Ukraine, Russia And European Stability

UKRAINE, RUSSIA AND EUROPEAN STABILITY
David Miliband

guardian.co.uk
Friday August 29 2008

It is not an act of hostility towards Russia for Europe to support
Ukraine, but a positive move towards lasting peace

Since the collapse of the Soviet Union, it has seemed that new rules
were being established for the conduct of international relations
in central and eastern Europe and central Asia. The watchwords
were independence and interdependence; sovereignty and mutual
responsibility; cooperation and common interests. They are good words
that need to be defended.

The Georgia crisis provided a rude awakening. The sight of Russian
tanks in a neighbouring country on the 40th anniversary of the crushing
of the Prague Spring has shown that the temptations of power politics
remain. The old sores and divisions fester. Russia remains unreconciled
to the new map of Europe.

Yesterday’s unilateral attempt to redraw the map marks not just the
end of the post-cold war period, but is also the moment when countries
are required to set out where they stand on the significant issues
of nationhood and international law.

The Russian president says he is not afraid of a new cold war. We
don’t want one. He has a big responsibility not to start one.

Ukraine is a leading example of the benefits that accrue when a
country takes charge of its own destiny, and seeks alliances with
other countries.

Its choices should=2 0not be seen as a threat to Russia or an act of
hostility. Equally its independence does demand a new relationship
with Russia – a partnership of equals, not the relationship of master
and servant.

Russia must not learn the wrong lessons from the Georgia crisis:
there can be no going back on fundamental principles of territorial
integrity, democratic governance and international law. It has shown
in the last two weeks what anyone could have foretold: that it can
defeat Georgia’s army.

But today Russia is more isolated, less trusted and less respected
than two weeks ago. It has made military gains in the short term. But
over time it will feel the economic and political losses. If Russia
truly wants respect and influence, and the benefits that flow from it,
Russia needs to change course.

Prime Minister Putin has described the collapse of the Soviet Union as
"the greatest geopolitical catastrophe" of the 20th century. I don’t
see it that way. Most people of the former Soviet bloc or Warsaw Pact
don’t see it that way. It will be a tragedy for Russia if it spends
the next 20 years believing it to be the case.

Indeed, since 1991 there has been no "stab in the back" of Russia. In
fact, we have offered Russia extensive cooperation with the EU
and Nato; membership of the council of Europe and the G8. Summits,
mechanisms and meetings have been developed by the EU and Nato not to
humiliate or threaten Russia, but to engage with it. The EU and the
United States provided critical support for the Russian economy when it
was needed, and western companies have invested heavily. And Russia has
made substantial gains from its reintegration into the global economy.

These are actions that seek to promote prosperity and respect for
Russia.

But they have recently been met with scorn. Indeed, the record from
suspension of Russian participation in the conventional armed forces
to harassment of business people and cyber attacks on neighbours is
not a good one. Now we have Georgia.

People often talk and ask about unity in Europe. Russian action
has produced unity in Europe. Unity in demanding the withdrawal of
Russian troops to their August 7 positions; unity in rejecting the
use of force as the basis for redrawing the map of the Caucasus;
unity in support of the democratically elected government of Georgia.

Of course Russia can and should have interests in its neighbours,
but like everyone else, it must earn that influence. Indeed, they
do not make up the "post-Soviet space" to which Prime Minister Putin
often refers. The collapse of the Soviet Union created a new reality –
sovereign, independent countries with minds of their own and rights
to defend.

Russia also needs to clarify its attitude to the use of force to solve
disputes. Some argue that Russia has done nothing not previously
done by Nat o in Kosovo in 1999. But this comparison does not bear
serious examination.

Leave to one side that Russia spends a lot of time arguing in the
UN and elsewhere against "interference" in internal affairs, whether
in Zimbabwe or Burma. Nato’s actions in Kosovo followed dramatic and
systematic abuse of human rights, culminating in ethnic cleansing on a
scale not seen in Europe since the second world war. Nato acted over
Kosovo only after intensive negotiations in the UN security council
and determined efforts at peace talks. Special envoys were sent to
warn Milosevic in person of the consequences of his actions. None of
this can be said for Russia’s use of force in Georgia.

The decision to recognise Kosovo’s independence came only after
Russia made clear it would veto the deal proposed by the UN secretary
general’s special envoy, former Finnish President Ahtisaari. Even then
we agreed to a further four months of negotiations by an EU-US-Russia
troika in order to ensure that no stone was left unturned in the
search for a mutually acceptable compromise.

Over Georgia, Russia moved from support for territorial integrity to
breaking up the country in three weeks and relied entirely on military
force to do so.

Russia must now ask itself about the relationship between short-term
military victories and long-term economic prosperity. At the time
of the Soviet Union’s invasion of Hungary in 1956 or Czechoslovakia
in 196 8, no one asked what impact its actions had on the Russian
stock market.

There was no Russian stock market.

Now, the conflict in Georgia has been associated with a sharp decline
in investor confidence. Russia’s foreign exchange reserves fell in
one week by $16bn. In one day the value of Gazprom fell by the same
amount. Risk premia in Russia have sky-rocketed.

Isolation of Russia is not feasible. It would be counter-productive
because Russia’s economic integration is the best discipline on its
politics. It would only strengthen the sense of victimhood that fuels
intolerant nationalism. And it would compromise the world’s interests
in tackling nuclear proliferation, addressing climate change or
stabilising Afghanistan.

