FAR Executive Director Delivers Sts. Vartanantz Day Keynote Speech i

FOR IMMEDIATE PRESS RELEASE

Fund for Armenian Relief
630 Second Avenue, New York, NY 10016
Contact: Edina N. G. Bobelian
Tel: (212) 889-5150; Fax: (212) 889-4849
E-mail: [email protected]
Website:

February 9, 2005
____________________

The following is the address delivered by Mr. Garnik Nanagoulian,
Executive Director of the Fund for Armenian Relief, on the occasion of
the Vartanantz Day commemoration at St. Vartan Cathedral in New York, NY
on February 3, 2005.

It is a privilege to speak to you today, on this special day, when we
celebrate the life of one of the most legendary Armenians, Vartan
Sparabet, and his valiant warriors, who stood up to an overwhelmingly
superior army of the Persian Empire. They faced the battle with courage,
and conviction, and dignity because they were defending the right of the
Armenian people to worship as they had chosen, to protect their
Christianity. In effect, to protect the very existence of the Armenian
people.

Vartanantz has since become a symbol of Armenian national aspiration, a
source of spiritual strength and resilience that has proven to be so
vital in confronting the numerous challenges that our nation has faced
for the centuries thereafter.

We celebrate a heroic event of the history of our nation, and we
celebrate it at the Armenian House of worship that proudly holds the
name of St. Vartan. Every morning crossing Second Avenue at 34th Street
I never stop admiring the beauty and majesty of this Armenian House of
worship. It proudly stands right in the middle of one of the most
powerful centers of the World. Busy with our daily routines we very
often take it for granted.

For me the St. Vartan Cathedral is not just a monument to one of
Armenia’s martyrs, it is yet another testimony to the fact that the holy
right and heritage of the Armenian people has been preserved through the
centuries. It is a testament to the continuing legacy of Vartanantz.

The spirit of Vartan lives today with the Knights and Daughters of
Vartan, an organization that is so proudly represented here tonight. An
organization that was established by visionary Armenians to preserve the
national, religious, and cultural heritage of the Armenian people.

Every period in Armenia’s history brought new challenges to our people,
and through it all, the spirit of Vartan persevered:

The spirit of Vartan remained alive with all those who came together to
help our fellow countrymen and women during the tragic days of the
earthquake in Gyumri and Spitak in 1988, as well as to support
Hayasdantsis in their struggle for an independent Armenia.

The spirit of Vartan remained alive with our brothers and sisters who
made the ultimate sacrifice to liberate Artsakh for all Armenians.

This year, in 2005, we are going to commemorate the 90th anniversary of
the Armenian Genocide. We come together as a nation to remind the world
that we never forget. We will make our voice louder and louder, stronger
and stronger until justice prevails.

Whenever we celebrate a glorious event in Armenia’s history, an event of
the past, it gives us the opportunity to reflect, to think about the
challenges of today and of the future.

It is amazing to me how we, Armenians will unite anywhere in the world
and in the homeland when we commemorate our past, or when we face an
imminent threat. However, as ironical as it may sound, the PRESENT, the
time we are living through NOW, does not seem to inspire us, does not
seem to ignite our will, does not seem to unite us in dealing with the
routine and day-to-day challenges of nation-building.

In the battle of Avarayr in the 5th century, the spirit of Vartan could
express itself only in two ways – live or die. In the end, the Armenians
chose to die rather than give up their holy rights, the essence of their
identity.

Today the spirit of Vartan could be expressed in many ways.

I am honored to be here tonight representing the preeminent Armenian
charitable organizations, the Fund for Armenian Relief, where each day I
witness different manifestations of the Vartanantz spirit.

The members of the FAR family have chosen to become soldiers for a new
Armenia by supporting an orphan in Gyumri, helping a single mother in
Syunik, giving hope to an elderly woman in Vanadzor, creating an
opportunity for young people, and in many, many other ways. What better
cause to fight for today than building an Armenia of our dreams!

Let me tell you about a shared philosophy within FAR’s family or donor
community – something I have learned and believe in. It is as simple as
it is powerful:
We are all Armenians. Whether in the Diaspora or in the homeland, we
are all Armenians. We have a common faith, a common culture, a common
history. Through all the generations, perhaps there are other
influences, but what unites us all, is our shared heritage. And we are
all proud to be Armenian. We are all deeply connected, as Armenians, we
are family. And as an Armenian family, we have a duty to help the
members of our family in the struggling homeland. It is a duty, an
obligation. An obligation as a choice, a choice you make for the people
you love.

Think about this: for almost 7 centuries, 700 years, Armenians did not
even have a chance to be responsible for their lives. Except for a
brief period after the World War I, almost 28 (28!) generations of
Armenians never had the luxury of self-rule, of self-government.

And guess what? We are the lucky ones. We, who simply happen to live
at the end of the 20th and the beginning of the 21st centuries, we
received a gift from God – an independent homeland. What a historic
opportunity for all of us to make that country the most envious place in
the World!

And we CAN make it happen. There is nothing that could prevent us. We
are a great nation, a great people: not only we have defeated all the
threats, not only we have preserved our national, religious and cultural
heritage, but we, Armenians – have been making the entire world
profitable by contributing generously to almost any advancement in the
history of mankind. There is nothing we can not do. We must believe
this.

In 1952, in his state of the Union speech, President Truman appealed for
unity and told the nation, this nation: “The only thing that can defeat
us is our state of mind. We can lose if we falter”

I believe, the same applies to Armenians today – the only thing that
could defeat us is our own state of mind. And nothing could defeat us,
if we try to illuminate the little Vartan in each of us. He is always
there with us: we just need to call on him more often.

I believe, the legacy of Vartanantz continues to teach us today, like
never before, to stay vigilant, not to allow to be overwhelmed by the
virus of apathy and complacency.

Today like never before, when most of the visible threats seemed to be
diminished, we have to find strength and inspiration from the Vartanantz
legacy and come together as a nation with our Church to double – triple
our efforts in strengthening our communities in the Diaspora, and more
importantly, to empower Armenians in Armenia to build a vital homeland.

I was on a plane returning from Armenia on my recent visit as the new
Executive Director of the Fund for Armenian Relief. An elegant, aged
lady was sitting next to me deeply submerged into her own thoughts. I
asked her if she was leaving Armenia, or just on a visit to see her
loved ones in the U.S. She said, she had left Armenia in 1985, and this
was her first trip to her homeland after it became independent. I asked
for her impressions. She sighed, and lowering her voice down said sadly:
“Well, it’s bad, pretty bad. Our poor people are suffering a lot.”

Then she paused, and continued:
“But you know what – we’ll do it, we’ve been there. It just requires
time, patience, and hard work. I have patience,” she continued, “never
shied away from hard work; as for my time – it’s in God’s hands.”

When we said good-bye at London’s Heathrow airport (she was heading to
LA, I was taking a flight to New York City), she said:
“I am afraid that we in the Diaspora sometimes lose heart over the
political disappointments in Armenia. But we can not do that, we are in
this for a long haul in Armenia. And, more importantly, that’s really
the only choice we’ve got, because Armenia is the only homeland we’ve
got.”

What a remarkable woman! What a bright spirit!

We, at the Fund for Armenian Relief, have been in Armenia for more than
16 years. We have implemented a wide range of humanitarian and
development programs there. Looking back we can proudly say – we have
accomplished a lot. Many of you are FAR family members and are fully
aware of the good work of FAR. We have channeled more than $250 million
dollars of assistance to Armenians, touched the lives of almost every
family in Armenia. And we do see the difference: perhaps not as big as
we want, maybe not as quickly as we want, sometimes with unnecessary
complications and problems, you know. But we know where we are heading.
And when you know your destination it makes it easier to overcome
today’s minor or even big problems.

Because our FAR family members know – we are still at the very beginning
in Armenia’s struggle to build a vital country, a coherent citizenry. We
just help them, we are working hard to empower them with hope and
opportunity to build the foundations for the new Armenia. And we know
these foundations are still being built.

As the old lady in the airplane said – we are in this for a long haul in
Armenia.

Today the stakes of the battle in Armenia are still high. They remind us
of the importance of the continuing resilience and long-term commitment
in helping our brothers and sisters there. That would be in the spirit
of Vartanantz, because it is there, in Armenia, where our future is.
Because it is there, where our roots are. Because this is the land of
Vartan. This is the land I’ve come from. This is the land we have ALL
come from.

