Shahumian Residents to File Suit in European Court of Human Rights

PRESS RELEASE
Shahumyan-Getashen Patriotic Benevelont Association
Contact: Eduard Balayan
Tel: (374-1) 560154
Email: [email protected]

Shahumian Residents to File Suit in European Court of Human Rights

A complaint against Azerbaijan is being prepared for submission to the
European Court of Human Rights on behalf of the former residents of
the region of Shahumian and the subregion of Getashen who were
forcibly deported. We are speaking about the regions which in 1991-92
were at the heart of the conflict and today are under Azerbaijani
control.

The complaint addresses specifically the violation of the rights of
those residents to the peaceful enjoyment of their possessions (stated
in Article 1 of the First Protocol of the European Convention of Human
Rights) and the violation of their rights to respect for their homes
(stated in Article 8 of the Convention).

The Shahumyan-Getashen Patriotic Benevelont Association expresses its
readiness to protect, in all legal international forums, the rights of
the thousands of Armenian families who suffered from Azerbaijan’s
aggression, unleashed in 1991.

Science facing challenges

Science facing challenges

By Mher Ohanian

Yerkir/arm
November 12, 2004

The Armenian economy is turning towards free market and is setting
vague development frames before science. In these terms not the
government but the market dictates the terms.

Heritage of the generation of science

It has been essential in the past decades to draw economic development
through science. On the other science needs economic
impulse. Naturally, it takes proper conditions to faster science
development.

This is a big issue for transitional countries including Armenia,
where the Soviet heritage is prevailing. The crisis is mainly
conditioned by lack of demand for its products. Armenia has
expe4rienced not only reduction of scientific staff, but also outflow
of brains abroad. And in many labs and institutions precious equipment
is being neglected for years.

Few university graduates take actual interest in pursuing
science. This is mainly for financial ill-prospects in this field.

On the other hand, many young scientists emigrate. But often they
cannot find apt options of activity and get to other work.

However, it would be unfair to ignore some positive developments. Many
institutes get sponsored by foreign organizations for certain projects
which provide certain progression to the field.

BAKU: Azeri president meets Muslim envoys on Ramadan holiday

Azeri president meets Muslim envoys on Ramadan holiday

Turan news agency
10 Nov 04

Baku, 10 November: Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev received
ambassadors representing Muslim countries in Azerbaijan today on the
occasion of the Muslim holiday of Ramadan.

Aliyev congratulated heads of the diplomatic missions and wished their
nations peace and prosperity. Aliyev pointed to the significance
of cooperation between Muslim countries and gratefully noted that
members of the Organization of Islamic Conference denounce Armenia’s
aggression and recognize Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity.

Speaking on behalf of the diplomatic corps, Uzbek ambassador
(?Abdugafur Abdurahmonov) said that the month of Ramadan is the best
demonstration of the fact that Islam is a religion rejecting violence
and preaching humanism.

The atmosphere of tolerance, inter-confessional concord and freedom of
conscience in Azerbaijan were particularly stressed during the meeting.

Bush adds countries eligible for US aid

Bush adds countries eligible for US aid

Agence France Presse — English
November 9, 2004 Tuesday 6:40 PM GMT

WASHINGTON Nov 9 — President George W. Bush has expanded a list of
countries eligible for US aid in 2005 under his Millennium Challenge
Account program, White House spokesman Scott McClellan said in a
statement Tuesday.

Bush added Morocco to MCA-eligible nations Armenia, Benin, Bolivia,
Georgia, Ghana, Honduras, Lesotho, Madagascar, Mali, Mongolia,
Mozambique, Nicaragua, Senegal, Sri Lanka and Vanuatu, said McClellan.

Six other countries — Burkina Faso, Guyana, Malawi, Paraguay,
Philippines and Zambia — were declared eligible in 2005 for Threshold
Program grants designed to help them qualify for MCA monies, the
spokesman said.

They will join Timor-Leste, Kenya, Sao Tome, Tanzania, Uganda and
Yemen.

To be eligible for money from the so-called Millennium Challenge
Account — expected to total five billion dollars by 2006 —
countries must demonstrate commitment to three standards: ruling
justly, investing in their people and encouraging economic freedom.

