ANKARA: Caucasus Talks Won’t Resolve Issues, Says Armenian Official

CAUCASUS TALKS WON’T RESOLVE ISSUES, SAYS ARMENIAN OFFICIAL

Turkish Daily News/Hurriyet
July 15 2009
Turkey

Wednesday, July 15, 2009
Vercihan Ziflioglu
YEREVAN – Hurriyet Daily News

As the presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan prepare for another round
of peace talks Friday, a former deputy to the Armenian ambassador in
Moscow has said negotiations will fail to resolve the long-standing
Nagorno-Karabakh dispute.

Dr. Stepan Grigorian, who has also been an adviser to the Armenian
Foreign Ministry, told the Hurriyet Daily News & Economic Review
that Russia, which is hosting the Caucasus peace talks, does not
want reconciliation in the Karabakh dispute. He also said he thought
attempts by Matt Bryza, U.S. deputy assistant secretary of state
for European and Eurasian affairs, for a solution were superficial
and inadequate.

Presidents Serge Sarkisian of Armenia and Ilham Aliyev of Azerbaijan
met in November for talks near Moscow, as Russia cast itself as
peacemaker after its August war with Georgia. Russian President
Dmitry Medvedev said Armenia and Azerbaijan had made progress toward
a resolution. Mediators from the Organization for Security and
Cooperation in Europe, who have been monitoring peacemaking efforts,
had also reported in early May that they saw signs of progress.

Nagorno-Karabakh is an enclave in Azerbaijan that has been occupied
by Armenian forces since the end of a six-year conflict that killed
about 30,000 people and displaced 1 million before a truce was
reached in 1994. Its unilateral independence is not recognized by
the international community. Turkey closed its border with Armenia
in 1993 in support of Azerbaijan in the conflict.

Past policies:

Despite the promising signals from the peace negotiations, Grigorian
said he believed Friday’s meeting between Sarkisian and Aliyev would
not provide a breakthrough in the Karabakh problem, which he said
had become more complicated due to the flawed policies of Armenia’s
second President Robert Kocharian.

"Since Kocharian himself was from Karabakh, he wanted to rule
Armenia and the disputed region together. He advocated Karabakh
independence. But this perception made the situation more difficult,"
he said.

Evaluating the Russian mediation of the talks, Grigorian said
he did not believe Moscow was honest about a clear solution to
the dispute, adding: "Russia just pursues its own interest in the
negotiations. Therefore, a solution will not be possible unless the
interests of Russia, along with the U.S., have been met."

According to Grigorian, Russia wants to be the only power in the
Caucasus region and a possible deal between Yerevan and Baku means
waning Russian influence in both former Soviet countries. Recalling
Russia’s recognition of the Georgian rebel regions of South Ossetia
and Abhkazia, Grigorian said that like the international community
Russia had never recognized the independence of Karabakh.

"Armenia thinks Russia will always be the protector country, but this
is a big mistake. Russia’s stance on Karabakh’s independence should
be an important lesson for Armenia," he said.

Criticism of optimism:

Grigorian said he thought attempts by Bryza for a solution were
left wanting. "It is hard to understand the optimism of Bryza on the
Karabakh issue. Optimistic statements raise expectations and that is
extremely wrong. Bryza does not know the area well enough and this
is a great danger."

He also suggested that rushing the process might pose grave risks
to the region and could even lead to another war, which would cause
instability not only in the Caucasus but also in the Middle East.

Grigorian said among all EU nations, only the policies of France
were similar to the Russian stance "because of the French hostility
toward Turkey."

"France does not want Turkish-Armenian relations improved," he said,
adding: "Ankara is seeking a deal with the Armenians that will open
the EU’s doors to Turkey. However, France does not want to see Turkey
among the EU family."

As a result the key to a solution is in the hands of the Armenian
and Azerbaijani people, Gregorian said, adding that they should
be further informed because both societies were not ready for the
solution process yet.

Gregorian said he also believed Turkey might play an active role in
the process by establishing dialogue with Armenia. But warned: "Like
Cyprus, the Karabakh problem is not one that can be solved quickly."

Turkish Association Appeals Landmark Massachusetts Court Ruling

Armenian Assembly of America
1334 G Street, NW, Suite 200
Washington, DC 20005
Phone: 202-393-3434
Fax: 202-638-4904
Email: [email protected]
Web:

PRESS RELEASE

July 14, 2009
Contact: Michael A Zachariades
Email: [email protected]
Phone: (202) 393-3434

TURKISH ASSOCIATION APPEALS LANDMARK MASSACHUSETTS COURT RULING

Turkish Denial Campaign Continues in California

Washington, DC – Last month, the Armenian Assembly of America (Assembly)
reported that Turkey’s ongoing global campaign to suppress the truth
about the Armenian Genocide was dealt a major blow in a U.S. District
Court. Chief Judge Mark Wolf issued a ruling in favor of the
Massachusetts Department of Education (Department), which allows the
Department to continue teaching the facts of the Armenian Genocide, and
other crimes against humanity, in public schools across the
Commonwealth, as constitutionally protected government speech.

Shortly after this landmark decision, as part of an ongoing campaign to
derail human rights education, the Assembly of Turkish American
Associations (ATAA) indicated, through a June 23 letter to the editor of
the Boston Globe from its attorney Harry Silverglate, that it intended
to appeal Chief Judge Wolf’s decision in the case of Griswold v
Driscoll. The appeal was officially filed on July 13, in U.S. District
Court in Massachusetts.

"The Armenian Assembly appreciates the court’s ruling in the matter and
will work to ensure that it is sustained on appeal. This decision
clearly demonstrates to Turkey and its revisionist allies that history
cannot be rewritten to further Ankara’s state-sponsored denial
campaign," said Assembly Board of Trustees Chairman Hirair Hovnanian.
Carolyn Mugar, the Board’s President, added, "Given the overwhelming
historical and legal evidence documenting the incontestable fact of the
Armenian Genocide, this ruling is a victory for all those concerned
about genocide education and prevention."

When this suit was initiated four years ago, the Assembly immediately
responded by hiring one of the nation’s preeminent First Amendment
expert, Duke University Professor Irwin Chemerinsky, and co-counsel
Arnold Rosenfeld of the firm K&L Gates LLP. Throughout this process, the
Assembly, along with others, challenged the ATAA at every turn by filing
a series of pleadings including an amicus curiae (friend of the court)
brief. The brief was intended to assist the Court in bringing the case
to a conclusion in favor of the Commonwealth.

Assembly’s Board Vice-Chair and Counselor Robert A. Kaloosdian chaired
the committee that responded to the lawsuit: "Through the federal
court’s ruling, the Griswold case rejected ATAA’s attempt to require the
Commonwealth of Massachusetts Board of Education to insert
‘contra-genocide’ citations into its curriculum guide. Judge Wolf wrote
in his decision that ‘plaintiffs do not have a right to receive
contra-genocide information in the classroom.’ In addition he wrote that
‘the curriculum guide required defendants to include materials
concerning the ‘Armenian Genocide.’"

