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  • State's Fried Outlines U.S. Policy for "Murrow" Journalists

    Washington File, DC
    April 7 2006

    State's Fried Outlines U.S. Policy for "Murrow" Journalists

    Says promotion of democracy to be enduring legacy of Bush
    administration

    The United States will continue to support democratic movements in
    the Middle East as well as in former Soviet states as a means of
    countering Islamist extremism `and the terrorism derived from that
    extremism,' said Assistant Secretary of State Daniel Fried April 4.

    Fried spoke during a roundtable discussion with participants from the
    Edward R. Murrow Program for Journalists, a new State Department
    initiative that brings foreign reporters to the United States to
    learn about American journalistic practices. (See related article.)

    The Bush administration looks at democracy as a `practical solution'
    to problems such as instability and poor economic development, as
    well as a long-term answer to the terrorist threat posed by `radical,
    anti-democratic, Islamist ideology,' said Fried, who heads the Bureau
    of European and Eurasian Affairs.

    `We do believe that democracy is applicable in the Middle East, just
    as it has been applicable in Asia, South America, Eastern Europe, and
    South Asia,' he said. `We intend to support democratic movements in
    that world, as well as in Central Asia and the post-communist
    hemisphere.'

    The emphasis on democracy as a long-term solution to extremism and
    terrorism `is apt to be an enduring legacy of the Bush
    administration,' Fried said.

    During the roundtable discussion, Fried answered questions about a
    wide range of issues, including democracy in Russia, the future
    status of Kosovo, the Annan plan for Cyprus, Turkey's bid to join the
    European Union, the conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan over
    Nagorno-Karabakh, energy security in Russia and Central Asia,
    democratic progress in Georgia and U.S.-European relations.

    The State Department welcomed 129 journalists from around the world
    for the inaugural Edward R. Murrow Program for Journalists April
    1-21. It is a component of the department's International Visitor
    Leadership Program. (See announcement.)

    Murrow, a leading broadcast journalist from 1935 to 1960, headed the
    United States Information Agency from 1961 to 1963.

    Following is the full transcript of the roundtable discussion:

    (begin transcript)

    Daniel Fried
    Assistant Secretary of State for European and Eurasian Affairs
    Roundtable Discussion with Murrow Journalist International Visitor
    Program



    U.S. State Department
    Washington, DC
    2:30 p.m. April 4, 2006

    Ambassador Fried: Well, given that this is, I'm told, Russian and
    Turkish speaking, [greeting in Russian]. [Laughter]. You're very
    welcome here in the Department of State, and I'd like to talk a
    little bit about U.S. foreign policy in the second Bush term, and
    then stop fairly quickly and answer your questions, if that's all
    right, if that's a good way to proceed.

    The Bush foreign policy has really evolved from the September 11th
    terrorist attack as an initial event and gone through several phases.
    In the initial aftermath of September 11th, we faced a national
    emergency. We were attacked essentially by the Taliban and al-Qaida
    from Afghanistan, and we took action there.

    Iraq you know about and that has been discussed, and I don't want to
    spend the whole time talking about Iraq, but we felt that one of the
    lessons of September 11th was that you could not wait for dangers to
    gather and do nothing. And that containment of someone like Saddam
    Hussein might not be a viable strategy, especially since containment
    wasn't working.

    But as time went on, you will notice if you study President Bush's
    speeches carefully that in his foreign policy speeches and in the
    National Security Strategy documents of the United States he
    gradually emphasized issues other than the strict military and
    intelligence side of counterterrorism and started speaking about
    longer term issues of building democracies and reform and stability
    through reform. We stopped defining al-Qaida as an enemy in a narrow
    sense of being a terrorist organization and started speaking more
    about radical, anti-democratic, Islamist ideology as a longer term
    problem for which the answer was not principally a military or
    intelligence answer, but was an answer rooted in reform, support for
    democracy, support for states, for nations seeking to deepen their
    own democracies.

