ANKARA: Rice’s Pax, and Turkey

Turkish Press
Feb 9 2005

Rice’s Pax, And Turkey
BYEGM: 2/9/2005
BY YILMAZ OZTUNA

TURKIYE- US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice told Foreign Minister
Abdullah Gul, ‘Each of us [Ankara and Washington] . . . have a
responsibility with our publics, because we have democracies to speak
out for how important and central [our] relationship is to both of
us; to remind all of us and our people of the long history that we
have together, of what we have achieved together, of what we have
supported for one another, and of what a prosperous future we have in
working on the many difficult and complicated issues ahead, as well
as the bright opportunities ahead.’ Rarely have I heard such sweeping
sincere sentences from a politician. Rice reminded us that during the
half-century of the Turkish-US partnership, we defeated Soviet
communism and pushed Russia back to its borders. She meant that from
now on, we could reset the political balance, reestablishing it by
continuing our strategic partnership. She wanted to say that the US
was not planning on benefiting solely from opportunities, but rather
sharing these with its strategic allies. Rice also suggested that
only countries ignoring their best interests would turn this down.
She was telling the Turkish people that both it and the American
people can prosper by taking advantage of these opportunities, and
called on our government to quell the soaring anti-American feelings
in Turkey.

Rice won’t retreat from the Pax Americana. If Washington can’t do
this with Turkey, it will instead work with Kurds, Armenians, etc.
She will eventually become the secretary of defense and command the
US armed forces. She will become a candidate for the Republican Party
leadership and perhaps run against Hillary Clinton from the
Democrats. Hillary is seven years older than Rice and still a New
York senator. Whoever wins will protect the Pax Americana. Only their
styles are different. Those who have difficulty understanding this
combination should reconsider and expand their horizons.

One killed, two wounded in skirmish in Yerevan

PanArmenian News
Feb 5 2005

ONE KILLED, TWO WOUNDED IN SKIRMISH IN YEREVAN

05.02.2005 14:45

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Yesterday at about 8:30 p.m. two young people were
taken to Erebuni Medical Center due to a skirmish at the crossroad of
Artsakhi and Arin-Berd streets in Yerevan. As reported by the
Armenian Police Press Service, one of those wounded – Mher
Ter-Harutyunian (born in 1974) died in the hospital later. As
evidenced by witnesses, two groupings took part in the skirmish. It
should be noted that an AK-74 submachine gun was found in the BMW, in
which the men were taken to hospital. Shells of 7.62 mm and 5.45 mm
are discovered at the scene of the incident. An
operative-investigation group is formed. The investigation is lead by
Yerevan Office of Public Prosecutor.

A Death in Georgia

A Death in Georgia

Intelligence Brief

Stratfor.com
February 3, 2005

By Marla Dial

The prime minister of Georgia, Zurab Zhvania, was found dead early
Feb. 3 in a friend’s apartment — the victim of an apparent gas
leak. Zhvania’s death, which will be investigated by the FBI as well
as local authorities, raises political concerns both in and around
Georgia.

The former Soviet republic, a key land bridge between the Caspian and
Black seas, is an important pawn in the rapidly accelerating Great
Game still being waged by Russia and the United States. A Georgia
where Russian influence holds sway allows Moscow to project power into
the Middle East, whereas a pro-U.S. regime means Tbilisi can cut
Russia off from any potential allies to the south. Iran and Turkey
also seek to influence opinion in Georgia’s power circles.

What, if anything, this political backdrop has to do with the death of
Zhvania remains to be seen. Security forces found the prime minister’s
body in the home of Raul Yusupov, the deputy governor of the
Kvemo-Kartli region. Yusupov also died; both men apparently having
suffocated on fumes from a small heater that was in use, though foul
play has not been ruled out.

In this case, disguising a murder as an accident — by sabotaging a
space heater so that it would emit carbon monoxide, for instance —
would not have been difficult, and sources in Georgia say many actors,
from hard-line nationalists to organized crime groups, might have had
reason to want Zhvania dead.

