BAKU: British-inspired Azeri military doctrine to be ready by mid-20

British-inspired Azeri military doctrine to be ready by mid-2005

Sources:

ANS TV, Baku
22 Dec 04

Assa-Irada, Baku
22 Dec 04

[Presenter] Azerbaijan’s military doctrine and security concept
will be ready by mid-2005. Then the documents will be reported
[presumably submitted] to the president of the country. A special
working group is now drawing up the documents. The aide on military
issues to the Azerbaijani president, Vahid Aliyev, has said that the
military doctrine and security concept will cover all spheres of life
in the country.

[Vahid Aliyev, speaking to microphone] The armed forces, security
bodies, ecology and all other aspects should be taken into
consideration. These documents must be worked out conceptually
and in such a way that they will give priority to Azerbaijan’s
interests. The Azerbaijani laws on national security, reconnaissance
and counter-reconnaissance were drafted, examined by experts, endorsed
by the Milli Maclis and adopted this year. The appropriate bodies
will abide by these laws in their work now.

[The Azerbaijani news agency Assa-Irada quoted Aliyev as saying on
the same day that “on the president’s instruction, we are working on
the security concept and military doctrine considering international
experience” and, in particular, that of Germany and Great Britain]

BAKU: Azeri speaker, Iraqi envoy discuss Karabakh conflict,expanding

Azeri speaker, Iraqi envoy discuss Karabakh conflict, expanding ties

Trend news agency
23 Dec 04

Baku, 22 December, Trend correspondent X. Azizov: The Azerbaijani
speaker [Murtuz Alasgarov] received the Iraqi ambassador to Azerbaijan,
Umar Ismai’l, on 22 December.

Alasgarov said during the meeting that Azerbaijan is interested in
the development of ties with the Iraqi people which has the same
religious origin, Trend news agency reported.

Alasgarov said that Azerbaijan is watching the Iraqi developments
with great interest and wishes the restoration of peace and calm
in the country. Then the speaker told the guest about the roots and
consequences of the Nagornyy Karabakh conflict and Azerbaijan’s fair
position on the settlement of the conflict. He noted that as a result
of the policy conducted by [Azerbaijani] President Ilham Aliyev,
Azerbaijan will soon liberate its lands.

The ambassador said that the Iraqi people is also interested in the
development of ties with Azerbaijan.

We will try our best to develop Iraqi-Azerbaijani interparliamentary
relations after the parliamentary elections in Iraq in January 2005,
he said.

He said he will work in the sphere of developing economic, cultural
and political relations. The ambassador also said that not only the
Iraqi, but also the Turkoman people were concerned over the Karabakh
conflict. We support a speedy solution to the conflict within the
framework of Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity, Ismai’l said.

Accession to NATO isn’t on current agenda of Armenia – minister

Accession to NATO isn’t on current agenda of Armenia – minister
By Tigran Liloyan

ITAR-TASS News Agency
December 17, 2004 Friday

YEREVAN, December 17 — The accession to NATO is not on the current
foreign political agenda of Armenia, Defense Minister Serzh Sarkisyan
said at Friday debates organized by the Public Dialog and Development
Center.

He was speaking about regional security in the South Caucasus.

“At the same time, Armenia is realistic about regional security. It
does not make premature statements but develops cooperation with
the North Atlantic Alliance step by step,” the minister said. “In
this light relations with NATO have a serious role in the provision
of Armenian security. Finally, our country has chosen European
development, and NATO is a leading organization ensuring European
security.”

Chirac insta a Turquia a reconocer genocidio contra armenios

Chirac insta a Turquia a reconocer genocidio contra armenios

Deutsche Presse-Agentur
December 17, 2004, Friday

Bruselas, 17 dic — El presidente frances, Jacques Chirac, insto hoy
a Turquia a reconocer el genocidio cometido en Armenia durante la I
Guerra Mundial.

“El trabajo de la memoria debe ser visto como una necesidad
irrenunciable”, indico el mandatario en Bruselas tras la cumbre de
la Union Europea (UE).

En caso de que esto no suceda, los franceses seguramente lo tendran
en cuenta para el planificado referendum sobre el ingreso de Turquia
a la UE.

En 1915 Francia abrio las puertas a muchos inmigrantes armenios.

Europe must clutch the cloak of history

Europe must clutch the cloak of history
By ADRIAN HAMILTON

The Independent – United Kingdom
Dec 17, 2004

The vote this week of the European Parliament in favour of starting
membership talks with Turkey should presage a decision by the EU
leaders today to start the whole process rolling.

