CR: Azerbaijan

Congressional Record: October 7, 2005 (Extensions)
>From the Congressional Record Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]

AZERBAIJAN
HON. TED POE
of texas
in the house of representatives

Friday, October 7, 2005

Mr. POE. Mr. Speaker, Azerbaijan is an important strategic ally for
the United States. The Country is located in a region that can produce
and transport energy products to the West. As well as provide military
and intelligence capabilities to the United States.
Azerbaijan is an emerging major non-OPEC oil producer and transit
country (i.e, Baku-Ceyhan pipeline), which will supply 1.6 million
barrels a day after being operational December 2005. This will
stabilize the other energy producing countries (oil and gas) in the
region and their ability to get their product to the marketplace
without the dependency of Russia or Iran.
Azerbaijan is a front line positioned state for military and
intelligence access to Iran. This will act as a stabilizing effect for
the region and fight off the aggressive position of Iran. It will also
work against terrorist activities spread by fundamental terrorist who
have the support of Iran.
Azerbaijan is the first Muslim state to provide troops to the U.S.
backed coalitions in Iraq., Afghanistan and Kosovo. To date, they are
the only Shiite Muslim state to provide troops.
Azerbaijan is in the vanguard of the emerging democracies from the
former Soviet Union. Azerbaijan has parliamentary elections scheduled
November 6, 2005, and is moving forward with international support to
assure free and fair elections. Azerbaijan has allowed opposition
parties the right to organize, protest, and access public television.
Azerbaijan maintains excellent relations with the State of Israel,
both, diplomatically and economically including providing crude oil.
Azerbaijan is a strong strategic partner with the United States and
is cooperating in United States activities regarding Caspian regional
security overseeing Iran (e.g., Caspian Guards program, radar system,
fly-over rights and re-fueling capacity).
Azerbaijan is a strategic asset given its presence as a strong United
States-Israel ally next to Iran. Azerbaijan welcomes trade with Israel
and stronger ties between the two countries.
Iran has threatened Azerbaijan due to cooperation with Israel and the
United States Iran continues to inform Azerbaijan that their strong
relations with the United States and Israel will not be beneficial, as
Iran is their neighbor.
The Iran military enters Azerbaijan airspace weekly and Iran has made
claims on Azerbaijan’s offshore oil and gas exploration.
Iran has attempted to spread Madrassas schools in Azerbaijan and
Azerbaijan has resisted.
Iran pressures Azerbaijan to abolish visas between the two countries,
which would lead to less control and more Iranians infiltration into
Azerbaijan. Azerbaijan is resisting this effort.
Occupied Azerbaijan (NK Region) is on the Iranian border, where
alleged terrorist camps, narcotic trafficking and weapons trading goes
on. Since Armenia has occupied this region of Azerbaijan, almost 16
percent of the total country, this activity has existed with the
support of Iran. Azerbaijan is defenseless in trying to stop this
activity, as long as Armenia occupies this region.

The New Cocaine: System Of A Down And The Dangers Of Irony

THE NEW COCAINE: SYSTEM OF A DOWN AND THE DANGERS OF IRONY
By Zac Pennington

The Portland Mercury, OR
Oct 6 2005

System of a Down
Rose Garden
1 Center Court

If you keep your tongue firmly lodged in cheek most of the time,
you’re eventually going to slip up and bite it. That’s one of the
primary dangers in this seemingly eternal age of irony: phrases, music,
clothing, and other affects adopted in fits of ironic appreciation
have the damnedest way of creeping out of their holes and into your
subconscious-and soon enough that joke you made a few years ago about
having an ironic coke party turns into 15-minute bathroom queues at
every bar in the city for the next five years.

It’s a slippery slope-in spite of all the defenses that we so carefully
compound around our lives, the viral strain of ironic appreciation
seems to have an uncanny capacity to work its way through our otherwise
closed doors of perception. And that’s the only viable explanation
for just how it came to be that a major-label metal band immerged from
the darkest corners of late-’90s radio rock to become every indierock
fan’s favorite guilty pleasure: System of a Down are the new cocaine.

For most of us, a tentative relationship with System of a Down began
with the 1998 release of their self-titled debut-a record comfortably
marketed alongside the era’s reprehensible rap-rock phenomenon.

Despite a campaign aggressively marketing the LA band’s Armenian
descent, most reasonable people saw little to distinguish System from
the hordes of goateed douchebags ruling the airwaves at the time.

>>From the very beginning, however, there was the faint call from
otherwise rational folks (and a few heshers) instantly able to
separate System from the radio rock’s most dreadful scourge in recent
memory-an assemblage of System apologists who’s fruitless refrain was
echoed time and time again: “Dude, I know that Nu-metal is totally
unforgivable-but System seems pretty cool to me. I mean they’re
Armenian, for godssake!” Needless to say, it fell largely on deaf ears.