The deaths appear to have unsettled Georgian President Mikhail
Saakashvili, a passionate nationalist who has consistently defied and
annoyed Moscow since taking office. Saakashvili, who temporarily
assumed the prime ministership for himself, relied heavily upon the
advice of the more sober-minded and tactical Zhvania. According to a
source in the Georgian Interior Ministry, Saakashvili has requested
personal protection from the United States in the wake of Zhvania’s
death — highlighting concerns that the prime minister’s demise could
have been more than accidental.

Even if Zhvania’s death proves to be nothing more sinister, the
consequences could be great. The last powerful Georgian leader to die
was Zviad Gamsakhurdia, in 1993. His death left the state in political
limbo until Eduard Shevardnadze took power — and in the process of
solidifying control, waged two wars against separatist provinces.

With separatist movements (backed by Russia) still lingering in the
provinces of Abkhazia and South Ossetia, and given the number of other
players — both domestic and foreign — who take an interest in
Georgia, any perception of instability in Tbilisi could be enough to
prompt any one of them to make a move.

ANKARA: Turkish parliament to discuss Armenian genocide claims

NTV MSNBC, Turkey
Feb 2 2005

Turkish parliament to discuss Armenian genocide claims

The parliament’s committee for harmonisation with the European Union
invited Armenian societies and unbiased Armenian and Turkish
historians to attend the session.

February 2 – The Turkish parliament’s committee for harmonisation with
the European Union has announced that it will investigate claims by
Armenians that the Ottoman Empire committed acts of genocide against
its Armenian citizens during World War One.

Ali Riza Alaboyun, the deputy chairman of the parliamentary
committee, said that some Armenian groups have agreed to the discuss
the issues and settle the Armenian genocide claims that have been
levelled at Turkey by many groups and organisations.
`I do not believe that in our history there is anything to be
ashamed of,’ Alaboyun said. `There is lack of information. We shall
take the initiative in hand and have an unbiased assessment of events
occurring away from us.’
Onur Oymen, a member of the opposition Republican People’s
Party who also sits on the committee, said that Armenians distribute
publications targeting Turkey on the genocide claims and that Turkey
should make sure to send out material refuting the allegations.
The decision to discuss the Armenian claims comes on the 90th
anniversary of the alleged Armenian genocide. In April this year, the
parliaments of a number of countries are to hold a vote on whether to
recognise the allegations against the Ottoman Empire, with the
so-called genocide also to be commemorated by massive events staged
by the Armenians.

OSCE fact-finding mission visits Karabakh’s Kalbacar District

OSCE fact-finding mission visits Karabakh’s Kalbacar District – Armenian TV

Public Television of Armenia, Yerevan
1 Feb 05

The co-chairmen of the OSCE Minsk Group [that mediates peace talks
between Azerbaijan and Armenia] and members of the OSCE fact-finding
mission have visited the center and several villages of Karvachar
District which is under the control of the Nagornyy Karabakh defence
army. The OSCE representatives met the district’s residents and
inquired about their previous place of residence.

The Russian co-chairman of the OSCE Minsk Group, Yuriy Merzlyakov,
said that their visit to the region was a bit unusual this time, and
naturally, it was different from previous visits. We have arrived here
to check cases of settlement of Armenians in the districts around
Nagornyy Karabakh, he said. The fact-finding mission has planned to
check one district a day. No-one can say what the reaction will
be. One can comment on this only after collecting information.

The head of the OSCE fact-finding mission, Emily Margarethe Haber,
added that they had gathered very interesting information about the
conflict. She said she was confident that this information would help
assess the situation correctly.

The deputy foreign minister of the Nagornyy Karabakh Republic, Masis
Mailyan, is accompanying the OSCE mission.

The members of the OSCE fact-finding mission visited Cabrayil and
Fuzuli districts earlier this morning.

