Category: Turkey

  • UK: ‘Don’t dress like Kim Kardashian’ says Queen’s University Belfast

    UK: ‘Don’t dress like Kim Kardashian’ says Queen’s University Belfast

    Queen’s University in Belfast has been given a dressing down for advising women not to style themselves like Kim Kardashian West at graduations.

    According to BBC an article on its website said women should “think Grace Kelly, not Kim Kardashian”.

    It also said “short skirts and cleavage” are “out of the question”.

    An email to Queen’s, reported by the Belfast Telegraph, said the advice was “like something that would be handed down in a convent”.

    It said: “Are we not a bit more mature than making cleavage out to be ‘bad’ or even ‘sacrosanct’? I feel massively condescended to and genuinely offended to be offered this advice.”

    The article, which offered advice to both men and women, is not currently on the Queen’s website.

    The university has said it is a “dynamic web page which is constantly updated” and that the site “includes news, tips, and information for graduation students”.

    Queen’s does not have a compulsory dress code for graduations.

    Kardashian West, who is married to rapper Kanye West, became a household name following reality TV series Keeping Up With The Kardashians and has also previously been a model.

    The style advice was written by Queen’s graduate Thom Dickerson, who runs a private tailoring company.

    The article begins with advice to men and said that they should stick to “leather and dark shades” when it comes to shoes.

    It added: “A tie should be worn, not bow tie. If you have represented the university at sport and received a club tie for hockey or rugby, I would recommend you wear this. Stick to a Windsor, four in one hand or Trinity knot.”

    The article goes on to state that the “biggest mistake I see at graduation is girls treating the event like a night out”.

    “A graduation is a formal event and the dress code should match this.

    “Short skirts and cleavage on show are totally out of the question.

    “Think Grace Kelly, not Kim Kardashian, at least until the day is done: you can always change before heading out.”

    The Belfast Telegraph reported that an email sent from a postgraduate student said the advice “gives legitimacy to the stereotype that university education is for the middle classes”.

    “As a woman, however, the part I find utterly deplorable is the way in which it advises how to dress.

    “Being told what to wear, being judged for our attire and being told certain attire says certain things about you as a woman is still a daily occurrence.”

    The email added: “Looking to the comparisons the university has made here, it’s pretty degrading.

    “The reserved, conservative Grace Kelly is the example of ‘good’ while the ‘louder’ more ‘risque’ Kim Kardashian is ‘bad’?

    “Isn’t that the same old, same old we’ve been trying to rally against for years now?”

  • Turkey Maneuvers to Escape Its Dollar Trap

    Turkey Maneuvers to Escape Its Dollar Trap

    Geopolitical Diary

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    So far, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s plea for Turkish citizens and businesses to convert their foreign currency holdings, mostly dollars, into lira appears to be working. The value of the Turkish currency has climbed against the dollar this week. (CHRIS MCGRATH/Getty Images)

    In Turkey, patriotism appears to be running deeper than profit motive. A number of major Turkish companies in the past few days have announced that they will heed President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s behest announced Friday to convert their U.S. dollars to lira. The switch may help to shore up the Turkish currency, but it does not make a great deal of purely commercial sense. The list of businesses so far supporting Erdogan’s call by conducting some transactions in lira include the Defense Ministry’s Industry Support Fund, Turkish Airlines and various telecom operators. The experiment, which has also involved Turkish citizens, has resulted in, at least during the past three days, a sharp reversal of fortune for the lira, which has strengthened against the dollar to end a monthslong streak of depreciation.

    The source of Turkey’s economic woes, along with various political and security issues, can be traced to its exposed position in relation to the U.S. dollar. Many Turkish companies hold dollar-denominated debts, which become more expensive as the dollar’s value climbs. And the course that Turkey is trying to set is being driven by necessity as the world’s reserve currency continues to gain strength. Several other countries have found themselves in a similar position, but perhaps none are as blessed as Turkey to have private sectors so flush in foreign money or so willing to spend it on bolstering the weakening national currency.

    What is a Geopolitical Diary?

    With this in mind, the Turkish experience could be seen as something of a test case for how exposed countries might be expected to cope with the dollar storm if and when it hits them. Turkish officials have revealed that capital controls — limits on the movement of capital in or out of the country — which were the savior of Iceland in 2008 and various Asian countries during their 1997 crisis, have been discussed but discarded, at least for the time being. Another potential solution to Turkey’s conundrum, a sharp rise in interest rates, looks highly unlikely given Erdogan’s passionate aversion to tight monetary policy, a feature of his speeches on an almost daily basis.

