Mediamax Interviews British Diplomat On Relations With South Caucasu

MEDIAMAX INTERVIEWS BRITISH DIPLOMAT ON RELATIONS WITH SOUTH CAUCASUS

Mediamax
May 18 2009
Armenia

An exclusive interview of Mediamax news agency with British Foreign
Office Special Representative for the South Caucasus Brian Fall. Sir
Brian Fall visited Yerevan on May 13-15 and had meetings with the
Armenian president, the foreign and defence ministers, other officials
and NGO members. On 14 May he spoke to a Mediamax correspondent.

[Correspondent] What is your assessment of the internal political
situation in Armenia ahead of the Yerevan mayoral election due on May
31, which the opposition has already described as the "second round"
of last year’s presidential election?

[Fall] We see a lively political debate, which is good. The upcoming
elections for the mayor of the major city are not national political
elections, but as the national parties are involved, they are important
elections. We would like to see them conducted according to the best
international standards. I think it is important for Armenia that,
if it is difficult immediately to score a 100 per cent, there should
be a real sense of progress from one election to the next, so we
would hope that this could be open and fair elections. We hope that
there would be lessons learned from the previous experience and that
we will see a hotly contested, but peacefully contested election.

[Correspondent] Do you believe that if the opposition will be
represented in the city parliament, this can become a start for the
dialogue between the Armenian authorities and the opposition?

[Fall] I think that is a question for Armenians to decide, not
for visitors to decide. There are political systems, including the
British one, based on "winner takes all", and there are systems much
more in kind of coalitional or proportional representation. One is not
necessarily better or worse than the other. Surely, the opposition has
an important role to play in any city or national government, whether
as part of the coalition, or whether as part of what we would call in
Britain the loyal opposition, which means loyal to the Queen, not to
the government. And I think it’s very much for Armenia to decide where
in the spectrum of democratic possibilities is the best for Armenia.

[Correspondent] The mediators have definite hopes that the meeting
between Armenian and Azerbaijani presidents, due in June in St
Petersburg, may become a "breakthrough". Do you share that optimism?

[Fall] I am an optimist. And a good friend of mine is perhaps the
most optimistic of the three co-chairs. Let’s hope that this year
there will be all the possibilities that they are. But it has been
very frustrating over the last two or three years – people walked
almost to the top of the hill and then it has gone down again. And
we need that extra push and we hope very much that that push will
be forthcoming on this occasion. The responsibility is primarily on
the two presidents, but the co-chairs need to show that they act on
behalf of the international community.

There are some people who say that the form is wrong and that it
should be done some other way. We don’t agree with that. We think
that the co-chairs are doing a good job and that the two presidents
have the opportunity to rise to a very important challenge and really
reach out now and find a common ground. So we hope for the best.

[Correspondent] Do you believe that Turkey has really renounced the
policy of preconditions and that Armenian-Turkish relations may be
regulated in a reasonable timeframe?

[Fall] There is an agreement between the Turkish and the Armenian
governments. And there is a timetable for the next steps, which
we hope will be followed. The scenes, judging by the press reports
from Baku [Brian Fall means the press coverage of the visit of the
Turkish prime minister to Baku on May 13 – Mediamax], to these
differences of interpretation, we have an English expression "a
storm in a teacup", and I hope that it will turn out to be that:
nothing more fundamentally important. But I think we’ll obviously
need now to renew contacts between the sides. I have not seen the
text of the agreement, I don’t know if anybody is accusing anybody
of going outside the agreement. That will be in the first place with
the two sides, and from outside there has been help, and the Swiss
government was involved in the past. That may be necessary.

We welcome what we have heard about the agreement. We want to see an
improvement in the Turkish-Armenian relations. It would be nice to
have the border opening, it would be nice to have bilateral talking
on a number of difficult points, and at the same time, we need to
make sure that we get this very serious, potentially very serious
dispute over Nagornyy Karabakh peacefully resolved, because it has
the potential to grow to a great real problem.

[Correspondent] There are opinions voiced that normalization of
Armenian-Turkish relations will change the entire geopolitical
situation in the South Caucasus. Are you of the same opinion?