US May Use Armenian Genocide to Pressure Turkey in Iraqi Issue

US MAY USE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE TO PRESSURE TURKEY IN IRAQI ISSUE

YEREVAN, JANUARY 31. ARMINFO. The US may use the Armenian Genocide as
a trump for pressuring Turkey in the issue of Iraq, says Milliyet
(Turkey).

This concern is due to the 2005 commemoration of the 90th anniversary
of the Armenian Genocide in Armenia and many countries and to the fact
that many European parliaments are considering the Armenian Genocide
recognition. Especially worrisome is the statement by a European
ambassador that Condoleeza Rice may be not very much included to
prevent initiatives for the Armenian Genocide acknowledgement unlike
the previous US state secretary and that “Washington may wish to use
the problem to pressure Turkey in the Iraqi issue.”

The Turkish FM is sensing a potential problem here. Ankara is taking
no step without considering the Armenian Genocide problem. The
Institute of Turkish History is preparing a series of articles on the
issue. Historian Betul Aslan has published a book entitled “The
Armenian Events in Erzurum” which is one more attempt to mislead the
international community. In fact Aslan is trying to prove that 50,000
Turks were killed in Erzurum and neighboring areas in 1918-1920.

Milliyet regrets that the May 2005 Vienna conference of Armenian and
Turkish historians will not take place because of Armenia’s refusal.

An uncertain wait

The Hindu, India
January 27, 2005

AN UNCERTAIN WAIT

by Vaiju Naravane

CAN TURKEY be considered a European country? The answer to that
question was given at the 25-member European Union summit in Brussels
on December 17, 2004, when heads of state and government agreed to
formally open talks on Turkey’s accession to the select European club
at whose door Ankara has been knocking with singular persistence
since 1963.

But the answer, when it came, was a conditional one. While EU leaders
gave a date – October 3, 2005 – for the opening of accession talks,
they also warned that the negotiations could drag on for up to 20
years, with no firm promises of membership at the end. This sets
Turkey apart from all other candidate countries for which accession
talks have been close-ended.

By responding with a conditional yes, EU leaders were in fact turning
the proposition around. Implicit in their response is the question:
is Turkey fit to be in Europe? With the onus of proof lying with
Ankara. For the past decade, Europe has been dragging its feet over
opening formal membership talks with Turkey, shifting the goalposts
each time the Turks pressed for a firm answer.

The objections to Turkey joining Europe are numerous: Turkey is large
with a growing population of 70 million people. Despite its secular
Constitution, it is not considered fully democratic because of the
preponderant role the army has played in its recent history. Its
treatment of the minorities and its human rights record do not in any
way match European standards. Turkey is poor and undereducated and it
will cost billions of Euros in development aid to allow the Turks to
catch up with everyone else.

But the overriding principal argument against Turkey’s adhesion to
the EU is that of religion, culture, history and geography.
Straddling East and West, sharing its frontiers as much with Europe –
Greece, Bulgaria – as with the Middle East – Syria, Iraq, Iran –
Turkey falls between two cultural stools.

Like many other European thinkers and commentators both from Europe’s
Right and Left, Jean-Louis Bourlanges, a French member of the
European Parliament, questions Turkey’s suitability to join the
European club on civilisational grounds. “Turkey is not part Europe
and it is foolish to persist in building a multi-civilisational EU
with unlimited, ever-extending borders. Turkey’s adhesion must
involve, first and foremost, a redefinition of the European project
with citizens deciding whether they want an EU devoid of specific
civilisational underpinnings or whether they wish to limit it to
borders inherited from history and geography,” he says.

These geographic, cultural, religious and political borders, he says,
are clear and set in the Bosporous Straits. While the contributions
of Turkey to Western institutions such as NATO, the OSCE
(Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe), the European
Council and the United Nations have been valuable, and must not be
underestimated, they do not make Turkey European. Does Europe really
wish to share its borders with Syria, Iran or Iraq? Does it wish to
import the endemic instability of the Middle East? Can Europe allow
itself to be undermined from within, he asks.

