Category: America

  • Turkish Involvement Could Stimulate Middle East Development

    Turkish Involvement Could Stimulate Middle East Development

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan (left) seems intent on increasing Turkey's influence with such neighbors as Syria's President Bashar Assad (2nd right)

    March 17, 2009

    By Abbas Djavadi

    In the Middle East, Turkey could play a leading role in resolving political conflicts; boosting economic cooperation and investment within the region; and supporting political, economic, and social reforms.

    As the most democratic Muslim country in the Middle East, one with rich experience dealing with and adapting to Western institutions, Turkey is the best-suited Middle Eastern country to lead the effort to advance regional stability and development. The European Union and the international community should support Turkey in this role.

    Ankara has demonstrated a consistent commitment to good relationships with all countries of the region, regardless of their domestic, regional, or international policies. Except for occasional military actions against Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) pockets in northern Iraq that Ankara considers essential for its national security, Turkey has abstained from interference in the internal affairs of other countries.

    After some years of hesitation, Ankara has begun improving relations with the Kurdistan regional government in northern Iraq, a key factor in improving stability and security in that country. Turkey was also one of the first countries to contribute to the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) in Afghanistan.

    Turkish efforts over the last two years to mediate between Syria and Israel, the Lebanese groups, and, more recently, Palestinian organizations — as well as its offer to mediate between Iran and the United States — have met with limited success so far. But they have nonetheless underscored Turkey’s capability and potentially suitable positioning to act as a regional leader.

    While primarily leaning toward the West in the past, the Turkish government (controlled by the Justice and Development (AK) party) has — especially over the last few years — improved its relations and image among the Muslim countries of the region, occasionally at the cost of Western reservations or objections.

    Leading The Middle East

    Boosting economic relations and investment between Middle Eastern countries would — especially if accompanied by relaxation of travel, residence, and work-permit limitations — gradually contribute to the overall improvement of living standards, education, and social services in the region. The result would be the mitigation of the actual and potential dangers of extremism and ethnic conflict.

    With its experience with its own democratic reforms (free and fair elections, media, education, privatization, and modernization), Turkey is in a position to help other Middle Eastern countries implement reforms. Doing so could also help Ankara unblock its own reform process and move ahead with EU-required measures that have been bogged down considerably for the last two years.

    If the Middle East were developing economically and socially as a region and countries there had direct and growing interest in cooperation and integration, there would be much less grounds for repression, terrorism, and war.

    The modalities of EU involvement in such a regional initiative remain undetermined, but it seems evident that a leading role for Turkey would be one of the best guarantees of success. Many Turkish officials have expressed a desire for greater Turkish engagement in the region.

    U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s recent visit to Ankara has signaled Washington’s support for Turkey’s role in the Middle East, and EU officials have seconded that support. The time seems ripe to build on these initiatives in order to keep the Middle East process active even as Brussels and Washington are preoccupied with immediate concerns closer to home.

    Abbas Djavadi is associate director of broadcasting with RFE/RL. The views expressed in this commentary, which is a summary of an address he gave at the Fourth Annual Conference of the Center for Middle Eastern Studies (Metropolitan University, Prague) are his own, and do not necessarily reflect those of RFE/RL

    Source:  www.rferl.org, March 17, 2009

  • Osama bin Elvis

    Osama bin Elvis

    Cover Story

    Where is Osama Bin Laden?

    By Angelo M. Codevilla from the March 2009 issue

    All the evidence suggests Elvis Presley is more alive today than Osama bin Laden. But tell that to the CIA and all the other misconceptualizers of the War on Terror.

    Seven years after Osama bin Laden’s last verifiable appearance among the living, there is more evidence for Elvis’s presence among us than for his. Hence there is reason to ask whether the paradigm of Osama bin Laden as terrorism’s deus ex machina and of al Qaeda as the prototype of terrorism may be an artifact of our Best and Brightest’s imagination, and whether investment in this paradigm has kept our national security establishment from thinking seriously about our troubles’ sources. So let us take a fresh look at the fundamentals.

    Dead or Alive?

    Negative evidence alone compels the conclusion that Osama is long since dead. Since October 2001, when Al Jazeera’s Tayseer Alouni interviewed him, no reputable person reports having seen him—not even after multiple-blind journeys through intermediaries. The audio and video tapes alleged to be Osama’s never convinced impartial observers. The guy just does not look like Osama. Some videos show him with a Semitic aquiline nose, while others show him with a shorter, broader one. Next to that, differences between colors and styles of beard are small stuff.