"I expect ATAA’s latest attempt to thwart history and stifle education
to be rejected on appeal," said Rosenfeld. "It is a constitutionally
significant legal victory that Chief Judge Mark Wolf of the U.S.
District Court in Massachusetts reaffirmed the First Amendment right of
the Commonwealth of Massachusetts to present the unfettered truth about
the Armenian Genocide to its students. Hopefully, this important ruling
will succeed in conveying the horrors of the international crime of
genocide to those who did not bear witness themselves and will lead to a
public outcry that will not tolerate similar illegal acts intended to
destroy national, ethnical, racial or religious groups."

Van Krikorian, Assembly Board of Trustees Member and Counselor, who
along with Rosenfeld, prepared and presented the amicus brief before
Judge Wolf, argued that if the court accepted the ATAA’s claims, it
would open the door for any extremist group, such as Holocaust deniers,
to challenge curriculum matters in court.

"This ruling sends a message not only to the ATAA, but also to others
who may seek to distort history," said Krikorian. "This was certainly a
direct blow to ATAA’s plan to get a favorable ruling here and then
repeat the tactic in every school district across the country. The
court’s decision cuts them off, destroys that plan and protects the
Commonwealth of Massachusetts’ Department of Education from being
subject to manipulation from a genocide denialist organization, which is
carrying out its campaign of dishonesty from coast to coast," added
Krikorian.

ATAA Threatens to Oppose Human Rights Education and Passage of
California Genocide Awareness Act

Handing the ATAA and its allies another defeat in its nationwide
denalist campaign, on July 8, the California Senate Education Committee
unanimously passed Senate Bill 234, the "Genocide Awareness Act," which
requires the California Curriculum Commission to include an oral history
component related to genocides as part of its high school curriculum,
including the Armenian Genocide.

At the California Senate Education Committee public hearing, the ATAA
and Armenian Genocide denier Bruce Fein testified against the passage of
the Genocide Awareness Act. He also questioned whether the mistreatment
of the Armenians, and the parallel cases in Cambodia and Darfur were
genocide, despite the fact that the California legislature has
repeatedly recognized and annually commemorated the Armenian Genocide
since 1968.

The Assembly was an early proponent of SB 234, and is on record
supporting its passage.

Recently, the ATAA escalated its longstanding strategy of harassment by
making the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) the target of a defamation
suit brought by Guenter Lewy, a former professor at the University of
Massachusetts, who is being supported in the lawsuit by the so-called
Turkish American Legal Defense Fund. The Southern Poverty Law Center was
founded in 1971, as a civil rights law firm combating racism and
prejudice in the U.S. In 1991, the SPLC established Teaching Tolerance,
an educational program to help K-12 teachers foster respect and
understanding in the classroom. Teaching Tolerance is now one of the
nation’s leading providers of anti-bias resources.

The lawsuit follows the publishing of an article entitled "State of
Denial" in which the SPLC criticized several academics, among them Lewy,
stating, "Revisionist historians who conjure doubt about the Armenian
genocide and are paid by the Turkish government provided politicians
with the intellectual cover they needed to claim they were refusing to
dictate history rather than caving in to a foreign government’s
present-day interests."

It is of note that Lewy is represented by attorneys Bruce Fein and David
Saltzman, of Saltzman & Evinch, P.C. Saltzman’s partner, Gunay Evinch,
is the President of the ATAA.

Established in 1972, the Armenian Assembly of America is the largest
Washington-based nationwide organization promoting public understanding
and awareness of Armenian issues. The Assembly is a 501(c) (3)
tax-exempt membership organization.

###

NR#2009-059

www.aaainc.org

Russian President’s News Conference Following G8 Summit – Full Text

RUSSIAN PRESIDENT’S NEWS CONFERENCE FOLLOWING G8 SUMMIT – FULL TEXT

President of the Russian Federation website
July 11 2009
Moscow

Text of Russian President Dmitriy Medvedev’s news conference following
the G8 summit in l’Aquila, Italy, on 10 July, published in English
on the Russian presidential website on 11 July. Subheadings have been
inserted editorially.

[Medvedev] Colleagues,

I will begin by providing some information on what we did, and then
I will take some questions.

G8 summit agenda

As a guest, I would like to begin by thanking Italy’s leaders and
Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi for such a well-organised
summit. I would like to thank them for their efforts. I would also
like to thank the key departments dealing with various issues here,
such as the Ministry of Emergency Situations. They worked very hard
to help recovery efforts following the destructive earthquake that
occurred here, taking multiple lives, and they continue to work hard
now. I feel that it is our duty to thank them.

I think that everyone present have grown fond of L’Aquila over the last
few days. In some ways, it makes a dire impression, because it is very
sad to see a city that is historic, beautiful, and at the same time,
dead. One comes to realise how much more effort will need to go into
restoring it, and it is tragic to think of the victims who cannot
be brought back. Our condolences go out to everyone who lost their
loved ones here.

Obviously, this summit took place at a difficult time, during the
financial and economic crisis. This has affected all of our work,
although in contrast to the G20 summit, we discussed a variety of
issues, not just ones related to the financial crisis. Still, the
central topic of our discussions was stimulating growth in the world
economy, and the dominant viewpoint on this matter is that the only
way to overcome our hardships is to combine our efforts, taking into
account different interests.

This is important. Overall, we affirmed our commitment to the decisions
made at the G20 summit in London and even earlier, in Washington,
and we hope that implementing those decisions will have a positive
effect on renewing global economic growth.

I’m not going to give an assessment of the current state of the global
economy; you yourselves have followed it closely. Nonetheless, while
we all noted certain positive moments in rebuilding our economies,
everyone also expressed the same simple idea: we cannot relax, because
it is still unclear whether we have reached the bottom of this crisis;
nor is it clear how the crisis will continue to unfold.

For the first time, we had a full-scale meeting between the G8, the
G5, and Egypt, as well as meetings that included other countries. In
essence, we configured the so-called Heiligendamm-L’Aquila process,
and for the first time, a joint declaration was made by the G8 and
the G5. I feel that this better reflects general ideas on ways to
overcome the crisis, as well as the overall situation in the world.

Clearly, the G8’s goal is to figure out long-term and medium-term
strategies, so we discussed them with other nations, and I hope that
we will be able to advance three goals.

The first of these goals is strengthening the legal framework for
international cooperation, which is something we are constantly
advocating, because without a legal framework, cooperation will not
be possible. Indeed, this is the aim of our additional suggestions,
which we formulated before this meeting, such as the agreement on
European security.

The second goal is to reform our financial institutions and create
new ones, if necessary ones that will enable long-term development
and improvements to macroeconomic policy, and which will help us to
build a new economic and financial architecture.

And as far as institutions are concerned, we should address the issue
even more broadly: not only do we need new financial institutions
and reforms to the IMF and the World Bank, but we need new attitudes
toward international institutions, as well. In this respect, I was
happy to hear that nearly everyone, including the President of the
United States, spoke about the need to reinforce the central role of
the United Nations.

