Armenian Winemaking dating back to 6,100 years. "ArmAs Estate"

Armenian Winemaking dating back to 6,100 years. “ArmAs Estate”

February 13, 2015

ArmAs is revitalizing Armenia’s winemaking legacy by creating elegant
wines that stem from one of our country’s best natural resources, the
idyllic terroir of the vine.
It is no coincidence that Armenia, known as the birthplace of the
vine, is also the site
of the oldest known winemaking ruins, dating back to 6,100 years.
Visit

Winemaker Emilio Del Medico has paid homage to this heritage by creating award
winning, elegant and distinct wines from estate grown native varieties.

ArmAs Estate is a picturesque display of agricultural achievement, set
against the backdrop of the inspiring Mount Ararat. The 180 hectares
of previously desolate and disconnected rock-strewn countryside was
diligently transformed into a stunning panorama including vineyards,
orchards, and a world-class winery. The endeavor proudly involved and
united hundreds of people from various villages, countries, and
backgrounds who continue to teach and learn from one another. The
continued realization of the ArmAs Estate is illustrative of progress
through guidance and cooperation, and represents the assimilation of
tradition with development. Indeed, the ensuing ArmAs wines convey
these improvements, and speak especially of the abundant sunshine,
volcanic soil, undulating terrain and magnanimous earth of a resilient
culture.

Known as the birthplace of the vine, Armenia is the acknowledged site
of the origins, as well as domestication of the wild grape to its
cultivated contemporary form. This designation has both a biblical
testimony and an archaeological confirmation. According to the Old
Testament, Noah’s Ark came to rest at the peak of Mount Ararat. As the
water subsided, Noah and his sons journeyed down to valleys of modern
day Armenia, and upon recognition of the fertile soil in this unique
terrain, they planted the first vines.

In 2010, carbon dating of remains discovered by archaeologists in the
Areni-1 Cave complex, in the Vayots Dzor region definitively proved
Armenia to be the site of the world’s oldest-known wine production
facility, dating back to 6,100 years. The remains of grapes, seeds,
and dozens of dried vines were also found in this location, all of the
genus species Vitis Vinifera. Known as the “common grape vine,” most
wines produced in the world today are of this variety and have their
originating roots in the surrounding regions.

http://www.horizonweekly.ca/news/details/61554
www.armas.am

U.S. Ambassador to Armenia wants to see large-scale U.S. investments

U.S. Ambassador to Armenia wants to see large-scale U.S. investments in Armenia

17:57, 13 February, 2015

YEREVAN, 13 FEBRUARY, ARMENPRESS. One of the most important issues on
U.S. Ambassador to Armenia Richard Mills’s agenda will be the
development of U.S.-Armenia economic partnership. The Ambassador
assures that his focus will be on fostering Armenia’s economic growth
and says his greatest desire is to see large-scale U.S. investments in
Armenia in the future.

As “Armenpress” reports, during a February 13 press conference, the
Ambassador mentioned that he had had meetings with businessmen prior
to his visit to Armenia to understand their perspectives and stressed
the fact that he would be presenting the desires and perspectives
during meetings devoted to Armenia’s economic issues.

From: A. Papazian

http://armenpress.am/eng/news/794031/us-ambassador-to-armenia-wants-to-see-large-scale-us-investments-in-armenia.html

US embassy to remember victims of Armenian genocide

US embassy to remember victims of Armenian genocide

YEREVAN, February 13. / ARKA /. The US Embassy in Armenia will mark
the centenary of the Armenian genocide together with the Armenian
people, the newly appointed US ambassador Richard Mills told a news
conference today.

As for the US government’s participation, the ambassador said
president Obama had the honor to be invited to participate in the
events to mark the centennial anniversary of the Genocide, “but during
my meetings in Washington it was not yet clear who will represent the
US government”, said Mills.

“During my meetings with President Serzh Sargsyan and Foreign Minister
Edward Nalbandian both told me how important the high-level presence
of the United States in the ceremonies is” said Mills.

The Armenian Genocide was the first genocide of the twentieth century.
According to Armenian and many other historians, up to 1.5 million
Armenians were killed starting in 1915 in a systematic campaign by the
government of Turkey. Turkey has been denying it for decades.

The Armenian genocide was recognized by tens of countries. The first
was Uruguay that did so in 1965. Other nations are Russia, France,
Italy, Germany, Holland, Belgium, Poland, Lithuania, Slovakia, Sweden,
Switzerland, Greece, Cyprus, Lebanon, Canada, Venezuela, Argentina, 42
U.S. states.

It was recognized also by the Vatican, the European Parliament, the
World Council of Churches and other international organizations. -0-

http://arka.am/en/news/politics/us_embassy_to_remember_victims_of_armenian_genocide_/#sthash.bLIA5XwX.dpuf

End of the Ottoman empire

End of the Ottoman empire

February 13, 2015 3:49 pm
Mark Mazower

How the decision to enter the first world war led to political
collapse, bloodshed and the birth of the modern Middle East

Defeated Turkish soldiers on the march in Palestine c1917

efore the first world war, the term “Middle East” was virtually
unknown. The Ottoman empire had ruled for centuries over the lands
from the Sahara to Persia but did not refer to them as part of a
single region. Coined in the mid-19th century, the phrase became
popular only in the mid-20th. It reflected the growing popularity of
geopolitical thinking as well as the strategic anxieties of the
rivalrous great powers, and its spread was a sign of growing European
meddling in the destiny of the Arab-speaking peoples.

But Europe’s war changed more than just names. In the first place,
there was petroleum. The British had tightened their grip on the
Persian Gulf in the early years of the new century, as the Royal Navy
contemplated shifting away from coal. The Anglo-Persian Oil Company
opened the enormous Abadan refinery in 1912. The British invasion of
Basra — a story of imperial hubris and cataclysmic failure that Eugene
Rogan weaves superbly through The Fall of the Ottomans — thus marked
the beginning of the world’s first oil conflict.

Second, there was the British turn to monarchy as a means of securing
political influence. The policy began in Egypt, which British troops
had been occupying since 1882. Until the Ottomans entered the war,
Whitehall had solemnly kept to the juridical fiction that Egypt
remained a province of their empire. After November, that was no
longer possible and the British swiftly changed the constitutional
order: the khedive Abbas II, who happened to be in Istanbul at the
time, was deposed and his uncle, Husayn Kamil, was proclaimed the
country’s sultan. In this way the British unilaterally declared an end
to almost four centuries of Ottoman rule in favour of a puppet who
would allow their continued control of the Suez Canal.