But the international community is not impotent. Europeans need Russian
gas, but Gazprom needs European consumers and investment. The reality
of interdependence is that both sides have leverage; both sides can
change the terms of trade.

Our approach must be hard-headed-engagement. That means bolstering
allies, rebalancing the energy relationship with Russia, defending the
rules of international institutions, and renewing efforts to tackle
"unresolved conflicts".

Here, Ukraine is key. It has strong links to Russia and this is
firmly in both countries’ interests. But Ukraine is also a European
country. Ukrainian leaders have spoken of their aspiration to see their
country become a member of the EU. Article 49 of the EU treaty gives
all European countries the right to apply. The prospect and reality of
EU membership has been a force for stability, prosperity and democracy
across eastern Europe and it should remain so beyond. Once Ukraine
fulfils EU criteria, it should be accepted as a full member.

As for Ukraine’s relationship with Nato, it does not pose a threat to
Russia. It is about strengthening Ukraine’s democratic institutions
and independence – things that will benefit Russia in the long term.

Europe also must re-balance the energy relationship with Russia. Europe
needs to invest in storing gas to deal with interruptions. More
interconnections between countries and properly functioning internal
markets will increase resilience. It needs diverse, secure and
resilient gas supplies.

Europe needs to act as one when dealing with third parties like
Russia. And we will be reducing our dependence on gas altogether:
increasing energy efficiency, investing in carbon capture and storage
technology for coal, and in renewables and nuclear power.

In all international institutions, we will need to review our relations
with Russia. I do not apologise for rejecting kneejerk calls for
Russia to be expelled from the G8, or for EU-Russia or Nato-Russia
relations to be broken. But we do need to examine the nature, depth
and breadth of relations with Russia.

In Nato, we will stand by our commitments to existing members, and
there w ill be renewed determination that there should be no Russian
veto on the future direction of Nato.

Fourth, the unresolved conflicts that mark the end of empire should
not be ignored. The world’s attention is currently on South Ossetia
and Abkhazia.

But the conflicts in Transnistria and Nagorno-Karabakh must not
be overlooked. Each has its roots in longstanding ethnic tensions,
exacerbated by economic and political underdevelopment.

The choice today is clear. Not to sponsor a new cold war, but to be
clear about the foundations of lasting peace.

Why Don’t They Demand An Answer From Ter-Petrosyan

WHY DON’T THEY DEMAND AN ANSWER FROM TER-PETROSYAN

Hayots Ashkhar Daily
27 Aug 2008
Armenia

Chairman of Constitutional Right Union Hayk Babukhanyan says: "The
stance of the law enforcers, the temporary parliamentary committee and
the ruling coalition is rather blurred. The disorder and the 10 victims
of March 1 is a fact and have been organized by L. Ter-Petrosyan. Why
doesn’t the committee demand an answer from him?

Instead the Prosecutor’s investigates the issue of who took the stone
and broke the head of this and that person. They continuously speak
about negotiations and certain bridges. Of course there should be a
dialogue with the opposition, but we must feel the difference between
crime and politics."

Batumi-Poti

BATUMI-POTI
Beril Dedeoglu

Daily Georgian Times
.do?haberno=151283
Aug 27 2008
Georgia

Even if the fighting phase has come to an end in the Georgian war,
other parts of this conflict are far from over.

The US has been pressuring Turkey since the beginning of the 2000s
about the Montreux Convention, which regulates passage through the
Turkish Straits, because Washington has decided that it should have
a presence in the Black Sea region. The covert crisis between Turkey
and the US was about the total tonnage and number of military ships
that the US wanted to send through the straits, their purpose for
reaching that sea and the port where they would cast anchor. Finally,
the Georgian war had assured the US of having an excuse to fly its
flag in the Black Sea.

The presence of the US Navy in the Black Sea is an important political
development on its own, even if this doesn’t mean the modification
of the Montreux regime or the breaching of this convention at this
point. Officially, the US is sending humanitarian aid to Georgia;
but in fact, these ships’ essential task is to demonstrate that the US
supports Georgia in the Russian-Georgian war. When someone talks about
humanitarian aid, the US, governed by neocons, is probably the last
country that comes to mind. Furthermore, a country that wants simply to
send help wouldn’t usually choose ways that would put other countries
such as Turkey into difficult diplomatic positions. Additionally,
it’s not mandatory to send diapers, milk powder, food or medicine
exclusively by sea. However, when the hidden objective is to provoke
Russia, which wants to sign a missile defense shield agreement with
Belarus and to renew its traditional alliance with Syria, then the
presence of the American battleships in the Georgian territorial sea
becomes necessary.

While the US ships unload their humanitarian aid cargo in the port of
Batumi, a city next to the Turkish border, Russia does exactly the
same in Poti, next to Batumi. How nice that Georgians receive that
much aid! In the context of NATO operations, American and Russian
battleships have worked together in the past without any problems,
but today, to have them in two close ports is too risky because of
the growing military tension between them. Additionally, Russia has
just decided to freeze its relationship with NATO.

These recent events have also put Azerbaijan and Armenia in an
uncomfortable position. Important social segments in these countries
were trying to westernize their states without making Russia too
angry. But following the latest developments, Russia seems to be
furious and this will undoubtedly affect not only Georgia, but also
Belarus, Ukraine, Armenia and Azerbaijan.

