Ambassador to visit Glendale

Glendale News-Press
Published February14, 2005

Ambassador to visit Glendale

John Evans, United States ambassador to Armenia, will stay two days, visit
with city officials.

By Josh Kleinbaum, News-Press and Leader

GLENDALE — When police officers in Yerevan, Armenia, wanted to learn better
fingerprinting techniques, they turned to their counterparts in Glendale. So
a team of Glendale police officers flew to Armenia with high-tech
fingerprinting equipment and trained the Armenians.

As the relationship between the Yerevan and Glendale police departments grew
tighter, the cities have relied on help from the U.S. Embassy to Armenia to
facilitate travel and the flow of information.

When U.S. Ambassador to Armenia John Evans spends two days in Glendale this
week, city officials will show their appreciation.

“The United States Embassy has been very, very helpful in making sure we can
get some of these things done,” Mayor Bob Yousefian said. “We’re going to
welcome him, talk to him, see what other challenges face him, and see what
we can do here to help relations between law enforcement here and law
enforcement in Armenia.”

Evans, who replaced John Ordway as ambassador in June 2004, is making his
first trip to Glendale on Tuesday. Because nearly 30% of Glendale’s
population is of Armenian descent, Armenian officials often visit the city.
Ordway came to Glendale several times, most recently in June 2003.

Evans will meet with Yousefian and other City Council members at City Hall
before Tuesday’s council meeting, and he will receive a mayor’s commendation
during the 6 p.m. meeting.

He will also meet with officials from the Armenian churches and the Glendale
Unified School District as well as members of community organizations.
Although the city’s interaction with Evans will focus on law enforcement,
other organizations have other priorities.

“We’re going to have a luncheon with him, exchange some ideas and see what
kinds of linkage we can develop,” Glendale Unified Supt. Michael Escalante
said.

“Maybe it’s as simple as exchanging letters or e-mails or sending support.
But having a contact with him as a conduit to do some of these things will
be a pretty neat thing.”

Evans will be accompanied by officials from the U.S. Agency for
International Development, the organization that dispenses money that
Congress gives to Armenia, said Armen Carapetian, acting executive director
of the Armenian National Committee Western Region.

Carapetian is trying to arrange a breakfast meeting with Evans and his
entourage.

“It’s important for us who work on communicating concerns and initiating
such [federal funding] that we listen to what they’re facing on the ground,”
Carapetian said.

* JOSH KLEINBAUM covers City Hall. He may be reached at (818) 637-3235 or by
e-mail at josh.kleinbaum @latimes.com.

Transcript of Interview with Taner Akcam by CBC (Canada)

THE SUNDAY EDITION
CBC Radio One

Program City: TORONTO
Broadcast Date: 6/2/05
Start Time: 09:11:00
End Time: 11:58:53

Michael Enright, Host

Live: Start Hour Two

Recording: Come Dance With Me (00:01:00)

Work Name: COME DANCE WITH ME
Recording Format (Medium): CD
Recording Title (CD or Album): NIGHT OUT WITH VERVE, DISC 1; WINING
Spine: 31435317
Label Name: VERVE

LYRICIST, SAMMY CAHN

COMPOSER, JIMMY VAN HEUSEN

PIANO, OSCAR PETERSON

DOUBLE BASS, RAY BROWN

DRUMS, ED THIGPEN

Live: Taner Akçam (00:28:03)

A Conversation with Historian Taner Akçam on Armenian Genocide &
Turkish Statement (Feb 6/05)

SUNDAY EDITION (2) (CBC-R)

Aired: 06 Feb 2005, 10:06am, 00:27:40

Bowden’s Media Monitoring Ref#:44AC85 (44AC85-2)

Michael Enright: It is impossible to underestimate the power of the
word “genocide.” And it is equally impossible to underestimate the
consequences when the word is NOT used.

This past week, a special United Nations committee concluded that the
rape and murder of tens of thousands of civilians in Darfur
constituted a crime against humanity …but it fell short of being a
“genocide.” Genocide, as the UN defines it, is “acts committed with
the intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical,
racial or religious group.”

There will be fall-out for generations from the decision NOT to call
Darfur a genocide. As there has been fall-out for almost a century
from refusal of many governments to use the word to describe the
slaughter of Armenians in 1915.

Armenians themselves call it “The Forgotten Genocide.” And while it
may have happened 90 years ago, in a far-away corner of the Ottoman
Empire, it is as alive for Turks and Armenians today as it was those
many long decades ago.

Taner Akçam has become the first Turkish historian to call the
Armenian killings a genocide. In response, his life has been
threatened. No university in his own country will hire him. He has
been derided as a traitor, and hailed as a hero. Professor Akçam is
now a visiting professor at the University of Minnesota. This morning
he is in a Minnesota Public Radio studio in Minneapolis. Good
morning, sir.

Taner Akçam: Good morning.

ME: What a pleasure to have you with us after reading about you and
reading your work. It’s quite important that you join us this
morning. Let me ask you—I know that the Turkish government has for
years vehemently denied that what happened in 1915 was genocide. Are
they still denying it as strongly?

TA: This is still the official Turkish state policy, that what
happened in 1915 was not a genocide.

ME: And this is in the textbooks, in the schools, this is taught in
the universities, and all of that?

TA: No. It is a little bit complicated. Until recently, it was not a
topic in the Turkish curriculum. Nineteen-fifteen was referred to
only as a deportation of the Armenian people in eastern Anatolia
because of the war conditions. Only these two sentences, nothing
more. But recently they changed the curriculum. Now they are teaching
Turkish students—or the students in Turkey from all nationalities,
Kurds, Armenian students also—that what happened wasn’t a genocide,
this is only an Armenian lie.