This was not the only way the British could have taken over: Cyprus,
for instance, they simply annexed. But the Egyptian strategy was less
of a slap in the face to the local population and this kind of
imperial improvisation became the template for the region after 1918,
when Hashemite princes were placed in charge of one new kingdom after
another for no very good reason other than their likely subservience
to British wishes. A fine system it was most of the time too, at least
for the British, and it is not surprising that when the Americans took
over in the region during the cold war, they did their best to keep it
going.

Rogan, director of the Middle East Centre at St Antony’s College,
Oxford, and author of The Arabs: A History (2009), has written a
remarkably readable, judicious and well-researched account of the
Ottoman war in Anatolia and the Arab provinces. The Fall of the
Ottomans is especially good on showing the fighting across multiple
fronts and from both sides of the lines, and it draws effectively upon
the papers, memoirs and diaries of soldiers and civilians. The Basra
notable Sayyid Talib, the Armenian priest Grigoris Balakian and the
Turkish corporal Ali Riza Eti provide perspectives that rarely make it
into mainstream narratives of the first world war.

They depict fighting of extraordinary intensity — from the trenches of
the Gallipoli peninsula, where Mustafa Kemal (later Atatürk) made his
name, to the mountains of the Caucasus, where thousands of Ottoman
soldiers froze to death. We see the plight of the Armenians in all its
grimness but also the starvation that swept across much of Syria as
the war ended. Between the fighting on multiple fronts, the deaths
from massacre and starvation, and the almost complete dislocation of
economic life across swaths of Anatolia and the Arab provinces, the
war that ended Ottoman rule also destroyed many of the institutions
that had sustained it.

In the second world war, Turkey made sure it remained neutral. Could
not the empire have done so in 1914? When hostilities broke out that
summer across Europe, the Young Turk triumvirate in Istanbul did stay
out of the conflict for a few months, holding back until deciding to
throw their lot in with the Central Powers.

This decision precipitated the disastrous campaigns — along the Suez
Canal, in eastern Anatolia against the Russians, and in the
Dardanelles in defence of the capital Istanbul — that nearly destroyed
the empire completely. By April 1915, the Russians had crushed Enver’s
Third Army in the east and the British were landing thousands of
troops on the Gallipoli peninsula. It was at this moment of maximal
threat that the Young Turk leadership took the decision to massacre
Anatolia’s Armenians, a story Rogan tells with sensitivity, insight
and judiciousness.

The ongoing political controversy over the genocide — Rogan rightly
deploys the word but does not make too much of the dispute, consigning
it to an excellent endnote — has overshadowed some critical historical
questions. The basic point is that the war created a crisis of
legitimacy that was especially severe in the Ottoman lands. Imperial
tax-raising power was limited and the Ottoman bureaucracy did not have
the capacity to organise a proper rationing system. This weakness
forced it to rely much more than other states on political
intermediaries and thuggish, well-armed irregulars. At the same time,
the prospect of defeat made the Young Turk leadership ever more
suspicious of vast swaths of the population irrespective of religion —
Ottoman loyalists, refugees settled from Albania, Bosnia and all the
other lost lands of the Balkans, and, perhaps above all, the Arabs.

Rogan documents the wartime repression in greater Syria in particular,
which alienated so many notables. Meanwhile, starvation claimed a
staggering 300,000-500,000 lives in Syria and Lebanon alone. The sense
of social collapse is palpable and must have been intensified by
something that Rogan does not discuss — the influenza of 1918-1919,
which may have cost Iran alone up to one-fifth of its population. The
losses in greater Syria and Iraq were probably just as devastating.
This story of the war’s impact on social life across the region still
awaits its historian.

Territorially, the ending of the Ottoman empire created the present
Middle East. The new republic of Turkey eventually won independence
for itself, primarily in its Anatolian heartland. Elsewhere, the
former imperial provinces were handed over to the war’s victors by the
new League of Nations and ruled under fictions of conditional
sovereignty that they called mandates. With the exception of the as
yet non-existent Israel, the map of the region that emerged in the
1920s looks much as it does today. Yet drawing boundaries round the
conference table was one thing; coping with the catastrophic
repercussions of four years of war was quite another. Helping us to
understand the difficulties the states of the Middle East have endured
since then, and the challenges they continue to face, Rogan’s book
takes us back to the moment of their birth, a moment in which one
imperial order collapsed and gave way to another.

The Fall of the Ottomans: The Great War in the Middle East, 1914-1920,
by Eugene Rogan, Allen Lane, RRP£25, 512 pages, published in the US in
March by Basic Books

Mark Mazower is a professor of history at Columbia University and
author of ‘Salonica, City of Ghosts: Christians, Muslims and Jews’
(Harper)

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/af218024-b2bf-11e4-a058-00144feab7de.html

Musurlian Wins GUSD Spelling Bee

Musurlian Wins GUSD Spelling Bee

BY STAFF
– POSTED ON FEBRUARY 9, 2015POSTED IN: COMMUNITY, NEWS

armenianlife.com

GUSD Spelling Bee video highlights:

June Musurlian is a 10-year-old 4th grader at R.D. White Elementary
School, one of 20 elementary schools in Glendale.After winning her
school’s competition in January, she found herself at the Glendale
Unified School District Spelling Bee on Monday night, February 2nd,
competing against 5th and 6th graders. She was the lone 4th grader
among the 20 competitors.

Since its debut in 1977, only two 4th graders had ever won the
Districtwide Elementary Spelling Bee in Glendale. Musurlian’s
successful attempt made her the third.

School officials run the event, which has been sponsored for those 39
years by Soroptomist International of Glendale, a local chapter of the
women’s global service organization.

During nearly 20 rounds of spelling, Musurlian was thankful for a
triumvirate of “a” words: apothecary, acumen, and atmosphere. She won
by correctly spelling “acumen,” which her last-standing opponent
misspelled. Then, she immediately spelled “atmosphere,” for the win.
(click-on YouTube link at top of page)

In a competition that, in recent years (both locally & nationally),
has been dominated by Indian-Americans and other students of Asian
ancestry, June Musurlian is only the second Armenian-American to win
the GUSD Elementary Spelling Bee, since 6th grader Jack Demerjian did
it in 1992.