One says “should” partly because one can never be quite certain in
Europe that its leaders will do what is required of them – witness the
extraordinary about-turns over the European constitution and the rows
over keeping to the rules of the stability pact. The major players,
including President Chirac, with important caveats, and Chancellor
Schroder and Prime Minister Tony Blair, more enthusiastically, have
all said that they will give it the green light.

But there’s a lot of bad politics about the Turkish application at the
moment, especially in Austria, Germany, France and the Netherlands
where the right-wing anti-immigration parties are rearing their
head. Even Chirac has had to promise a referendum to let the French
people decide when negotiations finally come to fruition.

Such hesitations are understandable, but miss the urgency and
importance of the moment. To say no at this stage, or to fob Turkey off
with a “country membership” or something less than full conjunction
would be an act of religious prejudice and historic recidivism of
the worst and most parochial sort. Europe has an opportunity to reach
out to a whole new world of a bigger, wider and more diverse Europe.

All the objections and the last-minute hurdles being put forward
against Turkey – the demands that it admit to the Armenian genocide,
the imposition of additional rules on labour movement, the proposal
for a “privileged partnership” instead of membership – are little
more than masks for a much more fundamental fear and dislike, and
that is of Turkey as a Muslim state. Even Nicolas Sarkozy, the world’s
favourite French politician, has made some deeply dispiriting remarks
about non-Catholics. If anything, Europe should be wanting Turkey in
precisely because it is a liberal, modernising country of Muslims
(officially it is still a secular state, although it is now headed
by an Islamic party).

In that sense Tayyip Erdogan, the Turkish Prime Minster, is quite
right to insist, as he did in The Independent earlier this week,
that Turkey will not accept second-best, special requirements, lesser
membership or anything other than the straight road to membership
that every other country has followed. Anything less would be an
insult, not least to all those in Turkey which have pushed, harried
and argued for the huge changes that have been needed to get Turkey
to this point of even beginning serious negotiations,

Of course Turkey has a long way to go. Anyone who knows Turkey also
knows how very far it is from properly integrating its Kurdish
minority, accepting even a minimum standard for its workers and
instituting the kind of law that would bring it into line with Western
Europe. We are not talking here of a neat homogenous country like
Sweden, but a largely Islamic nation developed through four centuries
of empire and then dramatically wrenched away from imperial habit to
modern national state by Ataturk after the First World War.

The benefit of that change is to produce a formally secular state
which, at least among the elite, feels its future looking westwards
and its place in Europe. The price has been a state that is fiercely
nationalistic, with an army at the centre of its constitution and an
attitude to its Kurdish minority and to human rights that has more
in common with Moscow than Brussels.

Far from that being a bar to full membership, however, it is the
very reason we should be insisting on it. Joining Europe brings
with it stringent obligations in a whole host of fields, from equal
opportunities to civil rights and financial disciplines. Lock Turkey
in those negotiations, and keep absolutely firm on their requirements,
and you help all those in Turkey wanting modernisation. Accept it as
something less than an equal European and you accept it as a basically
different country with lesser standards for its own people. Which is
why so many Kurds and even Armenians want the negotiations to go ahead.

Voting today for negotiations to start does not mean immediate
membership. Talks could last a decade and there is no reason why the
EU should compromise its own principles, at it seemed to be doing with
Romania, in order to include it. But there is equally no reason to
make Turkey a special case in negative terms, forcing on it special
obligations which are not true of everyone.

Of course politicians have to take note of their domestic opinion. At
a time when a leading Dutch documentary director has been murdered in
the Netherlands, 191 have been killed in the Madrid bombing and the
police forces of almost every European country are issuing warnings
about the dangers of attacks from Islamic extremists, now is not a good
time to talk of Turkey’s potential contribution to multiculturalism
in the Union.

But politics has to be about the promotion of causes in inconvenient
times as well as propitious ones. The Muslim aspect to Turkey’s
membership is important, not only because to turn it down would
be to send such hostile messages to Muslims within Europe as well
as its neighbours outside. Yet in some ways one can exaggerate this
aspect. Turkey has its own history and ethnic background which make it
quite separate from the Arabs and Iranians around it, or the Pakistani,
North African and Bangladeshi Muslims populations within Europe.

More profoundly, Turkey is important because it represents a whole
new leap towards regional integration in Europe. It brings with it not
just an Islamic background but a military force in Nato, a reserve of
labour and interconnections that spread out to Central Asia and beyond.

This year’s enlargement of the Union from 15 to 25 members was meant
to be the end of the story for the time being. But everywhere round
Europe – in Ukraine, Georgia, Turkey and now Romania – the older order
is collapsing and new democratic governments are coming to power who
see in the EU both a path to the future and a means of consolidating
change. Belarus and even some Arab states around the Mediterranean
could well follow in the coming years.

