Former head of Russian border force in Armenia goes on trial

Interfax
April 20 2004

Former head of Russian border force in Armenia goes on trial

MOSCOW/YEREVAN. April 20 (Interfax) – Hearings began on Tuesday at
the Russian garrison military court in Yerevan on the criminal case
against Lt. Gen. Vyacheslav Aboimov, former chief of the Russian
border force in Armenia.

At the prosecutor’s office of the Russian Federal Border Service in
Moscow, Interfax was told that the general is charged with large-
scale embezzlement and abuse of power with grave consequences.

“According to the investigation, Aboimov’s illegal activities between
February 2002 through May 2003 to procure material valuables caused
direct material damage to the state in excess of 3.5 million rubles,”
a spokesman for the prosecutor’s office said. [RU EUROPE EEU EMRG
CRIM AM] ml aw <>

“Rescue Of Nation” Ready for Violence

A1 Plus | 15:57:36 | 20-04-2004 | Politics |

“RESCUE OF NATION” READY FOR VIOLENCE

“We are ready to resort to even violence to get rid of these Authorities”,
Sargis Karapetyan, Chair of “Rescue of Nation” newly-established Party
announced at the press conference. {BR}

He assured their party will save Armenian people from treacherous
Authorities within 3 months. “If hotels, casinos become more in our state,
it means our state is very rich. The task is to return people what has
always belonged to them”.

Mr Karapetyan is sure Armenia now needs new apostles since no mortal is able
to take people out of crisis. Karapetyan said he’s ready to undertake the
role and announced all their supporters – the fighters of Artsakh War will
struggle till the present regime leaves. “We have toured all over Armenia
and concluded the only wish of our people is to get rid of the Authorities”.

Sargis Karapetyan said his party won’t cooperate or join any other one. “In
2001 I was eliminated from ARF for my policy against Authorities. Now I am
the Chair of the Party, which will fight for rescue of the nation”.

Negotiations Resumed

A1 Plus | 16:33:19 | 20-04-2004 | Politics |

NEGOTIATIONS RESUMED

On the initiative of Raffi Hovhannissyan, first Foreign Minister of Armenia,
Opposition-Coalition dialogue resumed.

Intellectuals and members of Parliament “People’s Deputy” group appeared as
a mediator for the meeting. Journalists were forbidden to enter the
building. We will later obtain information about the agreements achieved
during the talks.

Let’s remind that Opposition representatives think the negotiations won’t
have serious results since Coalition can’t influence upon Robert Kocharyan.

RFE/RL Iran Report – 04/19/2004

RADIO FREE EUROPE/RADIO LIBERTY, PRAGUE, CZECH REPUBLIC
_________________________________________ ____________________
RFE/RL Iran Report
Vol. 7, No. 15, 19 April 2004

A Review of Developments in Iran Prepared by the Regional Specialists
of RFE/RL’s Newsline Team

************************************************************
HEADLINES:
* TEHRAN CONDEMNS KILLING OF HAMAS LEADER
* WHO ASKED TEHRAN TO HELP IN IRAQ?
* LEADERS BLAME COALITION FOR DIPLOMAT’S DEATH
* SUPREME LEADER EXPECTS AMERICAN HUMILIATION IN IRAQ
* HOLDING PATTERNS ABOVE NEXT CASPIAN SUMMIT
* IRAN HOSTS ARMENIAN FOREIGN MINISTER
* TEHRAN ATTACKS U.S. HUMAN RIGHTS RECORD
* NEW DATE FOR SECOND ROUND OF PARLIAMENTARY ELECTIONS
* LEGISLATURE FORMALLY APPROVES WITHDRAWAL OF ‘TWIN
BILLS’
* LEGISLATURE REJECTS ONE PARLIAMENTARIAN’S RESIGNATION,
ACCEPTS ANOTHER’S
* TWO NEW CABINET MEMBERS INTRODUCED
* KHATAMI VISITS EARTHQUAKE SITE
* IRAN’S NEW INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT UNUSABLE
* IRAN COOPERATES WITH GLOBAL COUNTERNARCOTICS EFFORTS
* UN REFUGEE AGENCY CHIEF IN IRAN
* LEGISLATURE BRIEFED ON NUCLEAR ISSUE
* UNEMPLOYMENT FIGURES CONTINUE TO RISE
* NORTHERN TEA FACTORIES FACE CASH CRISIS
************************************************************

TEHRAN CONDEMNS KILLING OF HAMAS LEADER. Less than a month after
assassinating the leader and founder of Hamas, Shaykh Ahmad Yassin,
missiles fired from Israeli helicopters killed his successor, Abd
al-Aziz Rantisi, news agencies reported. Two of Rantisi’s
bodyguards were killed and bystanders were injured in the incident in
Gaza City. Hamas refused to divulge the name of Rantisi’s
successor, the “Los Angeles Times” reported on 18 April. Hamas
spokesman Ismail Haniyeh vowed that the death would be avenged,
saying, “This sacrifice will not be wasted.” He added, “It is our
fate in Hamas, and as Palestinians, to die as martyrs…. This
struggle will not weaken our determination or break our will.”
Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Hamid Reza Assefi
condemned Rantisi’s killing on 18 April, saying such measures
undermine stability and will not resolve the basic problems Israel
faces, IRNA reported. Expediency Council Chairman Ayatollah Ali Akbar
Hashemi Rafsanjani said the killing of Rantisi is an example of
Israeli terrorism under U.S. protection, IRNA reported. (Bill Samii)

WHO ASKED TEHRAN TO HELP IN IRAQ? Iranian Foreign Minister Kamal
Kharrazi announced after a 14 April cabinet meeting that the United
States had requested Iranian assistance in calming the current unrest
in Iraq, AFP and Al-Jazeera television reported. Kharrazi said Tehran
would help and added that the United States is complicating the
situation there. The Foreign Ministry’s director-general for
Persian Gulf affairs, Hussein Sadeqi, arrived in Baghdad on 14 April,
the Iranian Labor News Agency (ILNA) reported.
An anonymous “senior State Department official” said on 14
April that the United Kingdom invited the delegation of Iranian
officials to visit Iraq in an effort to reduce tensions there, AFP
reported. “Obviously, we did not object,” the source added, going on
to say that Washington did not ask London to invite the Iranians.
“Since Iran does have some influence with the Shi’a community, we
hope they would make clear that they are not in any way supporting
violence or confrontation and that, in fact, they are supporting the
authority of the central government,” the source said.
U.S. State Department spokesman Richard Boucher also denied
that Washington asked for Iranian mediation, but he did acknowledge
the recent dispatch of messages to Tehran, AFP reported.
“Our intervention is not based on the U.S. request,” Iranian
presidential adviser Mohammad Shariati said in a 14 April interview
with Al-Jazeera. He went on to explain Tehran’s reasons for
acting at this time and in such a public fashion. “We wanted the
world to know our role in solving the problems,” Shariati said.
“America had prevented us from doing so. Britain was more
understanding of the peaceful Iranian role in solving the problems.
Now it [the United States] has dropped its objection.” Shariati said
Iran does not want to interfere in Iraqi affairs, but it “must not
leave Iraq and its people alone in their ordeal…. Iran believes the
U.S. behavior is wrong.”
While in Baghdad, Sadeqi held talks with a number of Iraqi
political figures, state radio reported on 15 April. Among the
officials that Sadeqi met were Supreme Council for the Islamic
Revolution in Iraq’s (SCIRI) Abd-al-Aziz al-Hakim, Iraqi
Governing Council (IGC) President Mas’ud Barzani, Oil Minister
Ibrahim Bahr-al-Ulum, IGC member Jalal Talabani, and Foreign Minister
Hoshyar Zebari. The Iranian delegation also met with Ahmad Chalabi,
the Islamic Republic News Agency (IRNA) reported on 17 April.
Nevertheless, the exact role played by Sadeqi and his
colleagues remains somewhat unclear. Adnan Ali, a member of the
Al-Da’wah al-Islamiya party, said in a 15 April interview with
Egyptian radio, “The Iranian delegation led by Mr. Sadeqi had a
significant effect during talks with Shi’a clerics and
personalities as well as with the office of Seyyed Muqtada [al-Sadr].
I have recently met Mr. Sadeqi, and he assured me that the Islamic
Republic seeks to calm the situation to avoid any dissension [among
Iraqi factions] under occupation.”
But neither the American nor the Iranian side was so
forthcoming. CPA spokesman Dan Senor said on 16 March, “It is our
position that there is no role for the Iranians to play middleman
here in discussions between us and Sadr,” RFE/RL reported. “There is
no role for the Iranians, from our perspective, in the Sadr
situation. And, in fact, we believe that the issue with Sadr and his
militia should be resolved by Iraqis, not Iranians.”
Iranian Foreign Minister Kharrazi sounded a similar note on
16 April. He asked in a statement faxed to IRNA, “How can one mediate
between the Iraqi people and the occupiers?”
The Iranian diplomats ended their visit on 17 April without
visiting Al-Najaf or Muqtada al-Sadr, IRNA reported. This is
reportedly because the Iraqi cleric refused to meet with the
Iranians, the Shi’a news agency () reported.
(Bill Samii)

LEADERS BLAME COALITION FOR DIPLOMAT’S DEATH. Khalil Naimi,
identified by IRNA as the cultural and press attache at the Iranian
embassy, was shot dead in Baghdad on 15 April by unknown assailants.
President Hojatoleslam Mohammad Khatami said in a message
released the same day, “The current situation in Iraq is undoubtedly
the result of U.S. negligence toward the realities and the sentiments
of people in the region and the continuation of terrifying policy
that has already been proved ineffective,” IRNA reported. “It is
necessary that the U.S. changes its behavior toward the Iraqi people,
stops killing them and leaves the affairs to themselves.”
Later that day, Foreign Ministry spokesman Assefi urged Iraqi
officials and the Iraqi Governing Council to protect the embassy and
its staff, as well as visiting diplomat Hussein Sadeqi, ILNA
reported. He added that Iran has been trying to resolve the crisis in
Iraq and added, “Unfortunately, America’s wrong policies are
making the crisis more complicated every day.”
After condemning the killing, parliamentary speaker
Hojatoleslam Mehdi Karrubi said, “We hold the occupiers [of Iraq]
responsible for such incidents, but this does not mean [that we
should] overlook the terrorist move of those who carried out the
attack,” state television reported. “We do condemn their move,
although we do not know who they are.”
“The attack took place in the region under the control of
Paul Bremer, the American governor of Iraq,” Iranian state television
reported on 15 April. “This is while the occupying American forces
have taken no measures to follow up the case,” it added.
Addressing mourners at Naimi’s 17 April funeral, the
supreme leader’s representative, Abbasali Akhtari, said, “The
occupiers must know that they are directly responsible for the blood
of this beloved martyr and others, which is shed each day in Iraq,”
IRNA reported. (Bill Samii)

