BAKU: Armenian singer prepares pirate song for Eurovision

APA, Azerbaijan
Feb 13 2010

Armenian singer prepares pirate song for Eurovision

[ 13 Feb 2010 12:42 ]

Baku. Ulkar Gasimova ` APA. One of the Armenian candidates for 55th
Eurovision Song Contest in Oslo prepared pirate song, APA reports
quoting Turkish news portals. In the national selection tour, Armenian
singer Sonya performed `Never’, which music was based on Turkish
singer Izel’s `Bellimi Olur’ (`Is It Known’) and Hadise’s
`Evlenmeliyiz’ (`Should Marry’).

Armenian newspapers said Sonya’s song was composed by Katuzyan. But
Hadise’s song belongs to Sinan Akchil.

Before the national selection final on February 14, Sonya said she was
leaving the contest because of health problems. But it was claimed
that the real reason of her withdrawal was a pirate song.

Armenian candidate for Eurovision 2010 will be chosen on February 14.

BAKU: Kazakhstan has rare chance to declare about itself as mediator

news.az, Azerbaijan
Feb 13 2010

Kazakhstan has rare chance to declare about itself as mediator in Karabakh issue
Sat 13 February 2010 | 06:36 GMT Text size:

Rasim Aghayev Analyst Rasim Aghayev has voiced his ideas about
Kazakhstan’s possible role as the OSCE chairman in negotiation process
on the Karabakh conflict.

"I remember that the Kazakh President visited our region in period of
the first clashes between Armenians and Azerbaijanis. A comprehensive
plan on the settlement of the conflict situation in Nagorno Karabakh
was developed at the initiative and with active participation of
Nazarbayev in the early 90s. If there was any other politician in
place of Yeltsin in Russia who did not support this plan at that time,
the Karabakh conflict would have been settled and not moved to the
phase of the hot conflict", political scientist Rasim Aghayev said at
the session of the discussion club of the political scientists on the
first visit of OSCE’s new chairman Kanat Saudabayev to the South
Caucasus: opportunities and forecasts".

Kazakhstan will have a rare chance to demonstrate itself as a state
capable of mediating the international conflicts, especially because
it has a huge experience in this direction. Kazakhstan is interested
in a reliable transit corridor via the South Caucasus to Europe and it
is no secret that the unsettled Karabakh conflict is the main
hindrance on the way to implementation of regional transit and other
projects", Aghayev said.

1news.az

Iranian Opposition Takes To Street Again

IRANIAN OPPOSITION TAKES TO STREET AGAIN

PanARMENIAN.Net
12.02.2010 10:52 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Iranian opposition demonstrators clashed with
security forces across the country during celebrations to mark the
anniversary of Iran’s 1979 Islamic Revolution.

Iranian opposition protesters chanted anti-government slogans in a
Tehran neighborhood as government supporters held a massive rally
to celebrate the 31st anniversary of Iran’s Revolution. Eyewitnesses
say demonstrations took place in dozens of Tehran neighborhoods, with
security forces firing teargas at large crowds in major city squares.

Opposition leaders Mir Hossein Mousavi and Mehdi Karroubi had asked
supporters both verbally and on their Web sites to turn out for a
"peaceful demonstration" to mark the anniversary of the revolution.

Karroubi’s son reported that his father was attacked and injured by
pro-government agents, forcing him to turn back. He added that his
brother was arrested.

Iranian state TV showed what appeared to be a vast crowd gathered for
the official ceremony at Tehran’s Azadi or "Freedom" Square to hear
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and other speakers hail the revolution
and denounce Iran’s enemies, including the United States and Britain.

At another Tehran square a group of angry opposition protesters began
chanting anti-government slogans during an official rally, drowning
out the cleric who was speaking and forcing him to stop.

Eyewitnesses say that protests in many parts of Tehran turned violent
after security forces began firing teargas at crowds and chasing down
protesters with motorcycles.

Clashes between security forces and opposition demonstrators also
took place in a number of provincial cities. In Shiraz, a young man
told Radio Farda that violent clashes with security forces took place
as students turned out in the main square to demonstrate.

Opposition Web sites are reporting that hundreds of thousands of
opposition protesters turned out in cities across the country,
describing scores of violent clashes with security forces, VOA News
reported.