ANCA: Reps. Knollenberg / Pallone Oppose Azerbaijani Effort at UN to

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
November 8, 2004
Contact: Elizabeth S. Chouldjian
Tel: (202) 775-1918

CONGRESSIONAL ARMENIAN CAUCUS CO-CHAIRS OPPOSE AZERBAIJANI EFFORT
AT UN TO DISRUPT KARABAGH PEACE PROCESS

— Urge Secretary Powell to “Renounce” and “Secure Retraction” of
Proposed UN Initiative

WASHINGTON, DC — Congressional Armenian Caucus Co-Chairs Frank
Pallone (D-NJ) and Joe Knollenberg (R-MI) have urged Secretary of
State Colin Powell to take decisive action against a UN
resolution, introduced by Azerbaijan, which could seriously
undermine the Nagorno Karabagh peace process, reported the Armenian
National Committee of America (ANCA).

In a November 7th letter to the Secretary of State, the Caucus Co-
Chairs expressed concern about the “ill-advised” resolution on the
“situation in the occupied territories of Azerbaijan,” stating
that:

“This intentionally disruptive resolution threatens the principles
and procedures of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in
Europe (OSCE) as well as the Minsk group mediation effort, co-
chaired by the United States, France and Russia, to resolve the
Karabakh conflict.”

The letter from the Armenian Caucus Co-Chairs goes on to state
that: “Efforts to reinforce stability and reduce the risk of
conflict are in the best interests of the U.S. and the South
Caucasus region. To this end, we urge that the United States
forcefully renounce this proposal, secure its retraction, and
impress upon the Azerbaijani government that it should drop such
counter-productive tactics in favor of a serious and lasting
commitment to the OSCE Minsk Group process.”

“We want to thank the Co-Chairmen of the Armenian Issues Caucus –
Frank Pallone and Joe Knollenberg – from drawing the urgent
attention of Secretary Powell to the threat that Azerbaijan’s
efforts at the United Nations to manipulate the Nagorno Karabagh
issue pose to U.S. interests in the stability of the Caucasus
region,” said ANCA Executive Director Aram Hamparian. “We share
the concerns they raised in their letter and are also urging the
State Department to take decision action against destructive
measures, such as this, that only foster greater divisiveness and
set back the cause of peace in this important part of the world.”

On October 14th, the Azerbaijani Ambassador to the UN, Yashar
Aliyev, submitted a letter requesting that a resolution, which
would restrict the repatriation of Armenians to their homes in
Nagorno Karabagh, be included on UN General Assembly agenda.
Prior to its consideration by the international panel, Rep. Frank
Pallone (D-NJ) urged U.S. Ambassador to the UN John Danforth to
oppose the measure, citing the negative ramifications on the
Karabagh Peace process. The OSCE Minsk Group Cochairs issued a
statement on October 27th, noting that “introducing this issue to
the United Nations General Assembly may have two negative
consequences. In light of the situation we have outlined, this
will be detrimental to the efforts to find a just and lasting
settlement of the issue, particularly at this time. Secondly, it
will fail to achieve consensus, a situation that will not be
helpful. We advise avoiding this situation.” Despite these
efforts, on October 29th, the UN General Assembly voted in support
of the request during their regular session.

The complete text of the Knollenberg/Pallone letter to Secretary
Powell is provided below:

November 7, 2004
The Honorable Colin Powell
Secretary of State
Department of State
2201 C Street, NW
Washington, D.C. 20520-0001

Dear Mr. Secretary:

We are writing to share with you our alarm over the prospect that
Azerbaijan’s continued efforts at the United Nations to manipulate
the Nagorno Karabakh conflict will, if unchecked, undermine our
clearly articulated national interest in the stability of the
Caucasus.

We refer, of course, to Azerbaijan’s recent introduction of an ill-
advised resolution on the “situation in the occupied territories of
Azerbaijan.” This intentionally disruptive resolution threatens
the principles and procedures of the Organization for Security and
Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) as well as the Minsk group mediation
effort, co-chaired by the United States, France and Russia, to
resolve the Karabakh conflict. Azerbaijan’s proposal represents a
hostile declaration against the entire peace process, aimed only at
fostering increased divisiveness. Its consideration can only set
back the cause of peace.

We are deeply concerned that the OSCE Minsk process cannot survive
Azerbaijan’s destabilizing tactics. Continued tampering with this
process will inevitably produce a chain reaction resulting in its
demise. We cannot afford to allow Azerbaijan to continue to
disrupt the work of the OSCE, which, as you know, has been
recognized by the UN itself as the lead arbiter in this conflict.