If two major powers apply pressure to a region at the same time, the
possibility of eruption of local armed conflicts based on ethnic,
religious and territorial problems diminish. It is likely that the
Russian-American pressure has delayed the expansion and deepening of
several regional conflicts in the Caucasus for now. But this situation
doesn’t help to resolve the existing problems. Mutual deterrence
can help to freeze conflicts but cannot remove the risk of future
explosions. This means that we may witness more problems in Caucasia
over the issues between Azerbaijan and Armenia or between Armenia
and Turkey. Moreover, the pressure applied by leader countries to
their allied nations can cause a deterioration of the mutual trust
within old alliances, as we have witnessed with the Turkish Straits
situation between the US and Turkey. It’s hard to predict what
societies’ reactions will be in the face of this distrust because
actual international conditions are not what they were during the
Cold War. Most important of all, pressures on states and on societies
don’t always produce similar results.

http://www.todayszaman.com/tz-web/yazarDetay

American Diplomat Categorically Disproves An Idea That Russia And US

AMERICAN DIPLOMAT CATEGORICALLY DISPROVES AN IDEA THAT RUSSIA AND USA MAY LEAVE THE OSCE MINSK GROUP

arminfo
2008-08-26 16:24:00

Arminfo. US Charge d’Affaires to Armenia Joseph Pennigton has
categorically disproved an idea that Russia and USA cannot work
together within the OSCE MG on Karabakh conflict settlement.

To recall, earlier Zeyno Baran, the wife of the American co-chair of
the OSCE MG Matthew Bryza, supposed it.

Joseph Pennigton said that nobody in the USA made such a supposition
officially. ‘We shall continue working within the OSCE MG on Nagornyy
Karabakh conflict settlement’, – he said.

BAKU: Azerbaijan Considers Impossible The Independence Of Nagorno Ka

AZERBAIJAN CONSIDERS IMPOSSIBLE THE INDEPENDENCE OF NAGORNO KARABAKH EVEN IF ABKHAZIA AND OSSETIA RECOGNIZED AS INDEPENDENT

Azerbaijan Business Center
Aug 25 2008
Azerbaijan

Baku, Fineko/abc.az. A unanimous recommendation adopted today by
Federation Council and State Duma to Russian President on recognizing
Abkhazia and South Ossetia independent, is not recognized by Azerbaijan
as a precedent for recognizing the independence of Nagorno Karabakh
occupied by Armenia. Representatives of an occupation regime have
delivered the same speeches.

Press-Secretary of Ministry of Foreign Affairs Khazar Ibrahim said
Azerbaija is ready to continue negotiations with Armenia relating
Nagorno Karabakh problem.

"The international law is on our side, therefore Armenia has to release
Azerbaijani lands. We do not see Nagorno Karabakh outside Azerbaijan,"
K.Ibrahim said. Recently Turkey offered to solve the questions based
on Security and Cooperation Platform on Caucasus.

"Azerbaijan was always interested in peace-making, stability and
security in the region and contributed a lot to that. At the same time
we are ready to support all projects following that direction, but
the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Turkey has not sent us the Prime
Minister’s details concerning the creation of so called Caucasian
Union," K.Ibrahim said.

At the same time Turkey says Armenia has no place in the Union,
but the observers expect Abdullah Gul to visit Yerevan soon.

"Official Baku considers the talks between Turkey and Armenia as
normal. Turkey stands on a principal position regarding Armenia to
release Azerbaijani lands and is not going to change it at all,"
K.Ibrahim said.

Russia-led security bloc holds drills in Armenia

ArmInfo News Agency (in Russian), Armenia
Aug 22 2008

Russia-led security bloc holds drills in Armenia

The final fourth part of the Collective Security Treaty Organization
(CSTO) joint military exercise – Rubezh (Frontier) 2008 – has been
held in Armenia. About 2,500 servicemen, including 1,392 Armenian
troops and 1,106 Russian troops, took part in the exercise at the
Marshal Baghramyan shooting range, Armenian news agency Arminfo
reported on 22 August.

CSTO Secretary-General Nikolay Bordyuzha, Armenian Defence Minister
Seyran Ohanyan, heads of the Armenian security agencies, as well as
the military attaches of the USA, UK, China, Iran and other embassies
watched the exercise, Arminfo said.

Bordyuzha and Ohanyan told a news conference on 22 August they were
satisfied with the results of the drills. Bordyuzha said the exercise
had demonstrated that the organization was capable of defending the
member states from any aggression.

The CSTO has six members: Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan,
Russia, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan.

General Secretary Of CEC To Visit Armenia At Invitation Of Catholico

GENERAL SECRETARY OF CEC TO VISIT ARMENIA AT INVITATION OF CATHOLICOS KAREKIN II

Noyan Tapan

Au g 22, 2008

ETCHMIADZIN, AUGUST 22, NOYAN TAPAN. At the invitation of the Supreme
Patriarch and Catholicos of All Armenians Karekin II, a delegation
led by the General Secretary of the Conference of European Churches
(CEC) Colin Williams will pay an official visit to the Mother See of
Holy Etchmiadzin on August 24-31.

The delegation will visit Armenia’s historical sacred places and
dioceses, Tsitsernakaberd, the Gevorgian Theological Academy and the
Vazgenian Theological Seminary and will meet with representatives of
Armenia-based ecumenical organizations.