And then something very funny (and I do mean funny) happened: In
2001, System of a Down released a record called Toxicity. Toxicity’s
near-universal commercial embrace led to a great deal of forced
exposure inflicted upon a lot of previously deaf ears. With the help
of mega-singles (by metal standards, at least) like “Chop Suey!,”
“Toxicity,” and “Aerials,” it was difficult to avoid vocalist Serj
Tankian’s incredibly ridiculous, politically tongue-twisted, angry
leprechaun rants for the better part of two years. And you know what?

Shit was kind of awesome-you know, in a gut-busting, hyper-dramatic,
semi-retarded kind of way-enough to make you want to stop when it
popped up on the airwaves. Every single time.

It must have been about a year ago when I read somewhere that
System’s double album-in-progress (later split into current mega-album
Mesmerize and soon-to-be-released Hypnotize) had primary influences
of indie-friendly touchstones like Kraftwerk, the Zombies, and
the Beach Boys. At the time, it sounded like just another piece of
amusing mythology to tag onto my favorite band to get all post-modern
about. And then, like everybody else, I actually heard Mesmerize-an
incredibly ridiculous, politically tongue-twisted, gut-busting,
hyper-dramatic, semi-retarded, and legitimately brilliant record of
Zappa (or maybe Patton) level sonic complexity.

At first I tried to laugh it off-I mean, it is kind of funny-but
before long I had to face the fact that I sincerely (and still somewhat
inexplicably) love System of a Down. And I know I’m not alone.

BAKU: Azeri, Armenian FMs To Meet In December

AZERI, ARMENIAN FMS TO MEET IN DECEMBER

AzerNews, Azerbaijan
Oct 6 2005

Azerbaijani and Armenian foreign ministers are due to hold talks for
the next time on the sidelines of a meeting of the OSCE council of
foreign ministers in the Slovenian capital Ljubljana December 5-6
to discuss ways of peacefully settling the Upper Garabagh conflict,
officials said.

Deputy foreign minister and the President’s special envoy on the
Upper Garabagh conflict Araz Azimov said the two ministers are
expected to hold a private meeting as part of the event. Co-chairs
of the mediating OSCE Minsk Group are due to visit the region prior
to the ministers’ meeting, Azimov said. “The issue was discussed at
a recent OSCE meeting. A final decision was not made in this respect,
but the co-chairs’ visit is expected on the eve of the parliamentary
elections”, the deputy foreign minister said.

Armenian foreign minister Vardan Oskanian told a press conference on
Thursday that the conflicting sides – Azerbaijan and Armenia – should
step up progress achieved in the conflict settlement. “A very suitable
moment has come about from the standpoint of resolving the Garabagh
conflict”, he said. “There are positive processes and achievements
and we should use them in order to continue the negotiating process
and deepen the accomplishments after the parliament elections in
Azerbaijan.”

BAKU: Azeri Minister Blames Armenians For Flood In Western District

AZERI MINISTER BLAMES ARMENIANS FOR FLOOD IN WESTERN DISTRICT

ANS TV, Azerbaijan
Oct 4 2005

[Presenter] Minister of Ecology and Natural Resources Huseyn Bagirov
has explained why 150 ha of arable land and over 20 houses have been
flooded in the villages of Zangisali and Mahrizli in Agdam District.

Armenians are using the water reservoir in the Armenian-occupied
village of Saricali precisely for this purpose.

[Bagirov] According to information available to us, this is rain
water. I do not believe that it collected naturally because if this was
the case, it would have also collected earlier and these streams would
have existed earlier. The Armenians have fortifications, and the troops
of the occupying army are not far from there. We suppose that this
is an artificial lake and that was the intention, which they achieved.

One Of The Leaders Of The World Coming

ONE OF THE LEADERS OF THE WORLD COMING

A1+
| 12:41:46 | 05-10-2005 | Official |

October 6-8 on Robert Kocharyan’s invitation the President of
Latvia Mrs.

Vaira Vike-Freyberga will arrive in Armenia on official duty together
with her husband Imants Freyberga.

The delegation of the Latvian President includes the Ministers of
Economy, Transport and Communication, and Culture, as well as other
officials and about 50 businessmen.

The main aim of the visit is to stimulate the development of the
links between the countries and to mention the primary directions of
economic cooperation. The heads of the countries will discuss the
cooperation between EU and Armenia, issues about regional problems
and will exchange ideas about urgent international problems.