[Fall] The context of the moment is abnormal because there are lots of
issues: many difficulties between Armenia and Turkey, difficulties
between Armenia and Azerbaijan, differences between Russia and
Georgia. It is difficult to envisage. The three countries of the South
Caucasus working together as members of a very important region, that
would be to economic and social benefit of the people who live in those
three countries. And that is what we would very much like to see. If
the border is opened, this will be a green light and a very positive
signal psychologically. So we hope very much that that goes ahead.

[Correspondent] We always heard that this region of the South Caucasus
has always been a place where the interests of great powers were always
clashing. But today, looking at these processes of Nagornyy Karabakh
peace settlement and Armenian-Turkish dialogue, we see that the United
States, Russia and the EU approach them from the same positions. What
was the reason for such good cooperation among the great powers?

[Fall] Certainly, the co-chairs work together effectively. But the
co-chairs are not the most senior political officials in their
respective countries. I think that there is Russian interest in
seeing a peaceful settlement, which is exactly what the Western
powers would like to see. Settlement of Nagornyy Karabakh would
have implications for Russian involvement with Armenia for a longer
term. There would most certainly have to be international at least
peace observation mission to make it sure that the territories from
which Armenia withdrew will not become militarized and used against
Nagornyy Karabakh. So there will be an international role there
and agreement will have to be made on precisely how that should
be done. In the old days people said "no co-chairs, no neighbours"
[Means that peacekeepers should not represent US, Russia, France, or
Turkey – Mediamax]. Now, maybe that is still the right formula. But
we don’t know whether the Russians are committed to it. We don’t
know whether US-Russian relations in the new US administration are
really going to build on the "reset" button. If they do, we will be
very happy. And I think the effect on the region here will be to see
cooperation where previously there was a sense of zero sum game. So,
let’s hope that the things that are encouraging now will look the
same by the end of the year.

[Correspondent] In political circles of Armenia there is an opinion,
according to which Great Britain does not have any special interests
in Armenia, especially if we draw parallels with Azerbaijan. How
justified is this opinion and do you see opportunities for deepening
the Armenian-British relations?

[Fall] I think people underestimate what is happening here – we
have active British Council programs, we have Chevening scholars,
John Smith Fellowships, etc. There is some tendency in Armenia to
say that that if we have chocolate cake in Baku, there should be
chocolate cake in Yerevan as well. But you can’t do that. For instance,
Britain’s relations with the Netherlands and with Belgium are both
very close. But nobody says why you don’t have three of these in
Netherlands and only one in Belgium. What’s wrong? That’s not the
way relations develop.

We have economical-commercial interests in Azerbaijan for obvious
geological reasons. We are, I think the major foreign investors
in Azerbaijan, it’s a huge commitment which brings in it the active
involvement of lot of British companies. And of course, it matters how
full the plane is and how often it flies. But this isn’t something
that Armenia should see as a sign that we politically are favouring
one party against another. In a non-governmental way, the people
on the plane aren’t there because the British government put them
on the plane, they are there to make some money, and as relations
develop, business, economic, cultural, so the plane gets fuller and
fuller. But it is much a question of the private sector, and not the
government. There is no way that the British government could sign
a paper and say next year we will send you more people than we did
this year. That is not the way it works. It is understandable that
you are close neighbours and you look at each other and say why not
me? The answer is that we are trying to develop relations with each
of these important countries to the extent that it makes a good sense
to our businessmen, to our cultural people. And the net result will
be progressively more this year than over the past few years. I have
no doubt about it. But it is impossible to conduct relations on the
basis of equal slices of a chocolate cake.

Israeli Arabs Blast Plan For PA To Cede Temple Mount Sovereignty

ISRAELI ARABS BLAST PLAN FOR PA TO CEDE TEMPLE MOUNT SOVEREIGNTY

Ha’aretz
May 21 2009
Israel

The northern branch of the Islamic Movement blasted Thursday a proposal
for the Palestinian Authority to relinquish sovereignty over the
Temple Mount in exchange for international Islamic control of the site.

