Harvesting And Elections

HARVESTING AND ELECTIONS

NKR Government Information and
Public Relations Department
20.06.2012

Harvesting is still in process in the republic, to date 10% of the
fields is raped. Harvest is already ripen in foothills, which gave
rise organizational questions to those responsible for the harvesting.

Consultation invited at the Prime Minister’s office on June 19 was
devoted to those questions. Minister of agriculture A.Khachatryan,
minister, chief of the NKR government staff A.Avagyan, director of
rescue service A.Haroutunyan were present at the consultation.

6300 hectares territory is already reaped. Major part of the reaped
territory is barley fields-4860 hectares; this year barley harvesting
is lower than grain harvesting.

There is a need of individual work with combiners on-site. The
government has made an offer of supporting the individuals in buying
spares, nevertheless scheduled purchases are not realized in good
time. Prime Minister Ara Haroutunyan is dissatisfied.

Heads of regional administrations assured that the raised problems
are solved on-site, although there is a need of technical equipments
everywhere. 80 combines from the RA work in Artsakh, 70 of which
work in Qashatagh region. About 20 combines will come to help farmers
within the next few days.

First barley will be gathered then grain in order not to lose the
harvest. Barley’s price is already fixed 115 AMD per kilogram;
the price of grain is still in the negotiation process. Other
organizational issues have been discussed during the conference.

Henceforth all the issues regarding the harvest will be regulated
by the Minister of Agriculture. Prime Minister Ara Haroutyunyan will
lead the pre-election headquarters of the president’s candidate Bako
Sahakyan. During the conference Prime Minister instructed the heads
of regional administrations to follow the law during the election
campaign provide equal conditions for all candidates and control the
situation for organizing elections up to the mark.

Eurovision 2012 Winner Concerned about Photo-Journalist M Huseynov

Eurovision 2012 Winner Concerned about Photo-Journalist Mehman
Huseynov’s Fate

BAKU. June 17, 2012. The winner of the Eurovision Song Contest 2012
held in Baku this may, Swedish singer Loreen, has expressed concern
about the fate of photojournalist Mehman Huseynov, against whom the
Azerbaijani authorities brought charges of disorderly conduct against
the police.

On her Facebook page, she wrote: “After our meetings with Azeri human
rights defenders in Baku we hoped that the situation for them would
improve. But now we see the opposite. One of the brave human rights
defenders that we met, Mehman Huseynov, is accused of hooliganism and
risks five years in jail! Mehman is a young photojournalist and he was
just doing this job covering a demonstration for freedom during the
Eurovision week in Baku.”

Loreen was one of the few celebrities who supported the campaign “Sing
in the name of democracy,” which was organized by the Azerbaijani
champions of free speech and human rights during the contest. She was
the only performer to have visited the Institute for Reporters’
Freedom and Safety in Baku, where she gave a press conference on the
themes raised by the campaign of “Sing in the name of democracy.”

In an interview with Dagens Nyheter, she said that she could not turn
a blind eye to human rights violations. Loreen’s meetings with human
rights defenders caused serious irritation in the upper echelons of
power in Baku. On the day of the semi-finals the representative of the
President of Azerbaijan demanded that the contest organizer, European
Broadcasting Union should stop some artists from “politicizing” the
show. The matter was so notorious that the Swedish Ambassador was
forced to visit the Foreign Ministry to discuss the situation.

At the press conference of the finalists the singer made it clear that
she separates her private life, in which she has the right to show a
civic position, and her work, including the competition in Baku.

Loreen posted on Facebook links to the statements of international
human rights organizations about Mehman Huseynov, thereby inviting her
fans to pay attention to the fate of the photojournalist:

(Turan)

http://www.civilrightsdefenders.org/news/statements/azeri-photographer-freed-but-still-risks-prison/
http://humanrightshouse.org/Articles/18210.html
http://www.hrw.org/europecentral-asia/azerbaijan

Opposition bloc condemns Harsnakar restaurant brutal incident

Armenian opposition bloc condemns Harsnakar restaurant brutal incident

news.am
June 23, 2012 | 19:20

YEREVAN. – Opposition Armenian National Congress (ANC) believes that
the Harsnakar restaurant incident, which brought forth heavy
consequences and even may claim human life as estimated by doctors, is
not the only case, the ANC statement reads.

