Obama trip to Turkey within weeks

Obama trip to Turkey within weeks

Story from BBC NEWS:
/7929841.stm

Published: 2009/03/07 14:01:29 GMT

President Barack Obama will visit Turkey "in a month or so", US
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has said on a visit to Ankara.

She met Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan in the first visit by a
member of the new US administration to Turkey.

Turkey’s foreign minister said Ankara was ready to re-launch indirect
talks between Syria and Israel.

Mrs Clinton said the importance of building relations between Israel
and Syria could not be overstated.

Turkey was mediating those talks until recently, but Foreign Minister
Ali Babacan said any request to resume that role must come from both
sides.

"President Obama will be visiting Turkey within the next month or so,"
said Mrs Clinton, at a joint news conference with Mr Babacan. "The
exact date will be announced shortly."

‘Low perceptions’

The two allies would consult on the safest and most effective way to
withdraw US forces from Iraq, she added.

Mr Obama is due to head for Europe next month to attend the G20 summit
in London on 2 April.

Ankara has already indicated it will allow the US to use its territory
and bases for the planned withdrawal of troops.

The war in Iraq was just one reason perception of the US plunged to a
historic low in the major Muslim nation, says the BBC’s Sarah Rainsford
in Istanbul, and Mrs Clinton wants to reach out to that public.

In addition to her formal meetings, Mrs Clinton is making an appearance
on a popular daytime chat show, hosted by four women.

It is the final stop of a week-long foreign tour by America’s top
diplomat.

Our correspondent says after a fraught relationship with the Bush
administration, the visit is seen as a chance to reaffirm the two
countries’ alliance.

Turkey calls the US secretary of state’s trip "important confirmation"
of its strategic relationship with America.

Analysts in Turkey see the visit as a sign the Obama administration
plans to revitalise its support for Turkey’s EU accession efforts.

Our correspondent says Turkey is expected to try to ensure President
Obama does not refer to the mass killing of Armenians in 1915 as
genocide, in his speech on the anniversary of the forced deportations
next month.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/europe

Russia Profile Weekly Experts Panel: Eastern Europe In Danger?

RUSSIA PROFILE WEEKLY EXPERTS PANEL: EASTERN EUROPE IN DANGER?

Russia Profile
id=Experts’+Panel&articleid=a1236361826
March 6 2009

At a recent meeting of NATO defense ministers in Krakow, Britain’s
Defense Secretary John Hutton proposed establishing a 3,000 men-strong
rapid reaction force to defend Eastern Europe, including non-NATO
members like Georgia and Ukraine, against "outside aggression." Is
Russia a threat to Eastern Europe, or is it its savior? What will
the likely impact of the financial crisis be on the East European
perceptions of Russia and the security situation in that part of
Europe? Is there a realistic military threat from Russia?

Contributors: Patrick Armstrong, Stephen Blank, Ethan Burger, Eugene
Kolesnikov

Although the proposal did not go very far, it signaled a desire by
London and Washington to create a NATO capability that would enable
the alliance to interfere with such occurrences in Eastern Europe like
Russia’s war with Georgia last year. The proposal can certainly be
interpreted as NATO’s intention to provide deterrence against possible
Russian military action against Ukraine. Ukraine, however, is not
a NATO member, and is not covered by Article 5 guarantees. The real
question, though, is whether Eastern Europe is indeed under threat,
and what could NATO do about it? The answer is clearly "yes," Eastern
Europe is threatened, but not by Russia, while NATO is the wrong tool
to deal with the threat.

The mortal threat to East European democracies comes from the global
financial crisis. Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia, Hungary, Romania,
Slovakia and even Greece are largely bankrupt at present. Their
government debt is trading at junk-bond valuations, and the prospect
of default is excruciatingly real. Last week, Standard and Poor’s
analysts released a report warning of a possible unraveling of the
Euro zone, due to the collapse of the financial systems in East
European countries. Almost all East European countries have been
plagued by serious political and social unrest, including violent
street protests and even seizures of government buildings.

Latvia, for example, has no solvent banks, no budget, no government,
and a huge public and corporate debt, prompting its business elite to
seriously entertain the idea of inviting a prominent Russian banker
and a native of Riga, Peter Aven, president of Russia’s Alfa-Bank,
to be Latvia’s prime minister (Aven declined the offer).

