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  • Turkey, Azerbaijan, Armenia: Erdogan Cannot Be Allowed To Act As Tur

    TURKEY, AZERBAIJAN, ARMENIA: ERDOGAN CANNOT BE ALLOWED TO ACT AS TURKISH PREMIER ANYMORE. PART IV
    Dr. Muhammad Shamsaddin Megalommatis

    http://www.americanchronicle.com/art icles/view/96388
    March 29, 2009

    In four previous articles entitled "Turkey - Azerbaijan - Armenia:
    Documents Incriminating Erdogan, Still Hidden in Turkey"

    (http://www.pennsylvaniachronicle.co m/articles/view/94901),
    "Turkey, Azerbaijan, Armenia: Erdogan Cannot Be
    Allowed to Act as Turkish Premier Anymore. Part I"
    (http://www.americanchronicle.com/articles /view/95492),
    "Turkey, Azerbaijan, Armenia: Erdogan Cannot Be
    Allowed to Act as Turkish Premier Anymore. Part II"
    (http://www.americanchronicle.com/article s/view/96354)
    and "Turkey, Azerbaijan, Armenia: Erdogan Cannot Be
    Allowed to Act as Turkish Premier Anymore. Part III"
    (http://www.americanchronicle.com/articl es/view/96383), I illustrated
    some of the reasons for which the theologically extremist, politically
    Islamist, historically ignorant, intellectually gullible, and
    diplomatically inexperienced prime minister of Turkey has to be
    removed by any means and at all costs.

    In support of my approach to the (well hidden by the Western mass
    media and the Erdogan administration) subject of the forthcoming
    dissolution of Turkey, I brought to surface a critical document that
    remains widely - and catastrophically - unknown in Turkey, namely
    the Report presented to the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of
    Europe with respect to the Nagorno Karabakh

    conflict. Submitted in November 2004, the Report "The Conflict Over
    the Nagorno-Karabakh Region Dealt With by the OSCE Minsk Conference"
    demonstrates clearly that the countries with which Turkey has been
    allied, and the major powers involved in the Nagorno Karabakh conflict,
    drastically prevent Turkey from implementing policies pertaining to
    the interests of Ankara and Baku that are identical; even worse the
    Erdogan - Gul administration is fully compliant with these powers.

    Erdogan's and Gul's compliance with Anti-Turkish policies is
    revealed throughout this document, which demonstrates that there are
    international organizations ready to accept to consider, discuss and
    ponder about incredibly biased approaches, as is in the case of the
    Armenian -Azerbaijani conflict about Nagorno - Karabakh the inclusion
    of any reference to events occurred in the Ottoman Empire that are
    fallaciously described by the Armenian racists as "Genocide". Nagorno -
    Karabakh was not part of the Ottoman Empire when the events that are
    fallaciously called by the Armenians as "genocide" took place.

    The Islamist Turkish administration is guilty; either they studied
    the document and failed to reach the correct conclusion or they did
    not bother to take it into account because they are mere puppets of
    the Anglo-French Freemasonic establishments that dictate to them their
    demarches step by step. This means that either Erdogan and Gul are20=0
    D ignorant or they function as puppets; under either circumstances,
    the Turkish people and the Turkish army must resort to concerted
    action and eliminate them before they open the Armenian border.

    Quite contrarily with the colonial powers, Turkey has nothing to win
    from the reopening of the Armenian border. Any formal recognition of
    Armenia plays in the Freemasonic game, consisting in a step toward the
    destruction of Turkey. Those who help the colonial powers in their
    Anti-Turkish agenda have no reasonable explanation to provide the
    Turkish public with about their paranoid and treacherous acts. They
    call their policy "peace" whereas it signals a war at the prejudice
    of Turkey.

    With the present article, I complete the republication of the critical
    document.

    The Conflict Over the Nagorno-Karabakh Region Dealt With by the OSCE
    Minsk Conference

    Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe

    Doc. 10364

    29 November 2004

    http://assembly.coe.int/Documents/WorkingDoc s/doc04/EDOC10364.htm

    Mediation efforts in the N-K conflict

    Iranian mediation. Iran made a short-lived effort in March - May 1992,
    when two meetings took place in Tehran, the second one on presidential
    level. In March, the first ever cease-fire between the belligerents
    was achieved, but it only lasted days.