"The proposal to transfer sovereignty to a third state stems from the
attempted to internationalize the Al Aqsa Mosque, and actually this is
a proposal whose significance is the continuation of the occupation;
therefore, such a proposal must be aggressively rejected," the Israeli
Arab group said in a statement.

Palestinian sources have said the PA would accept the management of the
site by the Saudi-based Organization of Islamic Conference, whose 57
member states include Iran, as part of a final-status peace agreement.

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Sheikh Ra’ad Salah, the head of the Islamic Movement, has called for
in the past an intifada to "save" the Al-Aqsa Mosque, which sits atop
the Temple Mount.

The movement’s statement continued: "No one has the right to
determine the future of the Al Aqsa Mosque, which has Islamic, Arab
and Palestinian implications, and full Islamic sovereignty over the
mosque will only be implemented when the occupation of Jerusalem and
the mosque is lifted,"

The OIC is signatory to the Arab Peace plan, a initiative that would
provide the Palestinians with backing from all Muslim states toward
a historic compromise with Israel in a peace agreement.

According to the Temple Mount proposal, the Western Wall and the Jewish
Quarter of Jerusalem’s Old City will be under Israeli sovereignty,
while the Muslim, Christian and Armenian quarters would be transfered
to Palestinian sovereignty. Israel objects to Palestinian sovereignty
over the Armenian Quarter.

There is also a dispute building over the Western Wall; the PA plans
to demand that Israeli sovereignty applies only to part of the wall.

Nabil Abu Rudeina, spokesman for Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas,
said that if Israel opts for peace and has a leader who is willing to
make genuine compromises, a peace agreement could be reached within
three to six months.

Meanwhile, Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak announced Wednesday that
he was canceling his planned visit to Washington next week due to
the death of his grandson.

Abbas is expected to meet U.S. President Barack Obama next week. Abu
Rudeina said Abbas will ask for clarifications on the U.S. stance on
negotiations with Israel.

"During the meetings with U.S. special envoy George Mitchell, we made
it clear that there must be an Israeli recognition of the principle
of two states for two peoples and a freezing of construction in the
settlements," Abu Rudeina said.

"We will hear what happened during the meeting between [Prime Minister
Benjamin] Netanyahu and Obama on the Palestinian question and what
the American plans are for the coming months. Abu Mazen [Abbas] will
consult with Saudi Arabia, Egypt and Jordan to formulate a position
ahead of the meeting. In any case, the result of the negotiations
between Israel and the PA must be clear: the establishment of a
Palestinian state within the 1967 borders, whose capital is East
Jerusalem," the senior PA official said.

‘Israel must accept responsibility for creation of refugee problem’

With regards to the right of return, the Palestinians reiterated
their traditional position: Israel must acknowledge responsibility
for the creation of the refugee problem.

Abu Rudeina says the Palestinian position on the issue is identical
to that of the Arab Peace Initiative: a just and agreed solution to
the refugee question, on the basis of UN Resolution 194.

But other Palestinian sources say the PA will probably agree to an
arrangement under which refugees will have the right of return to
the Palestinian state, with Israel agreeing to absorb up to 100,000
Palestinians within its borders under family reunification.

Regarding borders, Abu Rudeina said that the principle of territorial
exchange was agreed, although there are disagreements over the exact
areas. He said that in the most recent talks the Palestinians agreed
to an exchange involving 1.2 percent of West Bank land, while then
prime minister Ehud Olmert demanded 6.5 percent.

"But the issue also depends on quality. If [Israel] receives land in
the Jerusalem area or Bethlehem we will not agree to receive desert
land in exchange," Abu Rudeina said.

He told Haaretz that the Arab states are willing to agree to
peace. "The problem is that now Israel is unwilling. They used to tell
us that with Olmert involved in corruption the negotiations can’t be
completed with him. Now they say Netanyahu will be restricted because
of his coalition problems. Every time it’s a different story. Perhaps
that’s why 15 years have passed and we haven’t seen peace."