    Another of Erdogan’s suggestions has attracted much global interest, especially considering Turkey’s possible role as bellwether. On Dec. 3, Erdogan suggested that Turkey should conduct trade with Russia, China and Iran using their currencies. This would appear to be an attempt to wean Turkey’s economy off its addiction to the dollar — one it shares with the rest of the world, where the dollar holds almost complete dominance. The three countries featured in Erdogan’s proposal supply 25 percent of Turkish imports and account for 6.6 percent of its exports.

    The dollar’s identity as the global reserve currency means that the world largely keeps its wealth as dollars. A decision by a country such as Turkey to turn its back on the dollar would thus come with immediate costs. Moving trade into the ruble, the yuan and the real would, by extension, increase the proportion of Turkish foreign exchange reserves that would have to be held in those currencies. Unlike the dollar, the ruble has a recent history of sharp devaluations, while the yuan is also on a depreciating course. A shift to local currencies increases the risk of a rapid loss of national wealth should those currencies collapse.

    For a single country, or just a small group of countries, a move away from the dollar would create inefficiencies inherent from being outside the main pool of interactions that dollar trade represents. The calculations shift, however, if a large number of countries were to follow this path. The greater the number of countries that use their own currencies to conduct interactions, the less overwhelming the dollar’s power becomes, thus shrinking the pool from which those countries are excluded.

    If that kind of movement were to pass a tipping point, a clamor might grow for an alternative currency to rise as the global reserve. Right now, however, there are few candidates that could supplant the dollar. The yuan is weakening and the trend in China is toward increased control over its currency, hardly propitious grounds for further internationalization. The euro was the favorite in 2001, but the odds that it will even exist in a few years are shrinking. The Japanese have never pushed the use of the yen, and the British pound’s best days are behind it. New technologies could provide alternatives, such as those based on digital ledger systems such as the blockchain, but those solutions cannot be adopted in the imminent future. In fact, if a large enough quorum of countries got together with the intent of ditching the dollar, the likeliest solution would be a renovation of the International Monetary Fund’s unit of account, the SDR (Special Drawing Rights), which could be rebooted as a global currency to replace the dollar.

    That is the thought experiment, anyway: the playing forward of Turkey’s currency strategy not only to meaningful fruition in itself, but also through adoption by a sufficient number of other countries to change the global picture. Sizable barriers stand in the way of this outcome, not the least of which is the substantial resistance that could be expected from the United States, which undoubtedly would go to great lengths to preserve the dollar’s role. An immense amount of force would be necessary to overcome the inertia and evolve toward an alternative reserve currency. Still, the concept is another thread to be watched and considered as the global economy continues to shift.

  • UK: Hundreds of police accused of sexual exploitation

    UK: Hundreds of police accused of sexual exploitation

    Stephen Mitchell (left) and Steven Walters were jailed for sex crimes
    Stephen Mitchell (left) and Steven Walters were jailed for sex crimes

    More than 300 police officers have been accused of using their position to sexually exploit people, including victims of crime, a report has said.

    Her Majesty’s Inspectorate of Constabulary said abuse of authority for sexual gain was now the “most serious” form of corruption facing police in England and Wales.

    The watchdog’s figures were gathered over two years to the end of March.

    The National Police Chiefs’ Council described the problem as a “disease”.

    It acknowledged that more needed to be done to “root it out and inoculate policing for the future”.

    Chief Constable Stephen Watson, the NPCC’s lead for counter-corruption, said: “It is the most serious form of corruption and it can never be justified or condoned.”

    HMIC said its police “legitimacy” assessment was positive overall, with high satisfaction among victims at how they were treated.

    The watchdog was asked to investigate the extent of the problem earlier this year, by the then Home Secretary Theresa May.

    It found that 306 officers, 20 PCSOs and eight police staff were involved in 436 reported allegations.

    The data also showed all but one constabulary had received at least one allegation, and that almost 40% of accusations involved victims of domestic abuse.

    Other people who were allegedly exploited were thought to include arrested suspects and people with drug or alcohol problems.