    According to Iranian analysts, the effort failed for a number of
    reasons, one of them being that Tehran was not perceived as impartial
    ..20 Iran, a traditional rival of Russia and Turkey in the region,
    was thought to have an interest that the newly emerging Armenia,
    Azerbaijan and Georgia survive as independent "buffer states" between
    itself and Russia, while keeping them in balance by pressuring the
    stronger side. In the N-K conflict, this would imply constraining
    Armenian military advances.

    Iran shares the same religion with all neighbouring countries except
    Armenia, but has the greatest affinity with the Azerbaijanis who, like
    the vast majority of Iranians, are Shiite Muslims (until Azerbaijani
    independence, Iran was the only State representing Shiite Muslims). On
    the other hand, Armenians are traditionally hostile to Iran´s rival
    Turkey, while Iran and Armenia have not had problems in recent history.

    Iran has a sizeable Azerbaijani minority - the second largest
    in the country. The Azerbaijani Popular Front had a pro-Turkish
    orientation. At one point the APF openly appealed to Iranian
    Azerbaijanis to secede and join Azerbaijan. While allegations that
    Iran provided arms to Armenia were not proven, it is certain that
    Yerevan today enjoys very good relations with the Iranian neighbour.

    In a little known episode, in September 1993, when Armenians launched
    an attack on Nakhichevan, Iranian troops crossed the border, with the
    official purpose to guarantee the security of the jointly managed dams
    on the Araz river and to establish camps for Azerbaijani refugees
    ( Iran says it hosts over 4 million refugees from Azerbaijan and
    Iraq). After this event, there was no further military action in
    Nakhichevan.

    Russian mediation. In October 1993, President Yeltsin of Russia
    proposed to his counterparts from the three South Caucasian states
    to adopt a declaration calling for the unblocking of lines of
    communication, joint protection of the borders of Georgia, Armenia and
    Azerbaijan with Turkey and Iran and .setting up of Russian military
    bases for this purpose. Presidents Ter-Petrosian and Shevardnadze
    agreed, but President Aliyev maintained that a declaration of this
    type could not be adopted until the Armenian forces had withdrawn
    from the occupied Azeri territories.

    Earlier, in September 1991, President Yeltsin and President Nazarbayev
    of Kazakhstan visited Baku, Stepanakert and Yerevan. Following the
    visit, the first direct negotiations took place in Zheleznovodsk,
    Russia, with the participation of the Presidents of Armenia and
    Azerbaijan as well as the N-K leadership.

    Negotiating mechanisms

    The UN Security Council adopted, in 1993, four resolutions on the
    N-K conflict9. They called for cessation of military activities and
    hostile acts, withdrawal of forces and resumption of negotiations,
    condemned the violation of the then established cease-fire and the
    excessive use of force in response thereto. The UN Security Council
    also referred to the forces that overtook the Kelbajar district
    of Azerbaijan as " l ocal Armenian forces" and urged the Armenian
    government "to exert its influence" on the Armenians of N-K.

    The Minsk process goes back to March 1992, when the CSCE Helsinki
    Meeting requested the Chairman-in-Office to convene a conference in
    Minsk on N-K peaceful settlement. The meeting named eleven States to
    participate in the conference. The conference never took place, but
    the name of the Belarusian capital remained attached to the process
    and the would-be participants became known as the Minsk Group. N-K was
    to be invited to the conference as an interested party. The formula
    "elected and other representatives of N-K" refers to the de facto
    authorities and the Azerbaijani refugees.

    In 1994, the OSCE Budapest Summit "strongly endorsed the mediation
    efforts of the CSCE Minsk Group and expressed appreciation for the
    crucial contribution of the Russian Federation and the efforts by other
    individual members of the Minsk Group". In order to harmonize these
    into a single co-ordinated effort, a Co-Chairmanship for the process
    was established - Russia and Finland. In 1997, the Co-Chairmanship
    was revised to its current composition: the United States, Russian
    Federation and France.

