on a visit on April 9-11, where he will take part
in the meeting of CIS member countries’ Foreign Ministers’ Council.

As Noyan Tapan was informed by the RA Foreign Ministry Press and
Information Department, E. Nalbandian’s official visit to Turkmenistan
will start after the meeting. He will have meetings with Turkmenistan’s
high-ranking leadership during the visit.

BEIRUT: Pakradonian: First Uncontested 2009 Parliamentary Winner

PAKRADONIAN: FIRST UNCONTESTED 2009 PARLIAMENTARY WINNER

NaharNet
April 8 2009
Lebanon

‘Reform and Change’ parliamentary bloc member Hagop Pakradonian
became the first uncontested winner in the 2009 legislative election
on Wednesday following the withdrawal of Nazrat Sabonjian.

"My victory won’t affect Armenian participation in the elections in
voting in favor for Free Patriotic Movement leader General Michel
Aoun and his list," Pakradonian said.

He went on to add that Lebanese/Armenians are to also vote for Michel
Murr’s person.

Murr is a former ally of Aoun but later moved away from his
political line and is running independently. Lebanese/Armenians have
traditionally voted for Murr in previous elections, but the main
Tashnag party is opting for Aoun in 2009.

You Cannot Put Out Fire With Flames

YOU CANNOT PUT OUT FIRE WITH FLAMES
by Amjad Atallah

The Washington Note
April 6, 2009 Monday 5:09 PM EST

President Obama quoted this Turkish aphorism toward the end of his
27 minute speech before the Turkish Parliament. It was, in essence,
a summation of his rejection of the policies of the previous eight
years. The president emphasized provided a comprehensive overview of
Middle East and Caucus politics that showed us a little bit of how
he views the conflicts in the region.

And perhaps of more lasting import, Obama noted that the US is not
and will not ever be at war with Islam, finally laying to rest the
bastardization of the conflict of civilizations thesis promoted by
so many neo-cons.

The President didn’t only rely on metaphors – he offered a concrete
analysis of conflict from Cyprus and Israel/Palestine in the west
to Nagarno-Karabakh and Pakistan in the east. And he admitted US
weaknesses before he gently chided his hosts on their own.

First a little about that last point. Everyone hates hypocrisy –
children are particularly good at noticing it in adults. Nations tend
to be like that too. The President seemed to grasp that in his speech
without letting anyone off the hook.

It has always seemed hypocritical in many nations around the world
for the US to criticize a lack of democracy in one country while
embracing it in another. Hard to criticize Turkey for not coming to
terms with the 1915 killing of Armenians without admitting that the
US has not come to terms with the full horrors of slavery and of the
annihilation of native American nations.

On conflicts, the President tied, perhaps unconsciously, four ethnic
conflicts over territory: Kurdish activity in Turkey and Iraq, the
Armenian-Azeri ethnic dispute in Nagarno-Karabakh, Cypriot talks
to re-unite the country into a "bi-communal federation" (as the
president put it), and the US effort to partition Israeli control
over both its own state and the Palestinian territory into two states
"Israel and Palestine."

On this last ethnic/territorial conflict in particular, the President
seemed to want to do what few in his administration have so far been
willing to – put an exclamation point on the differences between US
and international interests and those in Israel who want to maintain
the occupation.

He made a point of sounding fair – "The United States strongly supports
the goal of two states, Israel and Palestine, living side by side in
peace and security," he said. "Both Israelis and Palestinians must
take the steps that are necessary to build confidence. Both must live
up to the commitments they have made."

But he also used the future tense – noting that the creation of two
states is a goal that "I will actively pursue." For those who have
noted the lack of a new implementation policy so far, that may have
offered hope that one will be announced soon.

The President also tied in his now standard outreach to Iran
emphasizing that Iran had a choice between seeking a weapon or
economic integration. As the Financial Times noted today, this may
be part of a shift in emphasis to preventing Iran’s weaponizing of
its nuclear program rather than attempts to freeze its industrial
(including nuclear) development.