SUPREME LEADER EXPECTS AMERICAN HUMILIATION IN IRAQ. Supreme Leader
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said in a 14 April speech in Tehran that “an
alien power” invaded Iraq in order to fill the pockets of oil
companies “and the Zionists,” state radio reported. He went on to say
that nobody is inciting Iraqis to acts of violence. “There is no need
for anyone to incite the Iraqis,” he said, adding, “You [Americans]
yourselves are the biggest and the filthiest inciters of the Iraqi
nation.” Khamenei said U.S. policy in Iraq is like Israeli policy in
Palestine.
In an apparent reference to the closure of Muqtada
al-Sadr’s “Al-Hawzah” newspaper that disregarded the nearly 100
press closures in Iran, Khamenei said, “They close down newspapers.
They ban the press.”
Khamenei predicted, “Sooner or later, the Americans will
leave Iraq in wretchedness and humiliation.” Khamenei said the Iraqi
people can facilitate this through unity and reliance on Islam, and
by heeding the clerical authorities. (Bill Samii)

HOLDING PATTERNS ABOVE NEXT CASPIAN SUMMIT. Foreign Minister Kharrazi
said on 5 April in Moscow that Iran offered to host the next summit
meeting of the Caspian Sea’s littoral states — Azerbaijan, Iran,
Kazakhstan, Russia, and Turkmenistan — ITAR-TASS reported. Referring
to issues such as the division of the sea’s resources, fishing,
and military use of the sea, Kharrazi said, “The negotiations on the
Caspian problems are moving at a good pace. The sides have reached a
number of concrete agreements, and they have to be firmed up now.”
The official meeting began on 6 April.
Kharrazi said at the 6 April opening session of the foreign
ministers’ meeting, “This [Caspian] sea belongs to the countries
that are bordering it. It is a sea that represents peace and
friendship, and it is a symbol of the peaceful coexistence of the
countries surrounding it,” RFE/RL reported.
The meeting covered issues that include the sea’s legal
regime, IRNA reported, and Kharrazi expressed the hope that the legal
convention currently in progress will meet with all the
countries’ approval. He also said foreign powers should not
interfere in the region and that countries should avoid unilateral
measures that cause complications. Kharrazi returned to Tehran on 6
April, according to IRNA.
Although the summit’s final communique stressed such
positives as stability and cooperation, the summit did not achieve
any breakthroughs on the thorny issue of demarcating the
Caspian’s waters and seabed, RIA-Novosti reported on 6 April.
Summit participants agreed that differences remain on a number of key
issues.
An analytical article in the 5 April “Sharq” noted that, in
the absence of a legal regime accepted by all five littoral states,
they are turning more frequently to bilateral agreements. Azerbaijan,
Russia, and Kazakhstan have reached agreements without Iran’s or
Turkmenistan’s approval, and Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, and
Azerbaijan have begun trilateral negotiations. Even Iran, according
to the article, has entered bilateral negotiations with Azerbaijan.
Iran’s advantage, according to the “Sharq” analysis, is
that it is far less dependent on Caspian energy resources than the
other littoral states. It can concentrate on transporting oil and gas
for the other countries, and they must therefore heed its interests.
International law expert Yusef Molai said in the 6 April
“Jomhuri-yi Islami” that the Russia-Kazakhstan bilateral agreement
has replaced the Caspian legal regime. He said Iran has forsaken a
number of opportunities and predicted that the forthcoming summit
meeting would not accomplish anything. (Bill Samii)

IRAN HOSTS ARMENIAN FOREIGN MINISTER. Armenian Foreign Minister
Vartan Oskanian was in Tehran on 12-13 April, IRNA reported, where he
met with Iranian Supreme National Security Council Secretary
Hojatoleslam Hassan Rohani, Vice President Mohammad-Reza Aref-Yazdi,
and Foreign Minister Kharrazi.
The need for expanded bilateral relations was discussed in
every meeting, and Rohani noted that the two countries’
long-standing cultural connection contributes to such cooperation.
The natural-gas pipeline from Iran to Armenia was also discussed at
every meeting, as was construction of a dam on the Aras River.
Kharrazi told his guest that tradesmen and public and private firms
would be more motivated to engage in trade exchanges by improved
facilities.
Aref told Oskanian that Iran would like to help in a
negotiated and consultative solution to the Nagorno-Karabakh issue.
In the same vein, Rohani said, “Regional stability is prerequisite
for economic development and without settlement of the regional
crisis, the ground for extensive investment would not be prepared.”
Oskanian said upcoming negotiations with Azerbaijan on this issue are
important. (Bill Samii)

TEHRAN ATTACKS U.S. HUMAN RIGHTS RECORD. Foreign Ministry spokesman
Assefi said on 12 April that U.S. criticism of the Iranian human
rights record is “invalid” and its definition of the terms “human”
and “rights” is at odds with that of the rest of the world, IRNA
reported. He said the United States is not qualified to comment on
human rights issues because its actions in Palestine, Iraq, and
elsewhere cost lives and make people miserable and homeless.
A 12 April commentary on Iranian state television said that
while “American forces are busy mercilessly slaughtering the Iraqi
people in front of the eyes of the world, and while the regime
occupying Jerusalem [Israel] is also continuing its barbaric and
inhumane crimes against defenseless civilians in the occupied
Palestinian territories,” the United States has published a
“repetitive” report on human rights violations in Iran.
These are presumably references to a 9 April U.S. State
Department Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor and Bureau of
Public Affairs Fact Sheet, titled “Iran: Voices Struggling To Be
Heard” (). The fact sheet
notes that unelected government institutions are rebuffing and trying
to stifle Iranians’ calls for respect for their beliefs. It cites
the case of Canadian photojournalist Zahra Kazemi, who was detained
outside Evin Prison in Tehran in June 2003 and who died three weeks
later of head injuries suffered, it is suspected, in a beating she
underwent at the hands of her jailers.
This State Department publication notes the closure of up to
85 newspapers, as well as the detention, physical punishment, and the
fining of journalists. The continuing persecution of practitioners of
the Bahai faith is described as well, citing data on four Bahais
currently in prison for practicing their religion.
Other topics addressed in this State Department publication
are the failure of political reform at the hands of unelected
government institutions, particularly the Guardians Council; Nobel
laureate Shirin Ebadi; and the pro-democratic mobilization of the
country’s young people. (Bill Samii)

NEW DATE FOR SECOND ROUND OF PARLIAMENTARY ELECTIONS. The Guardians
Council has agreed to an Interior Ministry proposal to hold the
second round of the parliamentary elections on Friday, 7 May 2004,
state television reported on 12 April. An Interior Ministry official
had announced previously that the second round would take place
between 20 and 30 April (see “RFE/RL Iran Report,” 5 April 2004).
Guardians Council Secretary Ayatollah Ahmad Jannati added in
a letter to Interior Minister Abdolvahed Musavi-Lari that only an
amendment to the election law would allow further delays in the
scheduled voting in the Tehran, Rey, Shemiranat, and Islamshahr
constituencies, the Iranian Students News Agency (ISNA) reported on
15 April.
The first round of the elections took place on 20 February,
and a Guardians Council member explained in late March that there
will be a second round of voting in 39 constituencies where
candidates did not earn a sufficient number of votes to win outright.
Sixty-four candidates will be elected in the second round, and the
seventh parliament will begin work on 27 May. (Bill Samii)

LEGISLATURE FORMALLY APPROVES WITHDRAWAL OF ‘TWIN BILLS.’ In
a letter to parliamentary speaker Hojatoleslam Mehdi Karrubi that was
read out at the end of the 13 April open legislative session,
President Khatami formally withdrew two pieces of legislation
submitted in August and September 2002, IRNA reported. Known as the
“twin bills,” the first would have amended the election law by
reducing the role of the Guardians Council, and the second would have
increased the authority of the president.
Khatami’s letter noted that the Guardians Council
rejected the election-law amendment and added that the Guardians
Council and supervisory boards broke the current election law. His
letter concluded, “I predict that keeping these bills on the
parliamentary agenda in the future will have a detrimental impact on
the people’s rights and interests and the president’s
position.” Khatami had announced the bills’ withdrawal in
mid-March (see “RFE/RL Iran Report,” 22 March 2004).
On 18 April, the legislature formally agreed to hand the
bills back to the executive branch, IRNA reported. Vice President for
Legal and Parliamentary Affairs Hojatoleslam Mohammad Ali Abtahi
attended that session and said that the Guardians Council must
account for the president’s inability to do his job.
Conservative columnist Hussein Shariatmadari praised
Khatami’s decision to withdraw the “twin bills” in the 14 April
“Kayhan” newspaper. Shariatmadari, who is the supreme leader’s
representative at the Kayhan Institute, said Khatami’s decision
clears his record and eliminates the danger of reducing freedom.
Shariatmadari wrote that the bills would have eliminated people’s
right to prevent unqualified individuals from serving in parliament
and would have invested the president with dictatorial power.
Shariatmadari wrote that Khatami was ill advised to have submitted
the legislation in the first place, and he hinted that the bills were
imposed on the president by spies and agents of foreign countries.
Shariatmadari wrote that Khatami’s criticism of the
Guardians Council, which rejected the bills several times, was
unjustified and unfriendly. (Bill Samii)

LEGISLATURE REJECTS ONE PARLIAMENTARIAN’S RESIGNATION, ACCEPTS
ANOTHER’S. Parliamentary speaker Hojatoleslam Mehdi Karrubi said
on 14 April that he is glad the Iranian legislature did not approve a
parliamentarian’s resignation request, IRNA reported.
Some 120 parliamentarians submitted their resignations in
February to protest the Guardians Council’s rejection of
incumbents’ candidacies for the parliamentary elections, and to
date the resignations of Tehran representatives Mohsen Armin and
Fatemeh Haqiqatju and Urumiyeh representative Mahmud Yeganli have
been accepted (see “RFE/RL Iran Report,” 16 February and 22 March
2004).
The legislature rejected Isfahan representative Rajabali
Mazrui’s resignation, however. The request needed 98 “yes” votes
to be accepted by the 174 of 194 parliamentarians in the chamber who
voted on it; only 92 did so. Seventy-seven voted against Mazrui’s
resignation, and five abstained. Deputy parliamentary speaker
Mohammad Reza Khatami said on 17 April that nothing could stop his
colleagues from resigning, IRNA reported. Asked about Mazrui’s
abortive attempt to quit, Khatami explained that he is needed because
of his important role in the budget committee.
The next day, the legislature approved the resignation of
Tehran’s Behzad Nabavi, IRNA reported. There were 154 votes in
favor of his quitting and 22 votes against it. (Bill Samii)

TWO NEW CABINET MEMBERS INTRODUCED. In a letter to the speaker of
parliament, President Khatami introduced two new cabinet members,
IRNA reported. Khatami named Safdar Husseini to replace Finance and
Economic Affairs Minister Tahmasb Mazaheri. Husseini currently serves
as labor and social affairs minister. Isfahan parliamentarian Nasser
Khaleqi was introduced as Husseini’s successor as labor and
social affairs minister. (Bill Samii)

