Vladimir Naumov To Take Part In Meeting Of CIS Council Of InteriorMi

VLADIMIR NAUMOV TO TAKE PART IN MEETING OF CIS COUNCIL OF INTERIOR MINISTERS IN YEREVAN ON SEPTEMBER 29-30

National Legal Internet Portal, Belarus
Sept 27 2005

Issues on the fight against corruption in the CIS member-states will
be considered on September 29-30 in the Armenian capital Yerevan at
a meeting of the CIS council of interior ministers. Head of the law
enforcement bodies of this republic Vladimir Naumov will take part
in the meeting as well, BelTA was informed in the information and
public relations department of the interior ministry of Belarus.

The participants of the meeting will discuss intensification of
the cooperation between the CIS law enforcement bodies in combating
illegal migration and will analyze the course of implementation of
the plan of the CIS council of interior ministers on counteracting
terrorism for 2005. They will also consider possible creation of a
periodical of the council.

Within the framework of the sitting in Yerevan Belarus and Armenia
plan to sign a bilateral protocol on cooperation between the interior
ministry of the Republic of Belarus and the police of the Republic
of Armenia for 2006-2007.

Iran To Build 170m Power Plant In Armenia

IRAN TO BUILD 170M POWER PLANT IN ARMENIA

Mehr News Agency, Iran
Sept 26 2005

TEHRAN, Sept. 26 (MNA) – Mohsen Shaterzadeh, an official of MAPNA
International Company, said on Monday that Iran would construct
a combined cycle power plant in Armenia at an overall cost of 170
million euros within the next three years.

Initially, several gas units will be added to the current steam
units. The Harazdan Power Plant was constructed by Russia nine years
ago with 80 percent physical progress. However, it remained incomplete
due to the internal situation of Russia after the collapse of the
USSR and separation of Armenian, he stated.

Shaterzadeh added that in his recent visit to Iran, the Armenian
energy minister held negotiations with the managing director of
MAPNA Co. as well as the Iranian energy minister of the time, and
called for completing Harazdan by the Iranian company. Finally, the
cooperation agreement was signed between MAPNA and the Armenian part,
he further said.

According to the agreement, the Iranian expertise team was dispatched
to Armenia last winter for conducting the primary estimations; they
set the figure at 9 million euro for completing the fifth unit of
Harazdan Steam Power Plant, he explained.

He also maintained, “The production capacity of Harazdan power plant
is 325 MW and the whole equipment were provided by Russia.” MAPNA
has allocated credit facility of nearly $2 million to the Armenian
part to conduct the primary studies.

The construction project of the combined cycle power plant comprises
three phases, he said. “In the first phase, the standing steam power
plant is to be completed by 2007 based on the projections made. Since
the majority of the equipment has been provided by Russia, we held
discussions with an Armenia-based Russian engineering company whose
experts will soon pay a visit to Iran to finalize the cooperation
agreement.” Therefore, the steam power plant will be jointly completed
by the Iranian and Russian engineers, he added.

In the second phase of the project, a gas power plant will be set up
by the Iranian engineers and the local Armenian workers. In this phase,
the Iranian equipment will be used, he noted.

He added, “In the third phase of the construction, the Iranian and
Russian engineers will have a joint cooperation.”

According to Shaterzadeh, Armenia has held negotiations with the
Islamic Development Bank (IDB) to receive a loan and the bank has
given a positive go-ahead on approving it.

Baghdad Patriarch Warns Against Iraqi Constitution

BAGHDAD PATRIARCH WARNS AGAINST IRAQI CONSTITUTION

ChristianToday, UK
Sept 26 2005

Iraqi bishops have warned that the draft constitution “opens the door
widely to passing laws that are unjust towards non-Muslims”.

Catholic bishops in Iraq are growing increasingly fearful that the
draft Iraqi constitution “opens the door widely” to discrimination
against Christians and other non-Muslims, the patriarch of Baghdad
for the Chaldeans has told Iraqi officials.

The Prime Minister of Iraq, Patriarch Emmanuel III Dely, pushed for a
last-minute change to the constitution in a meeting with the president
after bishops argued that the constitution contradicts itself on the
issue of religious rights for minorities.

According to Internation Christian Concern, President Jalal Talabani
and Dely discussed a recent statement by the country’s 12 bishops,
including prelates from the Chaldean, Armenian, Latin and Assyrian
Churhces, in which they voiced fears for the future of the Christian
community in Iraq.

