PKK Claims Responsibility For BTC Blast

PKK CLAIMS RESPONSIBILITY FOR BTC BLAST

PanARMENIAN.Net
07.08.2008 14:18 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) claimed responsibility
for the blast at Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline, according to Cihan
Turkish news agency.

The explosion occurred on the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) oil pipeline
in eastern Turkey late Aug. 5. Turkish energy officials say it
will take at least 24 hours for the fire engulfing the pipeline to
extinguish. Until then, it remains unclear what the extent of the
damage is and how long it would take to bring the pipeline back online.

A spokeswoman for British Petroleumsaid oil flows have been halted
after a fire damaged a valve of the 1767-km pipeline on a section in
eastern Turkey, but exports from the Ceyhan port terminal continued
from storage.

She also said BP and its partners continued to produce crude from
their Azeri fields for stockpiling until flows can resume.

"The incident didn’t stop oil production on the Caspian and exports
from Ceyhan are going in line with the schedule. (Turkish state firm)
Botas is taking all necessary measures to put the fire out," she added,
Reuters reports.

International Law Expert Yuri Barsegov Dies At 83

INTERNATIONAL LAW EXPERT YURI BARSEGOV DIES AT 83

PanARMENIAN.Net
07.08.2008 14:30 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Retired diplomat, international law expert, author
of numerous article and books Yuri G. Barsegov died at the age of 83.

His most popular work is a three-volume collection of documents titled
"The Armenian Genocide: Turkish responsibility and obligations of the
international community. Documents and Comments" was published in 2005.

This year he issued the first volume of his collected papers on
Nagorno Karabakh.

Yuri G. Barsegov was born on March 7, 1925 in Tiflis.

He is the author of over 300 articles on international relations,
diplomacy and law which were published in Russia, France, Germany,
Norway, Sweden, Japan, Finland, Armenia and U.S.

Bryza Persona Non Grata?

BRYZA PERSONA NON GRATA?

Panorama.am
21:31 06/08/2008

The American Co-chairman of the OSCE Minsk Group Mattew Bryza is to be
announced as persona non grata in Azerbaijan, the decision is made by
the "Muasir Musavat" party which is intended to start a protest at the
Embassy building of the US in Baku towards Bryza for the announcements
he made for the NKR regulation. According to the Chairman of the party
his announcements put under threat the territorial unity of Azerbaijan.

Hence the leader of the party called on Azerbaijani to announce
American chairman persona non grata.

Albert Azaryan: – Armenian Flag Holder In Olympics

ALBERT AZARYAN – ARMENIAN FLAG HOLDER IN OLYMPICS

Panorama.am
21:33 06/08/2008

On the opening ceremony of 29th Olympics to be conducted in Beijing
Armenian Olympic champion Albert Azaryan will hold the flag of Armenia,
said Khachik Asryan, the vice Minister of Sports and Youth Affairs.

Remind that 25 Armenian sportsmen will present 8 sports
types. According to Khachikyan each of our sportsmen is a potential
medal receiver. The first group of Armenian delegation left for
Beijing on 31 July and the rest groups left in august 1;2;4;5 and
another one will leave tomorrow.

The leader of Armenian Delegation is the Chairman of National
Olympics Committee Gagik Carukyan, other members of the delegation
are the Minister of Sports and Youth Affairs, representatives of the
Committee, doctors, media representatives. The President of Armenia
Serzh Sargsyan will follow to the Olympics Games.

Prosecutor’s Office: :Over 1000 Crimes Not Calculated"

PROSECUTOR’S OFFICE: "OVER 1000 CRIMES NOT CALCULATED"

Panorama.am
21:34 06/08/2008

The Chief Prosecutor’s Office held a session concluding the data of
the first quarter of 2008. The Prosecutor in General and the vice
prosecutors made separate speeches.

According to the data presented during the session the crimes in the
republic reduced by 376 cases compared with the same time period of
the previous year. Cases conducted towards a human being increased
by 64 cases; moreover cases of violence, murder, rape have increased.

The vice prosecutors stated that our police officers still keep fare
to the habit of not calculating the crimes and other common cases.

