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Chechen President Congratulates Bush, As Do South Caucasus States

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  • Chechen President Congratulates Bush, As Do South Caucasus States

    Radio Free Europe, Czechia
    Nov. 5, 2004

    Chechen President Congratulates Bush, As Do South Caucasus States

    By Liz Fuller

    Aslan Maskhadov (file photo)

    Aslan Maskhadov has sent a telegram to George W. Bush congratulating
    him on his reelection to a second term as U.S. president,
    chechenpress.info reported on 5 November. Maskhadov characterizes the
    United States as a country that embodies for all mankind the principles
    of democracy and human rights. He said that in their unequal struggle,
    the Chechen people derive inspiration from the values proclaimed by the
    U.S. founding fathers. He hailed President Bush personally as embodying
    "the lofty principles that are fundamental for all those who battle
    against tyranny."


    In a commentary on chechenpress.info, Maskhadov's envoy Akhmed Zakaev
    explained that while many Chechens may consider Maskhadov's words of
    congratulation misplaced in light of Bush's proclaimed support for what
    Zakaev termed Russian President Vladimir Putin's "criminal regime,"
    Maskhadov was in fact hailing Bush not as an individual political
    figure, but as the head of a state founded on principles that are dear
    to all Chechens. "The fact that Bush has retreated from those
    principles does not detract from the significance of America as a
    symbol of the struggle for the freedom of oppressed peoples," Zakaev
    argued. "In expressing respect for the U.S. principles of freedom and
    democracy, we are simply stressing to what degree the current U.S.
    administration has retreated from those principles by upholding the
    Kremlin's regime of tyranny," Zakaev concluded.

    The presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan have both written to President
    Bush to congratulate him on his reelection. In a letter released by his
    press office, Armenian President Robert Kocharian offered "warmest
    congratulations," and expressed the hope that Armenia's "already
    extensive" relations with the United States will strengthen over the
    next four years," RFE/RL's Armenian Service reported on 4 November.
    Kocharian also expressed gratitude for Armenia's inclusion in the U.S.
    Millennium Challenge program and for Washington's "active involvement"
    in efforts to resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

    The radical Armenian opposition party Hanrapetutiun released a
    statement in Yerevan on 4 November congratulating Bush, RFE/RL's
    Armenian Service reported. The statement expressed confidence that the
    Bush administration will "bring the ongoing fight against international
    terrorism to its logical conclusion." It also expressed the hope that
    U.S. efforts to ensure lasting peace in the South Caucasus and to
    promote democratization in Armenia will prove successful. That latter
    remark reflects Hanrapetutiun's bitterness over last year's
    less-than-wholly-democratic presidential and parliamentary elections
    and subsequent reprisals against the Armenian opposition.

    Also on 4 November, Azerbaijan's President Ilham Aliyev wrote to Bush
    saying he is confident that Bush's efforts to restore peace to the
    planet will continue, and stressing the importance Baku attaches to
    continued cooperation with the United States, zerkalo.az reported,
    citing Turan. "Azerbaijan, which is proceeding along the path of
    building a democratic secular society based on the rule of law, is full
    of determination to raise bilateral relations with the United States to
    an even higher level," Aliyev wrote.

    Aliyev went on to stress Azerbaijan's strategic value to the United
    States, noting its unswerving commitment as a "strategic partner" of
    the United States to promote peace in the region and to fight
    international terrorism. At the same time, he noted that Baku continues
    to place great hopes on Washington's ongoing efforts to bring about "a
    just settlement, based on international law, of the
    Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh."

    Speaking in Tbilisi on 4 November, Georgian President Mikheil
    Saakashvili characterized President Bush as "a man of great principle,
    a man of great understanding of the complicated issues in our region,
    and a personality without whom the fight against terror in this part of
    the world would hardly be possible," RFE/RL's Georgian Service
    reported. Saakashvili said he plans to telephone Bush to congratulate
    him personally, Caucasus Press reported on 4 November.

    Nov. 5, 2004
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