Alexander Sotnichenko: There Will No Breakthrough In Armenia-Turkey

ALEXANDER SOTNICHENKO: THERE WILL NO BREAKTHROUGH IN ARMENIA-TURKEY RELATIONS

PanARMENIAN.Net
12.11.2008 12:30 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ A meeting between Armenian, Turkish and Azerbaijani
Presidents, if there is such, will not secure a breakthrough, according
to a Russian expert.

"The declaration signed by the Armenian, Russian and Azerbaijani
Presidents in Moscow on November 2, 2008 is the first-ever [since the
agreement on ceasefire in 1994] document containing exact proposals,"
senior lecturer at Saint-Petersburg State University, expert at the
Center of Oriental Studies, Ph.D. in historyAlexander Sotnichenko said.

In his opinion, such conflicts are usually resolved by a third party
and mostly by use of force.

"Many in Russia and abroad think that Russia always supports Armenia
but it’s not so. Russia is interested in peace and stability in the
South Caucasus because each regional conflict brings Russia flows of
refugees, drug and weapon traffic, terrorism. South Ossetia has been
the supplier of illegal alcohol to Russia until recently. Chechnya
was a center for drug traffic. The war in Abkhazia resulted in huge
refugee flows. Besides, any conflict in the South Caucasus blocks
overland trade routes to Iran and Turkey, our allies, which also
prefer a peaceful region," he said.

"While the Armenian cargo goes through Georgia, Armenia remains the
third important trade partner for Turkey, which is interested in
using Armenia as a transit for oil and gas from Azerbaijan and the
entire Caspian region. Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan is the most expensive oil
pipeline. Exporting oil through Armenia would be much cheaper. It’s
extremely profitable for Turkey and Europe but it damages Russia’s
interests because competition will increase in this case," Sotnichenko
said.

Touching on the Nagorno Karabakh conflict, the expert said that
Turkey and Russia, being ‘engaged mediators’ might find a solution
but it would arouse discontent both in Armenia and Azerbaijan. "It
will be more efficient if the sides in the Karabakh conflict take a
habit of meeting on a neutral ground, in Iran, for example. At that
Russia and Turkey should also participate in the talks," he concluded,
Russkaya Liniya reports.

Some Turkish media reported last week that President Adbullah Gul is
planning a meeting of Armenian, Azerbaijani and Turkish leaders in
Istanbul. The information was however later refuted by the Turkish
Foreign Ministry.

Gul: Armenian Genocide Not The Job For Politicians

GUL: ARMENIAN GENOCIDE NOT THE JOB FOR POLITICIANS

PanARMENIAN.Net
10.11.2008 15:22 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ If U.S. President-elect Barack Obama recognizes the
Armenian Genocide, it will be recognition of "non-existing thing as
an existing one," the Turkish President said.

"Actually, this is not the job of politicians. No one should forget
that Turks and Armenians had lived together in peace for centuries,"
Abdullah Gul told Belgian Le Vif/L’Express magazine.

"There was not a single problem between the two nations except for
the situation during World War I," Gul said.

Armenian Politician: "If Imitation Attempts "To Interfere" With The

ARMENIAN POLITICIAN: "IF IMITATION ATTEMPTS "TO INTERFERE" WITH THE CONFLICT RESOLUTION CONTINUE, NO PROGRESS WILL BE ATTAINED IN THE KARABAKH ISSUE"

Today.Az
itics/48852.html
Nov 10 2008
Azerbaijan

"The Moscow declaration once again fixed Russia’s position in
the Caucasus region, but it was not resulting from the logics of
the conflict settlement", said Kiro Manoyan, head of the Central
office of Ay Data for political issues noting that other countries,
including Turkey will continue taking imitative steps within the next
few months aimed at creating appearance of a positive achievement in
the resolution of the Karabakh issue.

"In fact, these steps may promote improvement of relations between
Armenia and Turkey and Armenia and Azerbaijan, but the Karabakh issue
will not be settled", said Manoyan.

Commenting on the declaration signing, Manoyan said definite powers
started the process of the Karabakh conflict settlement in favor of
their own interests.

