Iran’s Defense Ministry exports liquid and solid products

MENA Business Reports
June 28, 2004

IRAN’S DEFENSE MINISTRY EXPORTS LIQUID AND SOLID PRODUCTS

Iran’s Defense Ministry exported liquid and solid cooking oil, and
soap to Tajikistan, Afghanistan and Armenia in the first quarter of
the current Iranian Year (started March, 20 ). The goods were
produced in the ministry s affiliated-organization “Etka”. The
exports amounted to about $ 135,000.

According to IRNA, the Defense Ministry also exported $ 1.537 million
of similar goods to western Europe, Central Asia and Caucuses and
Afghanistan last year.

Iran’s Customs Administration reported last month that non-oil
exports including carry-on luggage and border market trade exceeded $
5.708 billion in the first 11 months of the last Iranian year
(started March 21, 2003.) It added the figure was 25.6 percent higher
compared to the same period last year. (menareport.com)

Rugby requiem

Indian Express, India
June 27, 2004

Rugby requiem

The once strong Armenian team was disbanded two years ago. A sad
reaffirmation of the shrinking numbers of Kolkata’s Armenian
community

KARTYK VENKATRAMAN

EVEN as the rest of the country begins to acknowledge rugby with mild
surprise, a 72-year-old man seeks the lonely solace of the Kolkata
Maidan’s wind-swept vastness to make room for his memories. Of times
that have probably passed on forever. Arsham Sookias often thinks of
the three-plus decades of his life that has been signed over to
Armenian Rugby.

Of distant 1947 when he began playing for the Armenians as a wing
forward. That was the year the Central Asian expats won the Calcutta
Cup for the first time, under the captaincy of his elder brother
Malcolm. That began one of the longest careers in rugby, lasting till
1980, after which he used his experience in teaching young Armenian
kids the game.

Looking for a Bride Groom
of Age 18 – 25 26 – 30 31 – 35 36 – 45 46 – 50 Above 50

Tough, fit and fast, the Armenians dominated the national scene for
several decades during the latter half of the 20th century. It’s now
been two years since the Armenian rugby team was disbanded, with a
finality rooted in changes in world politics and, consequently, the
dwindling Armenian community of Kolkata.

Their list of triumphs across a century of rugby in India is the
stuff legends are made of. Participating in the annual Calcutta Cup
and the All India and South Asia Rugby Tournament since 1930, they
have won the former 17 times with a triple in 1996-98, and the
All-India six times.

This, besides the All-India and South Asia Sevens on several
occasions and contributing to the National XV at all three Asian
Rugby Tournaments at Sri Lanka, Singapore and Malaysia. Now, says
Arsham Sookias – rugby player from 1947-80 and manager at the college
for several years – there’s no one left behind.

In Chennai, the last captain of the Armenian rugby team, Emil
Vartazarian, couldn’t agree more with Sookias. “A few other boys and
I were what was left of the Armenian rugby team. We formed a team and
participated in the Chennai Sevens in 2001. That was the last time we
participated under the Armenian banner.”

Now working with the Indian Rugby Football Union (IRFU) as technical
director in the South Zone, Emil says that till 1987 the going was
great. “From then on, the number of Armenian students began to
shrink. By 1990, there were only 17; by 1999, only three. Many gave
up the game once they were 19, passed out and began to think careers.
Many left for Australia, Canada, America.”

Emil now is about the last member of the team that once had tested
sides like the CC&FC and Bombay Gymkhana. Among the Indians who
played for the Armenian side in Kolkata towards the end, Tanvir Alam
will always remember the team he was once part of, with pride.

Alam, who played for them from 1995-99, moved on to the CC&FC team
when the Armenian side ceased to exist. “For someone new to rugby,
they were the best side to play with and pick up the game,” he says.

The present lot of kids at the College are very young, say Emil and
Sookias, but add that if they are started off with the game from a
young age, they can probably go on to regain past glory. Sookias, who
was part of the first overseas tour by India in 1970 under the
captaincy of English international scrum-half Steve Smith and has
himself captained the Armenian side from 1966-80 before taking over
as manager from 1981-2000, says the Armenian Sports Club (formed in
1945) thus no longer has the feeder base for its team.

The Armenian College and Philanthropic Academy, founded on April 2,
1821 has been home to local Armenian boys and to Armenian children
fleeing war-torn Armenia. Sookias says the Iranian government has
become very strict when allowing Armenian children to study abroad.
“In recent times, students who go home (to Iran and Armenia) on
vacation often never return,” he says.

At the college, honorary manager Sonia John admits that rugby has
taken a backseat. “Yes, there was no school rugby programme in place
last year. I will allow a coach to teach touch rugby to the kids only
if the IRFU sends an official coach,” says John.

Kolkata-based IRFU vice-president Noomi Mehta counters. “We have
sent them a proposal but are still to receive any response.”

A shrunk community intermingling with the local population has
reduced the Armenians to near-memory in a city where their community
once boasted its own quarter in the city and contributed to society,
commercially and culturally.

The game has been one of the casualties of the change, and remains
part of a diverse smorgasbord of talents and skills the Armenians no
longer offer.