    Nor does the tapes’ Osama sound like Osama. In 2007 Switzerland’s Dalle Molle Institute for Artificial Intelligence, which does computer voice recognition for bank security, compared the voices on 15 undisputed recordings of Osama with the voices on 15 subsequent ones attributed to Osama, to which they added two by native Arab speakers who had trained to imitate him and were reading his writings. All of the purported Osama recordings (with one falling into a gray area) differed clearly from one another as well as from the genuine ones. By contrast, the CIA found all the recordings authentic. It is hard to imagine what methodology might support this conclusion.

    Also in 2007, Professor Bruce Lawrence, who heads Duke University’s religious studies program, argued in a book on Osama’s messages that their increasingly secular language is inconsistent with Osama’s Wahhabism. Lawrence noted as well that the Osama figure in the December 2001 video, which many have taken as his assumption of responsibility for 9/11, wears golden rings—decidedly un-Wahhabi. He also writes with the wrong hand. Lawrence concluded that the messages are fakes, and not very good ones. The CIA has judged them all good.

    Above all, whereas Elvis impersonators at least sing the King’s signature song, “You ain’t nutin’ but a hound dawg,” the words on the Osama tapes differ substantively from what the real Osama used to say—especially about the most important matter. On September 16, 2001, on Al Jazeera, Osama said of 9/11: “I stress that I have not carried out this act, which appears to have been carried out by individuals with their own motivation.” Again, in the October interview with Tayseer Alouni, he limited his connection with 9/11 to ideology: “If they mean, or if you mean, that there is a link as a result of our incitement, then it is true. We incite…” But in the so-called “confession video” that the CIA found in December, the Osama figure acts like the chief conspirator. The fact that the video had been made for no self-evident purpose except perhaps to be found by the Americans should have raised suspicion. Its substance, the celebratory affirmation of a responsibility for 9/11 that Osama had denied, should also have weighed against the video’s authenticity. Why would he wait to indict himself until after U.S. forces and allies had secured Afghanistan? But the CIA acted as if it had caught Osama red-handed.

    The CIA should also have taken seriously the accounts of Osama’s death. On December 26, 2001, Fox News interviewed a Taliban source who claimed that he had attended Osama’s funeral, along with some 30 associates. The cause of death, he said, had been pulmonary infection. The New York Times on July 11, 2002, reported the consensus of a story widespread in Pakistan that Osama had succumbed the previous year to his long-standing nephritis. Then, Benazir Bhutto—as well connected as anyone with sources of information on the Afghan-Pakistani border—mentioned casually in a BBC interview that Osama had been murdered by his associates. Murder is as likely as natural death. Osama’s deputy, Ayman al-Zawahiri, is said to have murdered his own predecessor, Abdullah Azzam, Osama’s original mentor. Also, because Osama’s capture by the Americans would have endangered everyone with whom he had ever associated, any and all intelligence services who had ever worked with him had an interest in his death.

    New Osama, Real Osama

    We do not know what happened to Osama. But whatever happened, the original one, the guy who looked and sounded like a spoiled Saudi kid turned ideologue, is no more. The one who exists in the tapes is different: he is the world’s terror master, endowed with inexplicable influence. In short, whoever is making the post-November 2001 Osama tapes is pretending to far greater power than Osama ever claimed, much less exercised.

    The real Osama bin Laden, like the real al Qaeda over which he presided, was never as important as reports from Arab (especially Saudi) intelligence services led the CIA to believe. Osama’s (late) role in Afghanistan’s anti-Soviet resistance was to bring in a little money. Arab fighters in general, and particularly the few Osama brought, fought rarely and badly. In war, one Afghan is worth many Arabs. In 1990 Osama told Saudi regent Abdullah that his mujahideen could stop Saddam’s invasion of the kingdom. When Abdullah waved him away in favor of a half-million U.S. troops, Osama turned dissident, enough to have to move to Sudan, where he stayed until 1996 hatching sterile anti-Saudi plots until forced to move his forlorn band to Afghanistan.