    The Minsk Group receives assistance from the Personal Representative of
    the Chairman-in-Office, who resides in the region and a High-Level
    Planning Group made up of military experts seconded by OSCE
    participating States. The latter is a dormant body, w hich would come
    into action if and when the multinational OSCE peacekeeping force
    recommended by the Budapest Summit is established.

    The Minsk Group has put forward several peace plans, which have been
    rejected as they were not seen to deal acceptably with major concerns
    of one or another party to the conflict,

    Direct negotiations between Armenia and Azerbaijan at the highest
    level go back to the Zheleznovodsk meeting mentioned above. President
    Aliyev and Kocharyan have met nearly 20 times, with no breakthrough
    or decisive step forward in sight.

    In December 2002, the OSCE Porto Ministerial meeting "welcomed the
    continuing meetings of the Presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan and
    of their Special Representatives" and "encouraged the parties to
    continue their efforts, with the active support of the Co-Chairmen,
    aimed at reaching a just and enduring settlement".

    Positions of the sides

    Comment: the viewpoints of the parties to the conflict remain opposed
    as to the causes of the conflict, the way in which it should be
    resolved and which problems should be addressed first.

    The key elements of the positions can be summarized as follows:

    Pictures Flag 1 - Azerbaijan

    Occupied territories must be liberated as a precondition for serious
    negotiations;

    â-~O with territories occupied, there can be no regional co-operation
    or "business as usual";

    â-~O the return of the refugees must be addressed a t an early stage
    of the negotiations;

    â-~O Azerbaijan is prepared to grant N-K "the highest level of autonomy
    known in the world", or "in concrete terms - the status of Tatarstan
    in the Russian Federation";

    â-~O as the conflict is settled, Azerbaijan will re-establish normal
    relations with Armenia - (In Armenian terms - will lift the blockade).

    Pictures Flag 2 - Armenia

    â-~O the blockade of Armenia by Azerbaijan and Turkey is illegal and
    must be lifted;

    â-~O Armenia has no territorial claims to Azerbaijan;

    â-~O N-K must be recognised as a party to the conflict and of the
    negotiating process;

    â-~O The occupied territories will be returned to Azerbaijan once
    the conflict is settled;

    â-~O The Lachin corridor must remain under Armenian sovereignty but
    will be compensated to Azerbaijan by equal territory from other parts
    of N-K;

    â-~O Armenia stands ready to develop regional co-operation and
    confidence-building measures.

    Pictures Flag 3 - Nagorno Karabakh

    N-K has already covered its part of the road to compromise by
    renouncing the claim to union with Armenia and agreeing to be
    independent;

    â-~O N-K sovereign existence does not depend on international
    recognition, because N-K has (1) a territory and (2) population as
    well as (3) elected, organized and functioning authorities and is
    (4) capable of assuming and fulfilling intern=0 D ational obligations.

    Settlement options

    The content of the proposals for settlement officially remains
    a secret.

    Nevertheless it is not difficult to see that any solution has to be
    one of or a mix of elements from the following main options:

    (1) restitution of the status quo ante;

    (2) self-rule of N-K within Azerbaijan;

    (3) "common state" or a confederal/federal set-up (this option remains
    very unclear);

    (4) independence or merging with Armenia for N-K with either

    (5) a swap of territories or

    (6) exchange of corridors in order to ensure continuity between Armenia
    and N-K on one side and Azerbaijan and its exclave Nakhichevan on
    the other side.

    In 1996, the OSCE Lisbon summit elaborated three principles for
    settling the N-K conflict:

    â-~O territorial integrity of Armenia and Azerbaijan;

    â-~O N-K legal status to be based on self-determination and highest
    degree of self-rule within Azerbaijan;

    â-~O guaranteed security for N-K and its whole population.

    The above principles could not be adopted by consensus due to Armenian
    disagreement.

    According to Azerbaijani sources, in 1997, on the margins of the Second
    Council of Europe Summit, Presidents Aliyev and Kocharyan reached an
    understanding based on a swap of territories. Subsequently Armenia
    allegedly rejected the arrangement, which had also become known as the
    Sadarak agreement. The Armenian view is that a swap of territorie=0
    D s is not possible as it would cut Armenia off its border with Iran.