"The declaration has its minuses and pluses. The greatest minus
is that Karabakh is involved into the negotiation process, but the
declaration is not undersigned by a Karabakh representative", said
Manoyan noting that the reason for concerns is also the reference in
the declaration to the Madrid proposals in the framework of the OSCE
Minsk Group, as they raise the issue of return of the liberated lands.

Yet, he considers that the declaration has its advantages, fixing that
the conflict will be settled only by a political way and it does not
mention the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan.

"Unfortunately, this is just a declaration, not a contract and,
therefore, it does not contain any binding mechanisms. The settlement
of the issue with participation of the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs is
also important, as it does not imply involvement of other forces in
the negotiation process", said Manoyan.

According to him, if the attempts "to interfere" with the conflict
resolution continue, no progress will be fixed in the Karabakh issue.

"It will be possible to settle the issue, if the conflict sides,
including Karabakh, sign a contract on the peaceful resolution of the
conflict and use due mechanisms, ensuring observance of paragraphs
of the agreement", said Manoyan.

http://www.today.az/news/pol

RA Minister Of Justice, US Ambassador Discuss Judicial Reforms In Ar

RA MINISTER OF JUSTICE, US AMBASSADOR DISCUSS JUDICIAL REFORMS IN ARMENIA

armradio.am
10.11.2008 16:26

On November 10 the Minister of Justice of the Republic of Armenia,
Gevorg Danielyan, received the Ambassador of the United States of
America to the Republic of Armenia, Mrs. Marie Yovanovitch, Press
Secretary of the Ministry of Justice informed.

During the meeting the Ambassador showed interest in the trial of
the criminal cases launched on the occasion of the events in Yerevan
on March 1-2, the draft Code of Criminal Procedure, as well as the
judicial-legal reforms in Armenia.

The Minister of Justice thoroughly presented the clarifications to all
the questions and presented the details of the judicial-legal reforms.

At the end of the meeting the parties expressed willingness to
cooperate.

Russia may push Iran-Armenia rail link

941

Saturday, November 8, 2008
Russia may push Iran-Armenia rail link

Construction of a rail link to Iran is likely to be pushed forward
with Russian backing.

At a meeting in Sochi in September, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev
discussed the project with his Armenian counterpart Serch Sarkissjan
as part of a cooperation agreement between the two countries.

The Russian Rialways (RZD) subsidiary South Caucasus Railway took over
the operation of the Armenian rail network on June 1 under a 25-year
concession, but Armenia’s only active international rail link runs via
Georgia, as the lines to Turkey and Azerbaijan are out of use.

Initial proposals for a line into Iran were first floated in 2006, and
feasibility studies for three possible alignments are currently
underway. One would start from Eraskh on the line to Ararat, one from
the current terminus at Vardenis and the other from Gagarin, to the
northeast of Yerevan.

The link would require around 80 km of new construction in
northwestern Iran, running from the Armenian border on the Aras River
to Marand on Tabriz-Djolfa line.

According to Armenian Minister of Transport and Communications Gurgen
Sargsyan, the line is expected to cost around 2 billion U.S. dollars.

Iran and Armenia have agreed to set up a working group, in which the
Russians may be invited to participate.

(Source: railwaygazette.com)

http://www.tehrantimes.com/index_View.asp?code=181

Azerbaijan Talks Peace

AZERBAIJAN TALKS PEACE

Morning Star
November 3, 2008 Monday
UK

Armenia and Azerbaijan agreed yesterday to intensify talks to end a
20-year conflict over the disputed territory of Nagorno-Karabakh.

The pledge was made during discussions outside Moscow hosted by
Russia’s president, that lasted less than three hours.

Nagorno-Karabakh has been under the control of ethnic Armenian forces
since a six-year conflict that killed about 30,000 and displaced 1
million people, before a truce was reached in 1994. Sporadic clashes
have continued.

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev proposed the talks last month.

Presidents Serge Sarkisian of Armenia and Ilham Aliyev of Azerbaijan
agreed to instruct their foreign ministers "to speed up further moves
in the negotiating process," the declaration said.

The foreign ministers will work with Russia, the US and France on
a settlement.

Washington and Moscow have both pointed to Georgia’s war with Russia
in August as underlining the need to settle other regional conflicts
through talks.