We value the vital role the United States plays as an honest broker
in the Nagorno Karabakh peace process. In this capacity, given our
commitment to keep the parties talking and moving forward, it is
necessary for the United States to act forcefully against
destabilizing steps that will unravel the peace process. Our
interests are best served by the continuation of dialogue on the
outstanding issues related to Nagorno Karabakh within the OSCE
framework, not by the fragmentation of this orderly process.

Efforts to reinforce stability and reduce the risk of conflict are
in the best interests of the U.S. and the South Caucasus region.
To this end, we urge that the United States forcefully renounce
this proposal, secure its retraction, and impress upon the
Azerbaijani government that it should drop such counter-productive
tactics in favor of a serious and lasting commitment to the OSCE
Minsk Group process.

Thank you for your consideration of our views. We stand ready, of
course, to assist you in addressing this matter in the interest of
the American people.

Sincerely,

Joe Knollenberg Frank Pallone, Jr.
Member of Congress Member of Congress

#####

www.anca.org

BAKU: NATO chief supports peaceful solution to NK conflict

NATO chief supports peaceful solution to Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict

ANS TV, Baku
5 Nov 04

The brief visit to Baku by NATO Secretary-General Jaap de Hoop
Scheffer is ending.

[Passage omitted: reported details]

Scheffer met Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and Foreign Minister
Elmar Mammadyarov.

[Correspondent, over video of Scheffer and people accompanying him at
Baku’s Heydar Aliyev airport] Azerbaijan is one of NATO’s important
partners. Therefore, NATO attaches special importance to relations
with Azerbaijan. Scheffer also touched on the attendance of Armenian
MPs at the 58th Rose-Roth seminar of the Parliamentary Assembly of
NATO, due in Baku on 26 November. He said that although the presence
of any partner country in the seminar is beyond his purview, he sees
as necessary the attendance of Armenian MPs at the seminar.

[Scheffer speaking to microphone with Azeri voice-over] The holding of
the Rose-Roth seminar is outside the NATO secretary-general’s
sphere. I am not responsible for this. If the issue was within the
purview of the NATO secretary-general, as previously my position would
not change. My position is that the attendance of any guests is
admissible at this kind of seminar.

[Correspondent] The NATO chief left Bina airport [as heard]
immediately for a meeting with ambassadors of NATO member countries in
Azerbaijan.

This morning Scheffer visited the grave of ex-President Heydar Aliyev
in the Avenue of Honour. The NATO secretary-general had a meeting at
Baku State University. Delivering a speech in front of students,
Scheffer said that it was his first visit to Baku as NATO
secretary-general.

I have been to the region as OSCE chairman. But I see now there is
progress in Azerbaijan, end of quote.

The secretary-general said that Azerbaijan is cooperating with NATO
dynamically. Mr Scheffer recalled that Azerbaijani President Ilham
Aliyev had submitted a plan of individual cooperation with NATO during
his visit to Brussels and said that NATO will cooperate with our
country more closely within the framework of that plan, as an
organization supporting peace and partnership in the region. Then he
answered questions from students. He was asked about the Nagornyy
Karabakh conflict and NATO’s position on treating identically the
aggressor and the side subjected to aggression.

Having been the chairman-in-office of the OSCE, I was familiar with
the conflict. Many people are suffering from this conflict. I hope
that the conflict will be resolved peacefully. The international
public and the OSCE Minsk Group should help you in this conflict.

Scheffer left Baku State University for the Foreign Ministry. He had a
40-minute meeting with Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov. Neither
Mammadyarov nor his deputy Araz Azimov disclosed details of the issues
discussed.

The Foreign Ministry press service reported that the meeting focused
on the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict as well and the NATO
secretary-general expressed his respect for Azerbaijan’s territorial
integrity. The secretary-general said that even though NATO does not
directly intervene in the issue, it supports a peaceful solution to
the conflict.

Mahir Mammadli, Ceyhun Asgarov, Ibrahim Telmanoglu, ANS.

[Video shows Scheffer’s meetings at Baku State University and the
Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry ]

Russia critical of examination of Karabakh conflict in UN

Russia critical of examination of Karabakh conflict in UN

ITAR-TASS news agency
2 Nov 04

MOSCOW

Russia has abstained [in a vote] on including the issue of the
“Situation in the occupied territories of Azerbaijan” in the schedule
of the day for the UN General Assembly session.

