Monday, July 27, 2009

Karabakh Focus, Peace Process: Where We Are Now

From IWPR:

Karabakh Focus
Peace Process: Where We Are Now
A summary of progress on the road to a settlement.
By Kenan Guluzade (CRS No. 503, 27-July-09)

The Minsk Group, which is chaired by Russia, France and the United States and aims to find a peaceful settlement of the Nagorny Karabakh conflict, has laid out principles on which it believes the crisis should be resolved.

The principles are occasionally adjusted to reflect changes on the ground, but are still essentially the same as those agreed in a meeting in Madrid two years ago.

“We are instructing our mediators to present to the Presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan an updated version of the Madrid Document of November 2007, the Co-Chairs’ last articulation of the Basic Principles. We urge the Presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan to resolve the few differences remaining between them and finalise their agreement on these Basic Principles, which will outline a comprehensive settlement,” the French, Russian and United States presidents said in a joint statement after the G8 summit in Italy on July 10.

So what are the Madrid Principles, and what are the two sides’ positions on them?

RETURN OF THE TERRITORIES SURROUNDING NAGORNY KARABAKH TO AZERBIAJANI CONTROL

Currently, Armenian forces control parts of the Aghdam and Fizuli regions, and all of the Kelbajar, Zangilan, Jabrail and Gubadly regions, which are all outside the Soviet-era boundaries of Nagorny Karabakh and which they seized between March and November 1993. They also control the Lachin area, but this is covered by a different point of the Madrid Principles.

This principle is supported by Azerbaijan, which wishes to regain control over its internationally recognised borders.

In Armenia, this point raises concerns, however, since it involves surrendering the current “security belt” around Nagorny Karabakh proper. Armenian strategists consider the regions to be a buffer zone ensuring there cannot be a surprise assault on the self-declared state. However, even in early rounds of talks between the two sides, Armenian negotiators recognised that sooner or later these territories would have to be returned to Baku’s control in some way.

AN INTERIM STATUS FOR NAGORNY KARABAKH PROVDING GUARANTEES FOR SECURITY AND SELF-GOVERNANCE.

This point is tolerated by Azerbaijan, which has repeatedly announced it is prepared to give Nagorny Karabakh “the highest possible autonomy” consistent with its territorial integrity.

However, both sides have concerns about the definition of this article. How long would the interim status last? The current speculation in local media is that it could last for 15 years, by which time a resolution of its status would have to be secured under point 4 of the principles.

A CORRIDOR LINKING ARMENIA TO NAGORNY KARABAKH

This refers to the Lachin region, which separates the Soviet-era borders of Nagorny Karabakh and Armenia, and which Armenians consider to be a crucial lifeline, without which Nagorny Karabakh could be blockaded. It is currently controlled by Armenian forces.

Azerbaijan’s negotiators do not seem to have a firm opinion on the Lachin region, since conceding a corridor is a logical side-effect of the other points, but could also raise doubts about their country’s territorial integrity. The issue of the Lachin corridor is a potentially serious sticking point for the two sides.

FUTURE DETERMINATION OF THE FINAL LEGAL STATUS OF NAGORNY KARABAKH THROUGH A LEGALLY BINDING EXPRESSION OF WILL.

This point also divides opinion among Azerbaijan’s negotiators. Conceding a final referendum also risks conceding independence for Nagorny Karabakh, which is considered unacceptable. However, some commentators have expressed the opinion that, in a popular vote, ordinary Armenians in Nagorny Karabakh might prefer to remain in oil-rich Azerbaijan.

THE RIGHT OF ALL INTERNALLY DISPLACED PERSONS AND REFUGEES TO RETURN TO THEIR FORMER PLACES OF RESIDENCE.

Although this is theoretically accepted by all sides, it is a point that could prove very hard to implement. If it addresses all the victims of the war, it cannot only apply to Nagorny Karabakh itself. There are refugees from Armenia in Azerbaijan, and refugees from Azerbaijan in Armenia, without beginning to consider Nagorny Karabakh and the other territories where actual fighting occurred. Would this point include Armenians returning to Baku or Azeris to Yerevan? How would these people regain their old houses of flats? Who will guarantee their security?

If this point only addresses Nagorny Karabakh itself, then there is a potential sticking point concerning the town of Shusha, which Armenians call Shushi), that was predominantly ethnically Azeri before the war and which controls the heights above Khankendi, the main town in Nagorny Karabakh and which Armenians call Stepanakert.

