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AAA: Armenia This Week - 07/26/2004

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  • AAA: Armenia This Week - 07/26/2004

    ARMENIA THIS WEEK
    Monday, July 26, 2004

    U.S. ENVOY COMPLETES ARMENIA TOUR, SEES "ACROSS THE BOARD" PROGRESS IN
    RELATIONS
    U.S. Ambassador John Ordway, who is completing his three-year tour in
    Armenia later this week, said he was encouraged by the "really strong
    improvement in relations" between the United States and Armenia. Ordway, who
    is due to assume the post of the U.S. Ambassador to Kazakhstan, will be
    replaced by Ambassador John Evans, a decorated foreign service veteran with
    experience in Eastern Europe and Iran.

    In his farewell press conference last week, Ordway said there was "across
    the board" progress in bilateral relations, noting particularly "remarkable
    improvement" in the military and security relations, deeper cooperation via
    the U.S.-Armenia Task Force and successes of U.S. assistance programs in
    Armenia.

    At the same time, Ordway said that last year's elections and post-election
    political confrontation were the "biggest disappointment." While noting the
    civil society's development, Ordway said that everyone's hopes were for more
    rapid progress. The U.S. envoy further urged the Armenian opposition to end
    its boycott and return to the parliament in order to "work together to
    achieve solid aims for the country."

    Turning to Armenian-Turkish relations, Ordway said that since "Armenia has a
    policy of being ready to improve relations and open the border without any
    preconditions" the focus was "to have Turkey take more steps towards
    improving the relationship." Commenting on recent activation of the Karabakh
    peace process, Ordway said that "while it is a little early to tell whether
    [an agreement] would be possible" there is renewed hope for some progress.

    Ordway dismissed frequent speculations that Armenia was somehow a
    "pro-Russian country." "To Armenia's credit it has not pursued a sort of
    single vector direction for its foreign policy," Ordway said, pointing again
    to the development of U.S.-Armenia relations and Armenia's efforts to
    integrate into the international trade system and with Europe.

    Also last week, Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh hosted a delegation of U.S. and
    European non-government representatives led by Bruce Jackson, a former
    Pentagon official and President of the U.S. Committee on NATO, a group that
    has facilitated NATO expansion into Eastern Europe. Meeting with Presidents
    Robert Kocharian and Arkady Ghoukasian, Jackson pledged to work for greater
    U.S. and European involvement in the settlement of the Karabakh and other
    post-Soviet conflicts. Ghoukasian urged an end to a militant rhetoric by
    Azerbaijan as the first necessary step towards reconciliation. (Sources:
    Arminfo 7-22, 23; Mediamax 7-22)

    AZERI PRESIDENT SACKS SECURITY CHIEF
    President Ilham Aliyev dismissed Azerbaijan's long-time National Security
    Minister Namik Abbasov last Friday, replacing him with a mid-level police
    official. In charge of the Ministry for nearly a decade, 64-year-old Abbasov
    had been a key sponsor of anti-Armenian and pro-war propaganda actions and
    rhetoric. Abbasov's agents also sought to shut down peace-building contacts
    between Armenian and Azeri civic groups.

    Most Azeri commentators linked Abbasov's sacking to Ilham Aliyev's effort to
    create a new, more loyal ruling structure. They point to Abbasov's unusually
    cordial relations with the opposition and his initial reluctance to endorse
    Ilham as a successor to his father, Heydar Aliyev. The Azeri daily Zerkalo
    reported that Abbasov was in Europe last week and unaware of the President's
    decision. Five of Abbasov's immediate predecessors were either exiled or
    imprisoned following their dismissals.

    A former Communist Party apparatchik and Heydar Aliyev's protégé, Abbasov
    rose through the ranks of the Soviet Azeri KGB to become its deputy director
    by the late 1980s. During anti-Aliyev purges in Azerbaijan, Abbasov
    relocated to Russia to head a provincial KGB office there. Upon returning to
    Azerbaijan, Abbasov promoted Stalinist-style paranoia of foreign and
    opposition "conspiracies," and branded all Azeri POWs in the war over
    Karabakh as "traitors."

    The new National Security Minister, 47-year-old Eldar Mahmudov, was only
    recently reinstated as a department chief within the Ministry of Interior
    and put in charge of narcotics trafficking. In 1999 Mahmudov was sacked as
    Interior Ministry's department chief in charge of economic crimes on the
    insistence of Western companies working in Azerbaijan who claimed they were
    harassed by Mahmudov's department. Analysts at Azerbaijan's leading news
    agency Turan suggested that an appointment of a policeman to lead the Azeri
    successor to the KGB showed that President Aliyev distrusted Abbasov and his
    cadres. (Sources: AAA R&I; Armenia This Week 7-11-03, 1-30, 3-26, 6-25;
    Azertag.com 7-23; Turan 7-23; Zerkalo 7-24)

    Visit http://www.aaainc.org/ArTW/archive.php to read Armenia This Week
    issues since 1997.

    A WEEKLY NEWSLETTER PUBLISHED BY THE ARMENIAN ASSEMBLY OF AMERICA
    122 C Street, N.W., Suite 350, Washington, D.C. 20001 (202) 393-3434 FAX
    (202) 638-4904
    E-Mail [email protected] WEB http://www.aaainc.org
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