The Iranian Revolution refers to events involving the overthrow of
Iran’s monarchy (Pahlavi dynasty) under Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi
and its replacement with an Islamic republic under Ayatollah Ruhollah
Khomeini, the leader of the revolution.

BAKU: President Sargsyan’s Position Cannot Be Justified In Internati

PRESIDENT SARGSYAN’S POSITION CANNOT BE JUSTIFIED IN INTERNATIONAL LAW – ANALYST
Aliyah Fridman News.Az

news.az
Feb 12 2010
Azerbaijan

Neil MacFarlane News.Az interviews Neil MacFarlane, head of the
Department of Politics and International Relations at Oxford
University.

What is you your common impression from the speech of Armenian
president at Chatham house?

I was surprised at the tone of the speech. But I don’t think it
changes much. Leaders on both sides have frequently engaged in the
discourse of confrontation before.

The documents of all international organization including 4
resolutions of UN Security Council as well as resolution adopted
by Council of Europe and cetera recognize Karabakh as a part of
Azerbaijan. How would you comment on Sargsyan’s attempts to justify
military occupation a part of Azerbaijan during 188-1994 years by
referring to international law?

I do not believe that the position he takes can be justified in
international law.

President Aliyev says that if the negotiations with Armenia fail
Azerbaijan has a right to liberate its occupied territories in a frame
of Azerbaijani borders recognized by UN in 1991 (including Karabakh).

Is there any contradiction of law?

The UN charter does not prohibit the use of force by a government
within iits domestic jurisdiction. Although the Minsk process and the
UN Security Council engagement have internationalised the conflict to
a degree, to my mind it would be difficult to make a legal argument
that Karabakh was not part of Azerbaijani territorial jurisdiction.

Obviously, if Azerbaijan chose to use force (and I hope it does
not), it would be subject to the laws of war and to international
humanitarian law, which are frequently deemed to apply to civil
conflicts as well as international ones.

Russia is strategic military partner of Armenia, and besides there
are facts about participations of Russian soldiers in Karabakh war
on Armenian side (for instance in massacre of Azeri population in
Khojaly in 1992). Anyway there is an opinion in Baku that the keys
of Karabakh problem lie in Moscow. What do you think about Russian’s
influence on Karabakh settlement?

I think that the Russian Federation is currently playing a fairly
constructive role in the effort to resolve this conflict. The
persistence of the conflict is an obstacle to Russia’s pursuit of
other interests in the region and with Turkey. However, I am not
sure that Russian pressure could produce a compromise on either the
Armenian or the Azerbaijani side.

Azerbaijan proposes a highest possible level of autonomy for those,
who live in Nagorno-Karabakh (Armenians as well as Azerbaijanis, who
are refugees now). But Armenia demands independence for Karabakh. Do
you expect that international community will recognize independence
of Karabakh if Armenia will do it itself and thus a continuation of
practice demonstrated recently in Kosovo, Sought Ossetia and Abkhazia?

No. South Ossetia and Abkhazia have been recognised by Russia,
Nicaragua, and Nauru. That is not the "international community". The
Kosovo case is not obviously comparable to that in Karabakh. To my
mind, there is little reason to expect that major countries would
recognise Karabakh.

However, there is one necessary qualification. if it became clear
(as it did in Kosovo) that the Armenian population in Karabakh was at
risk of massive displacement or killing, then that might justify an
exception to the general rule of territorial integrity on the basis
of the notion of "remedial secession".

Neil MacFarlane is head of the Department of Politics and International
Relations at Oxford University, Associate Fellow at Chatham House
(London).

Great Game Playoff: Russia/Turkey Vs Palestine/Israel

GREAT GAME PLAYOFF: RUSSIA/TURKEY VS PALESTINE/ISRAEL
By Eric Walberg

Online Journal Contributing Writer
Feb 11, 2010, 00:24

A vital playing field in today’s Great Game is Palestine/Israel,
where again there is a tentative meeting of political minds between
Russia and Turkey. In defiance of the US and much of Europe, both
endorsed the Goldstone report on atrocities committed during Israel’s
invasion of Gaza in December 2008, where 100 Palestinians died for
every Israeli casualty.

Neither government is captive to Israel in the way European and US
governments are, though they both have important economic relations
with Israel.

Israeli dissident writer Israel Shamir commended the Turkish leaders
at a conference in Ankara in December: "Your president, Mr Gul, said a
few days ago to our president, Mr Peres, that he will not visit Israel
while the siege of Gaza continues. Turkey is no longer an American
colony. You stopped joint air force exercises with Israel and the US.