Ukraine is on the brink of a massive financial default on its
government debt, and the continued bickering between its president,
prime minister and parliamentary leaders offers little hope for
a possible way out of the impending economic catastrophe. Serious
political unrest threatens to engulf the nation. Ukraine is negotiating
a $5 billion stabilization loan from Russia after the International
Monetary Fund refused to provide the second stabilization facility due
to the government’s failure to come up with a realistic anti-crisis
program. Hungary and Bulgaria also requested financial assistance
from Russia, having failed to receive help from the EU.

Is Russia a threat to Eastern Europe, or is it its savior? What will
the likely impact of the financial crisis be on the East European
perceptions of Russia and the security situation in that part of
Europe? Is there a realistic military threat from Russia? Will the
British proposal for a rapid reaction force for Eastern Europe go
any further? Should NATO become involved if political instability and
social unrest engulf Eastern Europe? Should Russia get involved were
such a scenario to unfold in Ukraine?

Eugene Kolesnikov, private consultant, the Netherlands:

Rich Europe is scared. The fear arises from the utter uncertainty about
the course that the economic meltdown may take. Even the optimists
paint a picture of a deep, five-six year recession. Some prognoses are
much gloomier. Growth may not substantially resume for a long time (a
decade or more), and when it resumes, it may be very slow because there
is no feasible economic bubble on the horizon, such as the opening
of the former socialist markets, the Internet boom, and financial
pyramids were until last year. Protracted depression entails tens of
millions of unemployed for a long time, and deteriorating standards of
living for the majority of the population. Western European societies
are strong as long as there is prosperity. When the latter is under
threat, there is very little that keep burghers and working masses
from discontent. The first omens are there to see in Greece, France,
the UK, and Ireland.

Rich Europe will have to deal with this discontent by trying to numb
the pain through handouts, a lot of them, and for a long time. There
is simply not enough to go around. This is why the rich are holding
their purse tight. The money will be given out only to fight fires,
such as the IMF bailouts of Hungary and Latvia. Besides, Western Europe
will be prepared to let the new members experience much more pain
than that inflicted on their own countries – the local populace is
far more important than distant friends. If Western European leaders
were currently sure that $150 billion or more could solve the Central
and Eastern European problems once and for all, they would have paid
up. But uncertainty dominates strategy at the moment.

Central and Eastern European countries are therefore under multiple
threats. These countries will be subjected to protracted economic
and social suffering that will be much worse than that of the rich
Europe. This suffering may lead to political turmoil that can result
in chaos or a return to authoritarianism. Western Europe will try to
smooth this out, but all depends on how long and severe the economic
crisis is going to be. This crisis, in the worst case scenario,
may well lead to fundamental changes in political and economic
organization of Europe and of the world as a whole. In such times,
everyone will be inclined to put their own interests first.

Patrick Armstrong, Patrick Armstrong Analysis, Ottawa, Canada:

When NATO expansion was light-heartedly (George Kennan’s expression)
begun by the Bill Clinton administration, its proponents sold the idea
(I well remember earnest Americans patiently explaining this when I was
a diplomat in Moscow) as a means of improving European security. And,
had there been any serious intention to include Russia, perhaps it
would have been. But wiser people, like Jack Matlock, foresaw that
the exclusion of Russia would make things rather less stable.

And so it has proved to be. Even proponents of NATO expansion can see
the connection with Tbilisi’s attack on South Ossetia last August,
and are fond of claiming that Russia puts up gas prices in order
to weaken Ukraine (ignoring the fact that Russia has put up prices
for everyone – even Armenia and Belarus which have no intention of
joining NATO). NATO expansion has steadily crept east, from Poland
to Latvia and now to Ukraine and Georgia (although their accession
looks less likely today). Now the argument seems to be based on
the fact that since Moscow does not want these countries in NATO,
they must be admitted (and, above all, we must not give Moscow a
"veto"). A thin reason indeed.