KHATAMI VISITS EARTHQUAKE SITE. President Khatami arrived in the
southeastern city of Bam on 13 April to inspect the progress of
reconstruction efforts since the 26 December earthquake there, IRNA
and state radio reported. Housing and Urban Development Minister Ali
Abdol-Alizadeh, Interior Minister Hojatoleslam Abdolvahed
Musavi-Lari, Islamic Culture and Guidance Minister Ahmad
Masjid-Jamei, and Health Minister Masud Pezeshkian accompanied
Khatami.
Construction of 800 housing units began that day, and Khatami
visited other housing projects. Locals asked him to speed up the
construction of homes, IRNA reported. He also inspected work on a
96-bed hospital, the completion of which is expected by the end of
the summer.
At a meeting of the aid headquarters, Khatami said the
government allocated 2.1 trillion rials (about $256 million) for the
city’s reconstruction in the March 2003-March 2004 year, and
another 2.4 trillion (about $292 million) for the March 2004-March
2005 period, state radio reported. Khatami vowed that nobody will be
living in a tent by 20 May 2004.
Meanwhile, Bam Governor-General Ali Shafei said on 13 April
that Interior Minister Musavi-Lari has accepted his resignation and
he will leave within 48 hours, ISNA reported. His resignation was
reported in March (see “RFE/RL Iran Report,” 15 March 2004). Shafei
explained that the interior minister and the provincial
governor-general had opposed his resignation. He added that a Bam
native identified as Dr. Makarem will succeed him. (Bill Samii)

IRAN’S NEW INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT UNUSABLE. Supreme Leader
Khamenei declared this Iran’s year of accountability (see “RFE/RL
Iran Report,” 29 March 2004). He could start by determining why
Tehran’s newest and grandest international airport remains
unusable, almost three months after being inaugurated amid much
fanfare.
The Imam Khomeini International Airport near Tehran cost a
total of 2.6 trillion rials plus $60 billion, IRNA reported on 31
January. It is intended to handle about 6 million passengers its
first phase, 15 million in the second phase, and 40 million a year
when the third phase is complete; IRNA did not specify when this
would be.
President Khatami inaugurated the airport on 1 February at a
ceremony attended by the Roads and Transport Minister Ahmad Khoram;
Housing and Urban Development Minister Ali Abdol-Alizadeh; Post,
Telegraph, and Telephone Minister Ahmad Motamedi; and foreign
dignitaries, IRNA reported at the time.
Yet the airport still cannot be used, according to Radio
Farda on 14 April, because construction on the project is below par
and does not conform to international standards. The original project
engineers quit after the end of the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq War, and the
government at that time allowed the Oppressed and Disabled Foundation
(Bonyad-i Mostazafan va Janbazan) to take over the airport project.
The foundation changed many of the original specifications. As a
result, the runways were made with asphalt instead of cement and must
be repaved; neither the electrical power nor the runway lighting
function properly; and the aircraft refueling equipment is
inadequate. Until these problems are resolved, Radio Farda reported,
the airport cannot be used.
Meanwhile, a new airport was inaugurated in the West
Azerbaijan Province city of Khoi on 8 April, state radio reported.
Built at a cost of 40 billion rials, its runway is big enough to
handle medium-sized aircraft. Roads and Transport Minister Khoram
said at the inauguration that plans are under way to build airports
at Ahvaz, Bandar Abbas, Isfahan, Mashhad, Shiraz, and Tabriz. (Bill
Samii)

IRAN COOPERATES WITH GLOBAL COUNTERNARCOTICS EFFORTS. Iran plays an
active role in the international effort to stem the flow of narcotics
from Afghanistan, the world’s biggest producer of opium. Iran,
Afghanistan, and Afghanistan’s other neighbors — China,
Pakistan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan — on 1 April
signed an agreement on creating a “security belt” around Afghanistan
that will clamp down on narcotics trafficking, the “Financial Times”
reported on 2 April. The agreement calls for more border troops,
tighter border controls, coordinated counternarcotics strategies, and
more information exchanges. The concept of a “security belt” has been
promoted since 2002 (see “RFE/RL Iran Report,” 20 May 2002).
The signing of the “Good Neighborly Relations Declaration on
Narcotics Control” coincided with the 31 March-1 April Berlin
conference on Afghanistan, at which time UN Office on Drugs and Crime
(UNODC) chief Antonio Maria Costa released a statement stressing the
importance of drug control in Afghanistan and welcoming the
agreement.
Speaking at the same conference, Afghan Transitional
Administration Chairman Hamid Karzai said, “Drugs in Afghanistan are
threatening the very existence of the Afghan state,” “The Union
Leader” of Manchester, New Hampshire reported on 1 April.
Furthermore, Afghan Interior Minister Ali Ahmad Jalali said at an 18
March news conference that drug enforcement is his ministry’s top
issue for the coming year, Kabul’s Afghanistan Television
reported.
Iran’s Drug Control Headquarters (DCHQ) chief Ali Hashemi
met with European Union officials on the sidelines of 47th Session of
the Commission on Narcotic Drugs in Vienna on 18 March, IRNA
reported. Both sides concurred that the situation in Afghanistan is
the most intractable problem facing Iranian, regional, and European
drug control efforts. Hashemi said that Iran hoped the end of the
Taliban would reduce the drug threat, adding, “But after more than
two years, we are still witnessing a daily increase in the production
and trafficking of illicit drugs from the country.”
The next day, UNODC’s Maria Costa told Hashemi that his
organization is impressed with Iran’s efforts along its eastern
border, IRNA reported.
A delegation of Italian counternarcotics personnel visited
Iran in late February. The head of the delegation, identified by IRNA
on 24 February as Francesco Petroka, said in a meeting with Deputy
Interior Minister Ali Asqar Ahmadi that Italy’s counternarcotics
agency eventually would like to set up a branch office in Iran, IRNA
reported on 24 February. In Italy, the Central Directorate for
Antidrug Services runs narcotics-enforcement activities. This is a
multiagency body established in the Public Security Department with
personnel from the State Police, the Carabinieri Corps, and the
Guardia di Finanza (Customs and Excise Police) (see
).
DCHQ chief Ali Hashemi met with his Italian counterpart,
identified by IRNA on 24 February as Peter Kaba. Hashemi stressed the
need for controlling narcotics production in Afghanistan, and he
added that Iran’s strategy is to establish a stable government
there through economic assistance. Kaba expressed interest in an
information exchange on demand-reduction activities, and he suggested
that Italy’s experience might be useful for Iran.
There have been more recent meetings. Iranian Ambassador to
Moscow Gholam-Reza Shafei and Russia’s Federal Drug Control
Service chief Viktor Cherkesov (a colonel general of the Federal
Security Service) discussed cooperation in the counternarcotics field
on 15 April, IRNA reported. Shafei said narcotics production in
Afghanistan is on the increase “because of the lenient approach of
the coalition forces, mainly the U.S., toward the issue.” Shafei
suggested that Tehran, Moscow, and the United Nations work together
to stop the production of drugs in Afghanistan and prevent drug
trafficking. He added that Iran is ready to sign a counternarcotics
agreement with Russia and Tajikistan.
DCHQ chief Hashemi and the head of the Indonesian
drug-control agency met in Tehran on 14 April, IRNA reported. They
discussed preparations for a memorandum of understanding on drug
control cooperation that is due to be signed in Jakarta in May, IRNA
reported.
Such meetings do not seem to be making much of an impression
on some Iranian officials. Deputy Foreign Minister Mohsen Aminzadeh
said in Moscow on 13 April, “European countries and the United States
give little attention to this problem while narcotics production is
rapidly growing in Afghanistan,” ITAR-TASS reported. He said that
drug trafficking and terrorism are connected, and the money from the
Afghan narcotics trade goes to terrorists, especially Al-Qaeda.
Deputy Interior Minister Ahmadi complained to a 12 March
meeting of Iranian and Afghan officials in Herat Province’s Taleh
Mush region that European countries and the West generally are not
very serious in the global war on drugs, IRNA reported. If they are
serious, he added, they must assist Iran’s counternarcotics
campaign. Ahmadi said that narcotics mafias are taking advantage of
Afghan farmers’ economic needs. He said Iran is ready to help
Afghanistan in any fashion, and he cited Iran’s experience in
police training, local and municipal councils, issuing passports, and
anything else. (Bill Samii)

UN REFUGEE AGENCY CHIEF IN IRAN. United Nations High Commissioner for
Refugees (UNHCR) Ruud Lubbers arrived in Tehran on 13 April as part
of a trip that will take in Afghanistan and Pakistan, irinnews.org
and IRNA reported. Some 2.5 million refugees have returned to
Afghanistan since the Taliban’s fall in December 2001, and UNHCR
intends to help another 400,000 go home in 2004. Just this year,
according to irinnews.org, 26,000 Afghans have “spontaneously”
returned from Iran.
Lubbers met with Iranian Foreign Minister Kharrazi and
reportedly told him that the Afghan security situation is suitable
for the refugees’ return, according to IRNA. Kharrazi expressed
the hope that repatriations would be facilitated by the cooperation
of the UNHCR and the Afghan interim administration. Kharrazi added
that international organizations should be more active in the
refugees’ repatriation. International refugee agencies working in
Iran recently complained to RFE/RL that the Iranian government
impedes their work, driving some to leave the country (see “RFE/RL
Iran Report,” 22 December 2003). (Bill Samii)

LEGISLATURE BRIEFED ON NUCLEAR ISSUE. Officials from the Foreign
Ministry and Atomic Energy Organization on 13 April briefed members
of the parliamentary National Security and Foreign Affairs committee
on the progress of the country’s talks with the International
Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), IRNA reported.
Committee spokesman Jafar Golbaz said they were apprised of
the government’s discussions with IAEA Director-General Mohammad
el-Baradei and on “U.S. pressure on the IAEA.” Golbaz said the United
States is trying to obstruct Iran-IAEA talks but that these
obstructions can be removed. Legislators have complained that they
are out of the loop on the nuclear issue and are forced to conduct
their own research to know what is going on.
One day earlier, five inspectors from the IAEA arrived in
Iran, Mehr News Agency and AP reported on 12 April. The IAEA
personnel were scheduled to meet with representatives of Iran’s
Atomic Energy Organization and to supervise the suspension of uranium
enrichment and the making of uranium centrifuges, Mehr reported. AP
added that the inspectors intend to confirm whether or not Iran has a
covert nuclear program. Atomic Energy Organization chief Gholamreza
Aqazadeh-Khoi said on 16 April that Iran expects its nuclear dossier
to return to a normal status on the basis of its negotiations with
the IAEA, state television reported.
Meanwhile, Minister of Science, Research, and Technology
Jafar Tofiqi-Darian told visitors to the Arak heavy-water
installation that it would start test production “in the coming
months,” Iranian state television reported on 16 April. The output
will be stored until a 40-megawatt research reactor is built at Arak.
(Bill Samii)

UNEMPLOYMENT FIGURES CONTINUE TO RISE. Farshid Yazdani,
director-general of the social and economic planning department at
the Social Security Organization, said on 12 April that the number of
unemployed in Iran has doubled in the past four years, “Iran Daily”
reported on 13 April. Yazdani attributed this increase mainly to
mismanagement and added that management shortcomings are ignored
while the blame for unemployment is shifted to the workforce. Yazdani
said the government’s industrial renovation plan will render
another 30,000 people jobless.
Minister of Mines and Industries Ishaq Jahangiri said on 17
April that privatization and less government intervention in the
economy are the keys to creating more jobs, IRNA reported. (Bill
Samii)

NORTHERN TEA FACTORIES FACE CASH CRISIS. Ghasem Rezaiyat, who heads
the association of tea factories in northern Iran, said in the 13
April issue of “Entekhab” newspaper that the factories do not have
enough money to buy green tea from the growers. Gilan Province tea
factories have a 150-billion toman (about $187.5 million) debt, he
said.
Meanwhile, Iran is planning to export tea to Germany, Japan,
and Kuwait, “Iran Daily” reported on 13 April, citing the previous
day’s “Sobh-i Eqtesad.” The article described the creation of a
tea factory in the northern city of Lahijan, and it quoted tea
industry official Abdosamad Gharavi as saying that exports will begin
once the factory becomes operational. Gharavi said the factory will
make 5,000 kilograms of tea essence, 1,000 kilograms of tea powder,
and 200,000 tea bags during the first phase of the project, which
should become operational in a month. (Bill Samii)

*********************************************************
Copyright (c) 2004. RFE/RL, Inc. All rights reserved.

The “RFE/RL Iran Report” is a weekly prepared by A. William Samii on
the basis of materials from RFE/RL broadcast services, RFE/RL
Newsline, and other news services. It is distributed every Monday.

Direct comments to A. William Samii at [email protected].
For information on reprints, see:

Back issues are online at

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.ebaa.net
http://www.state.gov/g/drl/rls/31261.htm
http://www.poliziadistato.it/pds/english/drugs.htm
http://www.rferl.org/about/content/request.asp
http://www.rferl.org/reports/iran-report/

Global Re-Nazification and Yom Hashoah

Global Re-Nazification and Yom Hashoah

By Dr. Steven Plaut
Monday, April 19, 2004

Today is Yom Hashoah, Holocaust Commemoration Day. As usual the
Jewish left will strive to commemorate the Holocaust by trying to
promote a second one….

It has become fashionable in certain quarters, including among
some self-hating Jews, to challenge the uniqueness of the Holocaust,
to argue that it was just another in a long list of human savagery and
mass barbarism, no different from the deaths of Armenians in WWI or of
Cambodians or of Rwandans or of Gypsies. (The Cambodian genocide was
made possible in part by Noam Chomsky serving as promoter and
apologist for the Khmer Rouge and denying throughout that the Khmer
Rouse was annihilating millions of Cambodians. Talk about ”Holocaust
Denial”). According to this ”approach,” there was nothing unique
about the Holocaust, no reason why it should be regarded as sui
generic, and hence Jews should stop all their ”yapping” about it.

What is one to make of such people? It is certainly true that
there have been other cases of large-scale mass murder. But the
comparisons with the Holocaust are absurd.

There are many reasons why this is so. But I was struck by the
fact that in today’s Haaretz, one of the worst Oslo leftists managed
to put his finger smack accurately on what may be the most important
of these reasons. The most important difference is very simple. When
Noam Chomsky’s friends were murdering millions of Cambodians, the
world (other than the doctrinaire Stalinists) was horrified, demanded
that something be done, and denounced the atrocities. When the
Rwandans were butchering one another, the civilized world was
horrified, tried to stop the murders, tried to intervene, and
denounced the atrocities.

When the Jews of Europe were being annihilated, the “civilized
world” was indifferent, and much of it was downright supportive of the
annihilation. Large segments of the “civilized world” collaborated
with the genocide. Very few in the “civilized world” demanded serious
military efforts to end it. The “civilized world” sat in silence in
the decade leading up to the Shoah, while Hitler expounded his plans
openly. Many in the anti-Semitic West sympathized with his program.

I mention all this, because I think that one of the best litmus
tests of the extent of re-nazification of the planet is to observe the
reactions of the world to the assassination of the Gaza Nazi, Rantisi.
All those denouncing Israel’s hit on Rantisi as ”state terrorism,”
as a crime, as a violation of ”international law,” as violating
Palestinian ”rights,” as aggression, as itself ”nazism,” ALL such
people are today’s most visible illustration of global
re-nazification. ALL of these people are in fact in favor of the
random mass murder of Jewish children. ALL of these people oppose
every form of Jewish self-defense except capitulation to Nazism and
passive Jewish marching into the gas chambers. All of these people
would cheer if the Islamofascists ever succeed in building
concentration camps for Jews. The leftists Jews who will no doubt now
denounce the assassination of Rantisi, with all the usual lame
”reasons” (bad timing, will just bring forth worse extremists,
violation of Palestinian ”sovereignty,” creates more motivation for
terrorists, etc. etc.), should be formally dubbed the Jews for a
Second Holocaust.

And right on schedule, the British government and the British
Israel-Bashing press, especially the BBC, denounced Israel’s
verminating Rantisi as a ”crime.” Now let me see if I have this
correct. Only days after the British, as part of the Allied
anti-Islamofascist coalition in Iraq, participate in the extermination
of over a thousand Iraqis in Fallujah and elsewhere, many of them
innocent civilians, and now the British declare that when Israel
recycles a nazi mass murdering Islamofascist who has murdered hundreds
of Israeli civilians, many children, this constitutes a crime and
violation of ”international law.” It appears that it is only a
matter of days before the chief Shi’ite terrorist in Najaf Iraq will
be terminated by the good guys, including the Brits. Will the BBC
also regard that as a crime? Probably it will!

Don’t get me wrong, by the way. I endorse the Allied actions in
Iraq. But did you notice that the mowing down of the thousand Iraqis
was the Allied response to the murder of four Americans and the
hanging of their corpses on a bridge? And the greatest hush-hush
secret the media are refusing to report this week is that the killing
of the thousand resulted in near tranquility this week in most of
Iraq! Perhaps there are military solutions to the problems of
terrorism after all?

ChronWatch

SSC professor aims to debunk myths about Holocaust in book

SSC professor aims to debunk myths about Holocaust in book
By Jack Butterworth
Monday, April 19, 2004

PEABODY — Salem State College History Professor Christopher Mauriello
had a warning for those attending the Holocaust Center Boston North’s
annual Holocaust commemoration ceremony Sunday afternoon, especially
the 14 local survivors of the persecution and murder of 6 million Jews
that occurred from 1933-1945, which he called “one of the most
important moments in history.”

The survivors sat in the front center rows of the Peabody
Veterans Memorial High auditorium during the 90-minute ceremony, which
also included remarks by center President Robert McAndrews, Mayor
Michael Bonfanti and Jewish Federation of the North Shore officer
Merritt Mulman, music by the Gordon College Women’s choir and Shir
Shalom Children’s Choir, an interfaith service led by the Rev. Louise
Mann of Swamspcott, Rabbi Ilana Rosansky of Salem, Cantor Sam
Pessaroff of Peabody and Holocaust survivor Sonia Schreiber Weitz and
Harriet Wacks’ presentation of the Holocaust Center Service Award to
Sandy Weitz, center clerk and daughter of Sonia Weitz.

A large art display in the high school lobby included the work of
students and Peabody artist Apo Torosyan, whose relatives were caught
up in the Armenian Genocide and who presented his display, “My Story,
Everybody’s Story.”

Mauriello, who has a book in progress called “Nazi Myths,” said
the Holocaust is undergoing in-depth study by historians – not the
revisionists who deny the Holocaust ever happened, whom he dismissed
with a wave of his hand – but by researchers whose findings may force
the survivors and their families to let go of some of the feelings and
memories they carry.

“There is anxiety about this,” he admitted, “but historians have
to insist on accuracy in place of myths and misconceptions.” He said
his talk and the myths he plans to bring forward are based on
“consensus among historians” – in fact, he has asked German historians
to review a draft of his book for accuracy.

He offered four popular myths about the Holocaust, which he has
heard from students taking his course on the subject over the past
seven years: Adolf Hitler and the Nazis invented anti-Semitism and
brainwashed Germany with anti-Semitic propaganda; Hitler and the Nazis
were dominated by the notion of a Master Race; Hitler’s evil
imagination created the blueprint for the Holocaust; the Holocaust was
run by a ruthless, technocratic, centralized Nazi regime.

In fact, Mauriello told his audience, anti-Semitism has long,
deep roots in Europe, with spikes in persecution when there were
plagues, wars or other social strife. From 1933-1939 the Nazis were
careful not to alienate their political allies, the Conservatives, in
a Germany where Jews were as integrated as any in Europe. “It wasn’t
until the invasion of Poland that war made racial cleansing possible,”
he said.

As for the Master Race, Mauriello said a pseudo-science of racial
purity called Eugenics swept America as well as Europe in the early
20th Century, when county fairs gave prizes to families whose blond
hair and white skin denoted a high rate of racial purity.

Furthermore, there was no blueprint for the Holocaust, which
evolved from 1933-1939 as the Nazis grew more opportunistic. Poland
became a laboratory for racial cleansing as the Nazis tried
deportation, then ghettoization and finally racial cleansing.

Instead of a ruthless centralized regime, Hitler issued vague
orders and his bureaucrats, eager for status, credibility, promotions
and pay raises, competed to find innovative ways of making those
orders happen.

“There is no smoking gun linking Hitler to genocide,” Mauriello
said, but he didn’t let the lack of an arch-villain give his audience
any peace. “This can happen again.”

the Daily Item of Lynn and Herald Interactive Advertising Systems, Inc.

On the denial of genocide

On the denial of genocide

Jerusalem Post
Bret Stephens
Apr. 15, 2004

In April 1998, on the occasion of the 50th anniversary of the UN
Genocide Convention, a “Statement by Concerned Scholars and Writers”
was published by the Armenian National Institute. Its purpose was to
“commemorate the Armenian Genocide of 1915” and “condemn the Turkish
government’s denial of this crime against humanity.”

“Denial of genocide is the final stage of genocide,” the statement
read. “In a century plagued by genocide, we affirm the moral necessity
of remembering.”

The statement garnered more than 150 signatures, including those of
William Styron, Norman Mailer, Susan Sontag, Kurt Vonnegut, Seamus
Heaney, John Updike and Daniel Goldhagen. Also signing was Ben
Kiernan, a professor of history at Yale and director of its Genocide
Studies Program. And therein lies a tale.