Matthew Bryza ‘Explained’ Own Statements

MATTHEW BRYZA ‘EXPLAINED’ OWN STATEMENTS

arminfo
2008-08-07 16:34:00

ArmInfo. OSCE MG American Cochairman Matthew Bryza explained his
own statements on settlement on Nagorno Karabakh conflict, having
partially denied the press statements.

As "Zerkalo" Azerbaijani newspaper reports, M. Bryza said in an
interview with BBC Azerbaijani Service that he did not say about the
"referendum" when talking to "Interfax" Agency correspondents. As
M. Bryza said, someone read his interview incompletely and introduced
it incorrectly. He thinks thy are not acquainted with the problem
details. He said he was misunderstood in Azerbaijan: hi did not
say about prompt determination of Nagorno Karabakh status by its
residents. He added that the matter did not concern the political
status of Nagorno Karabakh. According to M. Bryza, he actually said
that there is a wide package of proposals from OSCE MG cochairmen
which, first of all, mean withdrawal of the Armenian forces from
seven Karabakh- adjoining regions and return of refugees, followed
by withdrawal of peacekeeping forces, as well as establishment of a
corridor between Armenia and Karabakh. M. Bryza said that just these
proposals may be put to voting in one or another form and added
that it is quite another issue whether it will be a referendum or
plebiscite. As M. Bryza said, one may say for sure that it will be
voting in one of the forms, and the NKR residents will be able to take
part in it. He added that all this may happen in future. However,
he said, the process of voting may happen after return of refugees
to their homes. According to M. Bryza, the point is that the details
of the voting have not been determined so far, however, they may be
agreed during preparation of the basic agreement terms.

Talking of possibility of holding a referendum on Nagorno Karabakh
status, the American cochairman said that they recognize the
territorial integrity of Azerbaijan and added that this international
principle has a very high diplomatic status. At the same time, At the
same time, he said, there are also political principles important
to the Armenian party. M. Bryza also said that if an agreement is
reached it should be signed by both parties.

Thus, he said, the parties have to come to agreement based on
a platform agreed in advance, that is, based on the territorial
integrity of Azerbaijan. As M. Bryza said, presently they are working
over reaching such an agreement. He expressed an opinion that one may
say now that the process came back to its course. At the same time, he
said, he admitted absence of a substantial progress in basic issues. As
the American cochairman said, both parties should get used to the idea
that they may acquire something and, at the same time, compromise in
something, however, the whole "acquiring- compromising" diagram is
based on the principle of Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Race, Ethnicity Give Rough Finish To Tennesse Rep. Cohen’s Thursday

RACE, ETHNICITY GIVE ROUGH FINISH TO TENNESSEE REP. COHEN’S THURSDAY PRIMARY
By Rachel Kapochunas, CQ Staff

CQPolitics.com
spage.cfm?parm1=5&docID=news-000002935693
Aug 7 2008
DC

Thursday’s primary in Tennessee’s 9th Congressional District, in
which freshman Democratic Rep. Steve Cohen is trying to fend off a
serious challenge, will conclude a fiercely fought campaign in which
race has been an inevitable issue — and in which religion and even
ethnicity issues have raised political tensions.

The contest is the direct result of primary two years ago in the
black-majority, overwhelmingly Democratic Memphis-based district,
which five-term African-American Democrat Harold E. Ford Jr. had
left open for a Senate bid that he narrowly lost. Cohen — a Jewish
state senator who was the only major white candidate in a field with
several substantial African-American candidates, including corporate
attorney Nikki Tinker — won the 2006 primary with 31 percent of the
vote to set himself up as the prohibitive favorite for a November
general election that he won easily.

Although Cohen had a mainly liberal voting record in the state
legislature that he has maintained since coming to Congress, some
black activists objected that the district should return to the black
representation that had been provided by Ford for 10 years and by
his father, Harold Ford Sr., for the previous 22 years. Among those
voicing that sentiment was Tinker, who finished second with 25 percent
in the 2006 primary and emerged as Cohen’s strongest challenger in
this year’s much less crowded primary field.