`As a result of brutal beating in the Harsnakar restaurant-complex,
which belongs to Armenian oligarch-MP Ruben Hayrapetyan, two army
doctors Vahe Avetyan and Artak Bayadyan were beaten almost to death.
Police had to arrest several suspects only under the influence of
media outlets and hot public discussions.

According to outlets, the victims were beaten by Hayrapetyan’s
security service and restaurant employees under the MP’s awareness or
order. Unfair or incomplete investigation of the case or improper
punishment of the guilty may influence the army’s moral-psychological
state and fighting ability. The ANC will not tolerate such actions
humiliating people and destructing bases of the state. It declares
that will follow further process of the case consistently.’

Grigol Vashadze: New Armenian-Azerbaijani war will bury the So. Cauc

Grigol Vashadze: New Armenian-Azerbaijani war will bury the
sovereignty of all three South Caucasian states

armradio.am
23.06.2012 17:08

A new Armenian-Azerbaijani war will bury the sovereignty and
independence of all three South Caucasian states, Georgian Foreign
Minister Grigol Vashadze told Ukrainian Zerkalo Nedeli weekly.

`I sincerely hope that the efforts of the OSCE Minsk Group will lead
to a speedy solution. However, a third party works actively so that
the Minsk Group achieves no results and tension at the line of contact
continues as long as possible,’ Vashadze siad.

He also spoke about trilateral Azerbaijan-Georgia-Turkey Trabzon declaration.

`We jointly participate in large infrastructure projects and would
like to expand cooperation to other fields. Besides, the region
faceschallenges, all the three states – Azerbaijan, Georgia and Turkey
– are often obliged to respond. I would like to stress that this
format is not targeted against any other state or a group of states,’
he said.

Paper says Artsakh President Bako Sahakyan already in Facebook

Paper says Artsakh President Bako Sahakyan already in Facebook

June 23, 2012 – 17:16 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – According to Chorrord Ishkhanutyun paper, Artsakh
President Bako Sahakyan has registered in Facebook social network.

Another presidential candidate, Nagorno Karabakh National Assembly
member Vitali Balasanyan has also joined the network.

President Sahakyan’s post on his Facebook page implies that the user
launched election campaign from the same villages as five years ago.

However, it is noteworthy that unlike Mr. Balasanyan, who makes notes
in first person, Sahakyan’s posts are in third person, which implies
that the president’s page is run by another person.

Prices for building materials go up

Haykakan Zhamanak: Prices for building materials go up

tert.am
10:29 – 23.06.12

The prices for most of the building materials in Armenia have
increased during the past month.

In many shops the prices have gone up and in some an attempt is being
made to maintain the existing one, though as the representatives of
these shops say it is being done on the account of their income.

Speaking to the paper’s correspondent, they said they will not be able
to restrain the inflation for a long time. The paper says during the
mentioned period the prices for building materials have gone up by
8-15%.

Authorities of Armenia must help Syrian-Armenians – expert

Authorities of Armenia must help Syrian-Armenians – expert

news.am
June 23, 2012 | 03:08

YEREVAN. – Authorities of Armenia should establish a special
structure, which will elaborate a program for re-populating
representatives of the Armenian community in Syria, expert of the Arab
studies Armen Petrosyan told Armenian News-NEWS.am.

`Situation in Syria is very tense, Armenians living in the state have
appeared in a difficult situation. They took no one’s side during the
developed local conflict. Despite they traditionally supported the
authorities, but in reality they were politically neutral. Currently
civil war is unleashed in the country and their physical existence is
at risk,’ the expert said adding the program will assist the Armenians
to come out of the problem to some extent.

Besides, representatives of the community should be involved in the
program, as well as contacts should be established with the
opposition.

As for information spread by outlets that over 4,500 Syrian-Armenians
have turned to the Armenian authorities for acquiring the citizenship,
the expert said that they will need the citizenship for going to the
United States, Australia or Canada, as well as United Arab Emirates,
Kuwait. Petrosyan once again stated that Armenian authorities should
make all possible efforts to preserve the community as it is a part of
national and cultural wealth of the Armenian people.

PAP leader is prepared to support any PM, except for incumbent

Prosperous Armenia Party leader is prepared to support any PM, except
for incumbent – newspaper

news.am
June 23, 2012 | 07:30

YEREVAN. – A variety of predictions were made as to what was said
during the tête-à-tête meeting between Prosperous Armenia Party (PAP)
Chairman Gagik Tsarukyan and Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan, Hraparak
daily writes.