Kocharian speech to Council of Europe turning point for Karabakh

Armenian leader’s speech to Council of Europe turning point for Karabakh –
paper

Hayots Ashkarh, Yerevan
25 Jun 04

Armenian President Robert Kocharyan’s speech to the Parliamentary
Assembly of the Council of Europe has moved the settlement of the
Nagornyy Karabakh conflict to the legal plane, according to an article
in an Armenian newspaper. Kocharyan played Armenia’s “trump card”,
when he said that Karabakh had never been part of independent
Azerbaijan, so recognition of Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity had
nothing to do with Karabakh, according to the article. “Europe can use
its real weapon, great international and political authority, and at
one stroke, by means of the NKR’s independence, cut the Karabakh knot
and ensure stable peace in the whole region,” the article concluded.
The following is the text of Vardan Grigoryan’s report in Hayots
Ashkarh on 25 June headlined “The real way of peace”:

It should be said that by means of Robert Kocharyan’s speech in
Strasbourg Armenian foreign policy has made that turning point in the
Karabakh negotiating process, which society was expecting for over 10
years. This was the transfer of the Karabakh settlement process to the
legal plane.

Robert Kocharyan’s strict, full and logical speech from the PACE
[Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe] rostrum and
explanation of separate points of the Karabakh issue during the
briefing with deputies, was a turning point in the history of the
positions adopted by Armenian diplomacy on Karabakh. Saying that
Armenia has always been in favour of a peaceful settlement of the
conflict, has always accepted the proposal of the mediating parties
for a common state, the Paris principles, the Key West accords, at the
same time from the high European rostrum the Armenian president
revealed the trump card of the Armenian party: the legal content of
the Karabakh issue. That is:

a) The NKR has never been within an independent Azerbaijan, for this
reason recognition of the territorial integrity of the latter has
nothing to with Nagornyy Karabakh;

b) Nagornyy Karabakh declared its independence along with Azerbaijan
(and even a little earlier) and on the same legal basis, the USSR
constitution and laws, two independent states were formed on the
territory of the former Soviet Azerbaijan;

c) The legal grounds of the NKR independence are flawless, so in such
conditions, instead of the trite “compromises” often applied by the
world community, these grounds should be discussed and gain their
strict assessment, which have the same meaning;

d) From the point of view of preserving peace only the package option
for a settlement poses a lesser danger than today’s status quo. So any
breaking of the latter, without including all the important problems
connected with the Karabakh conflict, will unavoidably lead to a drop
in the parties’ motivation to reach a final settlement and this may
have unpredictable consequences.

All this complex of questions shows that at the current moment in the
negotiating process Armenia is trying to solve three main problems:

1. In proclaiming its devotion to the Paris principles and Key West
accords, which have become a logical ending of the model for a
political settlement, Armenia has been presented before the world
community as a constructive party which is ready for mutual
compromise;

2. Being ahead of Azerbaijan in terms of constructiveness and
commitment to the accords, at the same time the Armenian party
strictly sets its bottom line – the Key West accords, from which it
cannot retreat;

3. As Azerbaijan is the initiator of revising the accords, the
Armenian party supports the world community in transferring the
problem to the legal plane in order to get out of the deadlock, that
is, in international law not to look for the “golden mean” but to
decide who Nagornyy Karabakh, which is strictly preserving all the
laws proclaimed in its independence, belongs to? We think that in this
way we may reach a quick and fruitful settlement of the Karabakh
issue. That is, by discussing the legal grounds of the NKR’s
independence and establishing that they are flawless Europe may settle
all the problems in one go and enter our region. In these conditions
Azerbaijan will have no option but to recognize the fact, as the main
subject of the argument – Nagornyy Karabakh will be immediately taken
out of the field of competition between Azerbaijan and Armenia. Europe
can use its real weapon, great international and political authority,
and at one stroke, by means of the NKR’s independence, cut the
Karabakh knot and ensure stable peace in the whole region.

Armenian Analyst Says Denounces Leader’s Refusal To Attend NATO Talk

ARMENIAN ANALYST SAYS DENOUNCES LEADER’S REFUSAL TO ATTEND NATO TALKS

Noyan Tapan news agency
21 Jun 04

Yerevan, 21 June: “The president’s (Robert Kocharyan) refusal to take
part in the Istanbul summit of NATO is a crude tactical mistake, which,
I think, may have bad consequences for the image of our country, and
for cooperation with Europe and the USA in the future, especially
as the leaders of the neighbour states are going to take part in
the summit,” the chairman of the West-East national and strategic
research centre, Aram Oganesyan, has said in an interview with a
Noyan Tapan correspondent.

He noted that transport corridors are already bypassing Armenia, in
particular, the North-South corridor via Azerbaijan, Iran and then
Pakistan and India. Negotiations are now being held on the unification
of the Turkish and Georgian railroads in the area of Batumi. “This
is being done now and if the foreign political situation regarding
Armenia will worsen, it will be a result of our mistakes.”

Aram Oganesyan recalled that the Caucasus is an important part of
NATO’s Partnership for Peace programme and is becoming one of the
most important elements of NATO.

At the same time, the analyst said that if one looks at the
chronology of the events, Kocharyan announced his refusal to visit
Istanbul immediately after his arrival from Moscow. A few days
later Russia announced that President (Vladimir) Putin will also
not participate in the Istanbul meeting, but send Foreign Minister
Sergey Lavrov instead. “There is some logic to this and agreement.
Armenia’s relations with Russia are the closest which is determined
by history, geography and culture. But it would be wrong to make our
national interests unconditionally dependent on Russia’s political
or national interests,” Oganesyan announced.

He said that Armenia must resolve the existing problems “at the
negotiating table with its neighbours which is the only way of
resolving conflicts”.

Reflections on Bernard Lewis

Reflections on Bernard Lewis
By Hugh Fitzgerald

JihadWatch.org
June 17, 2004

Bernard Lewis is an acute scholar about many aspects of Islam; he
writes beautifully. He is well-trained in languages. He lived during
the war in Egypt. He is lionized in Turkey, and even in small shops
off Taksim Square the proprietors, when they discover a visitor
is from the United States, ask if that visitor may happen to know
“Professor Lewis.”

