1. |
Re: question from an outsider. (mind) |
36 sor |
(cikkei) |
2. |
Re: Revanchist views or paranoia? (mind) |
31 sor |
(cikkei) |
3. |
Re: question from an outsider. (mind) |
25 sor |
(cikkei) |
4. |
Re: question from an outsider. (mind) |
9 sor |
(cikkei) |
5. |
Re: Mr. Francis O Akenami------>official Internet Bigot (mind) |
2 sor |
(cikkei) |
6. |
Re: question from an outsider. (mind) |
34 sor |
(cikkei) |
7. |
Re: NATO expansion (mind) |
467 sor |
(cikkei) |
8. |
Fekete lyuk (was: two words translated, please) (mind) |
21 sor |
(cikkei) |
9. |
followups Re: $$ FASTCASH $$ (mind) |
6 sor |
(cikkei) |
10. |
Re: question from an outsider. (mind) |
30 sor |
(cikkei) |
11. |
Re: question from an outsider. (mind) |
11 sor |
(cikkei) |
12. |
Re: Need accented character set (mind) |
32 sor |
(cikkei) |
13. |
Re: question from an outsider. (mind) |
11 sor |
(cikkei) |
14. |
Re: question from an outsider. (mind) |
18 sor |
(cikkei) |
15. |
Greetings from Italy (mind) |
9 sor |
(cikkei) |
16. |
Re: Fekete lyuk (was: two words translated, please) (mind) |
32 sor |
(cikkei) |
17. |
re. the question of using pen names (mind) |
30 sor |
(cikkei) |
|
+ - | Re: question from an outsider. (mind) |
VÁLASZ |
Feladó: (cikkei)
|
wrote:
: In article >,
: Hermes > wrote:
: The Roman Empire was long gone when the Hungarians arrived in the
: Carpathian Basin at the end of the period commonly known as the Great
: Migration of People.
No, Joe, once again your grip of historical reality proves itself
quite weak. The Eastern Roman Empire only fell in 1453 when the Ottoman
Turks sacked Constantinople. The Magyars had arrived in the Carpathian
Basin some half millenium earlier.
: The standards of that period were quite a bit different
: than that of the 20th century. The closest thing to the UN of that era
: was the Bishop of Rome (the Pope) and if he legitimized a conquest and
: status quo, that was all that was needed.
Never mind that Romanians are Eastern Orthodox.
: That state was recognized by the international community
: as legitimate for many centuries, so challenging that legitimacy with
: ridiculous claims dating back to over a 1,000 years is absurd.
: So I agree with *S* that Trianon was not about what the Romanians like
: to call "historic justice", but something much less noble.
Sure, Joe. But, in our reality, Romania got Transylvania because the
majority of the population was ethnic Romanian. The Western powers
really don't give a damn who got there first. The fundamental question
is one of self-determination. Too bad that you think that is "much less
noble" than Hungary's hanging on to as much territory as she could, never
mind that the population of that territory did not want to live under her
rule.
Alexander
|
+ - | Re: Revanchist views or paranoia? (mind) |
VÁLASZ |
Feladó: (cikkei)
|
wrote:
: In article >, Alexander Bossy > wrote
:
: >But, if Vojvodina wasn't given to either the Serbs or the Croats, but to
: >them JOINTLY, and now they aren't living in one state any more, does that
: >mean that "Vojvodina belongs to neither the Serbs nor the Croats" and
: >should be returned to "its rightful owners", the Hungarians? If not, why
: >are you telling us that Vojvodina historically belongs to Hungary?
: Because I described how Voivodina came to belong to Yugoslavia. But you
: conveniently ignored my suggestion that a partition of it between Serbia
: and Yugoslavia would be more in line with the original joint ownership
: than Serbia grabbing it all.
I know that your grip on reality is tenuous at best, so let me
just remind you that in our reality, Serbia is part of Yugoslavia.
Anyway, wouldn't a vote be a fairer way to decide what country it
should belong to?
: >In 1102, when King Koloman of Hungary, having consolidated Hungarian
: >control of Croatia, had himself crowned king of Croatia, he asserted the
: >triple claims of conquest, inheritence and election. And, his "rights"
: >to Croatia came in just that order.
: According to A. Bossy ...
Give us your version, and I'll cross-post it to
alt.history.what-if.
Alexander
|
+ - | Re: question from an outsider. (mind) |
VÁLASZ |
Feladó: (cikkei)
|
From: ()
>In article >, DBrutus >
wrote:
>> As for Romanians getting Transylvania, I see
>>little wrong with a compact ethnic group with fairly easily defined
>>borders getting its wish of independance from an abusive colonial
>>master.
>You can repeat that lie all you want, but that won't make it true.
>It's an all too obvious attempt of selfjustification by squatters.
I've been looking over the historical justification arguments
(which I'm finding very educational on both sides) that go on in
this group. I find the Hungarian position either badly argued or
simply lacking in merit. Of course, this could be the self-serving
justification of someone who is personally biased. but can anyone
really doubt that if there would be a plebescite held today that
the large majority of Transylvanians would vote again for union
with Romania? If not, why aren't Hungarian politicians concentrating
on organizing such a plebescite for a legal separation?
In the tradition of Publius, Cato, and Centinel...
Decius Brutus
|
+ - | Re: question from an outsider. (mind) |
VÁLASZ |
Feladó: (cikkei)
|
Hermes > writes:
>... Dima ... is a professor now !
Shit, this is news ! Professor of what ? Where ?
I hope I can stay on a different continent.
George Antony
|
+ - | Re: Mr. Francis O Akenami------>official Internet Bigot (mind) |
VÁLASZ |
Feladó: (cikkei)
|
Why don't you speak Spanish...