    Other findings outlined in the report:

    • Fewer than half (48%) of the 436 reported allegations had been referred to the Independent Police Complaints Commission
    • There was an “apparent disconnect” between the numbers of alleged cases and any subsequent staff dismissals
    • Officers did not have a “sufficiently clear understanding” of boundaries around establishing or pursuing relationships with vulnerable people
    • Some counter-corruption units did not have the ability or capacity to seek information about potential cases
    • Almost half of forces inspected were unable to audit or monitor the use of all IT systems, which limited the ability to spot any staff accessing databases to identify vulnerable victims

    HM Inspector Mike Cunningham, who led the review, said the problem of sexual exploitation could be “more serious” than the reported numbers and forces needed to become “far more proactive in rooting out” such corruption.

    Mr Cunningham told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “Make no mistake about it, the sexual exploitation of vulnerable women is corruption. It is using authority for personal gain, which is a definition of corruption.

    “It is the most serious corruption problem in the sense that it is the ultimate betrayal of trust, where the guardian becomes the abuser. That is what we are seeing in these cases, and we’re seeing too many.

    “The allegations that we collected across the country are not closed allegations, they’re not confirmed or finalised allegations but nevertheless they are allegations.”

    Police and sexual exploitation

    England and Wales (two years to March)

    436

    reported allegations of abuse of authority for sexual gain

    • 306 police officers accused
    • 28 Police Community Support Officers and police staff also accused
    • 40% of allegations involved victims of crime
    PA

    Mr Cunningham said people such as former Northumbria officer Stephen Mitchell, who is serving two life sentences for serious sexual offences including rape, were clearly predators.

    Others, he said, were opportunistic and found themselves in circumstances where they could abuse their power and authority.

    Det Supt Ray Marley, of the College of Policing, said the report “highlighted a number of unacceptable cases which have a significant impact on the victims and public confidence”.

    Home Secretary Amber Rudd described the report as “shocking”.

    “It undermines justice and public confidence and there is no place in the police for anyone guilty of this sort of abuse,” she said.

    She said she had met the College of Policing and the NPCC to discuss action needed to tackle the problem.

    “The vast majority of police officers do their jobs with integrity and I know they will share my determination to ensure the most vulnerable in our society are given the protection they deserve,” she said.

    Former Northumbria police officer Stephen Mitchell was jailed for life
    Former Northumbria police officer Stephen Mitchell was jailed for life

    Police officers jailed for sex crimes include:

    • Northumbria Police constable Stephen Mitchell was jailed for life with a minimum of seven-and-a-half years in 2011 for raping and sexually assaulting vulnerable women he met while on duty in Newcastle
    • West Midlands Police constable Steven Walters, 48, was jailed for four years in October for assaulting a female passenger in his patrol car and groping another woman in her home
    • Metropolitan Police constable James Evans was jailed for four years in August after having sex with a 15-year-old rape victim he met on the dating app Tinder
    • Met Police detective constable Clifford Earl was jailed for 12 months in 2013 after he sexually assaulted two women in their homes

    In the wake of the report, IPCC chairwoman Dame Anne Owers has written to chief constables in England and Wales urging them to ensure that all cases involving abuse of authority for sexual gain are referred to the commission.

    Two forces were graded as outstanding, 36 as good and five as requiring improvement. No forces were graded as inadequate.

  • World War II and the Origins of American Unease

    World War II and the Origins of American Unease

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    Sailors watch as the USS Shaw explodes at the Naval Air Station, Ford Island, during the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. (Fox Photos/Getty Images)

    By George Friedman

    We are at the 70th anniversary of the end of World War II in Europe. That victory did not usher in an era of universal peace. Rather, it introduced a new constellation of powers and a complex balance among them. Europe’s great powers and empires declined, and the United States and the Soviet Union replaced them, performing an old dance to new musical instruments. Technology, geopolitics’ companion, evolved dramatically as nuclear weapons, satellites and the microchip — among myriad wonders and horrors — changed not only the rules of war but also the circumstances under which war was possible. But one thing remained constant: Geopolitics, technology and war remained inseparable comrades.

    It is easy to say what World War II did not change, but what it did change is also important. The first thing that leaps to mind is the manner in which World War II began for the three great powers: the United States, the Soviet Union and the United Kingdom. For all three, the war started with a shock that redefined their view of the world. For the United States, it was the shock of Pearl Harbor. For the Soviet Union, it was the shock of the German invasion in June 1941. For the United Kingdom — and this was not really at the beginning of the war — it was shock at the speed with which France collapsed.

    Pearl Harbor Jolts the American Mindset

    There was little doubt among American leaders that war with Japan was coming. The general public had forebodings, but not with the clarity of its leaders. Still, neither expected the attack to come at Pearl Harbor. For the American public, it was a bolt from the blue, compounded by the destruction of much of the U.S. Pacific fleet. Neither the leaders nor the public thought the Japanese were nearly so competent.