`We learned that Tsarukyan said the following to the PAP
[Parliamentary] Faction about this meeting: `I told Tigran Sargsyan
that we [that is, the PAP] would have supported any PM, except for
him,” Hraparak writes.

L’Unesco au chevet de Bethléem

REVUE DE PRESSE
L’Unesco au chevet de Bethléem
L’Autorité palestinienne invoque le délabrement de la basilique de la
Nativité pour justifier son classement au patrimoine de l’humanité.
Imbroglio en perspective.

La basilique de la Nativité de Bethléem se trouve une nouvelle fois au
centre d’un imbroglio politique international. L’Autorité
palestinienne demande à l’Organisation des Nations unies pour la
culture et l’éducation (Unesco) le classement de l’église au
patrimoine mondial de l’humanité. – Israël, qui conteste l’adhésion de
la Palestine à l’Unesco, résultat d’une action unilatérale de
l’Autorité palestinienne, met en doute l’urgence du classement de
l’édifice et dénonce une opération politique. La demande palestinienne
doit être examinée la semaine prochaine par le comité de l’Unesco en
charge du classement, qui tient sa réunion annuelle à
Saint-Pétersbourg en Russie. Une trentaine d’autres sites à travers le
monde sont aussi candidats à un classement basé sur la « valeur
universelle – exceptionnelle » du lieu.

Le dossier de l’église de la Nativité, lieu de naissance de Jésus, est
politiquement chargé. Les Palestiniens ont été acceptés au sein de
l’Unesco en octobre 2011, après un vote des États membres qui avait
provoqué la colère d’Israël et des Américains. La demande de
classement de l’église de la Nativité est la première démarche
officielle entreprise par l’Autorité palestinienne depuis son
admission. Les Palestiniens demandent une procédure d’urgence, en
raison du « délabrement et de la dégradation de l’ensemble
architectural ».

La théorie du complot Les Israéliens sont d’un autre avis. « Les
Palestiniens ont demandé à utiliser la procédure d’urgence pour la
préservation de l’église de la Nativité qui serait soi-disant en
danger, explique Yigal Palmor, porte-parole du ministère israélien des
Affaires étrangères. Mais un groupe d’experts a rejeté leur demande en
expliquant qu’aucun danger immédiat ne menace le btiment. Résultat :
les Palestiniens ressortent leur théorie du complot en accusant ce
comité d’experts d’être politisé et manipulé par Israël. On ne sait
pas s’il faut en rire ou en pleurer. C’est l’arroseur arrosé. C’est
eux qui ont voulu politiser l’Unesco en menant une bataille pour faire
reconnaître prématurément un État de Palestine alors que l’Unesco est
censée ne s’occuper que de culture et d’éducation. Les pays qui ont
pris la responsabilité de soutenir cette initiative doivent désormais
s’en mordre les doigts. »

Les experts du Conseil international des monuments et des sites
(Icomos) ont effectivement rendu un avis défavorable, estimant que le
dossier palestinien a été insuffisamment préparé, et n’évalue pas dans
le détail les menaces pesant sur le site. Mais le comité peut se
prononcer contre l’avis des experts.

Deux millions de visiteurs Ce n’est pas la première fois que l’église
de la Nativité devient un enjeu de politique internationale. Au XIXe
siècle, l’étoile d’argent à quatorze branches, scellée par les
catholiques à l’endroit de la naissance Jésus, avait été enlevée par
les Grecs orthodoxes, protégés de la Russie tsariste. L’affaire, sur
fond de rivalité franco-russe, avait été l’un des éléments
déclencheurs de la guerre de Crimée en 1853. En 2002, en pleine
Intifada, une centaine d’activistes palestiniens de Bethléem s’étaient
retranchés dans l’église pour échapper à une opération de l’armée
israélienne. La basilique avait été assiégée pendant quarante jours
par les forces israéliennes, avant qu’un accord ne soit négocié pour
évacuer l’église, en échange de l’exil d’une partie des militants en
dehors de Palestine.

Depuis, la basilique de la Nativité est redevenue l’un lieux les plus
visités par les touristes en Terre Sainte, et accueille près de 2
millions de visiteurs par an. La toiture a été rénovée l’an dernier,
mais l’église, très ancienne, nécessite des travaux de restauration
constants, même si leur degré d’urgence reste matière à discussion.