Why am I bringing this up? Because earlier, the leaders of this
respected country did not always speak kindly about the role of the
United Nations. But today, I am glad that the attitudes change. The
UN is far from perfect, and it is true that we may need to make some
decisions on modernising it in the near future, but we simply do not
have any other universal platform for resolving global problems.

Finally, the third goal, and perhaps one of the most important,
is to reform our very attitudes, and to reject the stereotypes that
have been dominant within the establishment in recent years. I feel
that the atmosphere that prevailed at this Summit is very important,
because there has been a marked shift in attitudes. If you’d like,
I can talk more about these attitudes and their causes during the
question-and-answer section.

We made some important accomplishments. First of all, we defined an
ambitious long-term goal: reducing greenhouse gas [GHG] emissions. The
decision made by developed countries to reduce emissions by 80 percent
by the year 2050 is both ambitious and very difficult, and may indeed
change the model of human civilisation development.

We have our own view on this matter. We are ready to make a commitment
to reduce emissions by at least 50 percent by 2050, as compared
to 1990. `80 percent’ refers to total worldwide emissions, rather
than emissions from individual nations. This is an ambitious and
difficult goal.

Not long ago, we formulated our own goals for the next few years. In
addition to developing our economy along the energy efficiency lines,
I stated that we will try to reduce our GHG emissions by ten to
fifteen percent by 2020, as compared to 1990 levels. It seems that
this information also made our colleagues happy, because these are
difficult decisions to make. Even some of our G8 colleagues are still
in the process of formulating these goals, and have not come to a
final decision.

Energy and the environment, green technology, and the creation of
an energy-efficient model of economic development represent very
important goals. In fact, we need them, not because we want to look
good in front of other nations, but because it is necessary in order
to modernise our own, Russian economy. Thus, this is something we
will be working on, regardless.

A number of new, interesting ideas were brought up. In particular,
Mexico presented the idea of a so-called green fund. Overall, everyone
supported this idea, and we are also ready to participate in organising
a green fund (assuming this idea is finalised) with our own input,
monetary and otherwise.

Summit participants affirmed the G8’s commitments to promote growth
and provide assistance to developing countries, including the
development of infrastructure projects, improving public health,
and education. This is our common goal, and naturally, Russia will
also work on this goal with other countries.

On the last day of the summit, just half an hour ago, we completed
a discussion on global food security. The topic is exceedingly
complicated and very relevant. I have to admit that I really
appreciated the way that this issue was discussed, as it was quite
objective, and at the same time, quite advanced; naturally, the
Russian side also presented its suggestions.

Russia is ready to make its contribution toward global food
security. You know, we have nearly one tenth of the world’s arable
land, and we have become a major grain exporter. If everything goes
well, and if we can continue developing our agriculture industry
as we are doing now, then soon perhaps in five or ten years we
will be able to put up to 50 million tonnes of grain per year on
the global market, which represents a great deal of food that is
very much needed. Because regardless of the advanced technologies
that we use, a great deal will depend on geographical factors and
different countries’ possibilities. But we are also ready to help in
other ways. We are ready to contribute to funds, and we are ready to
continue training personnel to teach about agriculture. This is also an
important element of cooperation. Clearly, we will work on all of this.

Ultimately, what we agreed upon in the expanded format of our meeting
on global food security which included the G8, the G5, Egypt, and
a number of other countries, including African nations, as well as
several international organisations is to provide a total of around
20 billion USD in support. Initially, we had committed 15 billion
USD, but finally agreed on 20 billion USD, as was suggested by all
participating countries.

Naturally, we also discussed current political issues. We talked
about nuclear non-proliferation, which is a very important topic,
especially given that we just addressed this matter in Moscow with
the President of the United States. We talked about fulfilling
United Nations decisions and about violations of UN Security
Council resolutions, which have been permitted in several countries,
particularly North Korea and Iran. We feel that problems of this kind
need to be resolved politically and diplomatically, while adhering
to the founding principles of international law and the resolutions
that were reached on these issues.

We affirmed our commitment to many of our long-standing engagements,
such as the fight against terrorism, international organised crime,
and piracy, and we spoke seriously and in quite a bit of detail about
the Middle East peace process and resolving problems in that region
on the basis of the establishment and co-existence of two states,
Israel and Palestine.

I hope that this topic can be built upon and developed at the Middle
East conference that will be held in Moscow. Naturally, we analysed
other issues as well, including reconciliation in Afghanistan and
Pakistan, and conflict regions in Africa.

We are also happy with the decision made jointly with the United
States and France as co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group on settling
the Nagorno Karabakh conflict. We made a corresponding statement,
calling on the presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan to make additional
efforts in this process. I hope that in just a few days, I will be
able to welcome both presidents to the Russian Federation, where we
will continue discussing this matter.

And finally, the last thing I would like to say is that, as always,
many meetings and encounters took place on the sidelines of the
summit. Some of them were officially organised, while others were
informal, but no less productive. Thus, I was able to have talks with
quite a large number of my partners, and I am grateful to them for it.

I think that’s about all that I wanted to share. I will now take
your questions.

Relations with Obama

[Question] Mr President, Just before you came to Italy you held talks
in Moscow with the President of the United States and, according
to you, made genuine contact with Barack Obama. Have you been able
to build on those good relations here in Italy, and in what way (if
any) have your discussions in L’Aquila affected your talks with the
President of the United States?

If you don’t mind, one short additional question: how do you feel
about the Italian proposal to hold another summit here in L’Aquila?

[Medvedev] It was actually good that we were able to get to know the
President of the United States better. We have really forged a good
personal relationship, I like to chat with Barack Obama. I hope that
he has the same positive feelings about these exchanges.

At one point in the past we were both engaged in common that is to say,
scholarly research, as I said to him at our first meeting. He once
headed the editorial board of a legal journal, and at that time I was
studying English in graduate school and reading that very journal. That
is a curious coincidence, to say the least. Although it’s not the
main thing, our personal relationship is indeed something that will
facilitate the development of relations between our two countries.

We have gone on talking here, and repeatedly returned to what we were
discussing in Moscow, and even recalled some personal moments from
our conversations that took place during the informal dinner in my
residence in Gorki.

On the whole it was clearly a good idea that we have these back-to-back
meetings with the U.S. President, first in Russia and then the
continuation here. I hope that they will have some direct results. In
my view, we have already seen such results in Moscow.

Those decisions that were taken about strategic arms reduction, the
transit of goods and bilateral cooperation, are very, very positive,
especially when compared to the atmosphere in Russian-American
relations as recently as six months ago, when we were hardly even
talking. I have already said something about this. Unfortunately,
our relations had almost reached cold war levels, which was absolutely
unacceptable and not our fault.

Summit in L’Aquila

As for another summit here in L’Aquila, of course the point is that
we met here for a specific reason. The location is excellent and
the people are very hospitable, as I have already said. I get the
impression you enjoyed it as well. If we need to meet, we are ready
to do it anywhere, including here. And at the same time we managed
to make a small contribution to the restoration of L’Aquila.

You know about our decision to restore two sites in the city. Other
nations have made similar pledges. Maybe the more often we meet, the
better it will be. But let me repeat: if we are to talk seriously,
then this should lead to real, substantive results. We have been
meeting a lot, there has been no shortage of communication.

If before the G8 met once a year, and my colleagues and I often met
with our counterparts in other countries once a year, now there is
also the summit of the twenty biggest economies (G20), which takes
place at regular intervals (there have already been two, this is the
third). This means that in the past year we have met four times.

That is already a lot, not to mention our bilateral relations, which
involve regular exchanges, going to see each other, and carrying out
visits. This is not bad, but most importantly there has been some
real movement on the issues that we have discussed.

Russia’s domestic policies

[Question] Could you please explain how the summit declaration
will affect domestic politics in Russia, including its economic
implications?

[Medvedev] You know, I always assumed that everything in the world
was interconnected, but after the crisis happened, I realised the
extent to which this is so, unfortunately for all of us. And if all
the talk before about the global economy and countries’ interdependent
relations was somewhat abstract, after such a pummelling that talk
now seems very specific indeed. So even if it sounds a bit trite,
everything that we do has a direct domestic or national dimension.

If the decisions taken in London and Washington to rebuild the
international economy and reconfigure the international financial
system work the way they should, of course they will have a direct
impact on the national economies in general and the national economy
of the Russian Federation in particular.

Much of the world depends on how the major economies are doing,
economies such as the United States for example, and therefore,
when decisions are made concerning the recovery of major economies,
this has an effect on other economies. We all influence each other,
so these summits that we’ve had are not just some general discussion
of an important topic for our planet, but a set of very specific
conversations with the heads of international financial organisations
that will have important repercussions for our countries. I mean in
economic terms, but that is probably the most important thing.

Of course there are foreign policy questions that we also have to
discuss. I can tell you without going into all the details that this
year’s discussions were more transparent and more thoughtful than
ever before, and that they confirmed just how close our positions
are. Incidentally, for this I would like to thank all the other leaders
who participated in the discussion of international issues I mean the
seven other participants in the G8. So these discussions also have
an important practical dimension, and issues that were discussed in
the foreign policy area influence to a certain extent a number of
measures that we adopted later on our own. So this is very specific,
bread and butter work.

Expanding G8

[Question] We’re hearing more and more about the need to reconfigure
the G8 in an extended format, as the G13 or G14. What are your views
on this issue?

In your opinion which problems can the G8 resolve more effectively,
and which should be consigned to the expanded format? And when the
present crisis comes to an end will the G20 format continue to exist?

[Medvedev] Of course this subject was discussed, because it concerns
everyone: it concerns the G8; it concerns those who are not included
in the G8 but in effect already participate in all of its encounters;
it concerns all the countries that don’t belong to the G8 and are not
part of the Heiligendamm L’Aquila Process but are part of the G20. So
we all want to know how things will go in light of what I mentioned
in answering the last question, that we have become so dependent on
each other that we simply have to keep the lines of communication open.

The time when state leaders, particularly of leading states, would meet
every 20 or 30 years to define the parameters of foreign policy and
economic cooperation is long gone. Now there is no doubt that we need
to meet regularly, even in view of existing information technology.

What is going to happen? I think that in general the trend is already
clear, because the G8 plus 5 [Brazil, China, India, Mexico and South
Africa] already work much more closely together. At the same time,
the G8 continues to exist along with what has come to be called the
Heiligendamm L’Aquila Process.

With regard to the G20, I think that even if we succeed in resolving
this crisis and nobody knows when that will be, since the recession is
obviously going to last quite some time and the main thing is not to
move into a full-fledged depression we will have to go on meeting in
this format. Maybe we won’t have to do it two or three times a year,
but I think that we will have to meet so that we can at a minimum
definitively determine the contours of global financial architecture,
give the IMF and the World Bank a real mandate, reallocate quotas,
decide on the rules concerning international regulation and the rules
for monitoring the state of affairs in leading economies, accounting
and reporting – in general, solve all the issues that are now very
topical. It just will take time, even if we are past the worst of the
crisis. So these formats will continue to coexist, but I believe that
in general we should choose a pared down format for our discussions.

WTO

[Question] Regarding the WTO: will Russia be joining it as an
independent member, to the extent that that’s possible, or as part
of the Customs Union?

And my second question: have you discussed the issue of new reserve
currencies, and what was Russia’s position on them?

[Medvedev] With regard to WTO accession, I will not go back to why we
re-considered our approach to joining the WTO. I will only say that
we had two choices. But given the fact that the process of joining the
WTO was stalled, despite all the talk about the fact that 95 percent of
the issues had been resolved, we acted as we had agreed. Incidentally
we did achieve an agreement on this issue and I would like to shed
some light on that. Last year, when we met with the President of
Kazakhstan Nursultan Nazarbayev, we agreed to accelerate the creation
of a Customs Union, and we will decide about joining the WTO by, say,
the summer of this year. Neither Russia nor Kazakhstan nor Belarus
belongs to the WTO, and we have established a Customs Union.

What to do next? Of course we can join the WTO in one of two ways –
and that remains our goal, there should be no doubt about that.

The first way is to join as part of a Customs Union, which would
be nice but quite difficult, according to our colleagues at the WTO
charged with orchestrating such a process and other member states of
the World Trade Organisation.

Or we can join a different way. Having agreed on some common standards
and positions within the tripartite Customs Union, we could accede
separately, which in my view would be the simpler and more realistic
option, subject of course to honouring the rights and interests of
other parties, depending on the position that we’ve worked out. This
might enable us to proceed at different speeds in joining based on
what had been agreed. But of course we must honour the positions
outlined in our deal with Kazakhstan and Belarus.

Currencies

Now with regard to currencies: this issue has already become a regular
feature at these meetings. Although even a few months ago or, say, at
the first summit in Washington, it was hardly discussed, I did raise
the issue of international reserve currencies at [the G8 summit in]
Toyako in Japan. But it must be said that the economic situation was
not a great concern for many of the participants. They thought that
we’d avoid the worst.

And now the topic has become a constant one. We are always discussing
the creation of new reserve currencies or, to be more precise, the
emergence of new reserve currencies, including the possibility of the
ruble as a currency, even if that is not reflected in our statements,
as well as the issue of a supranational currency.

Incidentally, on this occasion I can cheer you up because I have
in my pocket a supranational currency, which someone gave me as a
gift. This is one unit of it, a sample featuring the motto "Unity in
diversity," and it is called a "united future world currency." It is
already possible to see and touch it.

What does this mean? Of course, this is just a gift, a sample
version, but something like this is in the works and may appear one
day. You will be able to hold it in your hand and use it as a means
of payment. There is even a special standard and rules concerning
its use, but it is a symbol of our unity, of our desire to jointly
address such issues. So here it is, an international currency.

Japan

[Question] I want to ask about your bilateral meeting with the Japanese
Prime Minister. Did you discuss visa-free exchanges with the Japanese
side? Do you think that the Japanese side has politicized the idea
of a visa-free regime?

[Medvedev] I had a full-fledged conversation, a full-fledged meeting
with the Prime Minister of Japan, Taro Aso. The conversation was
serious, friendly and quite informative, and at the same time totally
bound up with the issues that we had planned to discuss.

We talked about economic cooperation and international issues,
including the situation on the Korean peninsula. Of course, we touched
on the very complex issues between Russia and Japan, territorial
questions and the peace treaty. Such contacts are ongoing and are
conducted in the regular way, involving people in our ministries of
foreign affairs and other officials.

What can I say? We have positions that have not yet come together,
but at the same time we have shown a desire to discuss this issue
further on the basis of a set of principles. The Russian position is
quite clear: we believe that the only legal document that describes
the situation accurately and can serve as the basis for a settlement
is the Declaration of 1956, and that is the instrument around which
we need to build a dialogue.

With regard to specific aspects of the discussion of this topic, for
obvious reasons I don’t want to immerse myself in them. The topic is
complex, but most importantly we are talking not only at the expert
level but also at the highest level. We are discussing this topic
openly, listening to each other, and this is important when you
recall that Russia and Japan are key countries in the Asia-Pacific
region. Resolving foreign policy questions and establishing a normal
economic business climate depend on our collaboration. We have some
very large projects that we are undertaking together.

With regard to visa issues, of course they are in large measure related
to the issue of concluding a peace treaty and settling territorial
problems, but not completely. Of course we can arrive at any number of
decisions, but they must be in accordance with our sense of the best
way to reach an agreement on the main treaty, the peace treaty. The
subject is still on the table and discussions are ongoing.

The only thing that I would like to draw to your attention and that
I discussed with my colleague is the desirability of not politicising
this issue to such an extent. I understand that parliaments have one
position and that the establishment and society have theirs. But to
create a normal pragmatic atmosphere at the talks it is best not to
increase the tensions with the other side.

Unfortunately the Japanese side has recently done precisely this,
when there were several decisions taken at the parliamentary level,
including the use of language that was totally unacceptable for the
Russian side. We need to get away from this sort of politicisation if
we want to come to some sort of future agreement on all outstanding
items.

Base in Kyrgyzstan

[Question] Is it true that Russia is negotiating with Kyrgyzstan to
provide it with a new base for the CSTO collective forces [Collective
Rapid Reaction Force]? Would it possible to have some details on this?

[Medvedev] First, Russia has a base in Kyrgyzstan, let’s start with
that. Secondly, all the negotiations are of course based on our
partnership relations with Kyrgyzstan in matters across the board:
both economic affairs and military cooperation.

Periodically leaders of the Russian Federation and heads of
ministries and departments visit Kyrgyzstan. But as regards the
specific arrangements, as you can imagine, such an agreement cannot
be declared in advance. We have nothing here that we want to confirm
or to refute. In my view the only thing I should say at the moment is
that we are naturally interested in forging relations with Kyrgyzstan
on the basis of the long-term strategic partnership that we enjoy now.

As members of the Collective Security Treaty Organisation we have a
responsibility for each other. And there are special articles in the
Treaty. You know what they are, the same as the ones in the Treaty
establishing the North Atlantic Alliance. So of course we must work
to strengthen each other’s security. We would naturally like to bring
certain things that have been laying dormant to a more contemporary
level.

Well, that’s all I have to say about this topic.

Climate change

[Question] On the question of climate change, can you tell us what
measures Russia is taking to reduce emissions?

[Medvedev] Frankly speaking, I have already talked about this. But I
can say it once again with pleasure, because it was a fairly complex
set of meetings and discussions.

We met with our experts, talked with our energy people and eventually
came to the conclusion that, first of all, in accordance with my
executive order from last year, the energy efficiency of the Russian
economy should be increased and energy consumption reduced by 40
percent by 2020.

Secondly, by 2020 we are going to reduce greenhouse gas emissions
by 10-15 percent relative to 1990. This is a very good contribution
to international endeavours, because in terms of fossil fuels,
if my memory is correct, this amounts to 30 billion tonnes of
hydrocarbons. This is a huge figure.

And finally, we support the general provisions set forth in the joint
Declaration on Climate Change, including those relating to reducing
global emissions by 80 percent. By 2050, our contribution could amount
to 50 percent (well, according to our estimations because as you know
it’s quite a ways ahead). Therefore, I believe the real results we
have are very, very positive.

I will not hide the fact — it’s even been noted by some of my
colleagues during the G8 discussions that they were happy that Russia
has clearly articulated its position on these issues. Some colleagues
have not yet done so — we have. We will work on this, and I have not
yet mentioned our decisions to develop an energy-efficient economy,
so-called green technology, and alternative energy.

This direction is extremely important, despite the fact that Russia
is one of the largest producers of hydrocarbons on the planet. We
realise that nothing is forever, including our hydrocarbon power. If
we cannot create normal conditions for the development of other forms
of energy, we will have no future. It is necessary to invest money
and intellectual resources in this field.

Anti-missile defence in Europe

[Question] At the summit President Obama spoke about a new initiative
on nuclear safety. This initiative is supported by the leaders of the
G8 and apparently Russia as well. I would still like to know what
will happen with all the agreements between Russia and the United
States in the field of nuclear disarmament if the United States does
not abandon plans to deploy ABM systems in Eastern Europe.

[Medvedev] This question brings me back to Moscow, to negotiations with
the President of the United States in Moscow, and when we discussed the
issue of non-proliferation with him there. He suggested a corresponding
summit on this topic. I think that this is a good idea: I supported
him and said that we will be ready to take part in it. These ideas
were relayed to those here and have the support of all parties,
including our country. In general, this is probably the correct
direction for our cooperation.

In doing so, of course we will rely primarily on our own interests. If
with regard to non-proliferation issues our positions are close,
and sometimes identical, with regard to strategic offensive weapons
we are on the path towards maximum coordination and convergence. We
made clear our intentions in the so-called Moscow joint understanding,
there are options for warheads and missile launchers that have yet
to be definitively determined, but nevertheless the basic parameters
are there.

There is one issue on which we disagree. This relates to the decision
taken by the previous U.S. administration, along with two European
countries, Poland and the Czech Republic, to deploy a missile defence
system and place a certain number of anti-missile elements and radar
in Poland and the Czech Republic. Our arguments you know. Our position
has not changed. We believe that this aspect of missile defence is
harmful, that it will not protect a given country if a real threat
does arise, and simultaneously looks like a challenge to the Russian
Federation. Because actually this radar is more directed at controlling
the territory of the Russian Federation than that of those countries
that our partners are talking about.

Therefore, our idea is to nevertheless arrive at a modern understanding
– I emphasise the words modern understanding – of global missile
defence. We are ready to participate in this. I said this to President
Obama. We are ready to participate in this, not merely intellectually,
but also by providing our material capabilities, including radar and
other facilities.

The minimum that I see that makes me moderately optimistic is that
Americans are not forcing this initiative through and are now taking
time to study it. How this will end, I do not know, nor whose view will
prevail in the American administration. I can speak comfortably with
Mr Obama on the subject. But we understand that there are a number
of experts and of people making the relevant decisions who consider
this endeavour very important for their country and themselves. Once
again, our opinion is that this decision was a mistake. And if our
partners show a willingness to revise it, and this is what we are
hoping for, then we can agree on all elements. If we cannot agree
on these issues, you know what the consequences will be. No one has
suggested anything else. And what I said at the time in my Address
to the Federal Assembly of the Russian Federation remains an idea
that I am still contemplating.

[Question] To continue on the theme of missile defence, a quick
question if you’ll allow it. Today an article in the Polish press
claimed that the issue had been resolved, that the U.S. administration
agreed not to deploy a missile defence system. This is not very formal,
but nonetheless a leak occurred. In this regard, I have a question:
would you consider it your personal victory I stress the term personal
or rather a foreign and domestic policy victory?

And actually, I had another question on the prospects for settlement
of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict. How soon do you think a peace treaty
between Armenia and Azerbaijan could be adopted, and whether in this
context, since the issue relates to the Caucasus, you discussed with
your colleague President Sarkozy the fact that the MedvedevSarkozy
plan is not being stringently implemented, by Georgia of course.

[Medvedev] If the United States renounce their missile defence plans
then I am ready to attribute it to whoever you want, even to the
President of Poland, as long as it comes about. Because we believe that
the idea is harmful and unnecessary, and simply irritates all. If you
like, you can put this on my record I would not object. The important
thing is the result.

Karabakh

Now, with regard to Karabakh and the Armenian-Azerbaijani settlement. I
just said that we agreed on a document with the three participants
in the Minsk Group. You know, I’ll say it more simply: I have some
expectations on this account. This may be one of the conflicts whose
resolution is in the most advanced phase.

The presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan listen and understand each
other quite well, the number of nuances on which we have to agree
are dwindling and, in my opinion, this is a solvable problem. This
is not something that will require decades before a solution can be
found. Therefore, we believe that progress can be made.

We will help this process together with our partners in the Minsk
group and, to be honest, we will have to act because I hope they
will come literally in the near future to one of the presidential
events in Russia. We will continue with these contacts. But I will
not anticipate anything. The main thing is that the parties retain
their desire to negotiate. This is the case now.

Georgia

As to the situation in the Caucasus, of course this is
generally a more complicated issue than just the Nagorno Karabakh
settlement. Unfortunately, after what happened in August last year,
the overall situation in the Caucasus has become more difficult. And
we cannot be happy with the fact that, say, Georgia considers this
situation a pretext for the further militarization of their own
regime. The acquisition of additional weapons currently taking place
is certainly not improving the situation or helping it calm down.

Second. All kinds of exercises which take place in the Caucasus,
including on the territory of Georgia (in my opinion, last year prior
to the conflict between Georgia and South Ossetia, there was no point
in holding these exercises), but now they look like a provocation. We
have talked about this openly with our partners in NATO. And even
this was a reason to delay even just a bit the announcement of the
resumption of relations between Russia and NATO. Now we have done
this and agreed with the Americans that we will resume military
cooperation. This will all benefit the case at hand. Here the most
important thing is to avoid any provocation.

As for my agreements and the so-called MedvedevSarkozy plan, I think
that it has worked quite well and, to a large extent, accomplished its
purpose, which was to calm the situation. Another point is that there
are a number of aspects on which we must continue to cooperate. We will
do so. There is the issue of the missions in the Caucasus. Indeed,
this encountered difficulties, because neither South Ossetia nor
Abkhazia wants the missions to formally refer to them as they were
prior to the proclamation of their independence. But in fact no one
objected to the missions themselves.

The missions are useful and necessary: the UN mission and the EU
mission are actively working, as they should be. But if you talk about
the mandate and the United Nations mission, it seems to me that it
must take into account realities, rather than create the illusion
that nothing has happened, including with regard to name changes.

That is why we were forced to veto a decision. If the approach here
becomes more pragmatic, of course we will remove our veto and agree
on everything.

Obama

[Question] This is your second G8 summit as president. From your
point of view, what has changed in the past year within this club,
which players have come to the fore, what relations do you have with
them? And how would you rate the performance of Barack Obama at the
summit, given that he is not yet a very well-known political figure
on the international stage, but is nevertheless the head of one of
the largest economies in the world?

[Medvedev] If the degree to which a political figure is well-known
is associated with the length of his or her tenure, then I am also
not a very prominent figure. And the most recognised has to be one
of the leaders that has been in power for a very long time. In life,
everything is a little different.

Nevertheless, I want to say that the summit was certainly
interesting. And of course, the great advantage of such meetings is
that we can communicate informally: we have the opportunity not simply
to sit at the round (or oval) table, or under the cameras during a
bilateral meeting in one of the facilities where the meetings took
place, but simply talk one-on-one, to take each other aside, ask
certain questions and just chat. This is sometimes also useful. So
in this sense, these summits are unique. And in any event for me,
this is a good experience with my colleagues.

I have equal, and I hope, good relations with everyone. So I do not
want to go into any personal characteristics. But the fact that during
these discussions we got to know each other better is already a huge
bonus. The fact that sometimes people who in real life have difficulty
communicating with one another appear here is also a bonus.

But I will not hide the fact that last year it was difficult for me to
communicate with the President of the United States of America, because
we were very divided on many issues. Rather let me say this: talking
to George Bush Jr. is a pleasure. He is a frank man, a quick man.

But unfortunately this did not have any positive consequences for our
relations, and to speak frankly, it often had negative consequences. In
this sense, I hope that with Barack Obama we will listen to each other
better and therefore understand each other better. Anyway, let’s hope
that those decisions that were taken in Moscow and the positions we
discussed here will be implemented. This is, of course, important.

[Medvedev] Let’s ask the 14th question. We are in a place where you
cannot end on the number 13.

[Question] There is one issue that requires clarification. Who gave
you the coin, that is who issued the new international currency? And
especially, at what rate would you be ready to exchange it?

[Medvedev] You want to offer me a few euros for this? I am not ready
to change it with you because I do not know the real rate of this
currency. If you do, I might think about it.

With regard to who gave it to me, it is a gift that, I understand, has
been given to all the heads of delegations. It was coined, I think, in
Belgium (it is sort of a test batch) at the mint. But I am heartened by
the fact that aside from where it was coined and what quality it is,
this is now worrying everyone, including the mints. It means that
people are getting ready and I think this is a good sign. It is a
sign that we understand to what extent we are interconnected. There
is a very good declaration attached and I have quoted part of it. In
fact, if we ever live to see a global currency, it can be used as
the relevant rules concerning issuance and circulation. But I will
nevertheless keep this coin, as it is a valuable souvenir for me.

Thank you, colleagues. Good luck with everything. See you again.

U.S. Businessmen Convicted For Paying Bribes To Azeri Leaders

U.S. BUSINESSMEN CONVICTED FOR PAYING BRIBES TO AZERI LEADERS

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
13.07.2009 11:13 GMT+04:00

Frederic Bourke, the co-founder of handbag maker Dooney & Bourke
who was once part of the Ford family, was convicted by a U.S. jury
of conspiring to pay bribes to government leaders in Azerbaijan in
a 1998 oil deal. The federal jury in Manhattan returned its verdict
yesterday after a monthlong trial that featured testimony from former
U.S. Senator George Mitchell. Jurors found Bourke conspired with Czech
expatriate Viktor Kozeny to bribe to Azerbaijan leaders including
former President Heidar Aliyev to spur the sale of the state-owned oil
company. The verdict is a win for U.S. prosecutors as they step up
enforcement of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, the law that bars
payments to non-U.S. officials in return for business. Few criminal
cases under the FCPA have gone to trial. "By bringing and winning the
case, the government has expanded the FCPA’s coverage," said Richard
Cassin, the founder of Singapore-based law firm Cassin Law LLC,
who also writes the FCPA Blog. "This was probably the hardest FCPA
prosecution the government has ever brought. Bourke didn’t pay the
bribes himself. He only knew about them." Bourke, 63, was on trial
for investing with Kozeny knowing he gave Azeri leaders millions
of dollars in cash and a secret two-thirds interest in a venture
Kozeny formed to buy the state oil company, known as Socar. Defense
attorney John Cline said an appeal is "very likely." Bourke was
accused of conspiring to violate the FCPA, conspiring to violate
money-laundering laws and lying to agents of the Federal Bureau of
Investigation. He was acquitted of money laundering. U.S. District
Judge Shira Scheindlin said she will impose less than the 10-year
prison sentence that prosecutors said Bourke faced. He is free on
$10 million bail. Bourke, a Greenwich, Connecticut, entrepreneur who
launched startups in the home-building, accessory and biotechnology
industries, denied knowing of the bribes. His lawyers said Kozeny stole
more than $180 million from Bourke and other investors including the
hedge fund Omega Advisors Inc. and the insurer American International
Group. A Bourke investment vehicle put up $8 million in the deal.

Azerbaijan, a former Soviet Republic on the Caspian Sea, never sold
Socar, wiping out the investment. Kozeny, who also has been charged,
is a fugitive living in the Bahamas. He admits bribing Azeri leaders,
denies stealing from his investors and claims they knew their money
was being used as payoffs. He says the FCPA doesn’t apply to him.

Trial witnesses told of plane flights into Azerbaijan with millions of
dollars stuffed into suitcases, of shakedowns in government offices,
and of dealings with Chechen mobsters who provided protection to
Kozeny’s operation. Kozeny said his investors might control about
half of the Azeri economy if they captured Socar. Others believed
their investment might grow tenfold, witnesses said. The jury of
seven women and five men began deliberating July 8 after hearing
testimony since early June. Jury foreman David Murphy, 52, said the
panel believed Bourke learned of the bribes after investing and then
should have gotten out. By then Kozeny was known as the "Pirate of
Prague" for allegedly stealing money from investors in his native
Czech Republic. "It was Kozeny, it was Azerbaijan, it was a foreign
country," Murphy, an electrician, said in an interview after the
verdict. "We thought he knew and definitely could have known. He’s
an investor. It’s his job to know." The government’s case centered
on two witnesses, former Kozeny aide Thomas Farrell and ex-Kozeny
lawyer Hans Bodmer, both of whom testified that they told Bourke of
the payments. The two have pleaded guilty and are cooperating with
prosecutors in bids for leniency. Prosecutors also offered evidence
that Bourke "consciously avoided" learning about the bribes by not
asking questions about them. Jurors were allowed to convict if they
found Bourke knew or took steps to avoid learning of the payments.

The defense sought to poke holes in Farrell’s and Bodmer’s accounts
and said Bourke believed Azeri leaders had lawfully paid for their
stake in the company Kozeny formed to buy Socar. Juror Barbara
Robertson said jurors rejected a central defense claim that Bourke
wasn’t in Azerbaijan when Farrell and Bodmer said they told him of
the bribes. "The judge’s instruction was clear," she said. "If you
think the substance is right and the dates are wrong, it doesn’t
matter." Bourke, who was once married to a member of the Ford
family, didn’t testify. Among his witnesses was his friend Mitchell,
the ex-senator, whom Bourke brought into the deal as a $200,000
investor. Mitchell told jurors he was unaware of the bribes even
after meeting with Aliyev. Mitchell, 75, is a special U.S. Middle
East envoy. He was a Democratic senator from Maine in the 1980s.

Besides the president, intended bribe recipients included current
President Ilham Aliyev and two officials overseeing the sale of state
property in 1998, prosecutors said. Along with Farrell and Bodmer, a
former Omega executive has pleaded guilty. Benjamin Brafman, Kozeny’s
lawyer, said the verdict "does not affect Mr. Kozeny, who has always
maintained that the FCPA does not apply to him because he is not a
citizen" of the U.S. The U.S. says it’s appealing a Bahamian court’s
refusal to extradite him. "The jury had decided that Mr. Bourke lied
and bribed," Kozeny said in an e-mailed statement. He said Bourke
deserved a "minimal" sentence. "In our Judeo-Christian culture,
we base our life on forgiveness," Kozeny said, Bloomberg reported.

OSCE Appeals End To Armenia-Azerbaijan Dispute

OSCE APPEALS END TO ARMENIA-AZERBAIJAN DISPUTE

RTT News
July 10 2009

(RTTNews) – Friday, the United States, France and Russia appealed
to the leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan to resolve a long-running
dispute between the Caucasian countries over the Nagorno-Karabakh
region that killed thousands.

In a joint statement issued in Italy at the concluding day of the
G8 summit, U.S. President Barack Obama, French President Nicolas
Sarkozy and their Russian counterpart Dmitry Medvedev affirmed their
"commitment to support the leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan as they
finalize the basic principles for settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict."

The three countries co-chair a committee of the Organization for
Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE).

Azerbaijan Responsible For Armenian Refugees

Azerbaijan Responsible For Armenian Refugees

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
08.07.2009 22:04 GMT+04:00

Azerbaijan is responsible for Armenian refugees, said Grigory Ayvazyan,
leader of the Assembly of Azerbaijani Armenians.

"Our organization addressed the Armenian parliament and NGOs to
recognize Azerbaijan’s atrocities in 1988-89 as genocide and received
feedback from Heritage party only," he said.

He also informed that a commission for protection of Armenian refugees’
rights will be formed.

"If Azerbaijan’s atrocities are recognized as genocide, the country
will have to pay $100 million compensation," Ayvazyan underscored.

He was critical about the public diplomacy. "Armenia should be tougher
because Azerbaijan is preparing for new aggression against Nagorno
Karabakh," he said.

WB South Caucasian Regional Director Gets Acquainted With The Proces

WB SOUTH CAUCASIAN REGIONAL DIRECTOR GETS ACQUAINTD WITH THE PROCESS OF PROJECTS IMPLEMENTED ON THE BANK’S MEANS IN THE ARAGATSOTN PROVINCE

ARMENPRESS
JULY 8, 2009
YEREVAN

YEREVAN, JULY 8, ARMENPRESS: The Director of the World Bank South
Caucasian Region Asad Alam, who pays a working visit to Armenia, and
the head of the WB Armenian Office Aristomene Varoudakis visited today
a number of villages of Aragatsotn province to get acquainted with
the process of projects implemented in the province on the WB funding.

In the Aghdzk village community gasification works are being conducted
within the frameworks of "Rural Enterprise and Small-Scale Commercial
Agriculture Development Project". From the overall 2 million USD
price intended for the project 53 million drams have been allocated
for the gasification of the village of 500 residents. 15% of the
price has been paid by the residents.

The WB representatives got acquainted with the process of works of
construction of the 3.5km length road connecting the Vardenut and
Ara villages. The mentioned sector was previously in an unfavorable
condition and was nearly impassable in winters, as a result of which
the local population had restricted opportunities for transportation.

At the end of the visit Asad Alam also visited the Mulki village where
in virtue of the World Bank’s additional 8 million USD of funding
to the "Social investments foundation" project a drinking water pump
station is being constructed.

A. Alam also got interested in the issues of the residents and their
expectations. During the briefing with journalists he stressed the
importance of the implementation of this project noting that they
will have a notable positive impact in the communities in respect
of the increase of the living conditions, particularly after the
gasification of the Aghdzk village nearly 600 families, the school and
the kinder garden will have heating as a result of which woodcutting
will also decrease.

Referring to the reconstruction of rural roads A. Alam said that
as a result of the project the competitiveness and welfare of these
communities will improve, the village can be more easily connected
with the republican highway and the expenditures for the transportation
of the agricultural food to the market will reduce.

Speaking about the construction of a new water supply net in Mulki
village, A. Alam said that the village did not have a pure drinking
water for a long time. According to A. Alam the representatives of
the communities also have a great participation in these works.

Ankara: Turkey’s ‘Multi-Centered’ Foreign Policy

TURKEY’S ‘MULTI-CENTERED’ FOREIGN POLICY

Hurriyet
Wednesday, July 08, 2009 11:15

Some columnists such as Erdal Þafak and Taha Akyol see the new Foreign
Minister Ahmet Davutoðlu as an extraordinary minister and praise
him every chance they have. So do I see Davutoðlu as an important
academic, a humble but principled personality and a man of patience,
and I remember his always-smiling eyes.

Davutoðlu makes the claim to bring new breath, an understanding to
Turkish foreign policy! Therefore, he claims to have a multi-centered
foreign policy that depends on direct mutual interest of countries
that we have bilateral relations with, aims to have zero problems with
neighbors, and makes Turkey a central country in the Middle East and
independent from the U.S. backwashes.

Davutoðlu paid a visit to the United States after Barack Obama
was elected president and made the following remarks to describe
Turkey-U.S. relations in the new period, "Turkey’s foreign policy
choices and priorities overlap with Obama."

*** I can only make an assessment on multi-centered foreign policy
through an approach based on conclusion.

I am of the opinion that if a multi-centered policy cannot be anchored
to anywhere, or rather clearly if it is not equipped with basic
principles, it will eventually transform into a policy that cannot
reach any conclusion anywhere and that can try to please everyone. If
I look at Turkish foreign policy from a conclusion-centered point
of view, I see the following picture: *** 1) On the eve of Apr. 24,
Armenian Day, Turkey approached Armenia and talked about opening the
border without preconditions.

2) Obama was pleased to hear the developments and did not utter the
word "genocide" on Apr. 24.

3) But Azerbaijan, on the other hand, got fumed and challenged
Turkey. Obviously, Turkey couldn’t convince Azerbaijan on the Armenian
initiative. And Turkey promptly made a U-turn to give a guarantee
to Azerbaijan.

4) As Russia assured Azerbaijan regarding the Upper Karabakh
issue, Azerbaijanis decided to sell natural gas to Russia in big
amounts. Therefore, the Western product Nabucco project, to paralyze
the Russian hegemony in the energy market, was harmed severely.

5) Turkey announced partnership with Russia in the "Blue Stream"
project and began to talk about a strategic partnership with Russia,
just about the time it had an anchor with Obama.

6) Since Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoðan offended Israeli
President Shimon Peres through his remark "You know how to kill"
in Davos, Turkey-Israeli relations have not been on track.

The number of Israeli tourists visiting Turkey has dropped radically
as sports events are being suspended.

But most importantly, Israel does not want to see Turkey as a mediator
in Israeli-Syrian talks.

7) Erdoðan fell into a serious trap on the "Mine Bill" issue (See:
the visits of Israeli ambassador to Ankara to southeastern Turkey and
to Parliament). Erdoðan, who became a hero in the Arab World with his
"One Minute" move against Peres in Davos, this time, lost prestige
among Arabs.

8) Turkey became the first country to congratulate incumbent Iranian
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad following the controversial presidential
elections, despite the United States and the European Union. However,
the very same Iranian administration wants to see Turkey neither as
a broker in Iran-U.S. relations nor in Iran-EU affairs.

*** 9) Neither Saudi Arabia nor Egypt accepts Turkey as a dominant
country in the Middle East. They are even disturbed by Turkey’s
approach to Iran.

10) In the last period, Turkey mediated between the West, which
refuses to have direct talks, and Hamas and Hezbollah. This is the
only solid improvement in hand!

In a conclusion-centered approach the multi-center foreign policy
does not look good!

US Disapproves Israel’s Plan For Attacking Iran

US DISAPPROVES ISRAEL’S PLAN FOR ATTACKING IRAN

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
07.07.2009 13:18 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ US State Department is trying to smooth Vice
President Jospeph Biden’s statement on Washington’s intention stop
Israel from launching preventive attack on Iran’s nuclear bases.

About a day after Biden’s statement on ABC TV channel, State
Department gave official response in which it says that the United
States disapproved Israel’s plan for attacking Iran. "We wouldn’t
certainly want to give a green light to any kind of military action,"
State Department representative Ian Kelly stressed.

"United States share Israel’s fears of Iranian threat, but Washington
should be aware of Jerusalem’s decision in the given aspect. Israel
is a sovereign state, and its decision will not meet any obstacles
by United States," US State Department quotes Kelli as saying.

Mr. Biden announced previously that US had no right to dictate the
actions of a sovereign state, and it was up to Israel to determine
whether or not to strike any targets in Iran.

Turkish army bans AXA from Ministry tenders after Armenian comps

Turkish army bans AXA from ministry tenders after Armenian compensation
04.07.2009 21:00 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Defense Ministry of Turkey put France-based AXA
Holding on banned companies list after 14 years of merger with OYAK
Bank which was the Armed Forces Pension Fund’s, AXA is banned from
bidding for Defense Ministry’s tenders until 14 January, 2010, Aksam
Turkish newspaper said.
In 1995, AXA compensated some heirs of the Armenian Genocide
survivors.
The decision to ban the AXA came after the holding did not fulfill the
commitment under an agreement and AXA resort the ban to the
jurisdiction.
AXA officials have avoided commenting, saying "The event is under
judicial process. We can’t make a declaration."