Karabakh talks

Agency WPS
DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
January 14, 2005, Friday

KARABAKH TALKS

SOURCE: Gudok, January 12, 2005, EV

by Sergei Merkulov

FOREIGN MINISTERS OF ARMENIA AND AZERBAIJAN MET IN PRAGUE TO DISCUSS
KARABAKH SETTLEMENT

Foreign ministers of Armenia and Azerbaijan Vardan Oskanjan and Elmar
Mamedjarov met in Prague this Tuesday to discuss Karabakh.

The 6th meeting of the ministers was attended by Russian, French, and
American chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group.

No “breakthrough” in the 16-year old conflict is to be applauded.
Yerevan and Baku stick to their positions. The basis of the talks
themselves, however, indicates eagerness of the presidents, Robert
Kocharjan and Ilham Aliyev – to intensify the process of settlement.

President of Azerbaijan Aliyev said in his New Year address to the
nation, “2004, became a breakthrough year in the Karabakh
settlement.” He said, “Progress has been made in the negotiations,
the international community is paying closer attention, and the OSCE
Minsk Group as the intermediary is more active.” According to Aliyev,
“if the negotiations (in Prague) are constructive and Yerevan does
not deviate from the positions we agreed on, we will reach a
solution.”

On the other hand, Aliyev emphasized once again, “Where territorial
integrity is concerned, Azerbaijan will never make any concessions.
It will not even discuss the matter.”

Armenia insists on the so-called package accord (all together) while
Azerbaijan wants a systematic solution (it demands the return of the
territories occupied by Karabakh and the return of refugees). Baku is
prepared to discuss Karabakh status only after that.

So, where is the way out? A chairman of the OSCE Minsk Group, Russia
thinks that a complex solution is the only way out. Revival of
economy in the conflict zone (including the Caucasus railroad) is one
of the surest ways to accomplish it. It alone will get Karabakh and
Armenia out of the transport blockade. Transport is politics too.

Translated by A. Ignatkin

Armenia chums up with NATO

Agency WPS
DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
January 14, 2005, Friday

ARMENIA CHUMS UP WITH NATO

SOURCE: Voyenno-Promyshlenny Kurier, No 1, January 12 – 18, 2005, p.
3

by Samvel Martirosjan

Meeting of the working team of the NATO Military Committee took place
in Yerevan in December 2004. Representatives of 34 states, (23 NATO
members and 11 partners) attended it. Ukraine and Georgia represented
the Commonwealth.

The meeting reiterates the assumption that the Alliance is keeping
Armenia in the focus of its close attention. Co-operation between
Brussels and Yerevan was on purely familiarization terms for years,
until last year in fact when the former Soviet republic began an
active drift towards integration into structures of what once had
been the enemy of the Soviet Union. NATO ran its Co-operative Best
Effort exercise in Armenia in summer 2003. In 2004, it cancelled a
similar exercise in Azerbaijan because the local authorities refused
to permit Armenian servicemen to participate.

By the way, activities of the working team of the NATO Military
Committee in Yerevan may be viewed as another meaningful gesture. At
first, meetings were planned in all capitals of the southern part of
the Caucasus. Azerbaijan however, refused to deal with the Armenian
delegation and Brussels decided that official Baku had to be
punished.

In the meantime, co-operation between Yerevan and the Alliance is
broadening. In 2004, representatives of the Armenian Defense Ministry
participated in approximately 40 functions (including five exercises)
within the framework of the NATO’s Partnership for Peace Program. In
2005, Russia’s ally in the Caucasus intends to participate in 50
functions (including eight exercises).

The same rapprochement can be seen on the political plane as well.
The Armenian National Assembly ratified a number of documents that
provide a legal basis for broader co-operation with NATO. Another
document is being worked on because Yerevan volunteered to join the
Individual Partnership Action Plan in 2004. Twenty-three objectives
of this partnership were discussed and adopted within the framework
of PARP consultations in Brussels (19 1 i.e. NATO plus Armenia).

Armenia began participating in NATO peacekeeping operations in 2004.
A platoon of Armenian servicemen (subunit of the Greek contingent)
set out for Kosovo on February 13. Scheduled rotation of the unit
took place on September 8.

Yerevan wants more than that. Addressing the NATO Military Committee,
Deputy Defense Minister Lieutenant General Arthur Agabekjan announced
that his country intends to form a peacekeeping contingent in line
with NATO standards for fully-fledged participation in exercises and
peacekeeping operations within the framework of the NATO’s
Partnership for Peace Program. “It will enable us to form units
compatible with NATO troops,’ Agabekjan said, “They will be able to
perform all sorts of missions and participate in peacekeeping
operations.”

“Armenian-NATO relations moved to a wholly new plane. We are
advancing them in accordance with the policy of European integration
and on the basis of mutual trust and mutual welfare,” Agabekjan
continued. The officer proceeded to air the official opinion that
Yerevan’s interest in co-operation with Brussels was a corollary of
its long-term plans to build statehood and security. Armenia proceeds
towards integration with the European security framework but the lack
of stability in the southern part of the Caucasus interferes with the
process, Agabekjan said. “Our suggestions on co-operation in the
sphere of defense are negated by Azerbaijan that always comes up with
conditions and sometimes even ultimatums,” Agabekjan said. This
tactic preferred by official Baku collides with the spirit of
European security and does not align with NATO’s position.

Serzh Sarkisjan, Defense Minister and Secretary of the Security
Council, brought up the same subject several days later. Sarkisjan
emphasized in his program statement that membership in NATO was not
on the Armenian foreign political agenda. “At the same time, our
country takes a pragmatic look on the situation in the region.
Instead of coming up with untimely statements, we develop relations
with the Alliance systematically. From this point of view, it will
not be wrong to say that the Armenian-NATO relations play their own
important role in the system of national security, “Sarkisjan said.
According to the minister, Armenia follows the road of European
development and NATO is the central institution of European security.

As far as Euro integration is concerned, the minister’s opinion does
not differ from the major social tendencies in Armenia. Results of
the opinion poll conducted by the Center of National and Strategic
Studies indicate that 64% of the population and 92% of experts would
like to see Armenia a member of the European Union.

Back to Sarkisjan. The minister outlined the frontiers of
co-operation with the Alliance. “… It should be noted that
relations with NATO will develop unless some serious discord between
our international obligations crops up,” he said. “I’d like to point
out therefore that the Charter of the Organization of the CIS
Collective Security Treaty does not restrict its member’s freedom of
co-operation with foreign countries and international organizations.
At the same time, undeniable rapprochement of the positions of the
Organization and the Alliance on a number of issues and presence of
common threats and problems permits me to say that the potential of
development of our relations with NATO is quite considerable. It will
not be a mistake to say that co-operation within the framework of the
Organization of the CIS Collective Security Treaty and co-operation
with NATO are mutually complementary since they create additional
guarantees of security for Armenia and the region as such.”

Sarkisjan emphasized it is the Armenian-Russian relations that
maintain military security and regional parity. The minister referred
to the CIS United Antiaircraft Defense System to illustrate. “Along
with that, strategic relations between Armenia and Russia cannot
serve as an obstacle to the process of Armenian Euro integration.
Moreover, the Russia-EU rapprochement enables Armenia to combine
these two priorities, perfecting our national security and the
regional security framework as such,” Sarkisjan said.

Translated by A. Ignatkin

Turkish PM visits Moscow

Agency WPS
DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
January 14, 2005, Friday

TURKISH PRIME MINISTER VISITS MOSCOW

The Turkish prime minister’s visit to Moscow ends on January 12.
(…) The Russian and Turkish leaders discussed bilateral
co-operation and a range of regional and international problems,
including Iraq, Middle East and Afghanistan. They also raised
problems of terrorism and organized crime, and the prospects of
creating the Blackseaforce naval group. Putin stated at a meeting
with Turkish businessmen that negotiations also concerned
normalization of relations between Turkey and Armenia.

(…)

Source: Nezavisimaya Gazeta, January 12, 2005, p. 6

Armenian DM & US amb. discuss prospects of bilateral cooperation

Agency WPS
DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
January 14, 2005, Friday

THE ARMENIAN DEFENSE MINISTER AND THE U.S. AMBASSADOR HAVE DISCUSSED
THE PROSPECTS OF BILATERAL CO-OPERATION

Armenian Defense Minister Serj Sargsyan and US Ambassador John Evans
discussed the prospects of US-Armenian co-operation. The press
secretary of the Armenian defense minister stated that the parties
hope that friendly relations between the countries will continue in
2005. The US ambassador welcomes Sargsyan’s position regarding the
Karabakh conflict. In this regard, the parties discussed issues of
co-operation with Red Cross and other social and humanitarian
organizations, and collaboration within the framework of the mission
of observers.

Source: RIA Novosti, January 12, 2005

Translated by Alexander Dubovoi

Treasures on the trail of the wandering Turks

The Evening Standard (London)
January 14, 2005

TREASURES ON THE TRAIL OF THE WANDERING TURKS

by BRIAN SEWELL CRITIC OF THE YEAR

IF ANY of us think of Turkey as more than a place of inexpensive
holiday resorts, it is less in terms of an eastern heritage than one
of the ancient west. Dutifully, sand washed from our toes, we trample
hard into the earth the few remaining beauties of Xanthus, first
pillaged by cricketing sailors of the British fleet in 1842;
dutifully, carried thither in a char-a-banc, we trudge the streets of
Ephesus and are reminded of St Paul; and dutifully, with shoulders’
brush and the increased humidity of tourists’ breath, we scrub early
Christian imagery from the volcanic walls of Cappadocia.

Where most tourists go, Turkey’s classical and Christian past is much
in evidence for those who care to see it, a palimpsest of cultures
overlaid, the diaspora of ancient Greeks, the Hellenism of great
Alexander, the eastern reach of imperial Rome, the theological
establishment of Christian belief, Byzantium and its crusading
wreckers all sandwiched between the Gallipoli campaign and the voyage
to Colchis of Jason and the Argonauts. These we acknowledge easily —
we may even know that into this fabric we should weave Noah and
Abraham, the Hittites, the mysterious inhabitants of Catal H|y|k, the
birth of Priapus and two of the Seven Wonders of the World — but,
apart from recognising that the exemplary events of Marathon and
Thermopylae would not have occurred had ancient Anatolia not been
Persia’s pathway to the west, we know little or nothing of Turkey’s
links with the east.

It was, however, mirror-image invasions from the east that formed
Turkey as a western power, transformed the Mediterranean into a
Turkish lake and carried Islam to the gates of Vienna. This east
still plays a major role in western politics, as unfathomable now as
it was when, on 29 May 1453, young Mehmet II took for his seat of
power in Asia and Africa the great European city of Constantinople,
and formed the Ottoman Empire.

Who were these Turks? The question is to some extent answered by the
Royal Academy this winter, with an exhibition of which the romantic
sub-title is A Journey of a Thousand Years, this millennium defined
as between 600 AD and 1600, a period much shorter than Anatolia’s
role as a sphere of Greek and Roman influence. The journey of this
title is that made over centuries and generations by a nomad people
who set their tents in what is now western Mongolia and Sinkiang,
north of Tibet, but, as one writer in the exhibition’s catalogue
cautions, the history of this journey is “murky” and “much …
remains unknown”, and another uses of their settled destination the
term “forged” in the punning sense of history composed to give
background and legitimacy to a regime.

DEMONSTRABLE historical foundations to these Turkish origins there
undoubtedly are, but their adjustment and revision recall the similar
scholarship of the Germans in the Age of Enlightenment, discovering
that their origins lay in ancient Greece. Let it be enough to say
that these peripatetic tribal Turks had political reason to move
westward and away from their Chinese neighbours. The complexities of
this movement are more matters for historionomers and for the
archaeologists of language than for art historians and such an
institution of the visual arts as the Royal Academy — indeed the
exhibition is much more the business of the British Museum — and the
catalogue essays on the subject, written by experts for experts, will
be of little use to the RA’s customary visitors, few of whom will
understand the transliterations, most of whom will find the unedited
repetitions irksome, and all of whom will be confused by alternative
spellings Malazgirt/Manzikert) and contradictions.

In waves, unsteadily but inexorably, the Turks moved to the west, to
the north and south of it, but always west; one “collective
sovereignty” of Turks achieved supremacy, and then another and
another, and we are able to give an identity to three short-lived
empires that pulled up their eastern borders and moved on before the
fall of Constantinople stabilised the onward drift and anchored it in
1453.

The thousand years chosen by the RA is a nice round figure, the 600
AD a trifle arbitrary, the 1600 reflecting the geographicaland
cultural zenith of the Ottoman Empire, but I am inclined to argue
that the aesthetic journey continued into the early 20th century, in
the long, slow decline of Ottoman taste and its surrender to
sometimes ghastly European influences.

In the sense of tribal migration the journey ended with the expiry of
the Byzantine Empire and 1453 is a convenient and symbolic date for
it. By then the Turk no longer looked Mongolian; in crossing central
Asia he had absorbed and been absorbed by the inhabitants of what are
now northwest India and Pakistan, Tajikistan, Afghanistan,
Uzbekistan, Iran, Iraq, the riparian peoples of the Caspian and by
Armenia; he had assimilated alien languages and customs; religious
confusions he had resolved by adopting Islam, a faith new just as he
began his westward trek and a faith that had advanced east to meet
him.

He had learned to settle in cities, to build mosques and their
associated buildings, to decorate them with ornate brick and plaster,
to embellish them with glistening tiles. He had become a poet and a
teller of great tales. In short, he had become civilised and these
interactions and incorporations were the cultural baggage that he
carried to the Christian and antique city of Constantinople to make
it, as Istanbul, the greatest city of its day in Europe.

What was a Turk by the time the Turks settled for ever in Istanbul?
He had no sense of nationhood or nationality. He was so racially
mixed that his forefathers from the empire of the Uighurs on the
western edge of China would not, eight centuries on, have recognised
their kinship. They might, but only just, have understood his
language which, in 1453, after eight centuries of being a transient
population over a crow’s flight of 4,000 miles, was as different as
ours is from the English of King John; the language of the Ottoman
court, Osmanlija, a hybrid of old Turkish intermixed with classical
Arabic, the language of law and religion, and the Persian that
endowed Ottoman culture with a heritage of poetry, history and
romance, would have been beyond their comprehension.

The court was the driving force in cultural matters. The Ottoman
emperor might drop unfaithful houris of the harem into the Bosporus
in a sack of scratching cats and have all his brothers ceremonially
strangled by deaf mutes with bowstrings, but he was at least as
likely to be something of a poet, a bibliophile with his own
scriptorium, a connoisseur of carpets, ceremonial clothes,
embroidery, arms, armour, porcelain and even of paintings by Italian
artists.

SULEYMAN the Magnificent, Sultan from 1520 until 1566, far outdid the
connoisseurship of his near contemporaries Henry VIII of England,
Francis I of France and Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor. He spoke
demotic Greek as well as Osmanlija, wrote Persian poetry under the
pseudonym Muhibbi and was a skilled calligrapher; his library was
much enhanced when, on the capture of Buda in 1526, he took the great
Renaissance library of Matthew Corvinus — the act of a civilised and
cultured man compared with the decapitation of a thousand Hungarian
nobles and the display of their heads on poles outside his tent.

His elegant manuscripts of contemporary events, past history, romance
and poetry were bound in leather, sharkskin, tortoiseshell, precious
stones, jade plaques and gold embroidery; these bindings crossed the
bounds of craftsmanship and required the skills of the goldsmith
(Suleyman himself commanded these skills, for it was the custom of
Sultans to learn a practical craft) and the jeweller as well as the
worker with leather, tool and stamp.

All these, Suleyman had in the palace workshops — together with
armourers and damasceners, weavers of silk, brocades and carpets,
makers of lutes, of marquetry, mirrors, lamps and mounts for
exquisitely simple Chinese porcelain — all in permanent employment,
but few were Turks. They were from the territories over which the
Turkish hordes had swept, pooling the resources of Iran and Egypt,
Greece and Hungary, Ukraine, Armenia and all the Balkan states, to
develop in every artefacture an Ottoman court style that could be
repeated in every regional governor’s court within the Empire.

RATHER than the hard physical business of the trek itself, it is the
aesthetic journey from the steppes of Mongolia to Europe that this
exhibition illustrates, and the most important and telling aspect of
it, architecture, has no real presence in the Royal Academy — nor
could it have, for not even videos can play substitute for the real
thing.

Two matters should be borne in mind: the first is that the transition
from brick to stone as a building material could not have been
effected without the employment of the Armenian masons for whom stone
had been a natural and customary material at least since ancient
Roman times (I can think of a dozen Armenian churches and monasteries
built before the arrival of the Turks that would serve convincingly
as mosques and medreses and one, Barhal, that does); the second
matter is Selim Sinan, the most prolific and influential of all
architects in the 16th century, Michelangelo’s younger near
contemporary, a man whose extraordinary aesthetic and engineering
genius dominated the buildings of the Ottoman Empire in its prime.

Without his architecture the exhibition is a feast of hors d’oeuvres,
of wonderful and precious things, most of them of types familiar to
travellers who have visited the museums of Istanbul, unevenly spread
across the thousand years, weighted in favour of their Ottoman end.
Would it be churlish to argue that the other journey, eastward, of
the Greeks and Romans, would, in producing far more art than things,
have made a more exciting exhibition?

* Turks is at the Royal Academy (0870 848 8484, )
from 22 January to 12 April. Admission daily 10am-5.30pm (Friday and
Saturday until 10pm). Admission £11.

rcelain — all in permanent employment, but few were Turks. They were
from the territories over which the Turkish hordes had swept, pooling
the resources of Iran and Egypt, Greece and Hungary, Ukraine, Armenia
and all the Balkan states, to develop in every artefacture an Ottoman
court style that could be repeated in every regional governor’s court
within the Empire.

www.turks.org.uk

From Herald Archives: 100 years ago: SCOTTISH Armenian Association

The Herald (Glasgow)
January 14, 2005

FROM THE HERALD ARCHIVES

100 YEARS AGO

SCOTTISH Armenian Association: Women’s Auxiliary – A meeting was held
when the report for 1904 was presented.

During the year, pounds-126 had been forwarded to Marash in support
of 21 Armenian orphans. Industry and selfhelp are fostered among the
boys and girls who take their share in the daily routine of work in
the orphanages. The orphans are, of course, brought up as Christians.

Moscow notes signs of rapprochement in Karabakh settlement

ITAR-TASS News Agency
TASS
January 14, 2005 Friday 12:08 PM Eastern Time

Moscow notes signs of rapprochement in Karabakh settlement

By Sergei Bushuyev

MOSCOW

Moscow noted with satisfaction on Friday that the meetings between
Armenian and Azerbaijani officials at various levels, including
between the presidents and within the framework of “the Prague
process”, have become regular.

The Russian Foreign Ministry said so in connection with the talks in
Prague earlier this week between Armenian Foreign Minister Vartan
Oskanyan and his Azerbaijani counterpart Elmar Mamedyarov.

Taking part in the meeting were co-chairmen of the OSCE Minsk group
for Nagorno Karabakh settlement /Russia, the United States and
France/.

At the consultations, Armenian and Azerbaijani representatives review
practically all aspects of the situation related to the Nagorno
Karabakh conflict, including troops withdrawal, the demilitarization
of the territory, international guarantees, and the status of Nagorno
Karabakh.

“Both parties confirm their readiness to continue joint work,
oriented toward the necessity to seek an easing of tensions around
the Nagorno Karabakh problem and, consequently, normalization of the
situation in the whole region of southern Caucasus,” the Russian
Foreign Ministry said.

The ministry also noted certain headway in a rapprochement of Yerevan
and Baku’s views and their conceptual approaches.

Fitting in this context are the parties’ accords to continue the
implementation of the earlier decision on sending officials from the
OSCE Minsk group to the occupied territories around Nagorno Karabakh
with a fact-finding mission, and work toward organizing a new meeting
between the Armenian and Azerbaijani presidents in Warsaw this
summer.

Moscow reiterates its readiness to contribute, together with the
other participants of the OSCE Minsk group, to the deepening of
mutual understanding between Armenia and Azerbaijan with the aim of
resolving the Nagorno Karabakh conflict through talks and by peaceful
means, the Russian Foreign Ministry underlined.

Campaign for a jumbo’s cause: signature campaign to stop sending

The Hindu, India
January 13, 2005

CAMPAIGN FOR A JUMBO’S CAUSE

IF YOU have been to Bannerghatta Biological Park, you must have seen
or at least heard about Veda, the six-year-old elephant. The gentle
giant is in the eye of a storm, so to speak, about a planned transfer
to a zoo in Armenia.

Concerned Bangaloreans say it is illegal to shift her to that
country. They plan to organise a signature campaign against the
proposal. To make their protest clear, these citizens will take out a
procession on Sunday showing cartoons on Veda.

According to the protesters, Veda’s transfer from Bangalore to
Armenia is a goodwill gesture by the President and the Prime
Minister.

Such gifts are not uncommon. “It has become a trend for politicians
to gift elephants to temples, States and other countries, without
realising the consequences of their actions and overlooking the laws
on wildlife protection,” says Sharath Babu of People for Animals.

He says the Indian Wildlife Act, 1972 holds “gifting, rearing and
keeping Indian wildlife illegal.” That has not deterred such gifts
being offered to all and sundry.

Peacocks, black bucks, spotted deer and even pythons have been given
to prominent organisations in the city, he says. The protesters want
this “unfortunate practice” checked. And in Veda’s case, they say
that sending the pachyderm to Yerevan Zoo in Armenia is bad for the
mammal. “The climate is freezing there and, besides, the zoo is
unsuited for housing an elephant.” Winters in Armenia range from four
to six months in a year with temperatures varying from -4 to
-14<degree> Celsius, they say.

“Apart from the unsuitable climate of Armenia, Yerevan Zoo lacks the
space, infrastructure and facilities to keep an elephant,” they add.
Sunday’s walk will involve children, their parents and members of
corporates.

The protest march will start at 10 a.m. from the Shankar Nag
Chitramandira (Symphony) on Mahatma Gandhi Road and proceed to the
Mahatma Gandhi statue.

Those who want to know more about the walk and the signature campaign
can call 9880108801.

Working commission for Javakhetian issues formed

PanArmenian News
Jan 14 2005

WORKING COMMISSION FOR JAVAKHETIAN ISSUES FORMED

14.01.2005 17:04

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ As reported by A-info region, the Council of the
Public Organizations of Samtskhe-Javakhetia has formed a commission,
which is to work out a complex program of social and economic
development of the region. The decision was taken due to the
resolution adopted by the first forum of the public organizations of
Samtskhe-Javakhetia held in December 2004. The first sitting of the
commission will take place one of these days.

30 Armenians brought action against Azerbaijan

PanArmenian News
Jan 14 2005

30 ARMENIANS BROUGHT ACTION AGAINST AZERBAIJAN

14.01.2005 16:24

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ 30 Armenian citizens, the refugees from the
Shahumian region of NKR and Khanlar region of Azerbaijan appealed to
the European Court for receiving contribution from Baku. At present
the letters are being discussed in Strasbourg. The court is likely to
examine the issue within 2 or 3 years. To remind, the residents of
the Shahumian region of NKR, occupied by the Azeri army in 1992 with
the assistance of bribed Russian generals, were deported from their
domicile while Azeris settled in their houses. To note, this
settlement policy was set by the Azerbaijani government. The
residents of the Khanlar region were mostly deported by 1991, during
the “ring” operation carried out by the soviet army and the Azeri
OMON.