We know the challenges are becoming more complex, and we are getting
prepared to meet them with the help of our FAR family – committed and
dedicated Armenians. We get our strength and encouragement from them.

Our members believe in FAR, they are proud of FAR. They know FAR has
proven many times that we accomplish our goals lawfully, transparently
and reliably.

Not only do we help people in need, but many of our social, educational
and healthcare programs contribute to a social ethos of trust, which is
so essential for a productive society.

We contribute to a practical sense of hope and opportunity among
Armenia’s people. Our work tells them that their individual lives mean
something, that in new Armenia every human being counts.

We do not simply free people from their anxieties over meeting their
daily needs. Our work also helps them to become free spiritually, a
critically important thing if we dream to eventually achieve in Armenia
the kind of society that is free, productive, consensual, and humane.

We at FAR, realize how fortunate we are to have a unique chance in our
lifetime to see and know an independent Armenia. This is our chance. It
is time to cast our vote for the future of all Armenians drawing the
lessons from our past.

In fact, it is the only vote we have as Armenians, here, in Diaspora.

By giving our time, donating money, volunteering our services – we cast
our vote for the future of Armenia, for our future, for the future of
generations of Armenians to come.

And maybe our descendants will celebrate us as warmheartedly in the
future as we today celebrate St. Vartan and his valiant warriors.

Thank you very much.
May God bless Armenia and Armenians.

www.farusa.org

ANCA Welcome White House Proposal to Maintain Military Aid Parity

Armenian National Committee of America
888 17th St., NW, Suite 904
Washington, DC 20006
Tel: (202) 775-1918
Fax: (202) 775-5648
E-mail: [email protected]
Internet:

PRESS RELEASE

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
February 8, 2005
Contact: Elizabeth S. Chouldjian
Tel: (202) 775-1918

WHITE HOUSE PROPOSES MAINTAINING PARITY
IN ARMENIA-AZERBAIJAN MILITARY ASSISTANCE

— ANCA Welcomes Recognition of the Role that
Military Aid Parity Plays in Regional Stability

WASHINGTON, DC – In a move welcomed as a contribution to regional
stability and the search for peace, the Bush Administration’s
Fiscal Year (FY) 2006 budget proposal, released yesterday, called
for maintaining parity in military assistance to Armenia and
Azerbaijan, reported the Armenian National Committee of America
(ANCA). This decision represents a break from the last year’s
widely criticized FY 2005 budget request, which, although later
reversed by Congress, initially proposed providing four times more
military aid to Azerbaijan than to Armenia.

“We are gratified that the President’s Fiscal Year 2006 budget
calls for parity in military aid appropriations to Armenia and
Azerbaijan,” said ANCA Executive Director Aram Hamparian. “We
welcome this request as a contribution toward regional peace, and
want to extend our appreciation to Congressman Knollenberg, Senator
McConnell and the other key legislators who impressed upon the
Administration the wisdom of this course of action.”

The budget request includes $5 million in Foreign Military Finance
(FMF) assistance and $750,000 in International Military Education
and Training (IMET) for both Armenia and Azerbaijan. The FY 2006
White House proposal also includes a $55 million earmark for
Armenia, $7 million less than the figure proposed by the
Administration last year, and $20 million less than the actual
assistance appropriated by Congress for 2005. Azerbaijan and
Georgia have been budgeted $35 million and $67 million,
respectively. The overall foreign aid budget for the former Soviet
Union is $482 million, a $74 million reduction from last year.

For the first time, the budget document also made specific
reference to Nagorno Karabagh, citing that a portion of a $48.5
million allocation for Eurasia would include funding for
humanitarian assistance to Nagorno Karabagh.

“We were pleased that the Administration’s request, for the first
time, specifically cited humanitarian aid to Nagorno Karabagh,”
continued Hamparian. “We were, however, troubled by the White
House’s proposed reduction in aid to Armenia. We will, in the
coming weeks and months, work with Congressional appropriators in
support of an increased allocation for Armenia.”

The Foreign Operations Subcommittees of the Senate and House
Appropriation Committees will now review the budget and each draft
their own versions of the FY 2006 foreign assistance bill.

The agreement to maintain parity in U.S. military aid to Armenia
and Azerbaijan was struck between the White House and Congress in
2001, in the wake of Congressional action granting the President
the authority to waive the Section 907 restrictions on aid to
Azerbaijan. The ANCA has vigorously defended this principle,
stressing in correspondence, at senior level meetings, and through
grassroots activism, that a tilt in military spending toward
Azerbaijan would destabilize the region, emboldening the
Azerbaijani leadership to continue their threats to impose a
military solution to the Nagorno Karabagh conflict. More broadly,
the ANCA has underscored that breaching the parity agreement would
reward the leadership of Azerbaijan for walking away from the
OSCE’s Key West peace talks, the most promising opportunity to
resolve the Nagorno Karabagh conflict in nearly a decade. Finally,
failing to respect the parity agreement would, the ANCA has
stressed, undermine the role of the U.S. as an impartial mediator
of the Nagorno Karabagh conflict.

#####

–Boundary_(ID_K7jXzC/1b+8sBK+7RvO6Ow)–

www.anca.org

New Maragha With Old Wounds

NEW MARAGHA WITH OLD WOUNDS

Azg/arm
4 Feb 05

OSCE monitoring Mission Visiting Aghdam

Garik Stepanian, 25, lost his father and home at the age of 12. Today
he lives in Nor Marakha with his wife and two children. Garik’s
fatherdied in a hospital in Armenia where he was taken after being
wounded in a battle in Martakert. He was buried in Aramus village as
the family did not have meansto transport the body to native Maragha.

`Azeris killed many children and old people’, Garik said. He said that
the villagers gather at a monument to the war victims every April 10
and remember the killed relatives.

Since 1992 now Maragha and 5 other villages have been under
Azerbaijanâ=80=99s control. The village had 4.000 people before
enemy’s occupation. Only few hundreds of resettled in Nor Maragha, the
others spread out all over vast Russia.

The OSCE monitoring mission spent few hours at the village on February
2. Head of the village administration, Roma Arustamian, told Emily
Haber, headof the mission, that all the villagers would go back to
their homes if the Azeris leave the village. `When will they leave our
villages? We are waiting to go to our homes and lead a normal life. No
international organization has visitedus for 10 years. Why do they
help the Azeri refugees but neglect us?’, Arustamian was complaining
to Mrs. Haber.

But the monitoring mission had other goals. Though Mrs. Haber told
Arustamian that they will do everything possible to help people, it
was obvious that the European and American `fact-finders’ were not
that interested in, say, 52-year-old Aida Yeremian who left her house,
50 sheep and orchard at the other side of communication line.

The story of every Maragha family is a sad story. Maragha is one of
the painful spots after Karabakh war; many killed and still more
counted missing.

Elmira Sahakian, 57, lost her 21-year-old son and husband. Mrs. Elmira
settled in Nor Maragha with her son and daughter. Her son is the only
one who works in the family.

Zoya Sargsian, 70, lost her three sons, two of them were killed and
the youngest is missing. Her two daughters-in-law left for Russia with
their children, and Mrs. Zoya lives alone waiting to hear her
grandchildren’s voicein the phone from time to time.

Members of the monitoring mission finished reviving the old wounds of
Nor Maragha villagers and continued their search of newly built houses
in their Jeeps.

Before moving on to new regions, the head of the mission called a
short press conference. Answering daily Azg’s question, Emily Haber
said that the Karabakh authorities keep supporting the mission’s
activities and that `we are enabled to carry out our tasks’. She added
that the mission will make a report and will leave it to Minsk group
to deal with.

Tens of former citizens of Chaylu village in Martakert region settled
in Nor Aygestan village. Chaylu has been under Azerbaijan’s occupation
since 1992 now.

The villagers think that the foreigners riding about on Jeeps came
apparently to distribute humanitarian aid. Despite the palpable
poverty the villagers were inviting Finn Vesa Jaako Vasara and
American Luis O’Neal and other members of the mission to their homes.

Chaylu was conquered in June of 1992. Tens died on the battlefield,
around 20 villagers were encircled in Lachin corridor and are counted
missing together with other 200 refugees.

The scene of human tragedy could not leave the OSCE European and
American mission members untouched but they do not have enough time to
go through every live story.