According to a press release of the information system of the Mother
See of Holy Etchmiadzin, the delegation will also have meetings
with the speaker of the RA National Assembly Tigran Torosian and the
Armenian foreign minister Edward Nalbandian.

http://www.nt.am/news.php?shownews=116615

Memory Politics, The Reiterdenkmal And The De-Colonisation Of The Mi

MEMORY POLITICS, THE REITERDENKMAL AND THE DE-COLONISATION OF THE MIND
Phanuel Kaapama

Namibian
August/columns/0821D14A6D.html
Aug 22 2008
Namibia

I HAVE followed with keen interest the debate that has erupted since
the unveiling of the Namibian Government’s plan for the relocation of
the Reiterdenkmal monument to make way for the envisaged N$8 million
Independence Museum.

In a country where many essential political and policy issues are
normally allowed passage without being subjected to the necessary
public debates and scrutiny, one should therefore acknowledge the
enthralling exchanges that this issue has been able to generate, not
only in the corridors of power, but also in print and electronic media.

Various concerns were brought to the fore in this regard, ranging
from the price tag that could accompany the construction of the
proposed museum, the lack of broad-based public consultation and
administrative transparency in the allocation of the tenders for
the architectural design and construction of the proposed memorial,
to some other general concerns relating to the socio-political,
economic and cultural implications that may be yielded through the
execution of these plans.

As captivating as this debate may have been, there are a number of
pertinent aspects that have not been adequately addressed, and which
would therefore need further extensive pondering.

These relate to the specific historical context that underpinned the
commissioning of the Reiterdenkmal 96 years ago; as well as the essence
that such a preceding milieu may have on the present post-independence
socio-cultural and political dispensation.

This is of utmost importance in the sense that the analysis of the
socio-cultural, political and economic significance of Reiterdenkmal
will as a matter of principle have to be posited within the specific
historical events that it was created to give symbolic meaning to.

Only two out of the many commentaries that have emerged as part of
this lively debate have attempted to assess the present value of the
memorial in question on the basis of its historical background.

These were by Johannes Tjitjo of PACON and Andreas Vogt.

In his contribution Vogt tried to advance an argument to the effect
that the conservation and preservation of this specific historical
monument is one of the hallmarks of the true processes of national
reconciliation and nation-building in Namibia.

However as the present article will demonstrate, Vogt’s contribution
amounted to nothing more than an expression of narcissistically
triumphalist ethno-nationalistic sentiments.

This is particularly evident from the little (if any) effort that
the writer has made towards demonstrating his empathy whatsoever
to the enduring sense of injustice that is being felt to this very
day by the descendants of those who suffered enormous loss of life,
property, livelihood, culture and dignity due to past colonial acts,
which the Reiterdenkmal was erected to celebrate.

The Reiterdenkmal was specifically erected to eulogise the carnage
by the German colonial Schutztruppe in its military campaigns, which
many progressive historians have characterised as having stood out
in colonial historiography the world over, by virtue of its genocidal
features.

This memorial was a brainchild of Colonel Ludwig von Estorff and was
designed by a German sculptor by the name of Adolf Kuerle, before
being officially unveiled by the German governor Dr Theodore Seitz
in 1912, on the birthday of Kaiser Wilhelm.

In these wars, the soldiers to whose honour this monument was
dedicated, were not only responsible for the execution of General
Lothar Von Trotha’s notorious Vernichtungbefehl (Extermination Order),
which resulted in the slaughter of 80% of the Ovaherero people,
as well as in the death of 60% of the Nama population.

Many of these victims were subjected to well-orchestrated mass killings
in which they were driven out into the deserts to die of thirst and
hunger; while those who survived were later rounded up and send to
concentration camps, in which many more succumbed to the harsh living
and working conditions.

The horrendous acts that these soldiers committed marked what is
today recognised as the first genocide of the twentieth century,
which preceded other similar acts of carnage, such as that of the
Armenians, Jews and Cambodians etc.

Thus despite the enervated defence of the Reiterdenkmal put up by Vogt,
in which he opted to rely more on meaningless ethno-nationalistic
rhetoric rather than the power of reason, given its background there
should be no doubt whatsoever that the memorial in question should
first and foremost be considered as a symbol of the celebration of
colonial genocide and repression.

In many other countries such symbols of oppression are not only
relocated, but in some instances are also totally done away with
altogether, as part of the process of healing the memory of past
atrocities and injustices.

Some of the recent examples to this effect includes giant statue
of Lenin in Vilnius, the capital of the former Soviet republic of
Lithuania, which together with some other 60 symbols of repression
were relocated to the Soviet Sculpture Memorial Theme Park; a statue
of Enver Hoxha, the symbol of Stalinist repression in Tirana’s main
square in the former Yugoslav Republic of Albania was torn down in
February 1991; another dedicated to Soviet soldiers killed in the
WWII was removed under an Estonian government order in April 2007;
the Madrid authority’s removal in March 2005 of the city’s last statue
General Franco.

Therefore the measures that the Namibian government is contemplating
for the relocation of this memorial are not only too lenient, but
also very late.

In view of some of the issues raised in the course of this debate, it
became clearly evident that although Namibia attained its independence
from colonial rule and foreign domination 18 years ago, there is still
much to be done in terms of de-colonisation of the minds of its people.

In particular although the Government of Namibia has embraced the
politics of reconciliation, the debate on the Reiterdenkmal has
once more provided attestation to the effect that the people of this
diverse country of ours are miles apart when coming to terms with the
deep colonial scars that were engraved into the social and cultural
fabric of our society.