    There is a good reason why neither Osama nor al Qaeda appeared on U.S. intelligence screens until 1998. They had done nothing noteworthy. Since the 1998 bombings of U.S. embassies in Africa, however, and especially after director of Central Intelligence George Tenet imputed responsibility for 9/11 to Osama “game, set, and match,” the CIA described him as terrorism’s prime mover. It refused to countenance the possibility that Osama’s associates might have been using him and his organization as a flag of convenience. As U.S. forces were taking over Afghanistan in 2001, the CIA was telling Time and Newsweek that it expected to find the high-tech headquarters from which Osama controlled terrorist activities in 50 countries. None existed. In November 2008, without factual basis and contrary to reason, the CIA continued to describe him and his organization as “the most clear and present danger to the United States.” It did not try to explain how this could be while, it said, Osama is “largely isolated from the day to day operations of the organization he nominally heads.” What organization?

    Axiom and Opposite

    Why such a focus on an organization that was never large, most of whose known associates have long since been killed or captured, and whose assets the CIA does not even try to catalogue? The CIA’s official explanation, that al Qaeda has “metastasized” by spreading its expertise, is an empty metaphor. But pursuant to it, the U.S. government accepted the self-designation as “al Qaeda” of persons fighting for Sunni-Baathist interests in Iraq, and has pinned the label gratuitously on sundry high-profile terrorists while acknowledging that their connection to Osama and Co. may be emotional at most. But why such gymnastics in the face of Osama’s incontrovertible irrelevance? Because focusing on Osama and al Qaeda affirms a CIA axiom dating from the Cold War, an axiom challenged during the Reagan years but that has been U.S. policy since 1993, namely: terrorism is the work of “rogue individuals and groups” that operate despite state authority. According to this axiom, the likes of Osama run rings around the intelligence services of Arab states—just like the Cold War terrorists who came through Eastern Europe to bomb in Germany and Italy and to shoot Pope John Paul II supposedly acted despite Bulgarian intelligence, despite East Germany’s Stasi, despite the KGB. This axiom is dear to many in the U.S. government because it leads logically to working with the countries whence terrorists come rather than to treating them as enemies.

    But what if terrorism were (as Thomas Friedman put it) “what states want to happen or let happen”? What if, in the real world, infiltrators from intelligence services—the professionals—use the amateur terrorists rather than the other way around? What is the logical consequence of noting the fact that the terrorist groups that make a difference on planet Earth—such as Hamas and Hezbollah, the PLO, Colombia’s FARC—are extensions of, respectively, Iran, Saudi Arabia and Egypt, and Venezuela? It is the negation of the U.S. government’s favorite axiom. It means that when George W. Bush spoke, and when Barack Obama speaks, of America being “at war” against “extremism” or “extremists” they are either being stupid or acting stupid to avoid dealing with the nasty fact that many governments wage indirect warfare.

    In short, insisting on Osama’s supposed mastery of al Qaeda, and on equating terrorism with al Qaeda, is official U.S. policy because it forecloses questions about the role of states, and makes it possible to indict as warmongers whoever raises such questions. Osama’s de facto irrelevance for seven years, however, has undermined that policy’s intellectual legitimacy. How much longer can presidents or directors of the CIA wave the spectra of Osama and al Qaeda before people laugh at them?

    An Intellectual House of Cards

    Questioning osama’s relevance to today’s terrorism leads naturally to asking how relevant he ever was, and who might be more relevant. That in turn quickly shows how flimsy are the factual foundations on which rest the U.S. government’s axioms about the “war on terror.” Consider: We know that Khalid Sheikh Mohammed (KSM) planned and carried out 9/11. But there is no independent support for KSM’s claim that he acted at Osama’s direction and under his supervision. On the contrary, we know for sure that the expertise and the financing for 9/11 came from KSM’s own group (the U.S. government has accepted but to my knowledge not verified that the group’s core is a biological family of Baluchs). This group carried out the 1998 bombings of U.S. embassies in Africa and every other act for which al Qaeda became known. The KSM group included the perpetrators of the 1993 World Trade Center bombings Abdul Rahman Yasin, who came from, returned to, and vanished in Iraq, as well as Ramzi Yousef, the mastermind of that bombing, who came to the U.S. from Iraq on an Iraqi passport and was known to his New York collaborators as “Rashid the Iraqi.” This group had planned the bombing of U.S. airliners over the Pacific in 1995. The core members are non-Arabs. They had no history of religiosity (and the religiosity they now display is unconvincing). They were not creatures of Osama. Only in 1996 did the group come to Osama’s no-account band, and make it count.

    In life, as in math, you must judge the function |of a factor in any equation by factoring it out and seeing if the equation still works. Factor out Osama. Chances are, 9/11 still happens. Factor out al Qaeda too. Maybe 9/11 still happens. The other bombing plots sure happened without it. But if you factor out the KSM group, surely there is no 9/11, and without the KSM group, there is no way al Qaeda would have become a household word.

