Turkey’s EU Membership’s Possible Impacts on the Middle East

Turkey’s EU Membership’s Possible Impacts on the Middle East
View: Dr. Sedat LACINER

Journal of Turkish Weekly
Dec 24 2004

One objection forwarded about Turkey’s EU membership is the prospect
that the EU will border the Middle East. The implicit assumption that
this objection carries is that the EU is distant to the Middle East
and only through Turkey’s membership can it border the region.
Nevertheless, even at the present stage, the EU is much closer to
Lebanon, Israel, and Palestine with the newly joined Cyprus.
Similarly, the Greek islands, Malta, Italy, and Spain, all EU
territories, are closer to North Africa than Turkey. Moroccan
refugees virtually swim through the Gibraltar to seek asylum in
Spain. It is possible to say that Turkish borders are much better
defended when considering the ease in crossing the Spain-North Africa
or Italy-North Africa boundaries. In line with the terrorism of the
1980s and 1990s, Turkey’s Middle Eastern borders are highly protected
and illegal trespassing is at a minimum. Even if we disregard all
these facts, it is an established reality that millions of immigrants
from the Middle Eastern countries live in the EU countries and that
the immigration goes on with a steady increase. In other words, the
Middle East is speedily and uncontrollably settling at the heart of
Europe. With all these figures, is it possible to say that what
protects the EU from ‘meddling’ with the Middle East is a 1000
km-tract of land? With the current state of technology, is the EU
hiding behind the pretext of Turkish lands in order to distance
itself from the Middle East?

There is no doubt that even if the EU separates itself from the
Middle East by oceans, it will still want to be an influential actor
in the region, and will not be able to avoid that at any rate. Even
now, the Middle East is at the center of the EU’s troubles anyway:
The Middle East profoundly affects the EU with oil, terrorism,
migration, human trafficking, narcotics, arms proliferation, etc. At
the present state of affairs, the EU is affected from problems
originating from the Middle East but lacks the means to tackle them.
The Palestinian-Israeli conflict is a typical example. By allocating
its vast resources to this region and others, the EU has difficulty
in obtaining results. It has been unable to attain a role in the
Middle East on par with the US. Neither in terms of impact, nor in
prestige, has the EU risen to the status that its efforts warrant. On
the other hand, the September 11 attacks and the Iraq War clearly
depict that Middle Eastern events are going to affect Europe, just as
they do with the rest of the world. German Foreign Minister Joschka
Fischer confirms the vitality of the Middle East in the EU’s
interest:

“Before 11 September 2001 attacks I had been skeptical about the EU
bordering Syria, Iraq and Iran. But now, it is strategically
important… Our security will be defined for at least five decades in
this region… whether we like it or not.”

Should the EU fail to play its role as a guide, the Middle East might
be reshaped adversely, perhaps even in a way that could harm the EU.
At this point, Turkey’s membership may grant the desired means and
the power to affect the region. In addition to its Ottoman legacy,
Turkey’s cultural links with the region award it with a great boon.
Especially with its performance during the Iraq War and the proactive
policies it pursued with the Justice and Development Party (AKP)
government, prejudices and misunderstandings about Turkey in the
region have decreased. For example, while it was presumed that Turkey
had an interest in Iraq’s disintegration and in the rich oil fields
in Northern Iraq, Turkey was the most ardent supporter of Iraq’s
territorial integrity. With this approach, Turkey gained Arabs’ and
the neighboring countries’ respect while advocating the need to avoid
further conflict. On the contrary, it urged steps to be taken for
integration. In this sense, it can be said that at the center of
Turkey’s Middle East approach lies integration and regional
cooperation. On the one hand, Turkey increases its commercial,
social, and cultural links with the region, and on the other, strives
to eschew the eruption of yet another war. It does not find it fit
with its national interests and in the interests of the region to
have the events in Iraq rerun in Syria and Iran. Thus, it can be said
that this approach is in line with the EU’s Middle East policies. To
summarize Turkey’s approach regarding the Middle East, it can be said
that it has a three-stage integration plan:

1) National Integration: To preserve the national integrity of the
region’s countries within the framework of democracy, human rights,
minority rights, and free market principles.

2) Regional Integration: To improve relations and lines of
communication between the region’s countries, to be followed by
cooperation and regional integration. At this stage, integration
could be bilateral or trilateral and may eventually cover sub-regions
and the Middle East as a whole.

3) Global Integration: The Middle East’s failure to integrate with
the global system adversely affects regional stability as much as the
world. Many problems in the post-Cold War era are due to the lack of
integration between the Middle East and the rest of the world. In
this respect, one of Turkey’s basic objectives is to fully integrate
the Middle East to the global system.

Having mostly solved its problems with the countries of the region,
with its “zero problem with neighbors” motto, the current
government’s motion is the strategy that the EU is looking for.
Hence, Turkey’s full membership will both present the EU the
opportunity to pursue its strategy and also allow it to increase its
leverage through a weighty actor like Turkey. Furthermore, Turkey’s
full membership would significantly contribute to solving problems
originating from the Middle East. Especially with the items of
terrorism and drug trafficking, it is very hard for dangers to wither
away.

Another worry regarding the Middle East is that Turkey’s EU
membership will enable the US to manipulate the EU in the Middle East
through Turkey. Some individuals even likened Turkey to a ‘Trojan
horse’. However, despite sustaining great economic losses of billions
of dollars, Turkey denied access to the American military before the
Iraq War and adhered to the EU’s policies.

To sum up, at the present state of affairs, the EU already neighbors
the Middle East and is adversely affected by problems emerging from
that region. Conversely, it lacks the weight and decisive role that
it desires dearly. As a country that knows the region and has a
significant role, Turkey will contribute to the EU’s regional
policies.

What the Middle East Needs: Democracy and Legitimate/Just Policies

Since World War I, the Middle East has been one of the most
problematic regions of the world. Policies that have created the
region’s problems with time have been portrayed as the solutions to
those problems, creating an impasse. Middle Eastern peoples were
first seen as unfit for self-rule, needing guardianship and this
culminated in the establishment of authoritarian regimes.
Administrations of foreign mandates acted with a focus on security,
rather than on education and the economy and were followed by the
kings and emirs who were mere clients of the West. While social and
economic problems were attributed a secondary status, governments
raised barriers at home and much more problems on the international
scene to keep their armies and peoples occupied. Much of the
resources and energy was reserved for security forces. It is obvious
by now how misled these policies were. Middle Eastern peoples did not
attain higher living standards under foreign mandate, on the
contrary, democracy and administration degraded remarkably. Countries
living under colonial rule or their own dictatorships failed to
develop, while conflicts did not come to an end.
Now is the time for a new approach. Without disregarding security,
social and economic problems need to be addressed:

Economies, in general, have to be more inclusive and productive.
Relying on a few items such as oil and natural gas, economic
structures hamper the incorporation of society and halt genuine
economic development on the one hand, and on the other, leaves
decision-making to a select few, causing policies to be more oriented
on war and conflict. In a similar fashion, the countries in the
Middle East need to allocate their resources for the benefit of the
new generations, particularly for education and health. The current
situation intensely breeds terrorism and radicalism. While it might
appear paradoxical, the solution lies in the improvement of
democracy. Having governments elected to office through fair and
competitive elections would enable popular will to affect
decision-making. While this may at first cause some problems, the
masses would ultimately see the need to preserve the decision-making
mechanism. In that case, decisions will be more pragmatic and
reflective of the peoples’ and the countries’ interests,
strengthening national power. Currently, while decisions are taken
within a very limited confine, they are also more ideological and
much more personal. The capricious attitude of an individual may lead
a country to war. The remarkable correlation between democracy and
prosperity can be exemplified. The richest Moslem countries of the
world are not the oil-rich ones. On the contrary, the largest Moslem
economy of the world, Turkey, is perhaps the poorest in terms of
energy resources. In contrast to Saudi Arabia and Iraq, Turkey does
not even have enough oil and natural gas for self-consumption. In
terms of per capita income and economic size, the noteworthy
appearance of countries such as Egypt, Malaysia, Iran, and Indonesia
on the upper portions of the list proves the point that access to
decision-making positively affects economic power. In contrast, that
the historical process that brought Iraq to this point is due to the
Saddam Hussein regime is an undisputable fact.

The second basic problem is due to the West’s policies towards the
Middle East. Western countries that pay great attention to legitimacy
and rule of law at home, behave quite differently in the Middle East.
For example, while Israel has been developing nuclear weapons for
years, the reaction towards Iran, Iraq, and Libya is at best
discordant. Similarly, for so many years after supporting the Saddam
Hussein regime while it served interests, even with its systematic
torturing and gross human rights violations, then invading Iraq with
the pretext of Saddam Hussein’s regime and punishing Iraq seems
rather unfair. Even as Saddam Hussein virtually publicized his
understanding of authority starting from his first days in office and
that he used weapons of mass destruction on his own people, the West
did nothing. Worse, while all these occurred, he was armed to the
teeth by the countries that have now turned against him. While Saddam
Hussein’s case is quite telling, it has done great damage to the
West’s credibility in the region.

The biggest problem in the relations between the West and the Middle
East is the Palestinian question. Since its establishment, Israel has
ignored other countries and the Moslem world. Continuously expanding
on other countries’ lands, Israel refuses to set its borders under
the United Nations systems and constructs settlements at the expense
of Palestinians on the lands that it has occupied. This fact is
repeatedly raised by international organizations and even
occasionally confirmed by Israel. Israeli soldiers “clashing” with
Palestinian children is an image taken for granted.
Recently, the most tragic Israeli policy is assassination. It
involves attacking a predetermined vehicle as it moves along a
street. To kill only one person in the car others in the car or
innocent bystanders may be sacrificed. Furthermore, no matter how
guilty an individual is, it is a terrorist organization’s method to
assassinate someone, not a government’s.

Another Israeli method is to punish a criminal’s family by harming
them. Following a suicide bombing or a similar attack, the
assailant’s house is bulldozed, sometimes with his family inside. The
principle of the individuality of crime, established by humanity
thousands of years ago, is violated through such methods, leaving
many innocent people dead, homeless, and distrustful towards the rule
of law. Such methods hurt the conscience of people all around the
world, and foremost that of Moslems countries. Israel acts in an
“I’ll do what I want, my affair is no one’s business” mindset. Worst
of all, Israel harms itself as well as others. The time has come for
a country, which has lived under bombs and clashes since its day of
foundation, to question itself.
The greatest negative impact of the Israeli-Palestinian problem is on
Moslem populace. The devastation wrought on holy shrines, disregard
for the basic principles of law, and the perception that the US and
the EU are inert strengthen the sentiment that the West is
discriminatory towards Moslem countries. For example, the fact that
while Israel possesses nuclear weapons for decades and some Moslem
countries, not in possession of these weapons, come under intense
pressure for the possibility that they may seek to acquire nuclear
weapons, fortifies questions of double standards. Certainly, no
reason can justify international terrorism. On the other hand, the
creation of a sense of injustice in such a large segment of people
and the ascription of a privileged position for some countries to
violate international law leaves those people with little options to
struggle for their rights and for voicing their opinions. A majority
of Moslems fear that should they quarrel with Israel, they would end
up like Palestinians and thus, the justice of Europe and the US
cannot be trusted.

As a matter of fact, the events in former Yugoslavia augment these
fears. From the viewpoint of Moslem countries, at the hands of a
well-armed group, thousands of people have been massacred at the
center of Europe merely because they were Moslems, unarmed,
defenseless, and had nowhere to run. Tens of thousands of Bosnian
Moslem women were raped, thousands of people endured inhumane
treatment in prison camps. The EU and European countries just watched
while all these events took place. The understanding of truth is more
important that how it is interpreted and how the European states
defend themselves. The general understanding regarding Bosnia is that
European countries and institutions have failed.