    This emphasis on democracy as a long-term answer to the problems of
    Islamist extremism and the terrorism derived from that extremism is
    apt to be an enduring legacy of the Bush administration - more than
    what is usually considered to be the Bush administration's foreign
    policy legacy, things like preemption. Preemptive military action: I
    think that is going to be less important, and the emphasis on
    democracy is more important.

    Now, because there are a great many Turkish speakers here, it may
    have occurred to you listening to me that Turkey's experience of
    building a secular democracy within a society which is mostly Muslim,
    and then in recent years deepening that democracy may be very
    relevant. Indeed, we find that experience to be relevant because
    Turkey is at once a country with a Muslim population and a democracy,
    and a secular nation state.

    Those achievements are very relevant to the kind of problems we face
    now, which is dealing with a radical Islamist ideology which denies
    in principle the relevance of democracy and denies that democracy can
    take root in a society which has Muslim traditions.

    We reject the notion of a clash of civilizations, and we reject the
    notion that any one religion is intrinsically more disposed to
    democracy than any other religion.

    Similarly, we believe that democratic reforms, the rule of law, and a
    kind of openness toward the world is a better answer to the problems
    left behind by the Soviet Union than nationalism or authoritarianism.
    There is a debate in Russia today whether democracy - well, there
    isn't even much of a debate. Many Russians believe that democracy
    equals chaos and that democracy as it was practiced in Russia in the
    '90s demonstrates that democracy is not terribly relevant to the
    problems of post-communism.

    In our view this is mistaken, and the problem of reform in Russia in
    the '90s was not that it was too democratic, but that it was not
    consistent enough.

    I see there is a journalist from Poland here. In the beginning of
    the 1990s Poles didn't know whether they would succeed. The economy
    in Poland was in complete ruin. The country was very poor. The
    infrastructure was wretched. The demographics were bad. Not as bad
    as they are in Russia today, but actually pretty bad. And the Poles'
    answer to that was not to turn away from reform and embrace
    authoritarianism, but to push ahead with reform, and they did so in
    the early '90s with great concentration, and the results later speak
    for themselves of massive economic growth, rising standard of living,
    and gradual stability on a much higher level of national existence,
    actually.

    So the Bush administration looks at democracy not as is sometimes
    assumed in Europe as a kind of Messianic ideology that bears no
    relationship to reality, but as a rather practical solution to
    problems and a practical solution which has been successful in the
    past 17 years, since 1989, in cases where it has been applied
    consistently.

    Now one of the challenges we Americans face is that for 60 years we
    did not really regard democracy as relevant to the broader Middle
    East or countries which were Muslim. During the 1970s we talked
    about democracies and human rights as the answer to communism, but we
    seemed very happy to deal with authoritarian regimes in Egypt and
    conservative, absolutist monarchies in Saudi Arabia.

    The results in the Middle East were not terribly satisfactory, and
    what we have done in this administration is to do away with this red
    line around the broader Middle East which said within this red line
    democracy and the normal rules don't apply. They do apply.

    The problem with this kind of an approach is that although democracy,
    I am convinced, will be the fate for the broader Middle East in the
    long run; in the short run life is not life the way the Soviet Union
    used to describe it - a triumphant march to a better future. It's
    pretty complicated stuff.

    But we do believe that democracy is applicable in the Middle East,
    just as it has been applicable in Asia, South America, Eastern
    Europe, and South Asia.

    We intend to support democratic movements in that world, as well as
    in Central Asia and the post-communist hemisphere.

    Now those are very broad outlines of American foreign policy in the
    second Bush term. Tomorrow I'm giving testimony in the Senate about
    the problem and the causes of Islamist extremism, mostly in Western
    Europe. This is a long-term challenge for us. Many of the Islamist
    radicals and the intellectual climate they live in remind me as
    someone who lived in the Soviet Union, remind me of 21st Century
    versions of Raskolnikov, an uprooted semi-intellectual with great
    ideas who falls into rather dangerous radical nihilism.

