Category: Regions

  • Caucasus: No Easy Courtship

    Caucasus: No Easy Courtship

    There are positive signs in the budding relationship between
    Armenia and Turkey. But don’t expect too much too soon.
    by Timothy Spence
    30 September 2008

  • Washington hosts conference on Energy Security and Diaspora in the Development of the U.S.- Azerbaijan Strategic Allied Relations

    Washington hosts conference on Energy Security and Diaspora in the Development of the U.S.- Azerbaijan Strategic Allied Relations

     

     

    [ 02 Oct 2008 17:47 ]

    Washington. Husniyya Hasanova–APA. The conference on Energy Security and Diaspora in the Development of the U.S.-Azerbaijan Strategic Allied Relations has commenced in Washington, Adil Bagirov, USAN Executive Director told APA that the conference focused on political reforms carried out in Azerbaijan, Diaspora management, energy issues. Former congressmen Greg Laughlin and Robert Livingston drew attention of attendees to recent developments occurred in Georgia and called Baku to be more attentive. The conference also envisaged the participation of Azerbaijanis in presidential elections to be held in the US.
    Azerbaijani Ambassador to the US Yashar Aliyev, Agshin Mehdiyev, Head of Azerbaijani delegation to UN, Azerbaijani Consul General to Los-Angeles Elin Suleymanov, Elshad Nasirov, Vice President of SOCAR, MPs Sabir Rustamkhanli, Asim Mollazadeh, officials of State Committee on Works with Azerbaijanis Living Abroad and other officials participated in the conference. The event will continue tomorrow.

  • Britain’s top policeman resigns

    Britain’s top policeman resigns

    Metropolitan Police Commissioner Sir Ian Blair has announced his resignation, blaming a lack of support from London mayor Boris Johnson.

    Sir Ian said that “without the mayor’s backing I do not think I can continue”.

    Mr Johnson, who took over as chairman of the police authority on Wednesday, praised his service but said the Met would benefit from “new leadership”.

    Sir Ian, who became the UK’s top police officer in February 2005, said he would be stepping down on 1 December.

    Prime Minister Gordon Brown said Sir Ian had made a “huge personal contribution to the safety and security of our country”.

    He paid tribute to Sir Ian’s leadership at the time of the July 2005 suicide bomb attacks on London’s transport system.

    Home Secretary Jacqui Smith said deputy commissioner Sir Paul Stephenson would take over as acting head of the Met should no successor be found by 1 December.

    Ms Smith said: “I pay tribute to Sir Ian for the massive reductions in crime that his leadership of the Met has overseen and his continuing efforts to tackle gun, gang and knife crime.”

    “His part in leading neighbourhood policing across London has led to Londoners being safer and more confident.”

    Mr Johnson, who has repeatedly avoided publicly backing Sir Ian since being elected mayor in May, had called for the commissioner to be directly accountable to City Hall.

    Speaking after Sir Ian’s resignation, the mayor said: “There comes a time in any organisation when it becomes clear it would benefit from new leadership and clarity of purpose. I believe that time is now.”

    ‘No secrets’

    Sir Ian, who became the UK’s top police officer in February 2005, said he would be stepping down on 1 December.

    Defending his record, Sir Ian said: “I am resigning not because of any failures of my service and not because the pressures of the office and the many stories that surround it are too much.

    “I am resigning in the best interests of the people of London and of the Metropolitan Police Service.”

    He said he had wanted to stay on until his contract ran out in February 2010.

    “However, at a meeting yesterday the new mayor made clear, in a very pleasant and determined way, that he wished there to be a change of leadership at the Met.”

    Sir Ian’s tenure has been dogged by controversy.

    MPA auditors are in the process of examining Scotland Yard contracts given to consultancy firm Impact Plus, run by a friend.

    Sir Ian has said he had been “open and straightforward in informing both the MPS [Metropolitan Police Service] and the MPA about my relationship with someone who was subsequently awarded a contract with the MPS”.

    Sir Ian has also faced criticism over the racism row involving the Met’s most senior Asian officer Tarique Ghaffur.

    There have been questions too about his handling of events surrounding the 2005 death of Jean Charles de Menezes, who was shot dead at Stockwell Underground station in south London after being mistaken for a suicide bomber.

    The Met Police were later convicted of a health and safety offence over the incident.

    Erionaldo da Silva, speaking on behalf of the de Menezes family, said Sir Ian should have resigned three years ago and the decision to do so now should not deflect attention from Jean Charles’ ongoing inquest.

    Shadow home secretary Dominic Grieve said Sir Ian had taken the “right decision” in standing down.

    “We have been calling for Sir Ian to step down for almost a year – since the serial and systematic failings at the Metropolitan Police [service] disclosed during the de Menezes trial – whilst cabinet ministers from the PM onwards continued to express total confidence in him.

    “It is now clear that they have shown a serious lack of judgment about the leadership of the most important police force in Britain.

    “It is vital that a successor is appointed who can restore public confidence.”

    Lib Dem home affairs spokesman Chris Huhne said Sir Ian “had become part of the Met’s problem, not its solution”.

    “His resignation is long overdue following a string of embarrassments for his force… the Met now needs a tough professional, not a wannabe politician.”

    The former London mayor Ken Livingstone said the circumstances of the resignation appeared to be a political decision.

    “Whoever now takes the job as Sir Ian’s successor will know that they may be asked to leave at a change of election.”

    Sir Edward Henry was the last commissioner of the Metropolitan Police to quit in 1918. His departure came after the hugely damaging police strike of that year, the last time officers were allowed to walk out.

    Sir Ian Blair Video:

    Sir Ian Blair says leading the Met Police was ‘the proudest time’ of his life

    BBC  2 October 2008

  • Strategic Focus on Turkey Project (SFT)

    Strategic Focus on Turkey Project (SFT)

     

     

    This project is designed to adopt a distinctive approach on Turkey. Most of the research and policy work undertaken on Turkey in the US and Europe concentrates either on the complications for bilateral US-Turkey relations of the US intervention in Iraq, or on Turkey’s internal economic and political developments and their impact on the negotiations over Turkey’s accession to the European Union (EU).

    The dimension that appears to receive far less attention in current policy and contemporary academic discussions is Turkey’s pivotal geo-political and geo-economic position and, therefore, the impacts that Turkish policies will likely have upon the long-term stability and prosperity of the region that surrounds it.

    In essence, Turkey is assessed currently in the US within the prism of Iraq and in many European capitals only as a problem that the EU needs to confront. A better understanding of how Turkey can help deal with some of the biggest geo-political and geo-economic challenges facing the US, EU and beyond will assist in building a more sophisticated comprehension of Turkey’s role as a constructive partner to the US, the EU member states and other countries.

    Doğan Holding, one of Turkey’s preeminent business groups, is generously supporting this project.

    Areas of focus for SFT:

    • Turkey’s role in the Middle East
    • Turkey’s role in establishing a diversified set of energy options for the EU
    • Turkey’s role in the economic development and regional integration of the Black Sea area
    • Turkey’s relationships with the Caucasus and Central Asia and political stability in the region
    • Turkey’s contributions to EU and NATO-led peace-keeping missions and other security operations
    • Turkey’s role as a magnet for Foreign Direct Investment and as a growing investor regionally

    Advisory Board

    Chatham House is forming an Advisory Board for the project. This will be composed of individuals with extensive experience and expertise from international affairs, media, civil society and business. The Board’s purpose is to provide long-term guidance to the project.

    SFT Contact

    The Strategic Focus on Turkey Project is run by Fadi Hakura, Associate Fellow at Chatham House. If you would like to find out more about the project, please contact:

     

     

     

     

     

    Fadi Hakura
    +44 (0)7970 172541
    Email Fadi Hakura

  • Culpabilities and Consequences

    Culpabilities and Consequences

    Culpability matters. We cannot be ‘forward-looking’ unless we know who we

    are dealing with, what is driving them and what they are capable of. We also

    need to know ourselves, particularly when we share culpabilities with others.

    Culpabilities are shared in this conflict, but they are different in scale and in

    nature.

    The culpabilities of Georgia’s President, Mikheil Saakashvili, are essentially

    those of temperament. He is ambitious, he is a gambler, and he wraps his

    ego around every problem. When he became President in January 2004, he

    set himself a priority: restoration of Georgia’s territorial integrity; fatefully, he

    also set a deadline: the end of his first term. He totally misjudged the

    correlation of forces and, even less excusably, the mood of Russia. Although

    he understood that Russia had no respect for weakness, he wrongly and

    rashly assumed that it would respect toughness as a substitute for strength.

    Towards the aspirations and apprehensions of Georgia’s de jure citizens in

    Abkhazia and South Ossetia, he showed even less understanding. Finally,

    though the culpability was not exclusively his, he had an existential faith in the

    backing of the United States, which he manipulated and stretched. But he did

    not provoke this conflict. He was provoked by those who knew how to do it.

