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  • BAKU: paper predicts Soros, US-inspired power change early next year

    Azeri paper predicts Soros-, US-inspired power change by early next year

    Zerkalo, Baku
    31 Jul 04

    An article in Azerbaijani paper Zerkalo has predicted that a plan
    aimed at a change of power in Azerbaijan could be launched late this
    or early next year. The plan by so-called mondialists - US
    billionaire George Soros and his foundation, Russia, France and
    Armenia - would be aimed at breaking up "the geostrategically and
    geoeconomically important union between Azerbaijan and Georgia, making
    not Armenia this time around, but Azerbaijan, face isolation" and
    creating a domestic political crisis in Azerbaijan which would lead to
    a " very painful transfer of power" and the new leadership being
    forced to sign "a Karabakh capitulation treaty". The article examined
    the influence of George Soros and his foundation, focusing on the
    recent events in Georgia and Uzbekistan. The following is the text of
    a Musfiq Xaqq report by Azerbaijani newspaper Zerkalo on 31 July
    entitled "Azerbaijan in 'Borcali' sights, or Last Chinese warning"
    with the quote underneath "Millionaires spend money, whereas
    billionaires make history - George Soros"; subheadings inserted
    editorially:

    When on 16 May 2003 the mass media reported that US Secretary of State
    Colin Powell's visit to Georgia had been postponed to a later date,
    only a few people paid any attention to this. But when in late August
    of the same year Georgia came under the serious threat of default -
    inability to pay off foreign debts - and the International Monetary
    Fund (IMF) stopped giving money to Tbilisi, political observers became
    alert in anticipation of important political events, especially as the
    IMF representative had set forth strict conditions for the
    continuation of their cooperation with Georgia.

    Story of one coup

    When the IMF familiarized itself with the results supplied by its
    mission which worked in Tbilisi from 24 June to 7 July [2003], it
    pointed out that unless Tbilisi met the requirements for the
    restructurization of its obligations before the Paris club, the new
    IMF mission would arrive in Tbilisi only in December (!) 2003. Among
    the IMF requirements were the adoption of amendments to the tax code
    and the raising of the electricity tariffs, which in the run-up to the
    parliamentary elections left Shevardnadze faced with a very difficult
    and in every regard disadvantageous choice: losing international
    economic and political support or losing the votes of the
    electorate. The elections, in turn, promised to be difficult because
    as early as in early 2003, Shevardnadze gave his consent to the
    so-called "Baker principle". The point is that a method [of staffing
    the electoral commissions] was elaborated before the November [2003]
    parliamentary elections, when former US Secretary of State James Baker
    arrived in Tbilisi to act as a mediator between Shevardnadze and the
    opposition. According to the system, which both sides approved, five
    members of the Central Electoral Commission and the chairperson of the
    commission (the latter - with Parliament's approval) would be
    appointed by the president, and nine members would be appointed by the
    opposition. And in the very first big interview after his resignation,
    which was published on 27 November 2003 by the British newspaper Daily
    Telegraph, Shevardnadze admitted that he could not believe to the last
    moment that Washington would make him share Milosevic's fate: "I was
    one of the biggest supporters of the US policy," he said. "When they
    needed my support on Iraq I gave it," he recalled. But, despite this,
    Washington organized the toppling of Shevardnadze, and he said that
    "What happened here, I cannot explain."

    The former president suspects that US ambassador in Tbilisi Richard
    Miles directly supported the Georgian opposition, in other words, this
    was most likely done under sanction from the White
    House. Incidentally, Miles won himself laurels as a gravedigger of the
    regimes: he was the US ambassador to Azerbaijan when Abulfaz Elcibay
    resigned from his post, in Yugoslavia - during the bombings on the eve
    of Slobodan Milosevic's ouster, and in Bulgaria when successor to the
    throne Simeon Saxe-Coburg-Gotha won the parliamentary elections and
    became the head of government as a result. Also, Shevardnadze is
    certain that, along with political assistance, the USA provided
    financial support too to the opposition. Long before his resignation,
    in the summer of 2003, the former president accused foreign
    organizations of supporting his opponents. It was precisely back then
    when reports appeared in the Georgian press on the allocation by the
    Soros's Fund [Open Society - Georgia Foundation] of 500,000 US dollars
    to the radical oppositionist organization Kmara (English:
    Enough). Shevardnadze did not talk about Soros directly, but after the
    threats to ban the activities of the international funds in Georgia,
    Soros was reported to have spoken to the president on the phone and
    promised not to intervene in domestic political processes.