“I consider myself half Armenian, half Hungarian, and 100 percent
American,” Musurlian said, who has lived nowhere but Glendale, since
she was born at Glendale Memorial Hospital in 2004.

“As far as I’m concerned, hard work is all that counts in preparing
for a spelling bee. Then it’s 80 percent skill and 20 percent luck.
Some of the words other kids missed, I would have missed as well.”

Musurlian will be among 25 district winners, who will gather in
Alhambra on March 25th to compete in the Los Angeles County Spelling
Bee. The winner of the county competition heads to Stockton for the
state finals.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PdLLg-3y9KA
http://www.armenianlife.com/2015/02/09/musurlian-wins-gusd-spelling-bee/

Tehran photo exhibit explores beauty of Republic Square in Yerevan

Tehran photo exhibit explores beauty of Republic Square in Yerevan
Art Desk

On Line: 13 February 2015 19:37
In Print: Saturday 14 February 2015

TEHRAN – A collection containing 20 abstract photos of Republic Square
in Yerevan, the capital of Armenia, is on display in an exhibition at
Tehran’s Gallery No. 6.

The collection entitled “Water and Mirror” has been created by Iranian
photographer Mohammad-Amin Daneshvar.

The photos were taken over four trips Daneshvar made to Yerevan
according to a brochure for the exhibition.

He said that the photos of the collection have been meticulously
selected out of 4000 shots with the help of some writers, musicians
and poets.

The exhibition runs until February 20 at the gallery located at No. 2,
20th Alley, off Mirzaye Shirazi Ave.

MA/YAW

http://www.tehrantimes.com/arts-and-culture/121793-tehran-photo-exhibit-explores-beauty-of-republic-square-in-yerevan

Fajr Intl. Music Festival kicks off in Tehran

Fajr Intl. Music Festival kicks off in Tehran
Art Desk

On Line: 13 February 2015 19:38
In Print: Saturday 14 February 2015

TEHRAN — The 30th Fajr International Music Festival was inaugurated
on Friday with a variety of performances in several venues across
Tehran.

Tehran’s Vahdat Hall hosted a performance by Tehran Philharmonic
Orchestra directed by conductor Nader Mashayekhi on its opening day
followed by a piano recital from Germany.

The Tehran Philharmonic Orchestra is an orchestra recently established
by the Tehran Municipality in collaboration with the Iranian Artists
forum.

Rudaki Hall hosted several solo performances of piano and violin on
the first day.

The Iranian ensembles Khonya led by Pari Maleki and Sahand directed by
conductor Rashid Vatandust gave their performances at the Eivan-e
Shams Hall in Tehran.

In addition, Arasbaran Cultural Center and Azadi Tower were the hosts
of several performances.

This year, in addition to many local Iranian musicians, ten groups
from across the world are participating in the festival, which will
run until February 20.

The foreign groups will perform 15 concerts during the festival.

The groups are from Germany, Austria, the Netherlands, Italy,
Switzerland, Estonia, Armenia, Tunisia and Iraq.

Two performances by Italian quartet Maurice led by violinist Georgia
Privitera are scheduled to be held at Shams Hall today and on February
17. Laura Bertolino, Francesco Vernero and Aline Privitera are the
other members of the quartet.

Moreover, Dutch quartet composed of tenor and soprano saxophonist Yuri
Honing, pianist Wolfert Brederode, double bassist Ruben Samama and
drummer Joost Lijbaart will give concerts at Vahdat Hall on February
15 and 16.

RM/YAW

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.tehrantimes.com/arts-and-culture/121795-fajr-intl-music-festival-kicks-off-in-tehran-

Tsarukian Urges Regime Change as Tensions Escalate

Tsarukian Urges Regime Change as Tensions Escalate

Friday, February 13th, 2015

Prosperous Armenia Party leader Gagik Tsarukian
ARF Calls for Calm and National Unity

BY ARA KHACHATOURIAN

YEREVAN–The war of words escalated in Armenia Friday as two one-time
allies, President Serzh Sarkisian and the Prosperous Armenia Party
leader Gagik Tsarukian, publicly attacked each other with the latter
calling for immediate regime change after the president lashed out on
Thursday and relieved Tsarukian from his post in the National Security
Council.

Responding to the president’s unusual remarks during the Republican
Party of Armenia’s executive council session on Thursday, during which
Sarkisian called Tsarukian’s political activities a “circus,” calling
him ignorant and incapable of leading, the Prosperous Armenia Party’s
leader called on the citizens of Armenia to mobilize and take to the
streets and change the current regime through early presidential
elections.

“I am taking up the gauntlet and am going to fight till the victory,”
said Tsarukian at an emergency meeting with senior PAP officials. “A
new situation has surfaced since yesterday and it requires a solution.
I believe that the only solution is a complete regime change through
early presidential elections,”

Tsarukian said that his remarks were directed at the people of Armenia
and not at one individual. This was in contrast to Sarkisian’s
statements Thursday, where he claimed that his remarks were directed
at one person: “a pseudo-political phenomenon called Gagik Tsarukian.”

The apparent war declared by the two powerful political figures in
Armenia has escalated the political turmoil and threatens the fragile
domestic situation in the country, which continues to be threatened by
attack from Azerbaijan and aggravated tensions along the border.

In his remarks, Sarkisian leveraged his executive powers to direct
various state institutions to investigate alleged tax evasion and
criminal conduct by Tsarukian. In his turn, Tsarukian welcomed the
investigation and said he would expose the Sarkisian regime’s actions,
which have resulted in the growth of Armenia’s foreign debt and has
forced Armenian citizens to abandon their homeland. He also accused
Sarkisian and his supporters of stealing “billions of dollars” from
the people

What sparked this tension was Tsarukian’s remarks last week at a
conference of non-ruling party members where he called for regime
change and accused Sarkisian of using the upcoming Constitutional
reforms as mechanism to continue his rule and ensure that his party
remains in power. Earlier this week, Artak Khachatrian, a member of
parliament from Tsarukian’s Prosperous Armenia Party was beaten,
kidnapped and then dumped on the street. PAP officials accused the
government of staging the attack.