    The culpabilities of NATO were those of wishful thinking and bureaucratic

    formalism. It was not always so. After 1991, the Alliance understood that

    without integration, the ills and insecurities of Central Europe’s immature,

    over-militarised, post-Communist democracies would pose threats to

    themselves and others. Although it grasped that the former USSR was more

    complex territory, it refused to treat it as forbidden territory, recognising that

    the restoration of ‘zones of special interest’ would have adverse

    consequences along Russia’s periphery and inside Russia itself. These

    principles survived the events of 9/11, but the means of securing them

    diminished. The elaborate architecture of NATO-Russia ‘cooperation’ and the

    focus on ‘programmes’ and process substituted for negotiation, blunted

    warnings and marginalised analysis of Russian policies and plans. For 17

    years, NATO almost completely ruled out the re-emergence of Russian

    military threats in Europe. Defence cooperation with Georgia advanced

    alongside an almost principled refusal to articulate a policy on its territorial

    conflicts or assess the dangers they posed.

    The culpabilities of the United States lay in over-confidence and neglect.

    Once Saakashvili was inaugurated, he became anointed by Washington, as

    Shevardnadze once had been, and the trepidations and warnings of less

    favoured members of Georgia’s elite were ignored (even after the November

    2007 crisis bore them out). Command arrangements for the

    Sustainment and Stability Operations Programme were inappropriate for a conflict zone.1

    Georgia’s vulnerability and importance, its mercurial leadership, the presence

    of US forces and the precariousness of the post-Bucharest security

    environment called for high level coordination and direction. There was none.

    Instead, by summer 2007 there were a multiplicity of agencies, freelancers,

    ‘signals’ and back channels leading nowhere.

    The culpabilities of the ‘international community’ were those of piety and

    impotence. Its leading institutions (the UN and OSCE) are deadlocked by the

    opposition of its leading members. Its mechanisms for conflict resolution

    institutionalise deadlock. It was never the territorial conflicts in Georgia,

    Azerbaijan, Armenia and Moldova that were frozen, only the mechanisms of

    ‘resolution’. In practice, the mechanisms became the resolution, and it is not

    surprising that in 2004 Georgians elected a president who found this

    intolerable.

    The culpability of the Russian Federation is overshadowed by the problem it

    poses. Seventeen years after the Soviet collapse, Russia continues to define

    its interests at the expense of its neighbours. In Yeltsin’s time the right of

    these neighbours to develop according to their own models and with partners

    of their own choosing was disputed in principle but in practice conceded for a

    complex of reasons, of which weakness was only one. Any concessions

    during the early years of Putin’s presidency were the product of weakness

    alone.2 The threshold was crossed after 2004 thanks to the coloured

    revolutions and their evident failings, the West’s further disregard of Russia’s

    kto-kovo (zero-sum) scheme of interests (Kosovo, enlargement, missile

    defence) and the re-emergence of usable Russian power.

    Russia’s culpability lay in priming the mechanism for war. The calibrated

    sequence of measures, political and military, undertaken after NATO’s

    Bucharest summit, the combat readiness of the 58th Army, the crescendo of

    provocations by South Ossetian forces peaking on 6-7 August and the

    presence of Russian ‘peacekeepers’ on the scene—not to say all the Russian

    ‘studies’ of Saakashvili’s aims and character—belie official claims of ‘disbelief’

    at news of the Georgian offensive.3 The occupation of Georgian ports and

    cities and the cutting of its transport arteries, threats to the BakuTbilisi

    Ceyhan pipeline, the extension of the conflict to Abkhazia and the ethnic

    cleansing of Georgians from South Ossetia also belie Russia’s ‘humanitarian’

    justification for intervention. Finally, the employment of components of the

    Black Sea Fleet, whilst supporting clear military objectives, followed a

    sequence of provocative statements (and, in Crimea, actions) regarding

    Ukraine since Bucharest and obliges us to consider the wider geopolitical

    purposes of the conflict.

    Where To?

    Russia’s Georgia operation appears to be an assiduously planned tactical

    step in pursuit of a strategic goal that lacks a strategy. Those who planned it

    judged correctly that Georgia’s incapacity and the West’s divisions would

    enable Russia to transform the political and military landscape in the south

    Caucasus and Black Sea Region without sanction or reprisal. Yet this does

    not mean there will be no long-term consequences for Russia. Neither does it

    mean that the West will agree to learn the lesson intended: in President

    Medvedev’s words, that Russia ‘will no longer tolerate’ its ‘behaviour’ (or, by

    implication, influence) in Russia’s ‘regions of privileged interest’. It will hardly

    advance this narrowly conceived aim if the West adopts a less charitable

    assessment of Russia’s intentions or if the latest application of ‘firm good

    neighbourliness’ destroys the residues of friendship on Russia’s periphery.