    This is a challenge we have to face, and we have to face this
    together working with the governments of the countries you represent
    and with civil societies in your countries.

    Let me stop here. You come from a great many countries. Your
    questions are apt to be different. I will do my best to answer them,
    but I wanted to give you an overall framework of what our thinking is
    like.

    So with that, I'm at your disposal.

    Question: My name is Anna Novicka.... My name is Anna Novicka. I
    am from [the] Latvian newspaper Telegraf and I would like to find out
    about your opinion as the development in the relations in the
    triangle the United States, Russia and Europe is concerned if we take
    into account that the opinions of the United States and Russia are
    becoming more and more different. I mean the relationship with
    Syria, Ukraine, Belarus. Is there any future for relations in this
    triangle?

    Ambassador Fried: Everybody got the question?

    We want to work with Russia on a common agenda, and we want to work
    with Russia wherever possible. There are, objectively speaking, or
    there should be, objectively speaking, as used to be said in the old
    Soviet Union, no barriers to our cooperation because we are not each
    other's principal problem. In practice, that cooperation has been
    more difficult than we Americans had hoped.

    You mentioned Belarus. Is there anybody here from Belarus?

    I don't know why Russia has supported the recent elections in
    Belarus. No country in Europe believed these elections were free and
    fair. As far as I can tell no democracy anywhere in the world
    thought these elections were free and fair. I do not understand why
    Russia would find it in its interest to support the Lukashenko
    regime.

    I think Russia is still trying to find its place in the world after
    the collapse of the Soviet Union, and I think back to the period,
    there was a period in history when Russia was the most advanced
    relative to Western Europe, the most successful, the most
    economically, culturally, scientifically dynamic, which was, of
    course, the generation before 1914 when Russia also thought of itself
    as a European country.

    I think that the periods when Russia sought to be isolated from the
    world and separate and part of its own sitting in a kind of isolation
    were periods that did not bring Russia great results. Now this is not
    a US government view, this is only my view as someone who lived in
    Russia. But I hope that Russia will return to a path of convergence
    with and integration with the Euro-Atlantic community because Russia
    has a great deal to offer.

    I also don't think much of the theory of some Russians that the
    United States is out to encircle Russia. Encircling Russia is not
    our objective. We have other problems in the world. Russia is not a
    problem for us.

    We were interested - you're from Latvia, right? We were interested
    in seeing Latvia become a member of NATO and a member of the European
    Union not because we wanted to surround Russia, but because we wanted
    to complete a Europe whole, free and at peace.

    A Latvia, a Poland, a Romania that are secure, prospering democracies
    are not threats to Russia. A Germany in NATO and the European Union,
    a Germany which is a democracy, is hardly a threat to Russia. There
    is no threat to Russia from the West. I believe there ought to be the
    basis for strategic cooperation between Russia and the United States.
    It's proving more frustrating now than we had hoped.

    Question: My name is Kirill Krabu. I've got a question about
    Europe. As you know, Europe is growing up now and gets more and more
    powerful. Our currency rates now are higher than the dollar. For
    example, the Euro is higher than the dollar now.

    How do you think about that, if this growth will continue? Is it a
    reason for the USA to be maybe afraid of Europe and to begin some
    polarization between Europe and USA? Because Europe is somewhere
    also now called as United States of Europe. So is it a reason to
    become polarized?

    Ambassador Fried: No. We welcome a strong Europe. A strong Europe
    is good for the United States. The difficulties of the 20th Century
    - two world wars, the Cold War, Nazism, fascism, communism, were all
    products of a breakup, a kind of calamitous collapse of Europe in
    1914.