In 1994, Kiernan, an Australian, was awarded a $500,000 grant by the
US State Department to establish the Cambodian Genocide Project, the
purpose of which was to gather precise data on Khmer Rouge crimes in
order to bring its leaders to justice. But Kiernan’s scholarship, it
turned out, was blemished by his past attempts to whitewash those
crimes.

“Did the new government [of Cambodia] plan and approve a systematic
large-scale purge?” asked Kiernan in the pages of the Australian
Outlook in December 1976. “There is little evidence that they did.”
Elsewhere, he had claimed at the height of the killing that
“photographs of alleged atrocities are fake” (The Age, March 2, 1977)
and that “there is ample evidence in Cambodian and other sources that
the Khmer Rouge movement is not the monster that the press have
recently made it out to be” (Melbourne Journal of Politics, 1976).

Kiernan’s appointment elicited outrage in some quarters, particularly
in the opinion pages of The Wall Street Journal and in Commentary
magazine. But the Clinton State Department ignored calls to have the
grant rescinded and Kiernan proceeded as planned. In 1997, Yale made
Kiernan a full professor. In 2002, he was awarded the Critical Asian
Studies Prize. He is currently at work on a history of genocide from
1492 to the present.

In fairness, from the 1980s onward Kiernan became a tireless
chronicler of Khmer Rouge atrocities. But this was only after those
atrocities became impossible to deny. What’s significant, at any rate,
is that Kiernan is hardly the only scholar still active today who came
to the Khmer Rouge’s defense while the killing fields were in full
bloom.

In June 1977, The Nation – the flagship publication of the American
Left – ran a lengthy review of three books dealing with contemporary
events in Cambodia. The reviewers, Noam Chomsky of MIT and Edward
Herman of the University of Pennsylvania, cast aspersions on the
reliability of one book alleging Khmer Rouge atrocities while
lavishing praise on a volume which gave “a very favorable picture of
[the Khmer Rouge’s] programs and policies.” As with Kiernan, Chomsky
and Herman noted “repeated discoveries that massacre reports were
false.” And in a chilling echo of classic Holocaust denial, they gave
credence to the view that the death toll in Cambodia was mainly
attributable to sickness, not slaughter.

PERHAPS IT is not surprising that Kiernan, Herman and Chomsky were Pol
Pot apologists. It was in the late Seventies, after all, that Chomsky
was coming to the defense of Holocaust denier Robert Faurisson, while
Kiernan was a disciple, and apparently remains an admirer, of the
Australian Stalinist Wilfred Burchett.

But three points are significant. First, all three vehemently deny
their past sympathies. So much for “the moral necessity of
remembering.” Second, in sympathizing with the Khmer Rouge when they
did, they hardly traveled alone: Efforts to deny the existence of the
killing fields were widespread at the time, particularly in Europe,
and certainly not beyond the pale as far as the editors of The Nation
were concerned. Third, Kiernan, Chomsky and Herman are representative
of a broader phenomenon, namely, the tendency among self-styled
progressives and human-rights activists to willfully ignore, or
tacitly acquiesce in, some of the worst human-rights abuses of their
era.

Why? Among the oft-made arguments of people like Chomsky and Herman
is that Western policy makers focus only on the human-rights abuses
committed by their enemies, not their friends. Why, for example, was
so much Western attention and outrage devoted to goings-on in
Communist Cambodia, instead of East Timor, which was then under the
thumb of US-allied Indonesia? Why obsess about the sins of the
Sandinistas in Nicaragua, but not those of the Pinochet regime in
Chile? It’s a legitimate point. But what has been true of some
quarters of the Right has been at least as true of parts of the
Left. In their 1977 review, Chomsky and Herman did not merely point
out hypocrisy in Western attitudes; they systematically attempted to
shred the evidence that the Khmer Rouge was guilty of “autogenocide”
(the killing of their own people). Furthermore, they repeatedly argued
that most of Cambodia’s suffering was either the direct or indirect
consequence of American actions. Thus, in discussing photographs of
Cambodian civilians pulling plows in a field, they first alleged the
photos were faked, then suggested that if people rather than oxen were
in fact pulling plows, it was because “the savage American assault on
Cambodia did not spare the animal population.”

The proclivity to deny was not unique to the Cambodian situation.
Walter Duranty, the New York Times’s Pulitzer-winning Soviet
correspondent in the early 1930s, completely failed to report the
forced famine of the 1930s, which killed an estimated 10 million
peasants, mostly Ukrainian. This was not out of ignorance. Instead, it
stemmed from his conviction that “within five years or less [peasants]
will benefit enormously from being forced to accept a modern form of
agriculture [i.e., collectivization].” For him, the key question was
not the human toll, but “whether the Soviet drive to Socialism is or
is not successful irrespective of costs.”

A more recent case of genocide denial occurred 10 years ago this
month. In April 1994, as eyewitness evidence mounted that Hutus in
Rwanda were methodically exterminating hundreds of thousands of
Tutsis, the US State Department assiduously avoided use of the term
genocide. As described by Samantha Power in her article “Bystanders to
Genocide” (The Atlantic Monthly, September 2001), then-secretary of
state Warren Christopher instructed his spokesmen and deputies to
speak only of “acts of genocide,” a legalism that would, he believed,
avoid triggering US obligations under the Genocide Convention to
intervene. Power quotes the following remarkable exchange between
State Department spokeswoman Christine Shelly and Reuters reporter
Alan Elsner.

Elsner: How would you describe events taking place in Rwanda? Shelly:
Based on the evidence we have seen from observations on the ground, we
have every reason to believe that acts of genocide have occurred in
Rwanda.

Elsner: What’s the difference between “acts of genocide” and
“genocide?” Shelly: Well, I think the – as you know, there’s a legal
definition of this… clearly not all of the killings that have taken
place in Rwanda are killings to which you might apply the label… But
as to the distinctions between the words, we’re trying to call what we
have seen so far as best as we can; and based, again, on the evidence,
we have every reason to believe that acts of genocide have occurred.

Elsner: How many acts of genocide does it take to make a genocide?
Shelly: Alan, that’s just not a question I’m in a position to answer.

UNLIKE CHOMSKY, Kiernan and Herman, the Clinton administration did not
attempt to deny the unfolding reality in Rwanda. And unlike Duranty,
the administration did not wink at the mass killing as the necessary
price to be paid for achieving some prospective greater good. Their
motives were purely political. The US had been badly burned by events
in Somalia six months earlier and the appetite for another African
humanitarian assistance mission was slight.

Yet the administration, and particularly Clinton himself, did have at
least one thing in common with Chomsky, Kiernan and Herman: They
sought to obscure their past actions. On a visit to Rwanda in March
1998, Clinton confessed “that we in the United States and the world
community did not do as much as we could have and should have done to
try to limit what occurred.” Yet as Power points out, “this implied
that the United States had done a good deal but not quite enough. In
reality the United States… led a successful effort to remove most of
the UN peacekeepers who were already in Rwanda. It aggressively worked
to block the subsequent authorization of UN reinforcements.”

Clinton’s post facto handwringing notwithstanding, there were at least
intellectually defensible reasons for the US to stay out of Rwanda
when it did. To begin with, there was no compelling strategic
rationale to intervene, no vital material interests at stake in
Rwanda. Furthermore, Rwanda’s was hardly the only African tragedy in
the 1990s: assorted wars in Somalia, Congo, Sierra Leone, Liberia and
Ivory Coast collectively took approximately three million lives.

Why should one tragedy deserve intervention, and not the other? And
how does a single intervention put a stop to concurrent or future
genocides or massacres? Absent compelling answers to such questions,
the natural tendency is to do nothing. Of course, the Genocide
Convention is meant to compel great powers to act, whatever the
tangled moral dilemmas or strategic considerations.

Yet as Canadian scholar Michael Ignatieff has noted, in the case of
Rwanda the Convention did at least as much to hamper an effective
response to the genocidaires as it did to deter them. There were
limited measures the US and other countries might have taken in Rwanda
against the Hutu militia, such as jamming Hutu radio. One reason they
failed to take them is that the Convention condemned the US and other
countries into an all-or-nothing approach. Either a genocide was
taking place, in which case maximum efforts had to be undertaken to
stop it; or it wasn’t, in which case the situation in Rwanda was a
matter for Rwandans to resolve themselves. Confronted by such options,
denying the genocide, and doing nothing to help the massacred Tutsis,
seemed the counsel of prudence.

The instinct to do nothing, however, does not apply only to hardheaded
practitioners of realpolitik. In the face of atrocity, pacifists and
human-rights activists also tend to counsel inaction or measures not
likely to bring about a swift end to the atrocities. For example,
Human Rights Watch director Kenneth Roth argued recently that the war
in Iraq was “not a humanitarian intervention,” since despite the
uncontested awfulness of Saddam’s regime “it is possible to imagine
scenarios even worse.”

Many others in the so-called peace camp also tend to apply the
precautionary principle when it comes to military intervention, on the
theory that waging a war to end a bad regime might impose greater
hardship on the tyrannized population than the tyranny itself. Thus
the anguished predictions, prior to the Iraq war, of tens of thousands
of civilian casualties and up to two million dead as a result of food
shortages, water contamination and so forth.

WHAT ASTONISHES one most, looking back on some of this sordid history,
is not so much that so many genocides or mass killings were “allowed”
to happen.

Rather, it is that the reasons for shielding ones eyes from the
killing are so many, and the reasons for “doing something” are so few
and weak.

The hard Left represented by Chomsky looked the other way in Cambodia
because it could not believe that a “progressive” regime could be
responsible for such horror. The Durantys of the world understood that
killing was taking place on a mass scale, but thought it was a
worthwhile price to pay for the sake of realizing utopia. For Clinton,
interfering in Rwanda was not worth the prospective cost in American
lives or political capital.

For those who marched against invading Iraq, war is worse than
tyranny. For the so-called realists, a foreign policy based on
human-rights considerations is a bottomless swamp of open-ended
commitments and moral hazards into which no responsible power can
allow itself to wade. Anyway, if Hutus want to exterminate Tutsis –
indeed, if Tutsis put themselves in a position where it is possible
that they may be exterminated – that’s nobody’s fault but theirs.

Monday is Holocaust Remembrance Day in Israel. Sirens will blare,
traffic will come to a halt, and for a minute or two an entire nation
will stand in silence. They will do so behind the shield of a mighty
army – so far, the only proven remedy for collective helplessness.

[email protected]

The United States , NATO and the European army

The United States , NATO and the European army
Pol De Vos 18/04/2004
URL : ;object_id= 3D22573

Peace NATO The United States , NATO and the European army Dr. Pol De
Vos (Belgium) Anti-war Coordination Stop United States of Aggression
( ) 18 th of April of 2004

1. Globalisation of the economic crisis

Over the last twenty years, we have witnessed gigantic waves of
capital concentration on a world scale. Currently, a dozen of
multinationals control the various sectors of the world economy. The
world’s two hundred major multinationals represent 25% of the world’s
manufacturing value. A few thousands of multinationals (on a total of
65,000) own the major part of the means of production and set them in
motion for the single purpose of realising a maximum of profits for
the shareholders.