...this is America
|
+ - | Re: question from an outsider. (mind) |
VÁLASZ |
Feladó: (cikkei)
|
In article >, Alexander Bossy > wrote:
>
> No, Joe, once again your grip of historical reality proves itself
>quite weak. The Eastern Roman Empire only fell in 1453 when the Ottoman
>Turks sacked Constantinople. The Magyars had arrived in the Carpathian
>Basin some half millenium earlier.
What relavence does that have to the former Pannonia and Dacia? They
were not part of the Eastern Roman Empire, so you're just blowing hot
air again. In fact, the Magyars arrived there some half millenium later
than the Romans were last seen in the Carpathian basin (by the Huns).
>
> Never mind that Romanians are Eastern Orthodox.
That's right, I don't, for that Church did not legitimize any Romanian king or
state in the area and time in question.
> Sure, Joe. But, in our reality, Romania got Transylvania because the
>majority of the population was ethnic Romanian. The Western powers
>really don't give a damn who got there first. The fundamental question
>is one of self-determination. Too bad that you think that is "much less
>noble" than Hungary's hanging on to as much territory as she could, never
>mind that the population of that territory did not want to live under her
>rule.
I think I already expounded on what I thought about that particular
implementation of the self-determination principle. BTW, how about
implementing the self-determination also for the Hungarian minority
where they form local majorities? After all, before Trianon, Romanians
were also a minority in the Hungarian Kingdom and majority only in
Transylvania. And I am not even talking about ceeding from Romania;
only local autonomy. What's good for the goose is good for the gander, no?
Joe
|
+ - | Re: NATO expansion (mind) |
VÁLASZ |
Feladó: (cikkei)
|
This is a multi-part message in MIME format.
---------------------------------58391727627638
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Here is yet another publication on the subject of NATO expansion. Several
analysts are presenting different views on this subject in a somewhat more
open manner than the officials do. The situation does not get any clearer,
though :-) On the contrary, the confusion in Washington about what to do next
on this issue (as well as when) seems to be complete.
Regards,
--
Plamen
Internet E-mail:
WWW: http://ASUdesign.eas.asu.edu/~bliznako/
---------------------------------58391727627638
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Type: text/plain
DATE=JULY 15, 1995
TYPE=ON THE LINE
NUMBER=1-00339
TITLE=THE PARTNERSHIP FOR PEACE
EDITOR=OFFICE OF POLICY - 619-0037
CONTENT=
THEME: UP, HOLD UNDER AND FADE
ANNCR: ON THE LINE -- A DISCUSSION OF UNITED STATES
POLICIES AND CONTEMPORARY ISSUES.
THIS WEEK, "THE PARTNERSHIP FOR PEACE." HERE IS
YOUR HOST, ROBERT REILLY.
HOST: HELLO AND WELCOME TO ON THE LINE.
THE NORTH ATLANTIC TREATY ORGANIZATION -- NATO
-- IS ONE OF THE MOST SUCCESSFUL ALLIANCES IN
HISTORY. FOR NEARLY HALF A CENTURY, IT
PROTECTED WESTERN EUROPE FROM AN EXPANSIONIST
SOVIET UNION. TODAY THAT THREAT NO LONGER
EXISTS. IN 1994, NATO ESTABLISHED THE
PARTNERSHIP FOR PEACE. THIS INITIATIVE IS
DESIGNED TO PROMOTE MILITARY AND POLITICAL
COOPERATION BETWEEN NATO AND FORMER SOVIET-BLOC
COUNTRIES. FOR MANY, IT IS EXPECTED TO BE THE
FIRST STEP TOWARD FULL NATO MEMBERSHIP.
JOINING ME TODAY TO DISCUSS THE PARTNERSHIP FOR
PEACE AND UNITED STATES POLICY ARE THREE
EXPERTS. JOSEPH KRUZEL IS DEPUTY ASSISTANT
SECRETARY OF DEFENSE FOR EUROPEAN AND NATO
AFFAIRS; WILLIAM ODOM DIRECTS NATIONAL SECURITY
STUDIES AT THE HUDSON INSTITUTE AND FORMERLY
HEADED THE U.S. NATIONAL SECURITY AGENCY; AND
PAUL GOBLE IS DIRECTOR OF RESEARCH AT THE
JAMESTOWN FOUNDATION. HE PREVIOUSLY SERVED IN
THE U.S. STATE DEPARTMENT AND IS A LONGTIME
SPECIALIST ON RUSSIA AND EASTERN EUROPE.
GENTLEMEN, WELCOME TO THE PROGRAM.
MR. KRUZEL, LET ME BEGIN WITH YOU, IF I MAY.
NATO APPROVED THE PARTNERSHIP FOR PEACE PROGRAM
A YEAR AND A HALF AGO. IS IT LIVING UP TO
EXPECTATIONS SO FAR? WHAT IS ITS CURRENT
STATUS?
KRUZEL: I THINK IT HAS EXCEEDED EXPECTATIONS. WE HAVE
TWENTY-SIX MEMBERS OF THE PARTNERSHIP; FOURTEEN
OF THEM ARE ACTIVELY INVOLVED IN THIS PLANNING
AND REVIEW PROCESS; ABOUT EIGHTEEN OF THEM HAVE
OFFICERS ASSIGNED TO NATO HEADQUARTERS OR
WORKING IN THE COORDINATION CELL AT MONS,
[BELGIUM]. WE HAD THREE EXERCISES IN 1994.
WE'RE GOING TO HAVE ELEVEN EXERCISES THIS YEAR,
EVEN MORE IN THE YEARS BEYOND. IF YOU GO TO
NATO HEADQUARTERS OR TO MONS, YOU SEE POLES AND
HUNGARIANS AND CZECHS ACTIVELY INVOLVED IN THE
WORK OF THE ALLIANCE. WE HAVE A LOT MORE TO DO
BUT I WOULD SAY GIVEN THE GLACIAL PACE AT WHICH
GOVERNMENTS USUALLY OPERATE, WE'VE DONE A LOT IN
THE FIRST EIGHTEEN MONTHS.