In the statement, the bishops praised Articles 2.1(b) and 2.2 which
provided for freedom and religious rights but denounced Article 2.1(a)
which states: “No law can be passed that contradicts the undisputed
rules of Islam.”

The bishops concluded in the statement: “The bishops’ conference
expressed a grave concern and fear…about Article 2.1(a). This opens
the door widely to passing laws that are unjust towards non-Muslims.

The conference insists that this clause be amended or deleted.”

On the release of the statement to the international charity Aid
to the Church in Need, Auxiliary Bishop Andreas Abouna of Baghdad
stressed that the problem was not the propagation of Islam as the
majority-religion: “We are definitely not against the fact that in
Iraq Islam is the religion of the state.

“We know that the majority in Iraq is Muslim but the problem is that
the constitution is not clear. There are parts of the constitution
that are good but what about the other parts? For example, would
Christian women have to wear the veil?”

The bishops remain fearful that the “vague” constitution will fail
to protect Christians if the Iraqi government becomes less tolerant.

A referendum will be held on the constitution on 15 October.

America’s Inheritance in the Caucasus

ANTIWAR.COM

September 24, 2005

America’s Inheritance in the Caucasus
by Christopher Deliso
balkanalysis.com

While intervention is never praiseworthy, the one thing that can be said
about international involvement in the Caucasus is that it has at least been
fairly cosmopolitan, marked by a wide variety of voices and nations, and
less prone to polarizing truisms than in, say, the Balkans, where the
unchallenged ascendancy of the “Milosevic is guilty for everything” line has
basically eliminated the possibility of a more nuanced discourse and
contributed so much to the domination of US/EU single-track ideological
rule.

Indeed, as the Christian Science Monitor recently put it, “the region is a
patchwork quilt of warring ethnic groups and rival religions that makes
Europe’s other tangled knot, the Balkans, look tame by comparison.”

At least with the Caucasus, one encounters more reasoned analyses and a
wider variety of organizations, governments and individuals championing a
much more complex bundle of interests. Cut-and-dried conclusions appear less
frequently, and when war and ethnic cleansing is brought up, there is guilt
enough to go around on all sides. The Western mass media, despite its
unfortunate adulation of Georgia’s “Rose Revolution,” has been fairly
even-handed, though perhaps unintentionally. This is because a large part of
their “objectivity” owes to the region’s great distance, mentally and
geographically, from the average Western reader; whereas the Balkans was
more or less in Europe’s backyard, the Caucasus is on the edge of the
property – or maybe even on the other side.

Turbulence in the North

Meanwhile, on the other side of the other side, in the North Caucasus,
tensions have been rising as a murky web of secessionists, Islamists and
common criminals provoke an already tense situation with renewed violence.
The goal, boasts a Chechen commander, is to provoke a region-wide war that
would see the definitive exodus of Russia from the Caucasus. In an interview
with a Polish newspaper posted on the pro-Chechen site Kavkazcenter Chechen
“President” Abdul Sadulayev stated:
“We cannot doubt our victory. It is enough to look at the situation which is
taking shape in Chechnya for that. The Russians started this war, hoping to
make a ‘local conflict’ out of it. They have been pursuing their ‘wise
policy’ here, and as a result Dagestan has turned into a military front, as
has the whole of the Caucasus. A Caucasus front has been organized including
all the areas (sectors) of Ingushetia, Kabarda-Balkaria,
Karachay-Cherkessia, Adygeya, Stavropol Territory, Krasnodar Territory and
North Ossetia.”

Unrestricted Attacks, Expanding Fronts

While Sadulayev’s familiar if disingenuous logic of blaming everything on
Russia should be taken with a grain of salt, it is true that the violence
has been spreading.

Last week, four explosions hit Ingushetia, targeting a cargo train, court
building, bus stop and military column. While damage was small, the bombings
rattled an already tense republic whose Muslim population has been aiding
the fighters of neighboring Chechnya. And, since the terrorist attack on a
school in Beslan a year ago, tensions have dramatically increased between
the Ingush Muslims and Orthodox Christians of North Ossetia to the west,
where Beslan is located. The two republics fought a brief war shortly after
the break-up of the USSR and it cannot be ruled out that they will not clash
again. According to Russian police, the four bombings were the Muslim
terrorists’ choice of “revenge” against the government, which had “recently
conducted successful operations against several groups of local militants.”