    Soros did not keep his promise. The popular Canadian newspaper Globe
    and Mail published a detailed article on what the majority of the
    observers and Georgians knew about anyway - the famous financier's
    support for the oppositionists. "There were several instances in
    which Mr Soros gave the anti-Shevardnadze movement a considerable
    nudge" the paper begins cautiously. "He also funded a popular
    opposition television station that was crucial in mobilizing support
    for this week's 'velvet revolution', and he reportedly gave financial
    support to a youth group that led the street protests." According to
    the paper, before the toppling of Shevardnadze, the methods of staging
    mass protests in Yugoslavia which led to Milosevic's resignation were
    taught in Tbilisi. As early as in February [2003], funds from Soros's
    Open Society Institute sent a Tbilisi activist named Giga Bokeria to
    Serbia to meet members of the Otpor [Resistance] movement and learn
    the right way to stage street demonstrations. Then, in the summer,
    Soros's foundation paid for a return trip to Georgia by Otpor
    activists, who ran three-day courses for students, teaching some 1,000
    Kmara activists how to stage a peaceful revolution.

    According to Globe and Mail, the incumbent Georgian President Mikheil
    Saakashvili has a warm personal relationship with Mr Soros that dates
    back to late 2000, when he studied at a law school in New York. In
    particular, in 2002 Saakashvili was granted an award from his Open
    Society Foundation, which the billionaire personally handed to
    him. These conclusions are corroborated by Georgian politicians as
    well. In an interview with the Obozrevatel newspaper, Georgian Labour
    Party leader Shalva Natelashvili called the change of power a "palace
    coup" and added: "Effectively, George Soros is the president of
    Georgia, whereas M. Saakashvili and [Prime Minister] Zurab Zhvania are
    his governors. Soros's foundation nominated nine ministers of the
    Georgian government, and all of them were appointed. When they
    accomplish their mission, they will have to hand over the key posts in
    the government, economic and political levers of power, ports and
    railways to Soros. These are the ministers of the economy, culture,
    security, justice, education and so on. We do not even pay salaries to
    our government ministers, Soros does (! - Musfiq Xaqq). M. Saakashvili
    and his team-mates sold themselves out." Natelashvili claims that one
    has to undergo three months of training in the USA and work at the
    Soros Foundation to be appointed to the new Georgian government. The
    mastermind behind the campaign against Ajaria was also the famous
    billionaire. Natelashvili claims that he decided to take over the
    seaport of Batumi.

    Baku probing action

    It is quite understandable that Eduard Shevardnadze was sincerely
    surprised with the decisive role of US representatives in his
    resignation. We all are used to the fact that, for many decades, the
    Republicans and Democrats, replacing each other, have been carrying
    out a foreign policy which was essentially the same.

    And it does not occur to the minds of many people that, having found
    itself the only superpower in the early 21st century, the USA is
    beginning to resolve its internal dilemma: the dominance of the
    Anglo-Saxon policy or the triumph of mondialists [Russian:
    mondialisty] (see "Cruel elections in the USA", Zerkalo, 24 July
    2004). Incidentally, precisely this struggle has first clearly
    manifested itself in Azerbaijan and, when it ended with the defeat of
    the mondialists in the person of the same Soros, reverberated in
    Georgia. Let us trace the important events from April through to June
    of last year.

    On 18 April, at the meeting with the chairman of the US NATO Committee
    and author of the Project for Transitional Democracies, Bruce Jackson,
    President Heydar Aliyev noted that ever since Azerbaijan had joined
    the Partnership for Peace [NATO] programme, Azerbaijan had done
    everything that was necessary to join NATO without stirring much fuss,
    was interested in this and had made its choice. Bruce Jackson, in
    turn, noted the need for Azerbaijan's further integration into the
    Euroatlantic structures and said that the issue of Azerbaijan's and
    Georgia's accession to NATO could be discussed as early as in
    2006-2007.

    On 21 April, Heydar Aliyev became ill. On 14 May it emerged that NATO
    Secretary General George Robertson would take part in the opening of
    the Virtual Silk Road project and meet the Speaker of the Milli Maclis
    and the prime minister during his visit to Baku on 15-16 May.