NATO now has members that have re-painted their history under communist
rule: gone are the home-grown communists like Wladyslaw Gomulka or
Martin Latsis, and in their place is a picture of Russian imperialism
and native resistance. These countries are a lobby pushing NATO into
a reflexive anti-Russian stance. They do not need actual evidence of
Russian hostility: Russian imperialism is the very foundation stone
of their new historical mythology. Perhaps the most preposterous
example of this reconstruction of reality was the proposal that the
still-existing museum in Gori, Georgia, to its favorite son, Iosef
Bissarion-dze Jughashvili, be re-named the museum of the Russian
occupation of Georgia. Perhaps Russia should create a museum of
the Georgian occupation of Russia: given the importance to Russian
history of Joseph Stalin, Lavrentiy Beria, Grigory Orjonikidze, Sergey
Golglidze and Mikhail Gvishiani, this would have more historical
credibility. "In 1939 the whole of the Soviet Union could be said to
be controlled by Georgians and Mingrelians," says Donald Rayfield in
"Stalin and his Hangmen." But these people have been painted out of the
portraits – de-communization was often more airbrushing than an honest
recognition of the reality of enthusiastic native participants. And
now they’re selling these paintings to NATO. As Jack Matlock saw ten
years ago, "It creates greater polarization of attitudes as the line
moves east." George Kennan called it "a tragic mistake."

The actual problems of the post-communist countries are all
similar: corruption, outdated industry, bad work habits, decaying
infrastructure, crashing demographics and fragile economies. Countries
that had the full 70-year dose of communism are worse off than
those who received the 40-year dose to be sure, but the problems are
shared. NATO is not the answer to any of them.

There is no better illustration of this truth than the parlous state
of Ukraine today. The post "Orange Revolution" obsession with NATO
has only exacerbated the political division in the country.

And finally, why would Russia, which is surviving the financial storm
better than most – if not all – of its neighbors, want to acquire
these countries anyway? Much more trouble (and expense) than they’re
worth. After all, there wasn’t much stopping Russia from seizing most
of Georgia last August if it had wanted to.

Ethan S. Burger, Adjunct Professor, Georgetown University Law Center,
Washington, DC :

There is indeed a significant threat facing Europe (actually it
threatens most of the world) — it is the consequences of economic and
political instability. As conceived in 1949, NATO was not organized
to address such challenges. As a multinational organization, it
is doubtful that the political leaderships of the NATO members
could reach agreement on how to respond in a military fashion to
an ambiguous threat. It is likely that the political leaders would
decide to deploy forces when "success" was a certainty, with the
projected costs and concomitant risks judged to be minimal (witness
NATO’s role in Afghanistan). The British experience in Ireland, the
French experience in Algeria, and the U.S. experience in Iraq as well
as NATO’s deployment to former Yugoslavia are not easily forgotten.

The principal threats facing Europe and the Soviet Union’s successor
states are economic crime (both so-called "white collar" economic
crime as well as international organized crime, often economic as
well) and certain forms of terrorism that are not non-traditional
warfare being carried out by state-sponsored entities. This threat
can primarily be classified as the type of matter dealt with by law
enforcement, but under certain circumstances may be regarded as a
form of war. With respect to the first problem, it arises in part
since law and regulatory enforcement remain largely national, and the
difficulty of carrying out effective policies for numerous reasons (I
will gladly send the course syllabus on international economic crime,
which I offer at the Georgetown University Law Center, to anyone who
asks). Not being a military specialist I will stay clear of the other
variety of threat, though I would recommend the books of Wesley Clark
and writings of Steven Biddle.

International organizations (e.g. the Council of Europe, the European
Union, the International Monetary Fund, NATO, the OSCE, the UN and the
World Bank) are not without purpose, but are naive to think that states
will cease to be the most important actors in our global system. Today,
observers are noting that within the European Union, many countries
experiencing high unemployment are seeing nationalistic sentiments
reappear. Most people living on the continent think of themselves
as Frenchmen, Germans, Italians, Spaniards, and NOT Europeans. It is
difficult to expect regional organizations seeking to act collectively
in other parts of the world to do much better.

There are generally economic benefits from the free flow of capital and
labor between countries at similar levels of economic development –but
I have thought that since the establishment of the euro that it was
naive to think that governments would abdicate their right to establish
their own fiscal policies when the conditions demand it. The euro would
have collapsed if the European Bank enforced its rules concerning
the permitted levels of deficits euro zone members were permitted
to have. A large part of my thinking is that nationalism remains
the strongest force on the continent. Ironically, the EU permitted
states like Belgium, Britain, Italy, and Spain to function despite
ethnical/national/regional differences which have historic roots that
are far more important than linguistic or religious differences. The
late U.S. Speaker of the House of Representatives Thomas "Tip" O’Neil
(D-Massachusetts) is best known for his observation that all politics
are local.