It’s a development most European politicians have been slow to grasp
and fearful of embracing. The EU was desperately slow to respond
to Viktor Yuschenko’s call for EU partnership, and to the change
in government in Bucharest. Even though they know that existing
enlargement has changed forever the tight, inward-looking club of
Western Europe, the instinctive response of EU governments is to look
inwards and backwards. It won’t work. The dam has broken, and leaders
have the choice of either embracing this change or turning aside and
pretending it isn’t happening for fear that they cannot control it.

In the nervy and uncertain days before the fall of the Berlin Wall
and the reunification of Germany, Chancellor Kohl liked to quote
Otto Bismark’s statement about clutching the cloak of history (God,
as he called it) as He swept by. Kohl took the chance, and he was no
Bismark. Today’s European leaders are arguably even less statesmen than
Kohl. But history is passing by, and on Friday, and over the coming
months in Central Europe, they have the chance to touch its cloak.

[email protected]

EP Leaders Deliver Opinion: Let Negotiations Begin without Delay

EP Leaders Deliver Opinion: Let Negotiations Begin without Delay

Zaman, Turkey
Dec 16 2004

The European Parliament (EP) has advised European Union (EU) leaders,
who meet today at the EU summit, to begin full membership negotiations
with Turkey immediately.

The Parliament refused to insist on recognition of the so-called
Armenian genocide allegations and rejected proposals of privileged
partnership. The proposal decision was passed by 407 votes against
262 in the vote held yesterday. The report was prepared by Dutch
Christian parliamentarian Camiel Eurlings and the decision, though it
has no binding quality, has importance as it reflects the view of EP
before the summit which will have historic importance for Turkey. In
the general vote it was observed that Socialist, Liberal and Green
parliamentarians and British, Spanish and Italian parliamentarians
of the Christian Democrat group voted in favor of Turkey. In the
decision Turkey was praised for its reforms and it was noted that
the negotiations were the turning point of a long process, though it
did not mean that the process was open ended and would end in full
membership. The following articles are included in the report and
recommendation decision approved by the EP:

Full membership depends on the mutual efforts of Turkey and the EU.

The EU Commission can suspend the negotiations when it is necessary.

The process of negotiation will be long. Free movement and restrictions
on agriculture should not affect negatively Turkey’s efforts for
membership.

Six official changes in the Progress Report of EU Commission should
be approved.

Full membership negotiations cannot be completed before the targets
envisaged for the 2014 EU budget.

Turkey must solve its problems with its neighbors according to the
convention of United Nations (UN).

There must not be restrictions in the activities of minorities in
Turkey. In terms of this, the Heybeliada Seminary must be opened.

Alevism must be recognized and protected. Cem houses must be recognized
as religious centers. Religious education must be voluntary. Protective
system in South Eastern must be abolished.

Turkey must open its Armenian border. Both governments must support
a mutual peace process. Talking after the vote, Camiel Eurlings said
that after the start of negotiations, the application of political
criteria should have priority.

Iraqi Tells Pope That Christians Will Be Defended

Zenit News Agency, Italy
Dec 14 2004

Iraqi Tells Pope That Christians Will Be Defended

Foreign Minister Meets in Wave of Attacks on Churches

VATICAN CITY, DEC. 13, 2004 (Zenit.org).- Iraqi Foreign Minister
Hoshyar Zebari told John Paul II that his government is committed to
defending the Mideast nation’s Christians, targets of terrorist
attacks in recent months.

Zebari met the Pope today in audience and afterward conferred with
Vatican Secretary of State Cardinal Angelo Sodano, according to
Vatican spokesman Joaquín Navarro Valls.

“In the course of the conversations a review was made of the
situation in Iraq and the Middle East in general,” the director of
the Vatican press office said in a statement.

The foreign minister “thanked His Holiness and his aides for the help
they have always given to Iraq and confirmed his government’s
commitment to promote religious freedom and, in particular, the
defense of Christian communities,” Navarro Valls stated.

“In the discussion with the minister the painful plague of terrorism
was deplored once again, hoping for a speedy return to respect for
moral values which are the basis of all civilizations,” the
spokesman’s statement concluded.

Two attacks in Mosul on Dec. 7 destroyed an Armenian Catholic church
in Mosul and the Chaldean bishop’s palace.

They were the latest of a series of attacks against churches, which
began in early August, when four churches in Baghdad and one in Mosul
were hit, killing 11 people and wounding dozens. Attacks against
stores owned by Christians had started earlier.