By Tatoul Hakobian in Aghdam-Nor Maragha

Relatives of massacred Armenians win New York life insurance claims

Agence France Presse — English
January 30, 2005 Sunday 5:25 AM GMT

Relatives of massacred Armenians win New York life insurance claims

YEREVAN

Just a kindergartner during the 1915-1917 massacre of Armenians,
Petros Petrosyan, who saw his parents and baby sister killed in the
dying years of the Ottoman Empire, never expected a big Manhattan
life insurance payout.

But Petros knew little of a New York policy his father took out in
those brutal days that could now pay off after nearly a century and
so many generations.

Petros’s daughter-in-law Anaid is trying to cash in on an
extraordinary case that has startled the Manhattan bankers and
thrilled the survivors of a period in history that nearly erased much
of Christian Armenia from the map.

For the New York Life Insurance company has finally pledged to pay
back what it owed to relatives of those killed during one of the
starkest periods of World War I.

“When we found the name of my husband’s grandfather in the insurance
company’s lists, we were surprised and thrilled,” the 50-year-old
Anaid confessed.

“None of us could hope that there would come a day when the victims
and their families could reclaim at least a straw from the haystack
we lost in west Armenia,” she added.

According to a US court ruling of July 30, 2004, the New York Life
Insurance would have to honor its obligations to all who can prove
their blood ties to those named in the company’s lists.

Armenia’s justice ministry has arranged for a group of lawyers to
help those seeking to apply for the compensation to put together the
required documents and dispatch them to New York before the February
28 deadline.

However, the work launched in September proved hard, with many
survivors having escaped with only clothes on their back, leaving all
documents and insurance policies behind.

“We accept applications from people, we open cases, seek proof in the
archives,” the ministry’s spokesman Ara Sagatelyan said.

Such proof includes birth and marriage certificates, letters,
photographs, and books published in those times and telling of
various families and people.

“As of now over 700 people applied to us, having found their
relatives in the US company’s lists, and only nine of those still had
the policies. There are also cases of people that have the policies
but their names are not listed,” Sagatelyan said.

Over 180 ready applications had already been sent on, he said.

The New York Life Insurance had pledged to pay a total of 20 million
dollars, with the victims’ relatives due to receive 11.9 million,
three million to be handed over to Armenian charity groups, and the
rest given to the Armenian Church.

However, it was not yet clear how much money would be claimed, as
many of those listed perished along with their whole families.

Turkey, which formed the nucleus of the former Ottoman Empire, has
disputed the scale and nature of the killing of Armenians, and railed
against the term “genocide” used by surviving Armenians and their
descendants.

An estimated 1.5 million Armenians are believed to have died between
1915 and 1917 in the last years of the Ottoman empire.

“In refusing to admit the fact of genocide, Turkey also fears that
Armenians would call for compensation of their lost property and
reclaim the money Armenians held in Turkish banks for their heirs,”
Turkey expert Akob Chakryan told AFP.

ANKARA: Turkey can support only Karabakh deal approved by Azerbaijan

Turkey can support only Karabakh deal approved by Azerbaijan – envoy

Anatolia news agency, Ankara
1 Feb 05

BAKU

“Turkey wants good neighbourly relations with Armenia”, Turkey’s
Ambassador to Azerbaijan, Turan Morali, said on Tuesday 1 February .

Morali, who visited Nakhichevan Autonomous Republic, told a press
conference that problems between Turkey and Armenia stemmed from
policies of the current regime (in Armenia) and behaviour of the
Armenian diaspora, and said that good-neighbourly relations could be
established between two countries in case these problems were
solved. “If a friendship and good relationship is to be established,
this should include all the parties. And, this can be achieved by
finding a solution to the controversy between Azerbaijan and Armenia
(Nagornyy Karabakh region of Azerbaijan is under Armenian occupation)
in line with the international laws and in a way acceptable to
Azerbaijan,” said Morali. He noted that Turkey was ready to contribute
to efforts serving this goal.

Morali stressed that Turkey would only back a solution accepted by
Azerbaijan and said: “Turkey can’t accept anything other than this.”
“Establishing good relations with its neighbours, ending its
occupation of Azerbaijani territories and giving up its baseless
claims against Turkey would be in the best interests of Armenia”,
Morali stated.

Morali said that Turkey had always supported Nakhichevan’s efforts to
stand on its own feet, and wanted to further improve its relations
with Nakhichevan.

Second Pan Armenian Film Festival in Armenia on July 12-17, 2005

PRESS RELEASE
January 31, 2005
Embassy of the Republic of Armenia
2225 R Street, NW, Washington, DC, 20008
Tel: 202-319-1976, x. 348; Fax: 202-319-2982
Email: [email protected]; Web:

Second Pan Armenian Film Festival to be held in Armenia on July 12-17, 2005

Second Yerevan International Film Festival “Golden Apricot” will be held in
Yerevan on July 12-17, 2005, and the organizing committee is inviting
directors and their films from around the world, borne of different cultures
and a variety of aesthetics to convene in Yerevan, on the crossroads of
yesterday’s and today’s cultures. The objective of the festival is to
promote cross-cultural understanding, and the main theme will be Crossroads.

The Festival organizers would like to invite entries incorporating the
‘Crossroads’ theme, depicting human experience: the daily lives of ordinary
people, their troubles and joys, their hopes and heartbreaks. There are two
categories for the festival competition: full-length feature films and
documentaries (full length and short). One Grand Prix (Golden Apricot) and
one Special Mention will be presented in each category. Special Award will
be presented for significant contribution into the world cinema.

The festival will have a special competitive section for feature, animation
and documentary films made by filmmakers of Armenian decent. Two Awards will
be presented for the films included in this section. During the Second
Yerevan International Film Festival “Golden Apricot,” the organizing
committee will keep the “Yerevan Premiers” and “Retrospective” sections. The
former will include the best art-house films taken in the latest period, and
the latter will present films made by famous film directors.

The application submission deadline is 31 March 2005. Accepted screening
formats are:
film (35 mm) and video (DV, DVCAM, Beta-SP/PAL). The organizing committee
will not screen films from BETA NTSC or DigiBeta. Accepted preview formats
are VHS (PAL or NTSC). The date of production has to be after July 1, 2003.

The deadline for applications is March 31, 2005. For detailed inquiries and
application forms, please contact Susanna Harutyunyan and Mikayel
Stamboltsyan of the Golden Apricot International Film Festival, Byron
Street, #5, Yerevan, 375009, Armenia, Tel. (+374-1) 564484, email:
[email protected], web:

www.armeniaemb.org
www.gaiff.am.

Founding Presidents of Soviet Successor States: A Comparative Study

TITLE: Founding Presidents of Soviet Successor States: A Comparative Study
SOURCE: Demokratizatsiya 12 no1 133-45 Wint 2004