HOST: GENERAL ODOM, ARE YOU PLEASED WITH THE
PARTNERSHIP FOR PEACE? IS IT MEETING
EXPECTATIONS AND FULFILLING THE NEED FOR
SECURITY IN EUROPE?
ODOM: LET ME SAY THAT I AGREE WITH THE POINTS THAT JOE
KRUZEL MADE ABOUT SOME OF THE PROGRESS AT THE
OPERATIONAL LEVEL HE'S DISCUSSING AND SINCE
WE'RE INTO THIS PROGRAM WE MIGHT AS WELL MAKE
THE BEST OF IT. I PERSONALLY THINK THAT IT WAS
A BAD IDEA. IT'S A BAD IDEA BECAUSE IT GIVES AN
EXCUSE TO THOSE WHO WANT TO OPPOSE EXPANSION OF
NATO TO POSE THAT AS AN ALTERNATIVE. IT ALSO
CONFUSES A LOT OF PEOPLE ABOUT WHERE OUR
PRIORITIES ARE STRATEGICALLY IN THE EAST. IT
PUTS THEM ALL ON THE SAME STATUS. WE SAW THE
PROBLEMS THAT CREATED WITH RUSSIA'S INTEREST IN
THIS. SO WHILE THERE ARE SOME VERY POSITIVE
CONSEQUENCES OF SOME OF THESE EXERCISES, I THINK
THERE ARE DOWN SIDES [NEGATIVE ASPECTS] TO THE
PARTNERSHIP FOR PEACE THAT WE SHOULD NOT LOSE
SIGHT OF, PARTICULARLY IN LIGHT OF THE LARGER
NATO GOALS.
HOST: LET ME ASK PAUL GOBLE. ISN'T THERE A NEED FOR A
TRANSITIONAL PROGRAM SUCH AS THE PARTNERSHIP FOR
PEACE BEFORE FULL NATO MEMBERSHIP IS GRANTED?
GOBLE: A TRANSITIONAL PROGRAM IS FINE AND I THINK THE
PARTNERSHIP FOR PEACE HAS MADE AN IMPORTANT
CONTRIBUTION. BUT AS BILL ODOM SUGGESTS, IT HAS
ALSO GOTTEN IN THE WAY OF THINKING ABOUT THE
SECURITY ISSUE IN EUROPE. NATO IS NOT A CLUB,
IT'S A DEFENSE ALLIANCE. IT WAS CREATED NOT
ONLY TO DEAL WITH A THREATENING SOVIET UNION,
WHICH AS YOU SAY NO LONGER EXISTS, BUT ALSO WITH
A FUNDAMENTAL SECURITY PROBLEM BROUGHT ON BY
GEOGRAPHY. BETWEEN BERLIN AND MOSCOW THERE IS A
RANGE OF WEAK STATES. TWICE IN THIS CENTURY
ALREADY THAT'S WHERE WAR HAS BEGUN. NATO
EXPANSION EASTWARD AS FAST AS IT CAN BE ARRANGED
IS ONE WAY OF COPING WITH THAT SECURITY VACUUM
BETWEEN TWO CAPITALS OF TWO OF THE MOST
IMPORTANT COUNTRIES IN THE CONTINENT.
HOST: AT THE TIMES WHEN THOSE WARS BEGAN, WE HAD
TOTALITARIAN STATES IN GERMANY AND IN THE SOVIET
UNION.
GOBLE: ONE OF THE THINGS THAT'S SAID ALL THE TIME IS
THAT DEMOCRACIES DON'T GO TO WAR AGAINST EACH
OTHER. THIS IS HELD UP AS AN ABSOLUTE
PRINCIPLE. THE PROBLEM IS IT'S NOT A
STATISTICALLY SIGNIFICANT ONE. IN THE WORLD
TODAY, THERE ARE ONLY SEVEN COUNTRIES THAT HAVE
BEEN CONTINUOUSLY DEMOCRATIC FOR ONE HUNDRED
YEARS. WE CAN'T PREDICT WITH ANY ACCURACY WHAT
KIND OF A GOVERNMENT WILL BE IN MOSCOW OR INDEED
ELSEWHERE OVER THE NEXT DECADE OR SO. WE'RE
JUST BEGINNING THE PROCESS OF CHANGE IN RUSSIA.
THE REVOLUTION IS FAR FROM OVER, THERE ARE LOTS
OF DISTURBING SIGNS THAT THINGS MAY NOT TURN OUT
THE WAY WE WANT.
HOST: PRECISELY. AND ONE OF THE CRITICS OF THE
EXPANSION OF NATO, DR. KRUZEL, SUGGESTS THAT THE
EXPANSION OF NATO WILL BRING ABOUT A THREAT IN
RUSSIA THAT DOES NOT EXIST NOW BY UNDERMINING
DEMOCRATIC DEVELOPMENTS AND PLAYING INTO THE
HANDS OF CERTAIN NATIONALISTS WHO SAY WE
[RUSSIANS] ARE CONSIDERED AN ENEMY BY THE WEST.
HOW DO YOU ANSWER THAT CRITICISM?
KRUZEL: I SAY THE RUSSIANS SHOULD TAKE FULL ADVANTAGE OF
THE PARTNERSHIP FOR PEACE. THEY HAVE SIGNED THE
PARTNERSHIP. FOREIGN MINISTER KOZYREV SAID AT
THE LAST MEETING OF NATO MINISTERS IN NOORDWIJK
JUST A FEW WEEKS AGO THAT RUSSIA WOULD BE
ACTIVELY INVOLVED IN THE PARTNERSHIP FOR PEACE.