Moscow thinks the “initiative to examine the given question in the UN
General Assembly in parallel with the OSCE can hardly have a positive
effect on the negotiation process in the Nagornyy Karabakh
settlement”, the Russian Foreign Ministry said. The results of the
vote, the Foreign Ministry said, “proves the majority of the members
of the world community take a similar position”.

Russia “is interested in the quickest solution to the Karabakh issue
and will aid this in every way, whether it is on a bilateral level or
in its capacity as the co-chair of the OSCE Minsk Group “. Moscow
thinks that “the format of the said group means that any problem in
the Nagornyy Karabakh conflict can be solved and progress can be
guaranteed in the attainment of peace”.

“The recent meeting between the presidents of Azerbaijan and Armenia
showed prospects for renewed negotiations to find an acceptable
solution for both sides,” the Foreign Ministry said.

The UN General Assembly came out in favour of including the issue of
the “Situation in the occupied territories of Azerbaijan” in the order
of the day of today’s 59th session. Forty-two delegates voted in
favour of Azerbaijan’s request, two voted against and 99 states
abstained, including Russia.

Choose your Neo-con poison

Media Monitors Network
Oct 30, 2004

Choose your Neo-con poison
by Ahmed Amr
(Saturday 30 October 2004)

“The simple truth is that the Iraqi insurgency is a reaction to the
occupation. Yet, the DLC’s foreign policy `experts’ don’t seem to have
a clue about what is essentially a conventional and brutal liberation
struggle. Because of their neo-con backgrounds, it is entirely possible
that these policy wonks are deliberately misleading the same gullible
public that swallowed whole the canards about WMDs.”

————————————————————————

“We’re not going to beat George Bush by being Bush Lite. The way to
beat George Bush is to give the 50% of Americans who quit voting
because they can’t tell the difference between the Democratic Party and
the Republican Party – give them a reason to vote again.”

— Howard Dean

If the polls are anywhere near the mark, George Bush has an even chance
of polluting the White House for four more years. Given his record, the
only reason Dubya remains a viable candidate is John Kerry.

Until a few months ago, the `Anybody But Bush’ movement was gathering
enough momentum to guarantee that any randomly chosen Democrat could
land Dubya on the unemployment line. It now appears that any old
Republican can lick Kerry.

After 9/11, the conventional wisdom was that nothing would ever be the
same again. This election proves that America is back to doing business
as usual. This is certainly true of the election business. Let the
record show that in the year 2004, 290 million Americans could only
spare two Skulls and Bones alumni for the most important government
position in the world.

One thing is certain – 9/11 didn’t change the Democrats. After making
their best effort, their party came up with a Gore clone. Both nominees
share the same exact political DNA because they rolled off the same
production line that manufactured `electable candidates’ a generation
ago. The only difference these days, is that the big boys in the back
room wheel and deal in smoke free environments.

Kerry was nominated because he was not Howard Dean. To be more precise,
Dean was pushed aside when he assaulted the Holy of Holies and
described the Democratic Leadership Council (DLC) as the `Republican
wing of the Democratic Party’.

Dean didn’t do himself any favors with DLC insiders by suggesting that
the United States should pursue an `even-handed’ policy in the Middle
East. After that `gaffe’, Ira Forman, executive director of the
National Jewish Democratic Council noted that `For some small group in
the Jewish community, Dean’s appointment of David Ben-Gurion, Golda
Meir, Yitzhak Rabin, Menachem Begin and Ariel Sharon to his foreign
policy team would still be met with scorn.”

Who are these Democratic Leadership Council people? Consider them the
phantom candidates who are running for co-President of the United
States. The former chairman is none other than Senator Joseph
Lieberman, Israel’s point man in the Senate.

The DLC promotes a philosophy they call `progressive internationalism’
– a slight variation of neo-con ideology. In the run up to Iraq war,
the DLC launched a campaign to enlist Democrats in Bush’s march to war.
Will Marshall, The President of the Progressive Policy Institute, the
DLC’s think tank, led the charge. In an article titled `Making the Case
On Iraq’, he laid out the `progressive internationalist’ position on
the war.

