Orchestra Leaves Smiling Faces After Tchaikovsky Spectacular

ORCHESTRA LEAVES SMILING FACES AFTER TCHAIKOVSKY SPECTACULAR
Judith White

The Saratogian
Aug 19 2008
NY

The air dripped with musical passion instead of rain on Saturday at
the Saratoga Performing Arts Center as a full moon smiled down on
the Philadelphia Orchestra’s annual Tchaikovsky Spectacular.

Maestro Charles Dutoit offered a program focused on the great Russian
composer’s ballet music, along with the debut of a wonderful young
violinist, and the essential "1812," the "Solemn Overture."

The concert began with a sensitive treatment of the overture to Romeo
and Juliet Although it’s been played here a gazillion times in the
past, there was nothing perfunctory in this performance. Dutoit
reached deep and found something new, while keeping the familiar
urgency. Phrases in the opening section were put on display, while
the finale brought the most lush string sound heard here in some time.

The Philadelphia Orchestra’s last recording, with Christoph Eshenbach
conducting, was released this past spring, featuring music by
Tchaikovsky. It’s a good benchmark for comparison with Dutoit’s style.

Never before performed by the Philadelphians, Igor Stravinsky’s
orchestration of Excerpts from Sleeping Beauty added an extra layer of
interest to the evening. The first of the three excerpts, The Lilac
Fairy Variation, had been omitted from the ballet after its first
production and Stravinsky worked on it from just a piano transcription.

Here, Concertmaster David Kim played the solo with exquisite tenderness
from the front of the stage.

The concert’s guest violinist, Armenian-born Sergey Khachatryan, 23,
is already an international star of considerable acclaim, and has
played at the Ravinia and Blossom festivals, and toured the U.S. with
the London Philharmonic. In 2000 he was the youngest ever winner of
the Sibelius Violin Competition in Finland.

On this night the intense, somewhat brooding musician put his own
particular brand on Tchaikovsky’s Violin Concerto, playing with
carefully chosen phrasing and often leaving space for anticipation.

His first movement’s cadenza was dramatic and wonderfully varied in
approach, and he displayed a knife-clean tone as he made a nearly
mournful entry to the second movement.

In the fast third movement, Khachatryan was far from reckless, but
nevertheless managed to lose Dutoit and the orchestra for a few beats
along the way. His expressiveness held the audience rapt. He missed
landing a couple of high note harmonics along the way, but not by much.

This soloist is a keeper, and maybe Saratoga can teach him to smile
a bit during return visits.

And smiles were on most of the audience’s faces as the Philadelphians
played the famous 1812 Overture at the close of this concert.

The cannons are meant to represent the sounds of the fierce battle,
and synchronizing their shots with the score is always an issue. If
this performance is any indication, Russia wouldn’t have hit a single
target. No matter: prettier fireworks came after the concert, in the
night sky above the Hall of Springs.

The Philadelphia Orchestra performs at SPAC again at 8
p.m. Aug. 20. with a "Midsummer’s Night’s Dream" program. For tickets
or information, call 584-9330

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Solving The Crisis In The Caucasus

SOLVING THE CRISIS IN THE CAUCASUS
Greg Bruno

Council on Foreign Relations
Aug 19 2008
NY

Intense fighting between Russia and Georgia erupted on August 7 after
years of antagonistic rhetoric (NYT). After routing Georgian troops
in the breakaway region of South Ossetia, Russian forces launched an
invasion into the rest of Georgia, occupying several towns.

A cease-fire negotiated by French President Nicholas Sarkozy called for
Russian and Georgian forces to return to pre-conflict positions. But
reports of violations by both sides have raised concern about ongoing
hostilities. Russian officials have said their actions are necessary
to protect peacekeepers and citizens in the breakaway regions of South
Ossetia and Abkhazia. President Bush has ordered the U.S. military to
deliver humanitarian supplies to the region, and demanded that Moscow
"keep its word and act to end the crisis." As global leaders scramble
to find a solution, CFR.org asked five regional experts what must
be done to end the violence and create a climate where lasting peace
can be nurtured.

The Ossetian war has entirely transformed the situation in Georgia. In
the short term, the six-point agreement negotiated by Russian President
Dmitri Medvedev and French President Nicholas Sarkozy, and accepted
by Tbilisi, forms the basis for the cease-fire. The old peacekeeping
formula cannot be revived. For the time being, Russian forces are
creating security belts around both South Ossetia and Abkhazia. The
only neutral presence in the region recognized by all sides can be
that of European monitors.

There lies a chance for Europe, and above all, the European Union, to
move forward with facilitating conflict resolution. The hardest issue
will be that of the final status of South Ossetia and Abkhazia. It
is crystal clear that they will not revert to Georgia. It is also
clear that no political leader in Georgia is ready to admit that. A
long process of negotiations and agonizing reflection lies ahead,
and it will only be completed when borders are finally recognized by
all parties, and confirmed by the international community.

