Category: Regions

  • Izmir Azerbaijanis begin signature campaign for not opening the Turkish-Armenian border

    Izmir Azerbaijanis begin signature campaign for not opening the Turkish-Armenian border

    Izmir-based Azerbaijan Culture Center began signature campaign demanding not to open the Turkish-Armenian border until the withdrawal of Armenian occupier forces from the Azerbaijani lands, APA reports with reference to CHA agency. (more…)

  • Head of American Jewish committee: “Events in Georgia are a historical moment for Azerbaijan”

    Head of American Jewish committee: “Events in Georgia are a historical moment for Azerbaijan”

    Events in Georgia are a historical moment for the whole world, especially for Azerbaijan, said chief executive of the American Jewish Community David Harris by results of his visit to Azerbaijan.

    He said Azerbaijan has now a chance to show the US how it can help its friends in critical moments. (more…)

  • Head of American Jewish Committee: “We will focus on the 907th amendment on Azerbaijan”

    Head of American Jewish Committee: “We will focus on the 907th amendment on Azerbaijan”

    Few Americans know about Azerbaijan’s role in the war in Afghanistan, Iraq and in combat with international terror, said chief executive of the American Jewish Committee David Harris.

    He said that people in America do not know that Azerbaijan is an island of tolerance, maintaining good cooperation with Israel. (more…)

  • separate and unequal

    separate and unequal

    From: Arch Getty <getty@ucla.edu>
    Subject: separate and unequal
    Date: Fri, 15 Aug 2008

    Things look very different from here in Moscow,
    almost as if one is observing things from another planet.

    The other night I watched a story on Russia
    Today, a semi-official Russian news channel.  It
    showed CNN footage purporting to come from the
    apparent Russian “capture” of the Georgian town
    of Gori.  Actually, the film was (unattributed)
    Russia Today footage of damage from the Georgian
    attack days ago on Tskhinvali, the So. Ossetian capital.

    But even aside from the difficulty of getting
    anything resembling accurate news here, the
    Russian point of view is, predictably, vastly
    different from the knee-jerk Russophobia in the
    U.S. press.  And to many of us here, the Russian
    point of view is at least as compelling as the
    mainstream U.S. attitudes we hear about.

    Russians have always been sensitive to western
    views of them and are particularly alert for
    attitudes  that smack of inequality and
    hypocrisy.  The vast majority of people here are
    amazed, sad, and confused at the way the western
    media has transformed the Georgian side, which
    started the war, into the victims.  When Prime
    Minister Putin decried the west’s cynical
    “turning black into white” he spoke for large numbers of Russians.

    People here were amazed and insulted when
    President Bush bragged about his “stern” warnings
    to Putin.  Like Putin, they cannot imagine a
    reason to pay any attention to such a person,
    whose paternalistic but helpless schoolmarm
    lectures are considered here to be “not serious.”

    Russians wonder how, before Russian intervention,
    something more than a thousand deaths including
    the destruction of villages and shooting of
    civilians by the Georgians escape western notice.

    They wonder why Georgian attempts to suppress the
    Ossetian alphabet were not cultural genocide and
    Russian defense against Georgian attack is.

    They wonder how prying Kossovo away from Serbia
    was popular self-determination but So. Ossetian
    independence from Georgia is not.

    They wonder how President Bush, who for the sake
    of regime change invaded Iraq far from his
    shores, nevertheless managed to denounce Russian
    use of force and complain that the days of regime change had passed.

    They wonder why, in 1942 when attacked by Japan,
    the U.S. did not follow its own advice about a
    “measured response” and stop her counterattack on
    Japan at Pearl Harbor.  “Were the Japanese the
    victims then, just like the Georgians?”

    They wonder why, as one puzzled but sincere
    friend put it, “you Americans hate us so much when we do what you do.”

    But mostly they wonder why US leaders cannot come
    up with a more sophisticated world view for the
    21st century than surrounding Russia (which after
    all has nuclear weapons and much of the world’s
    oil) with verbal abuse, hostile alliances and
    provocations.  They don’t understand why US
    leaders cannot see beyond or outgrow the cold
    war.  Another asked,  “So Cheney and Rice, they
    aren’t your most advanced global thinkers, right?”

    J. Arch Getty
    Moscow
    [Professor of History, UCLA]

    Johnson’s Russia List
    2008-#150
    15 August 2008

  • Putin Is Not Hitler

    Putin Is Not Hitler

    Washington Post

    By Michael Dobbs (dobbsm@washpost.com)
    Michael Dobbs covered the collapse of the Soviet
    Union for the Washington Post. His latest book is
    “One Minute to Midnight: Kennedy, Khrushchev, and
    Castro on the Brink of Nuclear War.”