`For starters, Democrats need to resist the argument that only the
discovery of new evidence against Saddam — the acquisition of nuclear
weapons or clear involvement in anti-U.S. terrorism — would justify
action against the dictator. That reasoning implies that a statute of
limitations has expired on Saddam’s long catalogue of past crimes. What
we already know is bad enough: Saddam is a serial aggressor — he’s
attacked no fewer than four neighboring countries — and an implacable
enemy of the United States who is desperately seeking nuclear weapons
to complement his deadly arsenal of biological and chemical weapons.
Democrats should make it clear to the public that the status quo is
intolerable, that the old policy of containing Saddam has failed, and
that leaving him free to acquire nuclear weapons is a risk that neither
we nor or the civilized world can afford to take.’

Marshall’s article was published in Blueprint Magazine – a plagiarized
edition of Commentary. Now you would think that these `progressive
internationalists’ would be chastened by the turn of events in Iraq.
But Marshall not only remains an adamant supporter of the war; he is
now a militant proponent of escalation.

Here is what he wrote more recently in a Blueprint article published on
January 8, 2004.

`What the United States needs now is not an exit strategy but a
comprehensive counterinsurgency strategy. The key elements of such a
strategy are more supple military tactics, more money, and more allies.
But that requires more troops, not fewer, and it means deploying them
in ways that could raise the risk of U.S. casualties. The
administration has rightly made the democratic transformation of the
greater Middle East the grand American project of the 21st century.
That job starts in Iraq. If we fail here, our hopes for liberalizing
the region will be stillborn. To create a stable, representative
government in Baghdad, we need to show total commitment to quelling a
motley insurgency that includes remnants of Saddam’s security and
intelligence services, disgruntled Sunnis, and foreign jihadists. Yet
the timing of the administration’s troop cuts seems dictated by the
campaign calendar, not strategy.’

Notice that Will Marshall never bothers to suggest that Iraq was part
of the `war on terror’. Even though he repeats the neo-con’s outlandish
claims about Saddam’s non-existent WMDs, he makes it clear that the DLC
didn’t need illicit weapons or an Al-Qaida link to justify a
`pre-emptive’ war against an emaciated Iraqi army. Like other DLC
fellow travelers, Marshall was certainly aware that Saddam Hussein was
fully contained. But he couldn’t resist the urge to indulge in a little
bit of old fashioned imperialism and tinker with `regime change’ to
transform the `Greater Middle East’.

Now that his neo-con wet dreams have resulted in a tenacious native
insurgency against the foreign occupation forces, Marshall proposes to
up the ante. Instead of taking pause and reflecting on how much blood
and treasure have already been squandered at the neo-con roulette
table, he suggests we ignite other fires in the region. For Marshall,
`the job starts in Iraq’. When and where does it end? That’s for the
neo-cons to know and the rest of the world to find out.

Like the Bush administration, the DLC and Marshall still subscribe to
the idiotic notion that Saddam loyalists and foreign jihadists are at
the core of this insurgency. As the intelligence community has often
pointed out, very few `foreigners’ have been found among rebels
arrested by the Anglo-American occupation forces. Besides, Iraq was
home to millions of immigrants from other Arab countries. They are the
Iraqi equivalent of permanent residents – very much like the Green Card
holders in the US military who serve their country without the benefit
of citizenship. As a fully integrated part of the population, it is not
surprising that some of these Arab `foreigners’ have joined the Iraqi
resistance. Moreover, the insurgents are hardly Saddam loyalists. While
they have often demanded the release of Iraqi prisoners – they have
never once bothered to ask for Saddam Hussein. And one suspects that
the deposed president would fight extradition to Fallujah or Najaf. The
only part of Saddam the insurgents might want is his head.

The simple truth is that the Iraqi insurgency is a reaction to the
occupation. Yet, the DLC’s foreign policy `experts’ don’t seem to have
a clue about what is essentially a conventional and brutal liberation
struggle. Because of their neo-con backgrounds, it is entirely possible
that these policy wonks are deliberately misleading the same gullible
public that swallowed whole the canards about WMDs.

