Margaryan: Armenia Ready To Establish Relations With Turkey WithoutP

MARGARYAN: ARMENIA READY TO ESTABLISH RELATIONS WITH TURKEY WITHOUT PRECONDITIONS

PanARMENIAN.Net
01.05.2006 22:28 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ “We have many times stated that we are ready to
establish relations with Turkey without any preconditions. By saying
this I mean opening of the border and establishment of diplomatic
and economic relations,” Armenian Prime Minister Andranik Margaryan
stated in an interview published on the website of the Republican
Party headed by him. He voiced regret over the fact that Turkey sets
an inadmissible condition for Armenia. In his opinion, the opening
of the Armenian-Turkish border will offer the possibility to expand
regional cooperation.

“Relations with one more state will not do us any harm. I suppose our
economy will not suffer from it, we just should prepare our economic
policy in accord with the new demands,” the RA PM said. At that he
remarked the products and their volume to be imported are unclear
yet. “Anyway the commodities that will be imported will not do harm
to our economy,” he noted.

Lithuania preparing to host int’l conference in Vilnius 3-5 May 06

Lithuania preparing to host international conference in Vilnius 3-5 May 06

Kauno Diena, Kaunas
28 Apr 06

Twenty-six high-ranking delegations from different countries of the
world will take part in a large international conference that will be
held in Vilnius next week.

More than 2000 police officers will maintain order in the centre of
Vilnius, when dozens of important guests from many different countries
of the world will arrive to the large international conference in
Vilnius. The three-day forum, which will cost 2 million litas to the
government, will take place in several places in Vilnius; therefore,
strict city security and strict traffic restrictions have been
planned.

US Vice President Is Expected To Participate

Even 26 top-ranking delegations are expected to participate in the
Vilnius conference – Common Vision for Common
Neighbourhood. Presidents of Poland, Latvia, Estonia, Moldova,
Georgia, Ukraine, Romania, Bulgaria, US Vice President Dick Cheney,
Javier Solana, EU High Representative for the Common Foreign and
Security Policy, NATO Deputy Chief Alessandro Minuto Rizzo,
Azerbaijan’s Prime Minister Artur Rasizade, Swedish Deputy Prime
Minister Bose Rinkholm, foreign ministers of Armenia, Belgium, and
Spain, European affairs ministers of the UK and Germany, other high
ranking officials will come to the Lithuanian capital to discuss
Europe’s eastern policy and the future of the Baltic-Black Sea region.

During the international conference, youth, public organizations, and
individual intellectuals will hold various forums. The forums will be
attended by scientists, political analysts and experts from many
countries of the European Union, the United States,
Canada. Representatives of public organizations from Russia and
Belarus opposition representatives will also attend the forums.

Former Belarus opposition’s presidential candidate, Alexander
Milinkevich, was supposed to take part in the forum. However,
yesterday special agencies detained him at the order of Belarus
President Alexander Lukashenka. He will spend 15 days in jail.

Meeting of Presidents To Top The Agenda

The conference will end with the meeting of the presidents on 4
May. Lithuanian President Valdas Adamkus and Polish President Lech
Kaczynski will be hosting the meeting.

By the way, the Polish president will commemorate the Constitution Day
on 3 May, and the Latvian president will commemorate the country’s
Independence Day on 4 May in Vilnius.

Plans have been made to announce a common declaration of the
presidents. Moreover, bilateral talks between presidents and other
officials will be held during the forum.

Approximately 500 guests will come to Vilnius. Almost 200 accredited
reporters will be covering the event.

Some Will Bring Their Wives

Five presidents and top officials, including Cheney, will travel to
the conference with their significant others. There has been a
separate programme planed for them. Alma Adamkiene, the wife of the
Lithuanian president, will entertain the first ladies.

The presidents will start arriving in Vilnius on 3 May. In the evening
of the same day there will be a reception held at the President’s
Palace. The presidents’ conference will be held on Thursday at Reval
Hotel Lithuania.

During lunchtime, there will be another reception. It will be held at
the Sky Bar, located on the 22nd floor of the hotel. The dinner, which
will end the conference, will be held at Prie Belmonto Kriokliu
Restaurant.

Various events of the forum will also be held at the President’s
Office, the University of Vilnius, and the Forum Palace Conference
Centre. Press offices will be set up at the President’s Office, Reval
Hotel Lithuania, and Naujasis Vilnius (New Vilnius) Hotel.