IF THEY ARE, THEY WILL SEE THE NEW NATO. THEY
WILL SEE THAT NATO NO LONGER IS A THREAT TO
RUSSIA, IF IT EVER WAS. THEY WILL SEE THESE
COUNTRIES WORKING TOGETHER COOPERATIVELY TO
RESHAPE EUROPEAN SECURITY ENVIRONMENT. THAT IS
THE WAY THEY WILL UNDERSTAND THAT NATO
ENLARGEMENT IS NOT A THREAT TO THEM BUT INDEED A
BENEFIT TO ALL OF EUROPEAN SECURITY. BOB, CAN I
COME BACK TO MY COLLEAGUES OVER HERE WHO HAVE
RAISED A CURIOUS OBJECTION TO THE PARTNERSHIP
FOR PEACE? BOTH OF THEM ARE SERIOUS MILITARY
ANALYSTS AND THEY HAVE BOTH SAID THAT NATO IS
NOT A CLUB, NATO IS A SERIOUS MILITARY
ORGANIZATION. THAT MEANS THAT NATO, IF IT'S
GOING TO BE A SERIOUS MILITARY ORGANIZATION, HAS
TO PREPARE FOR NEW MEMBERS AND HAS TO HAVE THESE
NEW MEMBERS PREPARED TO ACCEPT THE OBLIGATIONS
AND RESPONSIBILITIES OF MEMBERSHIP. THAT'S WHAT
THE PARTNERSHIP FOR PEACE IS DOING EVERYDAY. IF
WE DIDN'T HAVE THIS, IF WE WAVED A MAGIC WAND
AND BROUGHT THESE COUNTRIES IN, NATO WOULD NOT
BE READY TO ACCEPT NEW MEMBERS AND THESE
COUNTRIES WOULD NOT BE READY TO MAKE THEIR
CONTRIBUTIONS. THIS GRADUAL EVOLUTIONARY
PROCESS ENLARGES THE TRANSATLANTIC COMMUNITY IN
THE RIGHT WAY.
ODOM: I'D LIKE TO RESPOND TO THAT. IN THE FIRST
PLACE, IN THE PAST WE'VE TAKEN COUNTRIES IN
WITHOUT PREPARATION AT ALL.
KRUZEL: THAT WAS THEN. THAT WAS IN THE COLD WAR.
ODOM: WE TOOK THEM IN 1949 WITH VIRTUALLY NO
PREPARATION FOR IT, SO I THINK THAT'S A RED
HERRING. THE LARGE POINT HERE [IS], WHAT SHOULD
YOU DO INSTEAD OF PARTNERSHIP FOR PEACE? YOU
NEED AN ALL-EUROPEAN SECURITY STRUCTURE AND YOU
NEED TO SATISFY GENUINE RUSSIAN SECURITY
INTERESTS. I THINK THEY CAN BE SATISFIED, AND A
NUMBER OF RUSSIANS I THINK UNDERSTAND THIS. THE
O-S-C-E [ORGANIZATION ON SECURITY AND
COOPERATION IN EUROPE] NEEDS TO BE UPGRADED AND
LET ME BE SPECIFIC. IT CAN'T ACT NOW BECAUSE IT
LOOKS LIKE THE U-N GENERAL ASSEMBLY. IT NEEDS A
SECURITY COMMITTEE WITH A FEW KEY GREAT POWER
MEMBERS, LIKE RUSSIA, GERMANY, FRANCE, THE U.S.,
BRITAIN. AND IT SHOULD HAVE RULES THAT IF THERE
IS A CONSENSUS IN THAT COMMITTEE, IT CAN ACT.
THEN RUSSIA HAS A ROLE TO PLAY IN ALL EUROPEAN
SECURITY AND THAT CAN BE BUILT TO DEAL WITH
THINGS RIGHT NOW THAT I THINK YOU'RE TRYING TO
DO UNDER PARTNERSHIP FOR PEACE, BUT THERE'S NO
SENSE OF PRIORITY. THEN THERE'S NO NEED TO
EXPAND NATO VERY FAR. IT SHOULD TAKE IN A VERY
LIMITED NUMBER OF MEMBERS FOR THE VERY REASONS
YOU POINTED OUT. WE CAN'T TAKE IN ALL OF
EASTERN EUROPE, BUT I THINK WE COULD TAKE IN
THREE RATHER QUICKLY, AND THAT NEEDS TO BE DONE.
THE REASON THAT NEEDS TO BE DONE IS NOT ONLY THE
ISSUES THAT PAUL JUST MENTIONED ABOUT THE
PROBABLE CHANGES IN SOME OF THESE GOVERNMENTS OR
THE POSSIBILITY OF THAT, BUT TO ENSURE AN
UMBRELLA UNDER WHICH DEMOCRATIC SYSTEMS AND
MARKET ECONOMIES CAN DEVELOP EFFECTIVELY.
PEOPLE TEND TO LOSE SIGHT OF THE FACT THAT WHEN
NATO WAS FORMED IN 1949, MOST OF THE ARGUMENTS
IN EUROPE FOR IT HAD TO DO WITH CREATING A
SECURITY CONTEXT FOR INTERNAL REASONS IN FRANCE
AND GERMANY AND THE BENELUX COUNTRIES. RUSSIA
WASN'T EVEN MENTIONED IN THE FRENCH DEBATE, ONLY
SLIGHTLY IN THE BRITISH DEBATE. NATO WAS
DESIGNED PRIMARILY TO GET OLD WARRING ETHNIC
GROUPS AND STATES TO COOPERATE.