He has all the right enemies — the absurd Said, who knew nothing
about Islam but for some reason thought his being an Arab entitled
him to act as an expert (the footnote alone, on “thawra,” in Lewis’
“The Question of Orientalism,” is enough to delicately dismember
all of Said’s pretentions; he does not survive the essay); the
apologist Esposito, who is not fit to be mentioned at the same time
as Lewis (Esposito is an out-and-out apologist, an ignoramus, and the
producer of glossy picture-books about Islam that win the reader over,
and distract from the apologetic or vapid texts he has chosen, with
plenty of local color — venerable mosques, turbans and Iznik tulips,
the usual Mughal miniatures of hunting scenes, or Majnoun and Leyla,
an apothecary jar or two from Abbassid Baghdad, the obligatory Persian
poetry in nastaliq, and of course the Dome of the Rock — while so many
subjects, including Jihad and the treatment of non-Muslims under Islam,
are yet again ignored, or minimized to the point of disappearance.

In Lewis’ long academic career in England, he was not listened to
sufficiently by the Foreign Office, and their insulting behavior
(stemming from antisemitism) could not but affect him. He clearly
enjoys being appreciated (who does not?). He enjoys, on his visits
to the Middle East, being made much of by Turkish or Arab hosts. If
you had spent years learning, and learning well, certain languages,
and the only people who could fully appreciate your achievement were,
say, Muslim Arabs, or quasi-Muslim Turks, and if they seemed to you
to talk a good game of “moderate” Islam (in the case of the Turks, it
was meant), you too might not wish to offend those colleagues, those
friends, those hosts and patrons. Some may find it telling that Lewis
has reproduced, for both his book of translations from the Turkish,
Persian, Hebrew, and Arabic, and for his latest collection of articles,
“From Babel to Dragomans”, a photograph that shows him sitting in his
Western dress — he never stoops to the clownish indignity of going
native like the mythomane Lawrence, or St. John Philby, or dozens
of others — in the tent, or something like it, that belongs to none
other than the Hashemite Prince Hassan ibn Talal, that plummy-voiced
“dialogue-of-civilisations” apologist for Islam (the most plausible,
the most outwardly pleasing, the most subtle, and therefore the
most convincing and dangerous of such apologists); that photograph,
that desire to have that photograph used on two of his books, might
be taken simply as a way to show the members of MESA that — look,
the real Arabs know that I tell them the truth.

Lewis in various interviews does seem pleased that he can address
two audiences at the same time. “He doth bestride the world like a
colossus.” He is proud of the fact that so many of his books have
been translated into Turkish, Arabic, Farsi. But the truth is:
you cannot write with two audiences in mind, one of the Muslim, the
other non-Muslim. That Muslim audience is so prickly, so defensive, so
unwilling to admit to the events of its own history (the unwillingness,
for example, to even read the scholarship of Bat Ye’or, even among the
so-called advanced Arabs in the West, is absolutely flabbergasting),
that Lewis finds himself at every turn, either pulling his punches,
or enveloping the thought in veils of velleities. It is not a case of
being fortiter in re, suaviter in modo. He is suave in his prose all
right, but that suavity is not wrapped around a sufficient amount of
truthful iron.

*He is attempting a trick that cannot be achieved. You cannot write
simultaneously for an audience of Muslims (to get them to see, gently,
and with constant, almost formulaic, reassurance about the “greatness”
of high classical Islamic civilization — which Lewis always describes,
wrongly, as being far above any other civilisation of the time — has
he forgotten China? And does he still accept the older cliches about
the “Dark Ages”? He is a poor historian who appeals to the self-esteem
problem of part of his audience; that is not the historian’s task*.

*Lewis now seems, at last, to be fully recognized, and triumphant. But
is he? He was an enthusiastic supporter of the disastrous Oslo Accords.
It is understandable why people such as Clinton, or Tom Friedman,
or all the others who know nothing about Islam, should believe in
the efficacy of such negotiations and such treaties. But Lewis — who
knows all about the rules of Muslim jurisprudence regarding “treaties”
with Infidel peoples and polities, and knows perfectly well why every
treaty Israel has ever signed with an Arab state has been violated,
sometimes completely, and knows too the significance of the Treaty
of al-Hudaiybiyya, which Arafat so frequently mentioned to his Muslim
audiences — what is Lewis’ excuse for supporting, so loudly and for
so long, the Oslo folly?*

*Lewis describes the series of political, legal, financial, social,
sumptuary, and other disablities placed on dhimmis in quite brisk
terms, usually limiting himself to a word or two about the jizya and
“other disabilities.” He does not stop to really go into the whole
monstrous system, or to quizzically ask what that phrase “protected
peoples” might mean, or how it was that everywhere that Islam
conquered, the treatment of dhimmis, whether they were Christians or
Jews or Zoroastrians or even Hindus or Buddhists — was remarkably the
same, and in all cases the post-conquest (i.e. post-Jihad) institution
of dhimmitude led to the enforced status of degradation, humiliation,
and permanent insecurity (including intermittent massacres that Lewis
hardly ever refers to) on all of these non-Muslim peoples*.