Georgian Opposition Party Asks Nobel Institute Not To Award NobelPea

GEORGIAN OPPOSITION PARTY ASKS NOBEL INSTITUTE NOT TO AWARD NOBEL PEACE PRIZE TO SAAKASHVILI

Armenpress
Oct 4, 2005

TBILISI, OCTOBER 4, ARMENPRESS: A Georgian opposition party has sent a
letter to the Nobel Institute in Norway asking it ‘not to award the 2005
Peace Prize to Georgian president Mikhail Saakashvili.”

Shalva Natelashvili, the chairman of the Labor Party, said the party
asked the Novel Institute that is to convene on October 7 to decide the
winner, ‘to examine Georgian president’s performance, who is trying to build
an authoritarian regime violating basic human rights and freedoms.”

Saakashvili and Ukraine’s president Viktor Yuschenko had been nominated for
the Nobel Peace Prize earlier this year by U.S. Senators Hillary Clinton
(D-NY) and John McCain (R-AZ).

Clinton and McCain sent a letter to the Nobel Institute in Norway saying
Yushchenko and Saakashvili had played historic roles in the lives of their
countries ‘displaying an extraordinary commitment to peace.” “Awarding the
Nobel Peace Prize to these two men would instill hope and inspiration in
those seeking freedom in other countries that lack it,” their letter said.

Energetic, honest, transformed – so why does Turkey need us anyway?

Energetic, honest and transformed – so why does Turkey need us anyway?

NORMAN STONE, Guest contributors

The Times. UK
October 03, 2005

THREE OF THE greatest engineering projects of modern times are under way in
Turkey. By the Maiden’s Tower, on the Bosphorus, a famous old landmark, two
elaborate structures have appeared. They are the surface end of an enormous
underwater enterprise, to link the European and Asian sides of the city by
tunnel. It will widen the traffic bottleneck that so besets Istanbul, and do
much to make it once again one of the great European cities. Already, huge
areas of the old European part of the city are being restored, brought back
to where they were in 1900, when the city was the heart of a Mediterranean
empire.

Then there is the vast Baku-Ceyhan pipeline that brings oil from the Caspian
to the Mediterranean; again a gigantic enterprise, negotiating its way
through poor mountain country, to keep Europe going. It also brings life to
towns such as Kars, in northeastern Turkey, where, with an endless winter,
the inhabitants had to heat themselves with `straw bricks’ – combinations of
animal dung and straw, dried out in the open in the summer and then used to
keep the people going in a cold that reaches well below zero. These things –
tezek – were used in Alpine Europe until the Fifties, and then, not. Turkey
is following that path.

The greatest of these engineering enterprises is the GAP, the `southeastern
Anatolian project’, by which great dams are to be placed on the biblical
rivers Tigris and Euphrates, flooding an area the size of Belgium and
turning what, for centuries, has been a dirt-poor area back into `the
fertile crescent’ that it used to be. If you go to that mainly Kurdish part
of south-east Turkey, you can see the green areas spreading, and towns such
as Urfa, on the Syrian border, growing ever more prosperous.

These projects are the background to the debate about whether Turkey should
be allowed to join the European Union. A stage army of Euro-Lilliputs has
put up objections, humiliating for the Turks in general: too many of them,
too poor, too Muslim, too nasty to their minorities, too likely to migrate
in droves and set up kebab houses all over the place. The country has, of
course, its problems, but the history of the Turks is about getting there in
the end.

It is true that in the 1970s there was a Third World demographic problem;
Turkey added, every year, the population of Denmark to itself. Schools could
not cope, hospitals were swamped, electricity failed for six hours every
day, a smog fell across the cities. But Turkish birthrates have fallen to
replacement-rate (though there are pockets in the east where the old ways go
on).
Nor is the country nearly as poor as legend would have it. Turkish males die
on average at 70, Russian ones at 60. The growth rate is enormous and you
can see the signs all around: the restoration of battered old parts of
Istanbul, or the chains and chains of Central Europe-bound lorries on the
main roads. (Kayseri, the old Caesarea, is now a key industrial town, and so
is Antep, both of them making things that Western Europe no longer makes for
itself.)

If Western Europe opened up the agricultural market as well as the
industrial one, you would see a similar process in the countryside of
Anatolia. At the moment it is a very odd mixture: near-biblical villages,
complete with donkeys and lines of men chewing the cud in teahouses, only a
mile or so from a modern farm with irrigation sprinklers pumping away.