At present, European countries are divided in their assessment of
the war and Russia’s reaction. Moscow will seek to reach out to those
which, like France, Germany, Italy, and Spain, take a more moderate
line, and hopes to work with them on a broad security agenda for the
continent. Beyond conflict resolution in Georgia, it includes such
issues as the Ukrainian leadership’s bid to join NATO [the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization] and the U.S. plans to deploy elements
of the ballistic missile defense system in Central Europe. With the
Georgian conflict finally erupted, the two issues are looming even
more prominently on the horizon.

Russia’s relations with the United States have been
deteriorating. Moscow blames Washington for having trained and
equipped the Georgian military that has been responsible for killing
about two thousand Russian citizens in the nighttime shelling of the
South Ossetian capital. That, they point out, amounts to half the
casualties the United States suffered on 9/11.

Rajan Menon, Monroe J. Rathbone Professor of International Relations,
Lehigh University; Fellow, New America Foundation

Like it or not, the balance of forces decisively favors Russia
(IHT). Feel-good ultimatums from us will merely increase Russia’s
intransigence. And lofty rhetoric with implied promises to Georgia
that we cannot keep will only erode our credibility, further weakening
Georgia’s position. As to specific steps, we should:

Coordinate efforts with the EU to craft a strategy for ensuring that
a permanent cease-fire agreement provides for a demilitarized South
Ossetia. Russia won’t allow Georgian troops back into the enclave
in any event, but with the alleged Georgian "threat" to its client
removed, there is an opening to push for the withdrawal of Russian
forces.

Work with the EU to persuade Russia and the South Ossetians to accept
neutral, third-party peacekeepers in South Ossetia. Those deployed
there since the early 1990s hail from these three countries. Georgia
has never seen them as neutral–and certainly won’t after this
war. Given the current animosity between Washington and Moscow,
the U.S. (short on troops in any event) should let EU or UN forces
handle peacekeeping.

Join with the EU to mobilize an international fund to fund the return
of refugees and postwar economic reconstruction. Our contribution
should be earmarked for Georgia. Russia poses as South Ossetia’s
patron; let it bear the costs.

Call for "confidence-building measures" (demilitarized zones, advanced
warnings for troop movements, etc.) to promote stability and advise
the Georgians during negotiations relating to them.

Provide Georgia the means for self-defense, principally air defense
and anti-tank missiles–but on condition that it will not initiate
war against South Ossetia.

Push for a new mediation framework on the final status of South Ossetia
and Abkhazia. The long-drawn efforts led by the OSCE [Organization
for Security and Cooperation in Europe] and the UN respectively are
stuck. If this is to change (a long shot), Russia must pledge not to
attack Georgia or to annex South Ossetia; Georgia must promise not to
reintroduce troops into South Ossetia or attack it; and South Ossetia
must commit to negotiating with Georgia in good faith about a loose
confederation (realistically, the best outcome Georgia can now hope
for). Gaining these compromises will prove tough, but joint U.S.-EU
incentives can help.

Ariel Cohen, Senior Research Fellow, the Heritage Foundation’s Kathryn
and Shelby Cullom Davis Institute for International Studies

To restore order in the short term, the U.S. should make sure that
Russia signs and respects the cease-fire negotiated by French President
Nicolas Sarkozy. The U.S. should also continue pressure within the
United Nations Security Council and the General Assembly to achieve a
resolution that will voice full and unequivocal support for Georgian
territorial integrity, including Abkhazia and South Ossetia, and for
Russian troop withdrawal in accordance to the signed agreement.

Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice should also coordinate support
for condemning Russian aggression in Georgia among our European
allies. The U.S. should encourage OSCE and EU and the United Nations
to send international observers to Georgia in order to facilitate
withdrawal of the Russian forces. The U.S. and its European allies
should communicate to Moscow that its aggression will not stand
and cannot be accomplished without irreparable harm to Russia’s
international standing for decades to come.

Longer term, the U.S. and Europe should lead the world in demanding
that Russia withdraw all its troops from all the territory of Georgia
and recognize Georgia’s territorial integrity.

They should convey to Russia that its invasion of Georgia has forfeited
its membership in the G8 and may derail its aspirations to join the
World Trade Organization and to host the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi,
only twenty kilometers from Georgia.

Washington needs to push for other great powers to speak out,
including Germany, France, India, Brazil, Japan, Korea, Turkey,
and China. This support would "globalize" the condemnation.

In order to resolve the deeper roots of the crisis, the U.S. should
begin talks at a neutral forum such as the OSCE to finally settle
the South Ossetian and Abkhazian problems. This can be done by
granting these territories full autonomy within the Georgian state,
as Tbilisi has repeatedly suggested. This dialogue, propelled by
the U.S. and European leaderships through incentive packages and
security guarantees, could serve as the basis for a more comprehensive
resolution of other conflicts in the former Soviet zone, such as
Nagorno-Karabakh between Azerbaijan and Armenia.

Finally, the U.S. and its European allies should coordinate policies
of expanded security cooperation with the countries of the former
Soviet Union to avoid the recurrence of the current Caucasus war.

Charles A. Kupchan, senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations
and professor of international affairs at Georgetown University

It is too soon to tell whether the ongoing conflict in Georgia will
constitute a turning point in the evolution of the post-Cold War
world. From one perspective, Russia’s invasion of Georgia demonstrates
that Moscow will not be the responsible stakeholder that many had
hoped for. Accordingly, the West must transition from a strategy of
cautiously engaging Russia to one of isolation and containment. From
another perspective, Russia’s actions constitute a disproportionate
reaction to the escalation of fighting in South Ossetia, but not
a clear sign that Russia has again embraced the path of imperial
aggression.

Georgia and Russia both bear responsibility for the outbreak of
conflict. Since taking office, Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili
has consistently embraced a blustery brand of nationalism, vowing to
"liberate" and "reclaim" the breakaway regions of South Ossetia and
Abkhazia. Moscow has been only too eager to take up the gauntlet
thrown down by Saakashvili. Russia has backed separatists in both
regions and, especially after the secession of Kosovo from Serbia,
taken a series of provocative actions that emboldened its Abkhaz and
South Ossetian allies.

Saakashvili’s taunts aside, Russia’s overreaction reveals a new and
worrying muscularity and is emblematic of its disaffection with
U.S. and European policy. From Moscow’s perspective, a series of
developments–including the ongoing expansion of NATO, the prospective
deployment of a missile defense system in Central Europe, and the
separation of Kosovo from Serbia–demonstrated the West’s disregard
for Russia’s legitimate security interests. Now that the Kremlin is
flush with oil revenue and Russia’s government is again in control of
the state, the conflict over Georgia serves as a proxy for Russia’s
attempt to push back against the West and reassert its influence in
its periphery.

As it seeks to discern Russia’s longer term intentions and determine
whether the current crisis represents the return of Russian imperialism
or more of a detour on the way to Russia’s potential integration
into a cooperative international order, the West should focus on the
following questions.

â~@¢ Does Russia withdraw its troops from Georgia proper in a timely
fashion, or maintain its military presence in Georgia and seek to
turn the country into a satellite?

â~@¢ Does Russia readily allow international assistance to arrive
and permit international monitors and peacekeepers to deploy quickly,
or does Moscow appear intent on occupying Georgia or controlling it
through coercion?

â~@¢ Does Russia withdraw the bulk of its troops from Abkhazia and
South Ossetia and engage in good-faith negotiations over the political
status of both territories, or does it capitalize on its military
occupation to annex both regions?

â~@¢ Does Russia refrain from obstructing Georgia’s own political and
economic choices about ties to the West, or does it compromise the
flow of oil and gas through Georgia, attempt to intimidate Tbilisi,
and seek to veto its strategic and economic ties to the West?

Alan Mendoza, Executive Director, The Henry Jackson Society: Project
for Democratic Geopolitics

Short-term order can only be restored by full compliance
with the cease-fire stipulations. Currently, Russia remains
disinclined to withdraw its forces from Georgia, let alone South
Ossetia. International pressure should be placed on Russia to
ensure that it downgrades its role to a ‘peacekeeping’ level,
notwithstanding the fallacy of its role as a dispassionate observer
through its military invasion. The withdrawal must be accompanied by
an international observer element to counter any Russian temptation
to backslide. Russian forces cannot remain in Georgia beyond South
Ossetia: This will only spark resentment and provide for conflict
perpetuation, not resolution.

The orchestration of an aggressive forward strategy in this conflict
by Moscow marks the evolution of Russian foreign policy to a highly
dangerous level. Russia has previously used political, economic,
and technological methods to punish those neighbouring states it
deems to have attempted to escape its influence, as Ukraine, Estonia
and Lithuania can all testify. The invasion of sovereign territory
is of a qualitatively different order, being an open breach of
international law and incapable of being defended on either preemptive
or preventative national security grounds. If Russia is now allowed
to claim a diplomatic victory, the military option will remain firmly
on its table and aggressive, expansionist Russian nationalism–the
real root cause of the conflict–will be emboldened.

In response, the West must show that violence will be punished, not
rewarded. The Russia-inclusive G8 should be sidelined in favour of
the G7, and Russian OECD [Organization for Economic Cooperation and
Development] and WTO entry stalled. EU members need to develop a joint
approach to alternative energy supply, rather than striking bilateral
deals. Crucially, there must be no delay in NATO’s consideration of
Georgian and Ukrainian membership. It would be fitting if the issue
that underlay Russia’s belligerence could be used to demonstrate the
futility of such aggression.