You expressed your clear anger over the horrors of Gaza. Now you
pay more attention to the area where you live; you play an important
role already and are destined to play an even greater role. So much
depends on you! We feel it every day in Palestine."

He called on Turkey, as inheritor of the Ottoman-era responsibility
for Palestine, to follow the lead of the Spanish and British judges
who issued arrest warrants for Chilean General Pinochet and Israeli
Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni for murder, and issue an arrest warrant
for the infamous Captain R, accused of murdering a Palestinian child,
Iman Al-Hams, but feted in Israel as a hero. "A Turkish warrant for
his arrest should await him wherever he goes," just as "according
to Israeli law, if a Turk does wrong to a Jew in Turkey, he may
be snatched, arrested, tried and punished in Israel. Turkey should
introduce a symmetrical law, covering offences against Palestinians
who otherwise are not protected by law."

Though unlikely, this would be wildly popular in Turkey. Similarly,
unlike brainwashed Westerners fed daily doses of pro-Israeli
propaganda, Turks and most Russians have no use for the Zionist
project. True, over one million Russians took up the tantalising offer
of instant Israeli citizenship in search of a better life, qualifying
as Jewish merely via marriage or with as little as one grandparent
racially Jewish. But, despite the chauvinism of the Russian-Israeli
Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman, many of these Russian Israelis,
too, have no use for the Zionist project, with its innate racism, some
even marrying Palestinians. Many are returning to Russia, bitter at
the way they are treated by sabra (Jews born in Israel). The natural
sympathy of these and non-Jewish Russians is for the Palestinians.

The Soviet Union was one of the first states to recognise the state of
Palestine after the Palestinian Declaration of Independence in 1988,
and Russia has maintained that position. As Palestinian Foreign
Minister Riad Al-Maliki said during a visit to Moscow last year,
the "fact there is a Palestinian embassy in Moscow is a sign of
the strength of our relationship." Visiting Russia a week after the
Israeli Foreign Minister Lieberman, he found the Russian position on
the peace process and the question of Israeli settlement-building in
the occupied territories unchanged.

As a member of the so-called "quartet" of negotiators (along with the
European Union, the United States and the United Nations), Russia has
stuck to the principles of the "road map" for peace, which requires
Israel to freeze expansion of settlements in the occupied territories
as a condition of further talks.

Russia has 16 million Muslims, about 12 per cent of its population,
and Western-style Islamophobia — and, the flip side, Judophilia —
is largely absent. It recently attended the Organisation of Islamic
Conference as an observer and expressed interest in joining. The
problem with asserting a clear policy towards Muslim countries,
including Turkey, is of course the tragedy of Chechnya and the
persistence of Islamist terrorism within Russia, resulting in
anti-Muslim sentiment in Russian cities, which thrive on cheap labour
from the "Stans" and where much of the small-scale trade has been
run by Chechens and other "blacks."

Shamir explains: "In Europe, if you inspect the coffers of anti-Muslim
neo-Nazi groups, you’ll find that they thrive on Jewish support. In
Russia, Jewish nationalists and Zionists try to rally the Russians
against their Muslim brethren. Sometimes they do it under cover of
the Russian Church, or of Russian nationalism. The most fervently
anti-Muslim forces in Russia are organised by crypto-Zionists."

As is the case in all countries of importance, the Zionists have
their lobby in Russia too. Yevgenny Satanovsky (that’s right), the
president of the Institute for Middle Eastern Studies in Moscow,
using the royal we, argues, "For us, there is no distinction between
‘rebels’ and ‘terrorists,’ as there is in Europe. They’re all part
of the same jihad, and on this we agree with Israel." But while busy
promoting anti-Muslim sentiment among Russians, he fails to mention
the support that his colleagues give to those very forces.

The Zionist footprint in Chechnya was hinted at during the scandal
surrounding the murder of Russian FSB defector Alexander Litvinenko in
London in 2008. In a Le Carre twist, Litvinenko converted to Islam
on his deathbed, attended by exiled Chechen rebel leader Akhmed
Zakayev and exiled Russian oligarch Boris Berezovsky, whose Zionist
credentials are well known. While the nature and extent of Mossad
activity in the Caucasus is impossible to know for sure, there is no
doubt that abetting terrorists is a useful way for Israel to apply
pressure on the Russian government, and that Russian security forces
do their best to keep track of it.