    Who, precisely, are KSM and his reputed nephews? That is an interesting question to which we do not know the answer, and are not about to find out. Ramzi Yousef was sentenced to life imprisonment for the 1993 World Trade Center bombing after a trial that focused on his guilt and that abstracted from his associations. Were our military tribunal to accede to KSM’s plea of guilty, he would avoid any trial at all. Moreover, the sort of trial that would take place before the tribunal would focus on proving guilt rather than on getting at the whole truth. It would not feature the cross-examination of witnesses, the substantive proving and impeachment of evidence, and the exploration of alternative explanations of events. But real trials try all sides. Do we need such things given that KSM confessed? Yes. There is no excuse for confusing confessions with truth, especially confessions in which the prisoners confirm our agencies’ prejudices.

    The excuse for limiting the public scrutiny of evidence is the alleged need to protect intelligence sources. But my experience, as well as that of others who have been in a position to probe such claims, is that almost invariably they protect our intelligence agencies’ incompetence and bureaucratic interests. Anyhow, the public’s interest in understanding what it’s up against should override all others.

    Understanding the Past, Dealing With the Future

    Focusing on Osama bin Elvis is dangerous to America’s security precisely because it continues to substitute in our collective mind the soft myth that terrorism is the work of romantic rogues for the hard reality that it can happen only because certain states want it to happen or let it happen. KSM and company may not have started their careers as agents of Iraqi intelligence, or they may have quit the Iraqis and worked for others, or maybe they just worked for themselves. But surely they were a body unto themselves. As such they fit Osama’s description of those responsible for 9/11 as “individuals with their own motivation” far better than they fit the CIA’s description of them as Osama’s tools.

    More important, focusing on Osama and al Qaeda distorts our understanding of what is happening in Afghanistan. The latter-day Taliban are fielding forces better paid and armed than any in the region except America’s. Does anyone suggest seriously that Osama or al-Zawahiri are providing the equipment, the money, or the moral incentives? Such amounts of money can come only from the super wealthy of Saudi Arabia and the Gulf. The equipment can come only through dealers who work at the sufferance of states, and can reach the front only through Pakistan by leave of Pakistani authorities. Moreover, the moral incentives for large-scale fighting in Pushtunistan can come only as part of the politics of Pushtun identity. Hence sending troops to Afghanistan to fight Pushtuns financed by Saudis, supported by Pakistanis, and disposing of equipment purchased throughout the world, with the objective of “building an Afghan nation” capable of preventing Osama and al Qaeda from messing up the world from their mountain caves, is an errand built on intellectual self-indulgence.

    Intellectual Authority

    The CIA had as much basis for deeming Osama the world’s terror master “game, set, and match” in 2001 as it had in 2003 for verifying as a “slam dunk” the presence of weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, and as it had in 2007 for determining that Iran had stopped its nuclear weapons program. Mutatis mutandis, it was on such bases that the CIA determined in 1962 that the Soviets would not put missiles in Cuba; that the CIA was certain from 1963 to 1978 that the USSR would not build the first strike missile force that it was building before its very eyes; that the CIA convinced Bush 41 that the Soviet Union was not falling apart and that he should help hold it together; that the CIA assured the U.S. government in 1990 that Iraq would not invade Kuwait, and in 1996 that neither India nor Pakistan would test nuclear weapons. In these and countless other instances, the CIA has provided the US government and the media with authoritative bases for denying realities over which America was tripping.

    The force of the CIA’s judgments, its authority, has always come from the congruence between its prejudices and those of America’s ruling class. When you tell people what they want to hear, you don’t have to be too careful about premises, facts, and conclusions. Our problem, in short, is not the CIA’s mentality so much as the unwillingness of persons in government and the “attentive public” to exercise intellectual due diligence about international affairs. Osama bin Laden’s role may be as good a place as any to start.

    Angelo M. Codevilla, a professor of international relations at Boston University, a fellow of the Claremont Institute, and a senior editor of The American Spectator, was a Foreign Service officer and served on the staff of the U.S. Senate Intelligence Committee between 1977 and 1985. He was the principal author of the 1980 presidential transition report on intelligence. He is the author of The Character of Nations: How Politics Makes and Breaks Prosperity, Family, and Civility.