Tinker has hit hard in an effort to portray Cohen as unfit to
represent a district in which about three-fifths of the residents are
black. She began running an ad last week that featured an image of a
Ku Klux Klan member with a burning cross. In the ad, former County
Commissioner Walter Bailey contends that Cohen, as a Memphis city
commissioner, was the only person who voted against renaming a park
that memorializes and contains the remains of Nathan Bedford Forrest,
a Confederate general who helped establish the KKK. The commercial,
though, prompted a sharp rebuke from Cohen’s supporters, including
a group of black Democrats who held a press conference to denounce
the ad as misleading and divisive.

This was not the only attempt by Tinker’s campaign to stir emotions
with the theme, "Who is the real Steve Cohen ?" aimed at countering
actions by the congressman that might burnish his appeal to his black
constituents. These include a non-binding resolution sponsored by
Cohen, and passed by the House last week, that offered a national
apology for the past enslavement of blacks in America and for the
subsequent "Jim Crow" era of legal segregation and discrimination
against African-Americans that lasted for nearly a century. Cohen has
also introduced a resolution to recognize the impact of soul music
on American society and another to recognize the contributions of
Negro baseball leagues.

The voiceover in another Tinker ad states, "While he’s in our churches
clapping his hands and tapping his feet, he’s the only [state] senator
who thought our kids shouldn’t be allowed to pray in school." The ad
also states that "apologies," a reference to Cohen’s House resolution,
aren’t always enough.

Cohen, though, has a longstanding relationship with African-American
voters stemming from more than 20 years served as a state senator in
the Memphis area. He is the self-proclaimed "father of Tennessee’s
lottery," which has raised money for state education and scholarship
programs that he says have benefitted.

The field is much slimmer than it was in 2006, when 15 Democratic
candidates entered the contest to succeed Ford. Still, there are three
other contenders, all of them black, according to Cohen, vying for
votes with front-runners Cohen and Tinker. This group includes one
officeholder, state Rep. Joe Towns, Jr., who entered the 2006 primary
but did not wage a serious campaign and received a tiny share of the
vote. Towns is a cousin of 13-term New York Democratic Rep. Edolphus
Towns .

The contest has divided constituency groups of blacks and women who
align with Democratic candidates. The Congressional Black Caucus
(CBC), which rebuffed Cohen’s efforts to join after he arrived in
Congress, gave a $5,000 donation to Tinker’s campaign. Other donations
have been made to Tinker by committees associated with CBC members
Stephanie Tubbs Jones of Ohio, Gregory W. Meeks of New York and Elijah
E. Cummings of Maryland. And the powerful political action committee
EMILY’s List, which supports Democratic women candidates who favor
abortion rights, has endorsed Tinker, as it did in 2006.

Cohen counters with endorsements from significant African-American
figures such as former NAACP executive secretary Maxine Smith and
CBC members John Conyers Jr. of Michigan, Charles B. Rangel of New
York and Jesse L. Jackson Jr. of Illinois, as well as from Planned
Parenthood, which supports abortion rights, and the feminist National
Organization for Women.

The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee has not played
an active role in the primary campaign by running independent
expenditures on Cohen’s behalf, but he overall has enjoyed the
fundraising benefits of incumbency, leading Tinker in total receipts
by $856,000 to $407,000 as of July 18 and holding a cash-on-hand lead
as of that date of $672,000 to $99,000.

Amid all the clamor over race, an ancient issue of ethnic conflict
halfway around the world has also emerged as an unexpected factor in
the contest. Tinker’s candidacy has received a number of donations
and statements of support from Armenian-Americans who say the deaths
of more than 1 million Armenians at the end of World War I was a
genocide committed by the Ottoman Empire.

Some activists have labeled Cohen a "genocide denier" for seeking to
block a 2007 House resolution to commemorate the 100th anniversary of
the mass deaths of Armenians. Cohen is a member of the Congressional
Turkish Caucus, which seeks to promote U.S. relations with Turkey —
the successor to the Ottoman Empire and a key U.S. ally in the war
in Iraq — a nation that portrays the Armenian deaths years ago as
the result of an ongoing conflict that should not be characterized
as genocide. A Turkish-American Web site identifies Cohen as having
a grandfather who was born in Turkey.

Race, Ethnicity Give Rough Finish to Tennessee Rep. Cohen’s Thursday
Primary The issue became personal on Wednesday, according to local
news reports, when Peter Musurlian, an Armenian-American filmmaker
and activist from California, followed a local reporter who had
been invited into Cohen’s home, prompting the congressman to shove
Musurlian out the door.

The winner of the high-volume primary almost certainly will enjoy
a quieter general election campaign for which three independent
candidates, but no Republicans, have filed to run. CQ Politics rates
Safe Democratic.

The best-known of the independent candidates is pharmaceutical company
representative Jake Ford, Harold Ford’s brother, who also ran in the
2006 general election and received 22 percent of the vote, ahead of
the 18 percent taken by Republican Mark White but well below the 60
percent won by Cohen.

Other primary contests: Thursday’s primary will also determine which
Democrat will stage a longshot bid to unseat first-term Republican
Sen. Lamar Alexander in November. Former state party Chairman Bob
Tuke is favored to take first place against five competitors,including
former Knox County Clerk Mike Padgett.

Democrats lost their top Senate recruit in November 2007 when Democrat
Mike McWherter — the businessman son of Ned McWherter, Tennessee’s
governor from 1987 to 1995 — dropped out of the race, citing the
taxing demands of campaigning.

CQ Politics rates Alexander’s re-election campaign as Republican
Favored, which means he’s likely to win but will face competition —
and an upset, while unlikely, cannot be completely ruled out. Tennessee
is one of the few Southern states where Democrats retain a strong
foothold for major offices: Phil Bredesen , the state’s second-term
governor, and five out of 9 House members are Democrats.

Nonetheless, Alexander is very well-known from his two terms as
governor (1979-87), his stint as Education secretary under President
George H.W. Bush and his unsuccessful bids for the 1996 and 2000
Republican presidential nominations, and he will carry a daunting
advantage in campaign funds into his fall contest.

Crowded primaries are on tap for several House seats, with two
Republican incumbents facing vigorous challenges.

One is in the eastern 1st District, a Republican stronghold where David
Davis won the crowded 2006 GOP primary to succeed retiring Rep. Bill
Jenkins with 22 percent of the vote before scoring an easy general
election victory that fall. This year, Davis’ hold on the seat is
being challenged by Johnson City Mayor Phil Roe, who placed fourth
in the 2006 Republican primary with 17 percent. This will be Roe’s
second consecutive campaign for the northeastern 1st District seat.

In the western 7th District, three-term Republican Rep. Marsha
Blackburn is being strongly challenged by former Republican state
Sen. Tom Leatherwood, but her reputation as a conservative lawmaker,
as well as her advantages of incumbency, are likely to carry her to
a win Thursday.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.cqpolitics.com/wm

Cohen’s Close Encounters: An Election-Eve Battle On Two Fronts

COHEN’S CLOSE ENCOUNTERS: AN ELECTION-EVE BATTLE ON TWO FRONTS

Memphis Flyer
oid=oid%3A46959
Aug 6 2008
TN

Even as one 5 o’clock local newscast was summing up a bizarre
development in the 9th District congressional race as a matter of
incumbent congressman Steve Cohen "losing his cool," a veteran
observer, looking at the same scenario from an ideological and
disinterested distance, saw the case in point in another light
altogether.

"I think it probably helped Cohen," said John Ryder, a well-known
local Republican and a GOP national committeeman. Like numerous other
Memphians, Ryder saw the TV footage of the congressman physically
ousting an uninvited Tinker supporter who, posing as a photo-journalist
and documentarian, was attempting to infiltrate a group of newsmen
convened at Cohen’s Midtown residence for a press conference.

"Maybe it’s a guy thing, and it goes beyond black and white," said
an admiring Ryder. "I think all of us around here realize that you
can’t just meekly put up with the presence of a hostile invader in
your own household."

Cohen’s close encounter occurred on the eve of what he hopes will be a
vote of confidence in Thursday’s Democratic primary. The set-to with
Peter Musurlian, a Californian of Armenian descent, occurred near
the beginning of the Wednesday morning press conference, called by
the congressman to rebut the second of two unusually virulent attack
ads this week from opponent Nikki Tinker.

Given the nature of the response to the new ad, which caused Tinker
to be all but repudiated by a major supporter, Cohen may have come
out ahead on that front as well.

A New Attack

Challenger Tinker’s first ad, appearing over the weekend, had
criticized Cohen for withholding support from a proposal to disinter
the late Confederate general Nathan Bedford Forrest. Among other
things, the commercial yoked the congressman’s image to that of a
hooded Klansman. The new ad, beginning with the voice-over of a child
at prayer, asserted that "the real Steve Cohen" was not the man who is
"in OUR churches clapping his hands and tapping his feet" but "the
Senator who thought OUR kids shouldn’t be allowed to pray in school."

It was arguable whether the "OUR " denoted "African-American" or
"Christian" or perhaps both, though the respected pundit Joshua
Marshall of the Talking Points Memo Web site was among several
observers who wasted no time pronouncing "anti-Semitism" to be at
the heart of the ad.

The two ads together meanwhile earned Tinker the stern disapproval
of the feminist PAC Emily’s List, which makes a point of supporting
women running for public office and had been one of her major nominal
sources of support. Said "Ellen Malcolm, the group’s president: "We
were shocked to see the recent ads run by the Nikki Tinker for Congress
campaign. We believe the ads are offensive and divisive. EMILY’s
List does not condone or support these types of attacks." (Though
Tinker has not, as of yet, been dropped altogether from the pro-choice
group’s roster of endorsees, she has been removed from the "Featured
Candidates" section on the Emily’s List Web site.)

Cohen had begun explaining to the journalists gathered in his den his
objections to Tinker’s new ad (among other things, he called himself
"a supporter of school prayer" and maintained that the 1997 state
Senate vote alluded to in the ad concerned a technical church-state
issue), when there were sounds of a disturbance in an adjoining room.

That turned out to be Musurlian, who had been in Memphis this week
confronting Cohen in the course of the congressman’s scheduled campaign
events. Cohen would later say that Musurlian has been stalking him
in retaliation for his role in defeating a House resolution that
would have formally condemned Turkey for its genocide against ethnic
Armenians almost a century ago. The Armenian activist had gained
entry into Cohen’s house and, claiming to be a legitimate media
representative, was involved in a heated argument with two of the
congressman’s aides, who tried to prevent him from disrupting the
press conference.

Ultimately Cohen himself, clearly perturbed, entered the anteroom
and, in the course of a shouting match, partly coaxed Musurlian and
partly shoved him through a doorway and out of the house. "He’s out
of here. Let’s start over," Cohen said. He then resumed the press
conference as scheduled – though he and everyone else present knew
that its subject matter had been superseded.

So Who Came Out Ahead?

What Musurlian gained from all of the above was some random video
of the unfriendly encounter which presumably can be put to use by
assorted Armenian pressure groups in their continuing full-court press
against Cohen’s reelection campaign. (Should such footage prove usable,
however, it would possibly undermine Musurlian’s claim that Cohen or
his aides had managed to "break" his video-camera.)

The Armenian also got the chance to speak at length about his cause
in an impromptu press conference of his own across the street from
Cohen’s house afterwards. Mursulian confirmed that supporters of the
Armenian cause like himself had contributed to Tinker’s congressonal
campaign (to the tune, Cohen would tell his press conference attendees,
of $30,000). He said that Cohen had been targeted not merely because
of his opposition to the resolution condemning Turkey but because
the freshman Memphis congressman had been a leader in quashing it.

What Cohen gained from the encounter was, first of all, the opportunity
to vent against a group — mainly composed of "outsiders," he
said – who had been tormenting him for weeks through a variety of
means, including longish, literal-minded non-sequitur screeds in
the blogosphere. He also got a chance to affirm that, while he was
against the war in Iraq, he wanted to safeguard and provision the
American troops there. He said his position on the Armenian resolution
had been partly determined by advice from General David Petraeus,
commander of the ground war, who had stressed to Cohen the importance
of not alienating the Turks, de facto allies who maintained a reliable
supply line to American forces in Iraq.

Cohen may also, as the Ryder comment indicates, have earned some macho
points for his do-it-yourself eviction – especially since Musurlian
was, on the clear evidence of the widely seen video, a stout sort who
enjoyed several pounds and more than a few years on the slightly built,
middle-aged congressman.

It was somewhat harder to see what down-in-the-polls challenger Tinker
may have gained from the day’s events – though her new ad, coupled
with her previous one, may have helped cement her pre-existing hold on
those voters for whom racial and religious loyalties outweigh all other
factors. But she has clearly lost traction with such undecided voters,
black and white, as subscribe to the amenities of polite discourse –
elements of which, in shadow form, survive even in politics. Even
Tinker’s true believers, if such really exist in the strict sense,
might have trouble exculpating her from charges of, consecutively,
race-baiting and Jew-baiting.

And there are quarters of the 9th District, as elsewhere in the
universe of Democratic voters, where there is no conceivable disgrace
like that of being designated "Worst Person in the World" by MSNBC
commentator Keith Olbermann,, who scoldingly bestowed the dubious
award on Tinker Wednesday night.

— Jackson Baker is senior editor of The Memphis Flyer and a
contributor to Memphis magazine. His primary concerns are political
coverage and general news; other duties include editorials, op-ed
contributions, and the paper’s online edition. He has worked as a
reporter for the Arkansas Gazette and as an aide in the U.S. House of
Representatives in Washington, D.C. He was a panelist on the WKNO-TV
series, Informed Sources and an assistant professor of English at the
University of Memphis. Jackson has won numerous journalism awards,
including four Green Eyeshade Awards from the Society for Professional
Journalists. A frequent TV commentator, he has written for such
periodicals as Time Magazine and the New York Times. He is married
and has four children and two grandchildren. He lives in Cordova.

http://www.memphisflyer.com/memphis/Content?

Rep. Steve Cohen Tosses Armenian-American Cameraman From Home

REP. STEVE COHEN TOSSES ARMENIAN-AMERICAN CAMERAMAN FROM HOME

FOXNews
/07/rep-steve-cohen-tosses-armenian-american-camer aman-from-home/
Aug 7 2008

Rep. Steve Cohen, D-Tenn., angrily tossed an California-based
documentary filmmaker from his Memphis home, and now is accused of
assault in the incident.

MyFOXMemphis.com reports that Cohen was holding a news conference
in his home on Wednesday when Peter Musurlian, the filmmaker, tried
to enter his home. Cohen told reporters that Musurlian was part of a
group trying to paint Cohen a bad light over a vote regarding Turkey’s
treatment of Armenians during World War I: Cohen did not support a
House bill calling Armenian deaths genocide.

The Web site for Musurlian’s company, Globalist
Films,( er.html) discusses Musurlian’s
Armenian-American heritage, and blames Turkey for the "first Genocide
of the 29th Century."

Cohen, can be seen in the TV footage first telling Musurlian to leave,
and then shoving him out the door. Musurlian reportedly filed charges
against Cohen.

Cohen faces Nikki Tinker in the Democratic primary Thursday. Cohen
accuses Tinker of being supported by out-of-state Armenians in her bid
to unseat Cohen, a freshman. And Tinker, who is black, has released
ads questioning Cohen’s religious beliefs, and leveled accusations
of sympathy for the Ku Klux Klan, which Cohen, who is Jewish, denies.

http://elections.foxnews.com/2008/08
http://www.globalistfilms.com/pet

Armenia Positive About Military Reform

ARMENIA POSITIVE ABOUT MILITARY REFORM
By Ara Tadevosian

Institute for War and Peace Reporting
Aug 7 2008
UK

Hopes that new defence minister will deliver on much-delayed plans.

Armenia is about to launch a programme that will strengthen civilian
control over its armed forces, a move which experts say as a positive
sign of new defence minister Seiran Ohanian’s commitment to military
reform.

The Armenia defence ministry is following the example of Georgia
in carrying out a strategic defence review that will look at all
aspects of the armed forces. This is a key component of the country’s
Individual Partnership Plan, IPAP, with NATO.

International experts attended a seminar on the defence review held
in Yerevan at the end of July.

Although the Armenian government has no ambitions to join NATO and the
country remains part of the Collective Security Treaty Organisation,
a defence grouping within the Commonwealth of Independent States, it
says it wants the military to be more convergent with NATO standards in
terms of transparency and ability to cooperate with other armed forces.

A law on "special civilian service" was adopted on January 1 this
year under which decisions should be taken in the next month about
which posts in the defence ministry can be held by civilians rather
than serving military personnel.

There has been talk of military reform in Armenia since the spring
of 2005, when the then deputy defence minister Artur Agabekian –
now head of the parliamentary commission on military affairs and
security – said it was a priority for the ministry.

Agabekian said that by 2015 Armenia should create an army "meeting
the demands of the 21st century, able to withstand new challenges
and comprehensively guaranteeing the military security of the state".

However, little progress was made subsequently, especially after the
then defence minister Serzh Sarkisian became prime minister in spring
2007. Sarkisian is now Armenian president.

"It is hard to say what exactly caused this [lack of progress],"
said David Alaverdian, deputy director of the Armenian Centre for
Transatlantic Initiatives. "It was either that Mikael Harutiunian,
who replaced Serzh Sarkisian as defence minister, was unprepared
to embark on real change, or that the political decision to begin
reforms had not been taken at the highest level.

"In any case, for many months NATO representatives were extremely
sceptical about the capacity of the Armenian military leadership to
push forward defence reforms successfully."

However, the new minister Ohanian has made a different impression.

In a speech to the defence ministry on May 30 this year, he said,
"extremely responsible and difficult work lies ahead of us". He
announced that a new commission, led by the chief of the general staff,
would begin work on military reform, a new directorate for strategic
planning would be set up, and a new law on defence would be adopted
this autumn.

>From this autumn, many of the military personnel now at the defence
ministry will be employed as civilians.

"This calls for an extremely careful and thorough approach so that the
rights of military personnel are not ignored," Ohanian said, stressing
that it would be a major psychological change for the Armenian army.

Psychologist David Atarbekian described the kind of culture change the
Armenian defence establishment will have to go if the reforms are to
be successful. He said it was important for the defence ministry to
recognise the need to change current ways of thinking, and to accept
that there would be some resistance to this.

He noted that the military still enjoyed a unique position in
Armenian society. "In present-day Armenia, the army is the only state
institution which basically has the unconditional support of society,
irrespective of their political sympathies," he said.

Atarbekian said that during the state of emergency imposed in Armenia
from March 1 to 20 because of the violence that followed the disputed
presidential election, there were no recorded cases of clashes between
soldiers and civilians.

He noted that until now, belonging to the army has meant membership
of a privileged caste, and losing this by giving up a military uniform
would be a profound shock for many officers.

Ohanian is a key figure in these changes. A career officer in the
Soviet military, he became an Armenian hero in the Nagorny Karabakh
war and was wounded in the fighting, losing a leg.

His appointment and actions have been widely welcomed.

"In my view, the Armenian army will not weaken, but on the contrary
become stronger because people’s level of trust in their armed forces
will increase," said Tevan Poghosian, executive director of the
Armenian Atlantic Association. "More regulated and precise planning
of defence spending, as foreseen by our IPAP, will ensure that our
army can be optimised."

No one opposes military reforms as such in Armenia, but some
politicians are worried that the process will bring the armed forces
too close to NATO and too far away from Moscow.

Russia and Armenia signed a military cooperation treaty in 1995, and
the Russians maintain a military base at Gyumri, Armenia’s second city.

Former defence minister Vagarshak Harutiunian, now an opposition
politician, said a close relationship with Russia and membership
of the CSTO was important not just militarily but economically as
well, because it allows the country to buy weaponry at discounted
prices. This is an important factor for Armenia, when its entire
national budget is less than neighbouring Azerbaijan’s defence budget
of more than 1.2 billion US dollars a year.

Harutiunian noted that most Armenian officers still train at Russian
military academies.

"Russia’s military presence in Armenia is fully justified in terms
of guaranteeing the security of our republic," said Harutiunian.

Ara Tadevosian is director of the Mediamax news agency in Yerevan.