Congressman O’Neil grew-up in Boston, where people were "hyphenated"
Americans (Italian-Americans and Irish-Americans), Boston Brahmins
(i.e. persons with English roots), and Blacks. He understood that
people, irrespective of their ethnic or religious background, had
common political concerns (jobs, schools, etc.) that transcended
other differences. Alas, the United States is largely a land without
a memory of major military conflict (with the exception of the Civil
War in the South).

At the present time, it is difficult to think of any economy
that is particularly strong after one performs appropriate
research. Interdependence has grown to such an extent that few
countries can pursue "beggar thy neighbor" policies. This can
entail major risks. There are cleavage lines throughout Europe,
as demonstrated not so long ago when Czechoslovakia and Yugoslavia
broke-up. There remains a Hungarian and Russian irredentia. There are
probably 100 people alive today who can name all the ethnic groups who
live in the Caucasus region (and this is further complicated by mixed
marriage and minority communities). Armenia and Azerbaijan have had a
territorial dispute that on first impression seems relatively simple
to resolve, at least compared to that facing Jewish Israelis/Arab
Israelis and Palestinians.

Throughout the world, many companies and the products they produce
are indeed multinational — the Mini Cooper is a wonderful example. In
some ways this can bind countries together in a positive way, at other
times the multinational corporation’s relation with the countries in
which they operate can be a source of tension. The existence of such
entities makes it more difficult for governments to assess the impact
of their policy options. This is one of the reasons that no country
can be the economic savior of another until governments are willing not
to use economics as a political tool to enhance their countries’ power.

Usually most governments rule in the interest of a limited portion of
their country’s population. Perhaps in some cases, the leadership’s
fear of being toppled might result in more equitable economic domestic
policies, as well as policies that take into account the interest
of other states (not necessarily just their traditional friends
and trading partners). I hope that governments are wise enough to
understand that the use of force domestically, or to interfere in
another country’s sovereign affairs, will eventually have a high
cost. Personally, I doubt that World War II (including the Great
Patriotic War) would not have been possible but for the economic and
human consequences of the Great Depression (made worse (and perhaps
possible) by the calamity that we refer to as World War I). The larger
role Russian business leaders have in governmental policymaking, the
less likely it is that Russia will be perceived as a threat to others.

Lastly, the label "Eastern Europe" is an anachronism. The Czech
Republic is to the West of Hungary. Must Europe be arbitrarily divided
into "West," "Central" and "East"? When we mean "East," do we mean
the former Warsaw Pact countries? How would we classify what had been
"East Germany"? Finland borders Russia, but has always had ties to the
West. What is the proper category to place Turkey in? The late Winston
Churchill was wrong in one major respect — the "Iron Curtain" did not
stretch from Trieste in the Adriatic to Stettin in the Baltic. It began
at the Soviet border. Fortunately, such a border no longer exists,
but not everyone fully appreciates this fact, and this is a tragedy.

Professor Stephen Blank, the U.S. Army War College, Carlyle Barracks,
PA:

Frolov’s question and scenario are unfortunately disingenuous. The
economic crisis is for real, but it is not something NATO can do
anything about. The Russian threat is real. It must be pointed out
here again, despite unceasing Russian propaganda, that the war against
Georgia (and the evidence is there to support this) was a deliberate
and premeditated Russian provocation, even if this does not excuse
Mikheil Sakaashvili’s recklessness. Furthermore (a point not mentioned
by Russia’s advocates), Moscow even broke its own laws concerning
the use of military force abroad, i.e., on Georgian territory,
to wage that war. It has also threatened virtually every state from
the Baltic to the Black Sea with missiles if they dare exercise their
sovereign rights as NATO members to host U.S. missile defenses, which,
its own analysts admit, do not threaten Russia.

Likewise, Moscow unilaterally suspended its participation in the
CFE treaty, an act for which no legal category exists. There is a
very real threat of Russian military action, not least in Crimea
where Moscow is handing out passports and visibly equivocating about
Crimea’s belonging to Ukraine. Indeed, as we know Vladimir Putin told
the NATO summit that Ukraine was not even a state, and that if it
exercised its right to seek NATO membership, Moscow would dismember
it. Furthermore, as there is no democratic control of the military,
the temptation to militarized adventurism remains ever present. So
if Ukraine feels threatened, it has good reasons to exercise its
sovereign rights and seek NATO assistance.