Le classement des sites religieux et archéologiques est un sujet
politiquement sensible entre Israéliens et Palestiniens. Le caveau des
Patriarches à Hébron, et le tombeau de Rachel près de Bethléem ont été
récemment classés par Israël comme faisant partie de son patrimoine
national. L’Autorité palestinienne a contesté cette décision auprès de
l’Unesco.

——————————————————————————–

L’église de la Nativité, un véritable monument.

L’église de la Nativité est l’une des plus anciennes et des plus
belles églises du monde. L’édifice original date du IVe siècle, et a
miraculeusement échappé à toutes les destructions et invasions qui ont
régulièrement ravagé la Terre sainte. Restaurée par les croisés,
augmentée d’un couvent arménien et d’une église catholique attenants
au btiment principal, la basilique est construite au-dessus du lieu
de naissance de Jésus, auquel on accède parun escalier souterrain qui
s’enfonce sous l’autel. Une étoile d’argent à quatorze branches marque
l’endroit de la Nativité, à côté de la crèche où, selon la tradition,
fut placé l’Enfant Jésus.

Par Adrien Jaulmes

Le Figaro

samedi 23 juin 2012,
Stéphane ©armenews.com

http://www.lefigaro.fr/culture/2012/06/22/03004-20120622ARTFIG00704-l-unesco-au-chevet-de-bethleem.php

The Great Caspian Arms Race

The Great Caspian Arms Race

Inside the petro-fueled naval military buildup you’ve never heard of:
It’s Russia versus Iran, with three post-Soviet states — and
trillions of dollars in oil — in the middle.

BY JOSHUA KUCERA | JUNE 22, 2012

The Caspian Sea, once a strategic backwater, is quickly becoming a
tinderbox of regional rivalries — all fueled by what amounts to trillions
in petrodollars beneath its waves. Observers gained a first glimpse into
this escalating arms race last fall, when Russia and Kazakhstan held joint
military exercises on the Caspian,
which abuts Iran and several former Soviet republics. Russia’s chief of
general staff framed it as a precautionary measure related to developments
in Central Asia, saying it would prepare for “the export of instability
from Afghanistan after the withdrawal of NATO troops from there.”

But a scoop by a Russian newspaper, *Moskovsky Komsomolets*, told a
different story. The newspaper* *got hold of a map apparently showing the
real scenario of the exercise:
the defense of Kazakhstan’s oil fields from several squadrons of F-4,
F-5, and Su-25 fighters and bombers. The map didn’t name which country
the jets came from, but the trajectory and the types of planes gave it
away: Iran.

While the world focuses on the possibility of an Israeli attack on Iran, a
little-noticed arms buildup has been taking place to Iran’s north, among
the ex-Soviet states bordering the Caspian. Twenty years after the collapse
of the Soviet Union created three new states on the sea, their boundaries
have still not been delineated. And with rich oil and natural gas fields in
those contested waters, the new countries — Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, and
Turkmenistan — are using their newfound riches to protect the source of
that wealth. So they’re building new navies from scratch, while the two
bigger powers, Russia and Iran, are strengthening the navies they already
have. It all amounts to something that has never before been seen on the
Caspian: an arms race.

The biggest reason for this buildup may be mistrust of Iran, but it’s not
the only one. The smaller countries also worry about how Russia’s naval
dominance allows Moscow to call the shots on their energy policies. Iran
and Russia, meanwhile, fear U.S. and European involvement in the Caspian.
All of this, among countries that don’t trust each other and act with
little transparency, is setting the stage for a potential conflict.

For the last several centuries, Russia has been the undisputed master of
the Caspian. Tsar Peter the Great created Russia’s Caspian Flotilla in
1722, and a quote from him still shines on a plaque at the flotilla’s
headquarters: “Our interests will never allow any other nation to claim the
Caspian Sea.” Until now, that’s pretty much been the case. Because the
Caspian was a relative strategic backwater for most of history, no one
cared enough to challenge Russia. The Soviet Caspian Fleet, based in Baku,
was perhaps best known for a novelty, the “Caspian Sea Monster,

a massive experimental hovercraft/airplane.

Since 1991, however, the Caspian has started to matter. While the Caspian
may still be marginal to Iran or Russia, it is of crucial strategic
importance to Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, and Turkmenistan. Upon gaining
independence, those three countries quickly contracted with Western oil
majors to explore the untapped resources in the sea, and discovered a
fortune capable of transforming their economies. Caspian energy expert (and
FP contributor) Steve LeVine estimates that the sea contains about 40
billion barrels of oil, almost all of it in the areas that those three
countries control.

The issue of who controls what, however, is a tricky one. While certain
pairs of states have worked out bilateral treaties dividing the sea between
themselves, some boundaries — most notably those involving Iran — remain
vague. In addition, the legality of building a “Trans-Caspian Pipeline”
under the sea* *(as Turkmenistan would like to do, to ship natural gas
through Azerbaijan and onward to Europe) is unclear, and both Russia and
Iran oppose the project.

This uncertainty has contributed to several tense incidents on the
Caspian over the last few years. In 2001 Iranian jets and a warship
threatened a BP research vessel prospecting on behalf of Azerbaijan in
waters that Baku considered its own. In 2008, gunboats from
Azerbaijan’s coast guard threatened oil rigs operated by Malaysian and
Canadian companies working for Turkmenistan near the boundary between
those two countries. And in 2009, an Iranian oil rig entered waters
that Azerbaijan considered its
own, prompting Azerbaijani officials to fret that they were powerless
against the Iranians, Wikileaked diplomatic cables show.

And so all five countries on the Caspian have taken significant steps to
build up their navies in recent years. Russia’s Caspian Flotilla is by far
the strongest of the lot, but that hasn’t stopped Kremlin officials
from publicly
worrying the fleet is
“uncompetitive,” and declaring that they are taking steps to cement its
superiority.* *Russia’s second frigate for the flotilla is currently
undergoing sea trials in the Black Sea and should be transported to the
Caspian later this year — part of a
planto add 16 new ships to the
fleet by 2020. Russia is also building up its
naval air forces in the region, and establishing coastal missile units
armed with anti-ship rockets capable of hitting targets in the middle of
the sea.

“The military-political situation in the region is extremely unpredictable.
This is explained on one side by the unregulated status of the sea, and
from the other, the aspirations of several non-Caspian states to infiltrate
the region and its oil and gas,” the Russian magazine *National Defense*,
in a not-so-oblique reference to the United States and Europe,* *wrote* *in
a special report this year on the Caspian naval buildup. “In these
conditions Russia is compelled to look after the security of its citizens
and the defense of the interests of the Caspian countries.”

Iran is the second power on the Caspian, and while it keeps details of its
posture on the sea under close wraps, its growing presence is impossible to
miss. Iran has built up its navy on the Caspian from nearly nothing during
the Soviet era to a force of close to 100 missile boats, two of which are
equipped with Chinese C-802 anti-ship missiles. And Tehran has announced
that it’s building a “destroyer,” which will become the largest ship in its
Caspian fleet (though probably closer to a corvette by international
standards).

The other three countries on the sea inherited some decrepit vessels from
the former Soviet Caspian flotilla, which they augmented with donations of
small patrol boats by the United States in the early days following
independence. But all now appear serious about developing real navies.
Turkmenistan, for example, is building a naval base and naval academy in
the coastal city of Turkmenbashi and has bought two Russian missile boats,
with plans to buy three more, as well as Turkish patrol boats.

Kazakhstan launched its first proper naval vessel this year — a
domestically built missile boat — with plans to buy two more. It also
recently contracted with South Korean shipbuilder STX to help develop its
shipbuilding capacity. A recent arms
expoin Kazakhstan’s capital of
Astana drew a substantial number of shipbuilders
and other naval arms producers from Europe, Turkey, and Russia, and
Kazakhstan appears poised to buy Exocet anti-ship missiles from European
consortium MBDA.

Azerbaijan has been the relative laggard, focusing nearly all of its
booming defense budget on land and air forces designed to win back the
disputed territory of Nagorno-Karabakh, now controlled by Armenian forces.
But it too has lately shown signs of focusing more on Caspian security,
buying anti-ship missiles from
Israel.

Adding a few frigates here and a few corvettes there, of course, doesn’t
mean the Caspian is the next South China Sea; the firepower and the
geopolitical tension on the sea are still low enough that the Caspian is
far from “flashpoint” status. But the trend is moving in a dangerous
direction. The five countries on the Caspian are all so opaque about their
intentions that there is plenty of room for miscalculation, leading to a
disastrous conflict that no state truly wants. It is also particularly
ironic because all the governments officially call for demilitarization of
the Caspian. Most of the countries justify their Caspian naval buildups in
light of this rhetoric by citing a threat from terrorists or piracy —
though there has been nearly no indication of either the intent or ability
of terrorists to attack.

In reality, the Caspian is a classic case of the security dilemma, in which
defensive moves can be perceived by neighbors as offensive ones. “Even if
we don’t want to spend that much money on naval militarization, we end up
spending it to keep up with all the threats,” says Reshad Karimov, an
analyst at Baku’s Center for Strategic Studies. “If someone is too safe, no
one is safe.”

The tension on the sea takes many forms. All of the post-Soviet states
mistrust Iran, especially Azerbaijan. “How will we react if tomorrow Iran
decides to install one of their oil wells in some territory that we
consider ours?” asks Tahir Ziyadov, a scholar at the Azerbaijan Diplomatic
Academy. “Maybe some crazy guy, because he got frustrated by
Azerbaijan-Israeli relations, tomorrow he will declare, ‘Go and install
that well over there.’ The possibility of serious tension is there, and
Azerbaijan will attempt not to allow it.”

Russian opposition to the proposed Trans-Caspian Pipeline is another
potential source of conflict. The United States and Europe have been active
in promoting the pipeline, which would allow Turkmenistan to export natural
gas to Europe, while bypassing Russia. But commentators in Moscow have
occasionally threatened force if a pipeline were to go ahead. “The reaction
can be very hard, up to some sort of military conflict in the Caspian Sea,”
said Konstantin Simonov, director general of the Russian think tank,
National Energy Security Fund, in an
interviewlast year.

“Russia is the wildest card in the deck — they have so many ways to mess
things up. They have the resources, they have the firepower, they have
established the political will to do that,” Karimov said.

Meanwhile, just this week, the two would-be partners in the Trans-Caspian
Pipeline, Azerbaijan and Turkmenistan, traded
accusationsabout
the disputed oil field that was at the heart of their 2008 standoff.

Russia and Iran both appear motivated to keep foreign (especially U.S. and
European) influence out of the Caspian. The U.S. has offered some modest
military assistance to help the new countries bolster their defenses on the
Caspian, including donations of some patrol boats and training of
Azerbaijani naval special forces. And it’s clear from WikiLeaked U.S.
diplomatic cables that Azerbaijan in particular relies heavily on U.S.
advice for naval issues.

Baku also appears to be using the escalating tensions on the sea to press
for greater help — and U.S. officials appear receptive to their requests.
During the 2009 incursion of the Iranian oil rig into Azerbaijani waters,
several high-level Azerbaijani officials consulted with U.S. diplomats and
military officials. One official in Baku
fretted:
“You know our military capacity on our borders. We do not have enough
capacity. We need military assistance.” In a later cable, one U.S. diplomat
said the incident “offers a timely opportunity to gain traction on Caspian
maritime cooperation with the [government of Azerbaijan].”

Russia, and especially Iran, tend to see this activity on the Caspian as an
encroachment on their strategic backyard, and they delivered thinly veiled
warnings against “third parties” getting involved in the region. “Iranians
think they are a besieged fortress,” said a Baku naval analyst who asked
not to be named. “The U.S. cooperation here is nothing special but they
build conspiracy theories about it.” Meanwhile, Azerbaijan’s strong
military relationship with Israel only adds to Iran’s suspicions.

The United States, however, has vowed to expand its involvement in the
Caspian and appears determined to help the smaller countries stand their
ground against Russia and Iran. The most recent U.S. State Department military
assistance plans
call for aid
to “to help develop Azerbaijan’s maritime capabilities and
contribute to the overall security of the resource-rich Caspian Sea.”

Meanwhile, the tension seems destined to rise. Iran recently announced a
huge new oil discovery in the Caspian, which Tehran says contains 10
billion barrels of oil.* *While Iran hasn’t yet announced the exact
location of the find, the information it has put out suggests that the
discovery, according to regional analyst Alex
Jackson,
is in “what would reasonably be considered Azerbaijan’s waters.”

As the vast wealth at stake in the Caspian becomes clearer, expect all
parties in this new battleground to deploy ever more sophisticated weaponry
to defend their interests. No word yet on when Azerbaijan is taking
delivery of those Israeli anti-ship missiles.

http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2012/06/22/the_great_caspian_arms_race
http://redbannernorthernfleet.blogspot.com/2010/02/excellent-photo-essay-on-caspian-sea.html
http://www.rferl.org/content/article/1097012.html
http://www.eurasianet.org/node/65542
http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2012/06/22/the_great_caspian_arms_race