The narcissistically triumphalist memory politics that have been
playing out following the announcement of the proposed relocation of
the Reiterdenkmal, is but one of the testimonies in this regard.

As part of his justification for the retention of the Reiterdenkmal
at its present location, Vogt argued that "it is the performance,
the achievement and the loss of life and health of the soldier which
is appreciated" in the symbolical form.

This creates an impression as if in Vogt’s eyes the thousands of
lives that were lost at the hands of the Schutztruppe are worthless,
compared to the memorial dedicated to those who were responsible for
these atrocities.

Furthermore Vogt’s disproportionate concerns for the health and
lives of the Schutztruppe seem to resonate with the manner in which
Von Trotha justified his chosen course of action, when he stated
"… I find it most appropriate that the nation perish instead of
infecting our soldiers and diminishing their supplies of water and
food… They have to perish in the Sandveld or try to cross the
Bechuanaland border".

Another aspect in Vogt’s analogy that should not be allowed to pass
without being subjected to the necessary challenge, is the assertion
that it is "… not only the Namibian Government, but also the
German government should formulate a clear attitude and opinion"
in the matter of the proposed relocation of this monument.

In this regard one wonders what Germany’s jurisdiction will be in
the matter of a memorial located on the Namibian soil, which not only
ceased to be German colony long ago, but has since moved on to become
an independent and sovereign state.

Could such sentiments have been prompted by the fact Germany remains
by far the biggest single donor country for Namibia, as well as
Namibia being the highest recipient of German official development
assistance in Africa? In this regard the President of the opposition
DTA, Katuutire Kaura was quoted in the local media as having noted that
"the German Government has given the Namibian Government hundreds of
millions of euros, since Independence, but the Swapo government now
wants to move that monument".

These latest diatribes by the Hon.

Kaura has turned out to be in total contradiction of the principle
that underpinned a motion that he introduced in the National Assembly,
three years ago, in which he advocated for the restoration of the
pre-colonial Otjiherero names of several Namibian towns, including
the capital city Windhoek.

The same can be said about the letter addressed to the Namibian
President, by Namibia Institute of Architects (NIA), whose content
turned to be similar that of an anonymous letter featured in the
local press.

After critically reflecting on NIA’s purported benevolence, I was
left with goose bumps.

In particular I was astounded by the NIA’s assertion that the proposed
location of the Independence Museum will be "…away from the very
people whose freedom it is supposed to represent".Does this mean
there are groups in this country who don’t consider themselves part
of the Namibian independence? Such claims may convey some unpalatable
undertones that are reminiscent of an era which confined various racial
groups to different residential and business sections in urban areas.

In terms of which Windhoek proper was exclusively reserved for certain
racial groups, whereas those whose freedom the newly proposed memorial
is supposedly going to represent were confined to the fringes of the
city in Katutura, Mondesa or Kuisebmond.

Moreover when the NIA speaks of other "sites where important related
events took place", does this mean the NIA as a body representing
one of the most learned cream of the Namibian intellectual crop is
truly not aware of the fact that the very site earmarked for the
proposed Independence Museum used to house one of the concentration
camps in which countless Nama and Ovaherero people were subjected
to innumerable acts of cruelty and humiliation; or does it mean that
these events are unimportant in the eyes of the NIA? Allow me to sign
off by making the following three notations.

Firstly there are two fundamental issues in this debate that are
being deliberately lumped together.

This is being done in a rather subtle attempt for the political
legitimisation of concerns that on their own would be exposed for
its moral reprehensibility, as well as its narrow sectional agenda.

Therefore in order to accord this important debate the justice that
it deserves, the concerns relating future fate of the Reiterdenkmal
monument should in my view be detached from the more legitimate
concerns regarding the essence, content, form, location, cost, and
transparent handling of the proposed Independence museum.

Secondly, the public acknowledgment of the history of abuse that has
for years remained ignored, cannot be realized without the fine-tuning
of the perpetrating group’s historical pride, which may entail the
not-so-easy, yet necessary balancing of the point of pride with
shame over the untold suffering that others may have had to endure
for decades.

Thirdly it is crucial to remember that dealing with fragmented
historical memory can be very complex and cannot therefore be
undertaken through a piecemeal process of political tokenism.

Thus the mere insertion of one or two paragraph into a history books,
adding tables to and/or moving of existing memorials, may add to rather
than diffusing the complex volatilities embedded in historical memory.

http://www.namibian.com.na/2008/

Average Monthly Wages Rise 20.4% In Armenia In January-July 2008

AVERAGE MONTHLY WAGES RISE 20.4% IN ARMENIA IN JANUARY-JULY 2008

ARKA
Aug 20, 2008

YEREVAN, August 20. /ARKA/. Armenia’s average monthly wages rose
20.4% to 87,908 drams year-on-year as of end-June, the RA National
Statistical Service (NSS) reports.

Wages in government-financed organizations totaled 62,253 drams – 16.7%
year-on-year increase. Average monthly salary of government-financed
employees rose 1.3% between June and July.

Average monthly wages in private organizations totaled 108,679 drams –
19.6% year-on-year increase (0.7% rise between June and July).

According to NSS, average monthly nominal wages rose 0.9% in Armenia
between June and July.

