China, Iran deal eyes a future decoupled from US

Asia Times


By Kaveh Afrasaiabi


Cooperation pact will put Iran firmly on China's Belt and Road
Initiative and promises to change the region's strategic calculus


In recent weeks, Iran and China have been hammering out the details of
a potentially momentous cooperation deal meant to span the next
quarter-century and chart a future decoupled from the United States.

Under the terms of a draft viewed by Asia Times, China will invest
tens of billions of US dollars in Iran as part of Beijing’s ambitious
Road and Belt Initiative. The 25-year agreement includes economic,
security, and military dimensions.

Such a deal is particularly important for Iran’s ailing energy sector,
which is in dire need of substantial investment to refurbish an aging
oil industry, which requires upwards of $150 billion for much-needed
modernization of wells, refineries and other infrastructure.

The negotiations are ongoing, even as the Donald Trump administration
continues to pin hope on Iran’s economic strangulation by a unilateral
maximum pressure strategy and against the backdrop of growing US-China
rivalry.

If approved by the Iranian parliament, the plan represents a major
affront to the Trump administration’s relentless pursuit of Iran’s
economic isolation in the international community. As expected, news
of the China-Iran agreement has set off a chorus of condemnation in
the West.

Some Iranian opponents in exile have branded the plan as the Islamic
Republic’s “sellout” to China and view it as a testament to China’s
ability to transform Iran into one of its “satellites.” Critics have
falsely claimed the plan contains a “monopoly clause”, most
controversially granting China control over one of Iran’s Persian Gulf
islands.

Reputed leaked versions of the agreement, clearly aimed to undercut
the deal, have been published in Farsi and in English and claim to
include provisions that could be perceived as harmful to Iran at
China’s expense.

Should China undertake such a massive long-term investment in Iran, it
is very likely that Beijing will take over the strategic Iranian port
of Chahbahar — the country’s outlet to the Indian Ocean.

The port enjoys a waiver from US sanctions imposed on Iran, which was
granted as a nod to India’s ambitions for the port. In Tehran’s view,
New Delhi has squandered that opportunity by effectively siding with
the US on oil sanctions and failing to make adequate investments in
the port.

The new Iran-China agreement points to both nations’ changing
strategic calculus in the current international milieu, where
international norms and principles have been eroded largely by the
Trump administration’s unilateral and aggressive policies vis-a-vis
Tehran and Beijing.

Slowly but surely, a triumvirate of China, Iran and neighboring
Pakistan is forming. This alliance could also encompass Afghanistan
and over time is expected to add Iraq and Syria, strategic anathema to
Washington and New Delhi.

A complementary new agreement between Iran and Syria, praised by
President Bashar al-Assad, signifies Iran’s intent to retain its
strategic foothold in that war-torn country, both as a gateway to
Lebanon and the Arab world and deterrent to Israel. That has come
irrespective of Israeli-Gulf Arab pressures, including recent attacks
inside Iran.

Much like responding to “maximum pressure” with “maximum resistance,”
Iran traditionally exerts counter-pressure to any regional and or
extra-regional pressure.

Tehran understands itself to be as a pivotal power in West Asia and
the Middle East, and can be expected to retaliate against the culprits
behind recent attacks on Natanz nuclear facility and the Parchin
military complex at a time and place of its choosing.

A final China-Iran deal would be a win-win serving the national
interests of both sides.

For sanctions and pandemic-hit Iran, it will offer important leeway to
economically survive at a difficult juncture, when Iran’s military and
nuclear sites are targeted for destruction, likely by a concerted
effort involving Israel and some Arab Gulf states.

According to a Tehran-based political scientist who wishes to remain
anonymous, “the purpose of these attacks on Iran might be related to
the perception that the Trump administration is willing to strike a
deal with Iran in the next few months prior to the November
elections.”

In turn, this raises questions about Trump’s real Iran strategy,
notwithstanding the major recent setback for the US at the UN Security
Council, which flatly rejected a draft US resolution on Iran calling
for an indefinite arms embargo.

Moreover, a UN expert denounced the US drone killing in January of
Iran’s top general Qasem Soleimani and nine other Iranian and Iraqi
officials as ” unlawful and arbitrary under international law.”

According to the UN report, the drone attack violated Iraq’s
sovereignty and in turn has “institutionalized” Iranian hostility
toward the US, making it nearly impossible for any Iranian official to
engage in direct diplomacy with the Trump administration. That’s
particularly true since Iran’s new parliament led by hardliners
commenced its work.

President Hassan Rouhani’s moderate government is about to enter a
lame-duck period prior to the presidential elections in 2021, making
it less and less capable of any major foreign policy initiatives.

Some analysts in Iran contend that there is still a narrow window of
opportunity for a new Tehran-Washington deal, prompted partly as a
reaction to the amentioned Tehran-Beijing agreement.

Given Iran’s post-revolutionary position of “superpower equidistance,”
the agreement with China reflects a “new look East” approach by Tehran
while under Washington’s pressure. At the same time, it serves the
opposite logic of a “new look West” for the sake of navigating the
treacherous currents of a new cold war in favor of equilibrium.

That assumes, of course, that Washington is willing to ease its
persistent sanctions and threats. That remains to be seen. Meanwhile,
the recent spate of suspicious fires and sabotage at the Natanz
nuclear facility and Parchin military complex will embolden Iran’s
hardliners, who see no ground for optimism of a possible US policy
shift.

They see China’s steadfast defense of Iran at the UN Security Council
as a testament to Beijing’s reliability. Iranian hardliners are also
cognizant of their country’s ability to serve China’s BRI, not only
for the 80 million-strong Iranian market but the larger Eurasian
landmass encompassing some 4.6 billion people.


 

“The Storm Has Definitely Hit” – Fresno ER Doctor On Rising COVID-19 Cases

Valley Public Radio, Fresno

Turkey’s ‘last Armenian village’ displays heritage that survived genocide

The Guardian, UK

More than century on, descendants of survivors who returned home open a museum to celebrate and preserve their culture

The Armenian graveyard at Vakıflı: 4,200 villagers fled during the 1915 genocide – the current population is 100. Photograph: Joerg Boethling/Alamy

Vakifli, a village in Hatay, the small wedge of Turkey sandwiched between the Mediterranean and the border with Syria, has the melancholy honour of being known as the country’s “last Armenian village”.

These days, it is home to just 100 people, but Vakifli’s orange groves and traditional stone houses are rich with history. Every summer, thousands of visitors in search of a connection to their Armenian past descend on the tiny village to visit its church, buy locally made jams and soap, and listen to the West Armenian dialect.

Lora Baytar, a journalist and art historian, decided a long time ago she wanted to create a dedicated exhibition space to celebrate the local Armenian culture. After five years of work, Vakifliköy Museum – the first such undertaking in Turkey – has just opened its doors.

“Visitors to Vakifli just come for the day, they take a picture of the church, and they leave again,” she said. “I wanted to give people the opportunity to really understand and preserve our heritage.”

Turkey’s reckoning with the past is long overdue: the government still refuses to recognise the events of 1915, in which up to 1.5 million Armenians were killed, as a genocide.

Inside the Armenian church at Vakıflı. Photograph: Joerg Boethling/Alamy

Vakifli’s community is descended from Armenians who successfully resisted the Ottoman army’s attacks. The area’s 4,200 residents retreated to the nearby Mount Musa, holding out for 53 days before being rescued and evacuated by allied warships to Port Said in Egypt. When the first world war ended, they returned home.

Baytar and her husband, Cem Çapar, are part of Vakifli’s church foundation, which maintains the village buildings, but the couple realised they’d need outside help and a much bigger budget for the museum.

A first application for funding in 2015, made with the help of the Hrant Dink Foundation, didn’t lead anywhere, but a second attempt in 2018, with support from the nearby Hatay Archaeology Museum and the Armenian Patriarchate in Istanbul, successfully won a government grant.

Vakifli’s residents then recorded oral history interviews and donated objects including clothes, traditional lacework, jewellery and photographs to create what Baytar calls a “story-driven” experience for visitors to the space in the existing cultural centre.

Vakıflıköy Museum shows how villagers speak, our beliefs, our traditions, what we eat – human and migration stories.

Lora Baytar, journalist and art historian

Sections focus on religious traditions, cultural celebrations such as harisa, the summer grape festival, the impact of migration on the Armenian community and unique local architectural and agricultural practices.

Baytar is particularly fond of a donation box from the now-destroyed Armenian church in Mersin, and a wedding dress and songbook from the 1920s owned by local figures.

The Covid-19 crisis has delayed the official opening until the end of the year, or possibly next summer, but Baytar and Çapar are keen to welcome visitors before that.

“Vakifliköy Museum shows the visitor how villagers speak, our beliefs, how we celebrate holidays, what we eat, how we succeed in agriculture and architecture, marriage traditions, music, photos, human and migration stories,” Baytar said.

“When people come now they won’t just leave with one photograph. Their memories will be filled the same way ours are.”

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/jul/11/turkeys-last-armenian-village-displays-heritage-that-survived-genocide?CMP=Share_iOSApp_Other&fbclid=IwAR25senP4jOH_V9gNnJon9z4rTdo-2irVXcw6lKLo5AtN1FyKD9VeJzk8HU

UNESCO ‘deeply regrets’ Turkey’s conversion of Hagia Sophia into mosque

Panorama, Armenia

The UN's cultural agency UNESCO said it deeply regretted Turkey's decision to turn the Hagia Sophia in Istanbul from a museum into a mosque, lamenting there had been no prior dialogue on the status of the former Byzantine cathedral.

UNESCO chief Audrey Azoulay "deeply regrets the decision of the Turkish authorities, taken without prior dialogue, to modify the status of the Hagia Sophia," the UN agency said in a statement,
It added that she had expressed her concern to the Turkish ambassador to the body.
The Hagia Sophia was first a cathedral, then made into mosque after the conquest of Istanbul by the Ottomans, but then a secular museum for all in modern Turkey.

It is inscribed as a UNESCO World Heritage site as part of an area of the city designated as "Historic Areas of Istanbul."

UNESCO warned that the move risked harming the universal nature of Hagia Sophia as a place open to all of civilisation, a key aspect of its World Heritage status.

It said that any modification requires prior notification to UNESCO and possibly examination by its World Heritage Committee, which adds – and sometimes removes – sites from the coveted list of UNESCO World Heritage.

"This decision announced today raises the issue of the impact of this change of status on the property's universal value," said UNESCO.

It warned that the "state of conservation" of the Hagia Sophia would be examined by the World Heritage Committee at its next meeting.

"UNESCO calls upon the Turkish authorities to initiate dialogue without delay, in order to prevent any detrimental effect on the universal value of this exceptional heritage," the statement said.

Garo Paylan. The decision of turning Hagia Sophia into a mosque will make life difficult for Christians

Panorama, Armenia
Society 12:34 11/07/2020Region

Istanbul-Armenian MP Garo Paylan, representing the pro-Kurdish Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP), has reacted to the Turkish authorities decision stripping the Hagia Sophia of its museum status and turning into a mosque.

“This is a sad day for all Christians who believed in Turkey’s pluralism. The decision to turn the Hagia Sophia from a museum into a mosque will make life difficult for Christians living here, likewise the Muslims living in Europe. The Hagia Sophia is the symbol of our rich history, and its dome was large enough for all of us,” Paylan wrote on is Facebook page.

Number of users both Christians and Muslims commented under the post. “As a Turk, I feel ashamed of this day,” one Turkish user wrote.

To remind, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan ordered the conversion of the city's historic Hagia Sophia back into a mosque after a court annulled a 1934 presidential decree that made it a museum.
The UN's cultural agency UNESCO said it deeply regretted Turkey's decision, while Greece’s culture minister decried the move, calling it "an open provocation to the entire civilized world."

Opposition party leader claims Armenian authorities should fear hundreds of thousands of people who lost their job

News.am, Armenia

13:32, 10.07.2020
                  

Police apprehend NGO head and protester in front of Armenia President’s Residence

News.am, Armenia
Police apprehend NGO head and protester in front of Armenia President's Residence Police apprehend NGO head and protester in front of Armenia President's Residence

14:22, 10.07.2020
                 

Founder of Kamq (Will) NGO for protection of Armenian values Vahagn Chakhalyan and the members of the NGO today held a protest in front of the Residence of the President of Armenia. Earlier, they had announced that they wanted to hand a letter to the President and give a press conference.

“We have brought a letter to hand to the President of Armenia in order to shame him for adopting the Lanzarote Convention. These people don’t want our children to learn history of the Armenian Church, Armenian language and history, and instead, they want to teach sexual education and advocate perversion so that they can implement their plans through repression. They’re taking actions to only let Nikol Pashinyan’s beloved politicians hold protests. We’re complaining against the Armenian authorities’ discrimination,” Chakhalyan stated, adding that police let people protest against smuggling of tobacco or the constitutional amendments, but don’t let citizens hold protests regarding national dignity.

The police gave the protesters two minutes to leave the premises, after which they apprehended the protesters, including Vahagn Chakhalyan and Sona Aghekyan, who also wasn’t wearing a face mask.

https://news.am/eng/news/590478.html

UATE CEO Karen Vardanyan dies aged 57

Public Radio of Armenia

Azerbaijani press: Expert: Kim Kardashian’s actions indicate a complete collapse of Pashinyan regime

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Recently, the popular American television star Kim Kardashian started raising funds through the platform of the "Support Fund for Armenia" to help micro-entrepreneurs in Armenia who have suffered from the coronavirus pandemic.

On this occasion, a well-known Russian TV presenter, political expert Evgeny Mikhailov expressed his opinion in a conversation with News.Az.

"In my opinion, if Kardashian is already unsure of Pashinyan's regime and started to collect money to help her compatriots in faraway Armenia, this points to the complete economic and political collapse of Pashinyan's regime. It's a direct indication that the Prime Minister's government is incapable of pulling the economy out, unable to bear the blow of the pandemic," Mikhailov said.

The expert noted that Pashinyan is not helping his population.

"Kim Kardashian understands very well that Armenia is a small country, which survives at the expense of small shopkeepers and tourist business. They tried to survive successfully under other regimes, which also did not rule well in Armenia. What is happening now is a collapse. Basically, Kim Kardashian, as a representative of the rich world of Armenians, directly rub Pashinyan's nose into the fact that he is not coping. Besides, in the publication circulating in Armenian media, I liked the comparison of the current situation and the support to people in Armenia and neighboring countries. It is directly stated that in Azerbaijan, in Turkey the population is much better protected than in Armenia. And the fact that the government of these countries provides maximum support to different segments of the population in order to survive the economic crisis," said Mikhailov.

"I think that Kim's opinion and her actions indicate a lot. First of all, the collapse of statehood is coming in Armenia. After all, it keeps getting worse. Pashinyan will strengthen his power in dictatorial ways, shut everyone's mouth. This will happen until the people finally overthrow him," the expert said in conclusion.

Skilled diplomat with high professionalism: Ambassador AlZaabi built new Armenia-UAE bridges

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YEREVAN, JULY 10, ARMENPRESS. A key role player in the development of the relations between Armenia and the United Arab Emirates, advocate of warm human relationship, friendly ties: these are the words of Armenian public-political figures about UAE Ambassador to Armenia Mohamed AlZaabi who is completing his diplomatic mission.

ARMENPRESS presents words of appreciation by numerous officials and representatives of different spheres addressed to the UAE Ambassador.

According to Vahagn Melikyan, Secretary General of the Armenian Foreign Ministry, Ambassador Mohamed AlZaabi from the very beginning was taking active steps to further deepen and expand the Armenia-UAE relations and the mutually beneficial cooperation in various spheres, by holding regular meetings with the Armenian officials. As a skilled and experienced diplomat, the Ambassador managed to establish working and friendly relations with Armenia’s high-ranking officials, in particular with the ministers conducting a sectoral cooperation with the UAE. Under his leadership the UAE Embassy in Armenia has also been actively engaged in humanitarian activity.

“Armenia’s ministry of labor and social affairs highly values the cooperation with UAE Ambassador Mohamed AlZaabi, his support and direct contribution to the implementation of various social initiatives and programs in Armenia. During the Ambassador’s tenure very close ties, constructive dialogue and effective cooperation have been established between the ministry and the Embassy, in particular aimed at the protection of rights of vulnerable groups and their social inclusion”, Minister of labor and social affairs Zaruhi Batoyan said.

Minister of healthcare Arsen Torosyan in his turn called the relations of Armenia and the UAE as a wonderful example of friendship and mutual support. “The coronavirus pandemic brought a new challenge to the world, and I am glad to reaffirm with gratitude that the UAE’s good people and government again stood by us at that difficult time, by providing personal protective items, disinfectants, face masks and other necessary items”, the minister, adding that the Ambassador with his activity has greatly contributed to the strengthening of partnership and warm friendship in the field of healthcare.

Minister of high technological industry Hakob Arshakyan also commented on the productive and prospective cooperation with the UAE Ambassador, stating that thanks to the active participation of the Ambassador they managed not only to create grounds for the comprehensive inter-state cooperation, but also hosted in Armenia and organized official visits with the UAE top officials and representatives of major investment companies, forming serious bases for mutual trust and prospective development.

Director of ARMENPRESS state news agency Aram Ananyan considers the signing of a memorandum of cooperation between ARMENPRESS and the UAE state news agency as one of the key achievements recorded during the Ambassador’s tenure in Armenia.

“The tenure of Ambassador of the United Arab Emirates to Armenia Mohamed AlZaabi was marked with the signing of a memorandum of cooperation between ARMENPRESS and the UAE state news agency (WAM) after which the works between the two news agencies entered into a new stage. Today ARMENPRESS and WAM are conducting active exchange of information. I think this is one of the firmest and most important bridges linking our two friendly peoples. On the sidelines of the cooperation this year ARMENPRESS participated in the International Government Communication Forum, during which numerous new cooperation agreements were reached with the national news agencies of several Arab countries (Lebanon, Jordan, etc)”, the Director of ARMENPRESS said.

He said the cooperation with the UAE partners has much greater potential which will be fully exercised in the upcoming years.

“I also want to highlight the Ambassador’s personal attention to the agency’s works during the pandemic days, as well as the technical assistance provided to us. But for me personally the most important is human, sincere communication and friendship. I wish my good friend new success and I am confident that he will have new achievements in his future activities, and our both personal and professional friendship will have its continuation”, Aram Ananyan said.

 

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan