Tbilisi: Saknavtobi plans natural gas storage

The Messenger, Georgia
Dec 28 2004

Saknavtobi plans natural gas storage
By M. Alkhazashvili

The leadership of Saknavtobi (the Georgian Oil corporation)
attributes great importance to the issue of building large
underground natural gas storage facilities in Georgia. They hope that
next year the Georgian government will pay extra attention to this
problem. On December 24, Saknavtobi organized a special presentation
at which it introduced a project to build an underground natural gas
storage facility at the Ninotsminda deposit.

Many analysts maintain that constructing such facilities will serve
as a significant guarantee for Georgia’s energy security. Each of
these storage units could contain several months’ worth of reserves
for the country, which could be used in case of emergency.

Furthermore, tt would also be possible to buy gas cheap in the summer
and use it in winter, when the tariff increases. This, in turn, would
allow for the conservation of hydro-resources. And, as Akhali Taoba
reports, if there was a surplus in winter, it would be possible to
export it for a profit.

In a word, Saknavtobi says, natural gas storage units have many
pluses. Construction sites have already been selected and relevant
projects have been developed. Georgian territory was studied for
these reasons in 2002-2003 within the framework of the TACIS program.
Ninotsminda, in the southern Georgian region of Javakheti, and
Rustavi emerged at the top of the list.

Experts evaluate that a gas storage facility with a 120-150 million
cubic meter capacity would cost approximately EURO 50 million. If
certain issues regarding finances are resolved soon, the construction
of such units could begin as soon as next year. However, so far there
are neither potential investors nor donors.

Supporters of the project hope that this will not be the case for
long, maintaining that if Georgia becomes home to a strategic natural
gas reserve, this will be significant for countries of the European
Union.

Statistics show that Georgia consumes 1.2 billion cubic meters of
natural gas annually. During the Soviet period, Georgia used to
consume six billion cubic meters, but the majority of this gas went
to industrial enterprises which no longer function today.

All of the world’s leading countries have natural gas storage
facilities. All together in the world there are 634 such units. There
are three underground storage facilities in the South Caucasus – two
in Azerbaijan and one in Armenia. Turkey is also planning to build an
underground gas reserve near Istanbul.

Boxing: Simonyan Fighting for A Title, and So Much More

MaxBoxing
Dec 28 2004

Simonyan Fighting for A Title, and So Much More
By Thomas Gerbasi (December 28, 2004)

Motivation comes in a number of different forms. For some in the
fight game, it’s money; for others, it’s the chance to make history
or to be able to put a world championship belt in their trophy case.
For junior featherweight contender Artyom Simonyan, who challenges
for his first world title tonight against IBF champion Israel Vazquez
at the Sycuan Resort and Casino in El Cajon, California, his
motivation can be found in the picture he carries with him wherever
he goes.

It’s his four-year-old daughter, and while that isn’t the greatest
surprise in the world, as most fathers carry their children’s
pictures around with them, in the case of the 29-year-old Simonyan,
it’s the closest he’s ever come to his only child, who was born after
he left Armenia for California in 2000.

`It’s very tough,’ said Simonyan’s manager Harry Kazandjian. `He
carries his daughter’s picture with him all the time, they talk on
the phone and he watches her videotapes that they send him from
Armenia. It’s tough, that’s why I say I think whatever it takes, he
will do it to win this title, so hopefully after the fight he can go
visit his family.’

It’s what keeps Simonyan in the gym constantly, working hard and
honing his craft, hoping that not only skill, but sweat will push him
through the tough times against the veteran Vazquez, who while two
years younger, dwarfs the challenger in professional experience, with
39 fights to Simonyan’s 15.

Yet since a 2002 stoppage of then-once beaten Radford Beasley,
Simonyan has shown that he has what it takes to compete at the higher
levels of the sport. Three victories followed the Beasley fight, over
quality foes Ablorh Sowah (TKO 6), Carlos Contreras (W12), and Fahsan
3K-Battery Por Thawatchai (W12), and coupled with Simonyan’s past
sparring sessions with the likes of Vazquez and Manny Pacquiao,
Kazandjian is confident that his charge will take care of business
against the champion tonight, even if the two combatants are friendly
outside the ropes.

`He knows that this is a world championship fight, this is a war,’
said Kazandjian. `There is no friendship and he knows that he has
been here four and a half years, he hasn’t seen his family, his wife,
and his daughter. He knows how important this fight is. There’s no
friendship; this is a war.’

If Simonyan can pull off the upset, he will become the second world
champion from Armenia to be crowned this month, joining buddy Vic
Darchinyan, who stopped previously unbeaten Irene Pacheco in 11
rounds on December 16 to win the IBF flyweight title. With
Darchinyan, Simonyan, featherweight contender William Abelyan and
2004 US Olympian Vanes Martirosyan (who was born in Armenia) all
making noise in the boxing world, are we witnessing the birth of a
new breed of world-class Armenian fighters?

`With the situation now between the countries, they have a chance to
get out and expose their talents,’ said Kazandjian. `The Darchinyan
kid, he and Art were in the same league and Art was the number one
pick to go to the Olympics at his weight, and Vic actually did go to
the Olympics, to Sydney. And he ended up staying over there. But they
know each other, they’re very close friends. They were talking on the
phone before and after Vic’s fight. I think it’s a lot easier to get
out of Armenia now to visit the United States, so they’re all trying
to take a shot, to come here and expose their talent. There are a lot
of talented fighters in Armenia.’

Simonyan, a highly touted amateur who compiled a 195-20 record
including three national championships, didn’t make the trip to
Sydney because of political issues, according to Kazandjian, but he
did make the trip to Glendale, California in 2000 to chase his boxing
dreams. Luckily, Glendale has a huge Armenian population of 350,000,
making his adjustment to the States a little easier, though there
still were the expected rough spots.

`Getting adjusted to the lifestyle here in the United States, which
is totally different from Armenia (was the biggest challenge),’ said
Kazandjian. `But he got adjusted very fast, which helped him in his
boxing career. He even adapted very fast from the amateur to the
professional style. But no matter how much he likes to be here, he
always misses his family.’

Yet Simonyan is here on business, which is what he told his manager
upon setting foot in sunny California. `When he got here he said he
wanted to become world champion,’ said Kazandjian.

He’s got his chance tonight, to take all the years of toil and
frustration of being away from home and put them into 12 rounds of
boxing that he hopes will unseat Israel Vazquez as champion. It’s a
tough life, but one which Artyom Simonyan has accepted.

`It is what it is, and there’s no going backwards right now,’ said
Kazandjian. `We’re right at the end, and he just has to do the best
he can, hopefully win the title, and then he can visit his country as
a world champion.’

And finally meet the little girl he’s only seen in pictures.

Russian, Armenian justice ministers sign cooperation agreement

Russian, Armenian justice ministers sign cooperation agreement

ITAR-TASS news agency, Moscow
28 Dec 04

Moscow, 28 December: The Russian and Armenian justice ministers, Yuriy
Chayka and David Arutyunyan respectively, signed a cooperation
agreement in Moscow today.

ITAR-TASS was told at the Russian Justice Ministry PR department that
the agreement stipulates cooperation in shaping up and implementing
state policy and in the sphere of justice, in ensuring the rights and
legitimate interests of the individual and the state, in providing
support for, and the implementation of, criminal sentences, court
decisions and decisions by other bodies as well as in some other
areas.

The Countless, Unforgettable Victims Of Disaster

Washington Post
Dec 28 2004

The Countless, Unforgettable Victims Of Disaster

By Neely Tucker
Washington Post Staff Writer

The dead are never as quiet as they seem.

More than 20,000 people died in a matter of hours in half a dozen
countries in South Asia in one of the most catastrophic tsunamis of
recent times, and the death toll is only going to climb. Although the
world quickly forgets such natural disasters — the body count in
Bam, Iran, was 30,000 and it was just last year; hadn’t forgotten,
had you? — the memory of the dead always lingers for those who meet
them.

Ten years ago, an American relief worker named Rich Moseanko found
himself in eastern Africa during a humanitarian crisis. That wasn’t
odd. Moseanko has spent the better part of two decades working in
areas most people are desperate to leave.

What was unforgettable was that when he got out of his organization’s
truck near the city of Goma in eastern Zaire (since renamed Congo),
he stepped into a Rwandan refugee tide of nearly a million people.
The dead, felled by cholera and other diseases, were lying along the
roadside by the score. Within days, more than 1,500 people would be
dying every day. More than 25,000 are thought to have died in all,
though no one really knows.

You know what Moseanko’s most difficult job was?

Finding enough trucks to haul away the corpses.

“Going to bed every night with the smell of death in your nostrils,
walking around all day with it, you just don’t forget that,” says
Moseanko, the Los Angeles-based director of disaster relief for the
nonprofit group World Vision. “The soil around Goma was volcanic
rock, which meant there was nowhere to bury the bodies. We finally
convinced the French [soldiers] to dynamite some holes for mass
graves. I don’t know that anybody was even keeping track. It went on
for weeks.”

Mass death isn’t hard-wired in the brain as something that it is
supposed to see, like thunderstorms or rain showers. People are
supposed to die alone, perhaps in ones and twos, and those are the
deaths that are personally meaningful. Human scale is intact.

But the exposure to huge numbers of the recently and unnaturally dead
is not a category that the brain keeps on file. The image — or the
smell; anybody who has worked around large numbers of the dead will
tell you it’s the smell that’s the most disturbing — entwines itself
in the long whipcord of memory, and there it remains, never to leave.

“Anyone who tells you that it doesn’t affect you when it’s all over
just isn’t being truthful,” says Dewey Perks, chief of Fairfax
County’s Urban Search & Rescue Department, which has been sent by the
federal government to work in some of the worst disaster zones in the
world. Perks has worked earthquakes in Armenia, Turkey and Iran that
killed tens of thousands, whose corpses were dropped in mass graves
to prevent disease.

The mind does try, though. Aid workers, journalists and soldiers who
have worked around mass death and misery will tell you the only way
to keep working is to personally block out what one’s eyes are seeing
and focus on tasks at hand. It’s a key tool of survival, and it isn’t
new.

To cite but one relevant example from the scrapbook of history: On
Aug. 27, 1883, the volcano Krakatoa erupted off the coast of Java —
not far from the current disaster — setting off a series of
tsunamis. More than 36,000 people died.

A single sheet of water destroyed the entire town of Telok Betong in
seconds. As recounted in Simon Winchester’s recent bestseller
“Krakatoa: The Day the World Exploded,” an engineer named R.A. van
Sandick, sitting on a steamer in the bay, had a front-row seat to the
wall of water. He still couldn’t tell friends what he saw.

“The tremendous dimensions of the destruction, in front of one’s
eyes, make it difficult to describe,” he wrote, as if being an
eyewitness were a hindrance to an accurate description of the event.
The best comparison, he judged, was the wave of a magic wand “on a
colossal scale and with the conscious knowledge that thousands of
people have perished in an indivisible moment.”

Moscow & Yerevan to discuss bilateral economic cooperation

RIA Novosti, Armenia
Dec 28 2004

MOSCOW AND YEREVAN TO DISCUSS BILATERAL ECONOMIC COOPERATION

MOSCOW/YEREVAN, December 28 (RIA Novosti) – On Tuesday the
Moscow-based President Hotel will host the sixth session of the
Intergovernmental Commission for Economic Cooperation between Russia
and Armenia.

The commission plans to consider a broad range of trade and economic
cooperation issues, including some energy, transportation, telecoms,
and humanitarian projects, the Russian Transportation Ministry told
RIA Novosti.

Russian Transportation Minister Igor Levitin is the Russian
co-chairman of the Commission; his Armenian peer is Armenian Defense
Minister and Secretary of the Presidential Security Council Serzh
Sarkisyan, who also heads the national delegation to the meeting.

Colonel Seiran Shakhsuvaryan, the press secretary of the Armenian
Defense Minister, said the meeting would discuss the implementation
of what had been agreed upon at the previous session on February 2003
and in the co-chairmen’s joint protocol of October 14, 2004.

A special protocol will be signed after the sixth meeting.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Tbilisi: Cigarette smuggling may increase in 2005

The Messenger, Georgia
Dec 28 2004

Cigarette smuggling may increase in 2005
By M. Alkhazashvili

Some Georgian experts have said that the influx of smuggled
cigarettes into country will increase in 2005 as a result of the new
tax code which envisages an increase in excise tax on cigarettes. The
state authorities, however, dispute such claims and maintain that in
spite of the increase in tax, contraband will not increase.

According to the new tax code, the excise on tobacco products will
become a major source of budgetary revenue. It increases the excise
tax on imported filter cigarettes from 40 to 90 tetri, and from 25 to
70 tetri on local brands. The excise on imported non-filter
cigarettes will increase from 7 to 25 tetri and from 5 to 15 for
local brands.

After these changes are implemented, the price of tobacco in Georgia
will be much higher than in our neighboring countries. In Armenia
cigarettes will be twice as cheap and in Azerbaijan, four times
cheaper. This will, some experts warn, will encourage the smuggling
of cigarettes from neighboring countries.

If one considers that controls against smuggling still remain an
“Achilles’ heal” of customs and taxation offices, the experts argue,
the chances are great that this will happen. Alongside the well
established tradition of smuggling from Russia, Georgia could witness
a similar problem coming from its South Caucasian neighbors.

The government, however, does not agree with such prognoses.
According to Deputy Finance Minister Zurab Anteladze, cigarette
smuggling will not increase because the situation is “very much under
control.” He considers that the administration of customs and tax
offices are well equipped to handle such problems and that there is
no threat in this area.

Meanwhile, the Georgian authorities are taking preventative measures.
Excise Service Head Davit Giorgadze warned local cigarette
manufacturers at a press conference on December 24 that if non-filter
cigarettes have illegal excise stamps, they will be removed from the
market. Second-hand usage of excise stamps will be very strictly
prosecuted, he added.

Broadcasters Struggle to Make Sense of a Disaster

New York Times
Dec 28 2004

Broadcasters Struggle to Make Sense of a Disaster
By DAVID CARR

Published: December 28, 2004

An earthquake that sent walls of water tumbling inland through South
and Southeast Asia left television news networks sifting through
thousands of images sent from around the region as they struggled to
make sense of the largest earthquake in 40 years.

The massive scope of the disaster touched on more than six different
countries, many of which have the kind of technological
infrastructure that allowed vivid imagery to be transmitted before
the dimensions of the disaster were actually known.

Video compression technology, fed by digital cameras and enabled by
satellite and videophones, along with laptops with uplink
capabilities, meant that people all over the world saw the deadly
aftermath of the earthquake just hours after it ended. And by
yesterday morning, real-time video footage of the tidal wave striking
the shores, much of it taken by tourists on or near the beaches in
Thailand began showing up on network broadcasts.