Turkey, Russia and Palestine all share a common geopolitical threat
in the form of US and Israeli global plans, from NATO expansion
eastward and US-Israeli plans to wage war on Iran, to the ongoing
US-Israeli colonisation of what remains of Palestine. Just as Russia
must struggle against NATO expansion eastward, intended to encircle
and contain Russia, "if the US and Israel do take Iran, Turkey will
be encircled and cut off. The fate of Palestine also depends on the
fate of Tehran," writes Shamir.

Shamir congratulated the Turkish Justice and Development Party (AKP)
on its resounding reelection in 2007: "The East returns to God, and
finds its own way. Istanbul has followed Gaza: the AKP-ruled Turkey
will be a friend to Hamas-ruled Palestine, to Islamic Iran, to Orthodox
Greece and Russia, to the religious anti-occupation forces of nearby
Iraq. She will again take her place of pride as the centrepiece of
the Eastern mosaic, while its pro-American and God-hating generals,
the Turkish Dahlans, will creep back to their barracks. Faith in
God unites us, while the nationalists had divided us." The shift in
Turkish politics since then only confirms Shamir’s words.

Is there is a Pax Russia unfolding? Ukraine is poised to turn back
the anti-Russian policies of the Orange revolutionaries. Both Ukraine
and Turkey depend heavily on Russian energy supplies, and their
political course is responding to this as well as to an aversion
to the aggressive nature of US foreign policy around the world. If
Georgia rids itself of its pro-US anti-Russian president, suddenly
US hegemony in the region evaporates.

Armenia and Azerbaijan, despite their bitter standoff now have good
relations with both Turkey and Russia and will inevitably have to
bury their hatchet as their conflict loses its ability to mobilise
support in the interests of power politics. The Iranians sensibly
refuse to cave in to Western and Israeli pressures. Their star can
only rise as the US and Israel’s sets.

Eric Walberg writes for Al-Ahram Weekly. You can reach him at
ericwalberg.com.

BAKU: Two Of Minsk Group Co-Chairs Are Armenian Allies

TWO OF MINSK GROUP CO-CHAIRS ARE ARMENIAN ALLIES

news.az
Feb 11 2010
Azerbaijan

Political analyst Zardusht Alizade has commented on the signing of
the military agreement between France and Armenia.

"Two of the OSCE Minsk Group – Russia, and now France – have been
military allies of the aggressor country – Armenia. Hence, these
countries, including the United States, which allocate money to
Armenia, can never be impartial mediators and it seems that it is
time for Azerbaijan to withdraw from the negotiation process, because
in such circumstances it becomes impossible to conduct them", said
political scientist Zardusht Alizadeh, commenting on the signing of
the Paris agreement on bilateral defense cooperation between France
and Armenia.

"Obviously, they want to drive us into a trap. We need to increase the
strength of our army and continue armament. We should also intensify
on all fronts to strengthen our position. Armenians will not become
wiser from this and they will remain puppets", said the politician.

BAKU: Turkey To Send Diplomats To Washington To Express Its Position

TURKEY TO SEND DIPLOMATS TO WASHINGTON TO EXPRESS ITS POSITION ON DECISION OF ARMENIAN CONSTITUTIONAL COURT

APA
Feb 10 2010
Azerbaijan

Ankara – APA. The delegation led by Undersecretary of the Turkish
Foreign Ministry Feridun Sinirlioglu will leave for Washington on
February 13 to express the country’s views on leading Armenia-Turkey
process out of the deadlock, APA reports quoting the Hurriyet.

After the decision of the Armenian Constitutional Court on the Zurich
protocols, Ankara is going to inform Washington about its position.

Feridun Sinirlioglu will also express Turkey’s concern over the
plan to put to the discussion the so-called Armenian genocide bill
in March. Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said the act of
the Congress caused Ankara’s concern.

Feridun Sinirlioglu visited Switzerland on February 5 and informed
the mediating country’s leadership about Turkey’s concern over the
decision of the Armenian Constitutional Court. Turkish Foreign Ministry
is also going to send diplomats to Russia and France for this purpose.