Another event that increases the sense of despair in relations
between the West and Islam is Chechnya. Looking at the policies of
violence in Chechnya, people see it unfair that Moscow treats those
demanding freedom and those demanding their basic rights as
criminals, along with Moscow’s indiscriminate categorization of any
opposition as “terrorist.” Human rights violations and extreme
security measures in Chechnya are at a paramount. Chechen people are
on the verge of annihilation. In this case, Russia’s security should
naturally be given attention and those Chechens using terrorism as a
tool must be severely punished. However, the existence of security
forces that seek to obtain results solely by violence and by the
methods of terrorist organizations must not go unnoticed. Warning
Moscow in the early 1990s with a rather caustic overtone, the US and
the EU have unfortunately not been insistent and congruous in their
attitudes. Especially following the attacks of September 11, the US’s
and the EU’s shift in their policies to support Moscow’s policies
towards the Chechens have created a serious crisis of trust in the
international arena. This shift has created the sense that the West
is taking self-centered approaches towards terrorism. In other words,
the contradictory attitudes of Western countries before and after
terror strikes directed against them is received very negatively.

The US’s policies in Iraq following the invasion further consolidates
this sentiment. Especially with the images of torture and
maltreatment that disrespects even the most basic principles of human
rights and international law from Ebu Gureyb and Guantanamo, the
hatred targets not only the US, but also the West as a whole. As the
scenes from Iraq increasingly resemble those in Palestine, there is a
feeling that Western countries are now repeating those mistakes they
criticized in the past. The violations in Iraq and Afghanistan create
worries that the West has different standards for itself and
non-Western countries.

Finally, Nagorno-Karabakh stands out as the event that has lead
Moslems to question the West’s sincerity in its claims to justice and
legitimacy. Over 20 percent of Azerbaijan’s territories are invaded
by Armenian forces backed by Russia. Approximately one million people
have become refugees. This situation has been dragging on for over a
decade and represents a much more severe violation of law than the
case of former-Yugoslavia. Furthermore, since the first days of the
invasion, US and EU statements that criticize Azerbaijan and support
Armenia is viewed as a Moslem-Christian divide by some.

When closely examined, it can be seen that in the post-Cold War era
all massacres and human rights violations from Chechnya to Palestine,
from Iraq to Afghanistan, and from Bosnia to Karabakh involve
Christians and Moslems with the Christians committing, supporting,
and inciting the atrocities. The Moslems are the ones who are
victimized, invaded, and subjected to cruel treatment and torture.

Of course, we Turks do not view these events as such. We are aware
that they are not Christian-Moslem conflicts. However, we can hardly
dismiss ever-increasing double-standards. Moreover, these practices
that discard Moslem opinion, weaken moderate groups, and strengthen
radicals are perceived as discrimination and are reminiscent of the
Crusades. In the light of these facts, this position that strengthens
terrorism and pushes the masses towards radical groups must be
closely scrutinized. The West should not be faultfinding only about
the Moslems with their integration to the global system, but should
also be critical about its own role. Important responsibilities fall
on the EU’s shoulders in this respect. In comparison with the US, EU
countries are much more insightful and should they wish to obtain the
tools and the power to break this vicious circle, they would easily
find them. Turkey’s EU membership would grant the EU the most
effective instruments that it seeks. The greatest Moslem economy, and
also the most effective Moslem polity, Turkey is obviously in a
perfect position to represent Moslems. By taking Turkey as a member,
the EU will show that it is not insincere towards Moslems.

To sum up, what the Middle East needs most in the years ahead is
democratization and for the West’s policies towards the Middle East
to be fair and congruous with the ones that it applies at home. It is
clear that whether it becomes an EU member or not, Turkey will have a
peculiar position in bringing about both needs.

Relations With Iraq

There is a dire need to address the question of Iraq with the US’s
latest operation and the impact that Turkey’s EU membership will have
on Iraq’s special position with its oil, terrorism, minorities, etc.

Following Turkey’s membership, the EU will neighbor Iraq. However, it
can be said that with the latest events, Iraq is close to the EU as a
neighbor and the incidents there seriously affects the EU. From oil
to terrorism and migration, from Christian-Moslem relations to global
restructuring, the EU is affected just like the rest of the world.
Some EU members, such as Britain, even participated in the Iraq War
while some others gave logistical support. While there were other
members that opposed the war, such as Germany and France, the
developments in Iraq constituted much of the agenda in these
countries as well, ranging from domestic politics to security. With
NATO’s Istanbul Summit in June 2004, many NATO countries also EU
members began engaging in Iraq. Contrary to this case, the EU does
not have adequate means to steer and influence the events in Iraq
that so profoundly affect it. Most importantly, it lacks the support
of a country with a strong regional position.
When looking at the Middle East and Iraq, two points of view seem to
be in conflict. The first of these, the “hawkish” approach, envisions
to transform the Middle East more with the help of military options.
If need be, just as in Iraq, it is foreseen that the regimes and
leaders of countries such as Syria, Iran, and Libya can be changed
and even their borders can be redrawn to fit the needs of religious
and ethnic groups. The more “dovish” approach, on the other hand,
advocates socio-economic instruments and dialogue. The previously
mentioned three-staged Turkish initiative is at the center of this
approach. Force may be utilized if need be. However, this force may
be employed only in conformity with law, within the confines of
legitimacy, and with the consent of regional governments and the
international community on a limited basis. Another subject that
Turkey has been continuously bringing up is the preservation of
national boundaries and regime change without the use of violence.
For regimes and leaders are a product of that environment rather than
the root of the troubles. In this respect, it is verified that the
hawkish approach in Iraq has failed and that forced leader or regime
change does not yield any results. Today, Iraq of the post-Saddam
Hussein era is arguably more unstable and suitable for terrorism to
breed than ever. Inter-ethnic tension is increasing steadily while
bombing raids are almost a daily matter. Accordingly, to resort to
similar mechanisms in Syria and Iran will be a great disaster for the
Middle East, the EU, and the rest of the world. The global system
will not sustain such an occurrence.
Coming back to Iraq, the country needs to preserve its security,
stability, and integrity first and foremost. All groups in the
country, ethnic or otherwise, deserve a balanced representation at
the national level. However, efforts aiming to disjoin Iraq should
not be supported. Iraqi Kurds have a special role here. While some
try to portray Iraqi Kurds and Turkey as opposing parties, Turkey has
been Kurds’ greatest support for a long time. Following the First
Gulf War, hundreds of thousands of Kurds fled to Turkey from Saddam
Hussein’s brutality. Until the Iraq War, Iraqi Kurds were protected
by the Hammer Power (Operation North Watch), to which Turkey provided
with bases and personnel. In the intermittent clashes between Celal
Talabani’s PUK and Mesut Barzani’s KDP throughout the 1990s, Turkey
acted as a mediator and extended economic help and technical
assistance to Iraqi Kurds. The establishment of TV stations and
educational facilities, along with other infrastructure investments,
came about with the help of the Turkish government and Turkish firms.
The gate with Turkey offers the greatest source of income for
Northern Iraq. It must not be forgotten that the oil produced in
Northern Iraq is transported to world markets from the Mediterranean
via pipelines in Turkey. In short, Turkey has been the greatest
supporter of Iraqi Kurds and many Iraqi Kurds are residing in Turkey
today. Following the Iraq War, relations with Iraqi Kurds are still
going on. Despite some conjunctural statements and tensions, Turkey
is one of the most active countries in Northern Iraq. It continues to
support the area through the border and by participating in various
projects. Turkey’s activities in the region mostly aim for the
region’s economic development and greater convergence between Turkish
and Iraqi markets.
In the same light, Turkey urges the employment of similar
socio-economic instruments for Iraq as a whole. It argues that once
the basic infrastructure and security problems of Iraq are solved,
increased regional economic and cultural transaction would bring
stability to Iraq and to the region.

In political and military matters regarding Northern Iraq, Turkey has
a set of priorities. These can be summarized under three headings:

1) Iraq’s territorial integrity must be maintained. Shiites, Sunnis,
Kurds, Turkmens, Assyrians or any other ethnic or religious groups
should not struggle to secede from Iraq and form another state.

2) Regional countries should not become the target of terrorism
stemming from Iraq. Especially Northern Iraq should not be a haven
for terrorist networks.

3) In administrations at the national and local level, ethnic and
sectarian differences must be respected. The inattention towards
Turkmens must come to an end.

As a matter of fact, almost all parties (US, EU, Israel, Arab
countries including Iraq’s neighbors) officially adhere to these
sensitivities. The problem is about fulfilling the word. Despite all
official statements, there are countries and groups in Iraq that
support secessionist factions. Some allied countries, including the
US, strengthen separatists with their words or deeds. Especially the
encouragement given to Kurds and Shiites for separation escalates
conflict in the country on the one hand, and worsens the possibility
of ethnic strife in the years ahead. It is not possible whatsoever
for any groups to secede from Iraq and to maintain statehood.
Contrary to expectations, disintegration would not even be to the
instigators’ benefit. For example, the establishment of a Kurdish
state would create a feud between Kurds and Arabs which the region
has of no use. The experience from the Israeli-Palestinian conflict
must be recalled and the same mistakes should not be repeated. The
Middle East does not need any further divisions and conflicts but new
unions and integration. In this framework, neither Kurds, nor
Turkmens, nor Shiites, nor any other Iraqi group can afford the
luxury to act unilaterally. They should not create hostility amongst
themselves or encourage other countries’ intervention by acting
unilaterally.

In this respect, it can be said that Turkey has the will and the
means to deliver stability to Iraq. The said will has been proven
over and over again since the Iraq War. As far as the means are
concerned, Turkey’s swelling trade volume with Iraq and its
neighbors, its ever-expanding investments in these countries, and its
growing relations with their governments reflect Turkey’s power. At
this point, Turkey’s power rests on the support it has from the
region. Today, the Syrian Prime Minister not only calls Turkey’s
policies towards Iraq as “correct and constructive,” but also praises
them for being ‘shrewd.’ The relations between Turkey and Syria are
developing at an unprecedented scale. Similarly, Iran is increasing
economic and political cooperation with Turkey particularly in the
field of counter-terrorism. Regarding Iraq especially, the two
countries have given their explicit support to Turkey. This grants a
vital advantage to Turkey, whose relations with the US and Israel is
already robust: regional support.

It is obvious that Turkey can be a major contribution to Iraq.
However, the extent of Turkey’s contribution will be determined by
economic and political limits. Full EU membership would further widen
these limits. Turkey, member of the EU, could make Iraq a less
dangerous place.

The Palestinian Question

The events of September 11 and the aftermath once again confirm that
the Palestinian question does not only concern Israelis and Arabs. It
feeds misunderstandings between civilizations on a global scale, lays
grounds for terrorism, and damages international law, stability, and
security. Even though it is the US that is greatly harmed from this
situation, the special relationship between the US and Israel keeps
Washington from acting as an effective catalyst in solving the
problem. Meanwhile, Arabs and Israelis have proved time and again
that they cannot solve their problems without outside mediation. It
is such that almost no one exists on the world genuinely believing
that Israelis and Palestinians can co-exist. However, this ‘miracle’
did exist in the past. There was a nation in history that let the two
live together peacefully. They were the Turks. During the Ottoman
era, there was almost no widespread ethnic clash in the Middle East.
Jerusalem functioned as a divine location for many religions and
sects while these groups practiced their religions freely under
Ottoman rule. But there is no point in resurrecting the Ottoman
Empire for the sake of good old days. Many empires came about in
history, but few achieved a peace like the peace of Jerusalem. The
secret lies in Turks’ understanding of religion and their historical
and cultural conditions. Embracing Jews who were fleeing Spain,
Turks, never had any anti-Semitic sentiments and clung to their
stance until today. Similarly Turkey did not implement anti-Semitic
policies in the modern times: First of all, “the Turkish Republic
took in hundreds of refugees from Nazi persecution during the 1930s,
including leading professors, teachers, physicians, attorneys,
artists and laboratory workers as well as thousands more less well
known persons.”

As Shaw put it “just as important as providing a haven for Jews who
had lived in the Ottoman Empire for centuries was Turkey’s role in
helping rescue many Jewish Turks who were resident in Nazi-occupied
western Europe during the Holocaust”: The Turkish government not only
refused German demands that it turn over the Jewish refugees for
internment in the death camps but instead it went out of its way to
assist passage into its territory of Jews fleeing from Nazi
persecution in Poland, Greece and Yugoslavia as well as in Western
and Central Europe. As Kiriþçi put it “there are no definite figures
for the number of Jews that benefited from temporary asylum in Turkey
until their resettlement… However, it is estimated that around
100,000 Jews may have used Turkey as their first country of asylum.”
During the Second World War, Turkey was the only continental European
country that refused to turn Jews over to Nazi Germany and
understandably prides itself with this heritage.
Arabs were ruled by the Ottoman administration in the same spirit,
enabling them to keep their language and ethnic roots intact. There
are many Turks who were Arabized in due course but Arabs did not face
remarkable assimilation. Even though the Ottoman past was discredited
first by French and British colonial administrations, and later by
nationalist leaders such as Saddam Hussein and Hafez al-Asad, Turks
still enjoy great reverence in the region. Especially in the Holy
Lands, Turkey is one of the few countries that maintains genuine ties
with both parties notwithstanding the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Even though it is a Moslem country and directs the harshest
criticisms towards Israel, Turkey has always maintained its
credibility vis-a-vis Israel, and Israelis have refrained from
replying to criticisms in due harshness. For example, the Turkish
Prime Minister at the time, Bülent Ecevit, equated Israel’s
operations against Yasser Arafat to “genocide” while Prime Minister
Tayyip Erdoðan labeled Israel’s policy to assassinate Palestinian
leaders as “state-sponsored terror.” Even though they claimed that
they were “having a hard time in withholding their replies,” Israeli
officials did always underline that Turkey was a real ally for Israel
in the region. As a matter of fact that neither Ecevit’s, not
Erdoðan’s statements are acceptable in terms of diplomacy. It can be
said that even the US cannot raise such harsh criticisms against
Israel. But both Ecevit and Erdoðan, immediately after their remarks,
also stated that they were concerned for Israel as well, and both of
them warned Israel about that these Israeli policies in Palestine
were also going to harm Israel itself. In other words, it was proven
that these censures were not from an enemy, but from an ally.

A similar situation also exists among the public. Many Jews lead
their lives in Turkey without any troubles. In contrast to many
Moslem countries, or even non-Moslem countries for that matter,
anti-Jewish sentiments are very limited. Even though Israeli policies
are disapproved, this disapproval does not translate into racism. The
criticism is against Israel’s policies, not Judaism. In this respect,
as Turkey can function as a mediator between Israel and the Arabs, it
can also work to improve the EU-Israel relationship that has been
deteriorating for some time. At least Turkey’s full membership would
increase the EU’s disposition over the Palestinian question.
Meanwhile, trade between Israel and Turkey is steadily increasing.
The forecast for the coming year is USD 5 billion. Similarly, in
trade relations with Syria and other Arab countries, there is a
geometrical progression. Even a closed regime like Syria, in line
with its trade relations with Turkey, reduces tariffs and takes steps
to increase economic integration. With the ever-increasing commerce
with Turkey, a visible opening up is underway in Syria. Turkey-Syria
trade volume in the 1990s was about 100 million US dollars. When two
countries solved the bilateral political problems, and Syrian
government refrain its support from the terrorist activities in
Turkey the trade between Turkey and Syria rocketed to more than 1
billion US dollars.

Another project undertaken by Turkey is to interconnect energy lines
in the Turkey-Syria-Lebanon-Israel-Jordan-Egypt axis and the
modernization and integration of transport routes in the region.
Water has been another tool that Turkey has used for integration. The
dire need of the region’s countries for water, combined with Turkey’s
offer to carry some of its water to the region through pipelines
would facilitate further convergence. In this respect, Turkey, that
is already sending fresh water to Northern Cyprus via sea-routes, is
also going to deliver water to Israel through the Mediterranean.
Actually, Turkey’s water pipeline project is much broader. The
project that would encompass all of Middle East would bring many
countries from Turkey to Saudi Arabia together around their water
needs.

While Turkey has partially succeeded in struggling to increase the
movement of goods, people, energy and capital between Israel and Arab
countries in the past 25 years, it is apparent that without a strong
supporter like the EU, it will take a long time for these efforts to
fully succeed. With EU membership, as integration will hasten, so
will stability and security in this most troubled region gain a
strong foothold. The EU would have a new market. In the long run, the
aim should be to further integrate Eastern Mediterranean and to
liberalize and democratize the lands from Eastern Europe to North
Africa. In reaching these goals, Turkey stands out with its
relatively strong economy and political system as well as with its
cadre that truly believes in these goals and integration.

To summarize, Turkey’s membership will enhance the EU’s projection to
solve the Palestinian question. Just as with Palestine and Israel,
Turkey can also arbitrate between the EU and the regional parties.
Moreover, Turkey’s policy to harmonize the region’s countries and
peoples through social and economic instruments is in perfect
compatibility with the EU’s outlook and can contribute to the
solution of many of the Middle East’s problems, including the
Palestine-Israel conflict.

Impact On Relations With Iran

With the Islamic Revolution in 1979, Iran became the symbol of
radical movements in the Islamic world and was perceived as defiance
to the West especially by the US. While this may be an overstatement,
Iran’s experiences since the Revolution clearly illustrate its
failure to integrate to the global system politically and
economically. While the role of the US’s containment policies against
Iran, as well as the manipulation emanating from Israel cannot be
disregarded, neither can Iran’s role. As a matter of fact, Iran does
seek integration with the world and promulgates its corresponding
will. Some countries, including the US have taken some steps to
integrate it to the world system and to make it more receptive to the
outside world. However, the lack of determination on the part of the
sides, flawed methods, lack of patience, lack of vision, and
conjunctural factors failed to deliver success. As a result, Iran was
labeled as a member of the US’s “Axis of Evil.” It was reiterated
that Iran was the next target after Iraq. Meanwhile, Israel
continuously reminded Iran’s intention to produce nuclear weapons and
repeatedly threatened to strike Iran. While the Khatami government
has shown eagerness to make Iran more liberal and democratic in the
recent years, it has failed to achieve that goal. Especially the war
with Iraq left the countries’ liberals weakened even further and in a
sense helped the revolutionaries to renew themselves. In short,
relations between Iran and the West have not normalized since 1979.
However, winning Iran is of utmost importance. First and foremost,
Iran has a very great strategic location. The only non-Arab country
of the Persian Gulf, it has full authority over the Gulf’s eastern
shores and serves as a key to liberalization and democratization in
the Arab world. In the same sense, as a part of the calculations in
the Indian Ocean and south Asia through the Arabian Sea, Iran is also
an important country for Afghanistan, India, Pakistan, and southern
Arabia. Having ethnic, religious, and historical relations with
Central Asia, Iran will no doubt deeply affect the region. An
important portion Iran’s population is composed of Azerbaijani Turks
and as a Caucasian state, it is an indispensable part of the regional
equilibrium. In close analysis, it can be seen that Central Asia, the
Caucasus, the Persian Gulf, and the Arab world an important segment
of the world’s energy resources. In this respect, Iran, itself also
an important owner of oil and natural gas, is at the hub of these
reserves. Thus, the securing of the Turkey-Iran route and its nearing
to the EU would suggest that in the future the EU’s energy needs
would be secured.
Iran’s economic potential and the network that it weaves around
itself is important to all; Turkey, the EU, and other powers.
However, Iran’s prime contribution at the present state of affairs
would be to aid inter-civilizational dialogue and the elimination of
religion as a source of violence. As it was pronounced before, Iran
has become the symbol of a radical interpretation of Islam. Even
though it does not support terrorism per se, there is a clear link
between many Iranian-based groups and terrorism. Worst of all,
occasionally even the Iranian administration has a hard time in
controlling these groups. In the same light, many radical groups see
Teheran as a source of inspiration. Intentionally or not, Iran has
become a center of radicalism. Iran’s retreat from its current
symbolic status would first of all be a great spiritual and
ideological blow to religious extremism and cast a green light for
dialogue between various cultures. There are not many centers to
resist a current that would emanate from a wave of positive change in
Iran, combined with the one already in Turkey. In other words, the
inclusion of Teheran to Ankara would make it much simpler for the
integration of the Islamic world to the globe.

The road to Iran’s integration to the world certainly passes from
Iran’s attainment of a more open system. A more liberal economy, a
regime that is more democratic and respectful towards different
opinions, the growth of minority rights and endorsement of human
rights are but the first steps to be taken and all of these are of
equal importance. Meanwhile, Iran has proven time and again that it
will not change due to outside pressure. For Iran to change, help and
encouragement should come from those who resemble it. Pressure should
come from those perceived as friends rather than foes. Transition
should be dictated by necessity. The internal dynamics of Iran,
ethnic and religious, need to be in motion. From this perspective, in
opening Iran to the West and inspiring its inner dynamics, Turkey is
the most suitable country.
First of all, almost half of Iran’s ethnic composition is formed of
Azerbaijani Turks. Speaking Turkish and having historical, cultural,
religious, lingual, and ethnic ties to Turkey and Azerbaijan, these
people are quite open to the change from Turkey. In relaying the
change from Turkey to Iran, this group plays a special part. Second,
Iranians do not perceive a threat from Turkey. Neither has the
Turkish-Iranian border been changed for centuries, nor have the two
countries engaged in a fighting ever since. Accordingly, Turkey’s
counsel would be received more positively than those coming from
elsewhere. Third, Turkey is a Moslem country and is a successful one,
moreover, it does what it says it will do. In other words, Turkey is
not telling Iran to implement a fantasy. On the contrary, it shares
its own experience. Fourth, Turkey does not have an imposing
attitude. It gives priority to mutual security and commercial
relations. To exemplify, the trade between the two countries has
increased dramatically in recent years, along with the construction
of an oil pipeline. Fifth, the benefit that Iran can make by
expanding its relations with Turkey is great and this fact has been
appreciated in the past few years. Turkey is a great market for Iran
in all respects and Iran has much to gain by cooperating with Turkish
firms in the markets that it tries to access. Sixth, during and after
the Iraq War, US policies have alarmed Iran just as they did with
Syria. Iran has seen the need to improve its relations with regional
powers and has approached Turkey. Iran has been one of the countries
that has observed Turkey’s policies with admiration and this has
opened the way for cooperation in all fields. As a matter of fact,
having been lenient towards the PKK for many years, Iran has
conducted military operations in 2004 in line with Turkey’s requests.
Also useful to note that as Turkey captured Abdullah Öcalan, the head
of the PKK, with the help of the US and Israel, it is getting rid of
the remnants of the PKK with the help of Iran and Syria. This case
illustrates how Turkey’s regional policies foster cooperation with
all parties.

To summarize, Turkey is a very important country in opening Iran to
the outside world and setting its inner dynamics into motion. At the
same time, Turkey offers itself as a useful example and guide for the
attempted transformations in Iran. Bearing in mind the failure of
US’s policies in this regard, Turkish partnership would be more than
effective for the EU that seeks alternative approaches to Iran. With
EU membership, a Moslem-Democrat Turkey could be a true model for
Iran and similar countries. It is certain that the EU will also
benefit from this affair. While security problems caused by Iran will
decline, energy routes will safely lead to Europe from Central Asia,
the Caucasus, and the Middle East. Furthermore, the Europe-Indian
Ocean, Europe-Central Asia, and Europe-Middle East transport lines
will become safer. And naturally, the EU will become a more effective
actor in the said areas.