More Profound Cooperation Between Armenian And Iran Discussed In Yer

MORE PROFOUND COOPERATION BETWEEN ARMENIAN AND IRAN DISCUSSED IN YEREVAN

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
21.05.2009 15:55 GMT+04:00

Secretary of Armenia’s National Security Council Artur Baghdasaryan
met with the Ambassador of Iran to Armenia Seyed Ali Saghaiyan on
May 21 in Yerevan. Officials discussed issues of more intensive
cooperation between Armenia and Iran. They stressed necessity of
developing and strengthening of ties between national security
council of the two countries. The sides discussed issues related
to construction of railways and Armenia-Iran oil pipeline, as well
as cooperation in energy sphere. Secretary of Armenia’s National
Security Council and Iranian diplomat touched upon the process of
normalization of Armenian-Turkish relations and the settlement of
Nagorno Karabakh conflict . Seyed Ali Saghaiyan thanked the Armenian
side for organizing the "Security and Stability in the Caucasus and
around" international conference, saying that the event has become a
serious step towards peace and stability in the region, press office
of the National Security Council reports.

Seven Parties Withdraw From Iraqi Kurdistan Parliamentary Election

SEVEN PARTIES WITHDRAW FROM IRAQI KURDISTAN PARLIAMENTARY ELECTION

Peyamner news agency website
May 18 2009
Arbil, Iraq

Seven political entities have announced their withdrawal from Kurdistan
Region’s parliamentary election, pro Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP)
Peyamner news agency website reported on 17 May.

Peyamner website reported the official in charge of the offices of the
Independent High Electoral Commission in Arbil, Handren Muhammad Salih,
as saying: "Seven political entities have forwarded a formal request
to the Independent High Electoral Commission for their withdrawal
from the election." The website did not indicate the reason for the
parties’ withdrawal from the election.

The website reported the seven entities which have withdrawn from
the election as follows:

"1. Kurdistan Conservative Party

2. Christian Assembly for Brotherhood

3. Toilers’ Independent Party

4. Democratic House of the Two Rivers Party (Bayt al-Nahrayn)

5. The National Party

6. The Independent White List

7. Shal Akob Murad from the Armenian Quota [as published]"

Elsewhere, Sbay website of Wisha media company quoted the head of the
High Electoral Commission in Kurdistan Region, Ali Qadir, as saying
that six political entities have withdrawn from the election, without
mentioning the names of the parties. Qadir added: "The [withdrawing]
parties have decided to run for the parliamentary elections [in
coalition] with other political parties," according to Sbay.

Mensoian: The Roadmap To Normalization Is A Roadmap To Oblivion For

MENSOIAN: THE ROADMAP TO NORMALIZATION IS A ROADMAP TO OBLIVION FOR ARMENIA
Michael Mensoian

8/the-roadmap-to-normalization-is-a-roadmap-to-obl ivion-for-armenia/
May 18, 2009

The "roadmap to normalization" is a roadmap to oblivion for
Armenia. Secrecy in the ongoing negotiations may be necessary, but
given the advantage that Turkey enjoys and the strident comments
made by Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, President Abdullah Gul,
and the former Minister of Foreign Affairs Ali Babacan, the only
conclusion that can be reached is that the negotiations are not
beneficial for Armenia.

Turkey still persists in demanding preconditions which, if accepted,
would be a tacit admission by Yerevan that genocide recognition and
Nagorno-Karabagh’s continued independence will not stand in the way
of normalizing relations. For sure, Turkey will not budge on the
genocide issue and will not forsake its ally Azerbaijan. Both Ankara
and Washington know that Russia is standing in the wings ready to do
whatever it can to bring Azerbaijan within its orbit. The Nabucco gas
pipeline project has evidently been approved by all participating
nations. Eventually, gas supplies from Central Asia will be pumped
beneath the Caspian Sea to be sent through this pipeline to the
European Union. Armenia will have no part to play in this new economic
endeavor. Having a fairly accurate sense as to what normalization
may cost Armenia, what are the benefits that Yerevan believes it
may obtain?