On Iraq, he noted that the US was leaving soon and that everyone had
to help to make sure that Iraq was secure and united (but he pointedly
did not comment on how democratic it would have to be).

On al-Qaeda, he noted Turkey’s help in Afghanistan and emphasized
the necessity of preventing the terrorist group a "safe haven" in
Pakistan or Afghanistan.

This was not Obama ‘s "Muslim speech" we are told. But it was a good
(and maybe precedent making?) speech to give in the Muslim country
that has most entrenched its ties with the West while maintaining an
Islamist modernizing government.

It was a pleasant juxtaposition with the embarrassing performance in
Doha last week of the Arab League which applauded itself on feting
Sudan’s indicted president Omar al-Bashir.

Obama’s Strategy And The Summits

OBAMA’S STRATEGY AND THE SUMMITS
By George Friedman

Right Side News
bal-terrorism/obama-s-strategy-and-the-summits.htm l
April 7 2009

The weeklong extravaganza of G-20, NATO, EU, U.S. and Turkey meetings
has almost ended. The spin emerging from the meetings, echoed in
most of the media, sought to portray the meetings as a success and
as reflecting a re-emergence of trans-Atlantic unity.

The reality, however, is that the meetings ended in apparent unity
because the United States accepted European unwillingness to compromise
on key issues. U.S. President Barack Obama wanted the week to appear
successful, and therefore backed off on key issues; the Europeans
did the same. Moreover, Obama appears to have set a process in motion
that bypasses Europe to focus on his last stop: Turkey.

Berlin, Washington and the G-20 Let’s begin with the G-20 meeting,
which focused on the global financial crisis. As we said last year,
there were many European positions, but the United States was reacting
to Germany’s. Not only is Germany the largest economy in Europe,
it is the largest exporter in the world. Any agreement that did not
include Germany would be useless, whereas an agreement excluding the
rest of Europe but including Germany would still be useful.

Two fundamental issues divided the United States and Germany. The first
was whether Germany would match or come close to the U.S. stimulus
package. The United States wanted Germany to stimulate its own domestic
demand. Obama feared that if the United States put a stimulus plan
into place, Germany would use increased demand in the U.S. market
to expand its exports. The United States would wind up with massive
deficits while the Germans took advantage of U.S. spending, thus
letting Berlin enjoy the best of both worlds. Washington felt it
had to stimulate its economy, and that this would inevitably benefit
the rest of the world. But Washington wanted burden sharing. Berlin,
quite rationally, did not. Even before the meetings, the United States
dropped the demand – Germany was not going to cooperate.

The second issue was the financing of the bailout of the Central
European banking system, heavily controlled by eurozone banks and
part of the EU financial system. The Germans did not want an EU
effort to bail out the banks. They wanted the International Monetary
Fund (IMF) to bail out a substantial part of the EU financial system
instead. The reason was simple: The IMF receives loans from the United
States, as well as China and Japan, meaning the Europeans would be
joined by others in underwriting the bailout. The United States has
signaled it would be willing to contribute $100 billion to the IMF,
of which a substantial portion would go to Central Europe. (Of the
current loans given by the IMF, roughly 80 percent have gone to the
struggling economies in Central Europe.) The United States therefore
essentially has agreed to the German position.

Later at the NATO meeting, the Europeans – including Germany –
declined to send substantial forces to Afghanistan. Instead, they
designated a token force of 5,000, most of whom are scheduled to be
in Afghanistan only until the August elections there, and few of whom
actually would be engaged in combat operations. This is far below
what Obama had been hoping for when he began his presidency.

Agreement was reached on collaboration in detecting international
tax fraud and on further collaboration in managing the international
crisis, however. But what that means remains extremely vague –
as it was meant to be, since there was no consensus on what was
to be done. In fact, the actual guidelines will still have to be
hashed out at the G-20 finance ministers’ meeting in Scotland in
November. Intriguingly, after insisting on the creation of a global
regulatory regime – and with the vague U.S. assent – the European
Union failed to agree on European regulations. In a meeting in Prague
on April 4, the United Kingdom rejected the regulatory regime being
proposed by Germany and France, saying it would leave the British
banking system at a disadvantage.