    In April 2001, further to their travel to Strasbourg on the occasion
    of the joint accession of Armenia and Azerbaijan to the Council
    of Europe, the two presidents met in Paris upon the invitation of
    President Chirac of France.

    Reportedly, an agreement was reached, referred to as the Paris
    principles.

    Subsequently, in a weeklong negotiation in a proximity format10 in Key
    West, US, the Paris agreement was put on paper. The bargaining seems
    to be about exchange of corridors, the Lachin corridor linking Armenia
    with N-K and the Meghri corridor linking Azerbaijan with Nakhichevan.

    Photocopy and Map

    In October 2002, there were vague press reports about new Azerbaijani
    proposals - notably, to divide contested lands with international
    mediation, with some localities choosing by referendum whether they
    belong to Armenia or to Azerbaijan. The same reports indicated that
    Baku had reiterated it would never accept that N-K become a new
    sovereign state.

    Problems of Conflict Settlement

    Comment: the following summary is based on writings by experts in
    conflict-prevention and negotiation.

    The extent of historical mistrust between Azerbaijanis and Armenians
    is difficult to evaluate. Whereas both sides may be exaggerating at
    present, serious violent episodes date back at least to the end of
    the 19th century.

    At the same time, as recently as 1990, far m=0 D ore Armenians lived in
    Baku than in N-K. During the N-K war, Armenians maintained life-saving
    relations with Iranian Azerbaijanis.

    Some experts argue that, generally speaking, in the South Caucasus
    the definition of ethnicity as well as the link between ethnicity
    and territory may be not so strong as in other regions where
    nation-building took place earlier and in different circumstances.

    Armenians are mistrustful of all Turkic-speaking Muslims, whom they
    tend to view as a single people ("Turks"). Most Azerbaijanis and
    Armenians seem to believe that the N-K conflict is not simply between
    Governments or the military, but between their two peoples.

    The internally displaced persons, in particular in Azerbaijan and
    especially those from N-K are known to be a bitter and intensely
    radicalised force, and have been responsible for attacks on Armenians
    in Baku. Here again, the problem may be exaggerated. Some observers
    believe that Baku is not doing enough to help refugees integrate -
    as integration would mean accepting the Armenian war gains.

    Security problems.

    Azerbaijan cannot feel secure while Armenians occupy seven of its
    provinces.

    However, if Baku forces were to re-establish control of Azerbaijani
    territories, the Armenian perception about the south-eastern part of
    their country would be one of vulnerability. In addition, Yerevan has
    particular worries about its long border with Turkey. Last October,
    Armenian Defence Minister20S arkisian told the press that the newly
    created joint Russian- Armenian military unit is to serve, inter
    alia as a deterrent against a possible Turkish incursion. Generally,
    security perceptions are a particular concern for Armenia and represent
    one of the main stumbling blocks in the attempts to find a settlement.

    The state of democratic reform. Ethnic Armenians find it difficult to
    trust a government in Baku that they may perceive as authoritarian,
    corrupt, and intolerant of minorities; Azerbaijanis, for their part,
    cannot bring themselves to trust the government of a state they believe
    is constructed on a strictly ethnic basis - a state that acts as if
    it believes Armenia is for ethnic Armenians alone.

    Domestic politics.

    The way the N-K conflict has interlocked the actors in internal
    political life both in Yerevan and Baku may be the single biggest
    obstacle to solution. President Kocharyan, himself native of N-K, came
    to power after his predecessor Ter-Petrosian was forced to resign by
    N-K hardliners opposing his moves towards settlement. Some analysts
    note that, against the background of economic difficulties, Yerevan
    has little to deliver for the time being, except a war that was won
    and a national dream. In Azerbaijan, the predecessors of President
    Aliyev are seen to have lost the war. Partly for this reason, the
    present-day political opposition in Baku often takes a harder line
    on the conflict than the Gov

    ernment. President Aliyev, a native of the Azerbaijani exclave of
    Nakhichevan, can hardly afford to be seen to give in to Yerevan.

    Once, a high-ranking official from the region put the political
    problem in a nutshell: both in Armenia and Azerbaijan, N-K is both
    a source of power and a threat to power.