Is there a European country of which the above might, easily within living
memory, have been said? There is. It is Spain, under Franco. Not long ago
the backwardness and cultural difference of Spain were held to be
incompatible with EU membership. Turkey also has a Mediterranean culture,
complete with clientelistic politics, a family sense of sometimes forbidding
strength, and very good hot dinners. Once Spain joined Europe it rapidly
`modernised’. Nor did poor Spanish ` guest workers’ migrate in droves. In
fact, as within Spain, the cultural differences within Anatolia are at least
as great as those between Turks and Europeans.

Comparison with Spain brings up another contentious question: minorities.
Spain had a vicious civil war, involving them. The Catalans were ahead of
the rest of the country, in much the same way as Greeks or Armenians were in
old Turkey. Turkey’s minorities had more and better schools; in fact the
Turkish language had to be radically reformed in order for the masses to be
at all literate (the old, Arabic-based, script could cater for four `z’s and
three vowels, whereas Turkish has one `z’ and eight vowels).

The problem in Turkey was complicated during and after the First World War,
when the Western powers used local Greeks and Armenians to try to carve up
Anatolia. Much massacre resulted, with whole regions being `ethnically
cleansed’. In the Thirties roughly half the urban population of Turkey was
made up of refugees and their descendants, and these can hardly be expected
to take kindly to the European Parliament’s resolving that one of these
ethnic cleansings, and one only – the Armenian – should be recognised as
`genocide’.

The other minority question concerns the Kurds. They are like the Basques:
mountaineers, in part religious-reactionary, in part bandit-revolutionary,
in part successful migrants, with several different languages, none much
developed. When Kurds move to the cities – two thirds have now done so –
they do not vote for the nationalist parties. They do do so in the
southeast, but that area has not flourished as the rest of the country has
been doing because it is on the Iraqi and Iranian borders.

Problems of `ethnicity’ among the north-eastern Kurds are much less than to
the south, where a tradition of tribal rivalry persists, making for a sort
of civil war that the communist PKK exploited. The answer? Very obviously,
an end to the unemployment that these circumstances have created. The
southeastern Anatolian project, the GAP, should matter, though much will
depend on whether the EU allows free movement of the resulting agricultural
produce. That would do more for the Kurds than preaching about minority
rights.

The Europeans should forget their objections to Turkey. The country is much
more of a prize than all the other new Eastern European countries put
together: it has a tradition of hard work and honesty that was never
destroyed by communism. It is a Spain in the making.

The country has been doing so well that you wonder if it really needs to
join Europe at all. At present the motivation for doing so is mixed: an end
to visa queues (the British are gruesome), an escape from the puritanism of
small-town Anatolia, a prospect of waves of foreign investment, a hope that
`Europe’ will mean an end to what the secularists see as religious takeover
and what the religious see as a secularist takeover.

But the Europeans arrive with health-and-safety regulations and much else
that could just mean the end of much of what makes Turkey tick: those small
shops and artisans working till all hours, ignoring silly rules in proper
Mediterranean manner and keeping families together in a way that makes for a
very healthy social atmosphere (if a handbag is stolen here, it makes the
television news).

Can Turkey stand the unemployment, bureaucracy and taxation that the EU
really portends? Up to the Turks. But there are those of us who might think
that they can carry out the beneficial changes on their own and who might
even say that, if they really want membership of the EU, they can have ours.

Norman Stone is Professor of History at Koç University, Istanbul

Turkish press angered, frustrated by EU deadlock

Agence France Presse — English
September 30, 2005 Friday

Turkish press angered, frustrated by EU deadlock

ANKARA

Turkish newspapers Friday wondered whether the country’s decades-old
efforts to integrate Europe are going down the drain as simmering
tensions on the eve of Turkey’s accession talks appear to exasperate
even the staunchest proponents of EU membership.

In a front-page “Historical Warning” to the European Union, the
mass-selling daily Sabah appealed to European leaders to leave aside
domestic political concerns and clear the way for membership talks
with Ankara, scheduled to start on Monday.

“We hope EU leaders, politicians and bureaucrats will realize the
gravity of the situation,” Sabah said. “It is not too late to return
to common sense.”

Newspapers highlighted a warning by Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul
that he would not go to Luxembourg for the opening of the talks if
the accession terms the EU outlines are unsatisfactory and Ankara is
presented with any last-minute offer other than full membership.

Tensions mounted Thursday when the EU failed to agree on Turkey’s
negotiating conditions and called an emergency meeting for Sunday,
leaving Ankara on the edge and doubtful of the pledges the EU made at
its December 17 summit inviting Turkey to begin accession talks.

The deadlock in the EU was blamed on Austria’s insistence to offer
Turkey “partnership” as opposed to full membership.

“Are we nearing the end of the road?” asked the pro-government Yeni
Safak, while the popular Aksam said relations were teetering “on the
brink of a breakdown.”