In his remarks Friday, Tsarukian alleged that Sarkisian had offered
him the ceremonial presidency envisioned under the new constitution in
return for his and his party’s support of the reforms being advanced
by the regime. Tsarukian said that he “categorically” rejected the
president’s “anti-state” proposal reiterating his claim that the
reform process was a means for the authorities to remain in power.

Following his statement, Tsarukian, who did not specify a date for a
public rally, met with former president Levon Ter-Petrosian and the
leader of the Heritage party Raffi Hovannisian to discuss next steps
in their campaign to overthrow the regime.

Meanwhile, speaking with Yerkir.am Friday, the political
representative of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation Bureau Armen
Rustamian warned that the recent political tensions have entered a new
and dangerous stage and called for national unity in the face of
growing tension on Armenia’s borders and the upcoming centennial of
the Armenian Genocide.

“The growing political debate is entering a new stage of heightened
intolerance, personal attacks, and dangerous confrontations. This
greatly undermines the security of both the country and its people,”
said Rustamian.

He went on to say that the recent statements of both the Prosperous
Armenia Party and the Republican Party confirm the ARF’s grave
concerns about the political landscape of the country. He stressed
that the separation of business and politics and the proper
implementation of the rule of law are necessary in the social and
political life of Armenia.

“In these difficult and dangerous times full of both internal and
external challenges, socio-economic problems and a tense border
situation, each of us has the responsibility to approach these issues
in a sober, mutually tolerant, and highly political manner. Today,
when our borders are under constant enemy attack and we as a nation
prepare to commemorate the Centennial of the Armenian Genocide, we are
all required to show the world that we are united as a people. We [the
ARF-D] are convinced that the present tensions and conflict are not in
the best interest of our state and nation. We instead call for wisdom,
calm and unity,” concluded Rustamian.

This quickly unfolding scenario in Armenia threatens the tenuous calm
in the country. Neither Sarkisian nor Tsarukian have the right to
speak about the other’s amassed wealth, because both men, who not long
ago drank from the same cup, have leveraged their vast resources to
“win” elections and both are responsible for the dire socio-economic
situation that is dragging the people of Armenia to ruin.

Rustamian’s call for calm and national unity is prudent and welcome.
The ruling regime and the president must understand that they cannot
intimidate factions or individuals who are in opposition. At the same
time, opposition forces that are seeking change and often speak in the
name of Armenia’s population, must abandon the tired rhetoric of
demanding regime change and actually put forth viable alternatives
that clearly outline their vision for change and set them apart from
that of the regime they want to topple.

In the end, the people of Armenia remain the victims of this ongoing
power plays. Sarkisian and Tsarukian publically calling each other
thieves is not going to provide relief to the lay Armenian citizen who
long ago has lost hope for life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness
that the current Constitution of Armenia claims to guarantee.

http://asbarez.com/131806/tsarukian-urges-regime-change-as-tensions-escalate/

Toumani Take II

Toumani Take II

Friday, February 13th, 2015

BY GAREN YEGPARIAN

Circumstances in the form of community reactions, discussions, and
commentary obligate me to revisit a topic I did not much want to
address in the first place since it gives the culprit what she craves
and needs to achieve her untoward desires/goals, ATTENTION.

I will start by apologizing to all those who read my December 2014
piece, “Soul-Searching, or Self Serving” for not being clear enough
about THE key aspect of my discussion of Meline Toumani’s book “There
Was and There Was Not: A Journey Through Hate and Possibility in
Turkey, Armenia, and Beyond.” My concern is how she and her publisher
are marketing, positioning, publicizing, and pushing (much like drug
dealers do) this book. I almost don’t care about its contents and
contentions. Whether what she argues and posits is brilliant or
bullshit is irrelevant to me since as it is the marketing angle that
troubles me deeply. This should have been evident from the fact that I
was concerned about this book long before it saw the light of day,
based on promotional material about it.

I had to clarify this since countless people, even those who agree
with me, have criticized me for commenting about the book and
advocating that others NOT buy it, without first having read it,
myself. Anyone reviewing my earlier piece will see that the only
content of the book I address is what she herself read aloud at the
Abril Bookstore event held for the book. The rest is about how it’s
being “sold” to the public.

A related, and odd, aspect of the criticism I have received is the
“surprise” of people at my recommending NOT getting this without
reading. Funny, isn’t it? I thought that was why we had book reviews
and signing events for authors and their publications, so we, as the
reading public, get a chance to sample the writer’s wares and decide
based on that whether to purchase or not. After reading the reviews
Toumani herself provides links to, and listening to her in person and
on radio interviews, I concluded buying this book is a bad decision
and said so. Why should that surprise anyone?

Let’s move away from the defensive nature of the paragraphs above.

Since December, much discussion has attended this book, its author,
her motivations, etc. These have occurred on hikes, online, and
everywhere in between. Two pieces well worth reading are Chris
Atamian’s and James Russell’s, Mahdotz Professor of Armenian Studies
at Harvard University. Peter Musurlian’s original piece is also worthy
of your attention.

But all this is playing into what I have become convinced is Toumani’s
game of making a name for herself. There’s nothing wrong with that…
unless it is done at someone else’s expense. In this case that
“someone else” is us, the Armenians, worldwide. How she’s doing this
is typically self-serving, depraved, and almost nefarious.

On the most obvious level, she’s playing to those who can’t see beyond
their immediate, comfortable, urban-cloistered existence. These are
people who go into fits of near-hysteria if they encounter something
labeled (rightly or wrongly) as hate. There are also the types who
think, and often advise Armenians and others to, “just get over it”
since it “all happened so long ago” and somewhere else. Read the book
reviews and listen to her interviews. You’ll see. I provided quotes in
my first piece.

But it gets worse. Toumani is cynically playing the part of the
“misunderstood” and “unappreciated” “martyr” of the Armenian
community. Her faux avant-garde arguments appeal to otherwise
forward-thinking and constructively-inclined people, taking advantage
of their being insufficiently informed about Armenian issues.

Remember, even if all her complaints were valid, she’s making them
just to sell books and earn acclaim. She is using legitimate
expressions of concern about her doings to make herself out a martyr
so she sells books. Without referring to me by name, she mockingly
referred to my advising people not to get the book, without having
read it. She is playing the “they’re picking on me” game.

A worse example of Toumani’s depraved approach is a question and her
answer about what happened in Abril Bookstore at her book’s event. She
flat-out lies when Leonard Lopate, her host on an interview, near the
end of their discussion asks her “Weren’t you heckled at an Armenian
bookstore in Los Angeles?” and she confirms that she was. Please see
Merriam-Webster’s definition of “heckle” below. What really happened
was she interrupted the questions being posed by Levon Marashlian,
Peter Musurlian, and I– whom she describes in the interview as “three
fellows who represent the far extreme nationalistic segment of the
Armenian Diaspora”! There is video-taped proof of this. Unfortunately,
that documentation is unavailable to us. I asked the owner of Abril
Bookstore for the footage. He refused, citing his advance-promise to
Toumani that it would not be publicized. She has made an unwitting
accomplice of a fellow Armenian (honorably keeping his word), who
otherwise provides an excellent service to our community. I can only
presume that she anticipated her own boorish behavior and didn’t want
the truth to come out.

Also, doesn’t it make you wonder how Lopate knew about her alleged
heckling? To me, it is evident that she planted that “information”
with him so that here again, she could play the victim. You can see
how she is using that “victimization” to curry favor and pity with her
audiences to get them to buy her book. And, it is all about selling
her book. Her publisher must be doing a great job, since she has in
the last two months even been reviewed in The Economist and The New
York Times and has become a finalist for the 2014 National Book
Critics Circle Award– how many Armenian-themed books have managed to
secure such visibility?

This kind of exposure and praise, her ability to fund a lengthy
sojourn in Turkey, and the very premise of her “personal; journey”
have many people wondering who’s backing her and why. To me this
smacks of conspiracy mongering, but I feel compelled to report what I
have been confronted with.

As I often do, I will point out some good news on this front as well.
A friend apologized to me recently, saying that he’d purchased the
book already, not knowing about its flaws. This, coupled with most of
the comments people have posted to online versions of articles
discussing Toumani and/or her book, shows that, at least in our
community, the majority “gets it” about what a damaging piece of work
a decade of Toumani’s life has produced. It’s even possible that
Toumani may yet recognize her misguidedness, assuming she can overcome
her arrogance. I assert this based on her response to a question in an
interview with Nayat Karaköse of “Agos” (Hrant Dink’s publication).

When asked, “You write about how Diaspora Armenians are full of
hatred. Most of the reactions are related to this. Did you hesitate
before openly writing about the hatred?” she replied, in part, “It has
surprised me how much people focus on that word, and it bothers me.
The US media were really fixated on this word, too…” and that she has
recalibrated her response to such queries. This is what some of us
have been trying to convey to Toumani and her few hangers-on. She is
playing in the American political arena, where some forces are arrayed
against the interests of Armenians. The “hatred” fetish I mentioned in
my first article fits into the narrative that those forces use against
us, typically to subtly undercut arguments advocating Genocide
recognition. She has been living in denial of the morass into which
she has naively waded with her book.

I will not address Toumani and this book of hers any more because she
is unworthy. I don’t want to publicize her. To further discuss it is
falling into the trap usually used by Turkey’s denialists– the
creation and maintenance of endless debate, effectively mental
masturbation, to postpone addressing the substance of the issue in the
hopes that over time, more Armenians, like Meline Toumani, will
succumb to self-hate, self-doubt, and simple fatigue leading to their
exit from the struggle to restore full justice for the Armenian nation
and distancing themselves from their Armenian roots.

I repeat my call to NOT buy this book. And, should your non-Armenian
friends mention it to you, enlighten them about it. Explaining that it
is an example of a pathetic human being trying to “make it” at the
expense of others. It is an example of someone (ab)using her
community, expecting the community’s support (purchasing books and
speaking kindly of her “work”), and giving nothing back except
degrading descriptions of that community.

Definition of heckle:
– to interrupt (someone, such as a speaker or performer) by shouting
annoying or rude comments or questions
– to harass and try to disconcert with questions, challenges, or gibes: badger

CORRECTION: In my piece last week, I erroneously wrote [email protected] as
the URL for the cross-country bike ride being organized on the
Genocide’s centennial. The correct address is LA2DC.org. Apologies for
any confusion and inconvenience this may have caused.

http://asbarez.com/131817/toumani-take-ii/

House Foreign Affairs Committee: US-Azerbaijan Relations

CQ Congressional Testimony
February 12, 2015 Thursday

U.S.-AZERBAIJAN RELATIONS: COMMITTEE: HOUSE FOREIGN AFFAIRS

SUBCOMMITTEE: EUROPE, EURASIA, AND EMERGING THREATS

CAPITOL HILL HEARING TESTIMONY

TESTIMONY-BY: DR. SVANTE E. CORNELL, DIRECTOR

AFFILIATION: THE JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY

Statement of Dr. Svante E. Cornell Director, Central Asia-Caucasus
Institute School of Advanced International Studies The Johns Hopkins
University

Committee on House Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on Europe, Eurasia,
and Emerging Threats

February 12, 2015 2

Introduction

This hearing occurs at a low point in relations between Azerbaijan and
the United States, a relationship that was once a well-functioning
strategic partnership characterized by a high level of trust. To
understand the reasons behind this state of affairs, and especially to
seek ways to improve the current situation, it is necessary to briefly
delve into Azerbaijan’s regional security situation and its politics;
and not least, the policy of the U.S. in Eastern Europe and Eurasia
more broadly.

Azerbaijan’s situation has unique characteristics, but the topic today
is part and parcel of several larger trends: first of all, it is an
acute case of the declining influence of the West, and particularly
the United States, in all of post-communist Europe and Eurasia – in
all sectors, including security, energy and human rights. Secondly,
the decline of Azerbaijan’s relationship with the U.S. bears
similarities to tensions in America’s ties with a number of other
allies, from Israel to South Korea, that have grown wary of U.S.
foreign policy.

Before delving into these matters, it is important to review briefly
why Azerbaijan and its region matters to America’s interests.

Why Does Azerbaijan Matter, and What Are U.S. Interests?