    Now why on earth would the United States, after having had to go to
    war twice in the 20th century to save Europe and fight the Cold War
    to defend democracy in Europe, be alarmed by the prospect of a
    secure, stable, prospering and democratic Europe today? It would be
    ridiculous. We want there to be a strong Europe.

    There is not one serious person in Washington who worries about a
    U.S.-European rivalry. Commercially, yes. Okay, Boeing and Airbus
    will always fight. Of course they will. Well, so what? Ford and GM
    also fight. Let them. All right?

    The strategic fact is the United States and Europe need to work
    together because the threats we face are common threats, and they
    mostly originate outside of Europe, both in the broader Middle East
    and the problems along what I call Europe's frontiers of freedom -
    the Balkans, South Caucasus. These are where the problems are. But
    the United States and Europe are together a center of democracy and
    prosperity in the world, and the alliance there is very close and apt
    to be closer.

    When I think of all the problems, the last of my worries is a
    U.S.-European rivalry. Besides, the worst days of 2003, 2004, the
    debate about the Iraq war - that is behind us now, thank God.

    Question: I am from Kosovo, Taner, the Balkans and anything about
    the Balkans. As you know the Kosovo problem and the challenge has
    not been solved yet and at the same time in Serbia there are sort of
    problems. So, the stability of the Balkans... and what is the
    American policy towards these two issues, especially the Kosovo
    status?

    Ambassador Fried: The United States has been involved deeply in the
    Balkans since the breakup of the old Yugoslavia. Kosovo's status is
    the last open question, just as Serbia's future direction is the
    biggest problem.

    We support the efforts of Ahtisaari, the former Finnish president, to
    negotiate arrangements for Kosovo's final status this year. I don't
    know what those arrangements will be, but I do know what they will
    not be. We will not go back to the situation before 1999. We will
    not partition Kosovo. We will not redraw borders. That is no
    secession, no greater this or greater that. And whatever solution
    there is in Kosovo has to respect the rights of Kosovo's minorities
    -- ethnic Serb, ethnic Turkish.

    NATO didn't fight a war in Kosovo to support anyone's nationalist
    agenda. The Serb population of Kosovo needs to be protected, it
    needs to be respected, it needs to have a home in Kosovo. Not
    because Belgrade insists, but because this is a matter of principle
    to us.

    Then the whole region needs to move to Europe. You cannot have the
    Balkans outside of Europe as a breeding ground of poverty, theft,
    smuggling, and occasionally wars. And I believe that Serbia ought to
    be in Europe. This isn't just about Kosovo, it's about the whole
    region. And Macedonia should be in Europe.

    What I can't say is exactly what Kosovo's final status will be, but
    that's not up to the United States, that's a negotiated process.

    Question: I am from North Cyprus. This is Basaran. Of course there
    is a... we have a Cyprus issue. In the Cyprus issue there has been a
    referendum as you know. The Turkish side said yes, and the Greek
    side said no, and because of that we could not reach to any peace.
    The Greek side of course established themselves as the member of
    European Union. So, there has been some commitments to diplomatic
    channels and economic commitments. Unfortunately, these commitments
    by United States have not been established. The... there was a
    meeting between our president and Condoleezza Rice but any committed
    promises were not established. So, if you can elaborate on this?

    Ambassador Fried: I am very familiar with the Cyprus issue. We
    believe in one Cyprus. We support reunification of the island as a
    bizonal, bicommunal federation. We do not believe in separatism or
    cessation. We are very pleased that the Turkish Cypriot community
    also supports reunification.

    I myself have met with Mr. Talat. We do not recognize him as
    president; we do not recognize the government, but we do understand
    that he is a leader of the Turkish Cypriot community, and we
    appreciate the fact that he supports a negotiated settlement to
    reunify the island. We encourage that. It's the right policy. We
    look forward to the day when a reunited Cyprus with a secure Turkish
    community is in the European Union as a whole island.

    Now we understand that bizonal, bicommunal federation also means that
    there have to be certain arrangements. We supported the Annan plan,
    as you know. It didn't pass. I regret that. But we have to find a
    way to make progress. We do want to make progress on the basis that
    I stated. And we do want to encourage the Turkish Cypriot community,
    but without recognizing a separate state and without creeping
    recognition of a separate state because we do believe in unification.
    Again, this is what the Turkish Cypriot leadership says it believes,
    and I accept this. I believe their position is sincere.

    So we look forward to working with the government of Cyprus, with the
    Turkish Cypriot community, with the United Nations, with Turkey, with
    Greece to advance a settlement which will help everyone.

    Question: I come from Brussels, speaking English.

    About the Cyprus issue, this year everyone is expecting a crisis for
    Turkey about the Greek Cypriots and opening the port issue. Turkey
    clearly declared that they won't open their ports unless there is a
    settlement in Cyprus. It will be a big crisis with, big or small I
    don't know, but definitely a crisis for Turkey in the EU
    relationship.

    Also there is a ground shifting for the settlement from UN to EU, and
    it seems that U.S. doesn't respond at all. Since Mr. Annan has a
    very limited time and I don't think that personally he will again try
    something else because of every limitation. Do you have any concrete
    steps in the short term for Cyprus? Not recognition of course, but
    to try for anything.

    Ambassador Fried: You make a very good point, which is that this
    issue, and I'm putting it in my words not yours, but that this issue
    will not get better by itself. In fact, we have been thinking about
    how important it is that we do whatever we can to help promote a
    settlement.

    I frankly appreciate the Turkish government's support for a
    settlement. I don't think that Talat could have done what he did
    without Turkey's backing. This is a significant change. It means
    that Turkey also supports a bizonal, bicommunal federation.

    So we have to look at what we can do to support a settlement. Now
    you're right, we have always supported Turkey's accession to the
    European Union on the basis that Turkey ought to be treated like
    every other candidate. Turkey meets the criteria, it should join.
    If it doesn't, it shouldn't. But no special rules.

    This is a tough position for Turkey, I understand it. We want to
    make progress, and we were thinking about how to approach the Cyprus
    issue so as to avoid this kind of a problem. The Turkish government
    deserves credit for having supported a settlement. This is not
    trivial. This is a big deal. It means that Greece, Turkey, the
    Turkish Cypriot community, and the government of Cyprus all support a
    bizonal, bicommunal federation. They just argue about the ways to
    get there. I understand this. This is not easy. But we should not
    let this drift.

    So that's the premise of your question, and I frankly agree with you,
    and we're thinking about this very actively right now.

    Question: I am from Azerbaijan, from the TV Company INS. From the
    year 2005 until today everybody who's connected to the settlement of
    the Nagorno-Karabakh issue, they've been talking that this conflict
    has to be solved in the year 2006. If it's not solved now then it
    will last for many years. But now we see that the talks are
    deadlocked and the non-constructive position of the Armenian
    president is indicative. How do you think, is it possible that this
    conflict is settled within one or two years? And please take into
    consideration that both parties have always claimed that they
    wouldn't seize any territory? How do you see it?

    Ambassador Fried: Happily the situation is not as stuck as it
    appeared immediately after Rambouillet. At Rambouillet Presidents
    Kocharian and Aliyev met. They failed to come to agreement on terms
    to settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, and many people
    thought, oh my God, it's over, there will be war, terrible things
    will happen.

    Shortly after that I went out to Baku and Yerevan with Ambassador
    Steve Mann, who is the American negotiator as part of the Minsk group
    process of negotiating a settlement of Nagorno-Karabakh. And we had
    a series of useful, I think productive, discussions with the
    government of Azerbaijan, the government of Armenia, and we have had
    discussions here with Foreign Minister Oskanian of Armenia and Deputy
    Foreign Minister Azimov of Azerbaijan. Both governments appear
    serious about making progress. Both governments gave us something to
    work with. So we're no longer quite stuck. We don't have a solution
    yet, but we are confident enough that we're proceeding with
    discussions with both governments, working with the Minsk group
    co-chairs.