The liberal Milliyet said the European Parliament threw “yet another
bomb” into an already demoralized Turkish public opinion by calling
on Ankara earlier this week to acknowledge that the Ottomans
committed “genocide” against Armenians in World War I as a condition
for accession.

“Is the EU aware that it is playing with fire?” Milliyet said. “Even
supporters of the EU have begun saying that enough is enough.”

The newspaper also suggested that Turkey should be prepared for a
“timeout” in its bid to join the bloc “until minds in the EU change
in favor of putting relations with Turkey on the track of full
membership, under equal conditions with the others.”

Belarus culture festival opens in Armenia

ITAR-TASS News Agency
TASS
September 30, 2005 Friday 2:40 PM Eastern Time

Belarus culture festival opens in Armenia

By Tigran Liloyan

YEREVAN

The Belarussian cultural festival in Armenia opened with a large
concern of Belarussian masters of the arts in Yerevan Opera House on
Friday. This is the first such festival from the time the two
countries became independent.

Armenian President Robert Kocharyan addressed a message of greetings
to the participants in the festival, describing it as “a remarkable
event in the cultural life of the two countries.” “Belarussian
culture evokes response in Armenian people,” the message of greetings
says. The president is also confident that “Armenian art is known and
liked in Belarus.”

Pointing out that “Armenian-Belarussian ties have a long history,”
the Armenian president expressed the confidence that “friendship and
spiritual closeness of our peoples accumulated over many years have
good prospects.”

“This remarkable fete presents vast achievements of masters of
Belarussian culture and offers Armenian people an excellent
opportunity to familiarize themselves with the richness of
Belarussian culture,” says the message of Belarussian President
Alexander Lukashenko that was read out by the republic’s Culture
Minister Leonid Gulyako.

“The peoples of Belarus and Armenia are linked by lasting sincere
friendship and fruitful cooperation,” Lukashenko noted. He is
convinced that “no distances and borders can affect the strength of
spiritual unity of the fraternal countries.” The Belarussian
president is sure that “the present cultural forum will promote the
growing closeness of the peoples” of Armenia and Belarus.

The Armenian president received Belarussian culture minister. They
came out for the stepping up of bilateral ties in the area of
culture.

EU applying ‘double standards’ to Turkey: parliament speaker

Agence France Presse — English
September 29, 2005 Thursday

EU applying ‘double standards’ to Turkey: parliament speaker

ANKARA

The speaker of the Turkish parliament charged Thursday that “double
standards” were being applied his country’s long-standing membership
bid in an attempt to provoke Ankara to walk away from the talks.

“It seems as if our patience is being tested. Looking at what is
being done to Turkey one sees that there are some quarters that hope
to get rid of us by forcing us to walk away from the (negotiating)
table,” Bulent Arinc said in an interview with NTV television.

“When one compares the treatment of Romania, Bulgaria or Malta to the
different treatment accorded to Turkey one sees … insincerity,
double standards and discrimination,” he added.

Arinc was commenting on a resolution adopted by the European
Parliament Wednesday which urged Ankara to acknowledge that the
Ottomans committed “genocide” against Armenians during World War I
and to recognize Cyprus during its accession negotiations with the
EU.

The resolution came only five days before Turkey is scheduled to
begin membership talks with the pan-European bloc on Monday, but the
start of the negotiations remains uncertain.

EU foreign ministers are to meet Sunday to break a deadlock on
opening the talks after Austria blocked agreement on a negotiation
position by insisting that Turkey be offered something short of full
membership.

Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul has warned previously that he will turn
his back on the talks if the negotiating framework contains “any
formula or suggestion other than full membership.”

Arinc said: “It is hard to swallow all these… But we should be
patient and I believe that we will overcome many obstacles once the
process starts.”

The speaker stressed that he understood widespread doubts in the EU
over the prospect of admitting a vast, populous country with a
predominantly Muslim faith, but urged European leaders “to keep the
debate away from prejudices and be objective.”

The European Parliament resolution unleashed anger in Turkey where
discussion of the tragic killings in 1915-1917 largely remains taboo
and triggers nationalist sentiments.

“We would like to recall that discussing the issue (the Armenian
massacres) in political platforms would benefit nobody,” the Turkish
foreign ministry said in a statement Thursday.

“Turkey has always argued that controversial chapters in history
should be handled by historians and has opened its archives to the
service of all researchers,” it added.

Armenians claim that up to 1.5 million of their kinsmen were
slaughtered in orchestrated killings under the Ottoman Empire, the
forerunner of modern-day Turkey, but Ankara categorically denies that
a genocide took place.