Before the war, the population of Nagorny Karabakh was 76.9 per cent Armenian (about 145,000 people), 21.5 per cent Azeri (about 40,000 people) and 1.6 per cent other (about 3,000 people). There are around a million refugees and internally displaced persons in Azerbaijan.

INTERNATIONAL SECURITY GUARANTEES THAT WOULD INCLUDE A PEACEKEEPING OPTION.

Both Armenia and Azerbaijan boast that, even without peacekeepers, the ceasefire agreed 15 years ago has been observed. However, there are regular exchanges of fire over the line of control. Soldiers and civilians are still occasionally killed, and peacekeepers would almost certainly be required to ensure the safety of refugees allowed to return under point 5.

Different peacekeeping forces have been mooted, although the co-chairs of the Minsk group are banned from providing troops under the terms of their mandate. Italian, British, Ukrainian, Hungarian, Romanian and other forces have all been suggested, but there is no clarity on this issue.

Kenan Guluzade is a regional expert from the South Caucasus think tank and editor-in-chief of the www.analitika.az website.

See the original article on the IWPR website.

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

Gaming In Tbilisi

Just got this note today from an acquaintance on a mailing list I'm on.

If you're interested give send Mark an email.

Hi all,

As some of you may already know I was a fairly well known game designer in my former life. I worked on projects as varied as Magic: The Gathering, Star Wars and The World of Darkness. I haven’t really done much design work in recent years, but a few months ago that all changed when the floodgates suddenly opened again.

You may have heard of ‘euro-game’s’, a category of board games that are simple, elegant, beautifully made, competitive but non-violent, and have no player elimination (Monopoly they ain’t). I’ve always been a big fan, but I never tried my hand at such minimalist design – I’m used to thousands of cards, dozens of books, Gigabytes of code.

Now, that’s all changed.

Inspired partly by events in Georgia, my first ‘euro game’ is called Power Politics. It’s for 3-4 players and it abstractly represents on a 10 x 10 grid (“The Political Landscape’) various Leaders trying to scoop up supporters, form factions, merge factions and create the largest coalition. It only takes an hour or so to play, perhaps longer your first game.

Here’s my problem, I don’t have a staff of 70 gamers anymore to pull out of their offices to test my new game. In fact, I don’t really don’t know that many gamers here period. I did once get someone's number, but then my phone died. In fact most of the initial play-tests were with Georgian teens. Imagine that.

However, I just know some of you out there must have a disreputable past: perhaps a long forgotten addiction to Bridge or Poker, a summer of playing Settlers of Catan or even a brush with D & D.

If this is you, I need help, I need play-testers. I have air conditioning, cheese and white wine.

If you are not that interested in games but are interested in models of political processes, you might want to give it a spin. The basic game is very simple, but is designed to be supplemented so that complex historical scenarios can be played out on the board: such as the Green Revolution, the Election of 2008 or even the Trial of Socrates.

Many more games are coming down the pike, including a ADHD party game called ScatterBrain, so if politics is not down your ally I will have other options soon. Thanks for you time… let me know if you need further inducements.

Mark Rein-Hagen

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Earth Hour, Persian Style II

This post is an update onmy original post about Earth Hour, Persian Style.

...OK, I'm embarrassed to say but I've changed my mind. Actually, the Iranians are being (as usual) really, really smart.

Think about it. It's pretty untraceable, non-violent, anyone can participate easily, and it can easily totally de-legitimize the government. Just imagine how the government could claim that a black out was only caused by "as small group of hooligans" (the usual line).

Finally, I'm pretty sure this is totally feasible. Most electrical grids are running pretty near maximum at peak hours, and that's without anyone really trying bring them down.

Earth Hour, Persian Style

Really, I couldn't make up this stuff even if I wanted to:

Remember Earth Hour? Well the Iranians have done us one better.

It's as if it's contest to see who's the stupidest.

Monday, July 20, 2009

The (Hopefully) Final Update On Georgia And NATO

According to the journalist who wrote the article, this, it turns out, was the exact quote:

If the Russians kill NATO (Georgia's membership hopes) it means the Russians fought for the right reasons.

This seems ridiculously different from what he wrote in the article:

He also called the hopes of Georgia joining NATO "almost dead. It's tragic," he said. "It means the Russians fought for the right reasons.".