    On 17 May it emerged that financier George Soros, founder of the
    worldwide network of the Open Society Institutes, would visit
    Azerbaijan on 28-29 May. The financier, whose opinion was to be
    reckoned with in international financial and political circles (!),
    had been noticed for having made a number of strong speeches against
    the lack of transparency in the activities of multinational oil
    corporations of late.

    On 22 May it was said that the building of the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil
    pipeline was "closely related" to the problem of the rights of
    thousands of people who resided along the route of the pipeline. This
    was said in a report by the international human rights organization
    Amnesty International, which was sent to Turan news agency. On 23 May,
    the mass media reported that President of the British Petroleum (BP)
    group Lord John Brown would pay a working visit to Baku, Tbilisi and
    Istanbul from 25 to 30 May. The purpose of the visit was to get
    familiarized with the progress in the implementation of such major
    projects as Azari-Cirag-Gunasli [oil fields], the construction of the
    Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline, the development of the Sah Daniz gas
    condensate field and the construction of the South Caucasian gas
    pipeline. On 24 May, Zerkalo published an article, entitled "George
    Soros is coming to us", to mark the arrival of the famous financier
    Soros. In particular, the article read: "US billionaire and founder of
    the worldwide Open Society Institute George Soros has never been only
    a patron of the arts and a good Samaritan. By investing his money in
    the development of the civil institutions in 50 countries of the third
    world, he controls economic processes and guides them in what he
    thinks (!) is the right direction. Now George Soros has decided to
    come here to Baku to set about checking how efficiently we are
    spending the income from Caspian oil."

    On 26 May, President Heydar Aliyev met BP head John Brown. The
    projects that were implemented by that company in Azerbaijan were
    discussed at the meeting.

    On 29 May, the president of the State Oil Company of the Azerbaijani
    Republic, Natiq Aliyev, told journalists that from 2005, Azerbaijan
    could start making up to half a billion dollars profit annually as a
    result of the implementation of its major energy projects. "Later on,
    this number may increase to 1bn US d ollars per annum, so a major
    influx of hard currency should be expected in the country," he said.

    Replying to journalists' question about US foreign policy at a news
    conference in Baku, G. Soros said: "The coming into being of an open
    society occurs through freedom and democracy. Whether it is possible
    to help establish freedom and democracy in a country by carrying out
    military operations is a different and very complex issue. I think
    that the USA has already encountered a few serious problems in Iraq."
    He also said that he was against President Bush's doctrine of
    "pre-emptive" strikes: "I have my own Soros doctrine (!?)." Answering
    the question about the absence of his investments in the Azerbaijani
    economy, G. Soros said that usually (!) he does not do business in
    countries where his foundations exist. "After a market economy is
    created in these countries, I start making investments there, which is
    not a simple issue," he said.

    On 4 June, President Heydar Aliyev signed the law "On approval and
    enactment of the Electoral Code of the Republic of Azerbaijan." It was
    obvious that the law was enacted after its approval by the USA and
    OSCE. Literally right before that, when concluding a meeting, the head
    of state publicized the results of an opinion poll on the presidential
    candidates in Azerbaijan, which was conducted two months (!) earlier
    by the US International Republican Institute (IRA [as published; IRI])
    together with representatives of the US special social centre [as
    published]. The results of the poll proved to be dispiriting for the
    opposition. Sixty-four per cent of voters were willing to vote for
    Heydar Aliyev, 7 per cent - for [Musavat Party leader] Isa Qambar, 4
    per cent - for [People's Front of Azerbaijan Party leader] Ali
    Karimli, 3 per cent - for [Azerbaycan Milli Istiqlal Party leader]
    Etibar Mammadov, 3 per cent - for [Democratic Party of Azerbaijan
    leader] Rasul Quliyev and 3 per cent - for [former President] Ayaz
    Mutalibov.

    The aforementioned facts confirm the same thing. The mondialists, in
    the person of the very same Soros, were ready at least from late 2002
    to change the situation in the important geostrategic and geopolitical
    corridor, the Caucasus. And the fact that already in early 2003 Baker
    forced Shevardnadze to adopt his "principle" of staffing the Central
    Electoral Commission, whereas Aliyev chose an opportune moment and
    managed to parry the "mondialist attack" by stating his readiness to
    join NATO, has largely predetermined the subsequent
    developments. Incidentally, precisely Baker was the co-author of
    Shevardnadze's coming to power in the past. A phrase by the ouster
    Georgian President Zviad Gamsakhurdia is interesting in this regard.