Levon Ter-Petrosian Meets With Ambassador Of U.S.

LEVON TER-PETROSIAN MEETS WITH AMBASSADOR OF U.S.

Noyan Tapan

Nov 5, 2008

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 5, NOYAN TAPAN. First RA President Levon
Ter-Petrosian met with Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary
of U.S. to RA Marie Yovanovitch on November 4. As Noyan Tapan was
informed by the central office of the Armenian National Congress,
home political issues, as well as issues regarding Nagorno Karabakh
settlement and regional developments were discussed during the meeting.

http://www.nt.am?shownews=1009451

Eurasia: Looking For Areas Of Possible US-Russian Arms-Control Coope

EURASIA: LOOKING FOR AREAS OF POSSIBLE US-RUSSIAN ARMS-CONTROL COOPERATION
Richard Weitz

EurasiaNet
Nov 3 2008
NY

Despite the recent deterioration in the West’s relations with
Russia following the August war in Georgia, two scholars at a recent
panel discussion in Washington, DC, urged the next US presidential
administration to engage the Kremlin and explore possibilities for
new arms control agreements in Eurasia.

Rose Gottemoeller, one of the participants at the October 29
round-table sponsored by the Carnegie Endowment for International
Peace, foresaw a period of unpredictability in Russian-American
relations due to the presidential transitions in both countries. She
therefore advised that in coming months both sides should strive to
"hang on to the superstructure of our relationship, as it has existed
in the many treaties and agreements that we have put together over
the years."

Responding to Defense Secretary Robert Gates’ call for fresh efforts
to bolster the US nuclear deterrent, outlined in a speech given at
the Carnegie Endowment on October 28, another round-table speaker,
George Perkovich, reaffirmed his support for abolishing nuclear
weapons as an "idea we can actually take seriously." [For additional
information, click here]. Perkovich, the Carnegie Endowment’s vice
president for studies, acknowledged that "we can’t do it alone,"
and urged the United States to promote this aim in collaboration
with other countries. "The first condition that would have to be met,
obviously, is US-Russian leadership."

Neither speaker was optimistic about achieving reductions in the
large stockpile of Russian tactical nuclear weapons deployed in
Eurasia. Perkovich pointed out that Moscow would require major
concessions since this is one of few areas in which Russia enjoys
numerical superiority over NATO.

While supportive of the status quo over the near term, Gottemoeller
suggested that modifications to existing arrangements should ultimately
be explored. "I am not in anyway advocating preserving agreements
as they have existed in the past and simply leaving them alone,"
she said, adding that Moscow and Washington ought to view "these
[existing] treaties and agreements as building blocks for our further
relationship."

For example, Gottemoeller said that, even though "we are now casting
around for a vaunted new security system in Europe" following the
war in Georgia, Washington and Moscow should try to revitalize the
Conventional Forces in Europe (CFE) Treaty. She went on to claim
that "the data exchanges, the notifications, the verification and
inspection measures that were at the core of the CFE treaty" have
helped dampen Russian concerns about NATO enlargement. While Moscow
may have acquiesced to the incorporation of the Baltic States into
the Atlantic alliance, the Kremlin, it deserves mentioning, remains
adamantly opposed to the admission of either Georgia or Ukraine. [For
background see the Eurasia Insight archive].

Referring obliquely to the ongoing situation in Georgia, Gottemoeller
asserted that "we need to review and again embrace key CFE principles,"
especially "the principle of host nation consent to the presence of
foreign troops on their territories," a norm that also underpins the
Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe.

Gottemoeller, a Carnegie Endowment expert on non-proliferation issues,
argued that a distinct advantage of using the CFE process rather than
other European security institutions is that "it gets everybody to
the table, not only the NATO countries, new and old, and not only
Russia, Ukraine and Georgia, but also countries we have been very
concerned about because of instability between them, like Armenia
and Azerbaijan."

In response to a question from EurasiaNet about the effects of
the Georgian War on WMD proliferation through the South Caucasus,
Gottemoeller agreed "that this whole area of what has loosely been
called threat reduction cooperation is a very good area not only"
in order to reduce nuclear threats (the original purpose of the
Nunn-Lugar program), "but also to help us to address the agenda that
was raised by Russia’s invasion of Georgia." [For background see the
Eurasia Insight archive].