The guests will be staying at nine hotels in the city. The majority
will be staying at Reval Hotel Lithuania and Naujasis Vilnius. By the
way, the Cheney family will be staying in presidential suites at Reval
Hotel Lithuania.

Common folk will not be able to rent rooms at this hotel during 3-5
May. Special attention will be devoted for the safety of this hotel.

The majority of the guests will leave Vilnius Thursday evening; some
will stay until Friday.

Year of Preparation

Almost a year was spent preparing for the Vilnius Conference: Common
Vision for Common Neighbourhood. Several dozen officials from the
President’s Office the Foreign Ministry and Polish diplomats have been
organizing the conference.

Two million litas has been allocated for the forum from the Lithuanian
budget.

The logo of the conference shows silhouettes of two people holding
hands. Different shades of blue colour symbolize two regions of
Europe: the light blue symbolizes countries of the Baltic Sea region,
dark blue – countries of the Black Sea Region. The event’s organizers
explained that, “the people holding hands are forming a circle, which
is symbolizing close cooperation of Europe’s many regions in the areas
of science, culture, business, politics, and in other important areas
of life.”

Will Guard Bridges

Due to the visits of the presidents and top officials, traffic in the
capital will be restricted. In addition, safety measures will be
increased. According to State Security Department Director Raimundas
Kairys, “all special agencies of Lithuania will participate in
ensuring safety of the event.” The list will include the Police
Department, the Border Patrol, Fire Safety and Rescue Service, the
State Security Department, certain departments of the Defence
Department, including the very secretive Second Department of Special
Operations.

The Police Department announced that more than 2000 police officers
would be working in Vilnius during the event. Eight hundred out of
them will be brought in from other cities. They intend to guard all
the bridges of the city. Police officers and National Guard troops
will be stationed around the city.

Officers strongly urged the capital’s residents not to drive their
cars to the city’s centre and the old town. They also reminded that
the traffic would be restricted not only around the areas where the
forum’s events will be held, but also around the streets leading to
the airport, when delegations’ convoys will be using those streets
[passage omitted on more traffic restriction information].

Officers’ Slap in the Face

A portion of police officers may create headaches for their colleagues
who will be guarding the important guests during the Vilnius Forum.

On May 4 they are planning to hold protest rallies in front of the
parliament and the government office. The officers who will be off
duty that day should be protesting against the government’s
unwillingness to compensate their salaries that have been reduced over
a few years. Five hundred police officers are expected to participate
in the rallies.

However, the organizers of the rallies have not made final decision
whether they will be holding the protests on the scheduled
day. Moreover, the Vilnius City Municipality has not issued the
permission to hold the protests on 4 May.

Organizers of the Vilnius Conference say that even if the protests
will be held, they will be held relatively far from the places where
the international forum will be held; thus, major problems should not
occur.

BAKU: PACE: ROA should look fwd for future not keep past memories

TREND Information, Azerbaijan
April 29 2006

Armenia should look forward for future not keeping past memories-
PACE chairman

Source: Trend
Author: Z. Ibrahimli

29.04.2006

In order to normalize its relations with Turkey Armenia `should look
forward for future not keeping past memories,’ the chairman of the
Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE), Rene Van der
Linden told in exclusive interview to MediaMax.

`The fact that both Armenia and Turkey are members of the Council of
Europe allows MPs from both countries to meet and hold joint
discussions. I think that if you live in the same region and you
don’t have any open relations in trade, economy, culture you are not
benefiting your own countries in the first place. You can not create
a stable future in the region if you are isolated from your
neighbors.’

`If you are looking for a solution you will find it. Though, you will
never find a 100% solution. Compromise is always a must as both
sides have their own arguments and if you will only stay on your own
principles and feelings it won` t be possible to find appropriate
peaceful solution for future,’ Van der Linden said.