HOST: LET ME ASK THAT FUNDAMENTAL QUESTION ABOUT THE
PURPOSE OF NATO TODAY. HAS IT LOST ITS MAJOR
ROLE AS A DEFENSIVE ALLIANCE SINCE ITS PRINCIPAL
THREAT, THE SOVIET UNON, NO LONGER EXISTS, AND
INDEED IS ITS PURPOSE NOW TO QUELL ANCIENT
TRIBAL ANIMOSITIES? DR. KRUZEL, DO YOU AGREE
WITHTHAT?
KRUZEL: WE HAVE NOT YET REACHED THE POINT WHERE WE CAN
SAY THAT FOR ALL OF TIME, EXTERNAL THREATS HAVE
DISAPPEARED FROM EUROPEAN SECURITY. THERE ARE
RESIDUAL THREATS THERE, AND NATO AS A COLLECTIVE
DEFENSE ALLIANCE IS THE MECHANISM FOR PREPARING
TO DEFEND AGAINST THEM. IT'S ALSO MORE BROADLY
IN THE POST-COLD WAR WORLD A MECHANISM FOR
MULTI-NATIONALIZING SECURITY OBLIGATIONS. IT IS
THE WAY THAT COUNTRIES LEARN A COMMON SET OF
OPERATING PROCEDURES THAT WILL ALLOW THEM EITHER
IN TOTAL OR IN SOME COALITION OF WILLING STATES
TO TAKE A BODY OPERATING STANDARDS AND
PROCEDURES TO SOME MILITARY OPERATION ANYWHERE
IN THE WORLD, NOT JUST IN EUROPE.
GOBLE: THE END OF THE COLD WAR DID NOT REPEAL EITHER
HISTORY OR GEOGRAPHY. WHILE WE CAN HOPE FOR THE
BEST IN ALL OF THESE COUNTRIES, THE FACT IS THAT
MANY OF THESE COUNTRIES FEEL VERY THREATENED,
AND COUNTRIES THAT FEEL THREATENED TEND TO
BEHAVE BADLY AND THAT TENDS TO SPIRAL. WE MAY
BE ABLE TO SAY ESTONIA OR POLAND SHOULD NOT FEEL
THREATENED BY A RUSSIA THAT WE'VE DECIDED IS
DEMOCRATIC, BUT THE REALITY IS THAT BOTH POLES
AND ESTONIANS, NOT TO MENTION OTHERS IN EASTERN
EUROPE, FEEL THAT RUSSIA STILL CONSTITUTES A
THREAT. GIVEN THAT THAT IS THEIR JUDGMENT,
GIVEN THE SECURITY VACUUM AND THE FAILURE TO
ARTICULATE A NEW SET OF PARAMETERS FOR NATO AND
TO ALLOW A LARGE GRAY AREA TO EMERGE BECAUSE WE
DON'T REALLY WANT TO MAKE A LOT OF DECISIONS
JUST NOW, THAT IS LEADING SOME OF THESE
COUNTRIES TO GO OFF IN DIRECTIONS WHICH WILL
EXACERBATE THE SECURITY PROBLEM FOR RUSSIA, AND
THAT PLAYS OFF RUSSIAN INSECURITIES TO THE
EXTENT THAT A POLISH GOVERNMENT COULD DECIDE
THAT RUSSIA IS A REAL THREAT TO IT, WHETHER WE
THINK THAT OR NOT, AND THEN COULD BEHAVE
ACCORDINGLY. ONE WAY THEY MIGHT BEHAVE WOULD BE
TO BECOME INCREDIBLY CONCESSIONARY TO MOSCOW.
ANOTHER WAY, HOWEVER, WOULD BE IN THE DIRECTION
OF A MORE RADICAL NATIONALISM. EXTENDING A NATO
GUARANTEE OVER THOSE COUNTRIES, JUST AS IT
WORKED IN 1949 AND THEREAFTER, IS A WAY OF
PREVENTING EITHER OF THOSE EVENTUALITIES FROM
HAPPENING. IT HAS NOTHING TO DO WITH KEEPING
THE RUSSIANS OUT PER SE.
HOST: I WANT TO ASK ONE PRACTICAL QUESTION BEFORE WE
RUN OUT OF TIME. PRESIDENT CLINTON HAS MADE
VERY CLEAR, THE QUESTION IS NO LONGER IF NEW
STATES WILL JOIN NATO, THEY WILL. THE QUESTION
IS WHEN AND HOW? ARE WE ANY CLOSER TO A
DECISION THERE?
KRUZEL: WE'RE NOT GOING TO ANSWER THAT QUESTION. WE'RE
NOT GOING TO GIVE THESE COUNTRIES A CHECKLIST OR
CALENDAR OR TIME-TABLE. PART OF THE REASON FOR
THAT IS BECAUSE IT DEPENDS VERY MUCH ON THE
ACTIONS OF THESE STATES. THE REAL NIGHTMARE FOR
NATO I THINK, WOULD BE TO EXPAND THE ALLIANCE,
ADMIT A NEW STATE AND TO WAKE UP THE NEXT
MORNING AND TO FIND THIS STATE GOING OFF IN SOME
TOTALITARIAN DIRECTION. WE WANT THESE STATES TO
SHOW US BEFORE THEY JOIN OUR SECURITY COMMUNITY
THAT THEY ARE ABLE TO CONTRIBUTE TO COLLECTIVE
DEFENSE, BUT EVEN MORE IMPORTANTLY THAT THEY
SHARE OUR VALUES. THAT THEY ARE DEMOCRATIC
STATES, THAT THEY HAVE MARKET ECONOMIES, THAT
THEY HAVE CIVILIAN CONTROL OF THE MILITARY. YOU
SEE THE PARTNERSHIP FOR PEACE WORKING EVERY DAY.
I JUST CAME BACK WITH SECRETARY OF DEFENSE PERRY
FROM WARSAW. THEY TOLD US, "HERE'S WHAT WE'RE
DOING TO PREPARE OURSELVES FOR NATO MEMBERSHIP."
IT WOULD BRING TEARS TO YOUR EYES TO SEE HOW
EAGERLY THEY ARE WORKING IN THIS INTERIM PERIOD
TO MAKE THEMSELVES NATO WORTHY AND NATO READY.
IF THEY WERE IN, I DON'T THINK THEY'D BE WORKING
AS HARD AS THEY ARE TO SOLVE THESE PROBLEMS.
ODOM: LET ME POINT OUT BY THOSE STANDARDS WE WOULD NOT
HAVE LET GERMANY INTO NATO.
KRUZEL: BILL, THAT WAS IN THE COLD WAR WHEN WE FACED A
VERY DIFFERENT SITUATION.
ODOM: WE FACE A SITUATION NOW THAT'S IN SOME WAYS MORE
COMPLICATED THAN THE COLD WAR. LET ME POINT OUT
THAT IN THE INTER-WAR PERIOD, A COMPETITIVE
DIPLOMACY TOOK PLACE, ONE THAT HAD ITS LINEAL
ANTECEDENTS IN THE NINETEENTH CENTURY AND
EARLIER IN THE BALKANS. BUT WHEN THESE STATES
WERE FREED UP IN EASTERN EUROPE AFTER 1919, THE
BRITISH, THE FRENCH, THE GERMANS, THE RUSSIANS
ALL COMPETED THERE. NOW, THE PATTERNS OF THAT
COMPETITIVE DIPLOMACY ARE ALREADY REAPPEARING,
AND IF NATO DOES NOT ASSERT ITSELF OVER A
LIMITED NUMBER OF STATES TO BREAK UP THAT
COMPETITION, I DON'T CARE WHAT FAVORABLE REPORT
YOU GET FROM A STOP IN WARSAW, THEY WILL BE
SWEPT ASIDE BY THESE LARGER COMPETITIVE FORCES.
I'VE ALREADY TALKED TO MANY EAST EUROPEAN
OFFICIALS WHO WANT TO KNOW WHY CERTAIN WEST
EUROPEAN POWERS ARE CULTIVATING THEM AGAINST THE
GERMANS AND AGAINST THE RUSSIANS AND SO FORTH.
I'VE HAD RUSSIANS TELL ME THAT FILLING THAT
VACUUM IS VERY IMPORTANT OBJECTIVELY FOR RUSSIAN
SECURITY AND, THEREFORE, THE LONGER WE WAIT ON
THIS, THE MORE LIKELY IT IS THAT THE POSITIVE
DEVELOPMENTS YOU CAN POINT TO WILL NOT HOLD UP
AGAINST THESE LARGER FORCES.
KRUZEL: THE POLES ARE WORKING HARD TO PREPARE THEMSELVES
FOR NATO MEMBERSHIP. THEY HAVE MADE THEIR
STRATEGIC CHOICE, THEY HAVE CAST THEIR LOT WITH
THE WEST. NATO HAS MADE ITS CHOICE. NATO
ENLARGEMENT IS INEVITABLE, IT'S GOING TO HAPPEN
AND WE'RE GOING TO DO THIS THE RIGHT WAY. I
DON'T FIND ANY COMPLAINTS OR CRITICISM IN WARSAW
OR ANY PLACE ELSE IN CENTRAL EUROPE ABOUT THE
PARTNERSHIP FOR PEACE NOW. AS THEY UNDERSTAND
THIS, IT IS THE PATH FOR THOSE INTERESTED IN IT,
TOWARDS NATO MEMBERSHIP. ONCE THEY UNDERSTAND
THAT, THEY ARE HARD AT WORK NOW PREPARING
THEMSELVES TO JOIN THE ALLIANCE.
HOST: SINCE THERE IS NO SENSE OF IMMINENT THREAT IN
CENTRAL OR EASTERN EUROPE...
GOBLE: THERE IS. THE COUNTRIES BETWEEN BERLIN AND
MOSCOW HAVE NOT ONLY BEEN SUBJECT TO THE INTENSE
DIPLOMATIC COMPETITION AMONG WEST EUROPEANS AND
THE RUSSIANS FOR INFLUENCE, BUT THEY HAVE HAD TO
LISTEN TO A VARIETY OF RUSSIAN POLITICIANS AND,
LET US BE HONEST, RUSSIAN OFFICIALS TALKING
ABOUT DENYING WESTERN ACCESS TO THESE REGIONS,
ABOUT A SPECIAL ROLE, A SPHERE OF INFLUENCE.
WHILE WE CAN USUALLY POINT TO OTHER RUSSIAN
STATEMENTS THAT ARE DIFFERENT, THE REALITY IS
THAT AN OFFICIAL SITTING IN WARSAW OR TALLINN OR
KIEV OR PRAGUE IS HEARING THOSE KINDS OF THINGS
AND IS FRIGHTENED. OF COURSE THESE COUNTRIES
ARE GOING TO COOPERATE IN THE PARTNERSHIP FOR
PEACE. IT IS, FROM THEIR POINT OF VIEW, THE
BEST THEY CAN DO AND INDEED THE SUREST WAY
ULTIMATELY TO GET INTO NATO. BUT THAT COULD BE
SWEPT ASIDE, AS GENERAL ODOM SUGGESTS, BY MUCH
LARGER FORCES. WE HAVE WATCHED IN THE LAST FIVE
YEARS, DRAMATIC CHANGES IN THIS REGION. I DON'T
THINK ANYBODY WOULD WANT TO BET THAT THE NEXT
FIVE YEARS ARE SUDDENLY GOING TO BE AN EVEN,
SMOOTH PATH. I THINK WE'RE GOING TO SEE A LOT
MORE CHANGES. I THINK THE COUNTRIES IN THE
REGION EXPECT IT AND PRECISELY BECAUSE OF THAT
SENSE OF INSECURITY, THERE NEEDS TO BE SOME
EXTENSION OF A SECURITY ENVIRONMENT BEFORE
THINGS GO REALLY BAD.
KRUZEL: THERE ALREADY IS. PARTNERSHIP FOR PEACE IS AN
EXTENSION OF THIS ENVIRONMENT. WE HAVE PROVIDED
THESE COUNTRIES WITH AN OPPORTUNITY TO BREATHE
NATO AIR, TO LEARN NATO PROCEDURES. IN FACT, TO
HAVE SOMETHING AS A PARTNERSHIP FOR PEACE MEMBER
THAT'S VERY MUCH LIKE THE ARTICLE FOUR THAT
BINDS NATO ALLIES TO EACH OTHER. THEY DON'T
HAVE A SECURITY GUARANTEE, BUT THEY ALREADY HAVE
A PENUMBRA OF SECURITY CAST OVER THEM. IF WE
HAD ANY SENSE THAT THESE STATES WERE IN IMMINENT
PERIL, WE COULD EXTEND NATO LIKE THAT. THERE IS
NOT THAT SENSE OF IMMINENT PERIL AND THERE'S NO
REASON TO RUSH A PROCESS THAT IS SERIOUS AND
NEEDS TO BE PREPARED FOR IN THE RIGHT WAY.
ODOM: I DON'T KNOW WHAT THE RIGHT WAY MEANS IN THAT
SENSE. IF THE RIGHT WAY IS DELAY, I SEE NO
REASON FOR IT. I WOULD ENCOURAGE YOU ALSO NOT
TO JUST TALK TO THE DEFENSE MINISTRY IN WARSAW,
BUT TALK TO THE FOREIGN MINISTRY AND LOOK AT THE
PRESSURES THEY ARE UNDER FROM RUSSIA WHEN THEY
DEAL WITH THE UKRAINE. POLAND IS RIGHT BACK IN
THE POSITION IT WAS IN THE 1930S WHERE IT GETS
CAUGHT GOING BOTH WAYS ON THIS. AND THAT HAS
MADE GERMANS STAND UP AND SAY, "IF YOU LEAVE US
AS THE EAST-MOST PARTNER IN THIS ARRANGEMENT,
YOU WILL FIND US INEXTRICABLY DRAWN INTO DEALS
EITHER FOR OR AGAINST RELATIONS WITH RUSSIA AT
THE EXPENSE OF EAST EUROPEANS." THOSE OLD
PATTERNS ARE FELT VERY STRONGLY IN GERMANY, THE
RUSSIANS ARE PUSHING THEM AND THE IDEA THAT YOU
CAN GIVE ANOTHER THREE TO FOUR YEARS FOR THAT
DEVELOPMENT AND NOT EXPECT IT TO GET WORSE,
STRIKES ME AS SOMEWHAT NAIVE.
HOST: GERMANY IS SUPPORTING THE PARTNERSHIP FOR PEACE,
DR. KRUZEL?
KRUZEL: ENTHUSIASTICALLY.
HOST: I'M AFRAID THAT'S ALL THE TIME WE HAVE THIS
WEEK. I'D LIKE TO THANK OUR GUESTS -- JOSEPH
KRUZEL, DEPUTY ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF DEFENSE;
WILLIAM ODOM FROM THE HUDSON INSTITUTE; AND
PAUL GOBLE OF THE JAMESTOWN FOUNDATION -- FOR
JOINING ME TO DISCUSS U.S. POLICY AND THE
PARTNERSHIP FOR PEACE. THIS IS ROBERT REILLY
FOR ON THE LINE.
13-Jul-95 3:13 PM EDT (1913 UTC)
NNNN
Source: Voice of America
---------------------------------58391727627638--
|
+ - | Fekete lyuk (was: two words translated, please) (mind) |
VÁLASZ |
Feladó: (cikkei)
|
T. Kocsis ) wrote:
: In article > Rainer Lingmann,
: writes:
: >(I've never been there
: You haven't lost anything. It is a shitty place with terrible
: acoustics for rubbish music. The bier ist warm and the queue
: is always long and slow. The people (mostly 14 years old
: kids) as shitty and rubbish as the music.
What I heard about it is that it's a *really* dark place with dark people
visiting like drug addicts.
But as I already wrote, I felt no urge to go there. Instead I went to the
"Ven diak" (forgive my probable misspelling) a couple of times and
liked it quite a lot. And for just one very quick drop-in I visited the
"Rigoletto".
Regards,
Rainer
(Aachen, Germany)
|
+ - | followups Re: $$ FASTCASH $$ (mind) |
VÁLASZ |
Feladó: (cikkei)
|
PLEASE, everyone, quit following up this trash on the newsgroups!
Zoli , keeper of <http://hix.mit.edu/hungarian-faq/>
<'finger '>
"For my assured failures and derelictions, I ask pardon beforehand of my
betters and my equals in my calling." - Rudyard Kipling
|
+ - | Re: question from an outsider. (mind) |
VÁLASZ |
Feladó: (cikkei)
|
From: (Alexander Bossy)
>DBrutus ) wrote:
>: I see
>: little wrong with a compact ethnic group with fairly easily defined
>: borders getting its wish of independance from an abusive colonial
>: master. The problem comes in only when you have isolated enclaves
>: like the Hungarian areas right smack in the middle of Romania or
>: the Armenian enclave of Ngorno Karabakh.
> Actually, Nagorno Karabakh is seperated from Armenia proper by
>less than a mile; early in the Soviet period, it was attached to, and
>infact part of, Armenia. But, the Turks protested, so Stalin carved it
>off, put it into Azerbaijan, and made a small portion of it part of
>Azerbaijan proper in order to keep it from reuniting with Armenia. In
>other words, classical imperial divide and conquer tactics.
I stand corrected. Since there is no such Hungarian corridor from
the Hungarian pockets to Hungary proper, I would stand by my
position that reunification is about as practical as Romanian
autonomy for sections of Ridgewood, NY, that is not at all practical.
The real solution is for Romanians to give equal rights to all
so that all individuals are satisfied irrespective of their
ethnicity.
In the tradition of Publius, Cato, and Centinel...
Decius Brutus
|
+ - | Re: question from an outsider. (mind) |
VÁLASZ |
Feladó: (cikkei)
|
In article > (DBrutus) writes:
>the large majority of Transylvanians would vote again for union
>with Romania? If not, why aren't Hungarian politicians concentrating
>on organizing such a plebescite for a legal separation?
Because they (=the H. party) do not want separation through organizing
such a vote within areas where they have a majority: what they want is
(limited) autonomy within Romania. Anyway this is only about the compact
Szekler area, a good part of Hungarians are dispatched as a local minority,
for them a Szekler kind-of-autonomy is totally indifferent.
-- Olivier
|
+ - | Re: Need accented character set (mind) |
VÁLASZ |
Feladó: (cikkei)
|
In article >,
.com (koplyay) says:
>
>Help!
>
>Can anybody tell me where can I find (and download) Hungarian Character Set
>(magyar ekezetes betuket) ?
>
>Janos Koplyay
<
There is an emigré publication called ITT-OTT which uses a perfect
Hungarian character set which was created for Macintosh, though
(I believe) it was created privately, perhaps with some sort of
character-set-creating program. I have used one of those myself
some years ago on my ancient KayPro II. For all of you who use
IMB type computers, WordPerfect has a Multinational character set
which has ALL the characters needed in Hungarian. You do have
to create macros for each (alt - macros), the process is somewhat
tedious (especially in WordPerfect 6 for Windows), but the character
set you gain is totally professional (you can desk-top publish
a book in Hungarian that would vie with the best printers in
Hungary - with proportionatly paced fonts and all . . . )
Actually, it was an Austro-Hungarian nephew of mine (literally,
father-Austrian, mother-Hungarian) - a young guru, who short-cut
the process of macroizing the necessary characters for me; I think
I still have his instructions . . . will share them with anyone
who will e-mail me at:
|
+ - | Re: question from an outsider. (mind) |
VÁLASZ |
Feladó: (cikkei)
|
DBrutus ) wrote:
: this group. I find the Hungarian position either badly argued or
: simply lacking in merit. Of course, this could be the self-serving
: justification of someone who is personally biased. but can anyone
: really doubt that if there would be a plebescite held today that
: the large majority of Transylvanians would vote again for union
: with Romania?
So sure? If I compare the GDP/person or the standart level of life
in Hungary and in Romania I do have some doubts.
Illes
|
+ - | Re: question from an outsider. (mind) |
VÁLASZ |
Feladó: (cikkei)
|
Alexander Bossy ) wrote:
: : The Roman Empire was long gone when the Hungarians arrived in the
: : Carpathian Basin at the end of the period commonly known as the Great
: : Migration of People.
: No, Joe, once again your grip of historical reality proves itself
: quite weak. The Eastern Roman Empire only fell in 1453 when the Ottoman
: Turks sacked Constantinople. The Magyars had arrived in the Carpathian
: Basin some half millenium earlier.
I have never seen Byzantine referenced at this time as the "Eastern Roman
Empire".
: Sure, Joe. But, in our reality, Romania got Transylvania because the
: majority of the population was ethnic Romanian.
But Romania also got some parts of Hungary proper where the majority of
population was not ethnic Romanian.
|
+ - | Greetings from Italy (mind) |
VÁLASZ |
Feladó: (cikkei)
|
I have been in Budapest last year and I have travelled by car
through Hungary.
I remember the city as very nice and entertaining.
In the evening with a friend I went to Fortuna disco.
I also remember Hungarian girls as beeing among the most
(Italians are very expert) beautiful in Europe.
Hope to come there again.
Bye, Giulio
|
+ - | Re: Fekete lyuk (was: two words translated, please) (mind) |
VÁLASZ |
Feladó: (cikkei)
|
In >
(Rainer Lingmann) writes:
>
>T. Kocsis ) wrote:
>: In article > Rainer Lingmann,
>: writes:
>: >(I've never been there
>
>: You haven't lost anything. It is a shitty place with terrible
>: acoustics for rubbish music. The bier ist warm and the queue
>: is always long and slow. The people (mostly 14 years old
>: kids) as shitty and rubbish as the music.
>
>What I heard about it is that it's a *really* dark place with dark
people
>visiting like drug addicts.
>
>But as I already wrote, I felt no urge to go there. Instead I went to
the
>"Ven diak" (forgive my probable misspelling) a couple of times and
>liked it quite a lot. And for just one very quick drop-in I visited
the
>"Rigoletto".
>
>Regards,
>Rainer
>(Aachen, Germany)
I heard that most everyone who frequents the Fekete Luk, sleeps with a
person of the same sex.
OD.
|
+ - | re. the question of using pen names (mind) |
VÁLASZ |
Feladó: (cikkei)
|
----------------------------------------------------------------------
wrote:
>
>My name is Joe Pannon
----------------------------------------------------------------------
NO DANUBIUS.
YOUR NAME IS NOT JOE PANNON.
YOUR NAME IS ION PANONESCU.
YOUR NAME IS ION PANONESCU.
YOUR NAME IS ION PANONESCU.
MA NUMESC ION PANONESCU.
MA NUMESC ION PANONESCU.
MA NUMESC ION PANONESCU.
-cristian
ps: hey adrian - looks like our internet fixture needs some more
de-magyarization sessions......
pps: and somebody else mentioned that he's also a republican and
buchanan lover - well, i may personally take care of this mental
aberration.....;->
|
|