Since I've been following Georgian news in the Western media, it's really appalled me how often journalist mix things up or just plain get everything wrong. They often just don't seem to care about things they think are details.

To me, those two quotes are very different. One says "if X then Y" the other says simply Y. It's not a fine point, it's a super politically charged topic, and the issue over which the government of Georgia may stand or fall.

Here's the correction on the Wall Street Journal website.

Here's another choice peice of journalism about Georgia that came in today, this time from the news-journalonline.com:

From Tallahassee to Tbilisi

Just so you know, Georgia is not in Central Asia. It's in extreme western Asia, or Europe, or Eurasia (depending who you ask). Central Asia is far, far away.

Georgian Wine In Ontario!

The LCBO is now stocking Georgian wine in Ontario!

Marani Kindzmarauli 2005

For those of you that don't know, Georgia is a famous for it's wines and may well be where wine were first invented.

Update On Georgia And NATO

From Civil.Ge (as trusted as source as you can get about Georgia):

Georgia Says Saakashvili’s NATO Remarks In WSJ Distorted

See my original post on Georgia And NATO.

Georgia And NATO

In this Wall Street Journal article, Georgia's President Vows Changes, Saakashvili is quoted as saying that Georgia's hopes for NATO membership are "almost dead".

The Government of Georgia tweeted the article without commentary (god, how I hate this verb).

So far, this is is the only source I've found that denies the quote.

Update:

From Civil.Ge (as trusted as source as you can get about Georgia):

Georgia Says Saakashvili’s NATO Remarks In WSJ Distorted

Estimation

From xkcd.com:

Subtitles Or Dubbing For Georgian Television?

From the CRRC Blog:

Introducing More Subtitling in Georgia | Policy Supported by Evidence

Everything is subtitled in Canada, and though I've finally gotten used to to dubbing enough to enjoy a film in those countries that dub, subtitles are much, much better.

Friday, July 17, 2009

Trailing Spaces Report

Believe it or not, this is an actual report generated by IBM's RAD IDE at deployment time:

I guess employees who have the least number of trailing spaces get gold stars on their foreheads.

Thursday, July 9, 2009

Tuesday, July 7, 2009

Generation X

If you're one of the half dozen or so people left who hasn't read Generation X you should absolutely just go and read it now.

Generation X is probably one of the intelligent and observant books of our times. I've read it maybe 10 times, and re-read it whenever I need to make sense of everything around me.

Douglas Coupland has through some kind of genius or fortune manged to see exactly what an entire Generation is thinking and has successfully summarized it 183 pages of fiction.

Here are some quotes from Coupland (not from Generation X):

Sometimes the best lighting of all is a power failure.

Before machines the only form of entertainment people really had was relationships.

Feeling unique is no indication of uniqueness.

Once you see someone lose it, you can never look at them the same way again.

Workshops and seminars are basically financial speed dating for clueless people.

Lottery tickets are a surtax on desperation.

Good-looking people with strong, fluoridated teeth get things handed to them on platters.

If a building looks better under construction than it does when finished, then it’s a failure.

Earth was not built for six billion people all running around and being passionate about things. The world was built for about two million people foraging for roots and grubs.

When you crop the photo, you tell a lie.

It’s difficult to speak with beautiful people. No matter how hard you try to pretend otherwise, you still want them to like you.

And another thing: if you like Generation X, try Life After God. Along with Bukowski, Leonard Cohen and Tom Waits its probably the best modern poetry I've read.

Douglas Coupland has a website too.

My New Xootr!

A few years ago when kick scooters were the rage I got a Xootr.

A few weeks ago, I realized how much I missed my scooter so I decided to get another one.

For urban short distance transportation nothing beets a Xootr.

For the uninitiated, the Xootr is not your normal kick scooter. It's a work of art. It's got large super efficient wheels, the frame is made of the aircraft grade aluminum and my model's deck is magnesium alloy.

And it's not at all expensive. You can get one for about $200.

If you don't like messing around with the constant maintenance bikes need, and you can't bother locking them up all the time, if you wish you could bring them on buses... take a serious look at the Xootr.

Monday, July 6, 2009

Ko To Tamo Peva

Make Sure you see the movie!

Без Комментариев

Well, maybe one comment, or rather a quote from my co-worker*: "Well, it would take a computer guy".

* Yes, the link is right.

Would The Real Ukraine Please Stand Up?

From RussiaProfile.Org:

Would The Real Ukraine Please Stand Up?