ME: “An Armenian lie.” That’s the phrase.

TA: Yes.

ME: Just give us a brief synopsis, if you will, of exactly what
happened to the Armenians in Anatolia in 1915.

TA: The beginning of the deportation was in 1915, May, and continued
until the beginning of 1917. Almost the entire Armenian population of
Anatolia was deported to the deserts of Syria and Iraq. The official
version, the official reason was that the Turkish authorities—or the
Ottoman authorities—of that time considered the Armenian population,
especially in eastern Anatolia, as a threat. They covered up their
operations as a necessity of the war. During this deportation, they
organized a paramilitary organization, and this organization—a secret
organization, a military organization—attacked the Armenian convoys.
The number of dead is between, according to Turkish numbers, three
hundred and six hundred thousand, and according to Armenian or
scholarly estimation, around 1 and 1 million Armenians perished
during that period. Most of the reasons for the deaths were killing,
hunger, starvation, health conditions, disease, and so on. At the end
almost the entire Armenian population was deported and eliminated.

ME: What was the—obviously not the stated reason, because the Turks
didn’t want to—the Ottoman Empire at the time didn’t want to—talk
about it, but why the enmity toward the Armenians?

TA: It is not only a problem of a culture or a problem of hate. There
are certainly different reasons for deportation and for genocide.
Undoubtedly the culture of tension between Christian and Muslim
populations is one of these reasons. But both peoples, the Muslims
and Christians, lived in the area more than 500 years without any
problem.

There are of course different reasons, but, if you ask me, I would
underline one important reason, and I would define this more as a
political reason. The basic fear of the Ottoman Empire was that they
were going to lose the eastern part of Anatolia. In 1914, before
World War One, there was an agreement between the Russian government
and the Ottoman government. According to this agreement, the Ottoman
authorities should implement certain reforms in eastern Anatolia.
These reforms should give certain autonomy to the Armenians.
According to the Ottoman authorities, this was the beginning of
Armenian independence in eastern Anatolia.

ME: Which they couldn’t abide. They couldn’t have that.

TA: Exactly. This agreement was also not a desire of the Ottoman
authorities. They were compelled to sign this agreement. When they
entered the war, the first thing that they did was that they annulled
this agreement. They discharged this agreement. They declared this
null and void. When they lost the first war against the Russians,
they thought the Russian army will come and occupy eastern Anatolia
and what they will do first is to implement this reform plan. This
means the creation of an independent state in eastern Anatolia.

This was the history of the decline process of the Ottoman Empire.
This was how it started in 1812 with Serbia, then continued with
Romania, Bulgaria, then continued in Lebanon, then Greece. This was
the independence movement of the Christian nationalities in the
Ottoman Empire. They first get certain democratic rights, autonomies.
Ottoman authorities never implemented these democratic rights. Then
the big powers interfered, and it ended with a separation, with an
independent nation-state of each Christian group. They thought this
will—exactly this same process will happen with the Armenians. They
thought that instead of creating an establishment of an
Armenian—allowing of a nation-state there, to kill them, to
homogenize the region, is the best political solution.

ME: So it was ethnic cleansing and the deportations and slaughter.
But what I don’t understand is why—thirty, forty, eighty years
later—that the Turkish historians were not looking at it the way you
did, and coming out and saying that yes, in fact, it was a genocide.
Other countries have faced their own history: South Africa, Germany,
Rwanda, and so on. What was the problem with Turkey admitting what
had happened?

TA: I think there are a lot of factors which cause this denial
policy. I will start with the psychological, the moral, reason. If I
summarize this issue, I would say that the Armenians symbolized and
were a constant reminder to the Turks of their most traumatic
historical events, namely, the collapse of the Empire and loss of
almost 90% of their territory over a forty-year period. They lived,
in the last 100 years of their Empire, under the constant fear that
they would disappear from the stage of history. The fear of total
obliteration from the stage of history was a permanent feeling during
the demise process of the Empire, in a simple way. They felt that
they would disappear as actors from the stage of history. That’s why
they don’t want to be reminded of that past.

A very important factor also, an additional factor is that an
important number of founders of the Turkish Republic were either
participants in this genocidal process or they enriched themselves
from this process.

ME: Does that apply to Kemal AtatĂźrk?

TA: Exactly, just the opposite. This is the important thing that I
constantly remind and write. Mustafa Kemal AtatĂźrk was one of the
opponents of this genocidal policy.

ME: And he was the founder of modern Turkey.

TA: Exactly. He openly accused the Unionist leaders who organized
this genocide of being murderers. But there are a number of other
founders of the Republic who participated in that process. It is a
psychological difficulty to call these founders thieves and
murderers. This is the basic psychological problem. But based on
Mustafa Kemal’s position, we can reverse this historiography in a
different way, definitely.

ME: Alright. Let me—I want to bring this down to yourself and your
researches and your writings. You use the word “genocide.” Now, what
happened when you published your work? What was the reaction, first
of all, among academics and perhaps other historians, but also in the
government and people?

TA: There are quite a number of other academicians in Turkey who
openly talked to me and told me that what happened was a genocide. I
think I would argue that among the critical scholars in Turkey, there
is a consensus that what happened was an ethnic cleansing. The term,
the G-word, is not actually the main problem in Turkey today, if you
ask me.

ME: “G-word,” the genocide.