Meanwhile, a police officer in the truly multiethnic (over 30 indigenous
groups) Dagestan was shot, and several Russian troops have been killed in
fighting as well, reports the BBC. Another recent article, reporting an
attack on a Russian oil pipeline in North Ossetia, claims that “Moscow
controls this area in name only. In reality the news has admitted that a lot
of the violence is not even being reported. Police and troops die daily
across the North Caucasus to the Caspian… The area is completely up for
grabs.”

Finally, according to the CSM, Ingush President Murat Zyazikov, who
“narrowly escaped assassination at the hands of a suicide car-bomber and a
sniper,” is being targeted by Islamic militants loyal to Basayev, who last
year briefly captured the capital, Nazran, “killing almost 100 police
officers and government officials” in the process. While Zyazikov put out a
brave face for the newspaper, claiming that things are basically peaceful,
locals aren’t so sure: “‘everyone here is always talking about getting ready
for war with the Ingush, to get even with them,’ says Madina Pedatova, a
teacher at Beslan’s spanking new School No. 8. ‘I’m terrified of it, but I’m
sure it’s coming.'”

Internal Fractures as Well

“Our forecasts say that Tatarstan and Bashkortostan will rise up next,
because Russia’s policy there is aimed at suppressing Muslims, and this
cannot fail to end in an explosion of emotions among the masses,” adds
Sadulayev in the Polish interview. “The role of Islam in the Caucasus is
huge. The Muslim population is in the majority here. Since we Chechens are
surrounded by friendly Muslim people, there are friendly traditions and
kinship links between us.”

However, not all involved see the conflict in such terms. As the situation
deteriorates further, infighting between the sides continues. According to
Interfax on Sept. 17, Chechen leader Akhmad Avdorkhanov, “a one-time aide to
the late Chechen rebel leader Aslan Maskhadov and the commander of the
so-called Eastern Front of Ichkeria” was killed by militants loyal to rival
group leader Shamil Basayev.

Chechnya’s First Deputy Prime Minister Ramzan Kadyrov described the slain
Avdorkhanov as a moderate; he was allegedly “among the most influential
field commanders, was notable for his particular courage, was categorically
against Wahhabis (radical Muslims), and did not recognize Basayev.” Indeed,
Sadulayev praises Basayev as “a disciplined amir and mojahed.”

However, according to the deputy premier, while Basayev viewed Avdorkhanov
as a threat to be dealt with, “the immediate motive behind the murder is the
1.5 million US dollars recently received by the Chechen separatists. ‘The
incident that led to Avdorkhanov’s death was prompted by Basayev’s attempts
to lay his hands on this money… the leaders of illegal armed groups,
primarily Basayev, have no ideals, but only the desire to make money, kill,
and please their foreign patrons, despite numerous victims among the Chechen
people,’ the official noted.”

Neocons in the Midst

Who are these “foreign patrons” of the Chechen cause? Without doubt, wealthy
Islamic fundamentalists from the Arabic world rank high on the list.
However, moral support for the Chechen militants can be found closer to
home. Less motivated by lucre than by a bizarre obsession with reviving the
Cold War, Washington hawks have taken a prominent position on the Chechnya
issue, it seems, solely with the aim of weakening Russia. Unfortunately, a
powerful and influential bloc in Washington – some neoconservative, all
predatorial – would like to shape events in a way that could have disastrous
long-term effects for America, guided by a desire to cling to archaic
antagonisms and to seek vindictive “victories” through extremely
short-sighted tactics.

A prime nesting ground for these hawks has been the American Committee for
Peace in Chechnya (ACPC) Writing a year ago, in the wake of the Beslan
tragedy, John Laughland stated:
“The list of the self-styled ‘distinguished Americans’ who are its members
is a roll call of the most prominent neoconservatives who so
enthusiastically support the ‘war on terror.’

“They include Richard Perle, the notorious Pentagon adviser; Elliott Abrams
of Iran-Contra fame; Kenneth Adelman, the former US ambassador to the UN who
egged on the invasion of Iraq by predicting it would be ‘a cakewalk’; Midge
Decter, biographer of Donald Rumsfeld and a director of the rightwing
Heritage Foundation; Frank Gaffney of the militarist Centre for Security
Policy; Bruce Jackson, former US military intelligence officer and one-time
vice-president of Lockheed Martin, now president of the US Committee on
Nato; Michael Ledeen of the American Enterprise Institute, a former admirer
of Italian fascism and now a leading proponent of regime change in Iran; and
R James Woolsey, the former CIA director who is one of the leading
cheerleaders behind George Bush’s plans to re-model the Muslim world along
pro-US lines.”