    "One might say," he said in one of his interviews, "that the military
    coup in Georgia was carried out from across the ocean with personal
    participation of Baker and with the blessing of Bush [Sr]." Attentive
    readers might accuse us of a discrepancy, because this means that even
    Bush Sr and his Secretary of State Baker were against the current
    foreign policy of Bush Jr.

    And so it is!

    As early as on 9 September 2002, Cengiz Candar wrote in his article
    "Iraq and hawks - Turkey's 'friends'" ([Turkish] Yeni Safak
    newspaper): "Plans to attack Iraq to overthrow Saddam Husayn not only
    caused acute discord among the USA and its allies on the one hand and
    the rest of the world on the other. This discord has manifested itself
    in yet more acute form in the USA itself, especially among the
    Republican elite. There is even a sharp disagreement between the teams
    of Bush Sr and Bush Jr (! - Musfiq Xaqq). Bush Sr's Secretary of State
    James Baker, National Security Adviser Brent Scowcroft, and one of the
    former secretaries of state Lawrence Eagleburger set out against the
    policy of the new 'hawks' Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld and Condoleezza
    Rice. Even Secretary of State Colin Powell's attitude towards the
    'hawks' is quite icy. It seems that when the mondialists saw after 15
    October [2003, date of the presidential election in Azerbaijan] the
    helplessness of the Azerbaijani opposition and acquiescence of the
    neoconservatives from the Bush Jr administration to what was going on,
    they carried out a strike in Tbilisi, forcing Shevardnadze to resign.
    Let us remind our readers that the so-called "rose revolution" started
    with the demand for an accurate tabulation of the votes that were cast
    during the [2 November Georgian] parliamentary elections and ended
    with the resignation of the president (!). Presumably, the mondialists
    needed a totally controllable outpost in the Caucasus in the form of
    Georgia.

    Why?

    In contrast to the neoconservatives, the mondialists emphasize in
    their foreign policy not crude military force or oil interests, but
    precisely the creation of so-called "democratic institutions" -
    parties, nongovernmental organizations, media sources, and so on - of
    clearly pro-American orientation. Then they rely on these and rule
    from behind the scenes. The fact that many opposition parties, from
    nationalist to liberal, do not differ much in their assessment of
    international events, readily criticizing Russia and Iran but tacitly
    contemplating US policy of double standards in the world, including in
    Azerbaijan, is a proof of this. But then Heydar Aliyev had kept them
    sidelined for too long, and the opposition started to express its
    displeasure with this. This, in turn, stands to bring the mondialists
    under the threat of losing the internal political lever without which
    they would be unable to implement their behind-the-scenes policy. On
    the other hand, the policy of "war and oil" of Bush Jr triggered a
    strongly negative reaction of the mondialists not only in the USA, but
    across the globe. Let us digress and examine

    The Uzbek example

    After the terrorist acts in Tashkent in March-early April of this
    year, General David Barno, head of the Combined Forces
    Command-Afghanistan, arrived in Uzbekistan and discussed the issues of
    Uzbek assistance in the fight against international
    terrorism. Analysing this visit, analysts noted that the Uzbekistan
    played quite an important role in Pentagon operations in the north of
    Afghanistan, and therefore the military base which was located in
    immediate proximity to the Uzbek-Afghan border was very important for
    the Americans. At the same time, US assistance to Tashkent increased
    10 times and reached 90m US dollars a year. However, the observers
    noted that some (!) awkwardness does exist in US-Uzbek relations, and
    the reason for that is the increasing frequency of the reports on
    violations of human rights in Uzbekistan. The US Department of State
    is to reach a decision in the next few days on assistance to
    Uzbekistan - whether it should be continued or Tashkent should be
    denied help on the grounds of systematic violations of human rights in
    Uzbekistan. And if help is denied, the future of the US military base
    in Uzbekistan will come under question.

    Just one week later, George Soros announced that the Uzbek had closed
    down (!) the Open Society Institute which he founded and which was the
    only (!) major private donor in that country.