TA: The “G-word” is “genocide.” Whether you call it genocide or
ethnic cleansing, it was a crime against humanity. There is a
consensus among the critical intellectuals in Turkey that what
happened was a crime against humanity. They never—

ME: Now, let me stop you there. Is this a consensus that those people
who are holding to it are willing to declare publicly? Or, why are
you the only one? Why are you the first to come out and do it and say
it publicly, if there is this consensus?

TA: I said, “among the critical scholars.” This is not—this is maybe
twenty, thirty percent of Turkish academia. The basic reason why they
haven’t come up with their statement is the fear that they would lose
their jobs. There is no open restriction, open suppression policy by
the state, but this atmosphere is very important.

After publishing my book, I can give an example. There was no single
book review. My first book was published in 1991. Can you imagine
that a book made five editions within two years without any book
review?

ME: In the whole country, there wasn’t one review of the book?

TA: There wasn’t one review, and the fifth edition—this means that
each edition was 2,500 [copies], and the book sold—this is an
academic book, a scholarly book—

ME: Right.

TA: —sold in Turkey more than 10,000 [copies]. Without any book
review, this book sold in that amount.

ME: What happened to you? You talk about some of the other
academicians who were fearful of losing their jobs. You couldn’t get
work as a professor, isn’t that right?

TA: Yes, between 1990—I was in Germany, and my Ph.D. is also from
Germany, and I was living in Germany. In 1995 I returned to Turkey
and tried to settle there and tried to find a job. I had certain
agreements with certain institutions. One private university in
Istanbul agreed to hire me, but at the last second, they decided to
drop their decision. It was the same experience with other
universities. They all gave me the same answer: We are scared, we
could get certain difficulties from the official authorities. I must
add that there was no official pressure at that time towards these
universities, but these scholars, the academicians who are going to
decide on that issue, got certain letters, unsigned or signed as “A
Group of Turkish Intellectuals.” In these letters, these scholars and
universities were warned [not] to get in touch with me. This is an
indirect threat. Everyone knew that these letters were coming from
the authorities, the Secret Service, or groups within the Turkish
state, and so the universities were scared to hire me.

ME: Our guest this morning is Taner Akçam. He’s a visiting professor
at the University of Minnesota. He’s in the studio in Minneapolis
this morning. He is the first Turkish historian—the first Turkish
historian—to use the word “genocide” in dealing with what happened to
the Armenian population of the Ottoman Empire in 1915, 1917. We’re
talking about the impact of that. Why is it important for you to tell
the story of the genocide?

TA: One important reason is my own experience. I know what torture
is, I know what suppression is, I know what persecution is. I was a
member of a certain students’ generation in Turkey, a certain
democratic tradition, a member of the ’68 generation in Europe and
Turkey—

ME: Right.

TA: —and I was a member of this generation who were really fighting
for human rights and democratic rights, in Turkey. That’s why I know
what torture means, I know what violence means. It’s part of my own
history.

ME: You’d better expand on that. You were thrown in jail in Ankara.
When you said earlier that you were living in Germany: you fled to
Germany, didn’t you. You had to get out of Turkey.

TA: Yes. I was arrested in 1976 because of the article I wrote in a
students’ newspaper. The reason why I was arrested is that I wrote
that there are Kurds living in Turkey. In fact, the Turkish state
claimed at that time that there were only Turks in Turkey. In the
1970s, this was a founding myth of the modern Turkish state. It was a
criminal offense. It was against the law to acknowledge the existence
of Kurds in Turkey. Because of that reason, I was put in jail and
sentenced to ten years. Then, after one year, I thought “it is
enough,” and I escaped from the prison. Then I came to Germany, where
I was given political asylum in 1978. After some personal tragedies
as a result of my political role, I decided to quit politics and
change the direction of my life. It was the middle of the 1980s. I
went to academia.

ME: Yeah, but people—you changed the course of your life, but people
were trying to kill you, right? I mean, the German police offered you
protection. They even offered you plastic surgery so you could change
the way you looked.

TA (laughs): If a filmmaker is listening, I can tell him or her the
details. The whole story’s really tailor-made for a movie.

ME: Well, you’re going to write your memoirs, I hope. Are you?

TA: Everyone wants [me to write them], but I don’t have time. I think
working on the Genocide is more important than my personal story, at
the moment. Yes, I was threatened by the PKK at that time.

ME: That’s the Kurdish—

TA: That’s the Kurdish separatist organization. One can compare this
organization with Pol Pot or Stalin or even with Saddam Hussein. The
number of people that the leader of that organization liquidated is
more than, unfortunately, 3,000. They liquidated more than 3,000 of
their own members. I was opposed to that also. They wanted to kill
me. They couldn’t find me, and so they killed one of my best friends
in Hamburg. This was the turning point for me.

I started very accidentally, coincidentally, studying the history of
violence and torture in Ottoman Turkish society. If one studies the
violence in Ottoman society, he unavoidably comes across the Armenian
Genocide, especially in the second half of the nineteenth century.
Violence was a very common device against the Armenians. This was the
beginning for me, and it was the propelling factor for me to be
[involved] with the Armenian Genocide.

ME: Turkey is desperate to get into the European community. It wants
to join Europe. The European community has officially recognized the
Armenian Genocide. Does that mean, if for no other reason but for
practical, economic reasons, the government of Turkey will finally
come out and say, “Yes, it was a genocide,” in order to get into the
EU?