Unfortunately, the braintrust that brought us the twin “liberations” of Iraq
and Afghanistan seems to have similar plans for Russia. Their plans proceed
along two fronts: one, replace Vladimir Putin with a malleable “pro-Western
reformist” such as the celebrated businessman and former Yukos boss Mikhail
Khodorkovsky; and two, humiliate the country through its dissolution,
starting with its Caucasus possessions.

Richard Perle’s championing of the Khodorkovsky cause is well-known; less
clear is the degree and type of support his bunch provides the Chechens.
Does it end with providing asylum to Chechen terrorists in America and
Britain, or are the neocons trying to “give Russia their Vietnam” (as
cold-warrior extraordinaire and current ACPC Chairman Zbigniew Brzezinski
once put it) for the second time, and again through more direct support?

There’s little definite proof, but the one thing that is sure is that the
most fervent supporters of the “war on terror” exhibit a predictable
schizophrenia in supporting “good” Muslims, as was the case in the Bosnia
and Kosovo interventions: “In Chechnya, the conflict has created a cultural
and demographic crisis rivaling the tragedies witnessed in Bosnia and
Kosovo.” Of course, there’s no mention of the very real terrorist attacks
carried out by foreign-backed Chechen and other Islamic fighters, who would
like to replace Russian rule with “a single Islamist state stretching from
the Caspian to the Black Sea.”

Indeed, in an unpredictable era of shadowy enemies and “non-state actors,”
Brzezinski’s celebrated 1998 quote now seems even more foolish than ever:
“What is most important to the history of the world? The Taliban or the
collapse of the Soviet empire? Some stirred-up Moslems or the liberation of
Central Europe and the end of the cold war?”

Preconceptions, Simplifications and Hard Realities

Yet apparently the Cold War is not yet over. If Brzezinski and his crew have
their way, America’s inheritance in Russia’s final lost provinces of the
Caucasus will be just as auspicious as it has been in Afghanistan.

The Cold Warriors’ presuppositions seem to rest on the following false
assumptions: that Russia is the enemy, and harming it in any way is thus in
America’s interests; that Iran is evil and uncontrollable; that the Caucasus
can be divided into a north and south, meaning that one can be stabilized to
the detriment or enhancement of the other; and, finally, that America has
the resources and capabilities to control everything in the world.

However, the opposite is clear in every case. Russia is not the enemy; it
has no extra-territorial ambitions, and its delapidated military poses no
threat. On the other hand, NATO’s expanding remit, American bases in Central
Asia, and the increasingly anti-Russian attitudes of US and EU client states
in Eastern Europe have pretty much finished off the Russian bear. Much to
the ire of Perle and Co., the only trump cards Putin’s vast nation still
enjoys are nuclear weapons and a huge supply of oil. However, the Russian
leader is not averse to involving foreign oil companies, as his recent
meetings in America indicated. And considering that the US has declared the
possibility of Russian nukes falling into the wrong hands, there seem to be
few reasonable arguments for accelerating the country’s decline. Expediting
dissolution in the North Caucasus only increases the risk of Russian nuclear
materials and other weapons coming into the possession of terrorists.

Indeed, while the neocons might be gloating when they see Russia fall apart,
it is hardly likely that successor “republics” such as Chechnya aspires to
be would be more Jeffersonian than Islamic. No one in Chechnya is going to
thank a Washington thinktank for championing their cause when it comes time
to establishing the mores of social life and the rules of the political that
will govern them. But given the narcissistic delusions of the war/democracy
party, which have reached glorious fulfillment in Iraq, they are no doubt
expecting to be embraced as benevolent role models by the Chechens, the
Ingush and whoever else comes next.

As for Iran, the destabilization of this charter member of the “Axis of
Evil,” whether under democratic or security pretenses via Iraq, would only
harm the fragile balance of power in the Caucasus. This perceptive article
discusses in detail why Iran “has acted as a moderate and balanced player in
the region by placing the geopolitical, economic, and security aspects of
its national interests over ideological or religious motives.” Yet
disinterested in seeing the complete picture of rival religious and ethnic
interests in the Caucasus, an arrogant American leadership has labored under
the pretense that its multi-colored revolutions and its oil pipelines can be
the only guarantors of regional “stability.” They seldom consider the
complex web of religious and ethnic relations that go into forming the
policies of neighboring states which seem “outside” the equation, such as
Iran. They thus fail to consider how the destabilization of such states
would have wider ramifications for areas where they had believed everything
was under control.

In the present context, this area under control would be what conventional
wisdom deceptively calls the “South” Caucasus. Despite their very real
internal antagonisms and frozen conflicts, the countries of Georgia,
Azerbaijan and Armenia are relatively quiet now, more or less pacified by
Western largess and (except for the last) a desire to break out of the
Russian sphere of influence. Contrasting this situation of relative
tranquility to Russia’s ongoing woes on the northern side of the mountains,
the Bush administration quietly gloats over the Pax Caucasia it has brought
with the elevation of Mikheil Saakashvili in Georgia, and the recent
completion of the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline.

However, such a north-south distinction cannot realistically be supported.
Throughout history, the Caucasus has been characterized by its singularity,
its wealth of disparate ethnic and religious groups, and by its geography –
simultaneously impassable and yet everywhere vulnerable to intrusion. For
the most part, the region’s formidable mountains make a joke out of all
attempts to impose state controls. Clan and ethnic groups straddle national
and sub-national boundaries, adding to this tendency to make the latter
irrelevent. Terrorist groups “safely” ensconced in Chechnya can and do spill
over into Georgia. Ossetians view their national territory – memorably
described by the Economist as “a smuggling racket with a patch of land
attached” – as unfairly divided between Russia and Georgia, and support the
former in its own interventionist policies against Georgia. Meanwhile,
foreign Islamic groups trained in Chechnya and Dagestan have penetrated
“pro-Western” Azerbaijan, and are starting to agitate for the overthrowing
of the state. And the list goes on.
That said, America’s pride and joy for “regional stability” – the BTC
pipeline – has a better chance of emerging as a gigantic target for various
groups of malcontents. In an appropriately titled article called “The
Pipeline from Hell,” Antiwar.com’s Justin Raimondo draws a likely conclusion
of this “strategic investment”:
“If American oil companies are due to make mega-profits in the Caspian
region, then the U.S. military will be doing guard duty along every inch of
the BTC pipeline, ensuring ‘stability’ in a land of nomadic herders and
exporting ‘democracy’ to a region formerly ruled by pashas, sultans, and
various and sundry dictators.”

Yet while it is true that this new asset will increase the US military
commitment to the region, it is also probable that the job of providing
“security” for the pipeline will also be taken over by various local lords
and chieftans along the route – some of whom, like the recently reactivated
Kurdish rebels in Turkey, might ask a price for their cooperation that is
exceedingly high. Unfortunately, the “or else” clause is likely to become a
part of the vocabulary of all such local security providers. America and its
Western co-investors are likely to be in for an expensive and all-consuming
headache, rather than a neat global solution to their energy and security
needs.

And this is just considering the largely subjugated “South” Caucasus. How
much more can these headaches be compounded, if you consider a post-Russian
“North” Caucasus, characterized by tiny and volatile statelets run by
dueling local chieftans, most of them under some variant of Islamic law? Are
the democracy proliferators of the ACPC prepared for what they are about to
get in a post-Russia Caucasus? While they hate Russia’s perceived
interventionism in the Caucasus, they fail to consider what the ensuing
power vacuum will look like, deprived of all counterbalancing forces.

A Sobering Conclusion

In the end, there is a comparison to be made here with another
neocon-inspired war. Back in March 2003, when America’s invasion of Iraq
began, syndicated columnist Charley Reese drolly congratulated the American
people on their imminent “adoption” of 22 million Iraqi citizens. We’ve now
seen just how much the Iraqi inheritance has benefited America. The worst
thing about the situation in the Caucasus is that no one, not even the
enthusiastic expansionist leadership, is aware of what they will be
inheriting there.

Yet as Gabriel Kolko predicted in Another Century of War?, America’s
resources are not unlimited. Heavily in debt, with foreign nations funding
43 percent of its wars, and unable to react to simple natural disasters at
home, it is clear that the imperial ambitions of the neocons are simply
neither sustainable nor realistic. The desire to replace Russia as imperial
power in the Caucasus is a case in point.
In short, there are no indications that America has the resources, will or
intelligence to “manage” this convoluted region any better than the Russians
have. In fact, they will likely do much worse – Russia, at least, had the
benefits of geographical proximity, thousands of years of intermingled
cultures, a long-term institutional presence, etc. America has none of
these. Its pretensions to rulership are largely based on the airy platitudes
of armchair strategists in Washington, who have little or no appreciation
for the local realities on the ground, counting on abstract values to see
them through.

In the end, the American supporters of expanding the empire to the Caucasus
should be careful what they wish for. They have yet to show an interest in
reading Russia’s will, though the document is right in front of their eyes.

Find this article at:

http://www.antiwar.com/deliso/?articleid=7376

Time For A Change, Not A Revolution

TIME FOR A CHANGE, NOT A REVOLUTION
By Ednan Agayev

The Moscow Times, Russia
Sept 23 2005

All but invisible to the wider world, a crisis is developing within
Azerbaijan that could threaten regional stability and the future
development of Caspian basin oil and gas.

Though largely self-created, by a combination of endemic corruption
and institutional underdevelopment, the emerging calamity is being
greatly aided by opportunistic measures by others, including Russia,
the United States and especially Iran.

In many ways, this is developing into a 21st-century version of the
Great Game — that epochal struggle between the British and Russian
empires, which dominated the lives of all sorts of tiny Eurasian
countries throughout the 19th century and well into the 20th century.

But Azerbaijan is not Afghanistan, which has had the misfortune
of historically always having been someone else’s buffer state or
strategic beachhead.

Azerbaijan is a prize in its own right. It can claim one-fifth of the
oil and gas of the Caspian Basin, one of the world’s last great pools
of hydrocarbon wealth. Led by BP, the Baku-Tblisi-Ceyhan pipeline
has just opened, creating a new gateway to world markets for Azeri oil.

With gross national product growth increasing at about 11 percent
annually, this should be the most economically successful of the
former Soviet states. Should be, and in some ways is — but not in
nearly enough ways to make Azerbaijan the happy and stable place it
ought to be.

Instead, it is a place that is starting to come unglued. Run until
recently by an authoritarian, but politically astute, former KGB
general named Heidar Aliyev, Azerbaijan is now run by a fractious
group of his ministers, ruling in the name of Heidar’s son, Ilham.

Ilham Aliyev is an intelligent, quite well-educated man of 44 whose
instincts do not appear to run to strong-arm tactics or dictatorship.

But he is surrounded by ministers and minders for whom there is much
to lose in the event of a regime change. Billions of dollars, in fact.

This is because Azerbaijan, under the elder Aliyev, functioned as
a giant franchising operation, with nearly all aspects of Azeri
national life hived off as vertically integrated businesses. If you
want to pass a university exam, you pay the instructor $50, a large
part of which he pays to his supervisor, who then pays part to his
superior, and so on all the way to the top. To be named police chief
in a medium-sized town costs about $10,000, most of which winds up
with whoever’s signature is required for such an appointment.

This was a relatively stable and predictable situation under Heidar
Aliyev, because he was imaginative enough to control its excesses
and tough enough to be able to do so.

There is room to doubt that Ilham Aliyev has that kind of authority.

He has in fact replaced few of his father’s lieutenants and has
remarkably few allies of his own in government from his own generation
or cohort. Increasingly, he appears to be more dependent on his
father’s aging cronies than they are on him.

Apart from the personalities at the top, the world around them
has changed utterly. Part of the change occurred in the streets of
Tbilisi, in neighboring Georgia, where just a month before Heidar
Aliyev’s death in 2003, the Rose Revolution replaced another former
KGB chieftain’s regime.

Understandably, a lot of people have been sticking colored pins
in their wall maps of the former Soviet Union ever since, trying
to guess in which state the next so-called color revolution might
happen: Tbilisi, Kiev, Bishkek — and now Baku? With parliamentary
elections set for Nov. 6, the Azeri opposition parties are playing up
that trend for all it is worth. But many of the opposition leaders
in Azerbaijan are every bit as corrupt and as much a part of the
old guard as the men they wish to replace. Many were involved in an
ill-fated 1992-93 government, almost universally condemned for chaos,
corruption and incompetence.

But the color revolutions have had an important influence, if not
domestically then externally.

For one thing, they have made it more difficult for Russia, still
the leading power in the region, and the United States, the remaining
world superpower, to collaborate, even when it is practical to do so.

The United States now faces a dilemma in dealing with the former
Soviet states with which it is friendly, including Azerbaijan. For
commercial and geopolitical reasons, Washington would obviously prefer
stability over chaos. But it can also no longer afford to be seen to
be propping up an unreformable kleptocracy.

Meanwhile, Moscow also would prefer stability instead of another
revolution in its own backyard.

For both, there are other complications. Iran, along the southern
Azeri border, is chief among them. There are 20 million to 25 million
ethnic Azeris in Iran, and the dominant religion in both nations is
Shiite Islam. Fundamentalism has started to surface in Azerbaijan’s
border areas, and there are reports that some theological schools
across the country are leaning toward Iranian-style militancy. In an
otherwise secular state, these are disturbing developments.

This must be disturbing Washington too. Rumors abound that it is
looking to redeploy military contingents from Uzbekistan, which has
asked the U.S. Army to vacate a military base there, to Azerbaijan,
including to one site close to the Iranian border.

Rumors also abound that Russia is redeploying troops formerly based
in Georgia to regions of Armenia that border Azerbaijan. Apart from
the historic enmity between Armenia and Azerbaijan over the disputed
territory of Nagorno-Karabakh, such movements could redraw the military
map of the entire region.

But is a U.S.-Russian rivalry in the area inevitable? The truth is
that Moscow and Washington have more interests in common than they
have in conflict, particularly with respect to Iran, which is a source
of even bigger worry to Russia than to the United States.

Intriguingly, in recent weeks, some members of the Russian media have
been playing up the disruptive influences in Azerbaijan of Wahhabi
militants. But Wahhabism is used as a catch-all term for all forms
of radical Islam, whether Sunni or Shiite.

There may well be some Wahhabi activists in Azerbaijan, especially
in the north, where Chechen and Dagestani refugees have settled. But
the real fundamentalist threat is overwhelmingly from the south,
from Iran. The Kremlin certainly knows this, but, for complex and
remarkably narrow commercial reasons — the sale of nuclear reactor
technology — it cannot bring itself to say so publicly.

And that, almost literally, is what is keeping Russia and the United
States from collaborating in Azerbaijan. In nearly all other matters
of consequence, their interests in Azerbaijan coincide: stability,
moderate reform, and even curbing corruption — since even Russian
companies like LUKoil must be finding the spiraling cost of graft
hard to manage.

There does not need to be a color revolution in Azerbaijan. There
does need to be fundamental change, bringing new young modernizers
into power and giving the rising middle class its say in the country’s
future.

But with Moscow eyeing the Americans with suspicion, and Washington
unable to rely on the Russians while facing Iran, Azerbaijan appears
headed unstoppably toward a less-than-promising future.

Ednan Agayev, an Azeri-born former senior Russian diplomat and
executive vice president of the Russian-American Business Council,
contributed this comment to The Moscow Times.

Robert Kocharyan: Economic Growth In Armenia Result Of EffectivePoli

ROBERT KOCHARYAN: ECONOMIC GROWTH IN ARMENIA RESULT OF EFFECTIVE POLICY OF AUTHORITIES AND DILIGENCE OF PEOPLE

ARMINFO News Agency
September 22, 2005

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 22. ARMINFO. The two-digit figures of economic
growth fixed in Armenia for already four years are a result of the
effective policy of the authorities and diligence of the people,
said Armenian President Robert Kocharyan at a solemn ceremony on the
occasion of the Independence Day of RA, on September 21.

The president said: “Armenia celebrates its 14th independence
anniversary as a steadily developing country. All-embracing reforms
and projects are implemented in the country. The high economic rates
have become possible due to the domestic political stability, which
is a priority of a country’s progress. It is important that funds are
directed to the social sphere. The economic growth must have a direct
effect on prosperity of the country’s citizens. We are determined to
fulfill the poverty reduction program. Work and social security must
be our slogan for the coming years,” Robert Kocharyan said.

Strengthening of legality, more effective administration and public
agreement are guarantees of solution to the tasks of our country,
the president thinks.

Regular Sitting Of Committee On RA And NKR Inter-ParliamentaryCooper

REGULAR SITTING OF COMMITTEE ON RA AND NKR INTERPARLIAMENTARY COOPERATION TO TAKE PLACE IN SPRING, 2006, IN STEPANAKERT

Noyan Tapan News Agency
Sept 22 2005

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 22, NOYAN TAPAN. The regular sitting of the
Committee on Interparliamentary Cooperation of the RA and NKR National
Assemblies will take place in spring, 2006, in Stepanakert.

An agreement about this was reached at the September 20 meeting of
Artur Baghdasarian, the RA NA Chairman, and Ashot Ghulian, the NKR
NA Chairman.

Artur Baghdasarian again congratulated Ashot Ghulian on the occasion
of having been elected the NKR NA Chairman and wished productive work
to the Parliament.

As Noyan Tapan was informed by the RA NA Public Relations Department,
according to traditions established between the Parliaments,
continuation of the cooperation at the level of Committees was mutually
considered important. Agreements were reached concerning legislative
and experimental assistance, joint re-training of staffs, assisting
the NKR Parliament with technical means.