The opening of the border will result in a significant increase
in traffic. Unfortunately, it will primarily be a one-way flow of
goods from Turkey to Armenia. How Armenia, with its US $18 billion
Gross Domestic Product (GDP), expects to compete with Turkey’s US
$800 billion GDP is difficult to imagine. Eventually, Armenia will
not only become part of the Turkish domestic market, but it will be
dependent upon Turkey for much of its manufactured goods. A related
development could well be a rise in unemployment and a decrease in
productivity since Turkey is better positioned to expand its production
facilities and attract the necessary labor. In addition, a real
possibility exists for Armenian entrepreneurs to migrate to Turkey,
where economic opportunity should be greater than in Armenia. Given
the volume and variety of goods stamped "made in Turkey" that will
flood the Armenian market, there will be an imbalance of payment
situation-with Turkey becoming the creditor nation. There are few
goods or commodities produced in Armenia that are not produced in
greater quantities in Turkey, which limits any significant flow of
traffic from Armenia to Turkey. Is this what Yerevan believes will be
a benefit derived from normalization? Within a relatively short time,
the Armenian dram would most likely lose its value as the currency
of choice, being replaced by the Turkish lira.

Any potential the Armenian economy currently has would be limited
since its development will be determined by Turkish entrepreneurs
who will be influenced by Ankara’s political objectives vis-a-vis
Yerevan. Normalization will not remove the existing impediments
hampering the Armenian economy. Of greater importance, potential
initiatives that are vital if Armenia’s economy is to develop will
be hampered by its economic domination by Turkey.

Politically, Armenia will retain its independent status. However, its
initiatives in the international arena will be influenced by Ankara. To
borrow a term from the distant past, the president of Armenia will be
no better than a satrap. With respect to Nagorno-Karabagh (historic
Artsakh), its future will be bleak. As a precondition, Armenia is
being asked to sacrifice the de facto independence of its brothers
and sisters. This would be a travesty should Yerevan agree. The 7,000
azatamartiks (freedom-fighters) are no less martyrs than the 1,500,000
innocent Armenian men, women, and children who were slaughtered during
the genocide carried out by the Ottoman Turkish government and the
Ataturk Turkish government. Can there be any justification for Yerevan
abandoning Karabagh? For abandoning the martyrs of the genocide?

In 15 years, the Karabaghtsis have overcome obstacles that many thought
were insurmountable. They have developed a democratic government
while Azerbaijan maintains a Soviet-style autocratic government. In
1923, Armenia had no say when the Bolsheviks forced the separation
of historic Armenian Artsakh and Nakhichevan to Azerbaijan. To allow
Artsakh to revert to Azeri control again is unconscionable. This may
well be the moment when it is absolutely necessary for Armenia to
decide whether it will become a compliant neighbor or accept the
challenge, daunting as it may be, to protect its future and the
independence of Artsakh as well. One may say this is easier said
than done. Agreed. However, normalization will reduce Armenia to a
vassal state. How will this differ from the Soviet Socialist Republic
of Armenia?

No one should fail to see the duplicitous nature of United States
foreign policy with respect to Armenia. The present Democrat
administration supports Turkey’s entry into the European Union. It
suggests that Turkey should have a role in bringing the Karabagh
conflict to an end. It supports the territorial integrity of
Azerbaijan. And just recently, aid to Armenia in the budget year for
2010 was reduced while aid to Azerbaijan was increased. As it is said,
when you know that the cards are stacked against you, only the fool
continues to play.

Leaders of our advocacy organizations have misread the political
landscape once again. The emotional issue of genocide recognition
is not the battle that should be fought at this time. While the
Armenian Caucus is working diligently to line up additional support
for the genocide resolution, the "war" for Armenia’s future and
that of Karabagh is being lost in the international arena. It is
conceivable in the Machiavellian world of international politics for
the genocide resolution to be passed by the United States Congress
and reluctantly signed by President Obama, accompanied by an innocuous
statement that Turkey would condemn with the proper amount of public
indignation. Washington and Ankara could well have discussed this
possibility notwithstanding the usual pressure from the pro-Turkish
lobbying organizations. The price Turkey would extract from the
Obama Administration would be its support in the ongoing negotiations
with Armenia and the return of Karabagh to Azerbaijan. This would be
Turkey’s reward while the geostrategic interests of the United States
would be served.

With limited political capital, the Armenian advocacy organization
in the United States must speak with a unified voice and pick the
single battle it will fight. Genocide recognition is not the battle
that should be fought at this time. The efforts of the Congressional
Armenian Caucus must be utilized in more effective ways to bring
immediate economic and military benefits to Armenia and to Karabagh.