TA: I’m not sure whether it is so important for the Turkish
government to use the “G-word.” The basic problem is generally facing
the history. It is not only the Armenian Genocide. We have to see
that Turkey has a lot of human rights violences. I’ll give you only
one number. Only between 1921 and 1938, in the first sixteen years of
the Republic period, there were more than twenty Kurdish uprisings
against the Turkish authorities, and there were a lot of violence,
massacre, human rights abuses. I’m not counting all other human
rights abuses after each military coup d’ĂŠtat, which were supported
mostly by the Western powers: 1960, 1970, 1980, 1997, and so on. This
means if Turkey wants to be a member of the European Union, Turkey
should come to terms with its own history. Turkey should start to
discuss its past in a democratic way. If a country wants to become a
democratic country, there must be an open discussion on its own past.
The Armenian Genocide is a part of it. Turkey, in that sense, must
come to terms with its past. And that will happen.

ME: Will it—?

TA: They will apologize. This is our position—this is my
position—that Turkey should acknowledge this as a genocide, but there
are other ways of acknowledging that there are wrongdoings in the
past. We know that from different experiences in the world.

ME: Will you ever be able to go back to Turkey? I know you go as a
citizen, but will you ever be able to get a job at a university? Or
will you ever be able to teach in your homeland again? Or will you
ever be acknowledged by the elites or by the government or by anybody
as having done a courageous thing?

TA: I think there will be a change, and 2015 will, in that sense, be
a very important symbolic date. It is the hundredth year of the
anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, and it is—eventually also could
be— the official date of Turkey’s membership. We can make both of
these days one. In that day, Turkey can declare openly that what
happened in history was a genocide in the past, and so, then, become
a member of democratic Europe. So then it could be possible for me to
find a job in a Turkish university. I hope it could be earlier than
2015.

ME: Well, we join you in that hope. Thank you so much.

TA: I thank you.

ME: It’s a great pleasure to talk to you. Thank you very much.

Professor Taner Akçam is the first Turkish historian to use the word
“genocide” in referring to what happened to the Armenians. This
morning he was in a Minnesota Public Radio studio in Minneapolis.

Now, we asked for a response from the Turkish Embassy in Ottawa. Here
is part of the Embassy’s official statement to The Sunday Edition.

[ME reads from statement:]

The question -whether the events in Anatolia during the First World
War can be termed a genocide- is too complex to treat in a short
time. The Turkish people, not only the Turkish Government as many
times mistakenly put, firmly believe that what happened to the
Armenians was not genocide. This stance does not aim to belittle the
suffering of Armenians as well as of Turks or to deny that high
numbers of lives have been lost in Anatolia. Every loss of life is
deplorable and tragic. To mourn these losses and learn about our
common history is one thing but attempting to use these tragic
–tragic equally to both sides- events for political or material gains
today is another.

In the years that the Ottoman Empire was getting closer to its final
collapse, Armenians had decided to wage an armed struggle against
Ottomans with the aim of creating an independent state of their own
in Eastern Anatolia.

The problem with the Armenian case was that in the territory that
they were claiming, they were only a minority. Therefore, for them to
be able successfully to form an independent state was possible only
by ethnically “cleansing” the majority Turks from these lands,
something which they planned and started to do. They actually
attacked and did whatever harm they could inflict on Turkish
interests. For the Ottoman Government, they were terrorists
instigating rebellion.

Alarmed by this imminent security risk and the strategic threat posed
by the Armenian support of the enemy, that is, the Allied forces, the
Ottoman Government decided in May 1915 to relocate only the eastern
Anatolian Armenians from the six provinces with Armenian population
to other parts of the Empire, away from a war zone in which they were
collaborating with invading Russian armies.

Many Armenian convoys, once uprooted, became victim of unlawfulness
prevailing in the region as well as the harsh natural conditions
aggravated by the war. As a result, many Armenians were killed while
many others made into one of these cities and formed today’s
Diaspora. But, one has to remember that the number of Muslim and
Turks perished in those years in those conditions is no less than
those of Armenians.

The Turkish people are deeply offended by the accusations branding
them as being genocidal- They find it disrespectful of their
unmentioned millions of dead in a time of desperation not only for
Armenians, but more so for the Turks. It is not accurate if the issue
is presented as one between the Armenian Diaspora and the Turkish
Government.

What determines genocide is not necessarily the number of casualties
or the cruelty of the persecution but the “intent to destroy” a
group. Historically the “intent to destroy a race” has emerged only
as the culmination of racism, as in the case of anti-Semitism and the
Shoah. Turks have never harbored any anti-Armenian racism.

There is no evidence that the Ottoman Government wanted to
exterminate Armenians by this decision of relocation. On the
contrary, all the evidence shows just the opposite that they wanted
to implement this relocation decision without risking lives.

Killing, even of civilians, in a war waged for territory, is not
genocide. The victims of genocide must be totally innocent. In other
words, they must not fight for something tangible like land, but be
killed by the victimizer simply because of their belonging to a
specific group.

What happened between Turks and Armenians was a struggle for land;
branding it as genocide, a term coined to depict the Shoah, is in our
opinion, the greatest disgrace to the innocent victims of the
Holocaust. It is deplorable that, some Armenian groups in the
Diaspora would like to exploit the horrors generated by the Holocaust
as a tool in their bid to realize their self-centered, dreamy
national aspirations, terribly hopelessly far from the realities.

ME: That’s the official statement from the Turkish Embassy in Ottawa.

–Boundary_(ID_tlhc2HGk+ZyYySCHjB7i4A)–

Iran Supported and Secretly Promoted U.S. Invasion of Iraq

Global Politician, NY
Feb 14 2005

Iran Supported and Secretly Promoted U.S. Invasion of Iraq

2/16/2005

By David Storobin, Esq.
In what is emerging as a spectacular coup for Iran, it is becoming
ever more clear that the Islamic Republic not only supported the war
in Iraq, but actually used its covert agents to help make the case,
often with falsehoods, for the American invasion.