    It did not take long for the “Putin is Hitler”
    analogies to start, following the eruption of the
    ugly little war between Russia and Georgia over
    the breakaway Georgian province of South Ossetia.
    A neo-conservative commentator, Robert Kagan,
    compared the Russian attack on Georgia with the
    Nazi grab of the Sudetenland in 1938. President
    Jimmy Carter’s former national security adviser
    Zbigniew Brzezinski said that the Russian leader
    was following a course “that is horrifyingly
    similar to that taken by Stalin and Hitler in the 1930s.”

    Others invoked the infamous Brezhnev doctrine of
    limited sovereignty, under which Soviet leaders
    claimed the right to intervene militarily in
    Eastern Europe, in order to prop up their
    crumbling imperium. “We’ve seen this movie before
    in Prague and Budapest,” said presumptive
    Republican nominee John McCain, referring to the
    Soviet invasions of Czecholovakia in 1968 and Hungary in 1956.

    Actually, the events of the past week in Georgia
    have little in common either with Hitler’s
    dismemberment of Czechoslovakia on the eve of
    World War II or Soviet policies in Eastern
    Europe. They are better understood against the
    background of the complicated ethnic politics of
    the Caucasus, a part of the world where
    historical grudges run deep, and the oppressed
    can become oppressors in the bat of an eye.

    Unlike most of the armchair generals now posing
    as experts on the Caucasus, I have actually
    visited Tskhinvali, a sleepy provincial town in
    the shadow of the mountains that rise up along
    Russia’s southern border. I was there in March
    1991, shortly after the city was occupied by
    Georgian militia units loyal to Zviad
    Gamsakhurdia, the first freely elected leader of
    Georgia in seven decades. One of Gamsakhurdia’s
    first acts as Georgian president was to cancel
    the political autonomy that had been granted to
    the republic’s 90,000-strong Ossetian minority
    under the Stalinist constitution.

    After negotiating safe passage with Soviet
    interior ministry troops who had stationed
    themselves between the Georgians and the
    Ossetians, I discovered the town had been
    ransacked by Gamsakhurdia’s militia. The
    Georgians had trashed the Ossetian national
    theater, decapitated the statue of an Ossetian
    poet, and pulled down monuments to Ossetians who
    fought with Soviet troops in World War II. The
    Ossetians were responding in kind, firing on
    Georgian villages and forcing Georgian residents
    of Tskhinvali to flee their homes.

    It soon became clear to me that the Ossetians
    viewed Georgians much the same way Georgians view
    Russians: as aggressive bullies bent on taking
    away their independence. “We are much more
    worried by Georgian imperialism than Russian
    imperialism,” an Ossetian leader, Gerasim
    Khugaev, told me. “It is closer to us, and we feel its pressure all the time.”

    When it comes to apportioning blame for the
    latest flareup in the Caucasus, there is plenty
    to go around. The Russians were clearly itching
    for a fight, but the behavior of Georgian
    president Mikheil Saakashvili has been erratic
    and provocative. The United States may have
    stoked the conflict by encouraging Saakashvili to
    believe he enjoyed American protection, when the
    West’s ability to impose its will in this part of
    the world is actually quite limited.

    Let us examine the role played by the three main parties one by one.

    Georgia. Saakashvili’s image in the West, and
    particularly in America, is that of the great
    “democrat,” the leader of the “Rose revolution”
    who spearheaded a popular uprising against former
    American favorite Eduard Shevardnadze in November
    2003. It is true that he has won two, reasonably
    free, elections, but he has also displayed some
    autocratic tendencies; he sent riot police to
    crush an opposition protest in Tbilisi last
    November and shuttered an opposition television station.

    While the U.S. views Saakashvili as a pro-Western
    modernizer, a large part of his political appeal
    in Georgia has stemmed from his promise to
    re-unify Georgia by bringing the secessionist
    provinces of South Ossetia and Abkhazia under
    central control. He has presented himself as the
    successor to the medieval Georgian king, David
    the Builder, and promised that the country will
    regain its lost territories by the time he leaves
    office, by one means or another. American
    commentators tend to overlook the fact that
    Georgian democracy is inextricably intertwined with Georgian nationalism.

    The restoration of Georgia’s traditional borders
    is an understandable goal for a Georgian leader,
    but is a much lower priority for the West,
    particularly if it involves armed conflict with
    Russia. Based on their previous experience with
    Georgian rule, Ossetians and Abhazians have
    perfectly valid reasons to be opposed to
    reunification with Georgia, even if it means
    throwing in their lot with the Russians.

    It is unclear how the simmering tensions between
    Georgia and South Ossetia came to the boil last
    week. The Georgians say they were provoked by the
    shelling of Georgian villages from
    Ossetian-controlled territory. While this may be
    well be the case, the Georgian response was
    disproportionate. On the night of Aug. 7-8,
    Saakashvili ordered an artillery barrage against
    Tskhinvali, and sent an armored column to occupy
    the town. He apparently hoped that Western
    support would protect Georgia from major Russian
    retaliation, even though Russian “peacekeepers”
    were almost certainly killed or wounded in the Georgian assault.

    It was a huge miscalculation. Russian Prime
    Minister Vladimir Putin (and let there be no
    doubt that he is calling the shots in Moscow
    despite handing over the presidency to his
    protege, Dmitri Medvedev) now had the ideal
    pretext for settling scores with the uppity
    Georgians. Rather than simply restoring the
    status quo ante, Russian troops moved into
    Georgia proper, cutting the main east-west
    highway at Gori and attacking various military bases.

    Saakashvili’s decision to gamble everything on a
    lightning grab for Tskhinvali brings to mind the
    comment of the 19th century French statesman
    Maurice de Talleyrand: “it was worse than a crime, it was a mistake.”

    Russia. Putin and Medvedev have defended their
    incursion into Georgia as motivated by a desire
    to stop the “genocide” of Ossetians by Georgians.
    It is difficult to take their moral outrage very
    seriously. There is a striking contrast between
    Russian support for the right of Ossetian
    self-determination in Georgia and the brutal
    suppression of Chechens who were trying to
    exercise that very same right within the boundaries of Russia.

    Playing one ethnic group off against another in
    the Caucasus has been standard Russian policy
    ever since tzarist times. It is the ideal wedge
    issue for the Kremlin, particularly in the case
    of a state like Georgia, which is made up of
    several different nationalities. It would be
    virtually impossible for South Ossetia to survive
    as an autonomous entity without Russian support.
    Over the last few months, Putin’s government has
    issued passports to Ossetians and secured the
    appointment of Russians to key positions in Tskhinvali.

    The Russian incursion into Georgia proper has
    been even more “disproportionate” — in
    President’s Bush phrase — than the Georgian
    assault on Tskhinvali. The Russians have made no
    secret of their wish to replace Saakashvili with
    a more compliant leader. Targets for Russian
    shelling included the Black Sea port of Poti —
    more than 100 miles from South Ossetia.

    The real goal of Kremlin strategy is to reassert
    Russian influence in a part of the world that has
    been regarded, by tzars and commissars alike, as
    Russia’s backyard. Russian leaders bitterly
    resented the eastward expansion of NATO to
    include Poland and the Baltic states — with
    Ukraine and Georgia next on the list — but were
    unable to do very much about it as long as
    America was strong and Russia was weak. Now the
    tables are turning for the first time since the
    collapse of Communism in 1991, and Putin is seizing the moment.

    If Putin is smart, he will refrain from occupying
    Georgia proper, a step that would further alarm
    the West and unite Georgians against Russia. A
    better tactic would be to wait for Georgians
    themselves to turn against Saakashvili. The
    precedent here is what happened to Gamsakhurdia,
    who was overthrown by the same militia forces he
    had sent into to South Ossetia a year later, in January 1992.

    The United States. The Bush administration has
    been sending mixed messages to its Georgian
    clients. U.S. officials insist that they did not
    give the green light to Saakashvili for his
    attack on South Ossetia. At the same time,
    however, the U.S. has championed NATO membership
    for Georgia, sent military advisers to bolster
    the Georgian army, and demanded the restoration
    of Georgian territorial integrity. American
    support might well have emboldened Saakashvili as
    he was considering how to respond to the “provocations” from South Ossetia.

    Now the United States has ended up in a situation
    in the Caucasus where the Georgian tail is
    wagging the NATO dog. We were unable to control
    Saakashvili or to lend him effective assistance
    when his country was invaded. One lesson is that
    we need to be very careful in extending NATO
    membership, or even the promise of membership, to
    countries we have neither the will nor the ability to defend.

    In the meantime, American leaders have paid
    little attention to Russian diplomatic concerns,
    both inside the former borders of the Soviet
    Union and farther abroad. The Bush administration
    unilaterally abrogated the 1972 anti-missile
    defense treaty and ignored Putin when he objected
    to Kosovo independence on the grounds that it
    would set a dangerous precedent. It is difficult
    to explain why Kosovo should have the right to
    unilaterally declare its independence from
    Serbia, while the same right should be denied to
    places like South Ossetia and Abkhazia.

    The bottom line is that the United States is
    overextended militarily, diplomatically, and
    economically. Even hawks like Vice President
    Cheney, who have been vociferously denouncing
    Putin’s actions in Georgia, have no stomach for a
    military conflict with Moscow. The United States
    is bogged down in Iraq and Afghanistan, and needs
    Russian support in the coming trial of strength
    with Iran over its nuclear ambitions.

