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Editorial: Hopeful Signs

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  • Editorial: Hopeful Signs

    EDITORIAL: HOPEFUL SIGNS

    Arab News
    http://www.arabnews.com/?page=7&section=0&amp ;article=126046&d=3&m=9&y=2009
    Sept 3 2009
    Saudi Arabia

    THE surprise announcement Monday night that Turkey and Armenia have
    agreed to open diplomatic relations and reopen a border between them
    that has been closed since 1927, except for a brief period ending
    in 1993, is to be welcomed, even though the finalization of the two
    protocols will be fraught with difficulties.

    However, if Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan can see this
    agreement through, it will transform both Turkey's international
    standing and bring stability to the southern Caucasus. But the "if"
    is a big one. The protocols require parliamentary ratification and
    are opposed by nationalists in both Turkey and Armenia. Economically
    Armenia has more to gain. Since independence was restored in 1991, it
    has struggled in the face of Russian interference, financial ineptitude
    and corruption. With a falling birth rate, its 3,250,000 inhabitants
    have survived in no small measure on investment and remittances from
    the eight million Armenians who live outside the country.

    Armenia's plight was worsened following the successful uprising
    of majority ethnic Armenians in the Nagorno-Karabakh enclave of
    Azerbaijan. Turkey re-closed the border and landlocked Armenia
    struggled, with a major part of its trade having to pass expensively
    through its neighbor Georgia. Until Monday's agreements Ankara had
    insisted on the return of the enclave to Azeri rule before negotiations
    could be concluded. Since Turkey expects to benefit substantially from
    the planned Nabucco pipeline that will pass across it taking Azeri gas
    to Europe, it seems unthinkable that the protocols with Armenia have
    been made in isolation. Diplomatic sources indicated Wednesday night
    that the Minsk Group established in 1992, and co-chaired by Russia, the
    United States and France might be on the verge of a settlement to the
    Nagorno-Karabakh dispute, possibly involving some level of autonomy for
    the enclave in return for Armenian recognition of Azeri sovereignty.

    It would, however, be surprising if the Kremlin is backing a deal
    running counter to its own interests. Facilitating the Nabucco
    project that will give Europe an alternative to Russian gas, Gazprom
    is currently offering to pipe Azeri gas to Baku's new European
    customers via its own pipeline network. It may be, however, that
    Russia is tempted by the longer view that a stable and prosperous
    southern Caucasus will assist it as it grapples with growing Muslim
    unrest in the north.

    Whatever the outcome, providing its nationalist right-wing politicians
    do not make an ugly spectacle of themselves, Erdogan's government is
    likely to emerge with considerable credit for grasping such a difficult
    political nettle as Armenia. The UN, the EU, the Organization for
    Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) and the United States all
    want to see a normalization in Turco-Armenian relations. Starting
    with President Abdullah Gul's visit last year to Yerevan to watch
    Turkey play Armenia in a World Cup qualifier, it is Ankara that has
    been making the running -- and taking the political risks. If only
    past Turkish governments had demonstrated equal wisdom over the vexed
    issue of Northern Cyprus. But maybe the Armenian talks now presage
    new movement on Cyprus as well.

    Japan's new rulers

    THE election upset in Japan is a potentially positive development,
    said Los Angeles Times in an editorial on Tuesday. Excerpts:

    How do you say, "throw the bums out" in Japanese? That's what Japanese
    voters did on Sunday, booting the Liberal Democratic Party that has
    ruled almost continuously for more than half a century and leaves
    now with the world's second-largest economy in sorry shape. The newly
    elected Democratic Party of Japan is an eclectic mix of leftists and
    defectors from the ruling party. Its ability to run the country is
    untested, and its leaders have yet to explain how to pay for their
    populist campaign promises.

    Nevertheless, the election upset is a potentially positive
    development. A one-party state is bound to grow stale; competition
    is as important in politics as it is in business.

    The outgoing Liberal Democratic Party helped turn Japan from a
    post-World War II wreck into a global powerhouse. In league with
    industry and a powerful government bureaucracy, the ruling party
    oversaw decades of growth that offered its citizens lifelong jobs
    with housing and health care.

    But that system has been unraveling since the Japanese economy
    collapsed in the 1990s. Now, government scandals, recession,
    unemployment and an aging population's deep anxiety about the future
    have prompted voters who normally value stability to reject the known
    and embrace the promise of change.

    Although the Democratic Party has never held power, key members come
    from the political elite, starting with leader Yukio Hatoyama, who
    is expected to be named prime minister. His grandfather is a founder
    of the just-defeated Liberal Democratic Party, and Hatoyama himself
    was a legislator.

    Hatoyama has said that Japan must strengthen its economic and security
    ties with East Asia. Americans should not be alarmed. China is Japan's
    largest trading partner, and the countries share a neighborhood. Such
    integration can help Japan's economic recovery without harming its
    ties to the US. A healthy Japanese economy is in everyone's interest.
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