Lewis himself must, more and more, have come to see — especially
as his beloved Turkey slides away from Kemalism — that in certain
essentials he got it wrong. He actually got Islam wrong. He
underestimated its malevolence. He underestimated the difficulty
of reform. He took as representative men the scholars, or the
well-educated exiles, who came out of that world but were about as
representative of it as Stravinsky, Balanchine, and Nabokov could have
been said to represent Soviet Russia. He was wrong; he was wrong
on the Oslo Accords; he was wrong in his political advertisement
(written with James Woolsey) to promote Prince Hassan to be a new
king for Iraq; he remains wrong if he thinks that the United States
should continue to be preoccupied with Iraq, when there are so many
other ways to expose the political, economic, moral, and intellectual
failures of Islam — which in the long run, is the only thing which
will cause, from within, the engendering of lots of local Ataturks,
who may work to constrain or limit Islam, as its sacred texts,
including the authoritative recensions of hadith, are immutable.

Lewis was asked some years ago by the TLS to review Ibn Warraq’s “Why
I Am Not a Muslim.” He dawdled and dithered; by the time he told them
he just could not do it, it was too late, in the opinion of the TLS,
to run any review. Contrast that with how the lefist, even Marxist
French scholar of Islam, Maxine Rodinson, treated the same book. He
was given it to review by Le Monde, which assumed that Rodinson,
known for his tiersmondiste sympathies (which probably explains why
Edward Said gave an enthusiastic blurb to Rodinson’s quite crticial
book on Muhammad — but then Said was known to provide enthusastic
blurbs for hundreds of books he never opened, but just guessed as to
their general direction; his endorsements were spread around like
confetti, and even cheaper). But Rodinson produced a favorable
review, much to the chagrin of the editors at Le Monde — and they,
acting true to Stalinist form, simply refused to print the review
(it can be found in Rodinson’s other publications).

But how could Lewis, after all, praise Ibn Warraq publicly? And he
could not publicly deny that the book had great merit, either. So best
to finesse; delay like Kutuzov; the mere passage of time will solve
the problem; solve it, Time did, and consequently that book, one of the
most important in recent decades, never received a review in the TLS.

It is fascinating to compare the behavior of Lewis with two other
scholars of roughly the same age and status. S. D. Goitein wrote his
celebrated “A Mediterranean Society” based on his detailed study
of the papers found in the Cairo Geniza — a record of the Jewish
community in Cairo, and not only in Cairo, that extended over many
centuries. Goitein, who earlier had had a kind of sympathetic, almost
sentimental interest in promoting the idea of the natural sympathies
and similarities of Muslims and Jews, was severely chastened by his
last decades of scholarship. If there was one thing, he wrote, about
which he had to revise his opinion, it was about the severity of the
jizyah. He now realized what a terrible burden it was, especially on
the poor non-Muslims. Just before he died, Goitein was preparing a
favorable review of Bat Ye’or.

Even at their advanced ages, both Rodinson and Goitein were willing
to break, in part, with their own pasts, to declare that new evidence,
and final summings-up, had led them to conclusions that were not nearly
as favorable to Islam as they might once have hoped. Goitein’s study
of the Cairo Geniza led him to rethink the problem of the dhimmi,
to reconsider his old pieties and sentimentalities. Rodinson, who
had been (of course) a great defender of the Arabs against French
colonialism, a die-hard tiersmondiste, a Marxist, found that Ibn
Warraq’s relentless assault on Islam, above all for its intellectual
constraints and failures, deserved the highest praise — and he
was willing to disappoint his editors at Le Monde in insisting that
they either publish his enthusiastic review, or squash it altogether
(of course, they squashed it).

Lewis himself once wrote an essay that identified the philo-Islamic
strain in Jewish Orientalists who found what seemed to be the more
welcoming world of Islam, compared to the brutalities inflicted on Jews
by Western Christendom. *He was good at diagnosis, but not as good at
self-diagnosis. He has never quite described, for his many admirers
and his wide audience, the full panoply of disabilities placed on
non-Muslims under Islam, usually being content with a sentence or
two about the “jizya” and “other disabilities.”_ _*

*Lewis has in the past been unwilling to endorse the scholarship of
Bat Ye’or, describing it as “too polemical.” Really? If the scrupulous
scholarship of “The Decline of Eastern Christianity Under Islam”
is too polemical (is that a word which one applies when scholarship
is sometimes informed with passion?), what of all the scholarship on
which that book rests? What of Arakel of Tabriz? Or Armand Abel? Or
Charles Dufourcq? Or Levi-Provencal? Or what about the scholarship
that Bat Ye’or did not use, that of Mary Boyce on the Muslim treatment
of Zoroastrians, or K. S. Lal on the Muslim treatment of Hindus?_ _*

*Bat Ye’or managed both to create a work of scholarship and analysis,
much of which was original to her, as well as a synthesis of a
large amount of scholarly literature — by French, German, Armenian,
Greek, Bulgarian, Romanian, and other scholars — scholarship which
does not paint quite the picture of the Ottomans as that which Lewis
has favored. Not that he has ever been an open apologist for Islam,
but he has failed to convey, in book after book, the real nature and
horror of dhimmitude. To describe, for example, the forced levy
of Christian children by the Turks, as a “recruitment” (which to
the modern mind evokes mental images of college or army recruiters
dangling inducements), which was often envied by the Muslim parents,
is to ignore the scholarship, by scholars from parts of Europe once
under Ottoman rule, detailing the fear and horror of such events as
the devshirme levy. The subject of dhimmitude has not been part of
Lewis’ main bailiwick. It is one thing not to treat of a subject,
quite another to mislead as to its real significance; quite another
still to simply shut out of serious consideration a lonely scholar,
outside the regular academic system, who has produced the body of
work that Bat Ye’or has produced, and continues to produce.*

One hesitates to criticize Lewis for this because of the disgraceful
treatment of him by the members of MESA (the MIddle Eastern Studies
Association). Their relation to Lewis reminds me of a story that
the late Tibor Szamuely once wrote in The Spectator. He described a
functionary, the compleat chinovnik, of the Soviet Writers’ Union,
giving a speech in Tula, famed for its samovars, in the southwest
of Moscow. “In bad old Czarist days,” he intoned, “we had only one
writer from Tula Province.” And then he noted proudly: “But now,
but now we have 3,247 members of the Union of Soviet Writers from
Tula Province alone.” (Wild cheering, laughter, applause).