    Guarantees.

    N-K is very sensitive to the question of guarantees. N-K recalls the
    British guarantees of 1918-1920, which did not prevent the application
    of force by the first Azerbaijani Republic, and the "guarantees"
    of the Soviet Union, which permitted what Stepanakert sees as the
    de-Armenianization of Nakhichevan.

    Regional issues.

    Several analysts indicate that the conflict is unlikely to find a
    lasting settlement before the regional powers - Russia, Turkey and Iran
    - adapt to geo-political changes. In the post - 11 September world,
    these geo-political shifts are not necessarily a zero sum game where
    gain by one side is another side´s loss.

    Common interest in settlement.

    >From 1988 to 1994, the GDP of Azerbaijan fell 73%. Azerbaijan needs to
    have the N-K conflict solved to gain stability for development based
    on oil wealth. According to experts, Azerbaijan has enough energy
    deposits to finance two generations of economic growth. There would
    be the immediate economic gain of a large segment of the population -
    the refugees and IDPs - returning to regular economic activity.

    Experts also caution that oil-based development is only guaranteed
    in a country with stable democratic institutions ("will Azerbaijan
    develop like Norway or like Nigeria").

    >From 1988 to 1994 Armenia saw its GDP fall by 60%. Particularly in
    Armenia, the economic situation was further aggravated by the 1999
    Russian financial system crisis. For Armenia, not having diplomatic
    relations with two out of four neighbours is clearly an abnormal
    situation. Restoring regular relations with the outside world would
    not only bring transport costs back to normal but would also enable
    Armenia´s longer-term comparative advantages - the Diaspora support
    with its networking and lobbying power and capability to raise
    investment. There are expert calculations suggesting that Armenia
    could experience a short term increase of up to 40% of GDP.

    Some analysts broadly compare the Armenian "Diaspora factor" to the
    Azerbaijani "oil factor". In this context, the "Norway vs. Nigeria
    dilemma" is also valid for Yerevan.

    The Council of Europe position

    Armenia and Azerbaijan joined the Council of Europe simultaneously on
    25 January 2001. For the first time in its history, the Organisation
    invited two new members with a bitter unresolved conflict between
    them. This was made possible by the prevailing understanding, both
    in the Parliamentary Assembly and in member States´ Governments that
    the accession of Azerbaijan and Armenia could help to establish20the=2
    0 climate of trust needed for a solution to the N-K conflict.

    Picture

    The Political Affairs Committee held hearings on the N-K in 1998
    and 1999.

    While voting positively on their accession demands, the Parliamentary
    Assembly asked Armenia and Azerbaijan to commit themselves, with
    regard to the N-K conflict:

    â-~O to continue efforts to settle the conflict by peaceful means only;

    â-~O to settle international and domestic disputes by peaceful means
    and according to the principles of international law (an obligation
    incumbent on all Council of Europe member states), resolutely rejecting
    any threatened use of force against its neighbours;

    â-~O (for Armenia) to use its considerable influence over the Armenians
    in N-K to foster a solution to the conflict;

    The Presidents, Speakers of parliaments, Prime Ministers and the
    chairmen of the political parties represented in Parliaments of
    Armenia and Azerbaijan confirmed these commitments in writing.

    The Presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan wrote separately to reiterate
    their countries´ commitment to a peaceful negotiated settlement of the
    N-K on the basis of a compromise acceptable to all concerned. President
    Aliyev stressed that Azerbaijan´s accession to the Council of Europe
    would be a major contribution to the negotiations process and stability
    in the region.

    Comment: the commitments regarding N-K are spelled out in less detail
    compared to domestic law and h uman rights obligations. Nevertheless,
    the Organisation regards them as seriously as any other
    commitments. They are subject to monitoring procedures.

    In September 2002, the Parliamentary Assembly adopted Resolutions
    1304 and 1305(2002) on the honouring of obligations by Armenia and
    Azerbaijan, where it:

    â-~O recognized that Armenia and Azerbaijan maintained regular
    high-level contacts with a view to reach a suitable and peaceful
    solution to the conflict,

    â-~O acknowledged in particular the positive influence of Armenia on
    the Armenians in N-K,

    â-~O voiced concern with the prevailing frustration in Azeri society
    at the deadlocked negotiations on the conflict, which is more and
    more frequently expressed,

    â-~O expressed hope that the negotiation process - including a recent
    meeting of the Presidents would soon lead to an acceptable settlement
    of the territorial conflict in line with the principles of the Council
    of Europe and international law,

    The Assembly has appointed Mr. Terry Davis (UK, Soc) Rapporteur on N-K.

    The Committee of Ministers monitoring Group, also known as "GT-Suivi
    Ago" follows regularly N-K conflict settlement efforts. It asks
    questions in writing, urges Yerevan and Baku to build confidence and,
    generally, impresses on the two countries the position of the member
    States´ Governments.

    In April 2002, the Chairman of the Committee of Ministers, further
    to a visit to the South Cau 0Acasus region, reported, "the most
    difficult challenge the member States face are their unresolved
    conflicts. Indeed, the conflicts of Nagorno-Karabakh and Abkhazia
    undermine the European efforts to assist Armenia, Azerbaijan and
    Georgia and threaten to effectively put limits on the process of
    democratisation".

    In January 2003, the Enlarged Bureau of the Committee of Ministers´
    Deputies held an exchange of views with the Co-Chairmen of the Minsk
    Group and the Special Representatives of the two Presidents.

    Within the framework of its assistance activities, the Council
    of Europe can bring to the sides in the conflict the European
    experience of post-conflict reconciliation and "work on the past". It
    can also promote regional co-operation as one of the means of
    post-conflict rehabilitation, and it can apply the Organisation
    know-how in working with the civil society for awareness raising
    and confidence-building. If a solution requires legal expertise, the
    Council of Europe, through the Venice Commission, remains prepared
    to help the Minsk Group work out the legal aspects of N-K status and
    protection of minorities.

    Comment: In the end, Nagorno-Karabakh is part of the shared history
    and common suffering of the Armenian and Azerbaijani people. A common
    solution must be found for a better future.

    Note

    Picture: The existing and the prospect pipelines highlight the
    geo-strategic importance of the entire Caucasus region.

    Dr. M 0Auhammad Shamsaddin Megalommatis

    Orientalist, Historian, Political Scientist, Dr. Megalommatis, 52,
    is the author of 12 books, dozens of scholarly articles, hundreds of
    encyclopedia entries, and thousands of articles. He speaks, reads and
    writes more than 15, modern and ancient, languages. He refuted Greek
    nationalism, supported Martin Bernal´s Black Athena, and rejected the
    Greco-Romano-centric version of History. He pleaded for the European
    History by J. B. Duroselle, and defended the rights of the Turkish,
    Pomak, Macedonian, Vlachian, Arvanitic, Latin Catholic, and Jewish
    minorities of Greece.

    Born Christian Orthodox, he adhered to Islam when 36, devoted to
    ideas of Muhyieldin Ibn al Arabi. Greek citizen of Turkish origin,
    Prof. Megalommatis studied and/or worked in Turkey, Greece, France,
    England, Belgium, Germany, Syria, Israel, Iraq, Iran, Egypt and
    Russia, and carried out research trips throughout the Middle East,
    Northeastern Africa and Central Asia. His career extended from Research
    & Education, Journalism, Publications, Photography, and Translation
    to Website Development, Human Rights Advocacy, Marketing, Sales &
    Brokerage. He traveled in more than 80 countries in 5 continents.

    He defends the Human and Civil Rights of Yazidis, Aramaeans, Turkmen,
    Oromos, Ogadenis, Sidamas, Berbers, Afars, Anuak, Furis (Darfur),
    Bejas, Balochs, Tibetans, and their Right to National Independence,
    demands international recognition for Kosovo, Abkhazia, South
    Ossetia,0D the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus, and Transnistria,
    calls for National Unity in Somalia, and denounces Islamic Terrorism.

    Freedom and National Independence for Catalonia, Scotland, Corsica,
    Euskadi (Bask Land), and (illegally French) Polynesia!

    Break Down the Persian Tyranny of the Ayatullahs of Iran!

    Freedom for 25 million Azeris in Southern Azerbaijan!
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