Those opposed to extending Europe’s borders up to Syria and Iran feel
such an Europe would have little consistence. It would be
overstretched and dysfunctional in budgetary, judicial and
institutional terms. Turkey’s adhesion would make Europe borderless,
powerless, ill-defined and irrelevant as an international player.
Opponents of Turkey view Washington’s continued pressure on the EU to
accept Turkey’s membership bid as proof of America’s Machiavellian
intention to further weaken its main rival in the international arena
by saddling it with a time bomb, both in terms of retarded and costly
economic development, and the Trojan Horse of a large and growing
Muslim population.

Supporters say the absorption of Turkey should pose no problem since
Europe is no longer a solid unified bloc of developed economies but
rather a mosaic of nations big and small with variable geometry,
moving in concentric circles at differing speeds. An excluded Turkey
could not be an effective firewall against Islamic fundamentalism and
Middle Eastern instability. Anchoring Turkey in the EU would reassure
Europe’s growing population of Muslims (an estimated 9 million
scattered mainly across France, Germany, Britain, Italy and Spain).
Turing away Turkey would send a negative signal to the fastest
growing segment of Europe’s population.

Writer Guy Sorman, a passionate supporter of Turkey’s EU bid, says:
“If Europe is to build a new and constructive rapport with the
Islamic world, one opposed to what the Americans have done in the
Middle East, it is imperative that Turkey is allowed into the EU.
Turkey is a living example of a compromise between secularism and
Islam, a reminder that choices other than purely confrontational ones
are both possible and available. Rejecting Turkey means closing our
horizons, refusing a global role, accepting American hegemony.”

In the past three years, there has been a significant shift in
European public opinion over the Turkish question. This is closely
related to the aftermath of 9/11 and an increase in Islamophobia
across Europe. A recent pan-European poll shows that public opinion
in several countries, including France, Germany, Austria, Poland and
Greece, is opposed to Turkey’s accession. In France, for example, 67
per cent of the population would vote no’ if a referendum were to be
held today. French President Jacques Chirac came in for some severe
criticism when he announced he was in favour of allowing in the
Turks, even though his cautious approbation was punctuated by an
impressive series of ifs and buts.

Critics of full membership for Turkey have proposed a special
partnership regime whereby Turkey would be granted special privileges
but would be formally kept out of the Union. Turkish Prime Minister
Recep Tayyip Erdogan has already rejected such an offer saying Turkey
would settle for all or nothing.

A significant stumbling block in the negotiations process could be
the status of Cyprus and Turkey’s stubborn refusal to recognise the
island state’s pro-Greek Government. A row over Cyprus, which joined
the EU in May 2004, almost derailed the talks until a last minute
solution was found, with Turkey agreeing to sign a protocol extending
its 1963 association agreement with the EU to cover all
member-states, including Cyprus. Ankara insists this does not amount
to a formal recognition of the Mediterranean island state. However,
over the next two decades that the talks are expected to last, Turkey
will have to work out some acceptable solution. Ankara now says it
will turn again to the United Nations and the good offices of Kofi
Annan whose peace plan was accepted by Turkish Cypriots in Northern
Cyprus but rejected by Greek Cypriots.

It is difficult at this stage to evaluate the economic impact of an
eventual integration of Turkey. Clearly, because of its size, its
potential but also its economic weakness, Turkey will pose an
enormous challenge to the EU. With its 70 million people, the
adhesion of Turkey alone, with its mainly agricultural economy and
accompanying poverty, will be equivalent to the addition of 10 new
members last May.

Figures published by the European Union appear staggering.
Simulations based on Turkish integration in 2015 suggest Turkey would
receive 28 billion euros in “catching up” aid by 2025 – a third of
the EU’s current budget.