Everywhere exploitation is intensifying. The number of workers is
being reduced, while productivity is drastically increased. The
workers are overexploited and underpaid. The vast majority of the
world population is kept outside of modern industrial
production. Developing countries are groaning under the burden of
2,500 billion dollar in debts, while privatisation has allowed
American and European multinationals to take over most of their wealth
and enterprises.

Overproduction and crisis have become a generalised phenomenon. In
twenty years of neoliberal globalisation, short-term cures to the
crisis have run out.

In spite of all `gains’ achieved, the United States has been
confronted with the most serious crisis of its entire history. The US
superpower now placesits bets mainly on the `military globalisation’,
on its overwhelming military superiority, in order to save its
multinationals, at the expense of the rest of the world. They try to
boost the economy through massive arms production, while ensuring a
worldwide hegemonic position and grabbing sources of raw materials and
markets. Also the European Union (EU) has become an imperialist
bloc that is able to compete with the United States in the economic
and financial fields. The Euro is challenging the position of the US
dollar as the only international reserve currency. A transfer to the
Euro of a significant part of the current world reserves held in
dollars would provoke an economic earthquake. The same holds true if a
major part of the oil trade, now in US currency, would shift to the
Euro.

2. Concentration of arms production in the USA and Europe The
worldwide concentration of capital also took place in the military
industry. From 1990 to 1998, a series of mergers and acquisitions in
the USA led to the establishment of four large producers in the
aerospace sector: Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman, Raytheon and
Boeing. From 1998 to 2002, the rate of concentration among large
companies slowed down, but the process continued at the level of
subcontractors. Concentration reduced the number of ‘prime
contractors’ – the end producers of major weapons systems –
dramatically throughout the 1990s. In the USA for instance, in 1990 13
suppliers of tactical missiles were operating. By 2000 they had merged
into 3 major companies.

While the process of concentration and consolidation in the US arms
industry has been predominantly national, the arms industries in the
Western European countries have continued the process of concentration
beyond the national level, as a consequence of their domestic
`markets’ and their national procurement budgets being smaller. Since
the late 1990s there have been a number of major mergers and
acquisitions, and the formation of joint ventures in Europe . One
result of this is the evolution of three major Western European arms
producing companies: BAe Systems, EADS and Thales. While they were
integrating most major arms producing capacities in the market
segments of their respective home countries under one roof, they were
also acquiring arms production assets abroad.

Governments supported the concentration through the establishment of a
wide array of joint armaments programmes, the signing of letters of
intent and framework agreement s, and support for the creation of
joint ventures.

The transatlantic dimension of this internationalisation is more
limited because of a range of issues related to technology transfer
and – mainly – preferences for domestic procurement in the context of
Euro-American competition.

The concentration in military production in Europe is – like in theUS
– part of a more global militarisation of the economy, as an essential
element of the construction of military Europe . Different organs have
been put in place.

In 1993, the COARM was founded, which is the group of
`conventionalarms exports’, depending directly on the European
Council. Its objectiveis to coordinate the exports to third
countries. In 1995 follows the POLARM, the`European arms policy’
group, also linked to the European Council. Its experts are tasked to
develop a common strategy. On November 12, 1996 , the Common
Organisation for Cooperation in the field of Armament (OCCAR) is
created, on the initiative of the four largest countries of the Union
: France , Germany , United Kingdom and Italy . It has the objective
to coordinate their military industrial policies. After Boeing bought
McDonnell Douglas in 1997, the European leaders feared to see their
military industry overwhelmed by their American competitors.

Airbus was in danger. In December 1997, the heads of state of Germany
, France and the UK signed a joint declaration. They confirmed that `
France, Germany and the UK have a same essential political and
economic interest in ensuring that Europe has an efficient and
competitive industry in the field of aerospace and defence
electronics. This will make possible for Europe to improve its
commercial position in the world, to reinforce its security and to
ensure that it plays its full role in its own defence. We agreed on
the urgent necessity to reorganise the industry in the field of
aerospace and defence electronics.

This process should include, in the aerospace sector, civil and
military activities, and lead to a European integration based on an
equilibrated partnership.’ 1 On March 27, 1998 , the presidents of
the societies participating in the Airbus project (DASA, British
Aerospace and Aérospatiale) proposed to develop an integrated
company, the European Aerospace and Defence Company (EADC). The
agreement was signed in December 1999. EADC controls 80% of Airbus,
which represents 50% of its sales turnover, 100% of Eurocopter, 62.5%
of Eurofighter, 25.9% of Arianespace, 75% of Astrium, 46% of Dassault,
etc. The (French) group Lagardère and the (German) group Daimler
(this means the Deutsche Bank) dominate EADC.

The European concentration leads to the constitution of some very
powerful groups. Besides EADC there is BAe Systems, the new name for
British Aerospace, which became the first defence industry in the
world, after taking over the activities of systems control of Lockheed
Martin. Its president defined his society as ` the first American
society in Europe and the first European society in the US ‘ 2. Its
weight is more important in the US than in Europe .Which is – together
with coinciding oil interests – an important element to explain the
British eagerness to participate in the US war against Iraq . EADS
became the `real’ European pole, but it is strongly linked to BAe
Systems.

These industrial developments – in the US and in Europe – induce a
worldwide arms race. According to the Stockholm International Peace
Research Institute, about 80% of the world’s total military equipment
is produced by NATO members (figures of 1996). The following NATO
members are among the world’s top ten military producers: the US , the
UK , France , Germany , Italy and Canada .The US , the UK and France
alone accounted for about 70% of the world’s total arms production for
that year.

3. NATO’s changing strategy Yugoslavia 1999: `the new strategic
concept’ After the disappearance of the Soviet Union and the Warsaw
Pact, NATO became increasingly irrelevant as a defensive
alliance. With the purpose of using the Alliance for its worldwide
ambitions, the United States pushed towards a redefinition of the NATO
doctrine. NATO should not only serve for the defence of the
territorial integrity of its members but also for `humanitarian
interventions’ outside its territory.

This new strategy was put into practice in the war against Yugoslavia.

There, for the first time, NATO intervened outside the territory of
the Treaty.

This `new strategic concept’ was ratified afterwards at a summit in
Washington at the end of April 1999. NATO’s so-called “humanitarian
war” in Yugoslaviawas sold to the public as a means of settling
conflicts between ethnic groups, while its real purpose was to expand
the spheres of influence of its member states and their corporate
allies.

Recent escalation of ethnic contradictions in Kosovo (March 2004)
shows the complete failure of NATO’s `humanitarian’ occupation.
Kosovo’s remaining minorities have no freedom of movement, live in
ghettos and face continuous terrorist attacks and the destruction of
their property.

`NATO Response Force’ and NATO’s involvement in the `war on
terrorism’ The Prague summit of November 2002 reinserted NATO in the
United States ‘ evolving strategy of world domination, now called
`war on terrorism’ . NATO is now being transformed from a
`defence’ organisation (1949) over a `defence and security’
organisation (1999) towards an `anti-terrorism’ organisation.

NATO Secretary General Lord Robertson described the Prague decisions
as ` a new capacity plan with strong national commitments to
ensure the most urgent needs; concrete proposals to improve NATO’s
defence capabilities against biological and chemical weapons; a
package of anti-terror measures that obliges the Alliance to intervene
where and when needed; internal reforms which ensure that the enlarged
NATO will remain an effective and flexible organisation. ‘ In
this context the ` NATO Response Force’ (NRF) is created, with the
objective of ensuring mobile and flexible interventions outside NATO
territory. This army for rapid worldwide combat interventions will
dispose of 21,000 soldiers by 2006. 3 The concrete content of this new
strategy was officially accepted during a NATO meeting in Brussels ,
in June 2003. Through this fundamental reform of NATO, the alliance is
clearly preparing itself to wage wars all over the world to ensure the
neo-colonial order. Secretary General Robertson explained: ` This
is a new NATO. A NATO able to meet its commitments when times get
tough, from the Straits of Gibraltar through the Balkans to southern
Turkey . A NATO now preparing to take on a demanding stabilisation
mission in the Afghan capital. In short, a NATO transforming its
membership, its relationships, its capabilities and its missions. ‘ 4
He was very clear on NATO’s objectives: it wants to play a central
role in the strategy to counter all attempts of resistance and
opposition against worldwide dominance and hegemony under US
leadership.

Robertson gave some examples for 2003: `We have recently ended the
deployment of surveillance aircraft, missile defence systems and
nuclear, biological and chemical protection units to Turkey . We
continue to conduct extensive anti-terrorism maritime operations in
the Mediterranean . We remain decisively engaged in the Balkans. From
August, NATO will take the leading role in the International Security
Assistance Force in Kabul , Afghanistan . And last week, NATO agreed
to Poland ‘s request for Alliance support in the role that it is
taking on this summer in the stabilisation of Iraq .’ More money for
weapons, less money for social security and health’ The `peace and
stability’ that NATO pretends to defend is nothing but ensuring world
hegemony by all means necessary. The reform of 2003 containsfour
central points, as Robertson explained. First of all, a more flexible
command structure will take the lead of the alliance: ` All
operational commands will be under the control of the new Allied
Command Operations, based at SHAPE in Mons , Belgium ‘. Second, all
member countries made a series of concrete commitments to enhance
their military capacities, mainly their air and marine forces.

This will necessarily lead to an important increase of the defence
budgets of all NATO member states. Third, there is an agreement on `
the creation of a key new tool, the NATO Response Force. This will be
a robust rapid reaction fighting force that can be quickly deployed
anywhere in the world. It couldhave an early operational capability by
autumn this year’ . And finally, asRobertson explained, there is an `
important progress on missile defence, andour terrorism and nuclear,
biological and chemical defence packages ‘.

These reforms will be implemented rapidly, and Robertson is
optimistic: ` The world has changed fundamentally, to become more
complex and even more dangerous than before. But NATO has kept
pace. It has proved its resilience, strength and determination. It is
a decisive factor in our security and in wider stability. A force for
the future, already working for peace today .’ As part of the
`NATO Defence Capabilities Initiative’, NATOmember states have
committed themselves to increase their military abilities for
`power projection, mobility and increased interoperability’. This
will require significant additional military expenditures. European
NATO countries have already increased their expenditures for military
equipment by 11% in real terms since 1995.

Through NATO, the US is pushing Europe towards higher military
expenditure, while ensuring their dependence on the US . The US
military budget reached almost 400 billion dollar in 2003, while the
military expenses of its NATO allies totalled 165 billion dollar.

During the NATO summit of December 2001, Secretary General Robertson
insisted on an increase of these budgets. Italy announced an increase
from 1.5% to 2% of its GDP and France would increase its budget for
the acquisition of new equipment (+1.7%). In January 2003, the French
Parliament decided on an investment of 14.6 billion Euro over 5 years.