Armenia’s Power Workers To Study Regional Streams

ARMENIA’S POWER WORKERS TO STUDY REGIONAL STREAMS

Aysor
Feb 10 2010
Armenia

Armenia’s Energy Sciences Research Institute has launched a campaign
aimed at studying the Armenia-Georgia-Russia and Armenia-Iran regional
energy stream projects, told Aysor’s correspondent Institute’s chief
director, Levon Yeghiazarian.

The campaign has been kicked off since January 2010 and will last
two years with assistance by USAID.

"The project is very interesting from professional and economical
points of view and in terms of mentioned countries’ regimes and
mutual-streams, especially from the point of the following turning
of our 400 kW system to the energy systems of Iran and Georgia. We
haven’t ever had such connections yet," said Levon Yeghiazarian.

Armenian energy sector always had excess energy for export; Armenia
even has provided Azerbaijan with electricity, according to Levon
Yeghiazarian.

Some projects are on the stage of establishing with focusing on
regional problems, economy and energy sectors’ development in Armenia,
and the international assistance. "We also take into consideration
the alternative resources’ development," said Yeghiazarian pointing
in this relation the wind power’s resources. He said that with German
KFW Bank’s assistance this year the wind power’s resources would be
studied. "The system is on the stage of an active development. In April
the Yerevan Power Station will operate, two more hydropower stations
will be build on Araks River, and there are obvious improvement trends
in operation of the ‘Electric Networks of Armenia’ company," he added.

The Major Limits Of Turkey’s Foreign Policy

THE MAJOR LIMITS OF TURKEY’S FOREIGN POLICY
By Dr.Kerem Oktem

e?c=Article_C&cid=1264249956754&pagename=Z one-English-Muslim_Affairs%2FMAELayout
Islam Online
Feb 10 2010

As was the case with the Kissinger’s foreign policy, ethical values
are not part of Turkey’s strategic-depth doctrine. (Reuters Photo)

In the last two policy briefs, I have discussed Turkey’s changing
relations with the Middle East, the Muslim world, and Israel, as
well as its interaction with the Caucasus republics and the Russian
Federation.

In this concluding analysis, I will discuss the possible conflicts,
which may emerge between the principles of Turkey’s Foreign Minister
Ahmet Davutoglu’s "strategic-depth" doctrine and realpolitik
developments on the ground.

Firstly, though, a brief consideration of the "strategic-depth"
doctrine, its origins, principles, and its location within the
tradition of the Turkish foreign policy is appropriate.

– Read the introduction of this three-article series on Turkey’s
foreign policy.

1- Turkey’s Foreign Policy in the Middle East

2- Turkey’s Relations with Caucasus and Russia

Originally, and before its association with the US Foreign Minister
Henry Kissinger, "strategic depth" was a military term used to signify
the distance between the front line and the war-faring nations’ most
vulnerable economic centers, capital, and other important cities,
as well as military industrial complexes.

The longer the distance, the safer these centers were. However,
supplies to the front would take longer and diminish the army’s
ability to stock up fast and act flexibly.

Such a strategic depth could be deepened by creating clients and
collaborators behind the front line. In a metaphorical sense, this is
also what more contemporary protagonists of the concept have sought
to do.

During the Kissinger era, through much of the Cold War, strategic
depth has been described as consisting of three principles: Embracing
moderate regimes outside the sphere of the Soviet influence (mostly
dictatorships and semi-democracies), maintaining access to natural
resources, and using indirect force through proxy regimes to maintain
stability.

Emphatic observers have expressed their appreciation of Ahmet
Davutoglu’s unusually proactive and multi-dimensional foreign policy
by likening him to Henry Kissinger.

They seem to have forgotten, however, that Kissinger was also one of
the key actors in the ill-advised Vietnam War which tarnished the US
reputation worldwide.

Indeed, both historically and conceptually, war remains an inherent
option in "strategic depth", and in Turkey’s volatile eastern
neighbourhood, the threat of war and nuclear proliferation is not
just a hypothetical mind experiment.

Furthermore, the challenges to the current Turkish foreign policy
re-adjustment are not limited to the eastern front, but also come
from Turkey’s domestic conflicts and deteriorating relations with
the European Union.

Challenge 1: Conflict Between Eastern Neighbours

The cautious opening toward Armenia has resulted in a significant
toning down of relations with the formerly close ethnic "brother"
nation of Azerbaijan.

In the conflict between Georgia and Russia, the Turkish government
has been able to maintain good relations with two warring countries;
in the case of Armenia and Azerbaijan, this has not been possible.