France and Germany, who would like to limit their EU payments to 1
per cent of GDP would have to contribute significantly more. If they
refuse, other beneficiary countries, such as the new entrants from
Eastern Europe, would receive less. With Turkish per capita income at
28 per cent of the EU average, every region of Turkey would be
eligible for extra development funding, a fact that makes weaker EU
economies baulk.

So is Turkey fit to be part of Europe? The true answer to this
question will come in the next decade. The EU has said Turkey is “not
a candidate like the others.” Which is a diplomatic way of pointing
to the religious question while underlining several difficulties:
that Turkey will be the most populous nation of Europe in 20 years
with tremendous regional disparities within its borders. Turkey has a
long, long way to go before qualifying. Its human rights record has
to improve. It has to bring itself in line with the democratic and
institutional principles that govern European nations. Healthcare,
education, treatment of minorities, the status of women, freedom of
expression – all need looking at. But Turkey must also work on and
reconcile itself to its own past by recognising the Armenian genocide
of 1915.

As the French daily, Le Monde , said in an editorial: “One of the
major virtues of the European Union is to encourage applicants to
reform, to modernise themselves, to respect the rights of minorities,
to break with hegemonist temptations. There is no reason why this
educational virtue should not work with the Turks. For them the
choice is clear: if they meet the conditions set by the European
Union, they could become a full member in 10 to 15 years. It is now
for the Turks to seize this opportunity.”

Kurdish language being taught in Siberia

KurdishMedia, UK
Jan 27 2005

Kurdish language being taught in Siberia

27/01/2005 KurdishMedia.com (Translated)
By Pir Dima

Tbilisi – In Primary School Number 77 in the city of Novosibirsk
(Russia), special beginners’ groups for Kurdish children (most of
whom are of the Yezidi faith) have been opened. The mayor of
Novosibirsk, Vladimir Gorodetski, has approved this decision.

Approximately a quarter of the pupils of School 77 are Yezidi Kurds.
The parents of the children, supported by the national intellectual
and social organization `Shems’, had submitted a petition to the
municipality of the city of Novosibirsk for Yezidi children to be
able to learn their native language, Kurdish. Their request was
accepted, and now a special group has been formed. According to the
project underway, each such group will be comprised of 12 children.

As is known, following the dissolution of the Soviet Union, many of
the Yezidi Kurds living in Armenia and Georgia left their homes due
to the social and economic situation and migrated to Russia and the
countries of Europe. A portion of these also settled in Novosibirsk.

Translated from Kurmanji Kurdish by KurdishMedia.com

Greece donates 100,000 Euros to Armenia

ArmenPress
Jan 26 2005

GREECE DONATES 100,000 EUROS TO ARMENIA

YEREVAN, JANUARY 26, ARMENPRESS: The government of Greece has
pledged today 100,000 euros ($137,000) to the UN World Food program
(WFP) for Armenia. The money will be used to provide food assistance
to vulnerable families in Armenian provinces of Tavush, Shirak,
Gegharkunik and Lori.
Speaking at a presentation ceremony at the Greece’s embassy in
Yerevan ambassador Antonios Vlavianos said his government was the
first to respond to WFP’s request to help support food security
program in Armenia.
The ceremony was attended also by WFP Representative and Country
Director Armenia, Muzaffar Choudhery.
Muzaffar Choudhery noted that the donation will help the
vulnerable families to resist winter hardships. He said part of the
money will be spent on buying flour, which will be distributed to
around 40,000 families. Part of the aid will be used for providing
around 30,000 schoolchildren with lunches. Also another part of the
aid will be directed to Food for Work and Food for Training courses.
Greece was followed by Japan, whose government has sent 2,000 tons of
wheat.
At the conclusion the ambassador said he hopes that Armenia will
soon no longer need such aid programs. He also said the embassy will
be supervising purchase of flour and its distribution.

Coalition pull-out from Iraq gathers pace

Coalition pull-out from Iraq gathers pace
By Peter Spiegel in London
Published: January 26 2005 22:19 | Last updated: January 26 2005 22:19
FT.com

Even as US forces struggle to stabilise Iraq during the tense election
period, they may soon face another challenge following Sunday’s vote: the
determination of several coalition members to withdraw thousands of troops
from the region.