In recent days, Iraqi dissident Ahmad Chalabi received support in his
bid to become Prime Minister of Iraq from Muktada al-Sadr, a Shia
terrorist with links to Iran. The al-Sadr family has been cooperating
with Iran and Iran-sponsored Lebanese Hizballah since the overthrow
of the Shah. Spokespersons for both al-Sadr and Chalabi have
confirmed cooperation with and support for each other.

In 2004, Sadr engaged in a massive guerilla and terrorist offensive
against American troops, hoping they will run from Iraq like they did
a generation ago from Lebanon after a series of bombings, at least
some of which were organized by members of the Sadr clan with help
from the Islamic Republic.

During the latter years of Saddam’s reign, Chalabi emerged as a main
proponent of invasion of Iraq, often meeting with U.S. officials and
regularly appearing in Western media. At the same time, it is now
known, he was cooperating with Iranians and passing to them
information about the United States. Today, he certainly seems like
the Ayatollah’s choice for Prime Minister of Iraq.

Chalabi’s bid is a long shot and he’s probably too unpopular to win
his struggle for the position of Prime Minister against the two main
candidates, Ibrahim al-Jafaari of the Islamic Mission (“Dawa”) Party
and Adel Abdul Mahdi of the Supreme Council for the Islamic
Revolution. Humam Hamoudi, a top official in the Supreme Council, was
quoted in the New York Times as saying that al-Sadr will support any
of the three candidates who will emerge as the Prime Minister.
However, it is also becoming clear that both al-Sadr and Iran are
keen on increasing Chalabi’s power, in hopes that he may emerge as
the Prime Minister later and for now to be a highly influential
government official in the new Iraq.

That Chalabi does not seem overly religious is not as much of a
problem for Iran, as many may presume. Iran has long cooperated with
secular, Ba’athist Syrian regime. It supported Armenian Christians in
their war against Muslim Azerbaijan, and maintains better relations
with the Christian Greece than their Muslim Turkish rival. The
Islamic Republic, like any other country, views its self-interest as
the most important criteria. It is for this reason that it decided to
embrace the supposedly anti-Islamic nuclear weapons and ignore
Russia’s human rights violations against Chechens and other Muslims.

So why would Iran be interested in an American invasion of Iraq?

The enmity between Iran and Iraq is well-known. They fought a bloody
war in the 1980’s with Saddam’s military using Weapons of Mass
Destruction. In fact, it was the Iraqi threat that caused the
Ayatollahs to re-examine their policy of rejecting nuclear weapons,
which they originally considered as a violation of Islamic law.

Iraq was the dominant force in that part of the Middle East and
weakening it meant it would be easier for Iran to spread its
influence not just to Iraq, but also to other countries, including
the predominantly Shia nation of Bahrain. Half of Yemen’s population
is Shia, as is a significant minority in Saudi Arabia, Syria,
Lebanon, Kuwait, United Arab Emirates and other Arab countries. The
Shia tend to be poorer and less educated than Sunni Muslims and
claim, with at least some justification, that they are discriminated
against. They are, thus, easy preys for pro-Iran guerilla and
terrorist recruiters.

At least as importantly, Iran realized that Washington had only one
“bullet” after the war in Afghanistan and if Saddam were to be
invaded, the leaders in Tehran (and their allies in Syria) can sleep
safely at night, knowing the U.S. will be too busy with insurgents in
Afghanistan and Iraq, and terrorists around the world. Just to be
sure that Americans will have a bitter taste left in their mouth from
fighting wars, Tehran and Damascus sponsored anti-American terrorism
and insurgency in Iraq, guaranteeing casualties and the impression
that Washington is losing badly. With the United States seemingly in
trouble in Iraq, it would be unable to bring together an
international coalition or even build popular support at home to
attack a much bigger Iran.

Nor was the government in Tehran concerned that having American
troops and bases on its western border would enable Washington to
attack Iran’s nuclear facilities. The U.S. already had soldiers,
bases and a friendly government on the eastern border of Iran in
Afghanistan, so they could easy bomb the Islamic Republic from the
East, if that was the Pentagon’s decision. While Iran has fairly
strong ground forces, their air force and air defenses are
phenomenally outdated and too small. Thus, an air attack by Americans
from the Afghani bases in the East would almost definitely succeed,
even if it was necessary to fly all the way to the Iran’s western
border (presuming they had accurate intelligence information as to
which targets should be hit). Meanwhile, Israel was always a threat
to attack from the West by flying over Iraq and the impotent Syria
before reaching the Islamic Republic.

The American invasion of Iraq made action against Tehran’s nuclear
facilities much less likely. For one, Israel will now have to fly
over U.S.-dominated Iraq (it is doubtful that Turkey would allow the
Jewish State to use its air space to bomb Iran, even though it is
horrified at the prospect of nuclearization of its fundamentalist
neighbor). As such, Jerusalem will not to move without permission
from the White House.

Meanwhile, the White House feels stung by the troubles faced in Iraq
– troubles caused largely by Iran and that would not exist without
its financial, military, logistic and intelligence support. Even
those insurgents and terrorists not affiliated with Tehran and/or
Damascus, are benefiting from the distraction of American forces. Due
to their lack of size and money, these insurgents would be quickly
defeated if the U.S. did not need to focus on terrorists sponsored by
Iran and Syria.