    The Uzbek justice minister said, however, that the institute could not
    function any further and accused it of discrediting (!) the policy of
    the government of the republic. Soros said that his staffers were
    harassed many times and urged the US government to review its
    attitudes toward the Uzbek authorities. His urge was heard three
    months later. On 14 July, it was announced that Washington had deemed
    the human rights situation in Uzbekistan "very bad". And according to
    the decision that was made just recently, Tashkent will get 18m US
    dollars in this year alone.

    This decision was made by US Secretary of State Colin Powell (!) after
    he analysed the country's democratic development and the human rights
    situation there. Many commentators think that Washington's attempt to
    link financial aid to Tashkent with the human rights situation in
    Uzbekistan could push Uzbekistan towards closer cooperation with
    Russia. It becomes clear that when the "hawks" in the person of the
    same Rumsfeld lost their influence, the "dove" Powell became the
    trendsetter in the US foreign policy. Taking into account close ties
    between the "doves" and the mondialists, as well as the fact that,
    owing to the elections, Bush does not care much for his former
    "allies" in Baku and Tashkent, it becomes clear why the mondialists
    want to fully control Georgia. But let us finish with Uzbekistan
    first.

    Many foreign mass media stress that the Uzbek regime no longer suits
    (!) the Americans. The point is that under the rule of [Uzbek
    President Islam] Karimov, it is impossible (!) to consolidate the
    exclusivity (!) of the American presence in Uzbekistan. On the other
    hand, the USA is interested in building up its presence in the region
    which is rich in strategic resources.

    As a result, it was presumably decided in Washington to get rid of
    Karimov using the successful experience of the "rose revolution" in
    Georgia (!) and elements of the "Kosovo scenario", which envisages the
    establishment of control over territories by instigating "governable
    conflicts" (!) in Uzbek regions (first and foremost, in the Fergana
    [Fargona] valley) and deployment of the peacekeeping troops. The logic
    of the developments leads to the only logical conclusion: the
    mondialists are making make preparations to establish total control
    over the Caucasus.

    In this undertaking, Georgia is the crucial bridgehead to them,
    Azerbaijan - the crucial element, and Armenia - the only country which
    is Russia's ally. It was not surprising that in April we all witnessed
    a surge in the activity of the Armenian opposition. Let us note
    briefly that by late April, [Armenian President Robert] Kocharyan had
    lost support not only of all the main parties, but even of those very
    "ultra-patriots" and "ultra-radicals" whom he used to remove [former
    President] Levon Ter-Petrosyan. Yet another significant event was
    Kocharyan's speech at the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of
    Europe in late June. Many witnesses called R. Kocharyan's speech a
    demonstration of political insolence. And replying to the question by
    the Irish deputy, Paschal Mooney, about the deplorable situation in
    the Armenian mass media, Kocharyan said that everything is perfectly
    all right in this sector in Armenia and accused Mooney of being
    uninformed. He said that the conflicts in Armenia between the
    authorities and the opposition were none of the Parliamentary
    Assembly's business (!). Kocharyan's departure from the policy of
    compliments and the insolence of his statements from the tribune of
    the Parliamentary Assembly testify to the fact that the president of
    Armenia, sensing the changes, has finally and unambiguously sided with
    Russia. Let us also note that Europe responded immediately. "Nagornyy
    Karabakh is a constituent part of the Republic of Azerbaijan" the
    newly elected secretary-general of the Council of Europe, Terry Davis,
    said at the session of the Political Affairs Committee.

    Azerbaijan's trump card, or Why don't they like Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan?

    On 21 July, addressing the personnel of a military unit of the Xudat
    border detachment on the Azerbaijani-Russian border, Azerbaijani
    President Ilham Aliyev said: "In a few years, Azerbaijan will turn
    into an economically strong state, and its military superiority (!)
    will be even greater. Under these conditions (!) we cannot have a
    positive attitude toward some urgings, and in particular, with respect
    to compromises." However, Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar
    Mammadyarov said during his visit to the USA at Colin Powell's
    invitation that until those who have become internally displaced
    persons return to their homes, society will have a particularly acute
    approach to the settlement of the conflict, and resolving the problem
    will be unrealistic (!). It is understandable that the Azerbaijani
    president is counting on the revenues from pumping our oil through the
    Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline. But let us remind our readers that
    precisely this pipeline route was not considered worthwhile for quite
    a long time. It was thought that it would be simply impossible to
    build it, especially over a short period of time: the construction
    work was to start in April 2003, be completed in the fourth quarter of
    2004, and first export was to begin in the second quarter of 2005.