    Instead of speaking softly and wielding a big
    stick, as Teddy Roosevelt recommended, the
    American policeman has been loudly lecturing the
    rest of the world while waving an increasingly
    unimpressive baton. The events of the past few
    days serve as a reminder that our ideological
    ambitions have greatly exceeded our military
    reach, particularly in areas like the Caucasus,
    which is of only peripheral importance to the
    United States but is of vital interest to Russia.

  • DALOGLU: Turkey’s regional influence Perhaps too much to handle

    DALOGLU: Turkey’s regional influence Perhaps too much to handle

    Tulin Daloglu
    Tuesday, August 12, 2008

     
    OP-ED:
     
    Nearly two weeks after Iran refused to yield to the demand by Germany, France, Britain, Russia, China and the United States that it stop developing nuclear technology that can lead to a nuclear weapon, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad will travel to a NATO country for the first time. Turkish President Abdullah Gul will meet the Iranian leader on Thursday in Istanbul. While Iran’s influence as a regional power has undeniably been enhanced by standing against the threats of new sanctions and continuing its nuclear program, Mr. Ahmadinejad’s visit to Turkey will further that image.
     
    But what will Turks gain from it? At best, nothing. Furthermore, this visit is likely to cause trouble for Turkey.
     
    Technically, the U.N. Security Council’s five permanent members and Germany unanimously agree that Iran should not have nuclear weapons. They differ in their tactics, but they agree that it is absolutely vital that Iran sees no positive side to trying to further its nuclear aims. Turkey’s political leaders, however, have chosen to see these high-level “talks” as a show of “good will” in the name of peace. Mr. Gul has also hosted Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir, who ordered genocide in Darfur, for the same reason. But a Turkish proverb suggests that talking is not always a virtue. Knowing when and how to stay “silent” is.
     
    It’s one thing for Turkey to nurture relationships with its neighbors. No one, be they friend or foe of the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) or any other Turkish political party, would deny that, at minimum, a civil relationship with other countries in the region can only be good for Turkey. But this current situation with Iran and the threat of it obtaining nuclear weapons is serious. And Turkey’s leaders, simply, may well be in over their heads.
     
    Curiously, though, AKP is strongly supported by the Bush administration. The U.S. certainly did not remain silent about a Constitutional Court case that decided the future of the AKP. Now that the court has decided not to shutter the AKP, the Bush administration has complimented the strength of Turkish democracy. In fact, there is speculation in Turkey that the AKP must have been in contact with Washington about Mr. Ahmadinejad’s visit – though no evidence of such a communication exists. Turkey seems to be acting completely independent. While the White House is likely unhappy about the visit, U.S. officials continue to praise AKP leadership for its pro-active engagement with its neighbors.
     
    In another scenario, it’s also possible that Turkey could sign a natural gas deal with Iran, violating America’s Iran Sanctions Act. If that happens, one can only wonder how Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice would react. Alas, she has been an exceptionally strong defender of AKP policies. Yet if Turkey signs that energy deal with Iran, the U.S. could end the November 2007 agreement that opened a new chapter of cooperation and intelligence sharing in the fight against PKK terrorism.
     
    Furthermore, Mr. Gul often boasts that Turkey and Iran have not fought a war since the early 17th century. The facts of the Turkish history, however, suggest differently, like Turkey’s invasion of Tabriz during World War I. Yet Mr. Ahmadinejad has made it clear that unlike every other visiting dignitary, he will not visit the mausoleum of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, Turkey’s founder, who created a secular republic in a Muslim nation. So Mr. Gul capitulated and instead invited him to Istanbul. So while these two leaders represent different forms of governments, they in fact seem to have much in common.
     
    Turkish Foreign Minister Ali Babacan says that Turkey cannot stay silent on matters related to Iran, especially when fighting could be possible. Turkey refused to be used as a way into Iraq for the United States, and it certainly won’t be used to attack Iran either, Mr. Babacan says. However, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan may be indicating a different circumstance. Mr. Erdogan admitted during a visit to Washington that he wished Turkey had cooperated with the U.S., because it would have made it easier for Turkey to defend its national security interests.Also, he blamed the opposition Republican People’s Party, CHP, for defeating the measure that proposed cooperation with the United States.
     
    Surely, politicians tend to gravitate toward populist demagogy. We cannot know whether Mr. Erdogan really meant that Turkey should have cooperated on the invasion of Iraq. It is unclear whether he really opposes Iran having nuclear weapons. Those same leaders who argue against the West pressuring Iran say that it’s no different than Israel or Pakistan having nuclear weapons.
     
    Turkey is blundering its way in this complicated relationship, unsure which side it wants to take or how big a threat it sees Iran to be. Turkey’s political leadership believes they can dance with Iran and simultaneously become a major regional player. Let’s hope they’re right. Otherwise, the Turkish people will be merely a casualty of a reckless policy.
     
    Tulin Daloglu is a free-lance writer.