Moscow Transforms Real-World Game Of RISK

MOSCOW TRANSFORMS REAL-WORLD GAME OF RISK

Globe and Mail
August 15, 2008 at 10:34 PM EDT
Canada

In early 2002, some 200 U.S. Special Forces soldiers landed in the
former Soviet republic of Georgia to train the Georgian army in
anti-terrorism techniques, including how to protect a planned oil
pipeline from secessionist or anti-Western saboteurs.

With strong encouragement from Washington, Georgia was finalizing
a deal with its neighbours, Azerbaijan and Turkey, and Britain’s BP
PLC to build a $3.9-billion (U.S.) pipeline from the oil-rich Caspian
region to the Turkish port of Ceyhan on the Mediterranean Sea.

The 1,768-kilometre, somewhat-circuitous route bypassed major
U.S. rivals in the region, Russia and Iran, as well as Armenia,
the traditional enemy of Turkey and Azerbaijan.

The Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) project, completed in 2005, entailed
tremendous commercial risk because the three participants were involved
in violent struggles with neighbours or internal separatist groups,
and the pipeline would be vulnerable to sabotage. Under the agreement
with BP, each country was to provide security within its borders and
be responsible for losses should the pipeline be shut down as a result
of political violence.

Enlarge Image Related Articles Recent

News: Georgia can ‘forget’ regaining provinces News: U.S. demands
that Russia get out Marcus Gee: Don’t abandon Georgia to Moscow Rick
Salutin: True lies and foreign wars Globe editorial: Russian hypocrisy
John O’Sullivan: Is Russia morphing into another USSR?

Earlier discussion: John O’Sullivan took your questions Marcus Gee:
Russia no longer content to swallow its bitterness It was part of the
United States’ effort to reduce Russia’s dominance of the region’s
booming oil trade, and by doing so to encourage the development of
independent-minded states on its rival’s southern flank.

Now, with its invasion of Georgia, Moscow has dramatically transformed
the real-world game of Risk that is being played out in the region.

For more than a decade, Russia watched while the U.S. and Europe played
the new "great game" of energy geopolitics in its own backyard. It
was 10 years ago this weekend that Russia plunged into financial
crisis by devaluing the ruble and defaulting on its mounting debt.

With the Georgian invasion, the Kremlin has sent notice that it
now controls the Risk board. And that it is willing to use its
armed forces to back up what it regards as its national interest in
neighbouring states.

At stake is control over one of the world’s most promising new sources
of crude oil – one that could rival the impact of the North Sea a
generation ago. The U.S., in particular, has worked strenuously to
minimize Russia’s influence over this energy development.

"While it is early days to say what the security situation is going
to look like in Georgia longer term, the events of the past few days
deal a blow to the U.S.’s plans to support existing and new oil and
gas routes that bypass Russia," Tanya Costello, Eurasian director
with the political risk consultancy, Eurasia Group, said yesterday.

For BP, the Russian invasion of Georgia could turn into a nightmare
if it forces it to keep closed two oil pipelines that pump more than
a million barrels a day of high-quality oil into world markets. They
represent an overall revenue stream of $100-million (U.S.) a day
among the oil company and its partners.

But then, BP recognized the risks before going into the project
and insured against losses with host governments and export credit
agencies. David Kirsch, an analyst with Washington-based PFC Energy
Group, said multinationals like BP have no choice but to operate in
extremely risky areas. "You go where the oil is," he said.

However, the Russian economy may also pay a price over the conflict,
which further tarnishes its reputation as a safe, reliable economic
partner and has provoked confrontation with the United States.

Ms. Costello said the Georgian war – which was motivated by political
rather than energy concerns – has added to the nervousness of foreign
investors, who dominate the Russian stock market.

In recent months, Russian markets have been rattled by the battle
between BP and its Russian partners, who received government support
for control over joint venture TNK-BP, as well as government threats
to prosecute companies that raise prices too aggressively.

"What happened in Georgia has come on the back of other events in
Russia that have increased market concerns," she said. "Together,
these are increasing the risk perception around the Russian market."

Moscow’s aggressiveness and lawlessness has clearly turned off some
Western investors. "Take all the money you want to lose to Russia and
you won’t be disappointed," quipped Toronto business leader Seymour
Schulich, who has spent a lifetime in global businesses.

But the country’s vast energy and mineral wealth, and its booming
construction and retail sector, amount to a lure that is too enticing
for many to pass up, regardless of the widespread criticism.

Inbound direct investment in Russia totalled $45-billion in 2007,
and is not expected to be dramatically affected by domestic squabbles
or Russia’s foreign adventure.

"I don’t think direct investors will be so easily deterred and they
will still be seeking opportunities across all different sectors of
the Russian economy, including energy," Ms. Costello said.

Despite setbacks, most of the international oil companies continue to
operate profitably in Russia. BP has made enormous returns from its
TNK-BP partnership, even as its battle with its Russian billionaire
partners heated up and its executives either fled the country or
were expelled for overstaying their visas. Fadel Gheit, an analyst
with Oppenheimer & Co. in New York, said BP has already earned back
its investment in the joint venture, though it may still lose out if
forced to unload its interest in a fire sale.

PUTIN’S HAND

Western governments and producers regard the Caspian-Central Asian
region as they had viewed Russia not so long ago – an important
source of production growth outside the cartel of the Organization of
Petroleum Exporting Countries, and an attractive area for investment
by their multinationals.

But as the West has had to reconsider Russia’s role in the global
energy picture over the past five years, it will now have to
recalibrate its assessment of the security of supply from the former
Soviet states.