The cautious opening toward Armenia has resulted in a significant
toning down of relations with the formerly close ethnic "brother"
nation of Azerbaijan.

The warming of relations with Syria has been accompanied by a
remarkable deterioration in Turkey’s partnership with Israel.

Other potential conflicts loom large: The Turkish Foreign Minister
may play a role as mediator between Iran and Iraq. Yet, the seizure
of the Iraqi Al-Fakkah Oil Field by Iranian troops may turn into an
armed conflict, which would force Turkey to make a choice between
Iraq and the Western allies on the one side, and Iran on the other.

Considering that Iran’s embattled President Mahmud Ahmadinajadi might
consider pushing hostilities with Iraq to diffuse tensions at home
and save his seat, this choice might be more imminent than many expect.

A comparably tricky decision will arise, if the UN Security Council
decides on the rein-forcement of sanctions or military actions against
Iran. As a temporary member of the council affirmed that Turkey will
have to decide on which side it stands.

The question, therefore, is justified about whether much of the current
multi-dimensional "opening" might in fact not turn out to be a new
type of zero-sum game, where intensified relations with the Arab
and Muslim elements weaken Turkey’s Western orientation, and where
renewed conflict within the Middle East will make a "zero-conflict"
policy with all neighbours impossible.

Challenge 2: Domestic Insecurity Turkey’s Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
Erdogan has shown signs of developing autocratic reflexes.

Turkey’s foreign policy strength is vulnerable, above all, due to
the volatility of the Turkish domestic political scene.

True, there is no denying the fact that Turkey has been undergoing
momentous changes, from the power struggle between the government and
the military, and the latter’s gradual recession from power to the
AKP government’s efforts to bring a fresh perspective to ossified
problems such as the disenfranchisement of Turkey’s Kurdish and
non-Muslim citizens.

The Ergenekon investigation, carried out by the judiciary, but
supported by the government–sometimes a bit too openly–has been
revealing shocking details of plans for coup d’états and psychological
warfare.

For many citizens of Turkey, it was hard to swallow that the
once-revered army has been involved in assassination plans against
members of religious and ethnic minorities and politicians. However,
these changes have also unsettled large segments of the Turkish
society and alienated important parts of the electorate from the AKP.

Above all, the transformation from tutelage democracy–a result of the
military coup of 1980 and the Kemalist nationalism to a post-Kemalist
liberal democracy has not been handled well by the government.

Turkey’s attraction to its eastern neighbours owes much to its status
as future member of the European Union. (Reuters Photo)

It has fuelled fears of the secular middle classes, the left wing and
the Alevis (a heterodox religious community with a distant reference
to Shiite traditions) that the government is using the democratizing
reforms to turn Turkey into a Shari’ah-based regime. The government
has done little to pacify these fears.

Finally, Turkey’s Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, severely
attacked by the coalition of the army, the bureaucracy, and the
judiciary, has shown signs of developing autocratic reflexes.

Independent human rights associations have testified that maltreatment
and torture in police custody has been on the rise for at least three
consecutive years, and so has the number of members of the public
shot by police.

Extremely heavy policing at anti-government and trade union
demonstrations have fuelled unrest and polarized society. Unlike
in 2002 and 2007, when the AKP was supported by a broad coalition of
liberals, intellectuals, and members of the general public, the party’s
electoral support is waning. This notwithstanding, the AKP remains
the largest political party with no serious constructive opposition.

The course of domestic politics reveals that a possible loss of
electoral support and espe-cially the uncertain future of Turkey’s
Kurds will make Turkey’s standing in the world more complex and
contested, not less.

Challenge 3: Strained Relations with the European Union The lack of a
comprehensive solution in Cyprus has put Turkey on a collision course
with the European Union.

The final impediment to the full realization of "strategic depth",
and probably the most important, stems from the deadlock, which is
building up with the European Union. Ever since accession negotiations
finally began in 2005, relations have been deteriorating.

This was in part due to "enlargement fatigue" in the European Union
and the anti-Turkish rhetoric of President Nicholas Sarkozy and German
Chancellor Angelo Merkel, and in part because of the very slow reform
process in Turkey.

More importantly, many EU-induced legal reforms were eventually scaled
back or re-tracted, as was the case with the draconian Police Law
and the Anti-Terror Law, which were enacted by the government in 2007.