DAVID C. BROOKER
As the Soviet Union completed its collapse in 1991, in founding
presidents of Soviet successor staes found themselves, sometimes
unexpectedly, leading independent countries. Except for Boris Yeltsin, and
perhaps Nursultan Nazarbayev, these leaders are not well known. Yet, the
fact that they were in positions of authority at a time of great change
meant that they had the potential to greatly influence the political and
economic development of their countries and leave a lasting imprint on their
respective countries. This makes studying their backgrounds, who they were
and where they came from, important.
The leaders covered in this study are: Askar Akaev(FN1) (Kyrgyzstan),
Zviad Gamsakhurdia(FN2) (Georgia), Anatolijs Gorbunovs(FN3) (Latvia), Islam
Karimov(FN4) (Uzbekistan), Leonid Kravchuk(FN5) (Ukraine), Vytautas
Landsbergis(FN6) (Lithuania), Ayaz Mutalibov(FN7) (Azerbaijan), Rakhmon
Nabiyev(FN8) (Tajikistan), Nursultan Nazarbayev(FN9) (Kazakhstan),
Saparmurad Niyazov(FN10) (Turkmenistan), Arnold Rüütel(FN11) (Estonia),
Stanislau Shushkevich(FN12) (Belarus), Mircea Snegur(FN13) (Moldova), Levon
Ter-Petrossian(FN14) (Armenia), and Boris Yeltsin(FN15) (Russia). These
individuals will be referred to collectively as the “founding presidents”
despite the fact that officially some held an office other than president.
Even those who were elected chairperson of a governing council, as was the
case in Belarus and the Baltic states, filled a role similar to that of a
president and were sometimes referred to as “de facto presidents.” This was
seen most clearly when Yeltsin, Kravchuk, and Shushkevich met to form the
Commonwealth of Independent States. Despite the fact that Shushkevich
technically was not the president of Belarus, reports were that the “three
presidents” met and effectively engineered the final end of the Soviet
Union.
Most of the founding presidents came to their positions through a
two-step process. First, they were elected to an executive office by their
country’s parliament. Second, they ran in and won a popular election. The
only ones who did not take this second step were Shushkevich and the three
Baltic leaders–Gorbunovs, Landsbergis, and Rüütel. Not only was the manner
in which most of the fifteen came into office similar, but so was the timing
(table 1). The first step, election by parliament, took place in 1990. There
wer eonly three exceptions to this. Gorbunovs was the veteran of the group,
first having been elected chairman of the Latvian Supreme Soviet in 1988.
The two latecomers were Nabiyev and Shushkevich. Both came into office in
September 1991 after their predecessors were kicked out for their behavior
during the coup attempt the previous month.
Most of the popular elections took place in 1991. Of the eleven popular
elections that were held, ten occurred in 1991–eight between September and
December 1991. Actually, Niyazov was the first to arrange a popular election
in October 1990, only a month after being elected by Turkmenistan’s
parliament. It was Gamsakhurdia and Yeltsin who were elected earlier in
1991. Many of these elections, particularly those after August 1991, were
scheduled very quickly and often lacked democratic qualities. Akaev,
Nazarbayev, Niyazov, and Snegur all ran unopposed, and most of the rest
faced only token opposition.
Research on political leadership in Soviet successor states generally
can be placed in one of three categories, based on its primary focus. The
first category focuses on elites–the widest swath of political leadership.
The second involves the presidency, where the main concern is the office
instead of the individual occupying the office. The third category of focus
is on the leaders themselves. This study derives something from each
category.

ELITES
Both Olga Kryshtanovskaya and Stephan White(FN16) and David Lane and
Cameron Ross(FN17) studied the Russian elite under President Yeltsin. Lane
and Ross did so as part of a larger project that traced the development of
the political elite from the late Soviet period, using the Brezhnev era as a
starting point, to the post-Soviet period in Russia. Both pairs of
researchers were interested in the extent that the Russian elite had its
roots in the old Soviet elite. Both studied political and governmental
leaders, regional administrators, and business leaders. Kryshtanovskaya and
White examined the background of 3,610 individuals, and Lane and Ross
studied approximately 800. In addition to studying similar individuals, the
two teams considered many of the same variables: age, gender, ethnicity,
educational background, and, most important, occupational background and
career path. Additionally, Lane and Ross used attitudinal surveys to study
the distribution of opinions within different sectors of the Russian elite.
Despite these similarities, they reached different conclusions.
Kryshtanovskaya and White argued that the Russian elite has its roots in the
Soviet elite, while Lane and Ross stated:

Our study refutes the view that the Soviet elite has been reconstituted
in a new form. We conclude that, though a significant minority of persons
holding middle positions in the former Soviet elite has been promoted to
particular segments of the new political elite, the previous Soviet ruling
elite has been largely destroyed.(FN18)

This disagreement stems not from how the two pairs saw the Russian
elite, but rather how they conceptualized the old Soviet elite. Lane and
Ross took issue with Kryshtanovskaya and White and others who define the
Soviet elite as having been the Soviet nomenklatura. Lane and Ross argued
that the nomenklatura was too large and too varied to be considered an
elite. Instead they likened it to a “political class.” Beyond this
disagreement, both teams isolated the important factors to focus on when
studying someone’s background.

PRESIDENCIES
Research on presidential offices has tended to focus on either the power
of the presidency or the nature of the political systems in which the
presidents operate. Work in this area has been more explicitly comparative
than work in either of the other two areas. Christian Lucky and James
McGregor separately compared the presidencies of a number of Eastern
European and former Soviet states in terms of the constitutional powers
given to the office. Lucky compared the presidencies of Albania, Bulgaria,
the Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Romania,
Slovakia, Slovenia, and Ukraine by examining the requirements of the office,
the manner of election, and whether the office contains twenty-seven
separate powers.(FN19) The list of countries studied by McGregor is very
similar, although Ukraine is absent, replaced by Croatia, Macedonia, and
Yugoslavia. Similar to Lucky, McGregor examined powers of appointment and
fifteen political powers. Additionally, McGregor ranked the presidencies in
terms of constitutional powers based on two scoring mechanisms.(FN20)
The broader question about post-Soviet institutional arrangements has
been largely a debate over the attributes of parliamentarianism,
presidentialism, and semi-presidentialism. Raymond Taras’s chapter in
Postcommunist Presidents is both a prime example of this type of work and
also a review of the debate, both in regards to the former Soviet Union and
a broader international context.(FN21) Even case studies that focus on a
single country are tied into this larger debate.(FN22)
Gerald M. Easter combined these first two categories. He argued that the
path a country followed with regards to constitutional arrangements was
influenced largely by the manner in which old regime elites weathered the
breakdown of the Soviet system.(FN23) Easter classified countries as having
a consolidated, dispersed, or reformed elite. In countries labeled
“consolidates” (the countries of central Asia and Azerbaijan), the old elite
suffered little fragmentation and maintained its dominance after
independence. Without exception, these countries ended up with presidential
systems. The cases of “dispersed old regime elites” (the Czech Republic,
Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Slovakia, and Slovenia) were
where the old elites crumbled. In the absence of any residual advantage due
to their former positions, old regime elites had to compete for political
power on equal footing with other political actors. In these cases, with the
exception of Lithuania and Poland, parliamentarianism was the norm. Finally,
there were countries with a reformed old elite. This was signified by cases
where the old elite split and part of it was able to maintain a share of
power by reforming itself. In most of these cases (Armenia, Belarus,
Croatia, Georgia, Romania, Russia, and Ukraine), the result was a
presidential system. However, there were cases of parliamentary (Albania and
Bulgaria) and mixed (Moldova and Mongolia) systems.
One of the things that sets work in this category apart is the extent to
which it is directly comparative. Lucky, McGregor, and Easter all
systematically study and compare at least a dozen countries. Lucky and
McGregor do this in a descriptive fashion, whereas Easter does it to show
the relationship between elite cohesion and the form of government adopted.
As previously noted, the work on institutional arrangements, even when
focused on a single country, has a comparative focus to it.

LEADERS
Scholarly research focusing on individual leaders, the people occupying
the offices, generally has taken the form of book-length biographies and
autobiographies and edited volumes. Not surprising, most of the attention
here has been directed towards Yeltsin. In addition to numerous biographies,
written by both Russian and western authors,(FN24) his autobiography,
Against the Grain,(FN25) also has been published. It appears that the only
other autobiographies commonly available are Landsbergis’s Lithuania,
Independent Again(FN26) and Nazarbayev’s My Life, My Time, and the
Future.(FN27) There also have been biographies on Akaev(FN28) and
Karimov(FN29) published, but they are not widely available. The
autobiographies are, almost by definition, noncomparative and the
biographies all have a single subject.
The two most prominent edited volums are Post Communist
Presidents,(FN30) edited by Ray Taras, and Patterns in Post-Soviet
Leadership,(FN31) edited by Timothy Colton and Robert Tucker. Both have
introductory chapters followed by profiles of individual leaders. Post
Soviet Presidents profiles Yeltsin, Kravchuk, and Nazarbayev as well as Lech
Walesa of Poland, Vaclav Havel of the Czech Republic, and Arpad Goncz of
Hungary. The examples of Yeltsin, Kravchuk, Landsbergis, Nazarbayev, and
Karimov are covered in Patterns in Post-Soviet Leadership. It should be
noted that some of the chapters in the Colton and Tucker volume focus on the
broader ruling elite, in either Russia or the countries of “Transcaucasia,”
and would fit in the first category of this classification scheme. The
chapters that profile a particular leader were written mostly by country
specialists. In fact, Martha Brill Olcott wrote the chapter on Nazarbayev in
both volumes. This reliance on country specialists, while having many
advantages, has kept comparison to a minimum.
As previously noted, this article draws on aspects of the work in all
three of the categories just discussed. It shares a focus on the individual
with the third category. A comparative focus has been adopted from the work
on presidential offices. The backgrounds of the fifteen leaders were studied
together, using variables derived from the work on elites. In other words,
the subject matter of the third category was studied using variables from
the second and the method of the first.
The choice of variables for this project was influenced by both
Kryshtanovskaya and White, and Lane and Ross. The variables used to compare
the founding presidents are age, social origins, educational background,
membership in the Communist Party, and career path. Some of the variables
used in the elite studies were not used here, due to a lack of variability
among the individuals studied. All are male and belong to the titular
nationality of their country, therefore gender and ethnicity were not
considered in any depth. For many of these variables, a norm was established
as a majority of the founding presidents were quite similar. Combining these
variables makes it possible to describe the typical founding president and
to indicate the extent to which each leader resembles this typical image.

AGE
When their countries became independent, the founding presidents ranged
in age from forty-six (Ter-Petrossian) to sixty-three (Rüütel).(FN32)
Through the work of Mostafa Rejai and Kay Phillips, it is possible to
compare the founding presidents, in terms of age, to other categories of
leaders. In their study of revolutionary leaders, Rejai and Phillips found
that more than 60 percent of the revolutionary leaders they studied came to
power before the age of forty-four.(FN33) By comparison only 36 percent were
between the ages of forty-five and sixty-four. Unlike revolutions seen in
other places, the collapse of the Soviet Union did not bring a new
generation of leaders to power. The fact that all fifteen founding
presidents fell within the forty-five to sixty-four age range shows that, in
terms of age, the founding presidents of the Soviet successor states were
similar to the presidents of the United States. In a study of American
presidents that paralleled their work on revolutionaries, Rejai, Phillips,
and Mason found that almost 90 percent were within the forty-five- to
sixty-four-year-old age range when they entered office.(FN34) The relatively
advanced age of the founding presidents, compared to revolutionary leaders,
reflects the fact that most of them had achieved some level of prominence
during the Gorbachev era.

SOCIAL ORIGINS
The founding presidents can be seen largely as Soviet success stories.
Most came from rather humble beginnings, usually born in villages of their
home republic. The exceptions to this were Gamsakhurdia, Karimov,
Landsbergis. Mutalibov, Shushkevich, and Ter-Petrossian. Ter-Petrossian
actually was born in Syria, but his family moved to Armenia soon after this
birth. Landsbergis was born in Kaunas, which was the Lithuanian capital
during the interwar years. Gamsakhurdia, Mutalibov, and Shushkevich were all
born in republican capitals–Tbiliski, Baku, and Minsk respectively.
Samarkand, where Karimov was born, was not the capital of Uzbekistan, but it
was still one of the major cities of central Asia and had a great deal of
history.
In terms of social origins, most came from a peasant background,
reflecting their rural births. The exceptions to this norm are similar to
those noted above. Gamsakhurdia, Shushkevich, and Ter-Petrossian were all
born into the intelligentsia. Membership in this class can be both positive
and negative. The fact that Gamsakhurdia’s father was a renowned Georgian
author probably offered a measure of protection as Gamsakhurdia began to
engage in dissident activities. On the other hand, Shushkevich’s father was
a poet who was sent away to a prison camp where he died. It was necessary
for Shushkevich to denounce his father to be allowed to attend
college.(FN35) In his official biography, Karimov’s father is described as
an office worker.(FN36) It is worth noting that Karimov’s parents both died
when he was very young, and he grew up in an orphanage, as did Niyazov.
Finally, both of Mutalibov’s parents and Landisbergis’s mother were medical
doctors. Landsbergis’s father was an architect.

EDUCATIONAL BACKGROUND
Because of their humble beginnings, it was their access to higher
education that made the founding presidents into Soviet success stories. Due
to the progress made during the Soviet era, these men had opportunities that
their fathers did not. Not only did all have college degrees, but most had
advanced degrees. Seven (Akaev, Gamsakhurdia, Landsbergis, Nazarbayev,
Rüütel, Shushkevich, and Ter-Petrossian) have doctorates. It should be noted
that in the cases of Gamsakhurdia, Nazarbayev, and Rüütel they did not
obtain their degrees until the 1990s, when they were already politically
prominent.
Reflecting the Soviet norm, and perhaps their humble beginnings, most
obtained degrees in practical areas of study–agriculture, engineering, and
science. The exceptions to this were Gamsakhurdia (literature), Landsbergis
(music), and Ter-Petrossian (history). Even Shushkevich, the son of a poet,
studied physics, and Mutalibov, whose parents were both doctors, went to the
Azizbekov Institute for Petroleum and Chemistry in Azerbaijan.
In some ways Kravchuk falls between these two categories. His degree was
in political economics. This was by no means impractical, particularly in
the Soviet Union with its emphasis on ideology. At the same time, this was
different than a degree in engineering or agriculture. This put Kravchuk on
a slightly different career path. He still worked in the governing
structures, but almost exclusively for the party, and he oversaw ideology
instead of construction or agriculture.
For many, higher education brought the chance to live outside their home
areas. Of the fifteen founding fathers, seven studied outside of their home
republic–two in Moscow (Gorbunovs and Kravchuk) and three in Leningrad
(Akaev, Niyazov, and Ter-Petrossian). Of the two who did not study in
Russia, Nazarbayev studied in Ukraine. This meant he still went to the
Slavic area of the Soviet Union for his education. The only one who studied
away from home in a non-Slavic area was Nabiyev, who studied agriculture in
Tashkent, the capital of Uzbekistan. Leaving their home area to study was
most common in central Asia where four of the five did so. The only one who
did not was Karimov, who also studied in Tashkent. This points to Tashkent
as a possible alternative to going to the Slavic area to receive an
education.
This is one of the few areas where Gamsakhurdia, Landsbergis, and
Ter-Petrossian did not share a similar background. While Ter-Petrossian
studied at the Institute of Oriental Studies in Leningrad, neither
Gamsakhurdia nor Landsbergis spent a significant portion of their academic
or professional lives outside of their home republic.
PARTY MEMBERSHIP
Of the fifteen founding presidents, twelve were long-standing party
members. Of these, only Akaev joined the party relatively late in life. It
was not until 1981, when he was in his early 40s, that he joined the party.
The three who never joined the party were Gamsakhurdia, Landsbergis, and
Ter-Petrossian. Of the factors that set these three apart, this might be the
most telling. Not being a member of the party reflects a conscious decision
to reject the Soviet system. Of those who were party members, most
maintained their membership until after the failed coup attempt. Only
Gorbunovs, Snegur, and Yeltsin renounced their party membership before
August 1991. Yeltsin did so most dramatically, announcing his resignation in
front of the party leadership at the twenty-eighth Party Congress on July
12, 1990.(FN37) The rest lung onto their membership until giving it up was a
necessity. In some cases, the party was a given a new name while its
leadership and organization remained intact.

CAREER PATH
There were two career paths taken to reach the presidency. The first,
and less utilized, was academia. Akaev, Landsbergis, Shushkevich,
Gamsakhurdia, and Ter-Petrossian followed this path. The first three were
professors, and the final two worked as researchers. Altough all five spent
their prepresidential careers in academia, there is a distinction to be made
within this group. Gamsakhurdia, Landsbergis, and Ter-Petrossian were
oppositional figures; Gamsakhurdia and Ter-Petrossian could even be called
dissidents, as both spent time in prison on charges stemming from political
activities. The success of these three came at the expense of the Communist
Party, and even at the expense of the Soviet Union.
Although Shushkevich and Akaev were critical of the Soviet regime,
particularly over Chernobyl in the case of Shushkevich, they can be seen as
compromise candidates. Neither would have been the first choice of the
Communist Party, but both were acceptable choices. Their victory was not a
defeat for the party as a whole. It is worth noting that Akaev was active in
the Kirghiz Communist Party. He served on a party committee overseeing
science and education and also served as first vice president and then
president of the republic’s Academy of Science. While this was not a
position within the party, it was an appointment that would have needed
party approval. First and foremost, Akaev was an academic, but he also had a
political background.
The more common path to the presidency was through the official channels
of government and the party. Although the party and the government were
supposed to be separate institutions, in an operational sense it is
virtually impossible to distinguish between the two. Most of the founding
presidents, while they were working their way up through the ranks, bounced
back and forth between the two institutions. For example, Snegur worked in
the Moldavian Ministry of Agriculture, a government job, and then served as
the Secretary of Agriculture for the Moldavian Communist Party. Of those
that rose through the party and government path, Karimov is unique in
spending much of his career, up until 1986, working exclusively for the
government. Since government jobs were less prestigious than party jobs, the
fact that he never held a party post until 1986 can be taken as a sign that
his career was not progressing very rapidly.(FN38)
On the other hand, Gorbunovs, Kravchuk, and Yeltsin spent the bulk of
their careers working for the party. Kravchuk is further unique in that his
specialty was ideology. A background in construction or agriculture was much
more common.
Those that worked their way up through the party hierarchy were, by and
large, “Gorbachev’s men.” This meant that their careers accelerated under
Gorbachev’s leadership. In 1986, Karimov was the party leader in the Kaska
Darya oblast’ and Mutalibov was working on the auditing committee. By 1990,
both were serving as first secretary in their republics. Yeltsin was
promoted from a position of leadership in Sverdlosk to a position of
leadership in Moscow. Gorbachev promoted the careers of the founding
presidents in two ways. First, he cleared a path for them by removing
entrenched figures from power. Once these positions were open, Gorbachev
undoubtedly had a hand in selecting the new occupants. The fact that they
rose under Gorbachev meant they were acceptable to him. The glaring
exception to this was Nabiyev, who became the leader of the Tajik Party in
1982, and then was forced out by Gorbachev in 1985. Nabiyev was able to
stage a comeback after Gorbachev’s man, Kakhar Makhkamov, was forced from
office for supporting the coup.

CONCLUSION
Each of these variables provide useful information on the founding
presidents, but they are even more useful when considered together. From
these variables a portrait of the “typical” first president of a Soviet
successor state emerges. He was from a humble social background, raised
either in a village or an orphanage. He received a college education,
specializing in a technical field such as physics, engineering,
construction, or agriculture. He joined the Communist Party, and spent most
of his prepresidential career working for either the party or the
government. He was a person of prominence who rose to a position of
influence under Gorbachev. He was in a position to benefit from the Soviet
Union’s collapse.
Each of these statements describes at least ten of the fifteen first
presidents. Of the fifteen, eight fit this profile in every way (table 2).
An additional three deviate from this profile only on a single
variable–Akaev because of his academic career path, Mutalibov because of
his parents being doctors, and Kravchuk because of his academic focus on
political economics. (As noted earlier, someone could argue that a focus on
political economics is just as practical as majoring in engineering or
agriculture.)
At the same time, these variables draw attention to three individuals
who deviated from the established norm in every way. Gamsakhurdia,
Landsbergis, and Ter-Petrossian all were from more privileged backgrounds,
majored in purely academic subjects, never joined the Communist Party, and
worked in academia. Post-Soviet first presidents essentially came in two
varieties. There was the dominant group and its antithesis. Only one person,
Shushkevich, can be said to fall between the two groups. He had the
technical education and party membership of the dominant group, but shared
the more privileged beginnings and academic backgrounds with the
“antithetical first presidents.”
The most prominent first presidents (Yeltsin and Kravchuk) and longest
lasting (Akaev, Karimov, Nazarbayev, and Niyazov) are from the dominant
group. This has helped create the popular perception that all of the initial
post-Soviet leaders were party careerists who turned against the party once
it was safe to do so in their own interest. They did not leave the party
until it was in the final stage of its collapse and then appropriated many
of its resources. One of the most useful things about studying the first
presidents collectively in this manner is that it calls attention to the
fact that not all of the people who came to power with the disintegration of
the Soviet Union were of the Yeltsin-Nazarbayev mold. There was a second
type of first president. The unlikely journey to power that they each took
is part of the story of the Soviet Union’s end that should not be
overlooked.
ADDED MATERIAL
David C. Brooker is a visiting assistant professor in the politics and
government department at the University of Hartford in West Hartford,
Connecticut.
TABLE 1. Date of Elections.

Presidents Election by Parliament Popular Election
Akaev October 1990 October 1991
Gamsakhurdia October 1990 May 1991
Gorbunovs October 1990 —
Karimov May 1990 December 1991
Kravchuk July 1990 December 1991
Landsbergis March 1990 —
Mutalibov May 1990 September 1991
Nabiyev September 1991 November 1991
Nazarbayev April 1990 December 1991
Niyazov January 1990 October 1990
Rüütel March 1990 —
Shushkevich September 1991 —
Snegur September 1990 December 1991
Ter-Petrossian August 1990 October 1991
Yeltsin May 1990 June 1991

TABLE 2. Comparision of Founding Presidents of Soviet Successor States.

Membership
in the
Humble social Technical Communist
Party/Government
Presidents origins education Party career path
Akaev X X X
Gamsakhurdia
Gorbunovs X X X X
Karimov X X X X
Kravchuk X X X
Landsbergis
Mutalibov X X X
Nabiyev X X X X
Nazarbayev X X X X
Niyazo X X X X
Rüütel X X X X
Shushkevich X X
Snegur X X X X
Ter-Petrossian
Yeltsin X X X X

FOOTNOTES
1. Biographical information on Askar Akaev was obtained from the following
sources: Naryn Aiyp, “Kyrgyzstan: Askar Akaev’s Diminishing Democracy,”
Transitions (October 1998),
http://195.212.213.208/transitions/oct98/askaraka.htm/; “Askar Akaev–The
President of the Kyrgyz Republic,” Web page of the embassy of the Kyrgyz
Republic to the United States and Canada,
; Asal Azamova, “Askar Akaev,” Moscow
News Weekly, no. 46 (1992): 10; Bess Brown, “Liberalization Reaches
Kirghzia: Profile of the New President,” Report on the USSR (November 30,
1990): 17-20; T. Koychaev and V. Glosky, Askar Akaev–Uchenie, Politik
(Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan: Ilim, 1996), 12-13; and Mukhamed-Murad Salamatov,
“Scientist President,” Moscow News Weekly, no. 19 (1991): 11.
2. Biographical information on Zviad Gamsakhurdia was obtained from the
following sources: Natalia Bogatova, “A Provincial President,” New Times,
no. 4 (1992): 16-17; “His Excellency, First President of the Republic of
Georgia, Dr. Zviad K. Gamsakhurdia (31.03.1939-31.12.1993),” President Zviad
K. Gamsakhurdia Memorial Page,
; Galina
Kovalskaya, “The End of a ‘Legendary’ Leader,” New Times International, no.
2 (1994): 10-11; Irina Lagunina, “Will Georgia Stay in the Union,” New
Times, no. 46 (1990): 10; Obituary of Zviad Gamsakhurdia, The Daily
Telegraph, January 6, 1994, 19; Donald Rayfield, “The Rise and Fall of an
Indestructible Bungler,” New Statesman & Society (January 24, 1992): 16-17;
Ronald Grigor Suny, “Eltie Transformation in Transcaucasia,” in Patterns in
Post-Soviet Leadership, ed. Timothy J. Colton and Robert C. Tucker (Boulder,
CO: Westview Press, 1995), 154-158; and Who’s Who in Russia and the
Commonwealth of Independent States, RUSSICA Information Inc., 1994.
3. Biographical information on Anatolijs Gorbunovs was obtained from the
following sources: “Biography of Anatolijs Gorbunovs,” Web page of the
Saeima (Latvian Parliament),
; “Latvia,” in
Europa World Year Book 1998 (London: Europa Publications Limited, 1998),
2052; and Who’s Who in Russia and the Commonwealth of Independent States.
4. Biographical information on Islam Karimov was obtained from the following
sources: “Biography of the President,” Web page of the government of
Uzbekistan, ; Donald S. Carlisle, “Islam
Karimov and Uzbekistan: Back to the Future?” in Patterns in Post-Soviet
Leadership, ed. Timothy J. Colton and Robert C. Tucker (Boulder: Westview
Press, 1995), 196-98; Felix Corley, “Uzbekistan: Islam Karimov’s Everlasting
First Term,” Transitions (October 1998),
195.212.213.208/transitions/oct98/islamkar.htm/; Mukhammed-Babur Malikov,
“Uzbekistan: A View from the opposition,” Problems of Post-Communism 42, no.
2 (March/April 1995): 19-24; and Who’s Who in Russia and the Commonwealth of
Independent States.
5. Biographical information on Leonid Kravchuk was obtained from the
following sources: Taras Kuzio and Andrew Wilson, Ukraine: Perestroika to
Independence (New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1994), 172-73; Andrew J. Motyl,
“The Conceptual President: Leonid Kravchuk,” in Patterns in Post-Soviet
Leadership, ed. Timothy J. Colton and Robert C. Tucker (Boulder, CO:
Westview Press, 1995), 108-11; Svetlana Ryaboshapka, “The Referendum: Before
and After,” New Times, no. 49 (1991): 5-6; Serge Schmemann,
“Leader-Come-Lately,” New York Times, December 3, 1991, A7; Elizabeth
Shogren, “Even Russians Concede Kravchuk is ‘Crafty Fox,'” Los Angeles
Times, March 31, 1992, 6; Staff of the Commission on Security and
Cooperation in Europe, “Report on Ukraine’s Referendum on Independence and
Presidential Election: December 1, 1991,” in Presidential Elections and
Independence Referendums in the Baltic States, the Soviet Union and
Successor States–A Compendium of Reports, 1991-1992, (Washington, DC:
Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe, 1992), 104, 105, 110; and
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6. Biographical information on Vytautas Landsbergis was obtained from the
following sources: “Biography of Vytautas Landsbergis,” Web page of the
Multimedia Center for the Humanities (Lithuania),
; Esther B.
Fein, “Lithuanian to the Core,” New York Times, March 26, 1990, 8; Stephen
Kinzer, “Militant Lithuanian Now Gives Pause,” New York Times, August 31,
1991, 5; Vytautas Landsbergis, Lithuania, Independent Again: The
Autobiography of Vytautas Landsbegis (Seattle: University of Washington
Press, 2000): “Lithuania,” in Europa World Year Book 1998 (London: Europa
Publications Limited, 1998), 2135; Esther Schrader and Masha Hamilton,
“Music Professor is Secession’s Unlikely Leader,” Los Angeles Times, March
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Nation (Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 1997), 140, 155, 209; and Who’s Who in
Russia and the Commonwealth of Independent States.
7. Biographical information on Ayaz Mutalibov was obtained from the
following sources: Bill Keller, “Provincial Communist is Born (Again) Free,”
New York Times, September 4, 1991, A16; Galina Kovalskaya, “Now That
Mutalibov Has Gone,” New Times, no. 11 (1992): 8; Liana Minasyan, “Ayaz
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Refugee,'” New Times (June 1996): 48; “Staying On,”, The Economist 321, no.
7735 (November 30, 1991): 50; Suny, 150-152; Staff of the Commission on
Security and Cooperation in Europe, “The Presidential Election in
Azerbaijan: June 7, 1992,” in Presidential Elections and Independence
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Compendium of Reports, 1991-1992 (Washington, DC: Commission on Security and
Cooperation in Europe, 1992), 171; and Who’s Who in Russia and the
Commonwealth of Independent States.
8. Biographical information on Rakhman Nabiyev was obtained from the
following sources: Bess Brown, “Tajikistan: The Fall of Nabiev,” RFE/RL
Research Reports 1, no. 38, (September 25, 1992): 12-18; Obituary of Rakhman
Nabiyev, The Daily Telegraph, April 12, 1993, 19; Martha Brill Olcott,
“Ceremony and Substance: The Illusion of Unity in Central Asia” in Central
Asia and the World, ed. Michael Mandelbaum (New York: Council of Foreign
Relations, 1994), 29; “Rakhman N. Nabiyev Dies at 62; Led Tajikistan Under
Communism,” New York Times, April 12, 1993, D11; “The Nays Have It,” Time,
September 21, 1992, 17; and Who’s Who in Russia and the Commonwealth of
Independent States.
9. Biographical information on Nursultan Nazarbayev was obtained from the
following sources: Bess Brown, “Nursultan Nazarbaev of Kazakhstan: A
Profile,” Report on the USSR (May 31, 1991): 10; “Dossier of Nursultan
Abishevich Nazarbayev,” Web page of the Kazakhstani Government,
;a
rt=dosie/; Vladimir Morozov, “Nursultan Means Enlightened Ruler,” New Times
International, no. 4 (1993): 14; Martha Brill Olcott, “Nursultan Nazarbaev
and the Balancing Act of State Building in Kazakhstan” in Patterns in
Post-Soviet Leadership, ed. Timothy J. Colton and Robert C. Tucker (Boulder,
CO: Westview Press, 1995), 169-75; and Who’s Who in Russia and the
Commonwealth of Independent States.
10. Biographical information on Saparmurad Niyazov was obtained from the
following sources: Aleksandr Bushev, “A Kind of Prosperity,” Bulletin of the
Atomic Scientists 50, no. 1, (January/February 1994): 44-47; Murad Esenov,
“Turkmenistan: Saparmurat Niyazov’s Invincible Rule,” Transitions (October
1998), http://195.212.213.208/transitions/oct98/saparmur.htm; Yael Kahana,
“Mahtumkuli, Avicenna and Saparmurad Niyazov,” New Times International, no.
51 (1993): 11; Avdy Kuliev, “The Dictator With the Personal Touch,”
Transitions (November 1997), ;
“The President of Turkmenistan,” Turkmenistan on the Internet,
html/; and Who’s Who in Russia and
the Commonwealth of Independent States.
11. Biographical information on ARnold Rüütel was obtained from the
following sources: “Estonia,” in Europa World Year Book 1999 (London: Europa
Publications Limited, 1999), 1318-19; “Presidential Ballot: The Five
Candidates,” Estonia Today, Estonian Foreign Ministry,
; and “Ruutel Falls Short of
Estonia Target,” Financial Times (London), September 21, 1992, 6.
12. Biographical information on Stanislau Shushkevich was obtained from the
following sources: “Belarus Parliament Ousts Its Reformist Chairman,” New
York Times, January 27, 1994, A6. James Bennet, “Byelorussian Leader Seeking
Stability in Economic Union,” New York Times, December 10, 1991, A19;
“Biography of Stanislau Shushkevich,” RFE/RL Research Reports, (February 14,
1992): 7; Kathleen Mihalisko, “Stanislau Shushkevich and the ‘Republic of
Belarus,'” Report on the USSR (October 11, 1991): 28; and Who’s Who in
Russia and the Commonwealth of Independent States.
13. Biographical information on Mircea Snegur was obtained from the
following sources: Staff of the Commission on Security and Cooperation in
Europe, “Report on the Moldovan Presidential Election: December 8, 1991” in
Presidential Elections and Independence Referendums in the Baltic States,
the Soviet Union and Successor States–A Compendium of Reports, 1991-1992
(Washington, DC: Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe, 1992),
123; Who’s Who in Russia and the Commonwealth of Independent States; and
Vladimir Yemelyanenko, “Mircea Snegur,” Moscow News Weekly, no. 21 (1992):
14.
14. Biographical information on Levon Ter-Petrossian was obtained from the
following sources: “Levon Ter-Petrossian,” Web page of ARMINCO Global
Communications, ; Gevork
Nazaryan, “Levon Ter-Petrossian: The First President of Armenia,” Web page
of the Armenian Enlightenment Chronicle,
; Staff of
the Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe, “Report on the
Presidential Election in Armenia: October 16, 1991” in Presidential
Elections and Independence Referendums in the Baltic States, the Soviet
Union and Successor States–A Compendium of Reports, 1991-1992 (Washington,
DC: Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe, 1992), 78; Staff of
the Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe, “Report on Armenia’s
Presidential Election: March 16 and 30, 1998,”
; and Suny, 145-46.
15. Biographical information on boris Yeltsin was obtained from the
following sources: Timothy J. Colton, “Boris Yeltsin, Russia’s All-Thumbs
Democrat” in Patterns in Post-Soviet Leadership, ed. Timothy J. Colton and
Robert C. Tucker (Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 1995), 50-54; Stephen White,
“Russia: Presidential Leadership Under Yeltsin,” in Postcommunist
Presidents, ed. Ray Taras (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1997),
47-55; and Boris Yeltsin, Against the Grain (New York: Summit Books, 1990).
16. Olga Kryshtanovskaya and Stephen White, “From Soviet Nomenklatura to
Russian Elite,” Europe-Asia Studies 48 (1996): 711-33.
17. David Lane and Cameron Ross, The Transition from Communism to Capitalism
(New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1999).
18. Ibid., 149.
19. Christain Lucky, “Table of Presidential Powers in Eastern Europe,” East
European Constitutional Review (Fall 1993/Winter 1994): 81-94.
20. James McGregor, “The Presidency in East Central Europe,” RFE/RL Research
Report 3, no. 2 (January 14, 1994): 23-31.
21. Raymond Taras, “Separating Powers: Keeping Presidents in Check,” in
Postcommunist Presidents, ed. Ray Taras (Cambridge: ambridge University
Press, 1997), 38-66.
22. Eugene Huskey, “Democracy and Institutional Design in Russia,”
Demokratizatsiya (Fall 1996): 453-73; and Kataryna Wolczuk, “Presidentalism
in Ukraine: A Mid-Term Review of the Second Presidency,” Democratization
(Fall 1997): 152-77.
23. Gerald M. Easter, “Preference for Presdentialism: Postcommunist Regime
Change in Russia and the NIS,” World Politics (January 1997): 184-211.
24. John Morrison, Boris Yeltsin: From Bolshevik to Democrat (New York:
Dutton, 1991); and Vladimir Solovyov and Elena Klepikova, Boris Yeltsin: A
Political Biography (New York: G.P. Putnam and Sons, 1992).
25. Yeltsin.
26. Landsbergis.
27. Nursultan Nazarbayev, Nursultan Nazarbayev: My Life, My Time and the
Future (Northampton: Pilkington, 1998).
28. Koychaev and Glosky.
29. Leonid Levitin and Donald Carlisle, Islam Karimov, Prezident novogo
Uzbekistana (Tashkent: Izd-vo Uzbekiston, 1999).
30. Raymond Taras, Postcommunist Presidents (Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 1997).
31. Timothy J. Colton and Robert C. Tucker, Patterns in Post-Soviet
Leadership (Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 1995).
32. Sources differ on the year Nabiyev was born. Some list his date of birth
as October 5, 1930, others have it as October 5, 1931.
33. Mostafa Rejai and Kay Phillips, Loyalists and Revolutionaries: Political
Leaders Compared (Westport, CT: Praeger, 1988), 23.
34. Mostafa Rejai, Kay Phillips, and Warren Mason, Demythologizing an Elite:
American Presidents in Empirical, Comparative and Historical Perspective
(Westport, CT: Praeger, 1993), 34-35.
35. Mihalisko, 28.
36. “Biography of the President.”
37. See Solovyov and Klepikova, 206-207 for a description of the event.
38. Carlisle, 196.

http://www.kyrgyzstan.org/akaev.html/
http://www.geocities.com.proxy.lib.umich.edu/Athens/2623/z_g.html/
http://www.saeima.lanet.lv/LapasEnglish/gorbunovs_a.htm/
http://www.gov.uz/op_100.html/
http://daugenis.mch.mii.lt/atspindziai/Asmenys/landsberg.en.htm/
http://www.president.kz/articles/state/state_container.asp?lng=en&amp
http://www.ijt.cz/transitions/thedict1.html/
http://www.icctm.org/T_Frames/president.
http://www.vm.ee/eng/estoday/1996/9609pcan.html/
http://www.arminco.com/elections96/ltp/levon.html/
http://www.armenianhighland.com/terpetrossian/chronicle550.html/
www.house.gov/csce/1998ArmenianElectionsreport.html/

BAKU: President meets OSCE MG French co-chair

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
Jan 28 2005

President meets OSCE MG French co-chair

President Ilham Aliyev, in a meeting with the new French co-chair of
the OSCE Minsk Group Bernard Fassier on Thursday, stated that the
OSCE-mediated talks on the Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict over Upper
Garabagh, carried out for the past 10 years, have been fruitless.
Aliyev emphasized that Upper Garabagh and the adjacent seven regions,
historic Azerbaijani territories, are occupied by Armenian armed
forces and that Azerbaijan entered the United Nations with these
areas included. Azerbaijan’s position on the conflict resolution
remains unchanged, the President said.
Fassier said the conflict is greatly impeding the peace and stability
efforts not only in South Caucasus but also the entire Central Asia
region and neighboring territories. He also voiced confidence that
his meeting with President Aliyev would provide him with broader
information on this `sensitive’ conflict.*

Karabakh deputy FM meets OSCE envoy

ArmenPress
Jan 26 2005

KARABAGH DEPUTY FM MEETS OSCE ENVOY

STEPANAKERT, JANUARY 26, ARMENPRESS: Deputy foreign minister of
Nagorno Karabagh, Masis Mailian, met today in Stepanakert with the
personal representative of the OSCE chairman-in-office Imre
Palatinus, based in Tbilisi, the capital city of neighboring Georgia.
Nagorno Karabagh foreign affairs ministry said Palatinus introduced
Torsten Aren, the new field assistant of the OSCE personal
representative.
After praising good working relations between the ministry and the
OSCE mission Masis Mailian expressed hope they will continue in
future too. He pledged foreign ministry’s willingness to continue to
support the activities of the OSCE representative and create good
working conditions for the mission.
The two men discussed also a range of issues connected with the
January 30 visit of an OSCE fact-finding visit to Nagorno Karabagh.
Also today Karabagh foreign minister Arman Melikian met with
another personal representative of the OSCE chairman-in-office
Andrzey Kasprzik, who heads a mission overseeing ceasefire regime on
the line of contact between Armenian and Azeri troops. They have also
discussed the January 30 visit of the OSCE delegation that comprises
representatives of Germany, Sweden, Italy and Finland.
In a related news Karabagh defense minister Seyran Ohanian told
today journalists that the army has significantly reinforced the
frontline positions. He also said that the number of peace-time army
fatalities is still big, but did not elaborate.

Terrorists more likely to strike Europe than America this year

Insurance Day
January 24, 2005

Terrorists more likely to strike Europe than America this year

A SIGNIFICANT terrorist attack is more likely to take place in the UK
than in the US during 2005 but the commercial impact and loss of life
from any incident is likely to be far less than the World Trade
Center attack in 2001.

Strategic intelligence company Exclusive Analysis said it expects to
see Sunni extremist attacks in both the UK and the US this year. It
added that the governments of both countries would respond to a major
terrorist attack by imposing “ever-wider, and in our view less and
less relevant”, security measures.

“We feel content that our forecast is that small things are likely to
happen in the UK rather than big events,” said Exclusive Analysis
managing director Simon Sole at an International Underwriting
Association briefing in London. “The basic threat is not from
al-Qaeda we have new Sunni extremist movements to deal with.”

Mr Sole said the company anticipates some deaths in the UK as a
result of such an attack this year possibly at a similar level to the
Madrid train bombing in 2004. “We do not foresee thousands of deaths,
and we don’t see billions of pounds of damage,” Mr Sole said.

Mr Sole also warned of continuing concerns over the “chaotic”
situation in Iraq. “I know some underwriting is taking place to a
limited extent in Iraq. We tend to have a negative view about that,”
he said. “The key point is that the US’s so-called ‘nation-building
effort’ is very flawed, as the US military does not have the skill
set within it to do that sort of work. We are also quite sure the
elections which are coming up very soon would make matters
significantly worse rather than better.” Mr Sole said US president
George Bush’s policies in the Middle East have shown few signs of
creating any long-term progress, although 2005 is unlikely to see
more overt confrontation. The US is unlikely to bring things to a
head in countries such as Iran, North Korea and Syria until at least
2006, he said.

“Invading Iran is an outrageous proposition,” Mr Sole said,
explaining that the Iranian nuclear programme is dispersed over
around 70 sites, with the important ones very much protected and
often under ground.

He added that more economic and political activity is expected
against Syria than elsewhere, and if sanctions were extended against
Syria this would be a “significant matter” for underwriters.

Risks remain present in the Americas, Mr Sole said. “Political risks
in Brazil have probably receded, while civil unrest risks in Brazil
have probably increased.” Colombia faces risks as fiscal deficit is
expected to widen against an uncertain political backdrop. “It is
somewhere you need a lot of information to underwrite safely,” he
said.

“Political risks in Venezuela have gone up and underwriting is
primarily affected by shifts in the legal environment,” Mr Sole
explained, with a land distribution programme that shows “echoes of
Zimbabwe” likely to prove a significant problem.

Elsewhere, Azerbaijan and Russia are areas facing notable political
risk. Relationships between Azerbaijan and Armenia are “potentially
explosive” and Mr Sole said political risks in Azerbaijan are likely
to be higher this year than last. Russia is expected to engage in
intensive counterterrorism efforts, which will involve incursions
into the Caucasus to eliminate renegade Chechens, antagonising
neighbouring states, particularly Georgia. Exclusive Analysis expects
Chechens to manage at least one significant attack in 2005, although
not on the scale of Beslan.