UAE delegation to visit Armenia next week

ARMINFO News Agency
September 21, 2005

UAE DELEGATION TO VISIT ARMENIA NEXT WEEK

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 21. ARMINFO. A delegation from the UAE will visit
Armenia next week, informed the representative of the Supreme Council
of the United Arab Emirates, Sharjah Emir Sheikh Dr. Sultan Bin
Mohammad al-Kasimi at Matenadaran, the depository of ancient Armenian
manuscripts, Sept 21. He stressed that issues of deepening bilateral
cooperation in economy, science and culture will be discussed during
the meetings.

Al Kasimi has seen the museum presented with 17.000 manuscripts, 700
of them in Arab language. The Matenadaran Director Sen Arevshatyan
presented the quest a book on horses’ health, probably, because
al-Kasimi is a big horse-fancier.

Sharjah Emir congratulated Armenian people on the Independence Day
and named symbolic the conduction of the Day of UAE culture in
Armenia just this time. He wished Armenia’s authorities to overcome
all the difficulties preventing country’s full development.

Al-Kasimi is leaving Armenia today.

Campain to scare foreigners dealing with the Armenian genocide issue

Cyprus Press and Information Office: Occupied Northern Cyprus
Sept 20 2005

Campain to scare foreigners dealing with the Armenian genocide issue

Ankara Anatolia news agency (19.09.05) reported the following from
Istanbul:
A denouncement has been filed against several Armenian scholars who
organized a conference on the so-called Armenian genocide and used
Ataturk’s picture on a poster at the University of California, Los
Angeles (UCLA).

The denouncement was filed at the Uskudar Republican Prosecutor’s
Office and had the signatures of Dr. Ibrahim Oztek, Dr. Zihni Papakci
and owner of Iktidar Magazine Metin Hacimustafaoglu.

A conference on the so-called Armenian genocide was organized at UCLA
which was attended by Armenian scholars Vahram Shemmassian, Ardashes
Kassakhian and Levon Marashlian last April. The conference posters
had Ataturk’s picture in front of puppies. [Bad REFERENCE tag…is to
an Armenian diaspora poster which reportedly doctored an old picture,
replacing Ataturk’s two pet dogs lying at his feet with two Armenian
children starved to death in 1915].

Dr. Oztek stressed that Turks and the founder of Turkey Ataturk were
insulted by the posters and conference organized at UCLA. ”We will
sue those responsible for the insult against the Turks,” noted
Oztek.

On the issue of the Armenian genocide Ankara Anatolia (19.09.05)
reported the following from Ankara:

Turkish Labor Party (IP) deputy leader Mehmet Bedri Gultekin has
indicated today that his party has launched a campaign titled ”Do
Not Purchase Swiss Goods” that will be effective until the Swiss
Parliament revokes a decision it adopted earlier on the so-called
Armenian genocide.

Members of the IP convened in capital Ankara’s main square Kizilay
and carried banners and shouted slogans encouraging Turks not to
purchase Swiss-made goods due to the decision of the Swiss parliament
vis-a-vis the so-called genocide of Armenians.

Gultekin pointed out that IP leader Dogu Perincek was called by the
Lausanne Prosecutor’s Office. Perincek was warned by the Swiss police
officers before he gave a speech on the so-called Armenian genocide.

”The acts of the Swiss police have hurt the democratic image of
Switzerland.

Despite the warnings, Perincek delivered his speech,” said Gultekin.

Gultekin said Perincek will be questioned tomorrow by the Lausanne
Prosecutor.

World Competitiveness Report 2005-6 to be held in Yerevan

ARKA News Agency, Armenia
Sept 19 2005

PRESENTATION OF WORLD COMPETITIVENESS REPORT 2005-2006 TO BE HELD IN
YEREVAN

YEREVAN, September 19. /ARKA/. A presentation of the World
Competitiveness Report 2005-2006 of the World Economic Forum is to be
held in Yerevan on September 29, 2005. The Economy and Values
research center, which is a partner of the program, reports that the
Report contains information on Armenia as well. The information will
be based on the results of polls that involved heads of various
organizations.
The international presentation of the Report is to be held in Geneva
on September 28. The World Competitiveness Report is a well-known
analytical paper, which contains information on the economic
competitiveness of various countries and factors influencing
countries’ economic development. First published in 1979, the Report
contained information on 117 countries. P.T. -0–