Marshall and his merry warmongers at the DLC like to posture as
`progressive’ zealots on a mission to modernize and liberate the lesser
people of the Middle East. In that regard, they are just imposters
imitating the diabolical Wolfowitz of Arabia. On both sides of the
political divide, the neo-con actors performing this charade have a
long and disgraceful history of being apologists for Israel’s bloody
repression of the Palestinians. So, it seems improbable that they are
now possessed with a sudden passion to spread the blessings of liberty
to Mesopotamia. More likely, their goal is to give Ariel Sharon a free
hand in shaping the future of the whole region. These
`neo-imperialists’ are not interested in American Empire; they are
motivated by an obsession to fulfill their Likudnik real estate
fantasies. Their one item agenda is to create a Greater Israel – not a
Greater Middle East. If in the process, we end up with a Lesser
America, it will not disturb their sleep patterns.

Marshall’s Progressive Policy Institute functions like an imbedded
think tank implanted in the heart of the Democratic Party. It is a
mirror image of the American Enterprise Institute – the neo-con
Likudnik bastion that served as a launching pad for Paul Wolfowitz,
Richard Perle, Douglas Feith and other weapons of mass deception.

Blueprint Magazine, The official publication of the DLC, regularly
hosts articles from another think tank – The Saban Center for Middle
East Policy at the Brookings Institution. On it’s pages, one can find
the stale neo-con mantras of war party hawks like Kenneth Pollack, the
author of `The Threatening Storm: The Case for Invading Iraq’. That
book was credited with convincing many reluctant Democrats to join the
march to war.

The DLC’s web site also promotes the foul produce of Bernard Lewis, a
rabid anti-Arab racist who was convicted in French courts of
intellectual dishonesty on account of his denial of the Armenian
Holocaust. Incidentally, Lewis has also served as a private part-time
personal tutor for Dick and Lynn Cheney to bring them up to speed on
the `dysfunctional Arab mindset’.

Martin Indyk is the resident DLC guru on the Israeli/Palestinian
conflict. The former AIPAC president who served as ambassador to Israel
in the Clinton administration is now employed as the director of the
Saban Center for Middle East Policy at the Brookings Institution. He is
a fervent supporter of the Iraq war and regime change. In an article
titled `A Squandered Opportunity’ that appeared in Blueprint Magazine
last November, Indyk wrote `There is nothing in itself wrong with
promoting a little instability.’ Indyk had effusive praise for Bush.
`The president argued correctly that if we achieved regime change in
Iraq, it could help our efforts to make Israeli-Palestinian peace,
reform the Arab world, and pressure the rogue states to end their evil
ways.’

If the DLC’s in-house think tank is the Progressive Policy Institute,
their offshore operations are sub-contracted to Martin Indyk’s Saban
Center, which is financed by Haim Saban, an Israeli/American media
tycoon who was the largest Democratic Party donor in 2002. After
dropping $5 million into the party’s coffers, Haim had enough change
left over to pony up another $7 million for the new Democratic National
Committee building.

Now, what percentage of the rank and file are aware that a right wing
Likudnik neo-con think tank resides in the inner sanctums of the
Democratic Party? And how many party activists have any clue that Haim
Saban plays a crucial role in shaping their party’s foreign policy
agenda?

The sad political reality is that John Kerry is not an independent
candidate. He comes with DLC strings hard wired to his soul. The
Senator is fully aware that he wouldn’t even be in this race if the DLC
had not succeeded in crushing Howard Dean’s insurgency.

As a Senator, Kerry never had the option to resist the DLC `guidance’
to vote for an invasion of Iraq. Now that he is the DLC anointed
candidate, Kerry will is obliged to support escalating Bush’s
`preemptive’ war. If you listen carefully to his recent speeches – you
will find that Kerry’s views are now perfectly aligned with those of
Will Marshall and Martin Indyk. Kerry is not promising an exit strategy
in Iraq but `a comprehensive counterinsurgency strategy’. He is not
saying this was an unnecessary war of choice – he is just promising to
fight a `tougher and smarter’ war by convincing our continental allies
to contribute a little European blood and treasure to the quagmire in
Iraq.

Because of his liberal domestic track record, Kerry was never the DLC’s
first choice. That honor went to Joseph Lieberman whose piss poor
performance in the primaries demonstrated that the DLC’s neo-con
ideology has no constituency among the party’s rank and file. No
matter. Neo-cons aren’t particularly fussy about the democratic
process. They now have a candidate they can live with in the White
House. John Kerry will do just fine as a neo-con Trojan horse. Of
course, the neo-cons got one hell of a ride on Dick Cheney’s pony. So,
they won’t be entirely disappointed if Bush gets a second term.