Moscow’s aggressive energy policy in seeking to dominate energy trade
in its "near abroad" – as it calls the former Soviet republics –
is consistent with the approach taken to the oil and gas industry by
former president Vladimir Putin. In bare-knuckle fashion, Mr. Putin
reversed a decade of wide-open capitalism to reassert the dominant role
of the Russian state, heavily dependent on oil and gas for revenue.

Mr. Putin "intended to reorganize the Russian oil and gas industry to
enhance the power of the Russian state," says Martha Brill Olcott,
an expert on Russia with the Carnegie Endowment for International
Peace. "Only then, after the reorganization was complete and the
state’s capacity to protect the national interests in this strategic
sector was reaffirmed, would Western firms be invited to participate
in the Russian market."

As rising oil prices strengthened the Kremlin’s hand, the former
president, who still wields considerable power as Prime Minister,
acted to correct what he viewed as the unacceptable status quo in
the energy sector.

His government reined in the freewheeling Russian businessmen known
as oligarchs, most famously through the controversial prosecution
of OAO Yukos chief executive officer Mikhail Khodorkovsky. Yukos’
assets were later sold at bargain prices to state-owned companies.

He changed the advantageous terms for Western companies operating
in his country, annulling exploration licences won by Exxon Mobil
Corp. and Chevron Corp. in the Sakhalin offshore, and then forced
Royal Dutch Shell PLC to sell its Sakhalin holdings to state-owned
OAO Gazprom.

He unilaterally raised previously subsidized natural gas prices to
former Soviet republics such as Ukraine and Belarus, raising the threat
of disruptions to gas exports that flow through those states to Europe.

Mr. Putin’s assertiveness was fuelled by Russia’s growing economic
clout, which resulted from rising oil and gas prices. Russia remains
the world’s second-largest producer of oil, at close to 10 million
barrels a day, and the largest producer of natural gas.

When he took power in 1999, crude prices averaged $10 a barrel
and Russia was virtually bankrupt. Since then, Russia has averaged
7-per-cent economic growth a year – 8 per cent in 2007 – and has run a
string of budget surpluses that last year topped 3 per cent of gross
domestic product.

As a result, its foreign reserves grew from $12-billion in 1999 to
$470-billion at the end of last year, a measure of economic strength
equalled only by countries such as China, India and the oil producers
of the Middle East.

The added riches stoked Russia’s ambitions to be an energy
superpower. To bolster its presence in energy markets, Moscow not
only boosted the government’s role domestically but has also sought
to dominate the export of oil and, especially, natural gas, from its
southern neighbours.

The transportation issue is both economic and political: Russia
reaps huge revenues and more control over export prices by having
its state-owned firms deliver crude and gas from competitors in the
Caucasus and Central Asia. At the same time, control of those exports
gives the Kremlin massive political leverage over Europe.

"Russia knows they are providing huge amounts to natural gas to
Europe – that they have a stranglehold on Europe," said Oppenheimer’s
Mr. Gheit. "There is no question in my mind that Russia is going to
play its energy card as much as it can."

Few analysts believe this week’s invasion of Georgia was motivated
by Russia’s energy ambitions, but it clearly supports the Kremlin’s
goal of exercising more clout in the broader region.

As a result of the invasion, Georgia’s reputation as a safe alternative
for transporting crude oil and natural gas is threatened, and Central
Asian producers will have to reconsider the risk involved in their
various plans for getting their oil and natural gas to Western markets.

"There are certainly very strong parallels between the development
of Russia’s domestic policy and its projection of influence over
the other former Soviet countries," Julian Lee, a senior analyst
with London-based Centre for Global Energy Studies, said in an
interview. "Russia has always felt it would like to exert a high
degree of control over the development of the oil and gas industries
of both Central Asia and the Caucasus, as well as its own."

Stephen Blank, a professor of national security affairs at the
U.S. Army War College in Carlisle, Pa., highlights the American
distrust of Russia’s energy policy in the region, though he added
those energy goals were of secondary importance in the current
crisis. "Russia’s energy objective is to monopolize all Caspian
energy flows to Europe, so that it can then blackmail Europe and
force political changes to European policy," Prof. Blank said.

It can then play that energy card to block further NATO expansion to
its borders, to prevent criticism of its anti-democratic government,
and to win support for the foreign ambitions of its state-owned
companies, he added.

PIPELINE POLITICS

The United States has long viewed the Georgian energy corridor as
the linchpin of its policy of encouraging independent, pro-Western
states to develop in the former Soviet states in the Caspian and
Central Asian regions.

At a meeting of the Organization for Security and Co-operation in
Europe in Istanbul in 1999, then-U.S. president Bill Clinton lobbied
hard and won agreement from Azerbaijan, Georgia and Turkey to proceed
with the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) pipeline project.

The deal represented a major victory for U.S. foreign policy.

The high stakes in the "new pipeline politics" had been clearly spelled
out two years earlier – somewhat undiplomatically – by Sheila Heslin,
who had earlier served on Mr. Clinton’s National Security Council as
director of Russian, Ukrainian and Eurasian affairs.

At the time, Western oil firms were making major investments in the
energy-producing states of Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan,
but export routes were still under discussion.