Several allied countries, many of them eastern European, that were part of
the original “New Europe” group backing the Iraqi war have said they will
either completely withdraw or substantially reduce their forces in Iraq
after the January 30 elections.
The largest reduction is expected to come from Ukraine, which currently has
some 1,600 troops in Iraq, making it the sixth-largest contingent. Earlier
this month, outgoing President Leonid Kuchma ordered the defence ministry to
draw up plans to begin a complete withdrawal by the middle of the year,
after eight Ukrainian soldiers were killed in an explosion.
The move has been backed by incoming President Viktor Yushchenko, who
campaigned on a promise to bring the troops home. “The withdrawal of the
Ukrainian peacekeeping force is one of our priorities,” said a statement by
Mr Yushchenko’s political organisation. He was planning to address it soon
after taking office last weekend.
The move follows a decision by Poland, one of the US’s closest allies in the
Iraq war and with the fifth-largest contingent of 2,400 troops, to reduce
its presence by nearly a third, to 1,700, by the end of next month. The
Polish government has faced intense political pressure domestically, where
its participation is increasingly unpopular, and the reduction may be
followed by a complete withdrawal by the end of the year.
Polish military officers, who command the multinational division in
south-central Iraq, have said their reduced numbers combined with a
Ukrainian withdrawal could force them to cut the number of provinces they
patrol – a decision that may force the US to fill the gaps.
Another eastern European ally, Hungary, had intended to leave its 300 troops
through the elections, but the plan was voted down by parliament, and all
Hungarian forces – save for some logistical personnel responsible for
bringing back military equipment – arrived home last month.
Not all of the countries pulling out forces are from eastern Europe,
however. Earlier this month Jan Peter Balkenende, the Dutch prime minister,
said the Netherlands would move forward with its plan to withdraw its 1,400
troops by the end of March despite intense US and British pressure.
“I understand the feelings of the Americans and British, but even they can’t
avoid the conclusion that the Netherlands has delivered a considerable
contribution in that area of Iraq,” he told reporters.
In addition, Portugal said earlier this month that it would end its
120-strong police mission in Iraq on February 12. Those moves follow Spain’s
withdrawal last year and the refusal of several western European Nato
members – including France, Germany, Belgium, and Spain – to participate in
the alliance’s new training mission in Baghdad, a stance that has infuriated
American officials.
“When it comes time to perform a mission, it seems to us to be quite awkward
for suddenly members in that international staff to say, ‘I’m unable to go
because of this national caveat or national exception’,” Colin Powell,
outgoing secretary of state, said last month. “You are hurting the
credibility and the cohesion of such an international staff or
organisation.”
Despite the growing number of withdrawals, there will still be 24 countries
other than the US and Britain with troops after the announced departures.
Italy, with the largest European contingent, has vowed to keep its 3,100
troops in the region, and South Korea actually increased its presence in the
north of Iraq to 3,600 late last year, making it the largest force other
than the US and UK.
In addition, some of the European Nato members pulling troops out of Iraq –
including Poland, the Netherlands and Hungary – have agreed to send forces
back as part of a security force attached to the Nato training mission.
US officials have vowed to continue to push for more foreign troops,
insisting that requests for help are made frequently by President George W.
Bush during bilateral meetings with world leaders. Some senior US officials
hope that the United Nations-backed election will be a spur to encourage new
deployments.
“After this election is over, we have a chance now to, as an international
community, support a new, elected Iraqi government,” Condoleezza Rice,
incoming secretary of state, said during her recent confirmation hearings.
“And it may be a time that we can enhance the contributions of some members
of the international community.”
It is an effort that may have already paid off, albeit in a small way: last
month, Armenia voted to send 46 soldiers to southern Iraq.
The troops arrived in the southern Iraqi town of Hilla on Friday.