    Source:  The American Spectator, March 2009

  • Armenian Studies at a Threshold Society for Armenian Studies

    Armenian Studies at a Threshold Society for Armenian Studies

    35th Anniversary Conference
    March 26-28, 2009
    University of California, Los Angeles

    Session 1. Thursday, 1:00-2:30 p.m.
    Medieval Literature and the Arts
    Theo van Lint, Oxford University, Chair

    * Andrea Scala, University of Milan, “About the Name of the Latin
       Language in Classical Armenian”
    * Robert Thomson, Oxford University, Emeritus, “Armenian Biblical
       Commentaries: The Present State of Research”
    * Sona Haroutyunian, Ca’ Foscari University of Venice, “Dante
       Alighieri and the Mekhitarist School of Translation”

    Session 2. Thursday, 2:30-4:00 p.m.
    Medieval History and Culture
    Anne Elizabeth Redgate, Newcastle University, Chair

    * Sergio La Porta, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, “Cultural
       Interaction and Cultural Strategies in Post-Seljuk Armenia”
    * Sara Nur Yildiz, Bilgi University, Istanbul, “Competing for the
       Il-Khan’s Favor: Seljuk and Armenian Rivalry in Thirteenth Century
       Mongol-Dominated Anatolia”
    * Tom Sinclair, University of Cyprus, “Coins, Trade, and Cities in
       Greater Armenia during the Il-Khanid Period”

    Refreshments, 4:00-4:15 p.m.

    Session 3. Thursday, 4:15.6:30 p.m.
    Researching the Contemporary Armenian Diaspora: Consolidating the
       Past, Situating the Future
    Khachig Tölölyan, Wesleyan University, Chair

    * Sossie Kasbarian, Graduate Institute of International and
       Development Studies, Geneva, “From Exile to Empowerment Reinvigorating
       the Concept of Diaspora: The Armenian Case”
    * Aida Boudjikanian, Montreal, “The Literature on the Armenian
       Diaspora in France and Canada”
    * Susan Pattie, University College London, “Twenty-First Century
       Armenians: Is Anyone Paying Attention?”
    * Anny Bakalian, City University of New York, “Still Alive and
       Thriving: Assimilation and Identity among Armenian Americans in the
       21st Century”
    * Nelida Boulghourdjian, University of Buenos Aires, “Migration
       Studies in Argentina: The Armenian Case”
    * Discussant: Aram Yengoyan, University of California, Davis

    Friday, March 27, 2009, 1200 Rolfe Hall, 9 A.M. 9 P.M.

    Session 4. Friday, 9:00 a.m.
    Armenian History as Connected History
    Houri Berberian, California State University-Long Beach, Chair

    * Sebouh Aslanian, University of Michigan-Ann Arbor, “From
       ‘Autonomous’ to ‘Interactive’ Histories: World History’s Challenge to
       Armenian Studies”
    * Peter Cowe, UCLA, “The Armenian Oikoumene of the 11th to 14th
       Century in Search of a Holistic Discourse”
    * Rachel Goshgarian, Zohrab Center, New York, “The Futuwwa and
       Armenian History in the Late Medieval ‘Islamicate’ World of Anatolia”
    * Elyse Semerdjian, Whitman College, “Morality, Communalism, and the
       Armenians of Ottoman Aleppo”

    Refreshments, 11:00-11:15 a.m.

    Session 5. Friday, 11:15 a.m.1:00 p.m.
    Economy, Society, and Culture of Early Modern East Central Europe
       (14th 19th Centuries)
    George Bournoutian, Iona College, Chair

    * Andreas Helmedach, Center for the History and Culture of East
       Central Europe (GWZO), Leipzig, “Armenian Minorities as Actors in
       Early Modern Globalization”
    * Bálint Kovács, Center for the History and Culture of East Central
       Europe (GWZO), Leipzig, “Interregional Cultural Relations of the
       Transylvanian Armenians in the 17th and 18th Centuries”
    * Judit Pál, Babes-Bolyai-University, Cluj-Napoca, Romania, “The
       Social and Economic History of the Armenians in Transylvania in the
       18th and 19th Centuries”

    Lunch Recess, 1:00-1:45 p.m.