    Russia’s mood (resentment, vengefulness and the worship of power) has

    dominated reason, and so long as Russia is both bully and victim, it will draw

    errant and possibly dangerous conclusions whether others are meek or

    tough.

    The Georgian conflict has dealt a powerful blow to Medvedev’s liberal project,

    insofar as it existed, and handed Putin as much de facto power as he wishes to take. The political and psychological pressures on the former to be as

    strong as the latter can only incapacitate him. The need for ‘strength’ makes

    him hostage to constituencies that will never be his (defence industry and the

    armed forces), it undermines his power to stand up to ‘national’ capital (those

    who do not derive their wealth from integration into the global economy) or

    fight for those who do, and it deprives him of authority abroad. To invert

    Kissinger’s question, ‘when there is a problem with Russia, who do you call?’

    The conflict has unified the country, but in so doing it has made dissent more

    perilous and entrenched the positions of those who would be the first to suffer

    if a major and increasingly urgent reform of the bureaucracy, economy and

    energy sector took place.

    Yet then comes the question: for how long? For how long will the neoisolationists

    not see what the stock market collapse made obvious: Russia’s

    dependency on the global economy? For how long will they ignore the

    economic and social costs of the country’s ‘legal nihilism’? For how long will

    Russia’s derzhavniki (great power ideologists) disregard the implications of

    the South Ossetian/Abkhaz secession for ‘national formations’ in Russia

    itself? What will happen when those who see these things are no longer

    quiet? Will things get better, or will they get worse before they get better?

    Today it is hard to say.

    Today it is also hard to say whether the West will recover its nerve or

    continue to neuter itself. Yet some changes are visible, and they are not

    entirely bad. It has become clear to all but the most besotted that the 1990’s

    paradigm of ‘partnership’ has exhausted itself. Although many G7 leaders

    speak with conviction about the importance of maintaining cooperation with

    Russia, few will pretend that cooperation is enough. Fewer now doubt

    Russia’s determination to resurrect its dominance over the former USSR, and

    whilst some would accommodate to this, virtually no one believes that a

    strong Russia is good for Europe.

    By establishing the NATO-Georgia Commission, by mandating it to ‘follow up

    the decisions taken at the Bucharest Summit’ and by assessing the needs of

    the Georgian army, NATO has quietly let Russia know that the game is not

    over. The EU’s agreement to conclude an association agreement with

    Ukraine in 2009 sent the same message: integration with Russia’s neighbours

    (and the EU’s own) will intensify rather than diminish. Prime Minister Putin

    might be right to ask ‘what is the West?’ Whatever it is, it is not leaving.

    There would be much to lose if it did. The notion that spheres of influence,

    established at the expense of countries residing in them, will generate less misery

    than they did before 1914 or prove any more stable is based on myth

    rather than realism. Our task is not to vindicate Russia’s outmoded paradigm

    of security, but create the conditions that will induce Russians, in their own

    interests, to question it. That will not be done by symbolic and provocative

    steps (e.g., MAP), but it will require practical measures to strengthen the

    security of neighbours and restore their confidence in the West and

    themselves.

     

     

     

    James Sherr September 2008

  • Cooperation with Iran in education

    Cooperation with Iran in education

    Turkey’s National Education Minister Huseyin Celik said Wednesday that further cooperation with Iran in the field of education was possible.

    Minister Celik who is visiting Iran met his Iranian counterpart Alireza Ali-Ahmadi in Tehran.

    Celik said during the visit that they were assessing formation of a joint commission on education with Iran.

    He said growing relations in economy and trade could make tutoring in Turkish and Persian easier in the two countries.

    Celik said there were Persian Studies department in 11 Universities in Turkey while there was only one Turkish studies department in Iran.

    He said they wanted Iran to open Turkish studies departments in Tehran and Tabriz Universities noting that Turkey was ready to offer assistance.

    Also speaking during the visit Ali-Ahmadi said they were ready to cooperate with Turkey in fields of nuclear energy, aviation, medical science and bio-technology.

    Ali-Ahmadi said they declared 2009 Turkey-Iran culture year adding that they were ready to work towards introducing more Turkish classes in Iran.

    Later, the two ministers signed a document expressing the will of the two countries for cooperation in education.
    newstime7.com