Christians in Iraq number about 800,000, or 3% of the population.
Chaldean-rite Catholics account for 70% of the Christians.

Zebari’s visit to the Vatican came weeks after the Pope’s meeting
with Iraqi Prime Minister Ayad Allawi on Nov. 4.

In that meeting, John Paul II condemned the present “senseless
violence” and encouraged the establishment of democracy in Iraq.

On Nov. 15, the Holy Father received the letters of credence of
Albert Edward Ishmael Yelda, the new ambassador of Iraq to the Holy
See.

Through him, the Pontiff appealed to the Iraqi government to
recognize “the right to freedom of worship and religious teaching,”
and assured him of the Catholic Church’s collaboration and, in
particular, of Chaldean Catholics, to “build a more peaceful and
stable nation.”

ANCC: Armenian delegation meet’s prime minister and senior ministers

PRESS RELEASE
ARMENIAN NATIONAL COMMITTEE OF CANADA
3401 Olivar-Asselin
Montréal, Québec
H4J 1L5
Tél. (514) 334-1299 Fax (514) 334-6853

13 December 2004

Contacts: Shant Karabajak 514-334-1299
Roupen Kouyoumdjian 514-336-7095
Aris Babikian 416-497-8972

Armenian delegation meet’s prime minister and senior ministers

Toronto- Representatives of the Armenian National Committee of Canada
(ANCC), the Armenian National Committee of Toronto (ANCT) and the
Armenian Revolutionary Federation Youth Organization (ARF-YOC), attended
a fund-raising reception, on December 2, organized by the Liberal Party
of Canada. The guest speaker was the Prime Minister of Canada, the Right
Hon. Paul Martin. In his speech, the prime minister touched upon the
recent visit of U.S. President George W. Bush to Canada, Canada-U.S.
bilateral relations, Canada ‘ s commitment to human rights around the
world, the Darfur crisis, the Israel-Palestine peace process, the
upcoming Ukrainian, Palestinian, and Iraqi elections. The prime minister
emphasized that Canada, as a middle power, has an important role to play
in the above issues.

During the reception ANCC, ANCT and ARF-YOC delegates met the prime
minister and Minister of National Defense, Bill Graham; Minister of
Human Resources and Skills Development, Joseph Volpe; Minister of
International Trade, James Peterson; Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration, Judy Sgro; Minister of State (families and caregivers),
Tony Ianno. The establishment of a Canadian embassy in Armenia and the
inclusion of Armenia in the Canadian International Development Agency’s
(CIDA) projects were highlighted by the Armenian delegates. The
ministers promised to follow up on the issues raised during the talks.

The large number of our delegates and their participation in the talks
was greatly appreciated by reception organizers.

-30-

Countries Weighing Troop Withdrawal after the Iraqi Gen’l Elections

Donga, South Korea
Dec 10 2004

Countries Carefully Weighing Troop Withdrawal after the Iraqi General
Elections

DECEMBER 10, 2004 22:25
by Ho-Gab Lee Hun-Joo Cho ([email protected] [email protected])

There was a time when a total of 35 countries had their troops in
Iraq after the Iraq war started in March 2003. Yet, more and more
countries are now busy withdrawing or reducing their troops.

As of December 10, the number of countries with troops in Iraq has
been reduced to 28, excluding the U.S.

Seven countries withdrew their troops this year, and three other
countries are planning to do so by May of next year. The main reason
is the ever-worsening security situation in Iraq.

Domino Effect of Withdrawal and Reduction of Troops-

As of February 2004, a total of 35 nations had dispatched troops to
Iraq at the request of the U.S. However, currently there are 158,900
troops from 28 countries stationed in Iraq. Excluding U.S. troops,
the number of troops stands at a mere 3,900.

Starting with troop withdrawal by Nicaragua in February, seven
countries have pulled their troops entirely out of Iraq including
Spain (early April), the Dominican Republic (early May), Honduras
(late May), the Philippines (July), Thailand (late August), and New
Zealand (late September). Spain pulled their troops out as their
government changed, mainly due to the shock caused by the tragic
Madrid bombing. Other countries decided to withdraw troops because
domestic public opinion became increasingly hostile toward the
dispatch of troops, as there is little sign of improvement in the
Iraqi security situation.

In addition, Hungary is planning to pull out troops by late December.
Poland and the Netherlands are scheduled to do so by January and
March of next year, respectively.

An increasing number of countries are planning to reduce their troop
size, if not complete withdrawal.

Four countries, Ukraine (200 troops), Moldova (12 troops), Norway
(150 troops) and Bulgaria (50 troops), have already reduced their
troop size. Poland has decided to cut some of their troops next year.

It is highly likely that some of the countries which still have their
troops on Iraqi soil will announce troop withdrawal or reduction if
the Iraqi general elections scheduled for January 30, 2005 are
successfully carried out.

Meanwhile, there are countries planning to dispatch or increase their
troops in Iraq. Armenia and Fiji announced their decision to send
troops. Georgia, Romania, and Albania have all promised to send
additional troops. However, the countries are not likely to deliver
the promise anytime soon, as they attached a condition that their
troops should be under the flag of the United Nations.

The Japanese Public is against Prolonged Troops Dispatch-

After the Japanese government decided to prolong the stay of
Self-Defense Forces (SDF) by one year on December 9, the Asahi
newspaper strongly blamed the Japanese government in an editorial it
ran the next day.

The paper strongly accused the government’s decision, saying, `More
than 60 percent of the public is against the prolonged troop
deployment. The cause of the Iraq war has been denied as many
countries are pulling out or reducing their troops.’

The leader of the main opposition Democratic Party, Katsuya Okada,
has said that he would urge the Japanese again to pull out the SDF
from Iraq in the plenary session of parliament next year.

As the SDF is not allowed to engage in battle, according to the
Japanese constitution, the Dutch troops have undertaken patrol
operations. The problem is that the Dutch troops will leave Iraq in
March of next year. It is expected that argument for troop pullout in
Japan would gain steam again after March, especially if Japanese
casualties occur by attacks from Iraqi insurgents.

Georgia FM: Democratic reform in Ukraine will help Russia,

Agence France Presse — English
December 10, 2004 Friday 7:15 PM GMT

AFP Interview: Democratic reform in Ukraine will help Russia, says
Georgian FM

MOSCOW

Georgian Foreign Minister Salome Zurabishvili said on Friday that
Russia should realise the benefits for itself of a process of
democratic reform in Ukraine, currently undergoing a period of
political crisis.

Speaking to AFP by phone from the Georgian capital Tbilisi,
Zurabishvili said that in order for the rerun of the second round of
Ukrainian presidential elections to take place peacefully, Russia
must be “warned against the temptation to meddle.”

She said in addition that as many observers as possible should be
deployed in the country for the vote, scheduled to take place on
December 26.

“If Ukraine becomes a democratic country at the frontier of Europe
there can only be winners,” including Russia, she said, adding that
“having borders with stable, democratic countries is something that
could set (Russia) along the same path.”

“Everything must be done to encourage Russia down this path, one
which is difficult to take,” she said.

“What is happening in Russia amounts to an internal decolonisation.
We must encourage them, support them, and help them down this
difficult path, the only one possible if Russia is to evolve in a way
that is sufficiently responsible and safe for both itself and its
neighbours,” she added.

As far as the recent strong criticism levelled by Moscow over the
West’s alleged interference in Ukraine was concerned, and in
particular comments by Russian President Vladimir Putin, Zurabishvili
spoke of a “constant swing between signs that Russia is moving
towards a possible normalisation and and signs that it is slipping
backwards.”

Questioned about the Russian accusations, Zurabishvili said that
there had been no intervention.

“We did not intervene in favour of one candidate of the other. We
intervened in favour of a democratic process,” she said.

“As long as Russia imagines that support for democracy, whether it is
in the Caucasus, Ukraine or elsewhere, is something that is directed
against it, Moscow will fail to understand the way the world is
going.”

The Georgian foreign minister described Moscow’s manifestation of
discontent as “a return to the instincts of the Soviet Union.”

“The big difference is that it does not have any effect any more.
Russian short fuses, which in the past petrified the West, are today
received in a more measured, philosophical way… and do not achieve
the desired effect.”

Zurabishvili also called on Russia to keep out of Georgia’s quarrels
with the separatist republic of Abkhazia, saying that Moscow must
“understand that former Soviet republics had become independent
countries” and that Moscow could not interfere directly in their
affairs.

Abkhazia has de facto independence from Georgia since it defeated
Georgian troops with the help of Russian mercenaries in the early
1990s in the aftermath of the breakup of the Soviet Union.

On the recent decision by Azerbaijan to shut down its cargo rail
traffic to other Caucasus republics because it feared that some of
the goods were being delivered via Georgia to its arch-foe Armenia,
Zurabishvili said Georgia had good relations with both countries.

She said Tbilisi had agreed to prevent transit through its territory
of military goods. But she added: “We refuse to take any economic
sanctions against Armenia.”

She said that if Georgia was anything other than neutral in the
dispute between the two countries, “we would enter into a logic of
escalation which would be not only damaging for us and for our
neighbours, but for the whole region.”