How the negotiations leading to normalization will eventually play out
can only be inferred from the public statements by Turkish leaders and
the foreign policy of the United States. Once Armenia has accepted the
conditions necessary for normalization, or whatever euphemistic term
that may be substituted, Yerevan will have no valid reason to believe
that Ankara will be motivated or even have the need to consider the
legitimate issues that have separated the two countries. And what of
those countries that have recognized the Armenian Genocide? Will they
support Armenia, once normalization has been achieved, as it seeks
to have Turkey consider the legitimate claims requiring restitution,
reparation, rectification, and yes, recognition. Definitely not.

Normalization is the end of Hai Tahd and it is the end for the justice
that generations of Armenians have worked to achieve. Let’s not say
this is a pessimistic view because it doesn’t comport with what we want
to believe. It is an objective assessment of the situation based on
the available evidence. Let us all hope that Yerevan will realize that
normalization is not a panacea for the Armenian nation. If anything, it
is detrimental to Armenia’s national interests and its future security.

http://www.hairenik.com/weekly/2009/05/1

A Handshake Shakes A Region

A HANDSHAKE SHAKES A REGION

Christian Science Monitor
ml
May 19 2009

Turkey’s warming with Armenia stirs up ethnic and energy issues in
the strategic Caucasus.

Make one move in the unstable Caucasus region, and a host of difficult
and far-reaching issues get tripped over – ethnic tensions, Russian
dominance, and competition over oil and gas.

So the world discovered when Russia’s military clashed with tiny
Georgia’s last August. And so it’s discovering again under far more
welcome circumstances: a long-awaited warming between Turkey and its
Caucasus neighbor, Armenia.

Yes, even such rapprochement can stir up this region, sandwiched
between the Black and Caspian seas and bordered by Russia to the
north and Turkey and Iran to the south.

Over the past few weeks, energy-rich Azerbaijan has turned up the
flame under this geographic cauldron. It was furious with Turkey for
agreeing in April to a "road map" to normal relations with Armenia,
which backs a separatist Armenian enclave within Azerbaijan called
Nagorno-Karabakh. The area was the site of a bloody war in the early
1990s after the Soviet empire broke up, and has since become the oldest
"frozen conflict" in the south Caucasus. Armenia-supported separatists
hold additional Azeri territory outside the enclave.

So Azerbaijan has used the only leverage it has – oil and gas – to
influence Turkey. It’s an influence that extends even to European
energy goals.

Situated on the western coast of the Caspian Sea, Azerbaijan serves as
a gateway to the sea region’s fossil fuels. It funnels oil to Western
countries via a pipeline that avoids Russia and winds through Georgia
to the Turkish Mediterranean coast. It also exports gas via a pipeline
that ends in Turkey.

Azerbaijan expects to significantly increase gas exports in another
five to seven years and has been counting on extending gas pipeline
delivery to Western European markets. Similarly, Europe has been
looking forward to an extended pipeline – particularly a planned one
from Turkey to Austria – to give it more energy independence from
Russia. But that east-west line – called Nabucco – has a history
of delays.

Unless the Turks make resolving Nagorno-Karabakh part of normalizing
ties with Armenia (and Armenia objects to this), the longer gas
pipeline will end as a pipe dream – or so the Azeris hinted. They
threatened to withdraw Turkey’s status as "most favored customer"
and as the main Azeri export route for oil and gas. There’s Russia
as an alternative, the Azeris warned.

Azerbaijan has a self-interest in a diversified export energy
market, but its overture to Russia is more than bluff. The Azeris and
Russians recently signed a memo of understanding about gas sales. The
concern is that this could go further and that Azerbaijan, fed up
with delays over a gas pipeline to Europe, would make Russia its gas
patron. Because supplies are not enough to support two gas pipelines,
European governments are now pushing to realize their dream of a gas
line that reaches them.

If Russia eventually gets the gas deal, it not only locks in energy
supplies, it also solidifies its leverage over the Caucasus – already
enhanced by its occupation of Georgia’s two breakaway republics.