Belgium and Germany were criticised by NATO for using only 1.5% of
their GDP for military expenses. Germany decided to spend 7.8 billion
Euro per year for its defence by 2010, compared to 4.4 billion
today. (+ 78%).

Meanwhile, military budgets in the US and Canada have also increased
continuously over the past years. The military budgets of NATO
countries amounted to about 60% of the world’s total military spending
(US$798 billion) for the year 2000.

4. NATO’s future involvement in Iraq has already been decided Step by
step, NATO is taking up a position as an occupying force in countries
colonised by a US aggression. In Afghanistan , NATO has taken over the
final responsibility of the occupation. This was a new qualitative
step in NATO development. In December 2003, US Secretary of State
Colin Powell confirmedthat all NATO allies had unanimously agreed on a
higher degree of involvement in Iraq . ` Not one NATO-member was
against it or gave reasons not to participate’ , Powell said, ` not
even France and Germany ‘ . 5 Today, 18 of the 26 NATO members have
some kind of military presence in Iraq .

In February 2004, US ambassador to NATO Nicholas Burns spoke about
` a strong political will in the Alliance to do more in Iraq
‘. Washington suggested that NATO should take over the command of the
divisions in South-Central Iraq that are currently under the command
of Poland . But Burns added that the increase of NATO’s military
presence in Afghanistan would be central in the discussions in the
coming months. ` I think it is too early to discuss formally within
NATO on a formal role in Iraq . That discussion will come later, maybe
in spring or early summer’. 6 Following the pledge of Germany ,
France and Belgium , NATO will only be involved after the formal take
over of political power by the Iraqi’s at the end of June this
year. Even if the new Iraqi government will be a puppet regime
completely dependent on the United States, such a façade government
would open the way for a UN resolution giving a mandate to NATO for a
so-called `peace mission’. By the end of 2004 or early 2005, NATO
could be on the ground. Europe really wants to participate in a
(peaceful) occupation. Not because of its desire to restore peace and
sovereignty for the Iraqi people, but to ensureits part of the profits
for `our’ multinationals Of course, the actual developments
in Iraq will surely and decisively influence when and how NATO is to
participate in the occupation. But the decision has been taken. Only a
growing strength of the Iraqi resistance, and (also) the mobilisation
capacity of the peace movement all over the world and especially in
Europe , could still prevent this from happening.

5. United States versus Europe : growing contradictions Beyond any
doubt, the US is today’s only superpower with the strategy, the means
and the policy for ensuring and maintaining world hegemony. For the
United States , NATO remains an instrument to ensure this global
hegemonic order.

The US uses NATO to ensure its control over Europe and to prevent all
attempts of insubordination to its plans. In 1995 the Pentagon stated
that `NATO is the most important instrument for long lasting American
leadership over the European security situation’ 7. Steven Metz, an
expert of the US Army, alerted that ` (t)he US objective has to be
that the European defence capacity develops as a complement, while the
leading role of the NATO remains intact’. 8 Through NATO, the United
States continues to involve its allies in wars of aggression, like in
Yugoslavia , Afghanistan and Iraq . Even if the Secretary General of
NATO is always a European, the US only accepts to work with people who
ensure that this policy be put into practice. Former NATO Secretary
General Lord Robertson, for example, confirmed at the Defence Industry
Conference in London , on October 14, 2002 , that ` even in 2015, and
despite` indeed, in part because of – a more powerful Europe , the
US will provide the indispensable core around which most military
coalitions will be built ‘. 9 Current NATO Secretary General, the
Dutch former Foreign Minister Jaap de Hoop Scheffer, will need all his
persuasion power to rebuild transatlantic relations damaged by a row
between the United States and France and Germanyover the US-led war in
Iraq . But the US is confident: de Hoop Scheffer has always been a
very strong transatlantic. `If anyone from the transatlanticcamp would
be good at building bridges with France , he would ‘, a diplomatic
source told Reuters. 10 De Hoop Scheffer was welcomed with open arms
in the White House early 2003 for having lend Dutch political support
to the US-led war in Iraq . He is avery suitable candidate for the
Americans, but he is still acceptable to the Germans, the French and
the Belgians, as the Netherlands did not support the decision to go to
war in a military sense but only politically (even if afterwards they
sent troops to support the occupation). He is mainly an expression of
the existing power balance in NATO: Europe has no option but accepting
US rule.

The recent (and ongoing) war on Iraq shows serious contradictions
between the United States and the European Union. They are a clear
expression of the growing rivalry between the two Western economic
powers. This rivalry has been growing since 1989, when the fall of the
Soviet Union ended the sacred union against the communist
enemy. Belgian Prime Minister Guy Verhofstadt explained in February of
2003: ` As long as the divisions of the Red Army could reach the Rhine
in 48 hours, it was evident to maintain a blood band with our American
cousins. But today the Cold War is over, and the contradicting
viewpoints can be expressed more openly. From an economic point of
view, Europe became a world power. At the international level, Europe
takes an own profile, develops its own projects and shows its own
ambitions. That’s also what explains the tensions that appeared within
in Atlantic Alliance .’ 11 The differences of strategy between both
economic blocs arise from the necessity for Europe to win a more
important place in the domination of theworld, which can only be
achieved at the expense of the United States . The United States is a
declining economic power, caught up and even overtaken by the global
economic power of the European Union. But US military power remains
incomparably superior. In the end it is on this unequalled destructive
force that US imperialism is betting in order to maintain and
reinforce its domination and exploitation to the utmost. Europe ,
which is progressing only very timidlyin the construction of its Euro
Army, is trying to prevent the United States from playing its military
cards. Not because of Europe ‘s dislike of weapons, but because of its
lack of weapons.

The militarist objectives of the European oligarchy was already made
clear in September 1991, three months before the Maastricht summit,
when the European Round Table made its evaluation of the 1991 Gulf
War: `The Middle East crisis of 1990 has shown the difficulty to
transpose our technical and economic developments on the political
scene: there you have the European paradox, an economic giant but a
political dwarf. Europe had interests to defend in the Gulf, and ideas
on what was to be done. But when force was to be used, Europe had no
decision mechanisms nor the means that would have made it possible to
intervene. It is today an anachronism to pretend that the Union can
manage its economic questions in a satisfactory way while leaving the
questions of foreign policy to others’ . 12 Pro-free market New York
Times journalist Thomas Friedman showed clearly how the global economy
is linked to the war, when in March 1999, during the war against
Yugoslavia , he wrote: ` The hidden hand of the market willnever work
without a hidden fist – McDonald’s cannot flourish without McDonnell
Douglas, the builder of the F-15. And the hidden fist that keeps the
world safe for Silicon Valley’s technologies is called the United
States Army, Air Force and Marine Corps .’ 13 It is not superfluous to
recall that the European Union has seen itself as an institution at
the service of its own multinationals, andthat ` if McDonald’s needs
McDonnell, Danone also needs Dassault ‘. 14 Being a military dwarf,
Europe has to bet on the economic card to enter the Middle East . For
instance, Germany ‘s exports to Iran went up from 1.6 billion in 1999
to 2.33 billions in 2001. During the first five months of 2002, they
increased by 17% over the previous year. Germany has become the
biggest importer in the world of Iranian products, oil excluded.
Europe would also like to get rid of regimes that are too independent,
too attached to their sovereignty, too jealous of their own
development. It would like to set up pro-European regimes in Iraq ,
Iran , Syria and elsewhere by political means, in other words by
strengthening the pro-European opposition groups, the so-called `civil
society’. At the same time, however, the majority of European
countries are aware they cannot yet do without US military
power. Through the experience of Yugoslavia and – more sharply – the
actual contradictions in Iraq , the European Union is more and more
convinced of the necessity of having its own army.

Nevertheless, NATO remains the only framework in which Europe can
intervene militarily on a large scale in the world today.

Therefore most European states, even if they oppose the aggression
against Iraq , gave support to the US war efforts in Iraq in various
ways. The US army was allowed to use all the ports, airports and other
infrastructures of the NATO countries.

6. NATO’s expansion to the East After NATO’s annexation of the Czech
Republic , Hungary and Poland some years ago, the membership of
Bulgaria , Estonia , Latvia , Lithuania , Romania , Slovakia and
Slovenia recently accelerated NATO’s expansion to the East.

NATO’s expansion into Central and Eastern Europe is a means of
integrating the military forces of those countries under NATO (and
largely US) control.As military units within NATO, the armed forces of
the new NATO member states must submit to the demands for
standardisation of military training, weapons and other military
equipment. Requirements that new members standardise their military
equipment to NATO’s exacting specifications is a tremendous boon to US
and European military industries, that will benefit greatly from these
expanded export markets.

New NATO member states also loose sovereignty over other important
aspects of their armed forces, such as the command, control,
communications and intelligence functions, which also risk being
subsumed under the auspices of NATO standardisation.

The reasons for NATO’s eastward expansion are largely economic. For
instance, NATO’s military access and control over Eastern Europe helps
Western European corporations to secure strategic energy resources,
such as oil from the Caspian Sea and Central Asia . The US and Western
European corporations will greatly benefit from NATO’s control of the
oil corridor through the Caucasus Mountains . NATO wants its troops to
patrol this pipeline and to dominate the Armenian/Russian route to the
Caspian Sea . The Caucasus also links the Adriatic-Ceyhan-Baku
pipeline with oil-rich countries even farther east, in the former
Soviet Central Asia republics of Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan . Billions
of dollars in oil may someday flow through these corridors to Western
Europe for the benefit of Western-based oil companies.

This NATO enlargement has an important influence on the internal
contradictions within NATO. From Estonia to Bulgaria , the United
States now has 10 new — or newish — states within NATO that
Washington can count on for support when contradictions US-European
contradictions intensify in the future. These countries’ membership in
NATO strengthens the US relative to Germany and France, US
imperialism’s `Old Europe’ rivals. It puts US forces near Russia ‘s
border, with air bases only five minutes away from St. Petersburg
. And young workers in these countries are an additional source of
cannon fodder for US military occupations. They are already stationed
in Iraq , Afghanistan and Yugoslavia .

15 But Washington had other reasons for this enlargement. Before 1989,
the people living in seven new member states were part of the
socialist camp. Bulgaria and Romania were independent
countries. Estonia , Latvia and Lithuania were republics in the Soviet
Union . Slovakia was part of Czechoslovakia . Slovenia was the richest
republic of Yugoslavia . The people in all those countries had access
to free education, medical care and nearly full employment. Pay
differences were relatively small. Now education, medical care and
everything else is subject to the `free’ market, dominated by the
Western monopolies. The few very rich people are rich because of their
connections with those monopolies.

There are many unemployed and otherwise very poor workers. Living
conditions, especially for women workers, have deteriorated
sharply. The governments, who accepted all the requirements for
entering NATO, want the alliance membership for future protection
should the working class in their countries revolt.