Gottemoeller urged the next US administration to work with Moscow in
curbing Iran’s nuclear ambitions. "There are certain ways that I think
we should look again at what are some Russian proposals" to give Iran
alternatives to developing the means to manufacture indigenous nuclear
fuel though uranium enrichment, since the same technologies could
enable Tehran to produce nuclear weapons. She specifically urged
renewing support for Moscow’s offer to allow Iran to participate
in the International Uranium Enrichment Center in Angarsk, a joint
venture between Russia’s Tekhsnabeksport and Kazakhstan’s Kazatomprom
that is open to tightly controlled third-party involvement regarding
non-weapons related nuclear technologies.

Editor’s Note: Richard Weitz is a senior fellow at the Hudson Institute
in Washington, DC.

BH Member Aghasi Hakobjanian Again Receives Maximum Votes According

BH MEMBER AGHASI HAKOBJANIAN AGAIN RECEIVES MAXIMUM VOTES ACCORDING TO PRELIMINARY RESULTS OF SISIAN MAYOR’S ELECTIONS REVOTING

Noyan Tapan

Nov 4, 2008

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 4, NOYAN TAPAN. According to the preliminary results
of the November 2 revoting of Sisian Mayor’s elections, Syunik region,
Aghasi Hakobjanian, a member of the Bargavach Hayastan (Prosperous
Armenia) party, received maximum votes. 3 951 out of 7 644 voters
taking part in the revoting voted for him and 3 319 voters voted for
his main rival, ARFD member Tigran Poghosian. Noyan Tapan correspondent
was informed about it by Tatev Ohanian, the Spokesperson of the RA
Central Electoral Commission.

It should be mentioned that the October 12 election of Sisian Mayor
was invalidated under the October 27 decision of the RA Administrative
Court. A. Hakobjanian had received maximum votes in the October 12
elections, as well, but the difference of votes received by him and the
second candidate receiving maximum votes, T. Poghosian, was smaller
than the number of inaccuracies, which, according to the Electoral
Code, does not permit to find out the elected candidate.

On November 2, community head elections were also held in the rural
community of Mrgavan, Ararat region, Tegh, Khoznavar, Antarashat,
Syunik region, where the October 12 elections of community head
had been invalidated under the decisions of the respective district
electoral commissions.

According to the preliminary results of revoting, non-partisan Armen
Haroutiunian received maximum votes in Mrgavan. 598 out of 1 059
voters taking part in the revoting voted for him and 445 for RPA
member Suren Davtian. 16 ballot-papers were invalidated. The number
of inaccuracies is 0.

According to the preliminary results, Bargavach Hayastan party member
Arsen Davtian received maximum votes in Antarashat. 53 out of 95 voters
taking part in revoting voted for him and 40 for current village head,
non-partisan Seyran Hayrapetian. 2 ballot-papers were invalidated. The
number of inaccuracies is 2.

According to the preliminary results, non-partisan Saghatel Galstian
received maximum votes in Tegh. 658 out of 1 247 voters taking part
in revoting voted for him and 553 for non-partisan Onik Avagian. 36
ballot-papers were invalidated. The number of inaccuracies is 0.

Most likely, recounting of revoting results will be held in Khoznavar,
as this time also the number of inaccuracies exceeds the difference
of votes of the two candidates receiving maximum votes. 231 voters
took part in revoting here. 112 voters voted for non-partisan Kamo
Haroutiunian, 109 for non-partisan Varo Grigorian, and RPA member
Ashot Avetian received no votes.

The number of inaccuracies is 6. 7 ballot-papers were invalidated.

http://www.nt.am?shownews=1009407

BSEC PA Session Opens In Chisinau Nov. 4

BSEC PA SESSION OPENS IN CHISINAU NOV. 4

PanARMENIAN.Net
03.11.2008 17:26 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenian Deputy Foreign Minister Gegham Gharibjanian
will attend the session of the BSEC Parliamentary Assembly opening in
Chisinau on November 4, the RA MFA press office told PanARMENIAN.Net.

The Armenian diplomat is also expected to address the session.

Armenia assumed the 6-minths rotating BSEC chairmanship on October
23, 2008.