The severity and urgency of the economic crisis does, for the moment,
eclipse military threats. But if it is unchecked it could lead, as in
the 1930s, to geopolitical explosions. Even if Russia can afford to
lend the kinds of sums involved to desperate governments, the terms
that it would impose, as we have seen in Ukraine which is already on
the verge of another gas crisis, would effectively compromise the
sovereignty if not the integrity of Ukraine for decades to come,
and undermine all the achievements in the post-Soviet space since 1989.

It is quite unlikely that anyone in Eastern Europe regards Moscow as
the region’s savior, even if the EU seems unprepared to step up to
the plate and assume its historical and political responsibility. For
states to surrender themselves to Moscow only restores the dangerous
bipolarity of a previous generation. While undoubtedly that would
be music in the ears of many Russian elites, it would be an utterly
discordant denouement to Europe’s present difficulties. But if military
instability does break out in Eastern Europe due to protracted failure
to come to terms with the present crisis, members may well call upon
NATO to act. If Moscow does not like the British proposal for a rapid
reaction force, it has only itself to blame. It alone remilitarized
Europe’s security agenda and must pay the price of its policy.

http://www.russiaprofile.org/page.php?page

BAKU: Azerbaijan Says Three Armenian Captives Want To Go To Third Co

AZERBAIJAN SAYS THREE ARMENIAN CAPTIVES WANT TO GO TO THIRD COUNTRY

Turan News Agency
March 5 2009
Azerbaijan

Three Armenian servicemen who recently crossed over to the Azerbaijani
side have asked to be handed over to a third country, the press
secretary of Azerbaijan’s Ministry of Defence, Eldar Sabiroglu,
has told Turan news agency.

According to Sabiroglu, all three servicemen are refusing to go back
to Armenia.

"They have asked the Azerbaijani authorities to send them to a third
country. They believe that if they return [to Armenia] they will face
death or torture and life in difficult conditions," Sabiroglu said.

Bullying, malnutrition and poor conditions in the Armenian army were
the main reasons for them to run away, Sabiroglu added.

BBCM note: News agencies reported earlier that Armenian servicemen
Hrant Markosyan, Alik Tevosyan and Artush Sargsyan crossed the
Armenian-Azerbaijani front line on 28 February and surrendered to
Azerbaijan.

NKR: Ripens In Root

RIPENS IN ROOT

Azat Artsakh Daily
05 March 09
Republic of Nagorno Karabakh [NKR]

The Council of Kozma Prutkov is Relevant For The Co-chairs of the
OSCE Minsk Group In the last day of winter, the co-chairs of the
OSCE Minsk Group around Nagorno Karabakh Yury Merzlyakov (Russia),
Bernard Fassier (France) and Matthew Bryza (USA) visited Stepanakert
in the frame of regional visit.

On the same day, the meeting of the foreign mediators with the
president of NK Bako Sahakyan took place, the details of which is not
open by venture of confidentiality. Co-chairs did not speak about this,
informing the Press dosated and avaricious information concerning to
the maintenance of the talk with the president of NKR and the coarse
of the process of regulation. Very likely, only Russian mediator
Yury Merzlyakov opened the brackets slightly underlining that the
co-chairs presented to the governing body of NK new opportunities
for the process, which, in their appearance, appeared in the result
of the last meeting of the presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan.

Certainly, it will be interesting to know what kind of opportunities
and prospect they open for the process of regulation. Especially, in
the context of recent optimistic announcement of some politicians
working at the Karabakhian problem concerning to the "golden
opportunity" for the achievement of the diplomatic break in 2009. In
particular,20special representative of the Parliamentary Assemble of
OSCE around NK Goran Lenmarker has recently spoken about good chances
for the regulation of the conflict. However, the fact attracts
attention to itself that the optimism of the mediators becomes
increasingly "careful". Therefore, Yury Merzlyakov said to the
journalists in Stepanakert "objective conditions have been created
for the achievement of the regulation, but the subjective ones are
not exactly absent". It is interesting whether to which conditions
Russian diplomat concerns the collaboration of the Karabakhian part
in the process of negotiation, subjective or objective.

Nevertheless, it seems to the subjective one, because NK remains
out of the negotiation process contrary to the official documents of
OSCE. Meanwhile, the question of the participation of Karabakh is by
no means the idle and the objective (I should underline) and has a
determinant meaning for the achievement of realistic and i.e. for a
viable decision of the problem.

Bako Sahakyan again confirmed the position of the Karabakhian part in
the meeting with the mediators, which is consisted in the necessity
for the reestablishment of the full-format negotiations with an
obligatory participant of NKR in all the stages of the regulation. It
is notable that in orally the co-chairman of the Minsk Group invariably
confirmed justice of the given demands of the Karabakhian part, in
prac tice they have not provided for its realization. It seems, that
"the subjective factor" of Azerbaijan disturbs them protesting with
fervour against the return of NK to the negotiating table. To the
amount of reasons, which are served an obstacle in the way to the
comprehensive regulation, the circumstance should be concerned that the
intermediary missions have already tried to eliminate the consequence,
but not the reasons of Azerbaijan-Karabakhian conflicts. At that,
in the process of negotiation the mediators speak only about the
consequences, concerning only to Azerbaijan on Baku’s suggestion, for
some reason forgetting about the Armenian refugees and the Armenian
territories are being at the Azerbaijani occupation. Nobody argues,
that the consequences must be removed but at the same time it is
necessary to observe the priority, in other words not to put a cart
in front of a horse. Because, without removal of the reasons of
the conflict, the risk is too big to get hold of consequence again,
moreover it is more dimensioned. By the way, a Secretary General of
The Council of Europe Terry Davis also underlined that in any conflict
one should find a source and carry on a struggle with the reasons,
which have brought to it.

As is well known, the reason is concluded in the state politics of
Azerbaijan directed to the destruction of Artsakh and the occupation
the Armenian historical territories. Did Aze rbaijan refuse from
its genocide politics? Unambiguously, no, did not. It means that
it continues to remain a potential source for the renewal of the
conflict. Certainly, for the neutralization of this treat, intermediary
efforts are aimed not only to the chairmanship of the OSCE Minsk Group
but to all the authoritative international structures. So, in any rate
they affirm in the corresponding cases. However, their efforts can
be crowned with success only in that case if a sincere concernment
in objective one is reinforced by the active discussion of the basic
question in the process of negotiation, i.e. taking into account
the free desire of the nation of NK, the settlement of the conflict
and the establishment of a long time peace in the region. Moreover,
this is neither removal of the consequence of the conflict nor the
status of NK, which has already be defined by its people and "worked"
successfully. This is a security in the basis of reliable guarantee
of the safety of NK, to the amount of which concerns international
recognition of the actual independence of the republic. It is obvious
that any agreement around NK in which the opinions of its inhabitants
are not taken into account, objective realities and objective reasons
of the beginnings of the Azerbaijan-Karabakhian conflict are deprived
of the prospect to be consummated.

Armenian Downhill Skiers To Participate In International Rating Comp

ARMENIAN DOWNHILL SKIERS TO PARTICIPATE IN INTERNATIONAL RATING COMPETITIONS

PanARMENIAN.Net
04.03.2009 21:08 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Three Armenian downhill skiers – Abraham Sarkakhyan,
Arsen Nersisyan and Yuri Manukyan – departed for Lebanon to participate
in an international rating competition due from March 6 to 10.

As a PanARMENIAN.Net reporter was told in the Armenian Ski Federation,
upon return from Lebanon, the skiers will train for another rating
competition to be held in Turkish Palandoken ski resort (near Erzurum
in eastern Turkey) from March 13 to 18.

Armenia Needs New Economic Policy, Armenian Economist Thinks

ARMENIA NEEDS NEW ECONOMIC POLICY, ARMENIAN ECONOMIST THINKS

ArmInfo
2009-03-04 12:20:00

ArmInfo. Armenia needs new economic policy, Armenian economist, Tatul
Manaseryan, told ArmInfo correspondent when commenting on yesterday’s
sharp falling of the Armenian dram rate.

‘Armenia has to refuse liberal economic policy having been conducted
for a long period of time in the republic. Today the republic needs the
social-market economy as never before, which has simply no alternative
in the conditions created today’, – he said. Manaseryan characterized
the economic system of Armenia as wild capitalism, which in the
conditions of global financial crisis is demonstrating is absolute
ineffectiveness regarding counteractions against the challenges to the
republic. He also said yesterday’s devaluation of Armenian dram has
already led to falling of the purchasing capacity of the population of
the republic. Taking this into account the government has immediately
to start the process of indexation of revenues of population including
pensions and social benefits. For instance, minimal salary has to grow
from 30thsd to 40 thsd drams at least, so that to compensate falling of
today’s purchasing capacity of the population’, – the economist said.

‘Today no liberal economy may be in Armenia as well as in the whole
world, as in the created conditions interference of the state in
the market relations is simply necessary. But this is not taken into
account not only in Armenia but also in the West, the main supporter
of the liberal economy’, – Manaseryan concluded.

Levon Ter-Petrosian: Authorities Have Learnt No Lessons From March 1

LEVON TER-PETROSIAN: AUTHORITIES HAVE LEARNT NO LESSONS FROM MARCH 1 TRAGEDY

Noyan Tapan

M arch 2, 2009

YEREVAN, MARCH 2, NOYAN TAPAN. "We have to mark the first anniversary
of March 1 in a suppressing atmosphere. Prisons remain filled with
dozens of our friends prosecuted on the basis of forged accusations,"
first RA President Levon Ter-Petrosian, the leader of the Armenian
National Congress, stated at the March 1 rally.

According to him, for a whole year the authorities did nothing to
disclose those really responsible for the crime, the murderers,
the instigators, those robbing shops and on the contrary, spared no
efforts to slur over their crimes. "The authorities learnt no lesson
from the March 1 tragedy and took no step to establish democracy and
legality," L. Ter-Petrosian said.

According to him, the only thing saving Armenia’s discredited honor is
people’s inflexible will-power and formation of a strong opposition
represented by the Armenian National Congress. The ANC leader also
mentioned that in spite of the March 1 cruel slaughter and total and
everyday persecutions following it it is obvious that the authorities
did not manage to intimidate or to force the people to its knees and
to make it renounce fight for restoration of its civil rights.

http://www.nt.am/news.php?shownews=1012581

RA Social Security Ministry Unaware Of Pension Payment Delay

RA SOCIAL SECURITY MINISTRY UNAWARE OF PENSION PAYMENT DELAY

PanARMENIAN.Net
03.03.2009 18:38 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The plummeting of Armenian currency resulted in
pension payments delay.

The authorities responded pensioners demands by assuring that the term
of payments will be determined today. According to RA legislation,
pension payments are to be effected within 10 days of each month’s
beginning.

"Pensions have always been distributed on time for already 5 years,"
Head of Employee Retirement Income Security Department at the
Armenian Ministry of Labor and Social Protection, Smbat Sahyan told
PanARMENIAN.Net reporter.

Sahyan refused to comment on possible influence of AMD collapse on
pension payments, dubbing it an untimely question.

BAKU: Armenian Reporter: "Both Armenia And Nagorno-Karabakh Resemble

ARMENIAN REPORTER: "BOTH ARMENIA AND NAGORNO-KARABAKH RESEMBLE A SICK CHILD WITH A BIG HEAD AND THIN LEGS"

APA
March 2 2009
Azerbaijan

Baku. Rashad Suleymanov-APA. "The majority of the residents of the
villages of Hadrut, being an administrative part of the Nagorno
Karabakh Autonomous Region until 1990s did not return to their homes
yet. The resettlement issue is one of the biggest problems facing the
region", said Armenian Reporter in the report from Hadrut Region. The
reporter said there were only 12 thousand residents in the region,
APA reports. According to National Statistic Services of the separatist
regime, as of January 1, 2009, the population in the Hadrut region has
increased by only 12 people compared to the data of January 1, 2008.

Head of Hadrut region’s administration Valeri Gevorgyan confirms
that during the past several years the population has not decreased,
but it has only barely increased.

The aftereffects of the war are not the only reasons behind today’s
demography, the residents said. Young people do not get married
because they do not have a house. Today only 1 percent of the region’s
population can afford to construct their own houses. Thousands of
workers from Armenia’s and Nagorno-Karabakh’s villages have moved to
Yerevan or Khankendi in search of temporary jobs and are trying not
to return to their homes, where the future is not as promising as
it seems in the capital cities. And those who have the money prefer
to construct or purchase a house in Yerevan, Khankendi or any other
city rather than in Hadrut, said in the report. "Both Armenia and
Nagorno-Karabakh resemble a sick child with a big head and thin legs",
the reporter said. The residents of the region of Hadrut were mainly
engaged in growing grapes, but now a portion of the vineyards simply
perished. There are only 200 hectares of vineyards in the region now.

Gevorgyan said during the past several years, Armenian Diaspora
carried out works worth several million dollars in the Hadrut region.

Yediot Ahronot: Turkey-Israel Honeymoon Over

YEDIOT AHRONOT: TURKEY-ISRAEL HONEYMOON OVER

PanARMENIAN.Net
02.03.2009 16:19 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Turkish-Israeli ties in danger unless trust building
measures promptly implemented, Haymi Behar, a columnist and foreign
news editor for Turkish-Jewish weekly Shalom, writes in Yediot Ahronot.

The article reads:

" The Turkish-Israeli honeymoon has ended. From the 90s up until
recent times Israelis flocked to Turkey, while economic and military
ties flourished. Yet today, following Turkey’s harsh criticism of
the Israeli offensive in Gaza, angry Israelis canceled more than 70%
of travel bookings to Turkey. In any case, they wouldn’t feel so
welcomed in many Turkish shops, which displayed signs expressing
anti-Israeli sentiments.

Israel’s Cast Lead operation triggered an unprecedented wave of
widespread criticism across Turkey. Solidarity with the suffering
fellow Muslim in Gaza, combined with difficult images of civilian
casualties led the crowds to the streets in mass protests. Yet
accusations did not stop at "disproportionate use of force" by
Israel. Rather, demonstrations held in almost every city often turned
anti-Semitic in tone, as hordes chanted "Death to Israel, down with
the Zionists."

Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan assured Jewish citizens of Turkey that
no one would dare harm them. However, support for Hamas positions
only added to the rhetoric used by protesters, culminating in hate
speech. In recent years, anti-Semitism in Turkey reached unprecedented
levels. The PEW’s polling center recently published shocking results
on the rise of animosity towards Jews in traditionally tolerant
Anatolian culture. According to the research, 76% of Turks hold
negative views about Jews and do not wish to be their neighbors. In
2004, 49% expressed this view.

The ever strengthening Islamic media’s criticism of Israel often turned
to demonizing Jews as a whole, referring to them in one case as "blood
sucking vampires." Pro-government media deemed the Gaza operation
genocide and a crime against humanity. Those same media outlets kept
silent when Sudan’s vice president visited Turkey around the same time.

President Abdullah Gul was quick to denounce the racist jargon against
Jews. Nevertheless, even in Kayseri, the birthplace of the president,
a schoolteacher distributed lokhum (Turkish delight) in the city
center to honor the memory of Adolf Hitler, recounting to bystanders
his dream about the notorious Nazi leader. Disturbingly enough, no
legal action was taken against the schoolteacher, symptomatic of the
inaction by the state against hate speech.

Turkey and Israel, two American allies in the region, enjoyed rapid
rapprochement during the post-Cold War era in the absence of the Soviet
threat. This period ended on September 11, effectively putting the two
countries on different sides of the "clash of civilizations." Today,
as Turkey leans more towards social conservatism and Israel to the
nationalist Right, question marks loom over the future of the special
relations between the countries.

Social conservatism in the Middle East divides civilizations based
on religion. As Bernard Lewis frequently pointed out, the Muslim
perception of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is fundamentally
a religious one. Increasingly, Turkish public opinion views the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict in this light. Animosity against Jews
reached such high levels that in case that a Turkish government
decides one day to cut diplomatic ties with Israel, it will have
wide public backing. Unless trust-building steps are taken promptly,
every new round of fighting between Israelis and Palestinians will
cause Turkish-Israeli relations to further deteriorate.

Genuine effort is necessary to repair the damage done to the
relations. To start with, both countries need to limit harmful public
criticism. Turkey was deeply disappointed by Israeli unwillingness
to implement several economic projects that will contribute to the
livelihood of the Palestinians and enhance the peace process. Israel
needs to engage Turkey more by implementing the Erez Industrial Zone
and "Peace hospital" projects. Both plans, which were jointly agreed
upon, did not materialize largely due to Israel’s foot dragging. If
US President Barack Obama does not want the two countries’ relations
to deteriorate on his watch, he would do well to oversee the
implementation of such projects.

Meanwhile, the Turkish government’s commitment to denouncing
anti-Semitism is encouraging. However, Turkey needs to enforce legal
action against the ever-growing hate speech in local media that
fuels hatred not only against Israel, but also towards Jewish people
in general."