–Boundary_(ID_Sl3jagE4vVeSyEcKuCsHbg )–

SOFIA: Black Pearl Company: National Armenian Complex Doesn’t Ask Fo

BLACK PEARL COMPANY: NATIONAL ARMENIAN COMPLEX DOESN’T ASK FOR DISMANTLING OF THE SCAFFOLDING

Focus News
Aug 19 2008
Bulgaria

Sofia. The owner of the scaffolding, from which the worker at the
national Armenian Complex object had fallen, is the Black Pearl
Company but it had been let out. Company’s engagement is to assemble
and dismantle the scaffolding, person in charge of the technical sector
in the company Dani Dundov told FOCUS News Agency. According to him the
scaffolding had been assembled at this object at about a year ago. They
haven’t received any information for it’s dismantling. He added that
no matter who is the owner of the scaffolding the company, which had
taken it for rent, takes the responsibility for its proper use.

According to Dundov the probable reason for the explosion is the
removing of installation elements but he added that this is only
his theory.

——–

Workers remove the fallen scaffolding

19 August 2008 | 17:23 | FOCUS News Agency

Sofia. The fallen scaffolding has been removed, FOCUS News Agency
reporter informed. The people who live in the building in the opposite
site of the National Armenian Complex building object have been
allowed to home when they had shown their personal documents and
address registration.

People, who have passed through the incident region, have been taking
pictures with their mobile phones.

SOFIA: "Hu- Fu" Building Company The Chief Executer Of The National

"HU- FU" BUILDING COMPANY THE CHIEF EXECUTER OF THE NATIONAL ARMENIAN COMPLEX CONSTRUCTION

Focus News
Aug 19 2008
Bulgaria

Sofia. The "Hu- Fu" building company has been the chief executer of
the National Armenian Complex construction, where there had been an
explosion on Tuesday afternoon and one of the workers had been injured,
Ministry of Defense press center reports.

The company had been chosen in 2004 by a public procurement under the
Public Procurement Act. Ministry of Defense press center said that
according to item 14 from the agreement signed between the executors
"Hu-Fu" company and the contradicting authority- the former Military
Clubs and Information Executive Agency the "Executor takes all the
responsibility for the safety of all kinds of works and activities
at the object, for the safety of the workers and the observing of
the safety rules and guidance of the work."

ANKARA: Yerevan To Host Meeting Of CSTO Defence Ministers

YEREVAN TO HOST MEETING OF CSTO DEFENCE MINISTERS

Journal of Turkish Weekly
Aug 19 2008
Turkey

A session of the Council of Defence Ministers of the Collective
Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) will be held in Yerevan, Armenia,
on 21-22 August, Kazakhstan Today reported quoting press service of
the Kazakh Defence Ministry.

The agenda of the session includes over 20 issues, mainly issues on
military construction, the report said.

Besides, Armenia hosts the third and fourth stages of joint drill of
the CSTO member states – Rubej-2008 – on 18-22 August.

This year, the drill is held in four stages and in three levels:
strategic, operative and tactical. It also covers all regions of the
organization, the report said.

The CSTO founded in 1992 and its members are Armenia, Belarus,
Kazakhstan, Kyrgyz Republic, Russia, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

A Serj Of Controversy

A SERJ OF CONTROVERSY
Shaun Love

The Skinny
serj-of-controversy
Aug 19 2008
UK

Since System of a Down went on an ‘extended hiatus’ in August 2006,
frontman Serj Tankian went completely solo with last year’s Elect the
Dead. Shaun Love patched in a transatlantic call ahead of Tankian’s
trip to the UK next month to discuss single life, airborne genitalia
and the consequences of being an overtly political musician Having
almost entirely written, performed and produced Elect the Dead, has the
experience of going solo improved or changed you much as a musician?

"Absolutely, as a songwriter it presented a lot of interesting
challenges and as a musician I got to exercise my chops on guitar,
piano, string arrangements, bass, programming drums, producing
and putting it out on my own label. It was like an all round arts
project that came together for me, like a composer’s way of making
a rock record."

Your touring band’s called the Flying Cunts of Chaos, what’s that
about?

"Well, I was originally thinking of naming the record that, but
I thought it might not make it into any retail stores. So when it
was time to come up with a name for the band I thought ‘Serj and
the Flying Cunts of Chaos’ just for fun, to be honest. We had two
or three different names, I ran them by the guys in the band and,
overwhelmingly, everyone liked the ‘Cunts’, so…"

You make it sound like such a reasonable suggestion. You’re well
renowned for your activism. can you tell me about your Elect the
Dead campaign?

"We set up a website (electthedead.com) to get signatures on electoral
reform points that I came up with. I’m working with Axis of Justice
and building coalitions between different democratic organisations like
RegisterToVote.org, MoveOn.org, DeclareYourself.com and Progressive.org
to get signatures. It’s building by the thousands all the time. Once
we have a decent number of signatories we want to take it to certain
members of congress and see if we can make it into a resolution or
a number of resolutions."

Video – Serj Tankian – Sky Is Over

What did you make of Bjork’s recent controversy where she was condemned
by the Chinese government and knocked off the Serbian Exit music
festival’s bill for associating her song Declare Independence with
Tibet and Kosovo during her concerts in China and Japan?

"Awesome. To be condemned by any government is awesome."

What do you say to her claim that she wasn’t making a political
statement so much as expressing the need for freedom as a human
emotion?

"Most artists make their points from an intuitive emotional point of
view rather than a political logical point of view, and that’s what
we should be doing. I have much respect for that."

I only bring it up because politics have played such a key part in
your music. Have you found yourself in any similar controversies?

"I had an article called ‘Understanding Oil’ appear on our website
on September 12th, 2001. I got death threats; radio station program
directors were dropping our single, Chop Suey, at the time; all over
the airwaves in the US people were telling me to get the fuck out of
the country if I don’t like America. All sorts of fun stuff. A lot of
reactionism prevailed in the US at the time, and people weren’t ready
to listen to logical explanations of the after-effects of our oil
policy in the last 100 years in the Middle East. So yeah, I’ve had my
share. But hers is nicer, I like that better. I’d rather be condemned
by a whole government for having emotions. I want to join her!"

http://www.theskinny.co.uk/article/43375-a-

SOFIA: Human Mistake Causes The Falling Of The Scaffolding: Hu Fu Co

HUMAN MISTAKE CAUSES THE FALLING OF THE SCAFFOLDING: HUFU COMPANY

Focus News
Aug 19 2008
Bulgaria

Sofia. A human mistake was the reason for the falling of the
scaffolding at the building of the "National Armenian Complex,"
the owner of the Hufu company Dimitar Atanasov told FOCUS News
Agency. According to him the incident had happen during the dismantling
of the scaffolding. One of company’s workers had been injured. Hufu is
a big company, specialized in the work with scaffoldings. The worker
hadn’t been injured seriously and probably the company will pay for
him treatment.

What To Do Now In Georgia

WHAT TO DO NOW IN GEORGIA
Ian Williams

Foreign Policy In Focus

Aug 19 2008

There are no saints and even fewer geniuses in the conflict between
Russia and Georgia over Ossetia. However, Russian Prime Minister
Vladimir Putin, clearly the real power in Moscow, has certain proven
himself even less saintly than other parties – and in the long term,
less clever. Albeit with serious input from American miscalculations
and atavistic politics and with the help of the hapless Georgian
leader Mikheil Saakashvili, Putin has made both Russia, and the world,
a more dangerous place.

That is not because of any great conspiracy, but rather a concatenation
of expedient stupidities on all sides, exacerbated by the tendency of
all American administrations since Reagan to treat Russia as a defeated
power rather than a partner. Russian leaders began the elder George
Bush’s New World Order with unprecedented gestures of cooperation,
around the first Gulf War, for example. Washington’s triumphalist
approach since would have provoked any regime in Moscow, let alone
one led by a KGB/Mafia consortium, to nationalist reaction.

Some conspiracy theorists see a pipeline beneath every recent front
line. In Georgia, a real one runs from Baku to Ceyhan in Turkey,
whose sole and explicitly announced purpose was to get oil from the
Caspian that did not have to go through Russian territory. Of course,
it also made Turkey and its Israeli friends very happy. But alienating
even a faded nuclear superpower to make two dependent states happy
is not a statesmanlike thing to do.

The United Nations has largely been absent from the conflict between
Russia and Georgia. There were Russian and not UN peacekeepers deployed
in South Ossetia, and there was little discussion in the Security
Council about either Georgia’s attack on the enclave or Russia’s
response. Any durable peace in the region, however, will require some
role for the UN. There is some real potential. The United States under
Bush, while paying lip disservice to the organization, has been using
it tacitly and widely. Russia, as one would expect from a weaker power,
often invokes the organization, even if its adherence to UN principles
has been as much, if not even more, expedient than Washington’s.

Unfinished Business As an organization of sovereign states,
albeit committed to over-arching humanitarian principles, the UN is
confronted with "Uncle Joe’s Jigsaw." The ex-Soviet republics were
born with often calculatedly capricious boundaries that Stalin had
established. As Boris Yeltsin took over after the Soviet Union’s
official dissolution, he doubtless expected to reconstitute the
union under some form or other. Polls across the former Soviet
Union showed quite strong support for maintaining the union in some
form. It would have helped defuse the economic and political shock of
the Soviet Union’s collapse if Russia had promoted dual or multiple
nationalities, freedom of movement and employment, a common currency,
a free trade area, and the maintenance of joint enterprises across
state boundaries. None of that happened. Instead, most of the new
states had independence – and authoritarian regimes – thrust upon
them. What had been administrative boundaries became concrete and
barbed wire, regardless of economic and ethnic realities.

Putin’s rhetorical and military over-reaction to events in Georgia has
scuppered any likelihood of reconstruction of the defunct Commonwealth
of Independent States on the lines of the European Union. Russia’s
attack has made NATO expansion all the more likely, and leaders of the
ex-Soviet states immediately showed their colors by making solidarity
visits to Tbilisi.

The Kremlin’s strategy in Georgia is likely to come back to haunt
it. If there is one country that has much to fear from unbridled
secessionism it is the Russian Federation, where Russians are a rapidly
decreasing majority. Legitimizing the secession of Abkhazia and Ossetia
strengthens the case of the Chechens and numerous other claimants to
independence or simply greater autonomy. And challenging the former
Soviet boundaries opens the way to future conflicts, not just between
Russia and its neighbors, but among the neighbors themselves.

Quite apart from any suspicions of Moscow’s ulterior motives, the
undisciplined behavior of Russian troops in Georgia, as documented
by human rights workers and the journalists who witnessed the Russian
assault, did not win hearts and minds in their field of operations. It
certainly belies Moscow’s weasel words about humanitarian interests.

Humanitarian Intervention The Canadian-convened Commission on the
Responsibility to Protect, the doctrine of humanitarian intervention
adopted at the 60th anniversary summit of the United Nations, was
quite clear about how dangerous a concept it could be when used
expediently. When the doctrine was first raised in modern times in
response to Saddam Hussein’s brutal assault on the Kurds, international
lawyers at the UN quietly mentioned that one of the precedents was
Adolf Hitler’s invocation of humanitarian intervention to "save"
the Sudeten Germans and justify the invasion of Czechoslovakia.

Sadly, there were shades of that expediency in Moscow’s declaration
that it was intervening on humanitarian grounds. Handing out Russian
passports to the Ossetian citizens of Georgia could be taken as a
humanitarian gesture – unless one takes into account the difficulties
encountered by ethnic Russians and other Soviet citizens marooned
in other ex-Soviet Republics in getting the same documents. As for
coming to the rescue of their Ossetian brethren, Human Rights Watch
and journalists on the ground have cast considerable doubt on whether
nearly so many people as Russia claimed were killed in Georgia’s
initial, unjustifiable attack.

Russia has followed the Kosovo script, almost recycling
the same rhetoric the United States used to justify the 1999
intervention. However while Putin did not succeed in getting UN
authorization for military intervention,- there are no records of any
CIS meeting to consider the reaction of the Russian peacekeepers it
nominally controls, unlike the long discussions Blair and Clinton had
that won round NATO members. By going beyond Ossetian boundaries and
papering over the brutalities of Ossetian militia, Moscow has seriously
compromised its case, quite apart from the implicit doublethink of
advocating in Ossetia the principles it repudiates in Kosovo.

Russia has claimed that its forces in Abkhazia, Ossetia, and
Transdneister are the equivalent of UN peacekeepers. The first has
a UN blue fig leaf, the other two have none. Of course the Russians
are not alone in their expediency. The UN resolutions that mandated
Russian presence in Georgia were the price Bill Clinton paid to
acquire UN support for U.S. intervention in Haiti.

It would be simplistic to see Ossetia as payback for Kosovo, but it
was certainly one element. Russia was clearly humiliated that it
could not deliver for Serbia, one of the few countries left with
any respect for the Kremlin. Even though Moscow has often been in
the wrong, Washington has not seriously tried to engage the Kremlin,
and its snubs have provoked understandable, if not always justifiable
reactions. And the United States has often been in the wrong as well.

The Russian veto at the UN, less frequent but often as unprincipled as
America’s, has been a demand for respect as well as a serious political
gambit. Neither the French nor the British feel the need to use theirs,
since they are treated as partners by Washington (albeit very junior
ones). Russia has not even been given this junior status.

Although Russians have sent an effective message to their neighbors
that neither NATO nor the USA can guarantee their safety, the
strategy is all stick and no carrot. The response of the leaders of
other ex-Soviet states and the immediate Polish-American agreement
on missile bases demonstrates how counter-productive the Russian
action has been. Add to that events in Ukraine, where the former
Russian anti-missile system is on offer to NATO and the Sevastapol
Russian Navy base has been called in question, and Moscow has actually
consolidated an anti-Russian alliance.

Was this the covert plan of the United States: to provoke Georgia to
attack South Ossetia, knowing that Russia would respond, and thereby
create anti-Russian solidarity among its neighbors? When April Glaspie
passed on Washington’s advice to Saddam Hussein that the United States
did not take sides in the dispute, she did not expect him to invade
Kuwait. It seems equally unlikely that the White House support for
their latest man in Tbilisi was intended to encourage him to respond so
vigorously. Some people in the Bush administration may have encouraged
Saakashvili in his impetuousness. There are neocons around who are
detached enough from reality to think that the United States could
face Russia down and welcome the chance to humiliate the old enemy –
but they are clearly not in the State Department at the moment.

Conversely, the readiness of Russian troops and the reported
provocation by Ossetian militias could have been a trap sprung
on the hapless Saakashvili. On the other hand Moscow’s calling of
an emergency meeting of the UN Security Council and its seemingly
exaggerated casualty figures could have been the result of credulity
on its part in the face of manipulation by the KGB/Mafia figures who
control South Ossetia.

It would be marginally more reassuring if the conflict had been caused
by the irrationalities of local leaders on both sides, rather than
by cold war calculations in either Moscow or Washington. That would
at least imply that there was a basis for getting the parties to the
negotiating table before matters escalate.

The Future With even Germany now supporting extension of NATO to
include countries with unresolved issues such as the enclaves in
Georgia and even the Crimea, an action replay of 1939 threatens. Just
as a bedrock principle of the African Union was acceptance of existing
colonial boundaries, there were good reasons not to open the Pandora’s
box of redrawing Stalin’s cartographic caprice.

Even so, however, there is room for legitimate mutually agreed boundary
revisions, for example between Azerbaijan and Armenia. The Russians
do have a point that self-determination is an important principle,
even if they tend to ignore the detail that Abkhaz self-determination
was a case of a minority expelling the majority.

Any U.S. administration that can restrain its scruples enough to deal
with the House of Saud, or Pervez Musharraf can do business with Putin,
or maybe even with Medvedev when we have sorted out if he is more
than a ventriloquist’s dummy. Europe, despite its frequent diplomatic
paraplegia can play a constructive role, and in fact already has done
so by inhibiting NATO’s pull to the west.

Washington should begin by taking its declared European allies such as
Germany and France seriously to work out a shared approach, and then
jointly talking with Russia to build a framework to handle problems
in the region. But any accommodation to the Russians (or indeed the
Georgians) has to preclude the use of military force. In the Georgian
enclaves, the Russian military are clearly part of the problem, not
the solution. They need to be replaced with real peacekeepers who can
guarantee the return of refugees and replace the KGB/Mafia rule in
the enclaves. Certainly Russian monitors should be part of the force,
but the substantial elements should come from elsewhere and be under
actual UN auspices.

Ban Ki Moon is not the type to use a bully pulpit, which is a shame
since all sides deserve a hard talking to. However, Moon’s customary
low profile does allow some possibilities for his "good offices."Some
form of UN mission could allow both sides to descend with dignity from
the poles they have climbed. A good example would be the brokering
role the UN played in ending the Iran-Iraq war. Such quiet diplomacy,
in concert with UN monitors and peacekeepers, could produce a durable
settlement without asking any of the parties to eat humble pie.

Ian Williams is a senior analyst for Foreign Policy In
Focus (). More of his work is available on

www.fpif.org
www.fpif.org
www.deadlinepundit.blogspot.com.

NATO Set To Blast Georgia Invasion As ‘Disproprotionate’

NATO SET TO BLAST GEORGIA INVASION AS ‘DISPROPROTIONATE’

Spiegel Online
Aug 19 2008
Germany

What to do about Russia? NATO is gathering in Brussels today to
come up with a unified response to Moscow’s heavy-handed treatment
of Georgia last week. Germany would like to see the European Union
deepen its relations in both the Caucasus and Central Asia.

Ossetian protesters gathered outside of NATO headquarters in Brussels
to demonstrate against Condoleezza Rice’s hard-line stance against
Russia.

After days of haggling over terminology, NATO’s partners have agreed
on a common term to describe Russia’s actions in invading Georgia:
"Disproportionate." Following Russia’s march into Georgia less than
two weeks ago, the 26-member North Atlantic Treaty Alliance is meeting
in Brussels on Tuesday to discuss its future relationship with Moscow.

Although it was refused status as an accession candidate at the
NATO summit in Bucharest this spring, Georgia is part of NATO’s
"Partnership for Peace" program, and the alliance is deeply divided
over the extent to which it should support the Caucasus nation.

Russia’s move to invade Georgia earlier this month has left NATO
divided in two camps reminiscent of the debate in Europe in the
run-up to the Iraq war in 2003. Led by the United States and
its ambassador to NATO, Kurt Volker, the one camp is calling for
action and questioning whether there is a future for the NATO-Russia
Council. The US originally called for the current crisis meeting, but
it has also blocked efforts for a parallel meeting of the NATO-Russia
Council. The US is also reportedly considering eliminating the council
altogether in light of recent events. Under the council, the 26 NATO
member states have cooperated with Russia since its creation in 2002
as part of efforts to assuage Russian fears about NATO expansion,
which now includes countries directly on its border.

"We don’t want to destroy the NATO-Russia Council, but Russia’s actions
have called into question the premise of the NATO-Russia relationship,"
Volker said on Monday.

Russia had requested a meeting of the NATO-Russia Council on
Tuesday, but it withdrew the request after waiting for a week without
response. Moscow’s ambassador to NATO, Dimitry Rogozin, said a meeting
had become pointless: "It’s like waiting for the emergency physician."

Widespread Distrust

Backed by the Baltic states as well as Poland and the Czech Republic,
US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, said she wanted to send a
"strong message" to Russia. The Eastern European countries have also
called on NATO to respond to Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili’s
plea for aid by, for example, sending its NATO Response Force (NRF)
troops into Georgia. Because of their historical experiences with
the Soviet Union, distrust of Moscow is widespread (more…) in the
Baltic states as well as in Warsaw and Prague.

But Germany, France and other primarily Western European allies are
putting their emphasis on continued dialogue with Moscow. French
Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner said NATO would send Russia a firm
message on Tuesday without threatening the country. The priority,
he said, should be reducing tensions in the region. "There can be no
peaceful solution without Russia, this huge European Union neighbor,"
Kouchner said in Paris on Monday.

For its part, the German government has called for the EU to intensify
its ties in the Caucasus and neighboring Central Asia. Speaking during
her trip to Tbilisi on Sunday, Merkel said Europe must establish
stronger ties with the Caucacus states like Georgia, Azerbaijan
and Armenia as well as former Soviet states in Central Asia like
Kazakhstan. A handful of those countries are already participants in
the European Neighborhood Policy, which promotes trade and economic
ties with nations in Europe’s backyard (more…). But Merkel’s
government expressly wants to expand the number of countries linked
to that EU program.

"She particularly mentioned countries that haven’t been directly
included in the neighborhood policy so far," German government
spokesman Thomas Steg said on Monday.

"Good Neighborly Cooperation"

Steg said any concrete proposals would be announced by France, which
currently holds the six-month rotating presidency of the EU. But he
said working groups in Germany and France were currently discussing
the possibility of holding a conference under the working title
"Reconstruction and stability in Georgia and the Caucasus region." Steg
said, however, that there were currently no plans to hold an EU
crisis meeting on Georgia. Nor did he comment on the "consequences"
French President Nicolas Sarkozy is calling for if Russia doesn’t
withdraw its troops from Georgia swiftly. He did reiterate, however,
that German supports Georgia’s sovereignty.

Steg said that Germany would likely redefine its future relations
with Russia this autumn. He said there would be "good neighborly
cooperation" built on a basis of common values. "But the application of
military force and invading a sovereign state certainly aren’t a part
of these shared common values," he added. The EU foreign ministers
recently agreed to take a closer look at EU-Russian relations in the
fall, and Germany would do the same, he said.

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Steg also said that German Chancellor Merkel had not shifted positions
on Georgia since the last NATO summit in Bucharest. At the time,
Merkel and Sarkozy prevented NATO from starting the accession process
with Georgia through the Membership Action Plan — instead saying
Tbilisi could become a member at an unspecified point in the future.

At a press conference held with Saakashvili on Sunday, Merkel said
that as a free and independent country, Georgia can decide "with NATO,
when and how it will be integrated into NATO and in December we will
make a first assessment of the situation." She added, however, that
"we are on a clear path to NATO membership."

On Monday, Merkel spokesman Steg said Berlin feels that Georgia needs
more reforms and modernization before it can become a NATO member. At
the same time, he argued, it is clear that Georgia needs international
help and aid. The first step would be international observers and
later, possibly peacekeeping troops.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Armenia’s Polished Diamond Production -21% In 1H

ARMENIA’S POLISHED DIAMOND PRODUCTION -21% IN 1H
By Avi Krawitz

Diamonds.net
Aug 19 2008
NY

RAPAPORT… Armenia’s polished diamond production fell 20.6 percent to
52,316 carats in the first of 2008, according to the Arka news service.

Armenia’s diamond polishing industry has been on a steady decline in
recent years as Russia rough supplies dwindled.

Reportedly, Russian diamond manufacturer Kristall of Smolensk has
agreed to send up to 7,000 carats of rough for polishing in Armenia
by year end.

Armenia’s jewelry production declined 42.6 percent to 509.4 kilograms
worth in the six month period, Arka reported citing RA Statistical
service.