If these structural impediments were not bad enough, the lack of a
comprehensive solution in Cyprus has put Turkey on a collision course
with the European Union, whose outcome is hard to predict. What could
be said with a deal of certainty, however, is that Turkey’s attraction
to its eastern neighbours owes much to its status as future member
of the European Union.

Without this perspective in place, and without the normative framework
for a legal and democratic reform, Turkey will lose power also in
its eastern neighbourhood.

Conclusion Is it possible to conduct a foreign policy based on soft
power and win-win conceptions in an environment that is governed by
the rules of zero-sum games?

All that glisters is not gold, and all that enthuses may not be
permanent. The AKP governments since 2002, and the Turkish Foreign
Minister Ahmet Davutoglu have succeeded in making Turkish foreign
policy a more proactive and more dynamic.

Where Turkey used to be reactive, US-oriented, and inward-looking,
it has become proactive, multidimensional and global. Where it was a
feeble economic actor, it has now become a powerhouse of industrial
production, construction, and services. Turkey is now the world’s
15th largest economy, and one of the few non-rentier economies in
the Middle East.

Bilateral trade, economic policy, and culture and charismatic
leadership have become part of Turkey’s foreign policy outlook. In
parallel to the country’s growing export-oriented industrial sector,
expanding middle classes, and the rising global role of Turkish
Muslim educational networks, such as the Gulen movement, Turkish
foreign policy has indeed become "deeper".

However, it has also become more vulnerable. I have discussed
many tensions and domestic and international conflicts, which the
"zero-conflict" strategy will not be able to respond to meaningfully.

Finally, as was the case with the Kissinger’s foreign policy, ethical
values are not part of Turkey’s strategic-depth doctrine. This is
why Turkey has been able to conduct business with Iran and Sudan,
while being woefully disinterested in the fate of the victims of the
two regimes.

Yet again, Iran might be a test too hard to pass; After the "stolen
elections" of the summer in Iran, President Ahmadinajadi has
unleashed an unprecedented reign of terror, which resulted in the
death, execution, and rape of many of his critics at the hands of
the Revolutionary Guards.

The respected Grand Ayatollah Hossain Ali Montazeri, before his death
on December 20 2009, had condemned Ahmadinajadi’s terror policy in
harsh terms and called for a public mourning after the murder of Neda
Agha Soltan.

Turkish Prime Minister Erdogan’s emphatic endorsement of Mr Ahmedinejad
came as a stub to many Millions of Iranians, who believe that the
latter is a dictator and imposter. This may yet come to haunt Turkey,
if Ahmadinejadi’s grip on Iran comes to halt.

Social scientists are not very good in predicting the future, a fact
that was brought pain-fully close to home by the global financial
crisis that only very few foresaw.

They are good at asking questions, however, and this is how I would
like to conclude.

Can a country projects power convincingly if it has not yet been able
to resolve the key conflicts torturing its society, like the rights
of Kurds and other minorities, the future of secularism, the role of
the army, and the safeguarding of human rights?

Moreover, is it possible to conduct a foreign policy based on soft
power and win-win conceptions in an environment that is governed by
the rules of zero-sum games, hard power, and the disregard of popular
will? We might not need to wait too long to receive an answer.

—————————————– —————————————

Kerem Oktem is a Research Associate at the European Studies Centre
in the University of Oxford and works at South East European Studies
at Oxford (SEESOX).He has concentrated on questions of conflict and
memory in Turkey, South East Europe and the Mediterranean, and the
impact of historical conflicts on inter-regional relations.

His recent publications include "Angry Nation: Turkey since 1989 "and
"Turkey’s Engagement with Modernity".

http://www.islamonline.net/servlet/Satellit

Ankara Will Not Respond To Armenian President’s Message

ANKARA WILL NOT RESPOND TO ARMENIAN PRESIDENT’S MESSAGE

PanARMENIAN.Net
09.02.2010 17:21 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ International community and not Turkish leader is
the true addressee of Armenian President’s message.

Armenian leader’s message meant to keep international community aware
that failure to finalize Armenia-Turkey rapprochement process should
not be linked with Armenia, politologist Sergey Shakaryants told
PanARMENIAN.Net reporter.

As the politologist noted, Ankara, which is drowning in its own
problems, will not respond to Armenian President’s message. Turkish
society is not yet ready to violate its centuries-long stereotypes,
he added. "Still, I believe, international community will appreciate
Yerevan’s position," Shakaryan concluded.