    It's important that both countries understand that they both cannot
    have their maximum objectives at the same time. Both countries can't
    achieve that. And, in fact, neither country will achieve its maximum
    objectives. Similarly, no country can receive anything. Both
    countries have interests that must be taken into account.

    It's going to take courage and political leadership to get out of a
    war cycle and start contemplating the much more hopeful future if
    there is peace.

    You're from Azerbaijan, right? Your country's going to have a lot of
    money coming in from oil and gas, but only if there is peace. If
    there is war, there is no more money. All right? Just look at the
    map. You know what I'm talking about. You're well set up for peace.
    Of course, the oil and gas money won't do you any good unless it's
    well spent, but that's a different issue. So we're determined to
    move ahead.

    Question: This is Liudmila Barba from Moldova. About the Kosovo
    status, many official people from Moscow, including President Putin,
    have indicated that in case Kosovo is recognized then Russia would be
    able to recognize the separatist regions in post-Soviet territory.
    Do you take into consideration this factor when you are thinking
    about the status of Kosovo?

    The second question is about the widening of the European Union.
    After World War II, the United States supported the present European
    Union. Will the United States keep supporting the enlargement of the
    European Union to include Ukraine and Moldova?

    Ambassador Fried: First, we do not regard Kosovo as a precedent for
    resolution of any other conflict. Not Transnistria, not Abkhazia,
    not South Ossetia, not Chechnya, or North Ossetia, or Ingushetia. It
    is not a precedent. Full stop.

    We do not support separatism. We do not support separatist agendas.

    Why is Kosovo different? Because Milosevic fought a war with NATO,
    for one thing, and he lost. Secondly, the United Nations has had
    administration over Kosovo for seven years. Third, the UN Security
    Council has repeatedly affirmed Kosovo's status as under UN
    administration, its final status to be worked out.

    So our position is very clear and should not be misunderstood.

    The second question about the enlargement of the European Union.
    We've always favored it. We think it has been a fabulous success. It
    has been a fabulous success. We believe that enlargement should
    continue, although we recognize first that there is a debate in
    Western Europe about EU enlargement that we have to respect. And
    second, the countries have to be ready. It is not a gift, it is not
    a charity program. Your Polish and Latvian colleagues here can tell
    you that it was very hard to get into the European Union. They had
    to do a lot, but it was worth it.

    As for Ukraine, Ukrainians have to decide themselves. Anybody from
    Ukraine here? Yes. All right. Ukrainians have to decide for
    themselves what they want. Then they have to do the work.

    Question: Thank you very much. Naziya Bissenova from Kazakshtan.
    Mr. Fried, actually I have several questions but to be fair I will
    ask only one question.

    Presently, Russia is using its energy card when playing on the
    international arena and this question refers to the Central Asian
    countries and Kazakhstan.

    Due to the position of the Russian monopoly Gazprom in the pipelines,
    they are in charge of everything. Europe and the United States are
    concerned about the situation that still the question of energy
    security hasn't been solved. How do you think, how soon will the
    alternative corridors be found?

    Ambassador Fried: Well, that is one of the questions of the hour.
    The Russians have put energy security on the agenda of the G8. We
    believe that energy security comes from transparency and an open
    investment regime. It does not come from a closed regime or
    politicization or corruption.

    Russia is going to make a lot of money off of energy under any
    scenario. That's not the issue. The issue is whether gas and oil
    will be developed according to commercial or strategic principles.
    We believe in commercial principles. We believe that an open
    investment regime will be better actually in the end for Russia.
    Certainly your country and Azerbaijan and Turkmenistan have a lot at
    stake here. So, in a way, does Ukraine.

    We think that a closed system is not good, either for your country or
    for Georgia or for Ukraine or for Western Europe, and, frankly, I
    don't think it's good for Russia.

    An open system will force governments - an open system will raise
    energy prices to world levels, which is not a bad thing, but you
    can't have energy prices at world levels for some countries and not
    for others. And it's very odd that your country sells its base for
    $40 a thousand cubic meters and that same gas is resold for $240 a
    thousand cubic meters. I see you know exactly what I'm talking about.

    The system needs to be open, and then Russia is going to make
    billions of dollars anyway, but it will do so under conditions which
    also benefit other countries.

    Question: I have very short question, and I can hear from you very
    short answer. I am from Georgia, Ekaterine Kadagishvili. Everyone
    knows about the Rose revolution. More than two years have gone after
    this event. I am just interested if U.S. government sees any ...
    some... steps before, steps forward to democratic principles in this
    country or are some aspects where U.S. government maybe is
    disappointed.

    Ambassador Fried: I do see progress. But, of course, in the end of
    2004 Georgia was, well, the end of 2003, I guess. That's when we
    have to date it from, from the Rose Revolution. Georgia was in pretty
    bad shape, so I see progress from a pretty low base. There has been
    progress. This progress needs to be sustained for a long time.
    Civil society has to be strengthened, the economy has to develop, the
    state has to become functional, but not authoritarian. Georgia
    cannot afford military adventurism. I don't care how frustrating it
    is to have North/South Ossetia and Abkhazia in their current
    situation. There is no military answer. But I think there is
    progress.

    You can tell me more, but I've been to Georgia three times in the
    past year, and each time it's a little better. The government's a
    little more organized, Tbilisi looks a little better, a few more
    roads have been developed.

    Question: Is this enough?

    Ambassador Fried: No, it's not enough. Of course it's not enough.
    But look, I'm not a Georgia expert but I know something - I'm old,
    right? So I've seen post-communist, I remember post-communist
    development in Eastern Europe in 1989. After two years in Poland,
    the country I know the best, it was still a mess, but there was some
    progress. Was it enough? No. But they made more progress, they
    didn't stop.

    Question: All other countries it seems like make more progress.

    Ambassador Fried: No, actually Georgia's done - Look, Georgia made
    no progress basically for 10 years after independence. It stopped a
    civil war, that's true, but that's all it did. Georgia has a lot
    more to do but it's done something.

    Question: I'm Armine Amiryan, I'm from Armenia from Armenian TV. In
    terms of democracy and human rights protection, which countries
    within our region are more favorable conditions?

    Ambassador Fried: Don't ask me to rank order countries. [Laughter].
    Look, a lot of Armenians were disappointed that the constitutional
    referendum last fall was not as free and fair as it should have been.
    We have recently concluded with Armenia an agreement to provide $250
    million worth of assistance under the Millennium Challenge Account,
    but we have told Armenia very clearly that it has to deepen its
    democratic reforms as a condition of this program.

    I think a settlement of Nagorno-Karabakh is critical for Armenia
    because the country needs to get beyond a mentality of encirclement
    in the war. The same could be said for Azerbaijan.

    Democracy takes leadership from the top, it also takes leadership
    from civil society. And it is only - I don't know about the rest of
    the world from experience, but I know that in post-communist
    societies the only successful countries emerging from communism have
    been countries which have implemented free market and democratic
    reforms and done so on a sustained basis over time.

    Other models have been tried - from nationalism and fascism in
    Serbia, to a "go slow" approach in Romania. Is anybody here from
    Romania? You remember President Iliescu's first term of office? Not
    exactly a great success. But when he came back the second time after
    Constantinescu, things advanced and got better. No matter what your
    politics I think everybody agrees it was better in the late '90s.
    That's my point.

    I really do have to go. Thank you.

    (end transcript)

    (Distributed by the Bureau of International Information Programs,
    U.S. Department of State. Web site: http://usinfo.state.gov)

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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