Given the daily or even hourly reports of troubles in Iraq, Americans
simply do not have the will, nor the international support, to deal
with Iran’s nuclear program, and they do not want to risk being
dragged into a war by being accused of allowing Israel to fly over
Iraq to bomb nuclear installations in the Islamic Republic. Moreover,
just like with soldiers, U.S. intelligence agents are also limited
and the more are tied up in Iraq, the fewer can spy against Iran,
weakening America’s ability to hit the proper targets.

As such, Iran quietly supported Washington’s plans to invade Saddam’s
Iraq and used its collaborator Ahmad Chalabi to promote the idea in
Western circles. It has scored a double victory: not only did its
Iraqi rival go down, but now Israel and the United States are now
less likely to interfere with its nuclear program.

David Storobin is a New York lawyer who received Juris Doctor (J.D.)
degree from Rutgers University School of Law. His Master’s Thesis
(M.A. – Comparative Politics) deals with Extremist Movements in the
Middle East and the historical causes for the rise of fundamentalism.
Mr. Storobin’s book “The Root Cause: The Rise of Fundamentalist Islam
and its Threat to the World” will be published in 2005.

–Boundary_(ID_qpZspMgdDx4WgJ+1ZUMtaw)–

http://globalpolitician.com/articles.asp?ID=346

Kyrgyzstan won’t allow AWACS flights

Kyrgyzstan won’t allow AWACS flights

Associated Press
Feb 14 2005

BISHKEK, Kyrgyzstan — Kyrgyzstan’s foreign minister said on Monday
that the government has turned down a U.S. request to deploy AWACS
radar planes in the country after consultations with regional allies,
including Russia and China.
Kyrgyzstan has hosted a U.S.-led coalition air base at the country’s
main airport just outside the capital, Bishkek, since December 2001.
The base supports combat operations in nearby Afghanistan.

Foreign Minister Askar Aitmatov said on Monday that Kyrgyzstan’s
government had been approached by the United States and NATO about
the possibility of deploying AWACS planes in this country, a former
Soviet republic and a neighbor of China. Aitmatov didn’t say when the
request was made.

“The issue has been thoroughly looked into by the Kyrgyz government,
which has held consultations with its allies in the Collective
Security Treaty and the Shanghai Cooperation Organization,” Aitmatov
told reporters in Bishkek.

“They (the consultations) led to understanding that such planes do
not really correspond to the base’s mission, which is designed for
operations in Afghanistan,” Aitmatov said.

Aitmatov said he hoped Kyrgyzstan’s Western allies would understand
the country’s position.

The Russia-dominated Collective Security Treaty unites several
ex-Soviet republics, including Kazakhstan, Tajikistan, Belarus and
Armenia.

The Shanghai Cooperation Organization is led by China and Russia and
also includes Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan and Tajikistan, who aim to
jointly combat regional security threats.

The U.S.-led base in Kyrgyzstan currently hosts around 800 troops,
who maintain and fly military cargo and refueling planes.

Kyrgyzstan also hosts a Russian air base which was established in
2003 — a measure seen as Russia’s response to the bolstered U.S.
military presence in the region.

Hundreds of U.S. troops are deployed in neighboring Uzbekistan.

–Boundary_(ID_m0FD4oScbROKvdNDfkWx0A)–

Russian company buys Armenian power grid – agency

Russian company buys Armenian power grid – agency

Regnum, Moscow
12 Feb 05

[No dateline as received] In November last year Regnum news agency
reported about talks between the British trade and industrial concern
Midland Resources Holding Ltd and the RAO UES (Russia) [Russia’s
power grid monopoly Unified Energy System] on the sale of the Armenian
power grid. The press secretary of the Armenian power grid, Margarita
Grigoryan, officially denied reports from a well-informed source in
the company that the Russian holding would become the owner of the
Armenian power grid in January 2005.

Meanwhile, Yerevan-based newspaper Aykakan Zhamanak reported on 12
February that a subsidiary of the RAO UES of Russia, Inter RAO UES,
has bought the Armenian power grid from Midland Resources for 80m
dollars. The deal will be officially made public in April 2005, the
newspaper noted. Aykakan Zhamanak noted that the World Bank is roundly
against handing over the Armenian power grid to Russia. The newspaper
also alleged that “after the sale of the Armenian power grid, Russia
will not be the only one to control them”. [Sentence as published]

To recap, an agreement on the sale of the Armenian power grid was
signed in Yerevan on 26 August between the Armenian government and
the British trade and industrial concern Midland Resources Holding
Ltd. In accordance with the document, 80.1 per cent of the Armenian
power grid shares were sold to the concern for 37.15m dollars. The
British company was to pay 12.15m dollars for the shares and to
allocate another 25m dollars to the Armenian budget to cover the
Armenian power grid’s debts and to pay wage arrears.

The RAO UES of Russia owns the Sevan-Razdan cascade of hydro-electric
power plants and the Razdan thermoelectric power plant and controls
finances of the Armenia Nuclear Power Plant. The RAO UES set up the
International Energy Corporation closed-type joint-stock company in May
2003 for the management of the Sevan-Razdan cascade of hydro-electric
power plants, which was handed over to Russia to cover part of the debt
for the nuclear fuel delivered for the Armenian Nuclear Power Plant.

Finances of the Armenian Nuclear Power Plant have been placed in
trust management of Inter RAO UES, a subsidiary of the RAO UES,
(60 per cent of shares) and Russia’s state nuclear power holding
Rosenergoatom (40 per cent) for five years.

Probably, the sale of the Armenian power grid should be viewed in
the context of the RAO UES’ attempt to synchronize the power grids
of the entire region, including Georgia, Armenia and Azerbaijan.

Taking account of the fact that after the commissioning of the
Iran-Armenia gas pipeline, Armenia will export electricity to Iran
in exchange for the supplied gas, which is outlined in the major
agreement, the issue of synchronizing the Armenian and Iranian power
grids could also emerge on the agenda. Since the RAO UES is also the
owner of Georgia’s major power facilities, one can say that the RAO UES
is striving to synchronize the work of the power grids of the whole of
the region, including Armenia, Georgia and even Turkey in the future.

Armenia-Iran energy cooperation suits USA, agency says

Armenia-Iran energy cooperation suits USA, agency says

Mediamax news agency, Yerevan
14 Feb 05

Excerpt from report in English by Armenian news agency Mediamax on
14 February headlined “Armenia between Iran and the United States”

The Armenian defence minister and secretary of the Security Council
under the Armenian president, Serzh Sarkisyan, paid an official visit
to Iran last week.

[Passage omitted: details of Sarkisyan’s visit]

The Armenian defence minister’s visit to Teheran took place right at
the time when clouds began gathering over Iran. Despite the fact that
the United States has not lately displayed any signs of discontent
over the expanding Armenian-Iranian political, economic and energy
cooperation, it should not be ruled out that the situation may change
in case the pressure on Iran increases.

[Passage omitted: USA imposed sanctions on Armenian company in 2002
for delivering chemical substances to Iran; details of plans to build
Armenia-Iran gas pipeline]

Washington, naturally, has never supported the Iran-Armenia gas
pipeline project. In March 2002, the US ambassador to Armenia, John
Ordway, said that the United States was not against ordinary economic
relations between Armenia and Iran. “However, the USA is preoccupied
with the fact that Iran supports terrorism and purchases weapons of
mass destruction… As Armenia is one of Iran’s closest neighbours,
I expect these issues should give concern to Armenia as well,” the
American diplomat said.

Nevertheless, over the past years the United States has made
no statement against the construction of an Iran-Armenia gas
pipeline. However paradoxical it may seem, we dare suppose that
the construction of an Iran-Armenia gas pipeline is, in a sense,
advantageous to the United States, which has begun open expansion in
the South Caucasus, since the realization of this project will make
Yerevan less dependent on Moscow, and, therefore, more compliant in
issues concerning the promotion of relations with Washington.

[Passage omitted: quotes from Armenian foreign minister’s statement
made in September 2004]

Although a war against Iran is highly unlikely, it is obvious that the
United States will increase its pressure on Teheran. This, of course,
gives concern to Yerevan, which should not waste time and should work
out several scenarios (optimistic, pessimistic and very pessimistic)
of behaviour and wait to see how far the confrontation between the
United States and Iran will go. For instance, if the rift widens,
Armenia will have to be more persistent with the United States in
the issue of opening the Armenian-Turkish border as an alternative
to Iranian communication routes. But if US-Iranian relations warm
up a little (this is, unfortunately, very unlikely), Armenia may try
to assume the role of a bridge between the sides which can launch a
policy of “small steps”.

In any case, the time has come when Armenia, which is already
overloaded with numerous commitments to the powers often pursuing
opposite strategic aims in the region, has to conduct a much more
cautious policy. Any mistake, which is considered to be minor in the
short term, can have serious consequences in the long run.

Kyrgyzstan won’t let U.S. and NATO deploy AWACS planes

Kyrgyzstan won’t let U.S. and NATO deploy AWACS planes

AP Worldstream
Feb 14, 2005

Kyrgyzstan’s foreign minister said on Monday that the government has
turned down a U.S. request to deploy AWACS radar planes in the country
after consultations with regional allies, including Russia and China.

Kyrgyzstan has hosted a U.S.-led coalition air base at the country’s
main airport just outside the capital, Bishkek, since December
2001. The base supports combat operations in nearby Afghanistan.

Foreign Minister Askar Aitmatov said on Monday that Kyrgyzstan’s
government had been approached by the United States and NATO about
the possibility of deploying AWACS planes in this country, a former
Soviet republic and a neighbor of China. Aitmatov didn’t say when
the request was made.

“The issue has been thoroughly looked into by the Kyrgyz government,
which has held consultations with its allies in the Collective
Security Treaty and the Shanghai Cooperation Organization,” Aitmatov
told reporters in Bishkek.

“They (the consultations) led to understanding that such planes do
not really correspond to the base’s mission, which is designed for
operations in Afghanistan,” Aitmatov said.

Aitmatov said he hoped Kyrgyzstan’s Western allies would understand
the country’s position.

The Russia-dominated Collective Security Treaty unites several
ex-Soviet republics, including Kazakhstan, Tajikistan, Belarus and
Armenia.

The Shanghai Cooperation Organization is led by China and Russia
and also includes Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan and Tajikistan, who aim to
jointly combat regional security threats.

The U.S.-led base in Kyrgyzstan currently hosts around 800 troops,
who maintain and fly military cargo and refueling planes.

Kyrgyzstan also hosts a Russian air base which was established in 2003
_ a measure seen as Russia’s response to the bolstered U.S. military
presence in the region.

Hundreds of U.S. troops are deployed in neighboring Uzbekistan.

BAKU: UAE defence minister assures Azeri counterpart of support inKa

UAE defence minister assures Azeri counterpart of support in Karabakh

Lider TV, Baku
14 Feb 05

The United Arab Emirates supports the position of the Baku government
in the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict, the UAE minister of defence
and crown prince of Dubai, Gen Shaykh Muhammad Bin-Rashid al-Maktum,
has said at a meeting with [visiting] Azerbaijani Defence Minister
Safar Abiyev.

He said that the UAE will support Azerbaijan’s position in the future
as well.

The meeting will also focus on defence cooperation. [Sentence as heard]

Armenian ombudsman displeased with new bill

Armenian ombudsman displeased with new bill

Aravot web site, Yerevan
11 Feb 05

A government session held yesterday and chaired by President Robert
Kocharyan discussed and approved draft amendments to the law “On
human rights defender”.

Under the draft law, the ombudsman cannot interfere in court trials
but can advise the plaintiff on appealing against the court verdict.

During the discussions Armenian ombudsman Larisa Alaverdyan asked to
allow her to put forward her position. But the president interrupted
her rudely: “The ombudsman has the right to ask questions but not
to interfere.”

Larisa Alaverdyan walked out of the session after this. In an interview
with an Aravot correspondent, the human rights defender said that
she considered this amendment to be unreasonable.

The Turkey Issue

THE TURKEY ISSUE

Azg/arm
15 Feb 05

French Analyst Article in Moscow Paper

One can only wonder reading articles of European political scientists
on Islam, Islamic states and their civilizations: canâ~@~Yt
these people see or donâ~@~Yt they want to see the real danger to
Christian civilization or civilization as a whole? How close does the
Muslim world stand to such noble European ideas as democracy, human
rights, womanâ~@~Ys emancipation, respecting the rights of national
minorities? When the Muslims were â~@~Xstrugglingâ~@~Y for the right
of wearing headscarves, they skillfully used the European credo of
freedom. But who will ever see a Christian demand a similar thing in,
say, Saudi Arabia or Iran.

>>From this perspective and from the viewpoint of Armenian subjective
approach, the article of Thierry de Montbrial, president of French
Institute of International Relations, entitled â~@~XThe Turkey
Issueâ~@~Y published in one of Moscow newspapers is immensely
interesting.

Montbrial thinks that the widening of the European Union makes it
versatile and variegated and considers it is dangerous. The Turkey
issue arises on this ground. Turkey entered the pilot stage of EU
accession after the Helsinki sitting in 1999. Three years later, just
before the Copenhagen summit, Justice and Prosperity Party declaring
adherence to Islam and bidding for a “party of Muslim democracy” came
to power. Meanwhile the new government continued the policy of reforms
launched by their predecessors and received the monitoring group of
the European Commission, to great surprise of numerous observers. Thus,
Turkey is doing everything to join the “Christian Club”.

The French analyst asks why they fear Turkey in Europe. Turkey for
most of the Europeans, he says, is an embodiment of deeply rooted
events that make them dread. The image of a dangerous enemy and
conqueror is palpable.

Democracy is another cause for fear; Turkeyâ~@~Ys population is about
70 million and keeps on growing. Once an EU member, it may have the
greatest majority of representatives at the European Parliament.

Thirdly, Europeans fear Islam that grew in momentum after the 9/11.

Franceâ~@~Ys open opposition to Turkey-EU relations, and the apologists
of Turkey-free Europe often refer to French politiciansâ~@~Y
statements. “Turkey stands very close to Europe and it has a real
political elite. Its importance is great but it is not considered a
European state”, Valeri Giscard d´Estaing, ex-president of France,
stated. If it becomes a member of the community that will be “the
end of the European Union”, Thierry de Montbrial wrote.

The most important part of the article for the Armenians is perhaps
the part where Montbrial speaks of the possibilities of general
reconciliation.

Itâ~@~Ys obvious, he says, that the UE is leaning on few conjoint
ideas that are united forming a system. They are: democracy, human
rights, respect for and protection of minorities, the rule of law,
reconciliation, secular government and market economy (Copenhagen
criteria).

The French analyst highlights 3 issues: relation of democracy to
minorities, secular government and reconciliation. He says that it
would be a great achievement if Turkey manages to settle all issues
concerning national minorities, the Kurdish issue first and foremost,
in accordance with the Western criteria.

Mentioning of the societyâ~@~Ys secularization, the author hesitates
that implacable adherents of Islam may come to power if Turkey fails
in effecting democratic reforms to join EU. They are possibly waiting
for their hour hoping that Turkeyâ~@~Ys candidacy will be voted down.

Concerning reconciliation, the author emphasizes latterâ~@~Ys romantic
nature no matter how desirable it is. Those concocting great plans have
the right and even have to dream. Why cannot we dream of reconciliation
of Turks and Greeks, successors of the Byzantine and Ottoman empires,
and even of representatives of 3 religions?

Though it is hard to imagine, Montbrial notes, we can also dream of
Armenian-Turkish reconciliation on the basis of European project. What
we mean by project is a system that will include realization of the
3 following conditions.

Firstly, each stage of broadening the EU has to be tested not
to destroy the system as a whole. The process of “transplantation”
has to be controlled. So, the immediate joining of such a country as
Turkey is hardly possible, it may happen in the course of time.

Secondly, the member states have to prove in practice that they
are truly following the Copenhagen criteria. Whereas it is scarcely
optimistic as regards Muslim countries.

And thirdly, no EU candidate can join the Union unless there is
unanimous consent of the member states after the accession talks. The
French analyst is pessimistic as regards the results of the future
talks.

All in all, Montbrial thinks that it would be a mistake not to start
accession talks in near future. Unless we do that, nationalistic and
Islamic forces turned against Europe will come to light throwing the
country into crises with unimaginable consequences. Besides, Montbrial
states unambiguously, the start of the talks is not equivalent to
the end.

By Ruben Hayrapetian

–Boundary_(ID_3eDjzlvNlhzjYxVgevJJ6w)–