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Ominous signs remind of world 100 years ago

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  • Ominous signs remind of world 100 years ago

    The Star Phoenix (Saskatoon, Saskatchewan)
    October 19, 2007 Friday
    Final Edition


    Ominous signs remind of world 100 years ago

    Pg. A14


    President George Bush's warning Wednesday that a nuclear-armed Iran
    could result in the Third World War is worth noting.

    In isolation, and considering such a conflict inevitably would
    involve nuclear weapons, it sounds like the ravings of a madman. But
    one must consider what else is happening in the Middle East, the U.S.
    and around the world.

    Military expert Michael Desch wrote this spring in the prestigious
    Foreign Affairs journal that the U.S. military was at serious odds
    with the White House over strategy, and Amsterdam-based military
    historian Gabriel Kolko told Der Spiegel this week that senior
    American officers were threatening to refuse to act if the
    administration ordered them to attack Iran.

    Meanwhile, the U.S. Congress considered but then backed away from
    citing Turkey for the 1915 ethnic cleansing of Armenians in the
    former Ottoman Empire. The move against a key NATO ally incensed the
    Turks. This comes in a week when the Turkish parliament
    overwhelmingly voted to give the country's powerful military
    carte-blanche to send forces across the Iraqi frontier, into a
    country the U.S. has occupied since 2003.

    The 509-19 vote, which was taken despite a specific warning from NATO
    headquarters, is understandable. In the last few weeks, attacks that
    originated in the Kurdish area of Iraq, have killed dozens of
    soldiers and civilians in Turkey.

    Turkey claims the right to protect itself against terrorism and has
    complained that NATO has done nothing to help it respond to attacks
    from the Kurdistan Workers Party. According to NATO General-Secretary
    Jaap de Hoop Scheffer, however, Turkey hasn't invoked the clause in
    alliance's treaty that calls on members to come to the aid of an ally
    under attack or requested military help. Turkey has been trying to
    get into the European Union and until now has reigned-in its military
    to ingratiate itself with its neighbours. But the decision in the
    U.S. to press for recognition of the Armenian genocide has clearly
    upset the nation, and military officials are threatening to close a
    major American base and hinder access to Iraq.

    The move by Congress comes after years of lobbying by Armenia's
    considerable diaspora living in the U.S. The irony is that, while
    Turkey is a critical Western ally, Armenia increasingly is under
    Russian influence. It depends on Russia for the military protection
    of its borders with Turkey and neighbouring Azerbaijan, with which it
    had a war in the 1990s.

    Azerbaijan, however, was one of five Caspian nations to sign a mutual
    defence agreement this week, in case any member was attacked. That
    list includes Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, Iran and Russia. Russian
    President Vladimir Putin warned the world Iran has a right to its
    nuclear program and any attempt to block it would be met with force.

    Coming just weeks after Israel attacked a Syrian facility believed to
    be involved in developing a nuclear program -- considered a clear
    signal to Iran about what's in store should it get closer to building
    a bomb -- Russia's warning needs to be taken seriously.

    Of equal concern is the decision by China this week to pull out of
    talks meant to defuse the Iran crisis. China is irate that the U.S.
    dared to give the congressional gold medal to the Dalai Lama. Last
    week China pulled out of human rights talks with Germany after that
    country's chancellor, Angela Merkel, met with the Tibetan leader.

    Except for the nuclear weapons, the world is looking more and more
    like it did a century ago.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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