    Session 6. Friday, 1:45-3:45 p.m.
    Between Perversion and Representation: Sexual Allegories in Armenian Literature
    Rubina Peroomian, UCLA, Chair and Discussant

    * Tamar Boyadjian, UCLA, “The Female City and Its Textual Function:
       Grigor Tghay’s Lament over the City of Jerusalem”
    * Talar Chahinian, UCLA, “The Crisis of Incest: Reconfiguring the
       Catastrophe in Orpuni’s ‘Vartsu Seniag, ‘ Sarafian’s Ishkhanuhin, and
       Shahnur’s ‘Buynuzlenere’”
    * Myrna Douzjian, UCLA, “Challenging Social and Literary Norms:
       Sexual Agency in Violet Grigorian’s Poetry”
    * Lilit Keshishyan, UCLA, “Sexual Perversion as Political Allegory in
       Gurgen Khanjian’s Hivandanots”

    Session 7. Friday, 4:00-6:00 p.m.
    New Perspectives on The Armenian Genocide
    George Shirinian, Zoryan Institute, Chair

    * Taner Akçam, Clark University, “Ottoman Documents and Genocidal
       Intent of the Union and Progress Party”
    * Janet Klein, University of Akron, “The Kurds and the Armenian
       Genocide: Reflections on Historiography”
    * Lerna Ekmekcio lu, New York University, “Approaching the Unlucky
       Sister and Her Child: Sexual Violence as a Marker during and after the
       Armenian Genocide”
    * Vahram Shemmassian, California State University-Northridge, “The
       Rescue of Captive Genocide Survivors, 1919-1921”

    Light Dinner Recess (on site), 6:00-7:00 p.m.

    Session 8. Friday, 7:00-9:00 p.m.
    Contemporary Armenia
    Hovann Simonian, University of Southern California, Chair

    * Khatchik Der Ghougassian, Universidad de San Andrés, Buenos Aires,
       “Market Fundamentalism, Economic Hardship, and Social Protest in Armenia”
    * Konrad Siekierski, Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznan, Poland,
       “Nation and Faith, Past and Present: The Contemporary Discourse of the
       Armenian Apostolic Church in Armenia”
    * Tamara Tonoyan, National Institute of Health, Yerevan, “HIV/AIDS in
       Armenia: Migration as a Socio-Economic and Cultural Component of
       Women’s Risk Settings”
    * Anahid Keshishian-Aramouni, UCLA, “Inknagir Magazine: Frivolous
       Iconoclasm or Marker of Artistic Liberty?”
    * Gregory Areshian, UCLA, Pavel Avetisyan and Armine Hayrapetyan,
       Institute of Archaeology and Ethnography, Yerevan, “Archaeology in
       Post-Soviet Armenia: New Discoveries, Problems, and Perspectives”

    Session 9. Saturday, 9:00-10:30 a.m.
    Discourse and Violence: Revisiting the Adana Massacres of 1909
    Richard Hovannisian, UCLA, Chair

    * Ohannes Kiliçdagi, Bilgi University, Istanbul, “Ottomanism among
       the Anatolian Armenians after the 1908 Revolution”
    * Bedross Der Matossian, MIT, “From Verbal to Physical Violence:
       Ihsan Fikri’s Itidal and the Massacres of Adana in 1909”
    * Rubina Peroomian, UCLA, “The Poetics of Violence in Literary
       Responses to the Adana Massacres”

    Session 10. Saturday, 10:30 a.m.12:45 p.m. The State of Armenian
    Studies Chairs and Programs in the United States Marc Mamigonian,
    NAASR, Chair (with comments on prehistory of Armenian programs)

    * Taner Akçam, Clark University
    * Kevork Bardakjian, University of Michigan-Ann Arbor
    * Peter Cowe, UCLA
    * Richard Hrair Dekmejian, USC
    * Barlow Der Mugrdechian, California State University-Fresno
    * Roberta Ervine, St. Nersess Seminary
    * Richard Hovannisian, UCLA
    * Jirair Libaridian, University of Michigan-Ann Arbor
    * Christina Maranci, Tufts University
    * Simon Payaslian, Boston University
    * Ara Sanjian, Armenian Research Center, UM-Dearborn
    * Vahram Shemmassian, California State University-Northridge

    Lunch Recess, 12:45-1:30 p.m.