Multiple fears are at work in the Caucasus: at the local level about
the preservation of ethnic culture, at the national level about
territorial integrity, and at the international level about regional
influence and access to energy markets.

This calls for a sophisticated approach that seeks to build trust
in all these areas. Earlier this month, international mediators
for Nagorno-Karabakh quietly brought the presidents of Armenia and
Azerbaijan together to talk on the sidelines of a conference in
Prague. In June, the two presidents are expected to meet again in
Russia. These are positive steps.

Last week, Turkey’s Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan visited
Azerbaijan and Russia to try to reduce the simmering ethnic and energy
tensions in the region. He made progress with Russian Prime Minister
Vladimir Putin on a new north-south Russian-Turkish gas pipeline
that would supply Israel and other countries. That, plus renewing
a contract for Russian gas supplies to Turkey, should help reassure
Moscow of its continued energy influence.

But when Mr. Erdogan, on his visit to Azerbaijan, gave in to the demand
that Turkey not reopen its borders with Armenia until Nagorno-Karabakh
is resolved, he reignited flames in Armenia. Some speculate that the
normalization process is now at risk.

This region is too small, the stakes too high, to separate politics
from energy. Both will have to be handled at the same time, if perhaps
on different tracks.

http://www.csmonitor.com/2009/0519/p08s01-comv.ht

NATO drills in Georgia increase tension – Russia’s Medvedev

NATO drills in Georgia increase tension – Russia’s Medvedev

19:3016/05/2009

BARVIKHA (Moscow Region), May 16 (RIA Novosti) – NATO drills in Georgia
have increased tensions and have not contributed to international
security, the Russian president said after talks with Italy’s prime
minister on Saturday.

"I think they will add nothing to the bank of pan-European security but
will on the contrary increase tensions," Dmitry Medvedev told
journalists.

The Cooperative Longbow/Cooperative Lancer 2009 command-and-staff
exercise, which Moscow has criticized as unhelpful in the wake of last
summer’s armed conflict between Russia and Georgia over South Ossetia,
runs from May 6 to June 1. NATO said earlier the exercise had been
planned before the Georgia war and was not aimed against Russia.

According to NATO, the drills in Georgia are aimed at improving
interoperability between NATO and partner countries, within the
framework of Partnership for Peace, Mediterranean Dialogue and Istanbul
Cooperation Initiative programs, and will not involve any light or
heavy weaponry. Russia was invited to take part in the exercises, but
declined the opportunity.

Over 1,300 troops from 19 NATO member or ally states were originally
scheduled to participate, but Kazakhstan, Latvia, Estonia, Moldova,
Serbia and Armenia withdrew.

Pope Ends Trip With Mid-East Plea

POPE ENDS TRIP WITH MID-EAST PLEA

BBC NEWS
iddle_east/8051987.stm
2009/05/15 12:32:06 GMT

Pope Benedict XVI has finished his eight-day pilgrimage to the
Middle East, calling for an end to fighting between Israel and the
Palestinians.

At a farewell ceremony, attended by Israeli leaders, he called for
"no more bloodshed, no more fighting".

He said the Holocaust "must never be forgotten or denied".

Israeli President Shimon Peres thanked him for his visit, calling it a
"profound demonstration of the enduring dialogue" between Christians
and Jews.

He particularly highlighted the Pope’s statement about the Holocaust
never being denied, saying it carried "substantive and special weight".

" I prayed for a future in which the peoples of the Holy Land can
live together in peace and harmony " Pope Benedict XVI "It touched
our hearts and minds."

The Pope, in reply, described the "powerful impressions" he had
gathered during his visit.

Meeting Holocaust survivors at Yad Vashem in Jerusalem was "one of
the most solemn moments" for him.

"Those deeply moving encounters brought back memories of my visit
three years ago to the death camp at Auschwitz, where so many Jews
– mothers, fathers, husbands, wives, brothers, sisters, friends –
were brutally exterminated under a godless regime."

The "appalling chapter of history must never be forg otten or denied",
he said.

During his visit, the Pope was criticised by commentators and
politicians for failing to express sufficient remorse for the Holocaust
and over his membership of the Hitler Youth as a teenager.