Washington’s fear was that the former Soviet producers would be
forced to market their oil and gas through Russia and Iran, thereby
conferring both economic and political clout on America’s rivals. (Even
then, the U.S. was enforcing sanctions against Iran over its nuclear
program.) In a New York Times opinion piece, Ms. Heslin wrote that
"the consequences would be dire" if Russia and Iran locked up the main
pipeline routes for the Caspian and Central Asian resources.) At the
time, Shell was planning to build a $2.5-billion natural gas pipeline
from Turkmenistan through Iran to Turkey. An oil pipeline was already
under construction that would move crude from Kazakhstan’s rich Tengiz
field to Russia’s Black Sea port of Novorossiysk.

A second oil pipeline was being considered, and it would be routed
either directly through Iran, or by a more circuitous path through
Georgia. Ms. Heslin said vital American interests required Washington
to ensure the Georgian route won out.

Washington’s staunchest ally for the Georgian route – in addition
to Tbilisi itself – was Azerbaijan, which was already sending crude
exports through a Russian-controlled pipeline but wanted to diversify
and did not trust Iran.

When the agreement was struck in 2003, the BTC pipeline had generous
backing from Western governments, including the World Bank’s
International Finance Corp., the European Bank for Reconstruction
and Development and seven national export credit agencies.

The BTC pipeline opened in 2005, complementing the smaller Baku-Supsa
line that BP also operates and the Russian line that ends in
Novorossiysk.

This week, BP was forced to shut down the Baku-Supsa line, which
delivers 100,000 barrels a day of oil from Azerbaijan to the Black
Sea port of Supsa. The company said it was planning to reopen the
line as soon as possible.

The larger BTC pipeline had been shut down last week as a result
of apparent sabotage by a Kurdish separatist group. BP is hoping to
reopen the line after Turkish officials complete repairs next week,
assuming the situation in Georgia has stabilized.

Georgian officials – backed up by Western press reports – claimed
Russian bombers had targeted the buried BTC pipeline, but BP said
it saw no evidence to support those allegations. Analysts said they
did not expect Russia to deliberately target the Georgian pipelines,
noting that the Kremlin is eager to bolster its claim that it is a
reliable energy partner.

NO TEARS IN MOSCOW

Fallout from this week’s Georgian war may, however, affect future
decisions regarding pipeline routes, and persuade Central Asian
states – which have better relations with Moscow than either Georgia
or Azerbaijan – that the risks of partnering with those U.S.-friendly
states is too great.

Those decisions will not only affect Europe’s dependence on Russia for
its gas supplies, but will directly affect the return on investment
of international oil companies that are operating in Azerbaijan,
Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan.

Those states are expected to contribute major growth in non-OPEC
global oil and gas production. Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan are expected
to boost crude production from 11/2 million barrels a day two years
ago to 21/2 million currently, to up to six million barrels a day
within the next 15 years.

"What is really at stake is the unrestricted access of Caspian
oil to world markets," said the Centre for Global Energy Studies’
Mr. Lee. "If, as a byproduct of the conflict in Georgia, people
become more wary in the future of expanding the capacity of the export
corridor through Georgia, then there will be no tears shed in Moscow."

Eurasia Group’s Ms. Costello said the key to future projects through
Georgia will be the degree to which the country returns to normal after
the Russia occupation of up to a third of its territory. Serious and
continuing instability in Georgia could force producers like Kazakhstan
and Azerbaijan to rely more heavily on Russian export routes.

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev said Russia’s sole motivation for its
incursion was to defend the residents of separatist Georgian enclaves,
South Ossetia and Abkhazia, from Tbilisi’s aggression. The Kremlin
has long denied it covets "energy superpower" status or that it uses
energy as a political weapon. It insists it remains a dependable
supplier of energy to world markets.

By yesterday, a de facto ceasefire was in effect, though Russian
troops remained in Georgian territory beyond the disgruntled enclaves
where they had previously maintained a peacekeeping force. With
U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice at his side, Georgian
President Mikheil Saakashvili signed a ceasefire that would require
Russian forces to withdraw to South Ossetia and Abkhazia, though not
out of the country completely.

Short of a continuing crisis, the regional oil producers are likely
to continue developing non-Russian export routes to reduce their
dependence on their aggressive northern neighbour.

Kazakhstan already exports 60 per cent of its oil through Russian
pipelines, but Moscow is blocking expansion of a line owned by a broad
consortium that delivers Kazakh oil directly to Russian terminals
on the Black Sea. Instead, it would force Kazakhstan to blend its
high-quality crude with lower-grade Russian oil in the line controlled
by state-owned Transneft.

There has been some speculation about building a pipeline across the
Caspian Sea to link Kazakh production with an expanded BTC line,
but both Iran and Russia – which have sea coasts on the Caspian –
would have veto rights over those plans.

Instead, Kazakhstan is likely to ship the oil across the sea by tanker,
and then feed it into pipelines leaving Azerbaijan.

European consumers are also hungrily eyeing Turkmenistan’s growing
natural gas production, as a way to reduce reliance of Russian exports,
which account for 25 per cent of European demand and much greater
than that in key markets like Germany.

But natural gas is more difficult than oil to transport because it
cannot be loaded on tankers or rail cars. There are proposals to build
a sub-Caspian pipeline and then ship the gas into central Europe,
a project known as Nabucco.

Analysts say the Nabucco project faces commercial obstacles that are
more problematic than the political resistances of Russia, largely
because Russia and even China would provide greater prices – net
of transportation – on gas sales from Turkmenistan than the Central
Europe market could offer.

So while oil producers may succeed in diversifying their export
routes, natural gas suppliers will remain beholden to Russian and
its monopolist, state-owned Gazprom.