    Along with external forces, the domestic political circles of
    Azerbaijan which were not interested in implementing this project also
    created obstacles. Nonetheless, it was precisely after George Bush's
    coming to power that Heydar Aliyev managed to launch the construction
    work and lay the foundations of the geostrategic and geoeconomical
    union with Georgia. This, however, very much worries not only Armenia,
    but also many influential circles in the USA, as well as France and
    Russia. These countries, using Armenians as a means of sabotage and
    pretending to be "peacekeepers", have been and are implementing a
    policy of double standards towards Azerbaijan. Their attempts to
    achieve the settlement of the contract at the expense of Azerbaijan's
    interests are universally known. To crush Baku's resistance, it is
    very important to make Azerbaijan lose the opportunity it deems
    important to export its oil precisely via the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil
    pipeline and precisely at a required moment.

    By way of a reminder, as early as in January 2000, R. Kocharyan
    threatened in an interview to the oil bulletin of the US company
    Interpol that he would blow up (!) Azerbaijan's oil pipelines. And
    what do we see now? Georgia is suspending construction work on the
    Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline to double-check how it meets
    environmental requirements. At the same time, beginning from late last
    year, reports and articles with negative assessments of the "oil
    policy" of the Bush administration have flooded the international and
    local mass media. The scandal continues around the Halliburton oil
    company, which was headed by US Vice-President Richard Cheney before
    he came to the White House. Halliburton is accused of securing
    lucrative oil contracts in post-war Iraq by cutting corners and unfair
    competition, solely due to lobbying by the vice-president. Analysts
    note that a large-scale "mopping-up" operation has started in the
    international oil business, one of the results of which might be a
    fall in the overall potential of oil lobbying - the very one on which
    great hopes have been and are pinned in Azerbaijan.

    In what way?

    In the light of the aforementioned facts, the attitude of the
    opposition mass media and political parties towards the Georgian
    leadership and their policy towards the ethnic Azeris who live in
    Borcali [Borchalo in Georgian; administrative unit - uyezd - in
    Tsarist Russia since 1880, included parts of what currently is
    Bolnisi, Dmanisi, Marneuli, Tetri-Tsqaro, and Tsalka districts of
    Georgia] is also interesting. It is surprising, to say the least, that
    these mass media and parties take no interest in the ethnic origin of
    the Georgian leaders and in the methods which the
    Saakashvili-Zhvania-[Chairwoman of Parliament Nino] Burjanadze used to
    come to power. However, these very same mass media and parties readily
    discuss the leadership of Azerbaijan from precisely this point of
    view. This is why we cannot appreciate enough the effort by political
    analyst Rasim Agayev, who shed light on precisely this aspect for the
    Azerbaijani readership in his article "'Velvet revolution' or Armenian
    coup?" (Ekho, 3 July 2004). Let us ask ourselves a question: if the
    interests of the mondialists - Soros, Russia, France and Armenia -
    were to coincide in one particular area, and if one of the main
    aspects on which these interests do coincide is the
    Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline, what will they do?

    That's right! Using the half-ethnic-Armenian leadership of Georgia,
    they will strike on Borcali and by doing so, will achieve two
    important goal as a minimum:

    1. They will break up the geostrategically and geoeconomically
    important union between Azerbaijan and Georgia, making not Armenia
    this time around, but Azerbaijan face isolation.

    2. By creating a domestic political crisis in Azerbaijan and causing a
    very painful transfer of power, they will paralyse Azerbaijan and
    force the new "leadership" into signing a Karabakh capitulation
    treaty.

    We are certain that preparations are under way at full speed for the
    implementation of this plan. For example, commenting in late March of
    this year on the situation in Georgia and results of the parliamentary
    elections, one of the leaders of the Qeyrat [movement of ethnic Azeris
    in Georgia] and former deputy of the Georgian Parliament Zumrud
    Qurbanli said: "The latest elections show that the Azeri factor in
    Georgia is on the verge of disappearing from the political arena. For
    example, the population of such large districts as Gardabani, Dmanisi
    and Bolnisi, where ethnic Azeris reside, are not represented in the
    new Parliament by a single deputy. As a result, we are getting a very
    pessimistic picture. The interests of more than half a million ethnic
    Azeris will be represented by only three (!) people. Naturally, this
    is not enough, so talking about a quality protection of the rights of
    the Azeris is out of the question."