The main importance of Azerbaijan and the Caucasus lies in its crucial
geographical location at the intersection of multiple crossroads. It
lies between the Black and Caspian seas, and thus between Europe and
Asia as well as providing the land link between Russia and the Middle
East. Its key strategic value is twofold. On one hand, it lies at the
intersection between Russia, Iran and Turkey, powers playing key roles
in international politics. On the other, it is the bottleneck of the
burgeoning east-west corridor connecting Europe to Central Asia and
beyond. In this Caucasus corridor, Azerbaijan is the only country
bordering both Russia and Iran, and therefore the geopolitically most
pivotal country. Former National Security Advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski
acknowledged this in his 1997 book The Grand Chessboard, in which he
termed Azerbaijan one of the five geopolitical pivots of Eurasia
together with Ukraine, South Korea, Turkey and Iran.

As a result, Azerbaijan and its region is key to western efforts to
shape the future of the intersection of Europe and the Middle East,
and to any reaction to crises occurring in this wider area. It also
plays a central role in western access to the heart of the Eurasian
continent, whether it be for energy, transport, trade, or military
purposes. The strategic importance of Azerbaijan and its region can
also be stated in terms of the current difficult moment in
international politics, where the two most salient challenges to the
transatlantic alliance are Russia’s aggressive expansionism, and the
Islamic radicalism emanating from the Middle East.

The states of the Caucasus and Central Asia, Azerbaijan in particular,
are unique as they are an important pressure point in both directions.
The task of countering Putin’s Russian imperialism goes beyond
Ukraine, and requires a firm strategy to bolster the states on
Russia’s periphery, and especially to maintain the crucial east-west
corridor to Central Asia open. But the Caucasus and Central Asia also
include fully one half of secular Muslim-majority states in the world.
These states may have far to go in terms of democratic development,
but their governments and populations are committed to the separation
of state and religion, to secular laws, and to the protection of state
and society from religious extremism. Azerbaijan is unique in being a
majority Shi’a Muslim state, bordering Iran, which is based on a
secular form of statehood.

Thus, the Caucasus (and Central Asia) should be seen as bulwarks
against both Moscow and the Islamic radicalism of the Middle East.
This is amplified by other regional trends. The Iranian theocracy
continues to assertively expand its regional influence, as events from
Syria to Iraq to Yemen indicate. In Turkey, the deterioration of
secular government has given rise to a growing anti-western
authoritarianism with Islamist underpinnings, endangering the
Turkish-American alliance. As a country sharing linguistic bonds with
Turkey and religious ties with Iran, Azerbaijan is once again uniquely
situated.

As mentioned, Azerbaijan is the lynchpin in the land bridge that the
Caucasus constitutes linking Europe with Central Asia. This is
important concretely in terms both of Europe’s energy security, and
America’s military access to the heart of Eurasia, including
Afghanistan.

The creation of a pipeline system connecting Azerbaijan’s Caspian Sea
oil and gas resources via Turkey to Europe, which began a decade ago,
broke the Russian monopoly over the exportation of Caspian energy
resources, and provides Europe with an important source of
diversification. Through Azerbaijan, Europe has the opportunity to
access Central Asia’s even larger natural gas resources. Second, after
the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, the U.S. faced the
enormous challenge of waging a war in the heart of the Eurasian
continent, thousands of miles from the closest U.S. military base.
America’s response was made possible by the introduction of U.S.
military power into Central Asia – which was achieved in turn through
the air corridor across Georgia and Azerbaijan. Later, a Northern
Distribution Network was created which includes access through Russia;
but given the state of Russia-West relations, that corridor cannot be
counted on. Moscow has already on two occasions in the past few months
blocked the German Air Force from using Russian territory to supply
its presence in Afghanistan. Thus, access through Azerbaijan will
remain crucial for any continued presence in Afghanistan or future
contingencies.

In sum, therefore, the Caucasus and particularly Azerbaijan has an
important place in the western strategy to meet imminent threats in
Eastern Europe and the Middle East, as well as in long- term
contingencies for a variety of challenges in the wider region. The
U.S. has a serious and strategic interest in ensuring that the
Caucasus, and Azerbaijan, maintain a positive relationship with the
West, and remain open for western access.

Concrete U.S. Interests

The title of this hearing correctly assumes that the relations between
Azerbaijan and the United States occur in diverse areas, usually
summarized as security, energy and human rights; and that the U.S. has
important interests in each area. In more specific and concrete terms,
American interests in Azerbaijan and the region can be summarized as
follows:

For Azerbaijan and the states of the Caucasus to be stable, sovereign
and self-governing states controlled by none of their neighboring
powers; and cooperating actively with Western governments and
institutions on regional security, counter- terrorism and conflict
resolution.

For the conflicts of the Caucasus, particularly the Armenian-
Azerbaijani conflict, to be placed on a path toward long-term and
peaceful resolution, within the framework of international law, and
with the degree of manipulation of external powers minimized.

For Azerbaijan to be a state with secular laws in a geographical
environment that includes theocratic Iran, Iraq, the North Caucasus,
and Turkey.

For Azerbaijan and its neighbors to evolve gradually but assuredly
into a zone of self-governing, law-based states that respect human
rights, are free of corruption, and are responsive to citizens’ needs.

For Azerbaijan and its neighbors to be a source and transit corridor
for energy, in particular contributing to diversifying the sources of
Europe’s energy supplies, and to function as a reliable territory for
Western access by land and air to and from Central and South Asia.

For Azerbaijan and its neighbors to develop into an important land
trade corridor connecting Europe, China, and India not controlled by
any of them but protected by all.

Unfortunately, developments over the past decade have not furthered
these interests. The sovereignty of the regional states is
increasingly under question as blatant interference by Russia has
mounted, complemented by lesser degrees of meddling by Iran and
Turkey. The Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict is on a path of escalation,
not resolution. Azerbaijan remains committed to secular laws, but the
political development of the country and its rights record has come
under increasingly strong criticism. The development of the energy
corridor to the West has been stalled and faced multiple hurdles in
the past decade. Progress toward making the Caucasus a land corridor
is proceeding, but at a slow speed.

Meanwhile, for most of the past decade, America’s ability to affect
developments in Azerbaijan and the entire region has been in decline.
In retrospect, the 2008 Russian invasion of Georgia was a turning
point, after which the situation in the region, and western influence
there, has deteriorated. In fact, it is no exaggeration to state that
at no time since the collapse of the Soviet Union has the U.S. had
less influence over regional matters than today.

Changes in the Region: Impact on the U.S.-Azerbaijan Relationship

The U.S.-Azerbaijan relationship is the most acute exhibit of a trend
of declining American influence. A decade ago, this was a relatively
strong strategic partnership, characterized by mutual respect and a
functioning dialogue between two governments. Today, its main
characteristic is bitter acrimony on both sides.

What are the reasons for this? It is customary to blame Azerbaijan’s
domestic evolution for the decline in the relationship. While this is
one factor, the question that should be asked is how the U.S. could
have allowed a relationship with a geostrategically pivotal country
like Azerbaijan to deteriorate so badly, and without taking serious
and visible efforts to engage its leadership until very recently. A
decade ago, the Azerbaijani government was considerably more
responsive to U.S. criticism and advice concerning its domestic
political system, management of elections, and human rights record.
What has changed in the past decade, and why is this no longer the
case?

First, Azerbaijan has benefited from a large inflow of wealth from its
oil and gas industry. It was the fastest-growing economy in the world
for several years – a major change in a country that was in a
dilapidated condition, indeed a failing state, only twenty years ago.
That has brought an ability to provide adequate funding to state
institutions; co-opt large portions of the elite, particularly young
professionals; as well as acquire legitimacy in considerable chunks of
society. Opinion polling from the respected Caucasus Research Resource
Centers shows that the broader population’s approval of government
services is growing, not falling. This new-found wealth has led to a
growing reluctance to take advice from abroad; this factor has been
compounded by the intra-elite politics within the government, as
discussed below.

A more important factor is the regional environment, which has
worsened considerably. Aggressive Russian efforts to reassert control
over the former Soviet republics have contributed to a siege
mentality. In the past seven years, Russia has invaded two post-Soviet
states (Georgia and Ukraine) militarily, helped orchestrate a coup
d’etat in a third (Kyrgyzstan), and strong- armed a fourth (Armenia)
to drop all efforts at European integration in favor of the Eurasian
Union. Russian subversion is on the rise across the former Soviet
sphere, as it is in western countries. To this should be added
constant Iranian subversive activities, as well as a growing tendency
by Turkey to interfere in Azerbaijan’s internal affairs. This, put
together, has formed a powerful inhibitor against loosening government
control over state and society.

Missteps in American Policies

However, U.S. policies – or the lack thereof – have been an important
contributing factor. It is important to recall that America’s
relationship with Azerbaijan, like all former Soviet states, was built
on several components. A constructive dialogue on human rights and
democracy was one of these. Another was American engagement in
supporting the development of the east- west energy corridor, which
enabled Azerbaijan to market is resources independently. A third was
close cooperation on security issues, which included America’s efforts
to help resolve the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict, as well as
bilateral cooperation on defense, security, intelligence sharing and
counter-terrorism.

These three areas, then, formed a tripod upon which U.S. policy was
based. But in the past decade, that tripod has for all practical
purposes faltered. American engagement in energy issues was strong
down to the completion of initial pipeline infrastructure ten years
ago; it has declined since then. The position of a U.S. Special Envoy
for Eurasian Energy has been abolished; and America’s role in the
efforts to bring Caspian natural gas to Europe is minimal. Security
interests gained salience after 9/11, but began a slow decline after
2003 as U.S. attention shifted to Iraq and European governments were
unwilling to pick up the slack. Not least, U.S. leadership in
resolving the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict has been missing.

As a result, for most practical purposes, the promotion of democracy
and human rights has been the only leg of U.S. policy proceeding at
full speed, leading to an imbalance in the tripod that forms the
underpinning of American strategy. Furthermore, this is certainly the
way the relationship is seen from Baku’s perspective. In large parts
of the elite, this is leading to a growing questioning of U.S.
motivations, and a growing inclination to entertain conspiracy
theories (propagated not least by Russian media) on alleged American
plots to overthrow governments.

To be clear, the argument here is not that the U.S. has engaged too
deeply in democracy promotion. The problem is that the U.S. has not
balanced that important commitment with equal attention to security
and energy, and has not adapted its methods to be successful in view
of evolving regional realities.

In this context, the period following the 2008 war in Georgia was a
watershed. That war laid bare the brute force Russia was willing to
deploy to achieve its interests; it also showed that the West did not
function as an effective deterrent against Russia. Not staying at
that, the two American initiatives that most affected Azerbaijan were
profoundly counter-productive for the bilateral relationship.

First, rather than causing Russia to pay a price for its invasion of
an independent state, the Obama administration rewarded Moscow with
the “Reset” initiative. U.S. officials claimed it would not come at
the price of relations with smaller post-Soviet states; but in
practice, it did. America’s weak response to the invasion of Georgia,
it should be said in retrospect, led the Kremlin to conclude it could
get away with an even more brazen attack on Ukraine without lasting,
serious consequences. In Baku, it led Azerbaijani leaders to question
the rationale of the country’s westward orientation.

Second, the Obama administration did not conclude from the Georgia war
that it should spend additional efforts and energy on resolving the
other unresolved conflict in the Caucasus – that between Armenia and
Azerbaijan. Instead, it decided to embark on a project to normalize
Turkish-Armenian relations. The core of that initiative was to open
the Turkish-Armenian border, which Turkey had closed in 1993 because
of Armenia’s occupation of Azerbaijan’s territory. Since that time, a
link had been maintained between Turkish-Armenian relations and the
Armenia- Azerbaijan conflict. The United States now pushed to cut that
link, something that would heavily damage Azerbaijan’s interests,
without offering Baku anything in the process. This initiative
effectively was understood in Baku to mean that Azerbaijan’s most
important national security issue was no longer an American concern.
At roughly the same time, America’s handling of the Arab upheavals,
and its perceived endorsement of revolutions that brought Islamist
forces to power, further exacerbated perceptions of American
intentions.

Further, the U.S. has failed to draw the implications of Azerbaijan’s
complex and opaque internal political scene. Because the formal
opposition is marginalized, American observers have generally assumed
that President Aliyev exercises autocratic power. On this basis they
pay little attention to intra- government politics. Yet Azerbaijan’s
internal politics are complex, and take place to a significant extent
within the government rather than between government and opposition.
Notwithstanding the formidable powers that the Constitution accords
the President, his power are in reality far from complete.

In fact, since the 1990s, Azerbaijan’s government developed a number
of autonomous fiefdoms, the masters of which have shown an ability to
effectively check the chief executive’s powers. Internal rivalries
exist in many countries, and can debilitate effective governance
anywhere. But in Azerbaijan, two factors exacerbate them: first, these
forces are strongest in the chief repressive organs of the state.
Second, they have a thinly disguised (and in some cases overtly
stated) affinity for Russia over the West, and maintain close ties to
counterparts in Moscow that date back to the Soviet period. These
forces have tended to oppose, and even undermine, Azerbaijan’s
relations with the West. While President Aliyev and his appointees
have consistently sought to deepen Azerbaijan’s relations with the
West, resilient forces whose positions date back to before Aliyev came
to power in 2003 have used their power to repress civil society
organizations and cracked down on dissidents at times often chosen
specifically to undermine the country’s relations with the West.

Meanwhile, the U.S. has effectively linked improved bilateral
relations in all areas with the advancement of democratic reforms and
human rights. This is certainly laudable in principle. But in
practice, in the absence of a solid American strategy toward the
region, the implication has been to give the most anti-Western forces
in the government a de facto veto over Azerbaijan’s relations with the
United States. This has benefited only the forces in the region
seeking to diminish U.S. influence.

Put otherwise, American actions in response to deplorable acts of
repression have inadvertently reinforced the most retrograde elements
in the government and contributed to isolating the very forces in the
government that advocate for reform, and for integration with the
West. By curtailing engagement in other areas of common interest, e.g.
security and energy, American and European leaders have inadvertently
alienated some of their closest potential partners in the region.

In the final analysis, the problem with U.S. policy has been, at the
basic level, the absence of a concrete strategy that defines America’s
interests in the region, appreciates the existence of separate
interests, while at all times taking into account the interactions
between these areas of interest.

The Way Forward

Taking as a starting point that the U.S.-Azerbaijan relationship is
important to the U.S. national interest, what can be done to improve
it?

It is sometimes implied that Azerbaijan is building closer ties with
Russia. In a sense, at least for the caricature of Azerbaijan
prevalent in Western media, turning toward Moscow would seem to be a
natural choice. But in fact, Azerbaijan is one of the former Soviet
states that has been the most determined in resisting Russian efforts
at Eurasian integration. Instead, Azerbaijan fundamentally remains
oriented toward the West, even though that orientation is increasingly
tenuous. Aside from pipeline infrastructure, the country is a member
of the Council of Europe, and joined the European Union’s Eastern
Partnership in 2009. European identity remains an important element of
Azerbaijan’s self-image, as the country’s eagerness to host the first
European Games in 2015 shows.

As Baku’s relationship with the West has cooled, it has nevertheless
moved gradually toward a position of non-alignment: while abstaining
from deeper integration with Russia, Azerbaijan also eschews
integration with Europe, attempting instead to “go it alone”. In view
of the turbulence of its region, western missteps, and growing Russian
pressure detailed above, Azerbaijan’s foreign policy orientation has
in fact been remarkably consistent. In many ways, Azerbaijan’s view of
the United States is similar to that which can be found in numerous
other American allies from Israel to South Korea and from Bahrain to
Saudi Arabia: confusion bordering on disbelief over America’s policies
and intentions, and a sense of frustration and abandonment. In other
words, it is indicative of a broader problem regarding America’s place
in the world.

That said, at this time of considerable turmoil both to Azerbaijan’s
north and south, the United States both can, and should, develop a new
approach to Azerbaijan and its region, as the current policy is
clearly not working. To this effect, several observers including
former senior officials, have argued for an approach that is even
tougher on Azerbaijan, including punitive measures. Such an approach
would be sure to fail, because it presupposes a level of American
leverage that is simply not in existence. In the current environment,
a policy that would make U.S. policy even more one-dimensional would
have almost no prospect of bringing positive results. The ruling elite
does not perceive that it benefits from its association with the U.S.
in key matters of national security; therefore, the U.S. simply does
not have the leverage it once had to influence Baku’s policies by the
use of the proverbial stick.

Furthermore, singling out Azerbaijan makes little sense in the absence
of similar measures against regional countries with worse human rights
records. Frustration with western indifference to the plight of the
hundreds of thousands of displaced people from the Armenian-occupied
territories in Mountainous Karabakh and western Azerbaijan is already
high in Azerbaijan, and any further targeting of Azerbaijan would
reinforce the sense of western double standards, which officials at
very high levels already denounce.

In fact, given the prevailing frustration with the west and the
character of the country’s intra-elite politics, such steps would be
likely to alienate Azerbaijan even further, and could in fact
extinguish whatever influence the U.S. still commands in the country.
The main victims of such an outcome would be not the ruling elite, but
the proponents of human rights and democracy in Azerbaijan itself.

Instead, what is needed is a policy rooted in a regional strategy,
which is based on a broad engagement of the region. A new American
policy must coordinate and find the right balance and sequence among
its priorities. In this context, a much stronger engagement in issues
pertaining to sovereignty and security will do more than anything else
to pave the way for progress in other areas, including human rights.
The history of the past twenty years shows that whenever the U.S. has
been strongly involved in energy and security affairs of the Caucasus,
the Azerbaijani government has been responsive to criticism. When that
has not been the case, as in the past several years, America’s
leverage has declined.

In short, going forward, the U.S. cannot expect progress on governance
and human rights without a clear commitment to security issues;
concomitantly, Azerbaijan’s leaders must understand that they cannot
expect Western support for their security without a commitment to
reforms in governance and human rights. As already noted, this does
not mean that a new policy should have less of an emphasis on human
rights issues. But it means the U.S. must do more also to address the
issues on which it worked effectively a decade ago: bolstering
sovereignty and independence, addressing security issues, working
seriously to resolve the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict, and
re-engaging on energy politics – all of which happen to be in U.S.
national interest. In sum, for both Azerbaijan’s domestic situation
and the bilateral relationship to improve, America’s presence must
once again be felt in the region.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress