Armenia To Take Part In The Conference On Road Safety In Moscow

ARMENIA TO TAKE PART IN THE CONFERENCE ON ROAD SAFETY IN MOSCOW

PanARMENIAN.Net
11.11.2009 13:54 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenia will take part in the first global
ministerial conference on road safety, the Minister of Transport
and Communications Gurgen Sargsyan said, answering the question of
PanARMENIAN.Net.

First Global Ministerial Conference on road safety will be held
November 18 to 20 in Moscow.

Gurgen Sargsyan also added that in the process of discussion topics
is the report which the Minister will speak at the upcoming events.

The conference is a breakthrough in the global fight for road safety,
since for the first time the issue of traffic safety is considered
at such a high level.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Morgenthau Night At The Javits Center

MORGENTHAU NIGHT AT THE JAVITS CENTER
By Tom Robbins

Village Voice
rchives/2009/11/morgenthau_nigh.php
Nov 11 2009
NY

Being Veterans Day eve, it was fitting that past and present employees
of the Manhattan District Attorney’s office gathered last night to
honor their outgoing boss, Robert Morgenthau, who has headed the
office since 1975.

Morgenthau is a veteran of the Second World War where he served as
a Lieutenant Commander on a series of destroyers. One of them, the
USS Lansdale, was torpedoed and sunk off the North African coast by
German planes. A troop carrier nearby exploded, taking 500 soldiers
and sailors with it. Morgenthau, minus life preserver, spent hours
treading water. The way he tells it, that’s where he pledged to do
good works if he made it out of there alive: "I made a lot of promises
to the Almighty, even though I didn’t have a lot of bargaining power
at the time."

Last night there was no shortage of testimony about the good deeds he
lived to accomplish. Most everyone had a tale of a personal kindness or
courtesy extended to them by the executive director of the 800-person
office. This is expected at events celebrating retiring managers. The
difference here was that this one was held at the main exhibition hall
at the Jacob Javits Convention Center and some 1200 people attending
each had their own stories.

The event included a video tribute from a Morgenthau alumna, Supreme
Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor, and remarks by Cyrus Vance, Jr. who
won election to the DA’s post last week.

There was supposed to be a mini-roast from assistant D.A. Peter
Kougasian, a narcotics prosecutor known for his office wit. But after
a couple of jokes, the prosecutor launched into somber praise for
Morgenthau’s dedicated work in support of the Armenian people. Yes,
the Armenians. Among his good works, the outgoing D.A. has campaigned
to make sure the world doesn’t forget the wholesale Turkish slaughter
during World War I, a carnage that his grandfather, Henry Morgenthau
Sr., vainly tried to stop when he served as American ambassador to
Turkey. The ambassador’s grandson has crusaded with equal fervor on
behalf of victims of the holocaust, about which his father raised a
similar alarm while a member of Franklin Roosevelt’s wartime cabinet.

Morgenthau is 90 years old and his hearing, damaged during those
hours spent in chilly waters, is fragile. But his voice, if hoarse,
is strong as ever and he took the podium last night to talk about
what he said had been the "privilege of leading this office."

"People are always asking me, ‘What’s the most important case you ever
had?’ My answer always is that every case is important to the victims.

"I will confess," he added, "that I got the most satisfaction out of
doing things people told me I shouldn’t or couldn’t do." A few years
ago he had insisted that murder charges be filed against a mother
and son grifter team who had swindled an elderly widow who had then
disappeared. There was no body or witness, and, as Morgenthau noted,
the day before the trial "the paper of record ran a story quoting
all the experts saying we couldn’t win the case.

"I have a very low regard for experts," he said. "That goes back to
my time in the Navy and the last ship I was on was hit by a kamikaze
plane that skidded into us just below the water line." An expert,
brought aboard to inspect the damage, assured them that only the
plane’s engine or undercarriage had been left behind. "Based on
that sage advice," Morgenthau said, "instead of being repaired,
we continued some 1200 miles to Leyte Gulf. We were out among the
destroyers for about a week when we learned that we had a 550 pound
bomb set against the bulkhead with the firing pin still intact. So I
have never trusted experts. In the Navy, the expression for expert is
‘The son of a bitch from out of town’."

He proudly touted something else the experts are still pondering,
the astonishing drop in crime achieved during his years: 648 Manhattan
homicides the year he took office; 62 last year.

"I was always reluctant to claim credit for any reduction in crime,"
he said, "because I knew it could always go up and I’d get the blame.

But now that I’m leaving," he added with a trademark twinkle,
"I don’t hesitate to take the credit."

There had "obviously been no one factor in the criminal justice system
that led to that extraordinary reduction," he continued. "Basically,
it was the hard work of all of you. You are an extraordinary group
of people."

Then he stepped off the stage to shake hands and pose for photographs
with admiring fans and colleagues. There was a long line of them,
even for the Javits Center.

http://blogs.villagevoice.com/runninscared/a

Belarus Ready To Contribute To Positive Settlement Of Nagorno-Karaba

BELARUS READY TO CONTRIBUTE TO POSITIVE SETTLEMENT OF NAGORNO-KARABAKH CONFLICT

National Legal Internet Portal
Nov 11 2009
Belarus

MINSK, 11 November (BelTA) – Belarus is ready to facilitate the
positive settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, President of
Belarus Alexander Lukashenko told Azerbaijan’s Trend News Agency on
9 November, BelTA learnt from the presidential press service.

"If we (the OSCE Office in Minsk, Belarus, Belarusian people) can do
something, if we can bring something positive to the settlement of
this dispute, we will be happy to do it," said Alexander Lukashenko.

But this problem can be solved only by the presidents of Armenia
and Azerbaijan, the Belarusian President stressed. "Only presidents
of these states can settle this problem. In what way? Only to the
benefit of those people who have stayed there. These people cannot
live in such conditions and such situation," Alexander Lukashenko
thinks. "We believe the problem should be solved by the two states,
two presidents and two nations."

The Belarusian President said that Belarus cannot distance itself
from the problems of regional conflicts in the CIS, whether it is
Transdniestria, Crimea or Nagorno-Karabakh, because once we all lived
in a single state.

"We have discussed this theme with the presidents of Armenia and
Azerbaijan, without interfering with the nuances and problems. And we
have never used this problem in politics. We have never been friends
against anybody," said Alexander Lukashenko.

"It is a sore point for both nations. We understand how painful it is
for the Azeris and the Armenians," stressed the Belarusian President.

"This Gordian knot should be cut. It should be cut by the two
presidents. They should not rely on any mediators. The involvement
of others can do some good, but it envisages various obligations and
taking into account the third, fourth and fifth side. And everybody
will try to gain from this problem," said Alexander Lukashenko.

Turkey, Iran Strike Military Deal Against Israel

TURKEY, IRAN STRIKE MILITARY DEAL AGAINST ISRAEL

PanARMENIAN.Net
11.11.2009 14:01 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ In the secret part of their talks in Tehran on
Oct. 28, Turkish prime minister Tayyip Recep Erdogan and Iranian
president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad were reported to strike military
cooperation deals which promised Iran Turkish military intelligence
and air force assistance against a possible Israeli attack on its
nuclear sites, DEBKA reported.

Their understandings have bound Turkish to pass intelligence data
to Tehran on potential Israeli preparations for a strike and on US
military movements in the Middle East for providing backup. Our sources
report that the details finalized in meetings between the Turkish and
Iranian military specialists in Istanbul Monday, Nov. 9, were due to be
sealed by presidents Abdullah Gul and Ahmadinejad Tuesday. The Iranian
president is to be in Turkey as guest of the Islamic Conference.

The Turkish prime minister has not only buried his country’s
longstanding military and intelligence ties with Israel but climbed
aboard the adversarial axis confronting the Jewish state. Turkey has
agreed to round out the forward surveillance outposts encircling
Israel’s borders: Hamas from the southwest in Gaza, Syria in the
east, Lebanon in the north and now Turkey from the northwest. Tehran
is banking on this encirclement for early warning of an approaching
Israeli strike and any supportive American movements.

According to Western intelligence sources in Ankara, heads of the
Turkish army objected to their government’s strategic turn to Iran and
the cutoff of its ties with Israel. However its pro-Islamic leaders,
which have gradually eased the army out of policymaking, have forced
them to accept operational ties with the military of an anti-Western
Middle Eastern nation as being in the nation’s best interests.

Erdogan’s most compelling argument is that President Barack Obama’s
secret proposal for Iran to deposit 400 kilos of its enriched Iran
in Turkey for safekeeping in charge of International Atomic Energy
Agency inspectors, had elevated Turkey to an enhanced role as a
broker between the US and Iran, sanctioned by Agency director Mohamed
ElBaradei. If Turkey, a member of NATO, was able to gain the Iranian
regime’s trust, the Turkish prime minister maintained, it was only
thanks to the military understandings he reached in Tehran.

Military sources report that word of the Turkish-Iranian military
collaboration deal landed with shocking effect in Washington and
Jerusalem. They had not forewarned by their intelligence services
that Erdogan was willing to go as far as this to ally Turkey with
the Islamic regime,

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Armenians Do Not Consider Themselves Europeans

ARMENIANS DO NOT CONSIDER THEMSELVES EUROPEANS

News.am
Nov 11 2009
Armenia

86% of Armenian citizens do not consider themselves Europeans but
Armenians, said Tevan Poghosyan, Executive Director of International
Center for Human Development at the discussions organized by Civilitas
foundation. According to him, soon the results of research conducted
by his organization will be available for public.

Poghosyan stated that often the commitment to make reforms in the
certain field or adopt a law remains ink on paper, as society is not
ready to European integration. He underlined that Armenia made choice
for EU in 1991 and should not glance back at Russia that opposes
the idea. The expert is confident that it is necessary to be guided
by national interests, but not shuffle everything off to friendship
with Russia. The latter might forget about century- long friendship
with Armenia or Belarus in the right time.

Meanwhile, Internews Armenia NGO director Nune Sargsyan expressed
confidence that Russia is a constraining factor on Armenia’s way to
European integration. She is sure that while choosing between Russia
and Europe, Armenia should side with the latter.

Whom Conflicting Statements Are Made For And Why?

WHOM CONFLICTING STATEMENTS ARE MADE FOR AND WHY?

Aysor
Nov 11 2009
Armenia

"EU, OSCE Minsk Group, and Turkey’s officials make conflicting
statements," said at today’s press conference Director of Caucasus
Media Institute, Alexander Iskandaryan, when asked by correspondent
of Aysor on-line paper to comment last developing and statements made
on issue of settlement of Karabakh problem

In particularly, the correspondent asked about two statements: of one
made by Turkish representative in OSCE that Turkey must become co-chair
of OSCE Minsk Group, and another made by EU Special Representative
for South Caucasus, Peter Semneby, on ‘current status quo in the
Karabakh conflict is not beneficial for Armenia’.

Alexander Iskandaryan said these statements cannot be viewed in the
context of normalization of Armenian-Turkish relations despite the
undirected link between closed by Turkey border and Karabakh conflict.

It is necessary to understand who these statements are made for
and why, the analyst says pointing that Turkey’s government is in a
very difficult situation because of protests against normalization
relations with Armenia and, in this connection, tensions between
Turkey and Azerbaijan.

Referring to the statements on links between Armenian-Turkish relations
and issue of Karabakh, Alexander Iskandaryan mentioned two signed
protocols with clear states: these two issues have no links.

"The protocols have not a single word about Nagorno-Karabakh Republic
and Azerbaijan," stressed the analyst adding that one shouldn’t
predict what might happen in the settlement of the Karabakh problem
before ratification in Turkey’s Parliament.

BAKU: Azerbaijani And Armenian Presidents To Meet In Europe: Azerbai

AZERBAIJANI AND ARMENIAN PRESIDENTS TO MEET IN EUROPE: AZERBAIJANI FM

Trend
Nov 11 2009
Azerbaijan

The Azerbaijani and Armenian presidents will meet in Europe by late
November, Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov told media
today.

"According to my information, the presidents will meet in a
European city. Ilham Aliyev and Serzh Sargsyan have agreed to meet,"
Mammadyarov said.

Afterward, OSCE foreign ministers will meet in Athens Dec. 1-2 to
discuss the resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

He added that the sides have failed to achieve new proposals to solve
the conflict.

The conflict between the two South Caucasus countries began in 1988
when Armenia made territorial claims against Azerbaijan. Azerbaijan
lost all of Nagorno-Karabakh except for Shusha and Khojali in
December 1991. In 1992-93, Armenian armed forces occupied Shusha,
Khojali and seven districts surrounding Nagorno-Karabakh. Azerbaijan
and Armenia signed a ceasefire in 1994. The co-chairs of the OSCE
Minsk Group – Russia, France, and the U.S. — are currently holding
peace negotiations.

"We continue discussing principles that have been considered at the
talks for the last five years," Mammadyarov said.

He noted that the talks on Nagorno-Karabakh are a step-by-step process
envisaging first the withdrawal of Armenian troops from Azerbaijani
occupied territories and the further restoration of communications
in the region.

"Then, the IDPs must return to these territories," Mammadyarov said.

"Peace and stability must be created. The economic situation must
improve. Afterward, it will be possible to determine Nagorno-Karabakh’s
status."

The Azerbaijani side repeatedly stated that Armenians and Azerbaijanis
living together will be able to determine Nagorno-Karabakh’s status
in the future. But this status can be determined only by honoring
the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan, the minister said.

Mammadyarov said there are many such examples. The Tatars and Bashkirs
determined their status within the territorial integrity of Russia
and the Hungarians in Slovakia, the minister said.

"I do not believe that we can reach any final decision now. We cannot
speak about any other issues before implementing the first stage, which
includes withdrawing Armenian troops from the occupied territories,"
Mammadyarov said.

He said the Armenians want to discuss myriad issues before the
withdrawal of their troops.

If Ratification Disrupted

IF RATIFICATION DISRUPTED

Aysor
Nov 11 2009
Armenia

"Armenian-Turkish protocols will be adopted in the second decade
of December or, at least, in late January," said Director of the
Analytical Center on Globalization and Regional Cooperation, Stepan
Grigoryan.

Despite the strong existing opposition in Turkey, it cannot prevent
the ratification, says the analyst. But at the same time it can vote
against at Parliamentary hearing and derail the process. Another
factor that may influence the process is likely a case of any
shattering casus, for example, like if Azerbaijan went in war with
Armenia. Meanwhile the analyst thinks this is impossible.

Referring to the ratification, Stepan Grigoryan said that if the
ratification fails the world powers will blame both sides for
disrupting.

Diplomacy Rules – Turkey And Armenia Sign Historic Protocols

DIPLOMACY RULES – TURKEY AND ARMENIA SIGN HISTORIC PROTOCOLS

Jane’s Intelligence
r/jir091111_1_n.shtml
Nov 11 2009

The foreign ministers of Armenia and Turkey signed a series of
protocols on 10 October, marking a historic breakthrough in relations
between the two states.

The mundane titles of the agreements – the Protocol on the
establishment of diplomatic relations between the Republic of Armenia
and Republic of Turkey and the Protocol on the development of relations
– belie the historic nature of the accord between the two states,
which have never established formal diplomatic relations.

The agreements are a culmination of a series of contacts that began
with Armenian President Sergh Sarkisian invitating Turkish President
Abdullah Gul to visit Yerevan for a football World Cup qualifying
match between the two national teams in September 2008. Six months
later, the presidents instructed their foreign ministers to develop
a bilateral agreement.

http://www.janes.com/news/security/ji