    Over recent months, the arrests of prominent residents of Borcali have
    become increasingly frequent; to boot, the Georgian special-purpose
    units are acting in a defiantly insolent manner towards the local
    population, creating an atmosphere of uncertainty and terror. The
    migration of Borcali residents to Azerbaijan is on the rise. Sensible
    Georgians have been calling for normal relations with ethnic Azeris
    for a long time, because precisely their economic undertakings and
    cooperation with Azerbaijan were bringing Georgia important economic
    advantages. But after the mondialists "presented" hundreds of millions
    of dollars to Saakashvili, the need for this was eliminated, and now
    the Borcali residents are openly accused of having a pro-Russian
    orientation because of their economic interests. This, in turn, leads
    to yet greater alienation between the "democratic" Georgians and
    "pro-Moscow" Azeris. It is interesting that the same mondialists, who
    sponsor many "oppositionist leaders" in the form of numerous
    international funds, present huge sums of money to Armenia too,
    although they know perfectly well that Armenia is occupying our
    lands. As to us, we are sent invoices for lack of democracy and human
    rights here and for the excessive extent of corruption, whereas the
    violation of the rights of Azerbaijan as a state are looked at with
    indifference.

    When?

    Two days this year are very important for Azerbaijan: 2 November and
    17 December. The presidential elections in the USA have always been a
    hugely important event worldwide. But in the light of the
    aforementioned facts, the 2 November elections gain paramount
    importance. If Kerry wins, the plan for a change of power through
    using the Borcali "card" will become very likely to be carried
    out. But even if Bush wins, the threat of this will remain very real
    because the "doves" from his team are also mondialists. On 17
    December, Ankara will hear the EU verdict as to whether it will or
    will not be part of the united Europe.

    Presumably, Brussels will not hand down a final verdict and, to keep
    Ankara in suspense, will postpone the issue of the specific date of
    Turkey's accession to the EU to a later date. As a result, the [Prime
    Minister Recep Tayyip] Erdogan and his government will gravitate more
    towards the normalization of relations with the EU, will be more
    inclined to normalize relations with Yerevan, and accordingly will
    finally desist from supporting Azerbaijan in the Karabakh
    conflict. If, that is, the Turkish army does not have its say, which
    for now seems unlikely.

    As you remember, the export of the first oil is scheduled for the
    second quarter of 2005. It follows that political cataclysms, such as
    a change of power, should, under this plan, be realized within the
    next 10 months. It is also quite important that the next parliamentary
    elections are scheduled for late next year.

    Usually all changes of power in Azerbaijan followed similar scenarios:
    first a mass influx of refugees would take place, then groups within
    the authorities would reach separate agreements with the opposition,
    then they would get a blessing from foreign centres of power and
    paralyse the authorities, and then the opposition would receive
    material aid and political assistance and dramatically intensify its
    efforts. The country would then lose its territories and be pushed a
    few decades back. And what about the authorities? Usually, by the time
    they have realized the actual level of threat, it has already been too
    late to change anything. The 1992 events were a visual example of
    this. On the other hand, time is required to play the card of the
    refugees from Borcali.

    Taking this into account, we assume that the plan might be launched by
    the late winter-early spring of 2005.

    Can this catastrophic scenario be avoided by Azerbaijan? We think that
    it is not too late yet, and that untangling the snarl of the problems
    is worth trying. But we should not lose a minute! We might suggest
    concrete ideas, but since our paper is read by our enemies as well, we
    decided not to.

    For now, however, our pseudo-oppositionists have been invited to
    Boston by the mondialist Democrats, Soros is publishing a book
    entitled "The Bubble of American Supremacy: Correcting the Misuse of
    American Power", in which he, praising Saakashvili, criticizes Ilham
    Aliyev, and the Soros's foundation in Azerbaijan, together with the US
    humanitarian organization Catholic Relief Services, and awards
    international certificates to the opponents (!) to building the
    Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline.

    [Signed] Musfiq Xaqq
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