Overall, the G-20 and the NATO meetings did not produce significant
breakthroughs. Rather than pushing hard on issues or trading
concessions – such as accepting Germany’s unwillingness to increase
its stimulus package in return for more troops in Afghanistan – the
United States failed to press or bargain. It preferred to appear as
part of a consensus rather than appear isolated. The United States
systematically avoided any appearance of disagreement.

The reason there was no bargaining was fairly simple: The Germans
were not prepared to bargain. They came to the meetings with prepared
positions, and the United States had no levers with which to move
them. The only option was to withhold funding for the IMF, and that
would have been a political disaster (not to mention economically
rather unwise). The United States would have been seen as unwilling
to participate in multilateral solutions rather than Germany being
seen as trying to foist its economic problems on others. Obama has
positioned himself as a multilateralist and can’t afford the political
consequences of deviating from this perception. Contributing to the
IMF, in these days of trillion-dollar bailouts, was the lower-cost
alternative. Thus, the Germans have the U.S. boxed in.

The political aspect of this should not be underestimated. George
W. Bush had extremely bad relations with the Europeans (in large part
because he was prepared to confront them). This was Obama’s first major
international foray, and he could not let it end in acrimony or wind
up being seen as unable to move the Europeans after running a campaign
based on his ability to manage the Western coalition. It was important
that he come home having reached consensus with the Europeans. Backing
off on key economic and military demands gave him that "consensus."

Turkey and Obama’s Deeper Game But it was not simply a matter of
domestic politics. It is becoming clear that Obama is playing a
deeper game. A couple of weeks before the meetings, when it had
become obvious that the Europeans were not going to bend on the
issues that concerned the United States, Obama scheduled a trip to
Turkey. During the EU meetings in Prague, Obama vigorously supported
the Turkish application for EU membership, which several members are
blocking on grounds of concerns over human rights and the role of the
military in Turkey. But the real reason is that full membership would
open European borders to Turkish migration, and the Europeans do not
want free Turkish migration. The United States directly confronted
the Europeans on this matter.

During the NATO meeting, a key item on the agenda was the selection
of a new alliance secretary-general. The favorite was former Danish
Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen. Turkey opposed his candidacy
because of his defense on grounds of free speech of cartoons depicting
the Prophet Mohammed published in a Danish magazine. NATO operates on
consensus, so any one member can block just about anything. The Turks
backed off the veto, but won two key positions in NATO, including
that of deputy secretary-general.

So while the Germans won their way at the meetings, it was the Turks
who came back with the most. Not only did they boost their standing
in NATO, they got Obama to come to a vigorous defense of the Turkish
application for membership in the European Union, which of course
the United States does not belong to. Obama then flew to Turkey for
meetings and to attend a key international meeting that will allow
him to further position the United States in relation to Islam.

The Russian Dimension Let’s diverge to another dimension of
these talks, which still concerns Turkey, but also concerns the
Russians. While atmospherics after the last week’s meetings might have
improved, there was certainly no fundamental shift in U.S.-Russian
relations. The Russians have rejected the idea of pressuring Iran
over its nuclear program in return for the United States abandoning
its planned ballistic missile defense system in Poland and the
Czech Republic. The United States simultaneously downplayed the
importance of a Russian route to Afghanistan. Washington said there
were sufficient supplies in Afghanistan and enough security on the
Pakistani route such that the Russians weren’t essential for supplying
Western operations in Afghanistan. At the same time, the United States
reached an agreement with Ukraine for the transshipment of supplies –
a mostly symbolic gesture, but one guaranteed to infuriate the Russians
at both the United States and Ukraine. Moreover, the NATO communique
did not abandon the idea of Ukraine and Georgia being admitted to
NATO, although the German position on unspecified delays to such
membership was there as well. When Obama looks at the chessboard,
the key emerging challenge remains Russia.

The Germans are not going to be joining the United States in blocking
Russia. Between dependence on Russia for energy supplies and little
appetite for confronting a Russia that Berlin sees as no real immediate
threat to Germany, the Germans are not going to address the Russian
question. At the same time, the United States does not want to push the
Germans toward Russia, particularly in confrontations ultimately of
secondary importance and on which Germany has no give anyway. Obama
is aware that the German left is viscerally anti-American, while
Merkel is only pragmatically anti-American – a small distinction,
but significant enough for Washington not to press Berlin.

At the same time, an extremely important event between Turkey and
Armenia looks to be on the horizon. Armenians had long held Turkey
responsible for the mass murder of Armenians during and after World War
I, a charge the Turks have denied. The U.S. Congress for several years
has threatened to pass a resolution condemning Turkish genocide against
Armenians. The Turks are extraordinarily sensitive to this charge,
and passage would have meant a break with the United States. Last
week, they publicly began to discuss an agreement with the Armenians,
including diplomatic recognition, which essentially disarms the danger
from any U.S. resolution on genocide. Although an actual agreement
hasn’t been signed just yet, anticipation is building on all sides.

The Turkish opening to Armenia has potentially significant
implications for the balance of power in the Caucasus. The August
2008 Russo-Georgian war created an unstable situation in an area of
vital importance to Russia. Russian troops remain deployed, and NATO
has called for their withdrawal from the breakaway Georgian regions
of South Ossetia and Abkhazia. There are Russian troops in Armenia,
meaning Russia has Georgia surrounded. In addition, there is talk of
an alternative natural gas pipeline network from Azerbaijan to Europe.

Turkey is the key to all of this. If Ankara collaborates with Russia,
Georgia’s position is precarious and Azerbaijan’s route to Europe is
blocked. If it cooperates with the United States and also manages to
reach a stable treaty with Armenia under U.S. auspices, the Russian
position in the Caucasus is weakened and an alternative route for
natural gas to Europe opens up, decreasing Russian leverage against
Europe.

>From the American point of view, Europe is a lost cause since
internally it cannot find a common position and its heavyweights are
bound by their relationship with Russia. It cannot agree on economic
policy, nor do its economic interests coincide with those of the United
States, at least insofar as Germany is concerned. As far as Russia
is concerned, Germany and Europe are locked in by their dependence
on Russian natural gas. The U.S.-European relationship thus is torn
apart not by personalities, but by fundamental economic and military
realities. No amount of talking will solve that problem.

The key to sustaining the U.S.-German alliance is reducing Germany’s
dependence on Russian natural gas and putting Russia on the defensive
rather than the offensive. The key to that now is Turkey, since it
is one of the only routes energy from new sources can cross to get
to Europe from the Middle East, Central Asia or the Caucasus. If
Turkey – which has deep influence in the Caucasus, Central Asia,
Ukraine, the Middle East and the Balkans – is prepared to ally
with the United States, Russia is on the defensive and a long-term
solution to Germany’s energy problem can be found. On the other hand,
if Turkey decides to take a defensive position and moves to cooperate
with Russia instead, Russia retains the initiative and Germany is
locked into Russian-controlled energy for a generation. (hyperlinks
for subscribers only, sign up for a Free Trial)

Therefore, having sat through fruitless meetings with the Europeans,
Obama chose not to cause a pointless confrontation with a Europe
that is out of options. Instead, Obama completed his trip by going
to Turkey to discuss what the treaty with Armenia means and to try
to convince the Turks to play for high stakes by challenging Russia
in the Caucasus, rather than playing Russia’s junior partner.

This is why Obama’s most important speech in Europe was his last one,
following Turkey’s emergence as a major player in NATO’s political
structure. In that speech, he sided with the Turks against Europe,
and extracted some minor concessions from the Europeans on the process
for considering Turkey’s accession to the European Union. Why Turkey
wants to be an EU member is not always obvious to us, but they do want
membership. Obama is trying to show the Turks that he can deliver for
them. He reiterated – if not laid it on even more heavily – all of this
in his speech in Ankara. Obama laid out the U.S. position as one that
recognized the tough geopolitical position Turkey is in and the leader
that Turkey is becoming, and also recognized the commonalities between
Washington and Ankara. This was exactly what Turkey wanted to hear.

The Caucasus is far from the only area to discuss. Talks will be held
about blocking Iran in Iraq, U.S. relations with Syria and Syrian talks
with Israel, and Central Asia, where both countries have interests. But
the most important message to the Europeans will be that Europe is
where you go for photo opportunities, but Turkey is where you go to
do the business of geopolitics. It is unlikely that the Germans and
French will get it. Their sense of what is happening in the world is
utterly Eurocentric. But the Central Europeans, on the frontier with
Russia and feeling quite put out by the German position on their banks,
certainly do get it.

Obama gave the Europeans a pass for political reasons, and because
arguing with the Europeans simply won’t yield benefits. But the key to
the trip is what he gets out of Turkey – and whether in his speech to
the civilizations, he can draw some of the venom out of the Islamic
world by showing alignment with the largest economy among Muslim
states, Turkey.

http://www.rightsidenews.com/200904064291/glo

G-Word Stays Out Of Turkey

G-WORD STAYS OUT OF TURKEY
John Boonstra

UN Dispatch

April 6 2009

According to the dictates of pragmatism, one couldn’t have reasonably
expected President Obama to drop the g-word — referencing the genocide
of the Armenians in World War I, which Turkey has persistently refused
to label as such — while speaking in Turkey, his campaign promise to
do so notwithstanding. And, in fact, the portion of Obama’s speech
in Turkey addressing the issue, while perhaps evasive, did address
the matter in a commonsensically productive manner.

While there has been a good deal of commentary about my views, this
is really about how the Turkish and Armenian people deal with the
past. And the best way forward for the Turkish and Armenian people
is a process that works through the past in a way that is honest,
open and constructive.

Whether or not the President of the United States of America says the
word genocide is indeed a political calculation. The politicization
of this usage of a single word stems partially from U.S. domestic
politics (which is why it will be much more interesting to see if and
how Obama pivots when he makes the president’s traditional statement
to Armenian-Americans in a couple weeks) and partially from the heavy,
almost all-consuming significance that the word has acquired (and
which, four and a half years after President Bush declared Darfur
a "genocide," to much fanfare and little action, is clearly not
productive). And in this sense, what matters more is that Turkey and
Armenia deal with this issue, and with their own relations with one
another. The opening of the closed Armenian-Turkish border is no small
accomplishment, and, though it may appear to be simply this year’s
entry in the annual casuistry explaining the particularly inopportune
timing of a genocide resolution, achieving tangible ends can lay claim
to an upper hand over a declaration that everyone assures will derail
progress on some Turkey-related foreign affairs project or another.

Yet for a dialogue between Turkey and Armenia to be truly "honest"
and "open," truths need to be acknowledged — and spoken aloud. It is
morally repugnant that Turkey continues to deny that genocide occurred
within its bounds, and the international coup that its leaders have
consolidated — convincing the world that any mention of a "genocide"
of the Armenians would provoke waves of hostility and summarily end
cooperation with Turkey — is even more perverse. Somehow, the onus
is consistently placed on external actors — such as on an American
president — over the consequences that his words may engender. Never
is it considered how out of proportion — how utterly ridiculous —
it would be for a Turkish government in 2009 to sever all relations
with countries, to entirely cease its contributions to projects like
that in Iraq, and to take all sorts of other rash steps that might
jeopardize its own admission to the European Union, all over the use
of a single word by a single world leader, about the actions of a
government 90-plus years ago.

Yes, we are talking about genocide, and that is serious. But no, we are
not talking about accusing a foreign government of conducting genocide
(again, though, on the effectiveness thereof, see Sudan). We are doing
what President Obama himself did in his speech, in acknowleding the
dark parts of American history, or what the government of Australia
is belatedly doing, in apologizing to the aboriginal population that
suffered in that country’s history. Calling a genocide a genocide is
a moral imperative, yes, but it would be better for all involved —
for the Acholi people in northern Uganda, for example, who suffer
ethnicity-based counter-insurgency campaigns without worldwide
hand-wringing (or attention) over the g-label — if the term coined
by Raphael Lemkin were less fraught with political overtones.

More than a moral decision, though, this should be a constructive
one. Leverage should be concentrated on Turkey acceding to
this judgment, not on urging the United States not to upset some
geopolitical balance that bears striking similarity to what Turkish
genocide-deniers would readily have the West believe. Would this be
"poking a stick in [Turkey’s] eye?" Only, if, effectively, Turkey is
allowed to continue holding the stick. Order will not devolve into
chaos in Turkey if we talk about the Armenian genocide in 1915 publicly
and openly; the incentives weigh very heavily against Turkey acting
recklessly in retaliation to such discussion. And then, perhaps,
we would not have to again be having this debate next year. That,
to me, seems like moving forward.

(image of Armenian Genocide Memorial, in Yerevan, Armenia, from flickr
user Rita Willaert under a Creative Commons license)

http://www.undispatch.com/node/8018

Edward Nalbandian: Turkey-Armenia Relations Should Have No Precondit

EDWARD NALBANDIAN: TURKEY-ARMENIA RELATIONS SHOULD HAVE NO PRECONDITIONS

armradio.am
06.04.2009 10:43

Recently some Turkish officials have been making statements to
the effect that the normalization of Armenian-Turkish relations is
conditioned by other issues like the resolution of Nagorno Karabakh
problem and the process of international recognition of the Armenian
Genocide. Asked to comment on this, the Foreign Minister of Armenia,
Edward nalbandian stated:

"The normalization of Armenian – Turkish relations should have no
preconditions and it is with this mutual understanding that we have
been negotiating with the Turkish side.

Normalization of the relations has no linkage to the resolution of the
Nagorno Karabakh problem and has never been a subject of negotiations
towards the normalization of Armenian – Turkish relations.

It has been said many times, and I want to stress it again, that the
normalization of Armenian – Turkish relations can never question the
reality of Armenian Genocide.

Today, dozens of states and international organizations have recognized
the Armenian Genocide, which Armenia has welcomed.

I believe, that the statements, which put forth preconditions for
the normalization of Armenian Turkish relations may be regarded as
an attempt to impede the progress reached in the negotiations."

BEIRUT: Tashnaq, March 8 And Beirut I

TASHNAQ, MARCH 8 AND BEIRUT I
Hayeon Lee

NowLebanon
cleDetails.aspx?ID=87286
March 3 2009
Lebanon

The suspense over how the Armenians would vote in the upcoming
parliamentary elections was eased somewhat when the demographic’s most
popular political party, the Tashnaq, recently announced its alliance
with MP Michel Aoun’s Change and Reform bloc after refusing Future
Movement leader Saad Hariri’s offer to form an independent Armenian
parliamentary bloc. This move could translate into a fiercer battle
among Christian leaders in the Beirut I district than previously
expected.

NOW Lebanon hit the streets of the Beirut I district to ask voters why
they think Tashnaq rejected Hariri’s offer, how they feel about it, and
how this might influence the elections’ outcome in their constituency.

Roula, 30, Mar Mitr

I am not into politics, but I could tell you that Hariri is on the
wrong track. Hariri does not want Tashnaq… Hariri is no good. We
don’t love Hariri. The Aounists will win, not because of Tashnaq,
but with the help of Tashnaq.

Bassam, 28, Rmeil, Achrafieh

I think Tashnaq supports March 8 for political reasons… They were
with Aoun already. Before, [they were with Murr] but they were never
with Hariri. I don’t think it’s surprising. Ironically, Tashnaq
became the one who will decide who will win in a way, especially in
the Metn… They are the [swing] vote… In Beirut I, there are lots
of Armenians, but I don’t know how many are supporters of Tashnaq,
but I heard that in Lebanon, in general, Tashnaq has 80% support
[among Armenians]. So I think it will be good for Aoun…

We don’t know [who will win] in Beirut I because there was never
an election since 1992. There were elections, but the Christians
didn’t vote, most of them… There is a big influence of Kataeb and
the Lebanese Forces; they are not small here either… I don’t know
really. I am excited to know who will have more

Eli, 27, Achrafieh

[Tashnaq is siding with March 8] because it is not a national
party. Its management is now in Teheran. So now we have two groups,
March 8 and March 14, and March 8 is with Teheran, so Tashnaq is
voting with March 8… This is why Tashnaq will not accept Hariri’s
offer or anyone else’s… They will not vote for [Michel Murr]… I’m
sad about [Tashnaq’s decision] because they’re a Christian party, but
they don’t act like it because Christians are with March 14… [Aoun]
is just Christian in his ID card… But Tashnaq will lose [in Beirut I]
because they are much bigger in the Metn.

Nicholas, 36, Achrafieh

I don’t like Tashnaq because it supports March 8, and because March
8 likes Syrians and Iranians… Tashnaq refused Hariri because they
had problems with Amin Gemayel and Kataeb, and Hariri supports Amin
Gemayel. Amin Gemayel insulted Tashnaq during the Metn elections
after Pierre Gemayel’s assassination, and Tashnaq did not forget
this… But Tashnaq has no guarantee to win because Hariri has more
supporters…. [In Beirut I, as well] Hariri will win.

Jihad, 22, Achrafieh

I don’t know politics. I vote just for my mom. And I vote. I think
I’ll vote for March 14.

http://www.nowlebanon.com/NewsArti

Rebel Land: Among Turkey’s Forgotten Peoples By Christopher De Bella

REBEL LAND: AMONG TURKEY’S FORGOTTEN PEOPLES BY CHRISTOPHER DE BELLAIGUE; OUT OF STEPPE: THE LOST PEOPLES OF CENTRAL ASIA BY DANIEL METCALFE

The Times
April 4, 2009

The Times review by Maureen Freely

A young Englishman goes to Turkey to work as a correspondent. He
falls in love, picks up the language, and is caught up in the great
romance of East-West relations, imagining that his new home, Ankara,
is its hub. He becomes interested in Turkish history, noting, with
some puzzlement, that his Turkish friends want, for the most part, to
turn away from it. But they recommend a few books by eminent British
and American scholars. Having read them, he is inspired to write an
essay on the origins of the Turkish Republic for The New York Review
of Books, in which he refers in passing to the massacre of up to half
a million Armenians in 1915, suggesting that it is best understood
in the context of widespread ethnic conflicts that raged throughout
the Ottoman Empire after it entered the First World War on the losing
side and began to break apart.

When the scholars of the Armenian diaspora bombard The New York Review
of Books with furious letters (claiming a death toll three times
larger, and insisting that it was – because planned and orchestrated
from above – a genocide) our young correspondent is appalled. How could
he have got it so wrong? He does more reading, this time drawing o n
texts rarely found on the coffee tables of the Turkish secular elite,
slowly coming to see that he has blundered into one of the great
historical controversies of all time.

This is the story that Christopher de Bellaigue tells against himself
in the opening pages of Rebel Land. The chapters that follow chart
his attempt to make amends. The obvious way forward would have been
to track the history wars that were in full swing in and outside
Turkey in 2005 and that have led to the deniers of official history
being challenged for the first time by Turkish scholars on Turkish
soil. The trials of Orhan Pamuk and more than 100 others for insulting
Turkishness can be best understood in this context.

So can the assassination of the Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink
in 2007 and the still-unfolding Ergenekon trial, which links several
retired generals and almost a hundred others in the secular elite to
a state-sponsored terrorist organisation that had allegedly planned
to use a string of assassinations and false terrorist incidents to
silence those wishing to challenge official history, while at the
same time softening up the country for a coup.

One day, when it is all over, if it is ever all over, someone will
write a book about it. It is greatly to de Bellaigue’s credit that he
decides to leave that poisoned chalice for someone else. Hoping to find
the human stories of love, longing and loss, he sets out for Varto,
a small town in the southeast that was "caught up in the fury of 1915"
and has, a knowledgeable friend assures him, continued to be "important
beyond its size". By that the friend means that it plays a significant
role in the Kurdish separatist movement, contributing not just heroes
but (the friend says with a smile) three of its most famous traitors.

On the last leg of his journey, de Bellaigue gets a lift with a group
of American Armenians making a pilgrimage to the monastery of Surp
Karapet. As he stands with the pilgrims before the ruins, trying to
pass himself off as one of them, he notes that they are ringed by a
not entirely friendly group of Kurdish peasants, who are surrounded
in turn by Turkish soldiers. All three circles, he notes, have claims
on this land. Coming down from the Serafettin mountains, and seeing
Varto from a distance, in a valley "hollowed and glassy where the
meltwaters had spread" and set against the great grey whale of the
Bingöl plateau, he is stunned by its beauty. He has "an impression
of water as landscape, masterful and unruly, swilling drunkenly and
breaking banks of its own making", seeing it as a landscape that
"inspires one not to recumbency, as the Aegean groves, nor to poetry,
as the oases of Iran, but to action". But the pace slows as he arrives
in town to be met by the two

policemen who will follow him throughout his travels in and around
Varto.

The more he sees of the district, the more he comes to understand
it as an occupied territory. As he wanders from village to village,
watched and mistrusted on all sides, there are echoes of Ka wandering
through the neighbouring city of Kars in Orhan Pamuk’s Snow.

Soon de Bellaigue has met the mayor, whose party has links with Kurdish
separatists, and the district governor, whose masters are intent on
crushing not just the separatists, but all manifestations of Kurdish
culture. He rents a room in the hostel where the state houses its
teachers: one of their jobs is to crack down on all students heard
using one of the two Kurdish languages still spoken behind closed
doors. Later, there is the "captain" who sweeps in from points unknown
for a friendly chat at the police station, and who is in no doubt
that de Bellaigue is (like himself) a spy.

By now just about everyone else in Varto has reached the same
conclusion. If they do agree to talk about history, most of it
is lies. But he doggedly persists, reading whatever he can find
and visiting the Varto diaspora in Germany and northern Iraq. One
particular exile opens doors for him, and slowly he is able to pull
together a tangled century-long web of human tragedies in such a way
that no reader (even this one, who would like to believe in truth and
reconciliation) can close the book feeling anything other than despair.

There are no innocents in this story. Europe and Europeans (not
least the author) play their part. The book is sure to cause a new
skirmish in the history wars de Bellaigue so assiduously avoided,
but his critics should pause, at least, to admire the fineness of its
prose and the darkness of its heart. It is, in the end, a brilliant
literary thriller, an incursion into forbidden territory that is all
the more gripping for being true.

Daniel Metcalfe is, in many ways, a younger version of de
Bellaigue. In Out of Steppe, he recounts, sometimes guilelessly,
but always with a noble heart, his search for the forgotten peoples
of Central Asia. These include the Karakalpaks of Uzbekistan; the
last remaining Jews of Bukhara, said to be the descendents of the
Israelite tribes of Isaachar and Naphtali; the Germans who have lived
in Kazakhstan since Catherine the Great brought them over in the late
18th century; the Yaghnobis, said to descend from fire-worshippers;
the Hazaras of Afghanistan, whose giant Buddhas were destroyed by
the Taleban; and the Kalashas of the Hindu Kush, thought by some
to be the descendents of Alexander’s army. Everywhere there is the
detritus of the Great Games that have been played out on this soil:
the environmental atrocities are, if anything, even more appalling. And
then there is the destruction of old buildings and old ways in the
name of modernity. The lost peoples of Central Asia are not so much
lost as heading for extinction, and it may be too late to save them.

Rebel Land: Among Turkey’s Forgotten Peoples by Christopher de
Bellaigue Bloomsbury, £20; 288pp

Out of Steppe: The Lost Peoples of Central Asia by Daniel Metcalfe
Hutchinson, £18.99; 352pp