Szamuely drily added: “Yes. He was right. But he forgot to add that
the one writer from “bad old Czarist days” was named Lev Tolstoy”
and no one would ever remember any of the 3,247 current members of
the Writers’ Union from Tula. Well, something like that comes to mind
when one thinks of Lewis, and his scholarship, compared to the heaps of
Rashid Khalidis and Hamid Dabashis and Joel Beinins, some of whom are
former propagandists for the PLO, others of whom spend their academic
leisure beavering about in the busy “construction of the Palestinian
identity” — which if it really existed, as more than a transparently
useful notion, would not require so much endless “construction.” In
relation to the MESA members who continue to deny him the recognition
he deserves, reminds us of Tolstoy, in Szamuely’s anecdote, in relation
to his numerous (3,247, to be exact) epigones. *But that does not
absolve Lewis of his failures, his elisions, his distortions, his
underappreciations, his allowing vanity to cloud his keen sight (how
could he continue to deny the Armenian genocide? out of what misplaced
loyalties to Ottomanists and Osmanlis, and to decades of friendship
with many Turks, to what perverse parsing of the word “genocide,”
could he have found himself denying what masses of evidence, and
eyewitness testimony, support? Which was more important — the
continued friendship of Turks, or the scholarly approval of Vankh
Dadrian and others who have studied the Armenian genocide?*

If one is to believe the Wall Street Journal and other publications,
Lewis has had an important influence on American policy in
Iraq. By that, one means not the original invasion itself, but the
Light-Unto-the-Muslim-Nations Project, which was to bring “democracy”
to Iraq, and then that “democracy,” in turn, would serve as a model for
other Arab states, and lead to all manner of good things, including
the diminishment of the role of Islam. But Lewis, like those in
the Pentagon, was making judgments on the basis of friendship with
highly misrepresentative men, Iraqis who were well-educated in the
West, who had spent decades in the West (Chalabi has been in the
West for 45 years), and who not only had become Western, rational
men, but had themselves forgotten just how irrational Iraqi society
is, with its ever-present substratum of Islam, the hostility that
Islam engenders toward all non-Muslims (which means, of course,
that any gratitude toward Infidel Americans for rescuing them from
the regime of Saddam Hussein will be either feigned, or fleeting, or
both). *Lewis likes to think of himself as unswervingly unpolemical,
the historian au-dessus de la melee — but he did not hesitate to
co-sign a political advertisement (written with James Woolsey) on
behalf of Prince Hassan of Jordan, to become the new king of Iraq —
an advertisement that required him to praise the ahistoric fantasies
of Amartya Sen about the historically “democratic” strain in Islam,
which if we are talking about modern “democracy” and its connection to
human rights, completely misstates the case). Lewis allowed himself
to forget, because he wanted not to remember, the essential tenets
of Islam, the manichaean split between Believer and Infidel, the
inability of the Believer to accept any authority other than the
sharia (and certainly not an authority stemmming from the votes of
mere mortals), the impossibility of their being a real defense of
human rights (beginning with full freedom of conscience, which is
impossible in any Islamic regime)_. _*

Lewis lived,in Egypt during World War II, when Egypt was essentially
ruled by the British under extraordinary, wartime conditions
(it was the British who jailed Answar Sadat for his pro-Nazi
activities). Otherwise, Lewis has visited the Middle East as a
dignitary, and in Turkey a celebrity. He is feted, treated with famous
courtesy. In Amman Prince Hassan himself is a host and patron. In
Princeton, dissenters now eager for support within the Administration
make sure, as Saad Eddin Ibrahim did, to visit Lewis in Princeton
(Lewis was instrumental in putting pressure on the Egyptian government,
through threats to withhold $30 million, to change its treatment of
Ibrahim in the courts). All of this attention, all of this lionizing,
has had an affect. Lewis has retailed on more than one occasion his
bon mots to gathered Arab admirers in Amman; his natural wariness
seems strangely absent in his retelling of a story where his sally
met with appreciative laughter. Few of us would respond otherwise;
everyone likes to have a receptive audience.

*Lewis did not grow up in the Arab and Muslim world, as did the dry
and brilliant Elie Kedourie; nor did he live, among the Arabs in situ,
as did J. B. Kelly. (It is quite another thing to live among Arab
colleagues in the West). He does not recognize quite as easily, and
thus dismiss quite as completely, the nonsense, lies,and blague that
are the stock-in-trade in the Arab countries as Kelly, for example,
is wont to do*.

What is passing strange is that Lewis’ first and greatest interest
was modern Turkey. He admired the Kemalist reforms. He understood
how difficult it was to undertake them. He knew that save for that
reforms, the class of secularist Turks — the very class from which
his own colleagues and friends came — would never have attained the
critical mass it did. Yet, when confronted with Iraq, he did not draw
any lessons from Kemalism. He did not stop to think that Kemalism was
a result purely from within, a result derived from an enlightened
despot, convinced that Islam explained the failures, political,
economic, social, and intellectual, of the Muslim peoples, including
the Turks — and it was Islam that would, in its practice, have to be
constrained by government fiat. That was what Kemalism was all about.

Now, confronted with Iraq, Lewis ignores the lessons of Kemalism. Yet
he must know that had the British tried, for example, with their
soldiers still walking the streets of Istanbul, to impose the kind of
de-islamizing reforms that Mustafa Kemal imposed, it would never have
worked, now seems to be promoting the idea that “democracy” can come to
that most unlikely country, Iraq, where tribalism and not the idea of
the individual, still rules, where ethnic (Kurd and Arab) and sectarian
(Sunni and Shi’a) rivalries and hatreds, have a long and deep history,
and where the underlying ideology of Islam is opposed, in every fiber,
to the rights enshrined in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights —
including the right to freedom of conscience (apostasy), the right
of equal treatment under the law for believers in all religions
(directly contradicted by the sharia), the right to equal treatment
of men and women (also contradicted by the sharia), and so on.

Why did Lewis not employ the lessons of Kemalist Turkey, the only
successful or quasi-successful, democracy in the Muslim world,
and apply them to Iraq? Surely the goal is not to bring “democracy”
which would mean a Shi’a takeover. The goal for Infidels should be
to bring about the kind of end-of-our-tether conditions that will
allow a sufficient number of people within the Muslim world to see
that Islam itself has failed, politically, economically, morally,
and intellectually, and that the Kemalist approach — not to try,
hopelessly, to “reform” Islam but rather to grimly and relentlessly
create the conditions that constrain the practice of Islam, so that a
secularist class may be nurtured. And in turn, that class will have
a stake in continuing to adhere to the local version of Kemalism,
to continue to suppress any signs of backsliding, so that Islam could
continue to be tamed. As Lewis must know from his own encounter a few
days ago with the Turkish Prime Minster, Mr. Erdogan, Kemalism is now
under assault, perhaps a successful assault. The assumption that the
gains were permanent, that Turkey would remain unaffected by Islam’s
natural distempers (not, as Lewis would have it,merely reactions to
the disappointments of the modern world), has turned out to be shaky.

Lewis has noted, in public lectures, that more has been achieved to
bring “progress” to the Muslim world by those who would be properly
described as enlightened despots, such as King Muhammad V of Morocco,
Bourguiba in Tunisia, Reza Shah Pahlavi in Iran, and especially, and
most successfully, by Ataturk in Turkey. Belief in the “people” (i.e.
in”democracy”) in the Muslim world is likely to lead to retrograde
legislation, and a situation that makes things worse, not better,
for Infidels.

So why did he apparently promote the idea of Iraq as a likely candidate
for something called “democracy’? Just how was that to take place, and
what was the final outcome likely to be in Iraq’s power structure? And
since there is nothing self-evident about the idea that “democracy” in
Iraq will necessarily be worth the vast allocation of men, materiel,
money, and attention that is now being spent, monomaniacally, on
this project, just how does it relate to encouraging, from within
Islam, lots of local and little Ataturks to recognize the failures
of Islam, and in their own way, for the sake of their own peoples,
to cunningly fashion ways to constrain its practice and dampen its
appeal? *What, one wonders, does Lewis think of the many Muslim or
ex-Muslim scholars who have written about the total contradiction
between the principles of sharia and the principles enshrined inthe
Universal Declaration of Human Rights — such scholars, for example,
as Rexa Afshari, or Ali Sina, or Ibn Warraq, or Azam Kamguian. Does
he give weight to their views, or regard them all as malcontents and,
as he has sometimes employed the Muslim word, “renegades”?*

Particularly when it comes to the Middle East, where Muslims do not
brook the slightest criticism of Islam, its greatness, the greatness
of its civilisation, and so on, it is hard for scholars who perceive
things otherwise to speak their minds fully. There is often a gap
between what is said publicly, and what is admitted privately. And a
good many people like to think that if they spent many decades studying
a subject, it must have inherent worth, its civilisation must have been
a glorious thing indeed. Those mental pictures pass by in vivid array,
those mosques in Samarkand and Tashkent and Bokhara, the Dome of the
Rock gleaming in Jerusalem, those turbaned Turks and Iznik tulips, all
the local color of that “high Islamic civilization” that Orientalists
today still feel that they must formulaically overpraise (and in so
doing, either tacitly accept the long-discarded notions of a European
“Dark Ages,” or belittle the vaster achievements of other non-Western
civilizatons — those of the Mayans, or the Hindus, or the Chinese).

Lewis has outlived almost all of his colleagues. The kind of training
he received goes far beyond what the Beinins and the Khalidis can
even conceive of, and much further still beyond what they could ever
attain. Because he towers over those who foolishly attack him, he
has been mistaken for a Giant Sequoia. Had those colleagues remained
in the field, he would now be seen as still something impressive —
a sturdy English oak, Quercus robur, say — but not quite as tall,
or as impressive, as that Giant Sequoia.

****

http://www.jihadwatch.org/dhimmiwatch/archives/002247.php

Armenian servicemen get visas for Baku-hosted NATO conference

Armenian servicemen get visas for Baku-hosted NATO conference

Public Television of Armenia, Yerevan
16 Jun 04

The Armenian servicemen have already received entry visas to Azerbaijan
and will take part in the planning conference for the NATO Cooperative
Best Effort exercises. The press service of the Armenian Defence
Ministry informed “Aylur” that the Armenian servicemen will be in
Baku on 1 July.

To recap, to take part in the planning conference the Armenian
servicemen had to receive the entry visas no later than 7 June. Because
of the Azerbaijani side’s fault they [previously] failed to get visas.