Syria

Syria has a special status in the future of the Middle East, the
solution of the Iraq question, the conclusion of the
Palestinian-Israeli conflict, and the repression of radical religious
violence. When looking at Syria’s political influence in the Arab
world, its importance in shaping the Arab world can be clearly seen.
The demise of the Baathist regime in Iraq increases Syria’s
predominance on Arab nationalism. In mean time, Syria can be taken as
a miniature of the Middle East with its numerous ethnic and religious
groups. Also, due to its special relationship with Lebanon, the two
countries must be considered together. Despite its complex ethnic and
religious setup, Syria and Lebanon have remained relatively peaceful
under the Ottoman Empire. With the 20th century, the two have entered
a period of much conflict and clashing. While Lebanon is struggling
to recover from the wounds of the civil war, the impact of the Iraq
War and the resurgence of religious extremism are sources of much
worry. Atop these worries, the explicit military threats from the US
and Israel make Syria a ‘potential Iraq or Afghanistan’ of the near
future. The question that needs to be asked at this point is whether
the world, the EU, and Turkey can sustain another Iraq or
Afghanistan? While this question is a concern for the world, it is
much more vital for the EU and Turkey. For both, Syria and Lebanon
are neighbors. While Turkey’s proximity is clear, some in the EU are
not yet aware of their neighborhood with Syria. However, there is a
narrow stretch of sea between EU-member Cyprus and Syria and Cyprus
is much closer to Syria than any other EU member. The short distance
through the Mediterranean between the EU and Syria is so marginal
that Syrian ports and lands serve as a staging point for immigration
and illegal smuggling. No matter how distant some people in the EU
would like to think of Syria, the closest EU airfield is only a
half-hour’s flight away.
In short, Syria is both Turkey’s and the EU’s neighbor and a
development similar to that in Iraq will cause substantial losses on
all sides and significantly injure international peace and stability.
Just as in the case of Iraq, if the ‘hawkish’ approach in the US,
together with the ‘Sharon’ factor in Israel, tries to ‘integrate’
Syria to the system by force, this will be a punishment not only to
this country but also to the EU and Turkey. As Al-Qaeda does not have
a breeding ground in Syria at the moment, just as it had not have in
Iraq before the invasion, the organization will choose Syria as its
third base of operation after Afghanistan and Iraq. The instability
in Lebanon in the 1970s and 1980s and its effect on regional turmoil
should be forgotten. Syria’s and Lebanon’s complex ethnic and
religious setup might offer itself as an even better medium than Iraq
for terrorist groups to operate. Hawks claim that they are also aware
of these risks but advocate that there is no peaceful way to
integrate Syria to the global system. However, the change of
administration and the incumbency of Beshar al-Asad in Syria have
created the ideal setting for the country’s connection to the
international community. The country that has most closely felt this
wind of change has been Turkey. Damascus supported leftist groups and
later the PKK, one of the most dangerous terrorist groups in the
world, throughout the 1970s, 80s, and 90s and gave them logistical,
technical, and financial support against Turkey. Today, not only has
Syria withdrawn its support from these groups, it also seeks avenues
of political and economic cooperation with Turkey. This rapid
transformation in the relationship between Turkey and Syria has some
invaluable lessons. The first reason that improved Turkish-Syrian
relations was Turkey’s harsh warning to Syria that it was going to
consider Syria’s support for the PKK and Abdullah Öcalan’s residence
in Syria as an act of war. Unwilling to risk belligerency, Syria
deported Öcalan and signed a document promising not to support
terrorism. As a matter of fact, similar threats did also come from
the US and Israel and these countries’ armed forces are strong enough
to cause worry to the Syrian army. However, neither country has
complemented these military threats with any other tangible action.
Turkey, while warning Syria of the possibility to use force, made it
clear that its intention was not to punish Syria, marginalize it on
the global scene, or to dishonor it, but merely to put an end to
terrorism. As Syria took steps against terrorism, relations improved,
written assurances were exchanged, commercial, political and most
importantly social ties were encouraged to foment between the two
sides. Syria was given time to adjust to the new status quo and care
was taken to avoid any provocation. More than 45 visits have been
made on the ministerial level for the last four years in which many
accords that are making the legal ground for the bilateral ties
inked. While Turkey encouraged the Turkish businessmen to invest in
Syria, the Syrian official bodies have granted facilities for the
investors. Syria’s new leader Bashar Al-Assad paid his first foreign
visit to Turkey in February 2004 and considered the level of
Turkish-Syrian relations almost perfect:

“My visit coincides with a period when Syrian-Turkish relations are
reaching a peak… We have moved together from an atmosphere of
distrust to one of trust. We must create stability from a regional
atmosphere of instability.”

In short, Turkey aimed ‘not to beat up the owner of vineyard, but to
eat grapes’ as an old Turkish maxim puts it. The Iraq War and the
common dangers it delivered have brought Syria closer to Turkey.
Investigating ways to liberalize the country and to open it to the
world, the new Asad administration tried to work with the region’s
countries, especially with Turkey, and expected Turkey in
ameliorating its relations with the West. Meanwhile, there was some
serious progress in bilateral relations. The leaders of the two
countries have exchanged visits. Firstly, effort was made to increase
the trade volume, cross-border commerce, and Turkish investments in
Syria. These steps are yielding surprisingly great results on such a
short amount of time. From tough adversaries, Syria and Turkey have
evolved to become close partners. This swiftness both shows Syria’s
desire to integrate to the world system, and Turkey’s receptiveness
to this desire.
In this respect, it is evident that a Turkey that has become an EU
member or is on the verge of becoming one can contribute greatly on
the question of Syria and Lebanon. On the one hand, Turkey can bring
Syria closer to the EU and the US, play a role in the resolution of
the region’s problems, and on the other, promote the EU’s interest in
the region. It has to be borne in mind that in some of the provinces
of southern Turkey, such as Gaziantep, Adana, Kahramanmaraþ, Mersin,
Hatay, etc. there are many citizens who have close ethnic, religious,
sectarian, and linguistic ties with Syria, along with some families
that are dispersed across the border. The advantages that this may
have on trade and the influence of Turkish investors in introducing
the Syrian market to the EU can be imagined.

When the EU decided to start membership talks with Turkey in 17
December Brussels Summit, Syria hailed the news. Syrian Information
Minister Dr. Mehdi Dahlallah expressed Syria’s support for Ankara’s
bid to join the EU and said “Turkey will be a bridge between Arab
countries and the EU”. Dahlallah told the CAN that Syria is very
pleased that Turkey will be an EU member in the near future, making
them a neighbor to the EU. Similarly Syrian President told Turkish
Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan that Syria takes Turkey as a model for
Syria’s foreign policy. Esad said in Erdogan’s Damascus visit on 22
December 2004:

“You (Turkey) follow a honorable foreign policy. We admire of you. We
take you as model for our foreign policy… Turkey’s EU membership
process is being watched by the Arab world. We are pleased, Turkey
will be EU member. This will be crucial for us and for our region.
When you enter the EU we will be neighbor of Europe”.

As a result, the use of force is not the only option to ‘tame’ Syria.
Turkish-Syrian relations offer a priceless experience and opportunity
for the EU and the world. Turkey, working with the EU in tandem on
the question of Syria, can thwart the possibility of a new Iraq War
and can deliver economic and political advantages to itself, Syria,
and the EU.

————————————————-
Sedat LACINER: Director, International Strategic Research
Organization (ISRO-USAK), Ankara and IR lecturer, Onsekiz Mart
University.

–Boundary_(ID_IsenROEHuiSSJPfJs4QdSw)–

http://www.turkishweekly.net/news.php?id=993

Cabinet nod for Rs 2,800 cr combat jets

Friday, December 24, 2004

expressindia
Indian Express Group

Cabinet nod for Rs 2,800 cr combat jets

Express News Service & Agencies
Posted online: Friday, December 24, 2004 at 1813 hours IST
Updated: Friday, December 24, 2004 at 2032 hours IST

New Delhi, December 24: The Cabinet Committee on Security has approved
the revised cost estimate of Rs 2800 crore for the development of
indigenous Kaveri engine for the LCA (Tejas) project. Already, the
Defence Research Development Organisation has spent Rs 1300 crore on
the prestigious project.

This was stated by Defence Minister Pranab Mukherjee after the CCS
meeting chaired by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh.

The CCS “approved the revised cost estimate of Kaveri engine” which
has been placed at Rs 2,800 crore, Mukherjee said adding that Rs
1,300 crore had already been spent earlier on the indigenous project.

Two prototypes of LCA being developed by Hindustan Aeronautics Limited
(HAL), Bangalore, have been test flown including at supersonic speeds.

LCA, a versatile, light weight and multi-role combat aircraft, is
expected to be ready for induction in the Air force in another three
years time.

Mukherjee said the CCS also approved a defence cooperation agreement
with Armenia which had been reached by the previous NDA regime in
May last year.

Reception Organized At Armenian Foreign Ministry On Occasion OfArmen

RECEPTION ORGANIZED AT ARMENIAN FOREIGN MINISTRY ON OCCASION OF ARMENIA
RECEIVING STATUS OF OBSERVER AT INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION OF FRANCOPHONY

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 21. ARMINFO. A solemn reception was held at the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Armenia (MFA) devoted to granting a
status of an observer at the International Organization of Francophony
to Armenia.

The MFA press-service informs ARMINFO that attending the reception
were parliamentary and governmental representatives, ambassadors,
representatives of international organizations accredited in
Armenia, representatives of priesthood, art workers and scientists,
businessmen, professors of the French University of Armenia and
other high educational establishments with a French bias. “I am sure
that membership of our country at the International Organization of
Francophony will contribute to even more devotion of Armenia to the
principles and values acknowledged by Francophony, as well as to even
more involvement of Armenia into international processes. It also
reflects the traditional friendship and exclusive relations between
Armenia and France, and it will, undoubtedly, allow the country to
more deepen the especial dialogue between our states and peoples,” said
Armenian Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanyan in his speech at the event.

In his turn, French Ambassador to Armenia Henry Cuny pointed out in
his speech Armenia’s efforts to participate in the organization, as
well as gave a high assessment of the purposefulness and possibilities
of Armenia to act in the new space.

Thousands of Armenians in Brussels anti-Turkish demo

Thousands of Armenians in Brussels anti-Turkish demo

Agence France Presse — English
December 17, 2004 Friday 6:52 PM GMT

BRUSSELS Dec 17 — Thousands of Europeans of Armenian origin
demonstrated during a European Union summit here Friday, and denounced
a decision by the bloc’s leaders to open membership talks with Turkey.

“This is not a negotiation. It is a capitulation. Political Europe
is very seriously compromised,” Laurent Leylekian, the director of
the Euro-Armenian federation, said in a statement.

After a day of frantic haggling, the bloc’s leaders struck a
hard-fought deal Friday securing Turkish promises on the divided
island of Cyprus in return for Ankara winning the historic prize of
a start to EU entry talks.

“This stunning result is without any doubt due to the inflexibility
of Ankara, which has not ceded anything, but also down to the patent
weakness of the union’s political structures,” Leylekian said.

Organisers said some 8,000 people — police gave the figure of 2,300
— of Armenian origin had demonstrated in the Belgian capital during
the key summit, calling on Turkey to admit to genocide against their
people nearly 90 years ago.

They insisted such an acknowledgment must be a precondition for Turkey
to begin talks on joining the EU.

Turkey has always denied the mass killing of Armenians during World
War 1 was genocide, saying the deaths were not ethnically motivated
but resulted from a crackdown on collaborators with the Russians.

The demonstrators outside the EU headquarters came from Armenian
communities in France, Germany, the Netherlands, Sweden and Russia.

Twenty busloads brought demonstrators from Paris, while planes were
chartered to ferry in others from Athens and Stockholm.

Speakers addressing the crowd included Garo Housepian, an elected
official in the French Mediterranean city of Marseille. He said a
delegation had been received here by the Dutch, who currently preside
over the EU.

Meanwhile in Armenia, more than 200 young people demonstrated outside
the European Union Commission’s office in the capital Yerevan.

“European countries must not weaken because of false reforms in Turkey
and must not integrate into their ranks a country that committed the
great crime against humanity, genocide,” they declared in a letter
to the commission office.

“In agreeing to start negotiations, European countries are taking on
responsibility for this crime,” it added.

In fact the theme of Armenia was not on the official Brussels summit
agenda. Turkey’s EU hopes had instead been threatened by a standoff
over calls for Ankara to recognize Cyprus, diplomats said.

Armenians say 1.5 million of their number died in a genocide between
1915 and 1917. Turkey disputes the scale and nature of the killing,
saying the deaths were not ethnically motivated but resulted from a
crackdown on parts of the population accused of collaborating with
the Russians during World War I.

Separately, in Italy, the anti-immigrant Northern League party which
forms part of the government of Silvio Berlusconi, organised several
demonstrations against the decision to open talks with Turkey.

The party is demanding a referendum be held in Italy on the issue
and has called supporters to demonstrate on Sunday in the northern
city of Milan.

Russian parliament chairman arrives in Yerevan

ArmenPress
Dec 14 2004

RUSSIAN PARLIAMENT CHAIRMAN ARRIVES IN YEREVAN

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 14, ARMENPRESS: The speaker of Russian State
Duma (parliament) Boris Gryzlov is arriving today in Yerevan on a
three-day official visit, which is assessed as a new round of
development of inter-parliamentary ties and political dialogue.
According to Russian Itar-Tass, in Yerevan Gryzlov will meet
president Kocharian and prime minister Margarian on December 15 and
will have talks with Armenian parliament’s leadership.
On December 16 Gryzlov will be received by Catholicos Karekin II.

Javakhk Public Orgs to Hold Conf.: “Integration, Not Assimilation”

PUBLIC ORGANIZATIONS OF JAVAKHK TO HOLD CONFERENCE ENTITLED
“INTEGRATION, NO ASSIMILATION”

AKHALKALAKI, December 13 (Noyan Tapan). A Press conference of the
Armenian public organizations of Samtskhe-Javakheti was held in
Akhalkalaki at ATV-12 TV company on December 9. It was devoted to the
first public conference of Samtskhe-Javakheti, which would be held in
Akhalkalaki upon the initiative of the board on December 11.

According to the “A-Info” Agency, members of the Board presented the
necessity and purposes of the holding of the conference. It was
noticed that the conference, which was devoted to the social-economic
problems of the region, will be no single one. It is expected that the
conferences devoted to the language, cultural problems, as well the
problems of the local self-government will be also held.

The title of the conference, i.e. “Integration, no Assimilation” is
typical, too. The initiators have chosen such a slogan because of the
fact that being adherents of the integration of their region into
Georgia, they at the same time, are against the policy of assimilation
carried out by the Georgian authorities.

Representatives of the Armenian public organizations of Javakhk
expressed hope that the conference will serve its purpose and help the
Armenians of Javakhk in the matter of the just settlement of the
problems, the development of democratic and legal society in Georgia.

Bowed by Age, Battered by Addicted Nephew and Forced Into Begging

The New York Times
December 12, 2004 Sunday
Late Edition – Final

Bowed by Age, Battered by an Addicted Nephew And Forced Into Begging
and Despair

By N. R. KLEINFIELD

They went out late. It was ugly weather. Six below zero in the
Brooklyn night. Wind took garbage into the air. A blizzard was in the
forecast. It was Lincoln’s Birthday, 2003, in Brighton Beach. Not a
night for humankind, but the sisters, one 73 and the other 70, didn’t
get holidays off, didn’t get snow days.

In years of miserable low points, it was one of the lowest. As they
had done the day before and the day before that, Lillian and Julia
hobbled out to Coney Island Avenue, a lineup of chromatic
storefronts, to beg from strangers in their cars. They were known out
there, regulars among the mendicants. The money was for their bilious
nephew and his crack habit, their own blood who was smoking up their
lives. He had already cost them their house, their savings, their
dignity. ”I need one more,” he would tell them when he desired a
hit, ”one more.”

Not comply and he would fly into crazed tirades, blacken an eye,
bruise their ribs. It had been this way for years, since their lives
stopped being comprehensible.

It was always a dice-toss what they got when they panhandled, but
what odds did they have on a brutal night like this? They had just
started their grueling shift when the police herded them home. Now
what? He was rambling around, that glazed look in his eyes. No money
in the house. No food. Despondent, Lillian told Julia she was going
over to the hospital, to sit all night in the waiting room. She had
gone there before, a temporary sanctuary during her black hours.

It had gotten to be 3 in the morning. She craved a coffee, so she
re-entered the cold, tried one car and heard the whoop-whoop of the
police again. She pushed on home, back to her sister, to that dour
apartment, with all that was wrong. And they slept without dreams or
any notion of a tomorrow. Soon would come the frosted Brooklyn dawn.
Then he would send them out again to the cars and the strangers.

It is called elder abuse, the polite rubric for crimes against the
aged, the neglected stepchild of domestic violence and child abuse in
the triangle of human violence. It is one of the more brutal yet
poorly understood plagues — its prevalence vague, its precise
definition elusive. Even the National Center on Elder Abuse, a
nonprofit Washington clearinghouse, feels studies are too
indeterminate to hazard a sound guess at its actual, quantifiable
toll.

No one doubts, though, that the abuse is real and intensifying. It
comes in many guises — the elderly aunt routinely roped to her bed
by her caregiver while game shows run on the TV, the wealthy
grandfather systematically plundered by his sharp-mouthed grandson,
the old woman pounded by her son because they can’t agree on whether
to keep the window open. It cuts across class and neighborhood. It
can last one traumatizing afternoon or persist for decades. It is
driven by demographics and the human capacity for malice.

There are indisputable hints of its chilling dimensions in an aging
population of more potential victims. In 1998, the city’s Department
for the Aging undertook a subway campaign for a month, all that it
could afford, alerting people to the problem. There was a 300 percent
increase in calls, overwhelming its ability to investigate them. The
campaign was not repeated.

Criminal cases are occasionally made, attaching some real names to
the horror. In Manhattan, the 69-year-old woman, hospitalized with
kidney failure, whose younger sister gambled away her $45,000 in life
savings in two days. In Brooklyn, the 79-year-old woman killed when
her deranged grandson planted a knife in her neck, his only
explanation being that she spoke some words he didn’t much like.

When the abuses happen, there is little to stop them. An Elder
Justice Act to funnel federal support to combat the problem and
heighten consciousness has been lingering, unacted upon in Congress.
The city has an agency, Adult Protective Services, but it is limited
by law and capacity in what it can do. Senior citizen centers and
nursing homes have their numbers to call. Specialized units formed by
prosecutors take stabs at it, but they are usually understaffed.

In Brooklyn, Arlene Markarian heads the elder abuse unit of the Kings
County district attorney’s office, and she points out that it is a
success story when she even hears of an incident. She dealt with 200
cases in the most recent year. There are 400,000 elderly people in
Brooklyn. ”I’m not an idiot,” she said. ”I know there are a lot
more.”

The police and family members and neighbors and social workers and
doormen — all of these might act as a prevention force. But they are
confounded by the contours of the problem. A beaten child reports to
school and advertises his torture. The elderly are often not seen. So
many wallow in dementia and can’t be heard. They fall a lot, and so
their lumps are explained away.

And it is a crime where victims don’t tell, a messy crime with a
potent psychological undertow, for it involves shame. Many older
people endure the abuse and accept its rules, because they feel
devalued enough in a youth-worshiping society. Why volunteer that
they are powerless to run their affairs, that their own flesh and
blood is stealing their money and slapping them around? Elder abuse
locates its targets among the isolated and marginalized, and it
twists love into a tool of manipulation and secrecy.

”There have been 16 murders in Brooklyn since 1999, when I began
doing this,” Ms. Markarian said of elder-abuse killings, 14 of them
by younger relatives. ”In only one case did anyone call the police,
for anything.”

Elder abuse, then, is a crime speeding well ahead of its solution.

Lillian and Julia lived elder abuse in one of its more virulent
strains. There are multiple vantage points on their story. There are
those of Lillian, now 75, and Julia, 71, as well as those of police
officers, social workers, relatives, caseworkers, prosecutors and
Frank, the abuser himself. All of them cooperated in recounting the
case. The sisters did not want their last name used, for they are too
ashamed of what their nephew did to them. As Lillian put it, ”I
don’t want everybody knowing our business.”

But they want their story told. They want others to understand how
easily it can happen to them.

>From the outset, they did not ask for much. Not even before it
started, back when there were still other possible outcomes. All they
wanted was a calm life in Brooklyn, a life that would start there and
end there, and maybe see a dash of dazzle in between. As Julia said,
”We’re not big dream people.”

Their mother was a homemaker and their father a bottler at the
Schaefer brewery, and there was a younger brother named Joseph. They
lived in a plain three-bedroom home in Flatbush, a working-class
family, house-proud and content.

After high school, the sisters drifted into their careers. Lillian
worked as an assistant manager in the personnel department of a law
firm; Julia was a filing clerk at an accounting company.

They were different people; everyone saw that. Lillian was airy and
spunky, quick to speak her mind. ”I’m a big girl and I’ve got a
mouth to match,” she liked to say. Julia was bashful and quiet, but
with a flicker of dry humor.

They lived with their parents and then kept the house as theirs after
their parents died. Early on, they figured out the particular
calculus of their lives, that they were fated to travel through the
years together, see the joys and heartbreaks as one, and hope there
were more joys.

Julia imagined getting married and having five children, but when she
saw friends’ children who strayed, she was thankful for her freedom.
Lillian attracted her share of suitors, but they were temporaries, no
Mr. Perfect. ”We both had our chances,” Lillian said. ”I kept
saying I’m still young, I’ve got time. Time had a way of running
out.”

They became active in the Catholic War Veterans, and it served as the
linchpin of their social life. Every Tuesday, they went bowling. One
year Lillian got handed the worst-bowler award, then picked up her
game. Neither bothered to learn to drive. Lillian took a few plane
trips out West, but Julia refused to fly, didn’t want to risk it.
They found enough in mundane pleasures.

They split up the labor. Lillian did the cooking. Julia wrestled with
the cleaning and the wash. Their money was pooled, both names on the
accounts. There was this lunar pull between them. ”We’d have our
differences,” Lillian said, ”but never anything that a half-hour
later we wouldn’t be talking to each other.” In many ways, they were
more one person than two.

For their old age, they resolved to save their pennies and stay put
in Brooklyn, dine out nicely now and then and see some movies, live a
predictable, quiet existence. It was a small future, perhaps, but big
enough for them.

It Begins to Unravel

It was in 1979 when Frank’s story became their story. He was 17, his
own life empty, and they took him in. Frank, their nephew, Joseph’s
son. Here was when everything began to unravel.

His pathology was not unfamiliar. He came from a broken-down
childhood in Staten Island. There were claims of relentless abuse by
his unstable mother — hit, pepper thrown in his face, tossed out in
his underwear to sleep in the stairwell. His father, a drug user, let
it happen, Frank said. When he was 11, he began smoking marijuana,
shoplifting meat and stealing bicycles to buy the weed. There was an
interlude in West Virginia with a man from the neighborhood who
befriended him. The man dropped dead of a heart attack. Frank’s
father had fled. Frank despised his mother. His aunts gladly opened
their arms.

His mother tells it differently. Disputing multiple family witnesses,
she said Frank had had a good childhood. She said Frank hit her. She
said her husband, long divorced from her and his whereabouts unknown,
was rotten, told Frank to beat her. His mother had not another word
to say.

Frank found a job pumping gas. He bought a cheap boat and fished for
bluefish. He chased women. For a long time, it was just three people
living.

The accident was a point in time, and it was a point that they would
always come back to. He was 31 and had become a Roto-Rooter man,
unclogging drains. One day, he said, he stumbled on some basement
steps and wound up with a crushed disk. He got hooked on prescription
pain pills, ”taking the pills like the Mad Hatter,” as he put it.

This made him nasty. He demanded money to feed his addiction. He
would ask for a twenty, just this once. In that way, it started. It
started small, as abuse usually does, a snowflake that becomes an
avalanche.

Soon he kicked the pills and switched to cocaine. Soon a twenty
wasn’t enough.

He squandered a $50,000 insurance settlement. He found work driving
for a car service — sometimes high — but it never paid enough for
his needs.

The sisters had swept him in out of pity, doted on him to excess, not
knowing then what they were beginning to know now. As Lillian put it
much later, ”We should have left him on the street.”

The mathematics were not good.

In the mid-1990’s, Lillian and Julia retired from their jobs. They
began living off modest pensions and Social Security, some money
Lillian picked up working as a companion at a nursing home, enough
for their life, but not enough for a drug life.

Frank graduated to smoking crack, sometimes calling it by its slang
name, the devil’s dandruff. He was trying this drug business on,
getting used to it.

”One more,” he badgered them when he needed money. ”One more.”

He was a burly man, thinning hair, a long face, a coiled spring
inside him.

His demands led, as they so often do, to violence. He would push
Julia around, slap her across the face. Give him the money!

Lillian, with her tougher crust, he did not hit, not yet. Many times,
she would bark at him, ”Get out,” and he would shout at her, ”When
I’m ready.”

There were enough good moments, too. He would purr sweet things to
them and win them over. Lillian admitted, ”He had the gift of the
mouth.”

The sisters took out a mortgage, plowing some of it into repairs,
keeping the rest in reserve. Quickly, he consumed it, then their
savings. They began missing payments.

Lillian said: ”It got to where we couldn’t pay this bill, that bill.
It got to the point where we didn’t care anymore.”

By the fall of 2000, they warned Frank that the house was in
jeopardy, but he dismissed the possibility.

And back here, the outside world, the system, was put on notice.
Neighbors heard shouting, spotted bruises. An anonymous call alerted
the city’s Department for the Aging that two sisters were being
abused. The matter was farmed out to a well-intentioned social worker
named Diane Baumgarten, who oversaw a new elder abuse program in
Brooklyn for the Jewish Association for Services for the Aged.

She called the house. Lillian picked up and told her that her nephew
hounded them and was causing them to lose their house. But she said:
”Don’t come over. Please do not come over. I don’t know how he will
react.”

Ms. Baumgarten had come to understand the peculiar paralysis of elder
abuse, about how daunting it was to get victims to complain. ”You’re
dealing with embarrassment and shame on so many levels — the
embarrassment of the police coming to the home, of the neighbors
seeing this, of people thinking we didn’t raise this person right,”
she said. ”Instead of their feeling like the victim, they feel like
the perpetrator. Instead of their seeing what he did to them, they
think, look at what I’m doing to him.”

Ms. Baumgarten had more cases than she could possibly handle. She and
one other person made up her unit.

In a couple of weeks, she tried again. The phone had been
disconnected. They were gone.

An Ache in Their Hearts

The sisters relished order, convention, sameness. Now — poof — the
house had been taken. It left an awful ache in their hearts, and they
wept over it. The house, one of the best things in their small lives,
held the ghosts of their parents and their quiet longings for a
future, and now all of it belonged to strangers and they had to move
on. ”I never imagined such a thing, that my life would turn out this
way,” Julia said.

Their finances a shambles, they squeezed into a two-bedroom apartment
in Canarsie. The new place was bleak. He needed his hits more often.
Pockets empty, embarrassment crawling up their necks, they borrowed
from friends and from a cousin, a successful doctor in Oklahoma who
would send them thousands of dollars over the years.

They argued with Frank, insults whizzing through the air. Stop it
already, or they’ll call the police. And he bellowed that if they
tried, he would kill them.

One day, with him pestering her and Lillian for money, Julia reached
a fathomless point. There was no money and there was that obstinate
chant — one more. Where else did someone at her age get money? She
impulsively went out to Foster Avenue, one of the main roads, with
its steady swish of traffic. She shuffled up to the cars, swallowed
what was left of her pride and began to beg.

This was a pivot point in the sisters’ decline, a surrender of
identity and a step into a dark place without a floor. ”I learned
something,” Julia said. ”I learned the things a person will do when
she’s desperate.”

People gave. She was a pitiful sight. Drivers passed over change, a
dollar, $5. Lillian was mortified, seeing her kid sister’s
submergence, out there with the riffraff. And Frank, well, Frank
loved the proceeds. He counted them out on the kitchen table.

It was clear now. Every morning abuse got up with them and spent the
day.

They were his captives, and he bullied them to his will. His favored
breakfast was Nestle chocolate milk and Suzy-Q cakes. When he woke up
and there were none in the house, he lashed out at them and they
would skulk out to get them.

And how he went after them. On more than one occasion, he punched
Julia in the face. ”The things you let happen,” she said. ”If I
said I wasn’t going out to beg, he would really go off the wall. He’d
hit me. I’d get a black eye. Then I would go out. It was so
demeaning. He’d say, if you give me $20 more, that would be it. How
we believed this stupid stuff, I don’t know.”

Again, the system heard some things.

After falling and breaking her hip, Julia had to recuperate in a
nursing home. The home, suspicious of the injury, notified the
police. Ms. Baumgarten was alerted. She went with an officer to the
apartment. Only Frank was home and he wouldn’t let them in. They
visited the nursing home and Julia denied that anything was amiss (as
it happened, Frank had not caused her fall).

Later, they returned to the Canarsie apartment. Once again, they were
gone.

Frank, of course, had his view of things. His aunts mothered him too
much, ”put a leash around me and treated me like a cocker spaniel.”
Lillian, with her sharp tongue, would get on his jumpy nerves,
hectoring him to do this, do that, pick up your clothes.

The house was lost, yes, but not his fault. It was actually a scheme
of Lillian’s so he wouldn’t inherit it. Go out and beg? Not his idea.
He had always been the fall guy.

That is what he says.

And also this: ”When you’re on crack you don’t consciously know what
you’re doing. You can’t remember all the sleazy things you did on
that drug. You don’t want to remember. You can’t pay attention to
whether your shoelaces are tied. What I remember is wanting it,
wanting it, wanting it, walking around and wanting it, wanting it,
wanting it.”

The Police Are Notified

The building they lived in was sold, and they had to leave. In early
2002, they found a painfully ordinary place in Sheepshead Bay, but
quickly fell behind on the rent, Frank smoking away their pensions.
Julia continued to beg, going out to the Knapp Street exit off the
Belt Parkway, a bustling intersection yielding good results.

One day, Lillian slipped and broke her hip and had to go into a
nursing home to heal. While she was there, Frank stopped by to force
her to sign over a check and got into a verbal tussle with a worker.
The woman called the city, and the police were notified, as well as
Diane Baumgarten again. The nursing home worker, in fact, obtained an
order of protection against Frank.

Ms. Baumgarten visited and was given a runaround. A police officer
named Dawn Deen, in the domestic violence unit of the 61st Precinct,
stopped by and found Julia with bruises on her lip, wrist and eye.
She said she fell a lot. Officer Deen had her doubts and referred the
case to Adult Protective Services, the agency that intercedes when
people might not be competent.

A caseworker accompanied Officer Deen to the apartment. Julia was
asleep on the floor at 3 in the afternoon. The apartment was filthy.
Julia insisted that nothing was going on. Officer Deen urged the
caseworker to dig deeper. The caseworker, she said, saw no need. Look
at the squalid condition in which they were living, Officer Deen
said. The caseworker told her she had seen worse. She announced that
she was done for the day, could the officer drop her off at the
subway station? Adult Protective Services would not discuss the case.

Soon after, in April, Officer Deen tried to follow up. They weren’t
there. They had vanished.

The rent in arrears, they had been evicted. They were panicked and
confused, and needed a new idea. Every possible road pointed to
nowhere. Without money for a new apartment, they put their belongings
in storage, family pictures of growing up, memorabilia, their
furniture, all of it. Their beloved dog, King, was given away.

”This went, that went, our lives were falling apart and we couldn’t
stop it,” Lillian said.

A friend offered her couch to Lillian and invited Julia to stay, too,
but not Frank; she knew his business and didn’t want him anywhere
near her. That left him with a final option, and that was on the
streets with the deadbeats and lost souls.

Julia intended to remain with Lillian, her eternal companion. But
Frank begged her not to abandon him. He told her she was his true
mother, called her ”Mama.”

Why listen to his maunderings? He beat her, took her money, made her
beg. He had brought her life to a standstill. Why listen? Why care?

No good reason at all, but blood is impossibly thick. And he was not
one person, but two. He hit her. But just the other day he drove her
down to the bay to look at the boats. He screamed at her. But didn’t
he get her that bag of clams?

She couldn’t cut the cord.

Fast-Food Bathrooms

The night hours were his. His shift at the car service was 6 p.m. to
6 a.m. She sat beside him, and he explained to his curious fares, Oh,
this is my mom, she hasn’t been feeling well, I’m just giving her a
ride so she can get out of the house.

The passengers told Julia what a considerate son she had. Many of
them handed Frank a big tip, urging him to please treat his mom to a
little something.

When work ended, they would straggle down to Plum Beach, a scrubby
strip of sand in Sheepshead Bay, and he’d sleep there and she’d sit,
watching the waves, or meander up and down the sandy wasteland, ways
to use up the day. In nasty weather, they would ride the B train back
and forth from the end of Brooklyn to the tip of the Bronx.

To bathe, they would duck into a fast-food bathroom and extinguish
the odors as best they could, try to feel fresh. Every now and then,
they’d grab a room at a hotel. It was $80 a night, too steep for
them, but there was a four-hour rate — a tryst rate, of course. They
got to soak in a proper bath and momentarily feel the sweetness of a
bed.

They saw Lillian now and then; she gave them sandwiches when she had
them.

His accursed habit consumed everything, and so Julia continued to
trawl for handouts, fettered to something that wouldn’t let go. She
found him better behaved, though. He struck her less often. ”And I
didn’t beg so much, maybe every other day.”

This improvised life went on for a week, a month, two months, three.

Time lost its meaning. Until, finally, a new roof. Enough money was
rustled together in the summer of 2002 for them to reunite in a boxy
two-bedroom in a tumbledown affair in Brighton Beach. They brought no
furnishings, because they no longer had any. When they couldn’t
manage the fee for the storage container, their belongings had been
disposed of, their material past erased.

It crushed Lillian and Julia, losing their mother’s china, their
trove of family pictures, their jewelry. First the house and now its
contents, everything slipping away.

”It wasn’t great stuff, we knew that,” Lillian said. ”But it was
our stuff.”

Frank was hot over the loss of his guitars, his Beatles and Stones
records, the TV’s. How was he going to watch the Yankees?

The apartment was in poor shape. The first three nights they slept on
the bare floor, until the landlord gave them a couple of mattresses.
The previous tenant had left behind a small kitchen table. They each
had a couple of changes of clothing. They washed them in the kitchen
sink.

So this was their new beginning.

Their frayed life, though, continued just as before — only worse.
Frank said his crack habit had worked its way up to $200 a day. Often
there was little money for food, and they skipped meals and the
pounds melted off their skeletal frames.

”He had to have his 25 bucks, 30 bucks,” Lillian said. ”He had to
have it. It was $30 every 20 minutes.”

They stepped up the begging. They approached it as a business; that
was what it had become. Begging was their profession.

”You’d go to a certain corner, and if you weren’t having any luck,
you’d go to another corner,” Julia said. ”When you found a good
corner, you stayed with it and went back there the next day.”

Julia focused on Coney Island Avenue, a wide commercial strip strung
with delis and restaurants and gas stations, City Carpet and Meena
Travel and Raya’s Linen Shop, and cars, always cars containing people
with money jangling in their pockets.

Frequently, she would begin in the creeping dawn, during the morning
commuting, take a break, then return to catch the evening rush, eight
or nine hours out there over two shifts, and maybe bring home $20 or
$30 or sometimes a haul of $100. It was sales work, selling a story
of woe, and the merchandise didn’t always move.

Rain drumming down. Teeth-rattling cold. Whipping winds. Snow dusting
her coat. Julia begged. It was on the most oppressive nights that
Lillian couldn’t stand to see her sister trolling out there and so
she would tell Frank, ”I’ll go out; let her stay here.” And so she
entered the business.

When they refused to go, or the take was slim, he raged and pummeled
them. He would bang his fist on the table, slam the door, throw
things. He hit both of them now, but he mostly hit Julia, because he
knew that was the way to intimidate Lillian, the stronger-willed, the
one he figured might some day turn him in.

Frank never begged. ”Oh, no, you kidding? He would never lower
himself to do that,” Lillian said. At times, he would accompany
them, hanging back on the curb while they performed their jobs. He
did this when they went out in the middle of the night, when there
were dangers, protecting his work force. ”He was very good about
that,” Julia said.

People who had been grocery shopping handed them food. Sometimes they
got cigarettes, a bonus if they were Newports, Frank’s brand. A woman
gave Julia a pair of boots. They were a little tight, but she
squeezed into them.

The intersection of Coney Island Avenue and Neptune worked
particularly well, a gantlet of retail shops intermixed with gas
stations, thick traffic. One evening there, Julia encountered an
important facet for a prosperous business, the repeat customer.

He was a chipper man who gave her $40, calling her Tootsie, and said
if Tootsie returned the next night, he would have the same for her. A
fine man with a big heart, and yet his chronic generosity tore at her
insides. The man thought he was helping a down-and-out old woman,
someone trying to salvage a vestige of a life in a city full of
pathology. And yet all he was doing was feeding a crack habit.

He was a man in a car who went to a home where everything was
different. She went back to a mattress on the floor and Frank and his
volcanic temper in the next room.

By now, Frank would awaken frequently at 2 or 3 in the morning,
craving a hit. No money in the house, of course, and he would get
them up with his chant. In their sleep-dazed state, they would trudge
out. It happened so often that they did what seemed practical. They
began wearing their clothes to bed. Then when he came in to rouse
them, snarling in their ears, they only had to slip on their ratty
shoes, shrug into coats and plow into the Brooklyn darkness. They
were firemen, ready to slide down the pole.

It is something to wonder: How many people knew of the sisters’
broken lives?

Possibly a dozen, possibly two, even three. The short answer to the
question of how many knew is, enough.

Relatives knew, including a squadron of scattered cousins, an
insurance man in Connecticut, the doctor in Oklahoma, a police
officer in New Mexico, a nun in Massachusetts. Neighbors and friends
knew. Police officers and caseworkers knew. As Lillian would later
say, ”All of my friends knew what was going on. I told them.”

This, then, was not elder abuse played out in the shadows, one of
those that after you hear about it you think, ”If only I had some
idea.” No, this unspooled on a reasonably well-lighted stage.

But none of the onlookers knew everything because what Lillian and
Julia told them was always selective — they rarely admitted they
were hit or, worse, that they were begging — and there always seemed
to be some sugar-coating, allusions to his benevolent side.

It is also true that, with numbing regularity, the outsiders pleaded
with the sisters to kick out Frank, change the locks, call the
police. Some phoned the police themselves. Their cousin, the doctor,
who gave them so much money, spoke several times to the police, but
was told that the sisters, the only witnesses, had to speak the truth
about Frank. ”I had a lot of resources and I couldn’t stop this,”
he said. ”Not just my money but my connections. This is a problem of
society, of America. The system doesn’t cope with people who don’t
want to act.”

Most of their relatives and friends eventually distanced themselves
from the sisters, exasperated. They would look at them and no longer
know them, for Lillian and Julia had entered a world where they could
not be reached.

Why didn’t they act?

The doctor has his theory: ”They couldn’t accept that they had
nurtured him for so long and he had turned on them. You have to
understand, they were knitting booties for Frank before he was
born.”

To their friends, they gave their own cascade of explanations. They
were scared, they didn’t want him in jail, just helped, they didn’t
trust the system or even comprehend it. No one else understood,
because no one else was in their house, living with him, walking in
their shoes.

There was truth there.

‘Maybe Tomorrow’

They did talk it over. Of course they did.

Lillian would say: ”Julia, we’ve got to do something; we can’t go on
like this. We’re going to get sick over it.”

Julia would say: ”You’re right, you’re right, what are we going to
do?”

Lillian would say: ”The only thing we can do is report him.”

But their despondency corroded their will. They moved beyond
self-scrutiny.

Lillian would say to Julia, ”Well maybe tomorrow he’ll be better.”

And Julia would say, ”Yes, Lillian, maybe tomorrow.”

They came up with a trick. When he was sleeping or out buying hits,
Julia and Lillian would slip out and camp at McDonald’s — the place
didn’t push you out, not two old ladies — and they would roost there
for five, six hours, nursing coffees. Then they’d go sleep at a
friend’s, stay away from Frank an entire night, and occasionally two.

One purpose of these rendezvous was temporary tranquillity. Another
purpose was to rattle him. An employees’ strike. It did work. They’d
return home and he’d have his arms open, so glad to see them, where
had they been?

It worked, each time it worked — for a few hours.

”We didn’t turn on him sooner, which we should have,” Lillian said.
”God knows we should have. He did run our lives. We had no guts to
do something. What we should have done is turned him in.”

”We were stupid,” Julia said. ”We had no courage.”

‘A Piece of Paper’

The upstairs neighbor was the one who called. It was a Saturday
night, Sept. 14, 2002. Hearing Julia screaming, the sound scissoring
through the building, he dialed the police.

The officers found her with her face battered, two huge black eyes.
Yes, she admitted, he had smacked her, a bitter argument over, what
else, money, and she too bone-weary to venture out there again.

They took Frank down to the station. He said quizzically that he
didn’t do anything, what was going on? A police officer stayed behind
and snapped pictures of Julia’s savagely beaten face. Both her eyes
were discolored, her cheeks puffed up. Her expression was drawn, the
look of a woman who had missed too many meals. A woman approaching
70, but she might be 90.

Frank was arraigned, charged with assault, menacing and harassment,
and a full order of protection was issued, forbidding him from any
contact with his aunts.

With no rap sheet, he was released. He went straight back to the
apartment, genially greeted his aunts by saying, ”They didn’t do
anything to me,” and went to bed.

Ms. Markarian, the prosecutor, said: ”That happens just about all
the time. You get a piece of paper. You don’t get a guard.”

Neither Julia nor Lillian would push the case. ”I didn’t want him
thrown into a snake pit and left there,” Julia said. He was offered
a plea bargain. He pleaded guilty to an assault misdemeanor and was
required to attend an anger control program. In this development
Lillian and Julia injected possibility. They foresaw a reckoning, his
finally shaking free of drugs and becoming the person he was when
they first took him into their home and their hopes.

He never went to the program, not once. He didn’t want to be told to
do something, didn’t like things set up that way.

With an arrest, elderly people involved, some visits took place.
Detective Cheryl Melchionna of the domestic violence unit in the 60th
Precinct accompanied Diane Baumgarten to the Brighton Beach
apartment. Lillian and Julia were tight-lipped, hovering near one
another, listening to what the other said, denying anything
abhorrent, just people doing the daily struggle.

Detective Melchionna casually rummaged around the place, sifting for
telltale signals. With elderly people, she knew it was a good idea to
make sure that the stove and refrigerator worked, that there was
ample food. People gripped by dementia, she knew, would forget to
eat, or do bizarre things like that woman she knew who kept nothing
in her freezer but bowls filled with ice.

The appliances functioned, but the detective was dumbstruck when she
opened the refrigerator. Nothing. Not one thing was inside. The
cupboards, too. Empty. In fact, there were hardly any dishes or pots.

And look at them — the sisters were ghostly thin.

How do you eat? she asked them.

Oh, they said, they ate out all the time.

Well, it was possible. Detective Melchionna’s mother, who was totally
together, had moved to that stage, what the detective referred to as
her diva thing, where she stopped cooking and either ate out or
ordered food delivered. There was a Dunkin’ Donuts near her, and even
it delivered.

So, she let that go, accepted it as a plausible explanation.

She spotted little things: ”I noticed no jewelry. Most old women
don’t like makeup. But they usually wear a bracelet or earrings,
especially if, like them, they have pierced ears.”

What struck her most of all, though, was that the apartment looked
nothing like a place where two spinsters lived. It looked like a
low-rent bachelor pad. Her suspicions were that this Frank character
was a controlling individual and that he had his aunts thoroughly
under his authority.

But was continuing crime involved here? She didn’t know.

Adult Protective Services showed up soon after, returning to a case
it had felt was no case. The appearance of its caseworker dislodged
Ms. Baumgarten, for that would be duplicating services.

A psychiatrist gave Julia a test. Who’s the president? What’s the
year? Draw a clock with the hands showing 3 o’clock. She did that,
though she messed up on the year, for some reason saying 202, not
2002. The agency tried to put her in a financial management program,
but she opposed it. The sisters didn’t hear too much more.

To do more, Detective Melchionna needed a complainant. She had a
sense of foreboding. Other than that, she had nothing.

Dreadful Days

It was another matter now. An arrest, well, that might rattle him. It
made sense, but his life wasn’t about sense.

Christmas came, but few good tidings in Brighton Beach, and it
saddened them. They had so little. In the past, they would put up a
big tree, but not now, just a sparse one a friend gave them.

The new year rang in, 2003, and it resembled the old. The days were
truly dreadful. In biting cold, on snow-swept streets, he sent them
daily to beg. The beatings intensified.

”Mostly he punched me in the back,” Julia said. ”I figure it was
because it wouldn’t show.”

Often, the sisters went to bed famished. In many senses, they were
running on empty.

Both of them were observant Catholics, going to church, doing daily
prayers morning and night by their bedside. In their prayers, Lillian
and Julia spoke to the heavens, bathing themselves in hope,
whispering to the Lord, asking that he get Frank help, asking that he
help them, deliver them from evil. Wasn’t that his job?

Time, maybe even he needed time. They very much believed in the
adage, ”If God closes a door, he opens a window.” Nothing in that
proverb, they recognized, suggested a timetable. Clarity was what
they needed.

They were two wrecks, waiting on a miracle.

The Food Ploy

The end began because she was seeing the ragged sisters in her mind,
at work, at home. She wept inside for them.

Detective Melchionna kept hearing it from her fellow officers, that
the sisters were out there panhandling again, looking horrid, spotted
them last night, saw them yesterday afternoon, shooed them away and
they came right back. She heard this from her own husband, a sergeant
in the precinct.

”They were filthy,” Detective Melchionna said. ”Their clothes
looked like they came off a pile of trash. The smell was awful. And
their eyes. There was a look in their eyes. It was a look that they
had given up on life.”

It was true that some of the police officers felt pity for them,
buying them coffee and even digging into their own pockets for a few
dollars. Two officers wrote Lillian summonses. Detective Melchionna
was thankful that they did. She thought it might be the only way to
keep them safe and inside.

But the drill did not stop. On the evening of Feb. 12, 2003, she made
up her mind. The next day, she was going to intervene. She spoke with
Ms. Markarian, who advised her to split up the sisters, divide and
conquer, go with the one who seemed most likely to talk.

Whenever she went to the district attorney’s office, Detective
Melchionna noticed that victims always got food. Nothing for the
police officers, but always for the victims. Food, she reasoned,
might be the truth serum she needed.

Both sisters had been begging the night before, out to the thumping
roll of cars in unforgiving cold, and had not produced enough even
for a meal.

Detective Melchionna drove over to the apartment. Lillian answered
the door. The detective told her they were going to have breakfast.
Nothing fancy, though; this was the police. At a gas station
convenience store, Detective Melchionna bought Lillian some cake and
a coffee, fixed herself a tea, and they went to the precinct station.
They settled down in her office and ate.

The detective coaxed her: ”Do it before it’s too late. Get your life
back.”

Lillian had hit a limit in pain. She had paid every price there was
to pay. The detective was so sweet. Was this the window opening?
Slowly as the minutes crawled past, it spilled out, not everything,
but enough to make an arrest stick.

Over cake, Lillian gave him up.

The detective rounded up the biggest officer she could find, and they
went to the apartment and took Frank away. He had been asleep. As
they shoved him out the door, he looked at Julia and said, ”Mama,
why are they arresting me? I didn’t do anything.”

It was one arrest in a city of many arrests, nothing worthy of even a
splash in the papers, but for two sisters in a threadbare apartment
in Brighton Beach, something monumental had happened on a quiet
Thursday morning.

The charges were multiple counts of menacing and reckless
endangerment for forcing them to beg, as well as contempt of court
for violating his order to attend anger control therapy. He could
easily get several years in jail.

His aunts would not put him on trial. They would not send him to
prison. Get him help, nothing more. That remained their own peculiar
logic, the embedded logic of family.

As Lillian explained it, ”We felt if he went to jail, he’d come out
rotten.”

This boggled Ms. Markarian’s mind. Come out rotten? What was he now?
But, yes, she saw this all the time, victims backtracking, either the
humiliation or fear or the powerful glue that binds relatives
undermining what she believed justice demanded.

People come to a particular place for a reason, and with Ms.
Markarian one has to understand that when she was growing up in the
New York suburbs, it was a two-bedroom house and she had to share her
room. Not with a sibling — she was an only child — but with her
Armenian grandmother. She spoke no English, but taught Ms. Markarian
her native tongue and taught her about life and about God. And she
never complained about the posters Ms. Markarian coated the walls
with. No, she was cool. And so when the adult Ms. Markarian heard
about the elderly being abused, well, that touched her somewhere in
the soul.

Even in a short span, she had seen all its rawness. The 16 murders.
That abuser who put an elderly woman’s puppy in a pot of water, set
it on the stove, started cooking it.

And so she wanted him in jail, with an order of protection severing
him from their lives for good. And she saw it wasn’t going to happen.

So she told the sisters that they had to play cards: ”This is a
poker game. I know testifying is not on your top 10 list of things
you want to do. But don’t let him know that or he’ll never accept a
plea.”

They played their bluff. On April 9, 2003, he took a plea. He would
be remanded to a residential program for roughly 18 months, his
progress to be watched by the court. He could not leave, could not
see his aunts, could not harm them.

Dolls Don’t Talk Back

Shattered lives are rebuilt slowly, starting with the essentials.

This case hit her worse than others, and Detective Melchionna
couldn’t just let it go. She rooted around her basement. There was a
dining table set and a living room table, pots and pans. There were
those flowery sheets that her husband had ordered removed, back in
their wrapping, unslept on. Her grandmother had always told her to
keep spare toothbrushes. Her husband was Italian, and the kitchen
overflowed with pasta. With help from fellow officers, she carted
these provisions over to the sisters.

The apartment became a place of life. In a once-vacant living room
appeared couches, an armchair, a rug. On a glass table a family of
dolls grew. Lillian won one at a raffle, then they added more,
something to do.

”They’re nice to have around,” Julia said. ”They don’t talk back.
They don’t ask you for the car keys.”

Adult Protective Services dispatched a caseworker to make monthly
visits, annoying Lillian because he habitually appeared when she was
preparing dinner. As Lillian put it, ”He’d open our cupboards and
just about drop dead. They were exploding with food.” After a while,
he stopped coming.

Frank was assigned to a rehabilitation center in Brooklyn. He was
given a diagnosis of anxiety disorder, and put on pills to still his
anger. Enrolled in a culinary program, he got to cook meals at a
senior center, feeding the old. His teeth had rotted out, and he was
fitted with replacements. Progress reports filed by his caseworker
were good. After six months, he earned passes to go out, and he said
he used them to patronize prostitutes, take in a Yankees game and see
his aunts. They were hard pressed to explain why they let him, but
they did. They spoke of second chances and of redemption.

In early October, the court released him. He moved into subsidized
housing in Brownsville and began going over to his aunts’ a lot. They
told him, not so much, but he kept showing up. Watched the TV.
Occasionally cooked a meal, his chicken cutlet parmigiano, his
macaroni and cheese.

The sisters have an order of protection in place until April 2007,
though they regard it cynically. ”You read about people with orders
of protection all the time that get murdered,” Lillian said. ”My
feeling is they’re for the birds. They give those things out in the
courts like candy.”

In elder abuse, you don’t know what will happen. Sometimes the cycle
repeats itself, feeds on the residual nutrients of its own past. Time
soothes but it also obscures. Diane Baumgarten said: ”Time passes.
Things improve. You look back and say, ‘You know what, things weren’t
really that bad.’ You see the positive side of the person. You
rationalize it. There’s a sense of false security. It starts all over
again.”

Friends have cautioned Lillian and Julia that he’ll never change and
they’re foolish to let him back into their lives. Some relatives of
the sisters have placed bets — in two months, he’ll be back on
drugs, in three.

You never know.

He has not apologized to them. As far as they can see, he has not
gathered the essence of what he did. Lillian knows he is still mad at
her: ”He figures I’m the one that put him in the cooler.”

Julia said, ”Yeah, but he seems better now that’s he’s off that
poison.”

Lillian said: ”Look, I’m not pinning medals on him. He was rotten to
us. But do you think we could throw him in the gutter? I know
everybody thinks we’re nuts because we bother with him. But he’s
lonely. I want him to be happy. It’s all we ever wanted for him.”

Fall inching toward winter, the days getting shorter and crisper. Was
justice done in Brighton Beach?

Arlene Markarian in her office on a sun-splattered afternoon, floppy
stacks of paper strewn around, files upon files documenting affronts
against the old.

”You don’t know how hard it is to do this job,” she said softly.
”There are days I close the door and I just cry.”

Was justice done?

”Yes,” she said. ”Given what he did and what the victims wanted,
yes.”

She knew many things, of course, but not the whole story. The
accounts of beatings not alleged in the two cases. Their losing not
just their home but also their most intimate possessions, their
family pictures and memorabilia. Julia washing up in a Burger King
bathroom. Sleeping in their clothes so they could always be ready to
beg. The refrigerator with nothing in it, not one thing.

Ms. Markarian was quiet. She took this in, ran it through her mind.
Then she had her answer.

”No, justice wasn’t done,” she said. ”He didn’t get what he
deserved. Not even close.”

Hungry at an early hour, he was eating dinner out, Chinese food,
going with the pepper steak and a Coke. Dreading returning to his
dingy apartment. He called it a ”caveman’s place.”

”I’m a very scared man now,” Frank said. ”I’m really scared,
because here I am alone again. I don’t know what’s in front of me. At
42, even a dog has a warm spot on the curb.”

He spoke too loud, unselfconsciously. He had always talked too loud.

He wondered. He wondered if he would get a job cooking and if it
would work out. He wondered how he would handle adversity in the
future, because he had never handled it well in the past.

During his idle hours, he rode the subway to Coney Island, got a
coffee and strolled up and down the Boardwalk. When the arcades were
open, he would play the game where you squirted the water at the
clown’s mouth, expanding a balloon until it burst.

Swigging down his Coke, a glance over his shoulder. He was fidgety.
Two packs a day of Newports to silence his nerves. He wanted to go
outside, light up.

”They make me out to be a monster,” he said. ”I hate this. You
know, a monster? I am 42 years old and I’ve been through it. I’m a
monster? I’m just a man.”

The cellphone chirped. It was a quasi-girlfriend of the moment.
Speaking much too loud, nearly bellowing, he wondered where she had
been for the last week. She said she had been locked up. He didn’t
ask why, didn’t feel curious.

”I don’t need this,” he said. ”I don’t need this. She’s a
sweetheart, but I do not need this.”

A Bitter Paradox

There is a ground-floor apartment in Brighton Beach, and two sisters
live there, one who is 75 and one who is 71. Tap-tap on the door and
Lillian swept it open; Julia was back in the living room.

Chilly today, winter in the wings. Rain drilled against the
windowpanes.

Lillian and Julia look vastly different than they did two long years
ago. Both have broadened now that they’re eating meals regularly.
They try to look nice. They wear jewelry, and Julia has been dyeing
her hair. But their health is faltering. Julia has had trouble with
her lungs and can’t walk very far before she is wheezing. It’s
strenuous for her to move, and she has a spatula at her side if she
needs to scratch something beyond easy reach. She doesn’t go out
much.

Lillian is more mobile, but she has a nasty case of arthritis and has
been in and out of the hospital for kidney problems. Mostly they
rattle around the apartment.

They get the bitter paradox here. They remained robust all those
harrowing months when they begged for a tomorrow. Now that the burden
is gone and there is possibility again, their health has betrayed
them.

The past is in concrete and irreclaimable and it is only the present
that they have to work with. They do all they can to will themselves
into forgetfulness, to blot out the swarm of memories of what once
was, the years Frank had stolen from them. It is hard ground to
visit. ”I can’t think about it,” Lillian said. ”You don’t know how
difficult it is to think about it.”

Julia settled on the couch. She used the spatula on her itchy lower
leg, tucked it back beside her. Lillian was crumpled into the soft
armchair, the family of dolls beside her in their frozen poses.

”Coffee, Julia? There’s some on the stove?”

”No, Lillian, I’m fine for now.”

They were comfortable with each other. They always had been.

”We don’t do much, do we, Julia?” Lillian said. ”Go to the doctor,
sit in the chair, what do we do, we do nothing.”

Julia: ”It’s true. We don’t kill ourselves.”

On the end table was a jar of pennies that the lady from the church
would pick up, the sisters’ modest contribution to feed the homeless.
The television was running, Court TV. Their feeling was, the legal
shows were the best, never the soaps. ”Judge Judy.” ”Law and
Order.” You couldn’t beat them. Julia got a kick out of ”Family
Feud.” They both thought ”Golden Girls” was a hoot.

The day was gathering itself in. Frank planned to stop by later,
maybe cook his macaroni.

You never know.

BAKU: Peace Talks to Continue in `Prague Format’

Assa-Irada
Dec 10 2004

Peace Talks to Continue in `Prague Format’

Azerbaijan and Armenia will continue talks on the Nagorno Karabakh
conflict on the basis of Prague meetings.

This was agreed upon at a meeting of the Azerbaijani and Armenian
foreign ministers Elmar Mammadyarov and Vardan Oskanian on Thursday
within the annual session of the North Atlantic Partnership Council.

The parties discussed the current situation with the conflict
resolution at the meeting attended by the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs.
No details concerning other matters discussed were reported.

Mammadyarov and Oskanian have held five such meetings so far and the
last one took place in Sofia a few days ago. Issues related to
liberation of the occupied Azerbaijani territories by Armenia and
restoration of transport and other communications were discussed.

ANKARA: De Gucht: We Understand Turkey on Armenian Issue

Journal of Turkish Weekly, Turkey
Dec 10 2004

Belgian FM De Gucht: `We Understand Turkey on Armenian Issue’

Karel De Gucht, Belgian Foreign Minister, said that they understand
Turkey’s policies on Armenian `genocide’ allegation. De Gucht added
`a politician should look at the future not past. This issue is very
sensitive’.

De Gucht gave a speech in Belgium Senate. According to the Minister
no one can ignore Armenia’s aggressive and provocative attitude in
Nagorno-Karabakh.

Karel De Gucht further argued that Turkey’s cost to the EU will be
very limited. When asked whether Turkey is in Europe or not, De Gucht
added the concept of `Europe’ should be defined on political terms
instead of geographical terms.

Source: Milliyet

Army and Church Are Basis of Confidence in Yerevan And President,

ARMY AND CHURCH ARE BASIS OF CONFIDENCE IN YEREVAN AND PRESIDENT, ARMY AND
MASS MEDIA – IN BAKU AND TBILISI

YEREVAN, December 10 (Noyan Tapan). On December 9, the Armenian branch
of the Caucasus Research Resource Center (CRRC) published the results
of the social-demographic research simulteneously conducted in
Armenia, Georgia and Azerbaijan. The purpose of CRRC is to contribute
to cooperation of specialists of social sciences of the three
countries of the South Caucasus and to establish favorable conditions
for their work. CRRC was established by the “Eurasia” Foundation, the
Carnegie Corporation of New York (Chairman – Vardan Grigorian), the
World Bank and other donors. The CRRC branches of Armenia, Georgia and
Azerbaijan conducted public opinion polls among randomly selected
1,500 farms of their capitals, collecting data on demograpy, political
activity, social institutes and crimes. Sociologist Samvel Manukian
presented the results of the research conducted on the basis of these
data. According to him, 60% of the population of Yerevan doesn’t
approve of the tendencies of the country’s development, meanwhile 23%
and 47% of the population of Tbilisi and Baku, respectively, is
discontent with the tendencies of the development of their
countries. The army and the church are the basis of confidence in
Yerevan, and the President, the army and mass media – in Baku and
Tbilisi. The level of crime is higher in Tbilisi, where 14.7% of
respondents was witnesses of the crime or victims. In Yerevan and Baku
this index is less three-fold, making 4.1% and 3.6%,
respectively. Lala Cholakian, the regional Director of CRRC, mentioned
that the purpose of the program is to expose the possibilities of the
effective research cooperation of the three countries and indicate the
spheres, where the scientific potential of each of the three countries
will be more useful for the universal progress. In 2005, CRRC will
give grants to separate researchers of the South Caucasus and small
research groups. According to Heghine Manasian, Director of the CRRC
Armenian branch, the research program should be dedicated to one of
the countries of the South Caucasus or their comparative analysis with
the application of the data available in other CRRC offices. It is
expected that 15 grants, whose maximum amount makes 2,000 dollars,
will be given.