Know Genocide launched

PRESS RELEASE
CONTACT: Harout H. Semerdjian
April 27, 2006
617-489-1597
Web:
E-mail: [email protected]

BOSTON, MA – KNOW GENOCIDE, a multi-ethnic, non-partisan coalition was
formally launched on April 21, 2006 during a public rally outside the
Massachusetts State House following the annual Commonwealth of Massachusetts Armenian
Genocide Commemoration Ceremony in the House Chamber.
The coalition was founded to combat the ongoing denial of known instances
of genocide, including the Darfur, Bosnian, Cambodian, Jewish, Rwandan, and
the Armenian genocides. Members are united with the firm understanding that
genocide denial is the final stage of that crime and its penetration into our
schools, universities and other institutions are unethical and unacceptable.
Among the distinguished speakers at the event were Massachusetts Lt.
Governor Kerry Healey, Attorney General Tom Reilly and Congressman Edward Markey
(D-MA). Leaders of several coalition groups also spoke including Rabbi Moshe
Waldoks, Chairman of the Jewish Community Relations Council Holocaust Committee,
and Mr. Jean Nganji, Executive Director of Rwanda Outlook together with
community leaders Carolyn Mugar and Heather Karfian and Representatives Rachel
Kaprielian (D-Watertown), Peter Koutoujian (D-Watertown) and State Senator
Steven Tolman (D-Boston).
While KNOW GENOCIDE is a coalition in formation, support from the people of
Massachusetts and beyond has been overwhelming. Coalition members officially
announced at the event include the Armenian Assembly of America, Jewish
Community Relations Council, Cambodian Mutual Assistance Association, Genocide
Intervention Network, Irish Immigration Center, Massachusetts Council of
Churches, Rwanda Outlook, Armenian National Committees of Massachusetts, Center for
Holocaust and Genocide Studies at the University of Minnesota and the
Strassler Family Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies at Clark University.
`KNOW GENOCIDE was initiated for the purpose of exposing and countering
deliberate efforts at genocide denial,’ says Anthony Barsamian, oneof the
founders of the coalition and a Member of the Board of the Armenian Assembly of
America. `Denial of genocide has penetrated our state and nation with new
sophistication, and KNOW GENOCIDE will combat this immoral effort to uphold the
fundamental tenets of human rights, academic integrity and the historical
truth.’
For more information on KNOW GENOCIDE please log on to

#####

www.knowgenocide.org
www.knowgenocide.org

Azeri Diaspora to Have No Impact on Georgia’s Position in Karabakh

PanARMENIAN.Net

Azeri Diaspora to Have No Impact on Georgia’s Position in Karabakh

28.04.2006 22:55 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ `Georgia practices multisided foreign policy. We are
not merely geographical neighbors with Russia. We have great number of
contact points at historical, cultural and human level,’ Georgian
Ambassador to Armenia Revaz Gachechiladze stated in an interview with
PanARMENIAN.Net. In his words, there is nothing strange in the fact
that Georgia heads for the West, since Russia’s new policy is oriented
towards western democratic values as well.

When touching upon the regional conflict, the Georgian Ambassador
remarked that the unsettled conflicts in Georgia and the presence of
the Azeri Diaspora are by no means bound with the Nagorno Karabakh
conflict settlement.

Ghukasian and Kasprzyk Discussed Karabakh Settlement

PanARMENIAN.Net

Ghukasian and Kasprzyk Discussed Karabakh Settlement

28.04.2006 20:54 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ April 27 Nagorno Karabakh President Arkady Ghukasian
received Personal Representative of OSCE Chairman-in-Office Andrzej
Kasprzyk. Amb. Kasprzyk informed the NKR President of the outcomes of
the OSCE Mission’s monitoring of the Karabakh and Azeri armed forces’
contact line. Then the interlocutors discussed the situation at the
frontline and exchanged views on the Nagorno Karabakh conflict
settlement and prospects of its development, reported the NKR MFA
press service.

CIS Split At Ministerial Conference

CIS SPLIT AT MINISTERIAL CONFERENCE
By Vladimir Socor

Eurasia Daily Monitor, DC
April 25 2006

The meeting of ministers of foreign affairs of the Commonwealth of
Independent States member countries, held on April 21 in Moscow,
exposed a profound split in the organization. Ukraine, Moldova,
Georgia, and Azerbaijan formed a common front on issues of shared
concern, opposing Russian policies directed against their interests.

The four countries are members of the GUAM group, though they did
not act in that capacity at the conference.

The Ukrainian delegation, led by Minister of Foreign Affairs Borys
Tarasyuk, led this group of independent-minded countries in the debate
on most economic and political issues of concern to them.

Russia, with the support of loyalist or neutralist countries
whose interests are not involved in those issues, rejected the four
countries’ initiatives with a high-handedness that can only exacerbate
the differences at upcoming high-level CIS meetings.