Armenian officer killed in border clash with Azerbaijan

Armenian officer killed in border clash with Azerbaijan

SpaceDaily
June 17 2004

YEREVAN (AFP) Jun 16, 2004 — An Armenian officer was killed in a clash
with Azerbaijani forces along this country’s northeastern frontier,
the ministry of defense said Wednesday. Chief of staff Michael
Arutunian said clashes in the area east of Idzhevan, an important
road and rail center, broke out a week ago when Azerbaijani troops
attempted to take a position on a hilltop that would have enabled
them to control a source of water running into Armenia.

There have been repeated such incidents in various frontier regions
since the signing of the cease-fire in 1994 interrupting the war over
the enclave of Nagorno Karabakh, which remained in Armenian hands. In
Armenian, the territory is referred to as Artsakh.

Arutunian said several troops on the other side were killed. There
was no statement from the Azerbaijani side.

At least three Azerbaijanis were reported killed in similar clashes
along the frontier last year.

Peace agreement for better future of NK

PEACE AGREEMENT FOR BETTER FUTURE OF KARABAKH

Azat Artsakh – Republic of Nagorno Karabakh (NKR)
June 6 2004

The OSCE Parliamentary Assembly reporter on Karabakh settlement
Goran Lenmarker will present a report in Edinburg on July 5, which
will include suggestions in reference to the ways of parliamentary
influence of the OSCE Minsk Group on the question of the Karabakh
settlement. Goran Lenmarker stated this in Stepanakert where he
had meetings with the NKR president, parliament leadership, public
organizations and representatives of refugees. During the meeting the
speaker of the Nagorni Karabakh parliament Oleg Yessayan mentioned
that he is satisfied with the fact that along with the OSCE Minsk
Group other European organizations start to occupy with the Karabakh
problem. He emphasized that the parliament of Nagorni Karabakh is
ready to assist comprehensively to the fair and peaceful settlement
of the problem. He emphasized that in Nagorni Karabakh they are
conscious that it is possible to achieve international recognition
only through building democratic statehood in our country. Goran
Lenmarker stated that he does not have much experience in the Karabakh
problem and at the same time he mentioned that he has great experience
in the question of other conflicts, especially the Balkan conflict
regulation. Lenmarker considers the main principles of work the rapid
settlement of the problem, maintenance of the cease-fire and the
admissibility of the decision for all the conflict parties. Lenmarker
mentioned that he does not intend taking the place of the Minsk
Group but he thinks that the parliament may have an important role
in the settlement of the problem. During the meeting the members of
parliament made their observations concerning the settlement. The head
of the NA faction “Dashnaktsutyun” (Armenian Revolutionary Federation)
Vahram Balayan emphasized that not recognizing the independence of
Nagorni Karabakh by the international community is a rough violation
of the rights of the Karabakh people who intend continuing to defend
their statehood. Member of the National Assembly of Nagorni Karabakh
Edward Aghabekian stressed that if “Europe intends settling the
Karabakh conflict in the way it did in the Balkans, then we prefer
the frozen state of the conflict without victims.” In this reference
Goran Lenmarker noticed that Europe has a self-critical attitude
to its policy in the Balkans and considers the reason of failure
hastiness of actions. Edward Aghabekian called the European officials
not to connect the settlement of the conflict to the pipeline or any
means of communication because this conflict was caused by the vital
necessity of self-preservation. In this reference member of the faction
“Democratic Liberal Union” M. Danielian pointed out the necessity
of the fair settlement of the problem emphasizing that the failure
of the Balkan settlement was the unfairness of its principles. Goran
Lenmarker stated that the unfairly settled conflicts take as a rule
a regressive course. During the meeting it was mentioned that the
European Union has completed the process of expanding in the north
and is now facing south, particularly the South Caucasus. In their
turn the members of the National Assembly mentioned that Karabakh has
always been part of the European civilization and sees its development
in northern direction. During the meeting with Karabakh journalists
Goran Lenmarker said that the aim of his visit to Karabakh was to see
the country, meet with the members of parliament, representatives of
the society and to get acquainted with the position of the people of
Karabakh in reference to the Karabakh regulation. Goran Lenmarker
stated that his role is to render parliamentary assistance to the
process of negotiations. According to him, judging by the European
experience, the parliament has huge potential for peaceful settlement
of conflicts. He mentioned that negotiations are governmentâ^À^Ùs
business, and the parliamentarians are to assist to the results of
those negotiations and inform the society. He stated that a peace
agreement must provide good future for the people of Karabakh. By
the way, he emphasized the importance of rapid settlement because as
a result the societies of Karabakh, Armenia and Azerbaijan suffer.

AA.

Chess: Kasparov throwaway

Kasparov throwaway
By Malcolm Pein

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH(LONDON)
June 14, 2004, Monday

“CALL a doctor!” cried Boris Spassky as his fellow former world
champion Garry Kasparov inexplicably missed a win in a king and pawn
endgame against the French champion Etienne Bacrot and saw his
Armenian team go down to a third defeat against the Rest of the
World. The score stands at 11-7 to the RoW at the halfway stage.

The Armenian team should have won this round. Vladimir Akopian was
clearly better against Vishy Anand, but after he correctly rejected a
sacrificial possibility and headed for a superior endgame, Anand
defended well and then played very quickly to induce errors from his
opponent, and won the game.

The Armenian team did score one win, as the world title challenger
Peter Leko swept aside Loek Van Wely.

The match is being played in Moscow to celebrate the 75th anniversary
of the late Armenian world champion Tigran Petrosian.