    Session 11. Saturday, 1:30-3:00 p.m.
    Church Politics and Identity
    Abraham Terian, St. Nersess Seminary, Chair

    * Paul Werth, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, “Rumors and Projects
       of Ecclesiastical Union: Armenians, Orthodoxy, and the Problem of
       Confessional Distinctions in Imperial Russia”
    * Ara Sanjian, University of Michigan-Dearborn, “The British Foreign
       Office, the Church of England, and the Crisis in the Armenian Church
       at Antelias, 1956-1963”
    * Marlen Eordegian, Vanderbilt University, “Straddling Religion and
       Politics: The Case of the Armenian Patriarchate of Jerusalem”

    Session 12. Saturday, 3:15-5:45 p.m.
    Armenians, World War II, and Repatriation
    Barbara Merguerian, Armenian International Women’s Association, Chair

    * Vartan Matiossian, Hovnanian School, New Jersey, “‘White’
       Armenians, ‘Aryan’ Armenians: Combating Racial Views during the First
       Half of the 20th Century”
    * Gregory Aftandilian, Washington, D.C., “World War II as an Enhancer
       of Armenian-American Second Generation Identity”
    * Levon Thomassian, California State University-Northridge, “Summer of ’42”
    * Astrig Atamian, National Institute of Oriental Languages and
       Civilizations, Paris, “Being an Armenian Communist in France during
       the Cold War”
    * Sevan Yousefian, UCLA, “The Formation of Soviet Armenian
       Immigration Policy: Diaspora Networks, Armenian Cadres, and the
       Postwar Repatriation Campaign”
    * Joanne Laycock, University of Manchester, “‘Belongings’: People and
       Possessions in the Armenian Repatriations, 1947-1949”

    Concluding Comments and Discussion, 5:45-6:00 p.m.

    Architectural Exhibit by US Chapter of Armenian Architects Association

    Conference Sponsors: Society for Armenian Studies UCLA Center for Near
    Eastern Studies UCLA Center for European and Eurasian Studies USC
    Institute of Armenian Studies National Association for Armenian
    Studies and Research

    and The Armenian Studies Programs of Armenian Center, Columbia
    University Armenian Research Center, University of Michigan-Dearborn
    California State University-Fresno California State
    University-Northridge University of California, Los Angeles University
    of Michigan-Ann Arbor

    Thirty-Fifth Anniversary Banquet, Taghlyan Center 1201 N. Vine Street,
    Hollywood, California, 7:30 p.m.
    Banquet Sponsor: Armenian Educational Foundation

  • The Future of Turkish Democracy: Assessing Local Election Outcomes

    The Future of Turkish Democracy: Assessing Local Election Outcomes

    Event Summary

    Turkey experienced a turbulent 2008 that included a constitutional crisis, strained civil-military relations, an economic slowdown and an activist foreign policy. As the country prepares for local elections later in March, the tension between the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) and the rest of the Turkish body politic is once again rising. Moreover, growing questions about Turkey’s pro-Western orientation make the upcoming elections all the more critical. The future of Turkish democracy and its near-term geopolitical orientation could be significantly affected by the lessons the Erdogan government draws from the election.
     On April 1, the Center on the United States and Europe (CUSE) will host a discussion of the election results and the future of Turkey’s policies at home and abroad featuring two experts on Turkish politics, Soli Ozel and Murat Yetkin. Ozel is one of Turkey’s most respected analysts, and his post-election analyses have consistently been the gold standard in helping the Washington policy community understand electoral results. Yetkin is a prominent commentator on Turkish domestic politics and foreign policies whose years of reporting on Ankara enable him to provide a unique “inside the Ankara beltway” perspective.

    Brookings nonresident Fellow Omer Taspinar, director of CUSE’s Turkey Project, will provide introductory remarks and will moderate the discussion. After the program, the featured speakers will take audience questions.

    Participants

    Introduction and Moderator

    Omer Taspinar

    Nonresident Fellow, Foreign Policy

    Panelists

    Murat Yetkin

    Columnist and Ankara Bureau Chief, Radikal (Turkey)

    Soli Ozel

    Bilgi University, Istanbul

    Event Information

    When

    Wednesday, April 01, 2009
    9:30 AM to 11:00 AM

    Where

    Falk Auditorium
    The Brookings Institution
    1775 Massachusetts Ave., NW
    Washington, DC
    Map

    Contact: Brookings Office of Communications

    E-mail: [email protected]

    Phone: 202.797.6105

  • Turkish Deputy Foreign Minister: Turkey’s position on Karabakh problem will continue as before, nothing has changed

    Turkish Deputy Foreign Minister: Turkey’s position on Karabakh problem will continue as before, nothing has changed

    Baku – APA. “The United States and Turkey have common targets on a number of issues, including Caucasus,” Turkey’s Deputy Foreign Minister, former Turkish ambassador to Azerbaijan Ahmet Unal Chevikoz, who ended his visit to Washington, said in his interview to Turkish service of the Voice of America, APA reports.