Georgia and Moldova submitted separately prepared statements about
Russia’s ban on imports of their wines and other agricultural
products on the Russian market. Describing the ban as politically
motivated, abusive, and unwarranted, the statements underscored the
“massive economic damage” inflicted on the two countries. Georgia
and Moldova regard the ban as an “unfriendly action” by the Russian
government, are asking the Russian government for explanations, and
are challenging the Russian agencies involved — mainly the Consumer
Protection Inspectorate — to show cause for this action. The Ukrainian
delegation lodged its own complaint about recent Russian restrictions
on the import of a wide range of Ukrainian agricultural products on
the Russian market.

Russian Minister of Foreign Affairs Sergei Lavrov handled those
grievances at the concluding press briefing with a dismissive reference
to “some kind of declarations” made during the conference.

He warned by Georgia and Moldova against “politicizing” the issue,
as this “will not facilitate a solution.” Russia takes the position
that the issue should be discussed at the level of technical agencies.

Thus, Moscow seeks to evade political responsibility for a measure
undoubtedly ordered by high political authorities. Georgia, Moldova,
and Ukraine intend to raise the issue again at the upcoming CIS
meetings of prime ministers (May 25) and of the heads of state
shortly thereafter.

The Russian side also blocked Ukraine’s proposal to discuss the
creation of a CIS Free Trade Zone at the conference. The proposal,
nominally endorsed by Russia as well, is almost a decade old and
no member country seriously expects Russia to actually implement
it. In Ukraine, however, the proposal has become topical again
in connection with the Russia-planned Single Economic Space
(Russia-Belarus-Kazakhstan, with Ukraine invited to become a member).

Some groups in Ukraine (not only within the Party of Regions) want the
country to join the Single Economic Space in one form or another — a
move that would compromise Ukraine’s European aspirations. On the other
hand, Ukrainian proponents of integration with the European Union cite
the proposal for a CIS Free Trade Zone as potentially advantageous to
Ukraine as well as compatible with the country’s progress toward the
EU. However, Ukrainian attempts to discuss the free-trade proposal
with Moscow shatter against the resistance of Russian protectionist
interests. Thus, the Moscow conference strengthened the view that the
CIS is, at best, useless to member countries generally and, at worst,
actually detrimental to their interests.

A proposal to discuss the “frozen conflicts” at the conference was
also blocked by the Russian side. Ukraine took the lead in submitting
this proposal with the support of Moldova, Georgia, and Azerbaijan.

The obstruction by Moscow and its allies will strengthen the case for
internationalization of the existing “peacekeeping” and negotiating
frameworks on Transnistria, Abkhazia, and South Ossetia, as well as
underscoring the value of American efforts to settle the Karabakh
conflict.

Ukraine asked the conference to prepare a proposal for the upcoming
CIS summit to express its attitude to the 1930-33 famine and genocide
in Ukraine (the Holodomor). However, the Russian side orchestrated
a procedural move that eliminated the proposal from the agenda.

Belarus, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, and Tajikistan voted with Russia
against the proposal. Armenia, Turkmenistan, and Kazakhstan
abstained. Moldova, Georgia, and Azerbaijan voted with Ukraine.

According to Lavrov at the concluding briefing, discussion of the
Holodomor would have “politicized” a historical issue. Lavrov argued
— as Russian Ambassador Viktor Chernomyrdin also did in Kyiv — that
Russians and other Soviet citizens suffered equally in Soviet times
and it would therefore be inappropriate to single out any people in
this regard.

This argument is heard regularly from Moscow about the Baltic
states as well: “It was a common pain in the Soviet Union.” Such an
argument constitutes the ultimate expression of a social culture
of collectivism. It also overlooks, first, the fact that Moscow
organized the famine and deportations in Ukraine, the Baltic states and
elsewhere; and, second, that the Kremlin today is actively discouraging
the attempts to come to terms with Soviet Russia’s own totalitarian
recent history. While refusing to assess the actions of the Soviet
regime, Russia at the same time claims prerogatives as the legal
successor of the USSR.

The Moscow conference was to have discussed a CIS Executive Committee
report on implementing decisions on CIS reform, adopted by the
heads of state at the August 2005 summit in Astana. A corresponding
Russian proposal envisaged setting up a high-level group on “measures
to enhance the effectiveness of the CIS.” Neither initiative was
mentioned after the conference. In his conclusions, Tarasyuk was
scathing about the CIS: “not a normal international organization,”
“unresponsive to situations that are most sensitive to member states,”
“useless,” and “has no future.”

(Interfax, Itar-Tass, Moldpres, Imedi TV, April 21, 22)

Elder Eductation And Training Week Begins Tomorrow

ELDER EDUCATION AND TRAINING WEEK BEGINS TOMORROW

Armenpress
Apr 25 2006

YEREVAN, APRIL 25, ARMENPRESS; An Armenian foundation set up to help
elder citizens to train and get new specialties throughout their
life is launching a week of education for elder persons on April
26. The week is made up of special training courses, round tables,
presentations, open door days, a conference and a series of workshops.

The ministry of education in cooperation with German union of higher
schools will open on April 27-29 Education and Career EXPO-2006. Forty
universities of Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh will showcase their
services and goods. The week will be closed by events in Vanadzor
and Ijevan.

Andranik Margarian: Armenia Considers Demonstration Of International

ANDRANIK MARGARIAN: ARMENIA CONSIDERS DEMONSTRATION OF INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL WILL AIMED AT GENOCIDE PREVENTION AS PRIORITY TODAY

Noyan Tapan
Armenians Today
Apr 24 2006

YEREVAN, APRIL 24, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. The Armenian Prime
Minister Andranik Margarian sent a message in connection with the
Day of Commemoration of the Victims of the Armenian Genocide. The
message, which was provided to NT by the RA Government Information
and PR Department, reads: “Dear compatriots, Every year on April 24
the Armenians in their Homeland and the Diaspora bend their heads
to the memory of the numerous martyrs who became victims of the
genocide. This crime committed at the state level by Ottoman Turkey in
1915 and in its essence aimed against the cililized humanity not only
was not prevented in time but also was not recognized and condemned,
thus becoming a foundation for new genocides to be committed in
future. Today – in the world that has entered the third millennium,
Armenia considers the demonstration of political will aimed at genocide
prevention as a priority and welcomes the aspiration of many states
to overcome jointly such challenges facing humanity.

It is praseworthy that the number of the states to have recognized
and condemned the Armenian Genocide is increasing each year, since
the civilized world realizes that only by condemning this crime and
giving a true assesment to the historical facts it will be possible
to prevent such crimes in the future.

The efforts of today’s Turkey to deny the genocide, bury the reality in
oblivion and to silence some Turkish intellectuals trying to condemn
the shameful pages of the country’s history are not conducive to the
establishment of stable peace and friendly relations in the region
and make it possible to perpetrate new crimes in an atmosphere of
impunity. Last year all the Armenians commemorated the 90th anniversary
of the Armenian Genocide, underlining once again that they are united
and unanimous to condemn the greatest tragedy of our past and to
join progressive efforts to promote the dialog of civilizations and
strengthen the international security system. And this year when
we celebrate the 15th anniversary of our independence, it is more
than obvious to us that only efforts of the international community
are not sufficient to prevent a crime against a whole nation, it is
also necessary to unite all potential of the nation to strengthen
the Armenian state and create a society professing prosperous and
democratic values. Over the past 15 years, our efforts have been
aimed to achieve this goal, and our achievements in this respect are
becoming apparent year after year.”

Eurasia Daily Monitor – 04/13/2006

Eurasia Daily Monitor — The Jamestown Foundation
Thursday April 13, 2006 — Volume 3, Issue 72

IN THIS ISSUE:
*Lavrov puts brakes on Kosovo recognition
*Baku sees opportunities, risks in Aliyev’s meeting with Bush
*Putin continues to lose allies in European elections

KOSOVO AND THE POST-SOVIET CONFLICTS: NO ANALOGY MEANS NO “PRECEDENT”
(part one of two)

Russian Minister of Foreign Affairs Sergei Lavrov and other officials
have shifted their tactics regarding the negotiations on the status of
Kosovo. The new theme of their statements and tactical approach to the
negotiations is: “No Haste.” In their view, the negotiations must
prepare a settlement “acceptable to all parties” — translation: hand
Serbia blocking rights — even if it means delaying the final outcome.
Lavrov and his spokesman, Mikhail Kamynin, somberly intimate that
recognition of Kosovo’s independence could set a “precedent” with
“dangerous consequences in Europe,” i.e., encourage movements in parts
of certain countries to press for separate statehood and international
recognition (Interfax, April 10). Meanwhile, the United States is the
main promoter of Kosovo’s independence, contingent on proper standards
of governance and human rights. The EU position is similar.
Moscow’s new arguments seek to dissuade some European governments from
supporting recognition and, through this tactic, to complicate and
prolong the negotiations.

The shift seems due at least in part to the prospect that the Serbian
government might officially consent to independence and international
recognition of Kosovo, albeit subject to international (i.e., Western)
certification that Kosovo has achieved democratic standards. Serbian
Minister of Foreign Affairs Vuk Draskovic recently declared that Serbia
could agree to international recognition of Kosovo’s independence,
including membership in all international organizations save the United
Nations (a reservation that seems destined to be abandoned in due
course). Draskovic’s statement has triggered a reassessment of policy in
Moscow.

The Kremlin had initially calculated that international recognition of
Kosovo’s independence could become a “model” or “precedent” enabling
Russia to call for recognition of Transnistria, Abkhazia, South Ossetia,
or Karabakh. However, Serbian consent to international recognition of
Kosovo would make it impossible for Moscow to apply a “Kosovo model” to
the post-Soviet conflicts. In that case, the “model” would stipulate
that international recognition of a new state depends on the prior
consent of the country from which that entity secedes. Such a model
would be useless to Russia and the post-Soviet secessionist territories
because Georgia, Moldova, and Azerbaijan would not grant such consent in
any foreseeable circumstances. Moreover, rapid progress toward resolving
the Kosovo issue with minimal Serbian resistance would deprive Russia of
opportunities to play spoiler in the negotiations
within the Kosovo Contact Group and UN Security Council. Moscow wants a
dragged-out negotiating process with opportunities for tradeoffs,
whether at Serbia’s expense or the expense of Moscow’s protégés in
the post-Soviet secessionist enclaves, depending on tactical
developments down the road.

Moscow is responding in three ways to the situation created by the
Draskovic statement. First, it tries to embolden hard-line nationalists
in the Serbian government to oppose Kosovo’s independence in principle
and to raise insuperable obstacles in the negotiations. Second, it tries
to outflank the United States by raising the prospect of destabilization
in Europe with some West European participants in the Contact Group and
with some Central-East European governments in bilateral channels. And,
third, it cries, “No Haste,” so as to frustrate the U.S. and, largely,
Western goal of achieving a resolution this year.

The authorities in Tiraspol, Transnistria; Sukhumi, Abkhazia;
Tskhinvali, South Ossetia; and Stepanakert, Karabakh (and Yerevan as
well) never based their hopes for international or at least Russian
official recognition upon a possible Kosovo “model” or “precedent.” When
Russian President Vladimir Putin raised this idea earlier this year and
turned it into a staple of Russia’s discourse on post-Soviet conflict
resolution, the secessionist authorities reacted with caution and
skepticism. While putting a few of their eggs in the Kosovo basket, they
are clearly loath to stake their case on Kosovo or Russian actions
related to Kosovo. They continually stress other arguments, “precedents”
or “models” in their quest for recognition (see EDM, February 2, 6, 8).

–Vladimir Socor

ALIYEV’S INVITATION TO THE WHITE HOUSE: A BLESSING OR A CURSE?

Officials in Baku are rejoicing. Three years after his election,
Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev has received an official invitation
to visit the White House and meet with U.S. President George W. Bush. In
a press release issued by the White House on April 10, the invitation
was justified by the fact that “Azerbaijan is a key ally in a region of
great importance and a valued partner, making important contributions in
Iraq, Afghanistan, and Kosovo.” The meeting with President Bush, set for
April 28, will include discussion of a wide range of issues, including
democracy promotion and cooperation in the Caucasus, energy
diversification, and the shared U.S.-Azerbaijani commitment to working
together to advance freedom and security.

The invitation comes as a slap in the face to the Azerbaijani
opposition, which has long complained about election fraud in the
country and the lack of adequate pressure from the Western community on
the Aliyev administration. The Azerbaijani opposition has often cited
the continuing refusal to invite President Aliyev to Washington, while
Ukrainian President Viktor Yushchenko and Georgian President Mikheil
Saakashvili were welcomed immediately after elections in their
countries, to show the international community’s negative assessment of
the state of democracy in Azerbaijan. Now this trump card has
disappeared.

Local analysts predict that two issues will dominate the talks between
Aliyev and Bush: Iran and Azerbaijan’s long-standing conflict with
Armenia over the Karabakh enclave. “There will be a set of complex
issues on the agenda, but Iran will dominate it with the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict being included into the discussion through the
prism of the Iranian question,” independent political analyst Ilgar
Mammadov told Jamestown. “Everything tells us that the negotiations will
focus around the Iranian and Karabakh problems,” according to an
editorial in the opposition Azadliq newspaper on April 9. Consequently,
the long-anticipated invitation from Washington might not be the
blessing that was expected by official Baku.

Political scientist Fuad Gahramanli believes “Aliyev is not interested
in participating in possible military operations against Iran and
actively tries to stay away from this process.” For that reason, the
invitation to the United States at this particular moment might not
please Aliyev that much, concludes Gahramanli (Azadliq, April 7).
Mammadov also believes that Azerbaijan will try to play a careful game,
but “It is not for sure yet if Azerbaijan will stay completely outside
of the process.”

Still, some other experts forecast that the Karabakh conflict will top
the discussions, as Washington is re-energizing peace talks between
Armenia and Azerbaijan and trying to save the failed talks in
Rambouillet, outside Paris, on February 11. The intensive trips by the
OSCE’s Minsk group co-chairs into the region in the last few weeks have
raised speculations about the possibility of reaching an agreement on
this conflict in 2006. U.S. Ambassador to Azerbaijan Reno L. Harnish
III, has told the local Azerbaijani media that there are good prospects
for settling the conflict in 2006. Furthermore, Azerbaijani Foreign
Minister Elmar Mammadyarov said after his trip to the Washington last
week “some new, interesting proposals regarding the solution of the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict have been offered and the Azerbaijani
government will discuss them” (Turan, April 10, also see EDM, April 12).

“The United States is interested in a quick resolution of the conflict
this year,” Mammadov told Jamestown, “but whether Russia will help in
this process is still not clear.” ANS-TV radio quoted Yuri Merzlyakov,
the Russian co-chair of the Minsk group, as saying that there is no
competition between the co-chairs and that President Aliyev met with
Russian President Vladimir Putin long before he is scheduled to meet
with President Bush (ANS-TV, April 13).

Much is expected from Aliyev’s upcoming trip to Washington, yet most
local analysts agree that the negotiations will be tough for the
Azerbaijani president. Particularly, any possible pressures on Aliyev to
agree to the terms of the referendum that is being proposed for the
resolution of the Karabakh conflict might produce counter-productive
results domestically. The Azerbaijani opposition is carefully watching
what will happen in Washington and they will try to dampen President
Aliyev’s excitement about the long-anticipated meeting with President
Bush by focusing on the failures of Azerbaijani diplomacy regarding the
Karabakh conflict. As for President Bush, he is no longer feeling the
necessity to postpone this invitation, as his re-election in 2004 has
removed the need to take domestic considerations into account regarding
such an action. Now the emphasis is on security and foreign
policy, areas in which Azerbaijan could be a key ally.

–Fariz Ismailzade

PUTIN’S FEAR OF ELECTIONS AND FEAR OF INVESTMENT

Every recent election in Europe has severed a connection with Moscow,
allowing Russia to drift further and further away from the rest of the
continent. Italy is the latest point in this trajectory since Prime
Minister Silvio Berlusconi’s defeat this week signifies for Russian
President Vladimir Putin the loss of a key European ally and the end of
a carefully cultivated personal friendship (Vremya novostei, April 11;
Gazeta.ru, April 13). The March 26 parliamentary elections in Ukraine,
inconclusive as they are, have confirmed Kyiv’s European vector and
shown the steady retreat of the pro-Russian forces in the multi-colored
political arena (Lenta.ru, April 11). Presidential elections in Belarus
on March 19 and the swift suppression of public protests against the
crudely manipulated voting left Putin, who rushed to congratulate
Alexander Lukashenka on his victory, alone against the broad
European condemnation of this authoritarian regime (Ekho Moskvy, April
11). Even the elections in the Palestinian Authority fit the pattern,
since Moscow’s readiness to embrace the Hamas leadership has generated
mild disapproval in Europe and bitter acrimony in Israel (Kommersant,
April 12).