    Pearl Harbor intersected with another shock to the American psyche — the Great Depression. These two events shared common characteristics: First, they seemed to come out of nowhere. Both were predictable and were anticipated by some, but for most both came without warning. The significance of the two was that they each ushered in an unexpected era of substantial pain and suffering.

    This introduced a new dimension into American culture. Until this point there had been a deep and unsubtle optimism among Americans. The Great Depression and Pearl Harbor created a different sensibility that suspected that prosperity and security were an illusion, with disaster lurking behind them. There was a fear that everything could suddenly go wrong, horribly so, and that people who simply accepted peace and prosperity at face value were naïve. The two shocks created a dark sense of foreboding that undergirds American society to this day.

    Pearl Harbor also shaped U.S. defense policy around the concept that the enemy might be identified, but where and when it might strike is unknown. Catastrophe therefore might come at any moment. The American approach to the Cold War is symbolized by Colorado’s Cheyenne Mountain. Burrowed deep inside is the North American Aerospace Defense Command, which assumes that war might come at any moment and that any relaxation in vigilance could result in a nuclear Pearl Harbor. Fear of this scenario — along with mistrust of the wily and ruthless enemy — defined the Cold War for Americans.

    The Americans analyzed their forced entry into World War II and identified what they took to be the root cause: the Munich Agreement allowing Nazi Germany to annex parts of Czechoslovakia. This was not only an American idea by any means, but it reshaped U.S. strategy. If the origin of World War II was the failure to take pre-emptive action against the Germans in 1938, then it followed that the Pacific War might have been prevented by more aggressive actions early on. Acting early and decisively remains the foundation of U.S. foreign policy to this day. The idea that not acting in a timely and forceful fashion led to World War II underlies much American discourse on Iran or Russia.

    Pearl Harbor (and the 1929 crash) not only led to a sense of foreboding and a distrust in the wisdom of political and military leaders, but it also replaced a strategy of mobilization after war begins, with a strategy of permanent mobilization. If war might come at any time, and if another Munich must above all be avoided, then the massive military establishment that exists today is indispensible. In addition, the U.S.-led alliance structure that didn’t exist prior to World War II is indispensible.

    The Soviet Strategic Miscalculation

    The Soviet Union had its own Pearl Harbor on June 22, 1941, when the Germans invaded in spite of the friendship treaty signed between them in 1939. That treaty was struck for two reasons: First, the Russians couldn’t persuade the British or French to sign an anti-Hitler pact. Second, a treaty with Hitler would allow the Soviets to move their border further west without firing a shot. It was a clever move, but not a smart one.

    The Soviets made a single miscalculation: They assumed a German campaign in France would replay the previous Great War. Such an effort would have exhausted the Germans and allowed the Soviets to attack them at the time and place of Moscow’s choosing. That opportunity never presented itself. On the contrary, the Germans put themselves in a position to attack the Soviet Union at a time and place of their choosing. That the moment of attack was a surprise compounded the challenge, but the real problem was strategic miscalculation, not simply an intelligence or command failure.

    The Soviets had opted for a dynamic foreign policy of shifting alliances built on assumptions of the various players’ capabilities. A single misstep could lead to catastrophe — an attack at a time when the Soviet forces had yet to recover from one of Josef Stalin’s purges. The Soviet forces were not ready for an attack, and their strategy collapsed with France, so the decision for war was entirely Germany’s.

    What the Soviets took away from the June 1941 invasion was a conviction that political complexity could not substitute for a robust military. The United States ended World War II with the conviction that a core reason for that war was the failure of the United States. The Soviets ended World War II with the belief that their complex efforts at coalition building and maintaining the balance of power had left them utterly exposed by one miscalculation on France — one that defied the conventional wisdom.

    During the Cold War, the Soviets developed a strategy that could best be called stolid. Contained by an American-led coalition, the Soviets preferred satellites to allies. The Warsaw Pact was less an alliance than a geopolitical reality. For the most part it consisted of states under the direct military, intelligence or political control of the Soviet Union. The military value of the block might be limited, and its room for maneuver was equally limited. Nonetheless, Soviet forces could be relied on, and the Warsaw Pact, unlike NATO, was a geographical reality that Soviet forces used to guarantee that no invasion by the United States or NATO was possible. Obviously, the Soviets — like the Americans — remained vigilant for a nuclear attack, but it has been noted that the Soviet system was significantly less sophisticated than that of the Americans. Part of this imbalance was related to technological capabilities. A great deal of it had to do with the fact that nuclear attack was not the Soviet’s primordial fear, though the fear must not be minimized. The primordial fear in Moscow was an attack from the West. The Soviet Union’s strategy was to position its own forces as far to the west as possible.