Because of the ubiquity of the footage, there was little competition
for good pictures, with the television operations of both Reuters and
The Associated Press finding themselves awash in video feeds from the
region.

“Like many natural disasters, there was not anything live actually to
begin with,” said Sandy MacIntyre, director of news at APTN, the
video arm of The Associated Press in London. “But now, a day after,
some of the most vivid images, the ones of the waves hitting the
beaches, were filmed by the people most affected.”

Still, Mr. MacIntyre said, “this has been one of the most
geographically and logistically challenging stories to cover in a
generation because of the sheer scale of it.” He added, “When I was
woken and told of what happened, I got the atlas open and I looked at
the mass of the Indian Ocean rim and realized what a big story we
were looking at.”

Robert Muir, the acting news editor of Reuters Television in
Washington, said there had been no scarcity of video imagery. “It is
not as if there was a single plane crash where someone had exclusive
footage,” he said. “This was happening many places at once, and we
found many people who were willing to part with video just so the
story could be told.”

It is a far cry from the 1988 earthquake in northern Armenia where
tens of thousands of people also died; it took more than two days for
images of the devastation to emerge.

Bill Wheatley, vice president of NBC News, said that at that time the
network had to charter a 300-seat Soviet aircraft because it was the
only one available to get images of the Armenian disaster back to
Moscow so they could be transmitted.

“It’s amazing how much things have changed,” he said. “We now have
the ability to feed our pictures from virtually anywhere. In fact,
the ability to feed pictures sometimes outpaces the ability to get
extensive editorial information to go with them, although in the
instance of this story, the pictures almost speak for themselves.”

Yesterday the airwaves were full of pictures of the aftermath, but
stringers in the area are now finding bystanders who shot video of
the disaster and lived to tell the tale.

“We knew right away that we needed to get to the beaches of Thailand
because that’s where the tourists were,” said Chuck Lustig, director
of foreign news for ABC, who immediately dispatched the network’s
Hong Kong correspondent to the Thailand.

John Paxson, London bureau chief of CBS News, sent two crews, one
from Beijing and one from Tokyo, as soon as he got word of the
disaster.

“One of our producers sat down and began looking at the many, many
images from so many different places and said, ‘I don’t know where to
start,’ ” Mr. Paxson said. “This isn’t a race for pictures, this is
an attempt to tell a massive story.”

As recently as 1998, when there was a huge tsunami that landed on the
coast of Papua New Guinea, the networks found themselves scrambling
to get pictures out of the disaster area, in part because the wave
landed in a technologically underdeveloped place.

“We didn’t get pictures from that until days later, because it was
such a primitive area,” said David Rhodes, director of news gathering
at Fox News in New York. “This has been nothing like that. There is a
lot to work with and a lot to try and make sense of.”

Bob Calo, an associate professor at the graduate school of journalism
at the University of California, Berkeley, said that there had been
something of a reversal in the news-gathering process. “If you think
back, news gatherers would get the story and then commission a
photographer to go and get the pictures,” he said. “Now we have
flipped it around to where reporters are chasing the pictures, trying
to create some context for what viewers are seeing.”

Mr. Paxson of CBS said that it was axiomatic that most of the
coverage was coming from areas that had been hit the least hard.

“The story now moves to what happened in places that are more remote
and less connected, places like the Andaman and Nicobar Islands,” he
said. “No one really knows what we are going to find out there.”

Jerusalem Christian Leaders See Signs of Hope in Holy Land

Christian Post, CA
Dec 28 2004

Jerusalem Christian Leaders See Signs of Hope in Holy Land

Christian Church leaders in Jerusalem believe that there are “small
signs of hope” despite the violence in the Holy Land.

Christian Church leaders in Jerusalem believe that there are “small
signs of hope” despite the violence in the Holy Land, according to a
Christmas statement obtained by an Italy-based news agency.

“The two peoples of this Holy Land are still in quest of peace and
justice, searching how to put an end to hostility, bloodshed and
killings in Palestine and Israel, not least in Bethlehem itself, the
city of peace toward which all Christians in the world turn their
eyes in these days,” wrote the Christian leaders in the statement
received by Zenit News.

But despite this, the leaders agreed that “there are in these days
small signs of hope: promises that soon some political prisoners will
be released by the Israelis and hopes of renewed efforts by all sides
to resume the peace talks.”

The patriarchs and the heads of the churches of Jerusalem suggested
that the Christians of the Holy Land ask themselves “if we truly
welcome Christ into our lives and if we are true witnesses to him and
if the others see through our witnessing in our daily life Jesus the
Savior and the Prince of Peace and the dignity he gave to all men and
women” especially during the present time “amid oppressions and
humiliations imposed on so many.”

The religious leaders requested for all “Christian brothers and
sisters” to “offer our sincere thanks for all your prayers,
solidarity, and for your love to this Holy Land and to all its
inhabitants.”

“We express our thanks and joy for the coming back of the pilgrims
and look for very many more,” they said. “The churches in the world
are called to remember that the Holy Land is the land of the roots of
all Christians.”

“The future of Bethlehem itself needs a special attention,” the
letter affirmed. “Doubtless you will sing time-honored carols about
‘The Little Town of Bethlehem.’ This little town today needs a
special support in order to remain the town of peace, where faithful
believing in Jesus the Savior and the Prince of Peace can remain.

The Church leaders reported that many Christian families had already
left the Bethlehem area “because of the hardships they have
experienced not least from the building of the ‘separation wall,’ and
the incredible structure at the entrance to the city.”

“All these works have also meant many Christian families have had
their land confiscated from them,” the leaders added.

Continuing, the message went on to say “As heads of churches we
continue to endeavor to build bridges of peace and hope as we raise
our voices for justice amongst all peoples. But still, dear brothers
and sisters, we need you to play your part in your respective
countries.

“We pray and hope that the days will come when people in Bethlehem
and in all the Holy Land will live freely without the need of the
separation wall for security,” concluded the statement.

Those who signed the statement included: Lutheran Bishop Mounib
Younan, Anglican Bishop Riah Abu el-Assal, Greek Orthodox Patriarch
Ireneos I of Jerusalem, Armenian Orthodox Patriarch Torkom I
Manooghian, Coptic Orthodox Archbishop Anba Abraham, Ethiopian
Orthodox Archbishop Aba Cuostos, Syro-Orthodox Archbishop Swerios
Malki Murad, Father Pierbattista Pizziballa–Custodian of the Holy
Land, Greek Catholic Archimandrite Mtanios Haddad, Armenian Catholic
Bishop George Khazoum, Syro-Catholic Bishop Pierre Malki;,Latin-rite
Catholic Patriarch Michel Sabbah, and Maronite Archbishop Paul
Sayyah.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Vazquez vs Simonyan for IBF Jr Featherweight Title on Dec 28th

EastsideBoxing.com
Dec 28 2004

Vazquez vs Simonyan for IBF Jr Featherweight Title on Dec 28th

27.12.04 – International Boxing Federation Association junior
featherweight champion Israel Vazquez defends his title under the
Sycuan Ringside Promotions banner for the first time when he meets
undefeated and No. 1-ranked contender Art Simonyan Tuesday, Dec. 28,
at the Sycuan Resort & Casino in El Cajon, Calif. The world
championship card, promoted by Sycuan Ringside Promotions in
association with Banner Promotions, will be held in the Sycuan
Showcase Theatre at the Sycuan Resort & Casino. The card starts at 6
p.m. (Pacific) with doors to the Sycuan Showcase Theatre opening at
5:30..

Also on the card will be five other fights, featuring a women’s bouts
and three boxers from the San Diego area.

The IBF 122-pound championship will be a belated birthday gift for
either Vasquez or Simonyan.

Vazquez turns 27 on Christmas Day while Simonyan becomes 29 on Dec.
27.

This is the fifth boxing card presented by Sycuan Ringside Promotions
since it burst onto the international boxing scene earlier this year.

Sycuan Ringside Promotions is considered by many to be the
fastest-growing and most dynamic promotional entity in the sport.
Sycuan Ringside Promotions made its promotional debut during
February, but already has presented world championship bouts on
premium cable networks.

Tickets for this championship card, priced at $100, $200 and $250,
are on sale 24 hours daily in the gift shop at the Sycuan Resort &
Casino. Tickets also can be ordered by calling 619-445-6002 or
619-659-3380 24 hours daily.

Vazquez, originally from Mexico City but now living in Los Angeles,
won the IBF junior featherweight championship in his most recent
bout, March 25 in Los Angeles, when he stopped Jose Luis Valbuena in
the 12th round.

Vazquez has a record of 36-3 with 27 knockouts. He has a mark of 16-1
dating back to 1999, that lone loss coming in a bout for the World
Boxing Council super bantamweight championship during 2002.

Simonyan, who was born in Armenia but now lives in Glendale, Calif.,
has a record of 14-0-1 with seven knockouts. He earned the right to
challenge Vazquez with a 12-round decision over Fahsan Por Thawatchai
in a title elimination bout May 21 in Elk Grove Village, Ill.

`Simonyan is a tough fighter and he’s strong,’ says Vazquez, `but I’m
motivated and anxious to fight.’

The undercard bouts include heavyweight Shawn Ross of San Diego
against undefeated Bernard Gray of San Francisco; heavyweight Jay
Horton of Pomona, Calif., against James Harling of Long Beach, Calif;
cruiserweight prospect Shane Johnston of San Diego against Moses
Matovu of Los Angeles; and veteran welterweight Francisco Maldonado
of El Cajon, Calif., against Mauricio Borquez of Culiacan, Sinaloa.

In the women’s bouts undefeated featherweight Crystal Hoy of Las
Vegas faces Sarah Huntman of Los Angeles.

Sycuan Ringside Promotions has many notable boxers in its stable in
addition to Vazquez, including WBO junior featherweight champion Joan
`Little Tyson’ Guzman, IBF lightweight champion Julio `The Kidd’
Diaz, former World Boxing Association cruiserweight king Orlin `Night
Train’ Norris and highly regarded welterweight Antonio Diaz.

Democracy in the Former Soviet Union: 1991-2004

PINR – The Power and Interest News Report
Dec 28 2004

”Democracy in the Former Soviet Union: 1991-2004”

Over the last decade and a half, an unprecedented initiative has
taken place in the Former Soviet Union (F.S.U.). In all 15 republics
that made up the U.S.S.R., the introduction of Western-style liberal
democracy and its principles became the dominant political modus
operandi since 1991. Today, it is useful to assess the initial
results of this important development, and draw conclusions in order
to gauge the significance of such a profound change. The overall
outcome of democracy’s introduction has been very mixed, and although
a few success stories exist, the rest of the process has quickly
fallen prey to old habits that refuse to part with the past.

Democracy as a Political Tool

The introduction of democracy to the F.S.U. itself has taken place in
an unprecedented environment of unipolarity, with the dominant
Western democratic United States as the most powerful state in the
world — politically, economically and militarily. Never before in
known history has there been a single state that could wield such an
incredible amount of power, nor has there ever been a state that was
so secure geopolitically in its preeminent place among the world’s
nations. Even the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001 had a
limited dampening effect on the United States, as its economy and
society rebounded within a year after the strikes.

U.S. actions since 1991 can be characterized as the logical course of
action in a unipolar world, moving from a mix of unilateral and
multilateral approaches towards a more unilateral stance on issues
that involved the safety and security of the country. While the
United States could consider itself safer in a new unipolar world
than ever before, it still required the absence of potentially
threatening political/military entities. Ensuring that states shared
Western norms and values became one of the main U.S. policies in the
post-1991 world. The spread of democracy in the newly independent
states of the F.S.U. was a key way to counter any potential
neo-Soviet entity from emerging and challenging America. The key
belief underlying the policy that promotes democracy is the notion
that liberal democratic states do not threaten each other the way
pairs of non-liberal states do. Historically, since the early 19th
century, democratic states enjoyed pacific, fruitful and secure
relations.

This has certainly been the case between the United States and its
European and Asian allies during the Cold War. The demise of the
Soviet Union presented Washington with an unprecedented opportunity
— to introduce the concept of democracy and a market economy to its
former enemy. Such a policy worked once before, when the United
States fostered and built Western liberal democracies in defeated
Germany and Japan after WWII. At present these nations are U.S.
allies and trade partners, though they can still disagree on certain
political and economic issues.

In 1991, U.S. policymakers considered an option that if all 15 states
of the F.S.U. were to become democratic, then the only possible
threat they could present to the United States would be in economic
terms, and not military/ideological ones. If democracy were to take
root in these countries, then the U.S. position around the world
would be further solidified as the leader of the market-oriented,
pacific liberal democracy.

In hindsight, such a concept made political and economic sense.
Soviet people, starved for political freedom, eagerly embraced
democratic values in the first years after the fall of the U.S.S.R.
The majority of the population had vague concepts of how democracy
should really work, but there was hope that once the democratic
“flood gates” would open, the ensuing flow of political freedoms
would usher in a new order of the day.

What did not happen from the start, and what is only now slowly
becoming apparent, is that civil society in the F.S.U. lacked proper
education on even basic democratic principles. Newly found political
freedom roughly translated into free elections for the majority of
the people, but they knew next to nothing about other principles that
are so crucial to a vibrant, working democracy. The importance of
properly prepared civil society was demonstrated repeatedly in U.S.
and U.N. efforts at establishing the rule of law in post conflict
societies around the world after 1991. In countries as diverse as
East Timor and Bosnia, properly prepared civil society was the
keystone that determined the success or failure of a given
international mission. Its importance was crucial to the F.S.U. as
well, but there, democracy became a process that was largely
instituted from the top-down, with the masses sidelined in crucial
decision-making or policy-setting agendas.

Almost all of the former Soviet states had a long and rich history of
autocratic executive rule. The notion of parliamentary-style
democracy, with checks and balances on the executive, legislative and
judicial branches of government, was a totally foreign and unfamiliar
concept. While many Soviet people for decades secretly wished for
their authoritarian Communist government to either fall or change,
most had no idea what would be able to effectively replace it. The
ephemeral concept of free elections, proportionate representation and
a leadership responsible to the people was just that — a desired
notion with no real grounding in the immediate post-Soviet reality.

Soviet people were used to the mass showcasing of their collective
desires, as millions would take to the streets in
government-organized demonstrations during Soviet rule. Many tapped
into that “training” during the democratic protests in 1991 and 1993,
when reactionary political challenges threatened the slowly emerging
democratic societies. Yet, one of the key concepts of Western
democracy was not properly introduced — that of the elected
leadership’s responsibility to its electorate. Used to trusting and
relying on non-elected Communist officials for decades, millions of
former Soviet people carried this “trust” with them into the new and
unknown post-1991 era. Thus, the F.S.U.-style mix of new
“democracies” that emerged on the international arena are as
different from each other as they are from the Western world.

Present Political Picture

Three of the most Western-leaning states in the F.S.U. were the
fastest to shed their Soviet “skin” to launch the process of
democratic reorganization. Latvia, Estonia and Lithuania spent the
least amount of time in the U.S.S.R., as the three states were
absorbed by Moscow only in 1940. While five decades of Soviet rule
had a tremendous effect, these Baltic states were part and parcel of
Northern Europe, itself a democratic area for a long time.

Even during Soviet rule, these three states stood apart from the rest
of the republics socially, economically and historically. And while
numerous post-Soviet problems still remain to be solved, these states
have been more successful at becoming Westernized. Their refusal to
associate with the past is exemplified by their desire not to be part
of the Commonwealth of Independent States, a loose political
affiliation of the former Soviet republics with Russia at its center.

Consequently, countries with culturally engrained importance of
authority had the most difficult time making the transition to fully
functioning Western-style democracy. Central Asian republics
exemplify this trend — only one out of the five states has elected a
new head of state after 1991. Three of them — Kazakhstan,
Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan — are headed by the men who were in
charge of these republics in Soviet times. Having changed their
titles from the first secretary of the communist party to prime
minister/president was largely the extent of democracy in these
states.

Tajikistan experienced a vicious civil war from 1992-1996, and Russia
is effectively keeping the country together with economic and
military influence. Only Kyrgyzstan has experienced a relatively fair
and peaceful transition to democratic rule. The power of the
executive in Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan is
disproportionately stronger vis-à-vis real or perceived opposition.
There, ruling communist parties and functionaries, in charge of the
state’s economy and finances, quickly reorganized themselves,
assuming new titles draped in nationalistic flags. “New” political
entities appeared virtually overnight. Yet, whatever civil groups and
political opposition that slowly developed in the last decade of
Soviet rule quickly found itself sidelined and incapacitated,
existing as a showcase of a “multi-party” political system.

Historically, autocratic rulers have governed the lands of Central
Asia. Tribal and clan connections still play a significant role in
the political, social and economic interactions amongst the
populations, but are now effectively utilized to maintain the ruling
elite in power, not to successfully mobilize any significant
opposition. Turkmenistan stands apart even amongst other Central
Asian republics in the degree to which the executive has a dominant
role in the country. Its leader has cultivated a Stalin-like cult of
personality, wiping out any hint of opposition to his autocratic
rule. According to Turkmenistan’s leadership, the people are not yet
ready for real democratic reforms, and will be potentially granted
that opportunity in the yet-to-be-determined future.

While neighboring countries point to the near-extreme situation in
Turkmenistan, no real opposition can successfully challenge the
executive in those states either. In Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan, the
executive branch has overwhelming power that maintains a nominal
existence of opposition that is capable of mounting only limited
political challenges.

Belarus is closer on the authoritarian scale to Turkmenistan than any
other post-Soviet state. Its leader retains a firm hold on the
political, social and economic life of the country. Just recently,
Belorussians “freely” voted the government of President Alexander
Lukashenka in for the third consecutive term. Much can be said about
a country where the security apparatus is still called the K.G.B., as
it was during the Soviet days, and where opposition is silenced
through physical intimidation.

While Lukashenka himself was elected to office democratically in the
first years of post-1991 political freedoms, he has since done
everything possible to not allow real democratic reforms and
principles to take root. While the people can hold small-scale
protests against the government, they can do little else against a
strong security apparatus with carte blanche from the capital. A
similar situation exists in Armenia, where a democratically elected
executive allows for opposition to exercise its rights, yet retains a
firm hold on the country’s political, economic and military
decision-making. While Armenia does have a capable civil society, it
is many years away from achieving its full potential that would be
able to effectively mount a challenge to the wide-reaching
presidential powers.

Azerbaijan and Moldova have also experienced a limited amount of
democratic freedoms, but there the changes have been handed from the
top down, and no capable challenge can be mounted to the executive
powers. In Azerbaijan, power recently passed from Aliyev-senior, in
charge of the republic in Soviet times, to his son, Aliyev-younger,
in one of the few such power transfers around the world. This type of
regime change can hardly be characterized as democratic, and yet
Azerbaijan is considered a multi-party democracy.

Profits from oil sales strengthen Aliyev’s hold on power, a situation
not likely to be challenged in the near future. Azeri opposition is
also kept in check, even as it tries to vocalize its discontent for
the ruling elite. Moldova remains split between the secessionist,
Russian-speaking, authoritarian Trans-Dniester region and the rest of
the country. Democracy did not usher in a peaceful post-Soviet
transition — in fact, a secessionist civil war started as soon as
the country became independent from the Soviet Union and embarked on
the process of Westernization. While there are attempts to finally
unify the country, the process has stalled time and time again due to
mistrust that both sides — especially non-Western Trans-Dniester —
feel for each other.

Future Trendsetters?

The progress of democratic reforms in the last three post-Soviet
states merits much closer attention, as these states are now setting
the trend for the possible future course of post-Soviet democracy. In
Russia, vibrant civil society exists, born in the Soviet times of
political repression and reared in the last fifteen years of
non-Communist rule. Numerous citizens’ groups and political parties
make themselves heard on a daily basis on a variety of issues. Some
civil society groups have even thrown a gauntlet to the government,
openly defying the military draft that sent soldiers into the
prolonged and bloody Chechen conflict. Yet, currently, even such
valiant efforts fall short of effecting real political change.

Democratic reforms in the Russian Federation have gone to great
lengths to strengthen the executive, first as a post-1991 safety
alternative against resurgent communist and nationalist trends, then
as the only viable option capable of holding the country together.
Once-vibrant political opposition in Russia has seen its real power
diminish over the last seven years. Pro-executive political parties
now enjoy overwhelming support, with Russia becoming a one-party
state where President Vladimir Putin controls the media, as well as
economic, military and political processes. On the surface, Russia is
perhaps the only state where political processes resemble those of
Western Europe or the United States. In reality, Putin’s political
party enjoys the preponderance of power that is unlikely to be
effectively challenged in the near future.

At present, there are only two post-Soviet states where real
democracy has a chance of limited success. At the end of 2003, the
people of Georgia gave their government a strong vote of no
confidence after a decade of corruption, crime, civil wars and
declining living standards. Following mass non-violent protests, they
peacefully forced the executive out of office in what came to be
known as the “Rose Revolution.” The new, young, Western-oriented
leadership promised wide-ranging reforms aimed at reaching Georgia’s
full economic, political and social potential.

Georgians exported their experience to Ukraine, where a repeat of
2003 is currently taking place, with the third round of presidential
elections most likely to usher in pro-Western Viktor Yuschenko as the
new leader of the country. In Ukraine, people went out into the
streets to protest the bitterly divisive presidential elections that
were marred by massive voting irregularities in favor of the
incumbent leadership aiming for closer ties to Russia. Ukrainian
civil society showcased its persistence, with month-long protests
taking place in Ukraine’s major cities.

As in Georgia, the democratic opposition was able to mobilize itself
to the extent not seen in the post-Soviet republics since the August
1991 hardliners’ coup against Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev.
While the third voting round will be able to bring the democratic
opposition to power, it will be faced with the gargantuan task of
unifying a country that was virtually split in half by somewhat
diverse visions of Ukraine’s future in the F.S.U. and the world.
While Georgians and Ukrainians were capable of efficiently mobilizing
and channeling their opposition fervor, it is unlikely that similar
protests can be held in other former Soviet republics to remove the
entrenched executives from positions of power.

Conclusion

The concept of democracy was introduced into the F.S.U. with
extremely varying results. By 2004, some states became one-party
autocratic systems with only a semblance of opposition. Such states
have multi-party parliaments and revised constitutions, while the
real power rests with former communist apparatchiks. Other states
walk the thin line between a one-party state and potential
multi-party democratic systems.

Still, others have been able to make the transition and to
approximate Western-style democracy as much as possible. These select
few states experienced revolutions “from below,” when the people rose
in popular revolt against corrupt governments, challenging the
“top-bottom” distribution of power and political freedom. All 15
post-Soviet states are official democracies. Thus, the U.S. goal of
democracy promotion in the F.S.U. can be considered successful, with
major caveats to that explanation.

While the U.S. was capable of steering certain democratic processes
to their rightful conclusions — such as offering support for
opposition in Georgia, Ukraine and in 1991-1996 Russia — the process
of democratization was left to its own, local devices in many other
newly independent states. American interests of the day dictated the
course of action, such as the need for Central Asian military bases
after 2001 or access to oil reserves, often moving the plight of
democracy to the political background. As a result, the uneven spread
of democracy in the F.S.U. created a collection of pacific states
vis-à-vis their policies towards the United States. Nominally or
fully democratic, they are in no position to challenge Washington
effectively. On the other hand, they all can be courted or considered
as allies, based on American foreign policy needs.

The last decade and a half brought momentous changes to large parts
of the globe. While many of these changes were positive, the U.S. has
not been successful in fostering and aiding civil society capable of
making educated and informed decisions in many former Soviet states.
Instead, it acquiesced to “democratic” changes handed from the top by
governments and executives associated with old and fallen regimes.
Thus, a new brand of post-Soviet democracy was created. It is yet
unclear how the future development of such democracy will unfold.
However, it would be prudent of the U.S. government to take the
lessons of post-Soviet political transitions into consideration as it
continues to promote political processes in diverse regions of the
Middle East and South Asia that are historically unprepared to bring
the concept of democracy to Western-style fruition.

Report Drafted By:
Yevgeny Bendersky

The Power and Interest News Report (PINR) is an analysis-based
publication that seeks to, as objectively as possible, provide
insight into various conflicts, regions and points of interest around
the globe. PINR approaches a subject based upon the powers and
interests involved, leaving the moral judgments to the reader. This
report may not be reproduced, reprinted or broadcast without the
written permission of [email protected]. All comments should be
directed to [email protected].

;report_id=249&language_id=1

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.pinr.com/report.php?ac=view_report&amp