Palestinian homeland

Addressing the Middle East conflict, the Pope pleaded for an end to
violence: "No more bloodshed, no more fighting, no more terrorism,
no more war."

He reiterated the call for a two-state solution, as Israel had the
right to exist, and the Palestinians "have a right to a sovereign
independent homeland".

He also spoke about the wall built by Israeli authorities to separate
Israel from Palestinian territories.

"As I passed alongside it, I prayed for a future in which the peoples
of the Holy Land can live together in peace and harmony without the
need for such instruments of security and separation."

On his final day in Jerusalem the Pope visited the Church of the Holy
Sepulchre, believed to stand upon the site where Jesus was crucified.

He told pilgrims that the "bitter fruits of recrimination and hostility
can be overcome".

The Pope was greeted at the church, one of the holiest shrines in
Christendom, by representatives of the Catholic, Orthodox, Coptic,
Armenian and Ethiopian churches, which jointly administer the site.

He knelt in front of the Stone of the Anointing, where Jesus’ body
is said to have been prepared for burial after the cr ucifixion,
and prayed in the tomb where Christians believe his body was interred
for the three days before the resurrection.

He then led prayers in the church, which he said would conclude his
pilgrimage, telling the congregation not to lose hope.

The Pope’s busy tour has included visits to sites sacred to all three
monotheistic religions.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/world/m

Central Bank Of Armenia Puts Into Circulation "Zbigniew Boniek" Silv

CENTRAL BANK OF ARMENIA PUTS INTO CIRCULATION "ZBIGNIEW BONIEK" SILVER COMMEMORATIVE COINS

ARKA
May 14, 2009

YEREVAN, May 14. /ARKA/. The Central Bank of Armenia issued 50,000
"Zbigniew Boniek" silver commemorative coins under "The Kings of
Football" international program, ARKA News Agency was told at CBA
on Thursday.

The nominal value of each coin is 100 AMD. The coins are issued with
color inks.

The coin has been minted by the Polish Mintand designed by Robert
Kotowich.

A crown with "KINGS OF FOOTBALL" legend is on the obverse of the coin,
which is guarded by two lions. A football is underneath the crown.

The value of the coin is on the obverse as well with the national
emblem of Armenia underneath. The year of issue – 2009 – is specified
on both sides of the national emblem ("20" in the left and "09"
in the right).

Portrait of Zbigniew Boniek is at the coin reverse with coloured
Polish flag in the background and a football in the left.

Boniek’s signature is in the bottom of the coin. The coin is made of
silver of 925±5 probation, with 38.61±0.15mm diameter and weighs
28.28±0.25grams. Zbigniew Boniek is a Polish football player, coach,
sports functionary.

His professional carrier started in Zawisza Bydgoszcz and continued
in more famous Widzew, one of best teams of Polish football. Boniek was

named by Pelé as one of the 125 Greatest Living Footballers.

He transferred to Italian Juventus in 1982 and played in the main
teams at once. He played in a pair with Michel Platini himself. Boniek
became a winner of Cup Winners’ Cup and the European Super Cup in
1984 and the European Cup in 1985.

Boniek represented Poland in 80 internationals and scored 24
goals.

Presidents Of Armenia, Azerbaijan Have Not Touched Upon The Withdraw

PRESIDENTS OF ARMENIA, AZERBAIJAN HAVE NOT TOUCHED UPON THE WITHDRAWAL OF TROOPS

armradio.am
12.05.2009 10:49

According to some statements, During teh meeting in prague the
Presidnet sof Armenia and Azerbaijan discussed the issue of withdrawal
of troops from the territories controlled by the Defense Army of
the Nagorno Karabakh Republic. Asked to comment on the statement,
the Head of Media Relations Department of the Ministry of Foreign
Affairs Tigran Balayan said:

"The issue of withdrawal of troops from the above-mentioned territories
has not been touched upon during the May 7th meeting of the Armenian
and Azerbaijani Presidents in Prague. The discussions mainly focused
on the status of Nagorno Karabakh, and it is natural, since it is a
central issue in the negotiations on the Artsakh issue.