7. A growing pressure for a European Army The European army is at the
order of the day, because the European superpower wants to play a role
in the struggle for the redivision of the world that was started when
the USSR disappeared.

The `war on terrorism’ is the pretext of a common struggle where
`Americans and Europeans are partners in common values that are beyond
discussion’ 16. No European government doubts the necessity of
NATO. Even those who are most` European’ know that, for the defence of
their common interests, they still need – for many years – NATO and
its infrastructure. Verhofstadt explains his concept of the European
army as a `European pillar within NATO’. He adds: ` The
solidarity within the Alliance risks to disappear because of its lack
of equilibrium: one superpower and 18 states, mainly European, without
a common line on defence matters, and of which some still think of
being a superpower, while compared to the US, they do not weigh much.’
But for France and Germany (and Belgium ), the European pillar of NATO
is only a phase towards the construction of an independent European
army comparable to that of the United States . Thus, in certain
regions, those who are considered `terrorists’ for some, are not
necessarily the`terrorists’ for others.

The states that ensure the oil and gas for the European continent are,
in many occasions, in conflict with Washington . These `rogue
states’, in the definition of the White House, ensure 27% of
European oil. And this is without counting the 14% of Russia , the 3%
of Algeria and the 2% of Venezuela , all of them countries that do not
have very good relations with US imperialism.

This is an essential point on which European and US interests risk to
increasingly diverge in the future. The Middle East and Central Asia
are more important for the oil provision of Europe than for the US
. In this way, this part of the world is strategic for Europe (and for
Japan , and for China , the rest of Asia and Russia ). Therefore, the
fact that the US is interested to control this region is an
affirmation of its desire of hegemony. While at the same time, it is
`the’ place where this supremacy could be challenged.

The confrontation on Iraq during 2002-2003 shows the growing
contradictions between US and European imperialism. Clearly, this has
less to do with `weapons of mass destruction’ than with the
organisation of a new order in the Arab world.

Thus the demand to accelerate the setting up of a European military
force, capable of defending the interests of the European monopolies
whenever these diverge from those of the US or another rival or
enemy. Ten years ago, France and Germany already developed the Euro
corps in which Belgium , Luxemburg and Spain are likewise
participating. It was seen as the start of the future European
army. Since then, the pillar of common foreign and security policy
(CFSP) has been introduced in the Maastricht Treaty (1993). 17 During
the Koln summit of June 1999, one month after the war against
Yugoslavia , it was decided thata European `rapid intervention
force’ of 60,000 soldiers had to be created.

But contradictions remain and are growing since the Iraq war. While
the UK clearly seas the European army as `a pillar of NATO’,
France and Germany (and Belgium) support the constitution op a
`European vanguard’ composedof the countries that want to
accelerate the development of a `European Security and Defence
Policy’.

8. Conclusion The French-German-Belgian axis affirms that the
constitution of a European army is a necessity to develop a
counterweight to the hegemonic policy of the US . They present Europe
as a humane, social, ecological and multilateral alternative to the US
. Verhofstadt: `The European Union has a moremoderate profile in the
world than the United States , without being inferior to it. Europe is
presented as an example of multilateral cooperation. Europe is seen as
a continent sensible to social and ecological problems, as a continent
that understands that its own wealth is vulnerable if most of the
people of the world are suffering from hunger.’ 18 We do not agree
with this statement. The European Army is not a solution for the US
war policy. It is also an imperialist army, in the service of economic
interests of the European monopolies. Its creation increases the
danger of war, leads to the militarisation of the economy, the
explosion of the military budgets and the breakdown of democratic
rights.

If the ` Europe of the monopolies’ speaks about diplomacy,
dialogueand multilateralism, it is mainly because it has not yet the
means to impose its views against US military power. The European past
in Africa , Latin America , Algeria or Asia shows the ferocity of
European imperialism when and where it was dominant. The European army
will only accelerate the rivalry and the dangerfor a major world
war. The more this army will be able to develop its capacity for
foreign interventions, the more it will reinforce the political
capacity of the EU, the more it will make possible an independent
European policy in favour of the European multinationals, the more it
will offer the possibility to the EU to defend its zones of influence
against eventual competitors, e.g. the US. This can lead to important
conflicts, as has been seen in the two previous world wars.

One final comment. Undoubtedly, the crisis over Iraq has severely
divided NATO. But towards the Middle East , the common interests of
Europe and United States are – in the current situation on the ground
in Iraq` overwhelmingly more important than what opposes US and
EU. Both want to ensure a `stable’ Middle East region. The US is
being forced by reality to let its partners get into the business. And
Europe is eager to do so. Notwithstanding all the rancour that might
still exist within the alliance, NATO is undergoing a profound
transformation into an organisation ` whose main missions are
collective security and crisis management and whose main centre of
activity is increasingly located in the Muslim world. NATO now
provides security in Afghanistan . And beyond that, NATO is now
preparing to move into the Middle East .’ 19 If and how NATO will
enter Iraq will depend on the resistance the Iraqi people develop
towards their occupiers. ` Although NATO’s current priority is
Afghanistan and it is reluctant to enter Iraq unless the members
united behind the idea, the principle of engaging the Middle East is
not the subject of an argument. Rather the question is how to do so,
i.e. the modalities of this engagement. In fact, NATO is clearly
moving to create a stronger basis for its relations with the Middle
East . NATO’s new plan, a so called `Greater Middle East
Initiative’, will be unveiled at its forthcoming Istanbul summit in
June .’ 20 To block the US war preparations and to preserve world
peace, the peoples of the world are right to demand the withdrawal of
the US occupation troops from the Balkans, Afghanistan and Iraq , the
dissolution of NATO and the dismantling of all US military bases
abroad. The worldwide antiwar movementis growing, while enhanced US
aggressivity and NATO’s complicity will help us to reinforce its
anti-imperialist character.

We oppose any increase of military budgets, any development or
production of new weapons. Not one cent, not one man for the
imperialist army. No money for imperialist war, but for education,
health and employment. We support the right of oppressed nations to
defend themselves. We struggle for non-aggression pacts, with the
purpose of preserving the sovereignty and the collective security of
the nations.

http://www.anti-imperialism.net/lai/texte.phtml?section=3DCMBC&amp
www.stopUSA.be

UNDP Enhances Technical Capacities of Municipalities

United Nations Development Programme Country Office in Armenia
14, Karl Liebknecht Street, Yerevan 375010, Armenia
Contact: Aramazd Ghalamkaryan
Tel: (374 1) 56 60 73
Fax: (374 1) 54 38 11
E-mail: [email protected]
Web:

UNDP COUNTRY OFFICE IN ARMENIA
19 April, 2004

UNDP ENHANCES TECHNICAL CAPACITIES OF MUNICIPALITIES

Yerevan, Armenia

Today the Ministry of Territorial Administration of the Republic of
Armenia and the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) held an
event to discuss financial decentralisation and hand-over computer
hardware and databases to municipalities. Mr. Vache Terteryan, the
Deputy Minister of Territorial Administration, Mr. Seyran Avagyan, Head
of the Local Self-Government Committee at the Presidency and Ms. Lise
Grande, UN Resident Coordinator and UNDP Resident Representative
presided over the event.

In addition to providing technical support to 12 Yerevan districts and
the Yerevan Municipality, UNDP is handing-over key databases including
one on conditions in 914 communities and a second database on the
National Human Development Survey, which was conducted in 2003 and
covered 170 rural and 44 urban communities. UNDP will also provide
special software to the municipalities and the Ministry, helping to
strengthen their capacity in statistical analyses.

According to Ms. Grande: `During last few years UNDP has initiated and
successfully implemented several projects to support the process of
decentralisation and community development in Armenia. Very soon, from
May 7 to 14, UNDP Armenia will help to organise a Community Week to
raise public awareness about ongoing legislative and other reforms
affecting communities and contribute to discussions on community-related
issues.’

Mr. Terteryan noted: `The cooperation between the Ministry of
Territorial Administration and UNDP Armenia Office has a long history
and is highly successful. The Government of Armenia has adopted an
approach to delegate more authority to our communities, but we want to
ensure that the communities are ready to accept and fully implement
those rights and authorities for the benefit of the population. In this
respect, it is highly important to enhance the technical capacities and
to strengthen human resources of municipalities. We are grateful for
UNDP’s attention and ongoing support to our efforts in this area, and we
are confident that our successful cooperation will continue in future.`

Country Background: In 2002, the Government adopted a new Law on Local
Self-Government, recognising communities as legal entities and
transferring land and property to them. As part of a on-going commitment
to fiscal decentralisation, communities have also been granted a share
of the income and profit tax as well as nature protection fees. In
addition, 100 percent of property and land tax revenues have been
transferred to communities.

***
UNDP is the UN’s global development network. It advocates for change and
connects countries to knowledge, experience and resources to help people
build a better life. We are on the ground in 166 countries, working with
them on their own solutions to global and national development
challenges. As they develop local capacity, they draw on the people of
UNDP and our wide range of partners.

***
For further information, please contact Mr. Aramazd Ghalamkaryan, UNDP
Armenia at [email protected].

***
This and all previous press releases by UNDP Country Office in Armenia
are available at If you do not want to receive the
subsequent press releases by UNDP Country Office in Armenia, please send
a message to [email protected] containing ‘unsubscribe your-email-address’ in
the subject line.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.undp.am
http://www.undp.am.

Antelias: Rwanda Delegation to Take Part in April 24 Commemorations

PRESS RELEASE
Catholicosate of Cilicia
Communication and Information Department
Tel: (04) 410001, 410003
Fax: (04) 419724
E- mail: [email protected]
Web:

PO Box 70 317
Antelias-Lebanon

Armenian version:

A HIGH-RANKING DELEGATION FROM RWANDA WILL TAKE PART IN 24TH APRIL
COMMEMORATIONS IN ANTELIAS

Antelias, Lebanon – On the occasion of 24th April, the Armenian Martyrs’
Day, a series of commemorations and activities will take place in the Armenian
Catholicosate of Cilicia in Antelias, Lebanon. This year, in addition to
religious and political functions, an international conference on “Genocide,
Impunity and Justice” will take place in Antelias which is organized by the
Catholicosate of Cilica under the auspices of His Excellency General Emile
Lahoud, the President of the Republic of Lebanon. Several university
professors, lawyers and special guests will take part in this conference.

The representative of the president of Rwanda together with a high-ranking
delegation will also take part in this event. The representative of the
president of Rwanda will address the conference.

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The Armenian Catholicosate of Cilicia is one of the two Catholicosates of
the Armenian Orthodox Church. For detailed information about the history and
the mission of the Cilician Catholicosate, you may refer to the web page of
the Catholicosate, The Cilician Catholicosate, the
administrative center of the church is located in Antelias, Lebanon.

http://www.cathcil.org/
http://www.cathcil.org/v04/doc/Armenian.htm#23
http://www.cathcil.org/