The trend could easily be traced further back: Parliamentary elections
in Poland last September were dominated by parties that hold serious
suspicions about Putin’s Russia, and elections in Germany forced the
departure of Putin’s closest and most privileged partner, Gerhard
Schroeder, from the Bundestag. Some electoral results that were
unfortunate for Moscow were decided by margins slimmer than the “hanging
chads” that decided Bush’s victory in 2000, and both Berlusconi and
Schroeder could complain about bad luck. In other cases, Belarus being
the prime example, Moscow was clearly set to lose because of its own
political choices. Lukashenka enjoys solid enough popular support to win
a free and fair election, but the very possibility of creating a space
for uncontrollable political opposition was unacceptable, and he opted
to show the “monolithic unity” of the quasi-Soviet regime
(Ezhednevny zhurnal, April 1).

Putin is in much the same situation and shows equally deep mistrust in
election mechanisms, but he feels the need to hide his true preferences
behind many layers of “Euro-correct” rhetoric. This habitual hypocrisy
serves to make him an acceptable partner for Western leaders, but the
Russian public apparently prefers a more frank expression of political
views; a recent poll by Ekho Moskvy radio (March 20) showed that 82% of
listeners would vote for Lukashenka as the president of a hypothetical
union of Russia and Belarus, while only 18% preferred Putin. Finalizing
the text of his annual address to the parliament, Putin now may take a
clue from this rather unexpected choice and add a few explicitly
populist condemnations of his own bureaucracy (Vedomosti, April 12). He
also knows that he has no real competitor in the country so that the
officially discarded idea of a third presidential
term remains far more popular than any of his potential successors; 45%
of Russians are now ready to amend the constitution accordingly
(Kommersant, April 12).

Each setback with elections in the near and far neighborhood, however,
increases Putin’s distaste regarding the proposition that his tightly
hand-managed system of power should be subjected to the test of
competitive — even if only formally — decision-making by the general
population. This entirely unnecessary procedure goes directly against
his self-perception as the CEO and the chairman of the board of a
corporation comprising all structures of the Russian state. This
self-perception, which in fact is not that different from how Berlusconi
had seen himself until last weekend, probably informed Putin’s first
words to the “captains” of business that were gathered in the Kremlin
last month: “Dear colleagues” (Vedomosti, April 4). Russian
state/corporate culture could be quite relaxed and the discipline in the
hierarchy should not necessarily be draconian, but the idea that the top
management must be exposed to electoral choices of the “lower ranks” is
simply alien. Berlusconi’s scandalous resistance to his removal from a
position of power only reinforces the conviction among Putin’s entourage
that undesirable surprises must be prevented at any cost.

Elections, however, remain a source of grave risks and the possibility
of a sudden shift in the electorate’s mood cannot be eliminated.
Amassing “administrative resources” and employing every available
“political technology,” the Kremlin still cannot overcome the pervasive
fear of elections. While perhaps not entirely rational, this feeling is
driven by growing mistrust among Putin’s courtiers and rooted in their
common knowledge that the Russians indeed have very good reasons not to
trust any of them. The only way to exorcise this fear is to spread it
not only through the business elite, which constitutes less than 1% of
the population, but also across the middle entrepreneurial class that
has grown to about 20% (Kommersant, April 12). Uncertainty about the
immediate future, which can bring any kind of semi-official offer that
cannot be refused, including the sell-off of prime assets,
is an irreducible feature of Russian business climate. Fear is the main
instrument of establishing dominance of the 1.462 million strong army of
bureaucrats, which increased by 10.9% in 2005, over the oppressed,
abused, and potentially hostile class of middle and small business
(Lenta.ru, April 12; Ezhednevny zhurnal, April 11).

This instrumentalization of the fear factor creates various distortions
in Russian economic activities, from the increase of “informal taxation”
to the speculative growth of the Moscow property market. Such respected
experts as Yevgeny Gavrilenkov and Yevgeny Yasin have argued this week
that the abnormally low level of investment affects the dynamics and the
quality of economic growth and generates huge inflationary pressure
(Nezavisimaya gazeta, April 11). Entrepreneurs have no confidence in
their own businesses and are reluctant to invest, so money flows into
the stock market, which expanded by some 20% since the start of the
year, or into the accelerated growth of consumer imports. Corporatist
politics invariably translate into deformed and stagnant economics.
Putin’s team of managers may try to hide their fiasco by doctoring
accounts and spinning new slogans, but Berlusconi was a
grand master of these tricks — and they helped him only so far.

–Pavel K. Baev

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