Bacrot
p p p p p p p c p p p p ) p p p p c p p p p n p p d n p p p p p p p p

Kasparov

Position after 65Kg6

Kasparov’s error comes after Bacrot has just played 65Kg6 to reach
the position in the diagram above. Kasparov played 66.Kd4?? and after
66Kh5 a draw was agreed because of 66Kh5 67.Ke5 Kg4 68.Kf6 (68.h5
Kxh5 69 Kxf5 f6! 70 g4+ Kh4 draws) 68Kxg3.

Kasparov could have won with 66.Kf3! Kf6 (66Kh5 67.Kf4 transposes)
67.Kf4 Kg6 68.Ke5 winning the f5 pawn and the game; 68f6+ 69.Ke6 does
not help. After 66.Kf3! Kg7 67.Kf4 Kf6 68.h5 Ke6 69.Kg5 the h pawn
runs.

THIS sharp pawn sacrifice from Boris Gelfand gives Francisco Vallejo
Pons (White) attacking chances and 19.c6! dxc6 20.Ne4 Qe7 21.Qe5 was
good for White. Instead, Gelfand gives up all the white squares to
win the c7 pawn but gets mated. In the final position the black rook
comes to c8 and Qe2+ wins.

B Gelfand – F Vallejo Pons

Armenia-ROW (3) Moscow

1 d4 Nf6 2 c4 e6 3 Nf3 b6 4 Nc3 Bb4 5 Bg5 Bb7 6 e3 h6 7 Bh4 g5 8 Bg3
Ne4 9 Nd2 Nxc3 10 bxc3 Bxc3 11 Rc1 Bb4 12 h4 gxh4 13 Rxh4 Be7 14 Rh5
Bd6 15 Qg4 Qf6 16 c5! Bxg3 17 Qxg3 Na6 18 Bd3 Rc8 19 Bxa6? Bxa6 20
cxb6 axb6 21 Rxc7 Rxc7 22 Qxc7 Qg6 23 Rh3 Qd3 24 Kd1 Ke7! 0-1

Pons
p p p 7 p f c e c p – o p c p o p p p p p n p p p p Y n p * b p l n b
p p p X p p

Gelfand

Final position after 24Ke7!

ACYOA honors dedicated stewards

PRESS OFFICE
Diocese of the Armenian Church of America (Eastern)
630 Second Avenue, New York, NY 10016
Contact: Jake Goshert, Coordinator of Information Services
Tel: (212) 686-0710 Ext. 60; Fax: (212) 779-3558
E-mail: [email protected]
Website:

June 9, 2004
___________________

AWARDS PRESENTED TO PEOPLE DEDICATED TO YOUNG FAITHFUL

As part of its General Assembly and Sports Weekend, the Armenian Church
Youth Organization of America (ACYOA) awarded several honors to
dedicated leaders during its weekend of events in Dallas, TX, May 27-31.

The Gregory Arpajian Award, given to an individual who displays
leadership and service to the Armenian Church and community, was
presented to Saro Kalayjian of the St. Mary Church of Washington, DC.

The Sam Nersesian Award, which honors an individual who displays
Christian values, was awarded to Karen Khatchadourian from the St.
Thomas Church in Tenafly, NJ.

The Chapter “A” Award, annually given to an ACYOA senior chapter that
has best fulfilled the requirements as seen by the ACYOA Central
Council, was awarded to the ACYOA chapter at the St. Sarkis Church of
Dallas, TX.

“We will definitely remember the southern hospitality of the Dallas
ACYOA and St. Sarkis parishioners as we return home to our parishes
throughout the Diocese,” newly installed ACYOA Central Council Chair
Morris said. “The countless hours of planning and preparations led to
the success of the weekend and proved that Dallas’ ACYOA Seniors were
truly worthy of receiving the Chapter ‘A’ Award this year.”

The V. Rev. Fr. Haigazoun Melkonian Award, named after the beloved late
pastor and given each year to a priest in recognition of his dedication
to the youth, was given to Fr. Nersess Jebejian, pastor at the St. Hagop
Church in St. Petersburg, FL.

“I knew Fr. Haigazoun for many years and, in fact, was his mentor for a
time, so I’m especially pleased to be awarded this in his name,” Fr.
Jebejian said. “I pray that the ACYOA continues to grow and fulfill its
mission and that it lives up to the vision of its founder, Archbishop
Tiran Nersoyan.”

The group’s newest honor, the Rev. Fr. Haroutiun Dagley Award, also
named after a beloved departed pastor, and presented to a layperson who
has supported the youth of the church, was awarded to Dean Shahinian, a
delegate from the St. Mary Church in Washington, DC.

“We are brothers and sisters in a family that God has created,” said
Shahinian, who on Saturday, May 29, also lead an Insights Session for
the participants, during which they focused on morals. “We are bound
together with love and respect for each other, although we are at
different stages in our lives.”

— 6/9/04

E-mail photos available on request. Photos also viewable on the Eastern
Diocese’s website,

PHOTO CAPTION (1): Fr. Nersess Jebejian, pastor of the St. Hagop Church
in St. Petersburg, FL, is presented with the V. Rev. Fr. Haigazoun
Melkonian Award during the ACYOA General Assembly and Sports Weekend in
Dallas, TX.

PHOTO CAPTION (2): Saro Kalayjian, from the St. Mary Church of
Washington, D.C., is presented with the Gregory Arpajian award during
the ACYOA General Assembly and Sports Weekend, May 27-31, 2004.

PHOTO CAPTION (3): Dean Shahinian, from the St. Mary Church in
Washington, D.C., is presented with the ACYOA’s Rev. Fr. Haroutiun
Dagley Award, during the group’s 2004 General Assembly and Sports
Weekend, hosted the St. Sarkis Church of Dallas, TX.

# # #

www.armenianchurch.org
www.armenianchurch.org.