    Consider this in contrast to the Soviet relations with China. Ideologically, China ought to have been a powerful ally, but the alliance was souring by the mid-1950s. The Soviets were not ideologues. They were geopoliticians, and China represented a potential threat that the Soviets could not control. Ideology didn’t matter. China would never serve the role that Poland had to. The Sino-Soviet relationship fell apart fairly quickly.

    The Soviet public did not develop the American dread that beneath peace and prosperity lurked the seeds of disaster. Soviet expectations of life were far more modest than those of Americans, and the expectation that the state would avert disaster was limited. The state generated disaster. At the same time, the war revealed — almost from the beginning — a primordial love of country, hidden for decades under the ideology of internationalism, that re-emerged spontaneously. Beneath communist fervor, cynical indifference and dread of the Soviet secret police, the Russians found something new while the Americans found something old.

    France’s Fall Surprises Britain

    As for the British, their miscalculation on France changed little. They were stunned by the rapid collapse of France, but perhaps also relieved that they would not fight in French trenches again. The collapse of France caused them to depend on only two things: One was that the English Channel, combined with the fleet and the Royal Air Force, would hold the Germans at bay. The second was that in due course, the United States would be drawn into the war. Their two calculations proved correct.

    However, the United Kingdom was not one of the ultimate winners of the war. It may not have been occupied by the Germans, but it was essentially by the Americans. This was a very different occupation, and one the British needed, but the occupation of Britain by foreign forces, regardless of how necessary and benign, spelled the end of the British Empire and of Britain as a major power. The Americans did not take the British Empire. It was taken away by the shocking performance of the French. On paper, the French had an excellent army — superior to the Germans, in many ways. Yet they collapsed in weeks. If we were to summarize the British sensibility, after defiance came exhaustion and then resentment.

    Some of these feelings are gone now. The Americans retain their dread even though World War II was in many ways good to the United States. It ended the Great Depression, and in the aftermath, between the G.I. Bill, VA loans and the Interstate Highway System, the war created the American professional middle class, with private homes for many and distance and space that could be accessed easily. And yet the dread remains, not always muted. This generation’s Pearl Harbor was 9/11. Fear that security and prosperity is built on a base of sand is not an irrational fear.

    For the Russians, the feelings of patriotism still lurk beneath the cynicism. The collapse of the Soviet Union and the collapse of Russia’s sphere of influence have not resulted in particularly imaginative strategic moves. On the contrary, Russian President Vladimir Putin’s response to Ukraine was as stolid as Stalin’s or Leonid Brezhnev’s. Rather than a Machiavellian genius, Putin is the heir to the German invasion on June 22, 1941. He seeks strategic depth controlled by his own military. And his public has rallied to him.

    As for the British, they once had an empire. They now have an island. It remains to be seen if they hold onto all of it, given the strength of the Scottish nationalists.

    While we are celebrating the end of World War II, it is useful to examine its beginnings. So much of what constitutes the political-military culture, particularly of the Americans, was forged by the way that World War II began. Pearl Harbor and the American view of Munich have been the framework for thinking not only about foreign relations and war, but also about living in America. Not too deep under the surface there is a sense that all good things eventually must go wrong. Much of this comes from the Great Depression and much from Pearl Harbor. The older optimism is still there, but the certainty of manifest success is deeply tempered.

  • UK: Man held over Gina Miller threats

    UK: Man held over Gina Miller threats

    A man has been arrested over alleged threats against Gina Miller, the woman behind the Brexit legal challenge.

    According to BBC Met Police officers arrested the man, 55, in Swindon on Monday on suspicion of racially-aggravated malicious communications, police said.

    He was taken to a Wiltshire police station and later released on bail.

    Officers from the Met’s anti-cyber crime Falcon Unit also issued a “cease and desist” notice on 3 December to a 38-year-old man from Fife, Scotland.

    The Metropolitan Police said the Swindon man was held over threats made online from 3 November onwards.

    Gina Miller, an investment fund manager, and philanthropist is the lead claimant in the legal fight to get Parliament to vote on whether the UK can start the process of leaving the EU.

    The case is currently being heard at the Supreme Court in London.

    The government is appealing to the court, saying it does not need the approval of MPs to trigger Brexit.

  • Access to Power: VP Pence Calls Sargsyan; Erdogan & Aliyev Call Pres.-elect Trump

    Access to Power: VP Pence Calls Sargsyan; Erdogan & Aliyev Call Pres.-elect Trump

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    Shortly after the Nov. 8 elections, I wrote a column suggesting that Armenian-Americans make every effort to contact President-elect Trump or his aides before the January 20 Presidential inauguration, after which it would be much more difficult to have access to the President.

    I am happy to report that one such successful connection was made last month by the joint efforts of Armenia’s Ambassador to Washington, Grigor Hovhannissian, and President of Prime Health Care, Mike Sarian of Glendale, California, who has extensive contacts with high-ranking Republicans.

    As a result, Vice President-elect Mike Pence called Pres. Serzh Sargsyan on December 1 to thank him for his earlier congratulatory letter to Pres.-elect Trump. According to the Armenian President’s website, Pence and Sargsyan stressed the importance of expanding political and economic relations between Armenia and the United States. “Pres. Sargsyan and Vice President-elect Mike Pence discussed also issues of mutual interest, including regional problems and challenges.”

    The Armenian President’s website drew special attention to the fact that the Pence-Sargsyan “phone call was initiated by the American side.” In contrast, Azerbaijan’s President Aliyev and Turkey’s President Erdogan were the ones calling Pres.-elect Trump on Nov. 9 and 17 respectively, making Vice Pres.-elect Pence’s call to Sargsyan politically more valuable! Trump may have asked Pence to make the call to Sargsyan due to his familiarity with Armenian issues during his 10-year tenure in the House of Representatives. As a member of the House Foreign Relations Committee, Cong. Pence voted for a Congressional Resolution recognizing the Armenian Genocide in 2005, but voted against similar resolutions in 2007 and 2010, expressing concern for the possible fallout on US-Turkey relations.

    Erdogan’s and Aliyev’s other disadvantage was that their phone calls to Trump were most probably arranged through hired multi-million dollar public relations and lobbying firms in Washington, whereas Armenia did not have to spend a penny for the Pence-Sargsyan phone conversation. This successful access to the newly-elected Trump Administration confirms the importance of getting involved in American political life, so that when the need arises, such arrangements can be made with relative ease.

    Furthermore, the phone calls between Trump and leaders of several countries, including those of Taiwan, Turkey and Pakistan, came under intense scrutiny by the U.S. media. China’s leaders were upset that Trump spoke with the President of Taiwan. No U.S. President or President-elect has done so since 1979, due to the U.S. “One China” policy which recognizes Taiwan as part of the People Republic of China.

    The controversy regarding Turkey involves Ivanka Trump’s participation in her father’s phone conversation with Pres. Erdogan which some view as a conflict of interest. Ivanka was closely involved with the Trump Towers project in Istanbul and Turkish business partner Mehmet Ali Yalcindag. She attended the 2012 opening celebration of Trump Towers in Istanbul. During the phone call, Trump told Pres. Erdogan that he and Ivanka admire him and Yalcindag. Trump’s lavish words were intended to relieve the irritation caused by his earlier announced plans to ban all Muslim immigrants. In response, Erdogan had demanded that Trump’s name be removed from the Istanbul Towers.

    Another controversial phone call was the one Pres.-elect Trump made to Pakistan’s Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif. Trump was quoted as heaping lavish praise on Pakistan, its people and culture which drew a harsh response from India, an important U.S. ally and Pakistan’s archenemy. In contrast, back in 2012, Trump had tweeted: “Get it straight: Pakistan is not our friend. We’ve given them billions and billions of dollars, and what did we get? Betrayal and disrespect — and much worse. #TimeToGetTough.”

    Finally, readers may recall that in my last week’s column I had commended the Armenian government for blocking Pakistan’s request for Observer status in the Parliamentary Assembly of the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO), due to Pakistan’s pro-Azerbaijan, pro-Turkey, anti-Armenia, and anti-Artsakh (Karabagh) policies. The Turkish media disseminated my column, although mistakenly attributing to the Armenian government my four suggestions to counter Pakistan at the UN, US Congress, Eurasian Economic Union (EEU), and support India in the Kashmir conflict with Pakistan.

    Armenian-Americans should continue their efforts to cultivate good relations with the Trump Administration and Members of Congress in order to counter all anti-Armenian attempts by Azerbaijan, Turkey and their high-priced lobbying firms in Washington!