The sad truth is that the Democratic Party’s foreign policy has been
auctioned off to the Israeli Lobby. There is nothing Bush Lite about
the DLC. A vote for Kerry is a vote for Haim Saban and the DLC. This
coming Tuesday, you will be invited to choose your neo-con poison. In
the next four years, we will all discover that diluted neo-con Kool Aid
is just as toxic.

Idea of Having Armenian Navy Comes True

IDEA OF HAVING ARMENIAN NAVY COMES TRUE

Azg
2 Nov 04

On May 28, 2005, “Cilicia” will resume its voyage from Venice and
passing by Rome, Carthago and Dublin will reach Amsterdam, finishing
the envisaged trip. The leadership of “Ayas” Marine Research Club
said this recently. “By successfully finishing the first stage of the
navigation, passing Ayasâ=80`Venice route, we proved that “Cilicia”
had right for living,” Karen Balayan, captain, said.

The captain represented the voyage that lasted from July 14 till
October 16, talked of joyful and dangerous moments of the days they
spend out in the sea. “Particularly, the specialists respected our
initiative. An impression was created that the Armenians were good
sailors. Let’s not change it”,he said.

Dwelling on the marine achievements of Cilicia Armenia, Zory Balayan
said: “Today we also use marine routes, so, even without having sea
coast, we should have a navy. The lake Sevan is a good place for
training. A sailor who was trained there will easily sail in the
ocean.” For instance the sailors pin hopes on 19 years old Moushegh
Barseghian, who joining the Armenian army, spent the four months with
the sailors in the sea. Zory Balayan assured that the 17 sailors that
participated in the voyage, members of “Ayas” club, could helpin
establishing the Armenian navy. Samvel Karapetian, captain-adviser,
lives in Georgia and he spends 6-7 months a year in the sea. He thinks
that in orderto become a good sailor, one should be near the sea, with
the sea from very young age. As the future sailors should have the
opportunity of sailing in the sea in small boats before they become
crew members of a big ship.

By Tamar Minasian

US dealer holds art world power

US dealer holds art world power

ts/3960821.stm

BBC NEWS – Thursday, 28 October, 2004, 09:02 GMT 10:02 UK

Gagosian was described by Art Review as a ‘mega-dealer’

Art dealer Larry Gagosian has topped a list of the art world’s 100
most powerful figures.

The annual chart, compiled by the magazine Art Review, called Mr
Gagosian “the world’s greatest art businessman”. Sir Nicholas Serota,
the director of the Tate galleries, remained in third place for the
second year. But art collector Charles Saatchi dropped 11 places
down the list to number 17. He topped the chart in 2002 and was sixth
in 2003.

Larry Gagosian(dealer/gallerist)
Glenn Lowry (museum director)
Sir Nicholas Serota(museum director)
Maurizio Cattelan (artist)
Sam Keller (fair director)
Dakis Joannou (collector)
Bill Ruprecht (auction house)
Ronald Lauder (collector)
Robert Storr (curator)
Takashi Murakami (artist)

The top 10 includes two artists, but is predominantly made up of
gallery owners, collector and dealers.

Los Angeles-born Gagosian opened the largest private gallery in London
earlier this year. Art Review said: “Gagosian is a figure of mystery
and controversy. That alone should tell us something about the art
world and the place of mega-dealers in it.

“If artists today are defined less by their styles than by the prices
they command, then no individual has done more to charge that market
than the dealer called GoGo.”

The director of the Museum of Modern Art in New York, Glenn Lowry,
raced up the list to number two after being listed in 14th place
last year.

But the highest climber in the top ten was artist Maurizio Cattelan
at number four. He was up 20 places on 2003.

Inaugural list

Contemporary artist Damien Hirst slipped to 78 from 49 last year. The
contents of his Pharmacy restaurant recently sold at Sotheby’s for
more than £11m. Indian-born British artist Anish Kapoor is a newcomer
on the list, at 83, along with Scottish artist Jack Vettriano who
rounded off the list in 100th position.

Other British newcomers include Amanda Sharp and Matthew Slotover,
founders of the Frieze Art Fair, at 32.

But Tracey Emin, who appeared on the inaugural list in 2002, was left
out of the list again this year.

–Boundary_(ID_ws0nMpU2tO/2rVKaVWdC6g)–

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/ar