    Chevikoz had high-level meetings with the U.S. officials in Washington and discussed President Barack Obama’s forthcoming visit to Ankara.
    “Obama’s visit is very important. The relations between the two countries were discussed during the recent visit of the Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to Ankara. We saw that the two countries had very significant foreign policy targets. We have a common agenda on a number of issues, including our relations with Iraq, Afghanistan, Caucasus and Russia,” he said.

    Commenting on Turkey’s policy with respect to Armenia Chevikoz said the whole world witnessed everything.

    “After September 6 visit of President Abdullah Gul to Yerevan, high-level warm relations were formed between the two countries. Foreign Ministers met seven times. The ways to improve Turkey-Armenia relations were discussed at the meetings. We hope the relations will normalize soon and it will be continuous. There are some preparations in this respect and these preparations will be realized with support of the Foreign Ministers of the two countries,” he said.

    Ahmet Unal Chevikoz also commented on Azerbaijan’s attitude towards Ankara-Yerevan relations.


    “Being our nearest neighbor in the region Azerbaijan is attentively observing normalization of the relations between Turkey and Armenia. On the other hand, there is unsolved Karabakh conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan. It is normal that Azerbaijan is observing these processes. But Azerbaijan need not worry or doubt anything. Turkey’s position on Karabakh problem will continue as before, nothing has changed. Of course, normalization of the relations between Turkey and Armenia is parallel to the process of settlement of Nagorno Karabakh problem,” he said.

    Turkish diplomat said his country was not mediator, but played an easing role in the settlement of the conflicts in the region.

    Ankara has offered opportunities for contacts between Afghanistan and Pakistan, Israel and Palestine and played an easing role in Israel-Syria and Syria-Lebanon dialogues and European Union’s contacts with Iran.
    “All this is sourced from everybody’s confidence in Turkey,” he said.

    Source:  en.apa.az, 16 Mar 2009

  • Cheney: Obama detainee policies make US less safe

    Cheney: Obama detainee policies make US less safe

    Former Vice President Dick Cheney appears on CNN's "State of the Union" Sunday, March 15, 2009, in Washington. Cheney's going high-tech with a BlackBerry and a wireless device for reading books. And he's driving a car these days. Such is life after 8 years as vice president. Two months after leaving office, Cheney also is getting used to being out of the loop when it comes national secrets. (AP Photo/Kevin Wolf)

    Obama has suspended military trials for suspected terrorists and announced he will close the U.S. detention facility at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, as well as overseas sites where the CIA has held some detainees. The president also ordered CIA interrogators to abide by the U.S. Army Field Manual’s regulations for treatment of detainees and denounced waterboarding, part of the Bush program of enhanced interrogation, as torture.

    Asked on CNN’s “State of the Union” if he thought Obama has made Americans less safe with those actions, Cheney replied, “I do.”

    “I think those programs were absolutely essential to the success we enjoyed of being able to collect the intelligence that let us defeat all further attempts to launch attacks against the United States since 9/11,” Cheney said.

    “I think that’s a great success story. It was done legally. It was done in accordance with our constitutional practices and principles,” he said. “President Obama campaigned against it all across the country. And now he is making some choices that, in my mind, will, in fact, raise the risk to the American people of another attack.”

    Some Democratic lawmakers and other administration critics have denounced those and other Bush programs, such as warrantless surveillance, as counterproductive and illegal. In defending these policies established by President George W. Bush following the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, Cheney said he had seen a report itemizing specific attacks that had been stopped because of the intelligence gathered through those programs.

    “It’s still classified. I can’t give you the details of it without violating classification, but I can say there were a great many of them,” he said.

    Cheney said the March 2003 invasion of Iraq has led to democratic elections and a constitution as well as the defeat of al-Qaida in Iraq and Iran’s efforts to influence events in Iraq.

    “We have succeeded in creating in the heart of the Middle East a democratically governed Iraq, and that is a big deal, and it is, in fact, what we set out to do,” he said.

    Asked if he was declaring “mission accomplished” — those words graced a banner aboard the USS Abraham Lincoln that heralded Bush’s overly optimistic declaration on May 1, 2003, that major combat operations had ended in Iraq — Cheney replied: “I wouldn’t use that, just because it triggers reactions that we don’t need.”

    He added: “But I would ask people — and the press, too — to take an honest look at the circumstances in Iraq today and how far we’ve come.”

    The Associated Press 15 March 2009