Russia To Keep Soldiers In Georgia

RUSSIA TO KEEP SOLDIERS IN GEORGIA
By Sergei L. Loiko and Borzou Daragahi

Los Angeles Times
Aug 21 2008
CA

Moscow plans to set up 18 checkpoints, some in Georgia proper,
a Kremlin official says. The plan appears to violate the terms of
a cease-fire.

MOSCOW — Russia plans to establish a long-term presence in Georgia and
one of its breakaway republics by adding 18 checkpoints, including
at least eight within undisputed Georgian territory outside the
pro-Russian enclave of South Ossetia, a ranking Russian military
official told reporters Wednesday.

The checkpoints will be staffed by hundreds of Russian troops, the
official said, and those within Georgia proper will have supplies
ferried to them from breakaway South Ossetia.

If implemented, the plan would in effect put under Russian control
the border between Georgia and the South Ossetia region, which is
seeking independence, as well as a small chunk of Georgia proper.

"This is the essence of it," Col. Gen. Anatoly Nogovitsyn, deputy chief
of the army general staff, told reporters at a briefing. He showed
maps detailing the proposed Russian positions, one just outside the
Georgian city of Gori, which lies along a crucial juncture of the
country’s main east-west highway.

"The president ordered us to stop where we were," he said. "We are
not pulling out and pulling back troops behind this administrative
border into the territory of South Ossetia."

The plans appear to violate the terms of a French-endorsed cease-fire
deal signed late last week by the presidents of Georgia and Russia. It
called for both country’s troops and allied armed groups to move back
to their positions held before hostilities between the two countries’
troops led to a Russian military incursion early this month into the
staunchly pro-U.S. Caucasus Mountains nation.

Russian officials say the deal allows them to keep troops along the
South Ossetia-Georgia border as well as within Georgia proper as
part of a peacekeeping mission begun in the 1990s. The Russians say
their peacekeeping mandate gives them access to a "security zone"
along the border.

At the United Nations, Russian Ambassador Vitaly Churkin on Wednesday
circulated a draft resolution calling for the Security Council’s
endorsement of the cease-fire plan that had been promoted last week
by French President Nicolas Sarkozy.

U.S. Deputy U.N. Ambassador Alejandro Wolff made it clear that
Washington opposed the Russian initiative. He said it is "designed
to rubber-stamp a Russian interpretation" of the cease-fire that the
West rejects.

Western envoys at the U.N. supported a French draft resolution Monday
calling for immediate Russian withdrawal from Georgia. But Russia,
which wields a Security Council veto, blocked it. The 15-member
council did not debate the rival Russian draft.

Relations between the West and Moscow have plummeted to their
lowest depths since the end of the Cold War, prompting fear that an
economically invigorated Russia would strive to reestablish authority
over what it views as its centuries-old sphere of influence, including
Eastern Europe and Central Asia. Top diplomats of the North Atlantic
Treaty Organization members said they would reconsider their relations
with Moscow in light of its incursion into Georgia.

In this month’s fighting, at least 64 Russian soldiers were killed
and 323 injured, Nogovitsyn said. Russians were outraged by what
they called an unprovoked surprise attack by Georgians on Russian
peacekeepers based in South Ossetia, as well as civilians in the
breakaway region. Georgians have accused Moscow of provoking the
fight as a pretext for sending troops into Georgian territory.

Officials in Georgia, the U.S. and European nations have demanded
that Russia pull its troops back to positions held before the fighting
broke out Aug. 7.

President Bush reiterated that message Wednesday during a speech at
the Veterans of Foreign Wars national convention in Orlando, Fla.,
and defended Georgia’s claim to South Ossetia and Abkhazia, another
pro-Moscow breakaway region.

Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said Wednesday that the presence
of Russia’s forces is "now having an effect" on Georgia’s neighbors,
Armenia and Azerbaijan, by making imports and exports difficult. She
said Armenia is beginning to see shortages.

Rice said that as of midafternoon, U.S. officials had seen no signs
of a Russian retreat from Georgia. Another U.S. official said some
movement suggested that some military units might be pulling back.

In Moscow, Nogovitsyn said "time will tell" when Russians would pull
troops out of areas they control in Georgia proper, including the
key city of Gori. He called the proposed new checkpoints "observation
posts."

Georgian officials voiced outrage over the continued Russian
presence. The Georgian Foreign Ministry announced Wednesday that
Russians had set up a new position along the highway between the
Black Sea port city of Poti and Abkhazia.

"Over the last seven days they’ve promised three times to leave,
but they’ve yet to fulfill their promises," said Alexander Lomaia,
Georgia’s national security advisor, during an interview in downtown
Gori.

"We’re here and we haven’t seen any sign of them pulling out," he
said. "There is the same number of checkpoints and the same severe
rules for entering and exiting."

The U.S. military flew in five loads of relief supplies, news agencies
reported. It is also attempting to dispatch several military vessels
from the Mediterranean to Georgia’s Black Sea coast with additional
aid.

[email protected]

Loiko reported from Moscow and Daragahi from Gori. Times staff writers
Paul Richter in Warsaw and Richard Boudreaux at the United Nations
also contributed to this report.

Erdogan: ‘We wish for soonest solution to Nagorno Karabakh conflict’

Receb Tayyip Erdogan: ‘We wish for soonest solution to Nagorno Karabakh
conflict’

2008-08-16 11:58:00

ArmInfo. Next week Turkish Foreign Minister Ali Babacan will discuss
initiative of the platform of security and cooperation in the South
Caucasus with his Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov, Turkish Prime
Minister Receb Tayyip Erdogan told reporters at the press conference in
Bodrum, Turkey, APA reports.

Erdogan said he wished for Azerbaijan and Armenia to participate in the
newly-established union. "We want to see Azerbaijan in the new
platform. Armenia can contribute to the peace and stability in the
region by joining this platform". Speaking about the Nagorno Karabakh
settlement process Erdogan said they wished for this conflict to be
solved in a short time. "Despite efforts of OSCE Minsk Group, this
conflict has continued for almost 13 years and there has been no result
yet. We wished for soonest solution to this conflict".

Assemblyman Krekorian Condemns Rep For Anti-Armenian Statements

PRESS RELEASE
Office of Assemblymember Paul Krekorian
620 N. Brand Blvd. Suite 403
Glendale, CA 91203
Adrin Nazarian Chief of Staff
(818) 240-6330
(818) 240-4632 fax
[email protected]

August 14, 2008
(818) 240-6330

Assemblyman Krekorian Condemns Congressman for Anti-Armenian Statements

GLENDALE-California Assemblyman Paul Krekorian strongly condemned a US
Congressman from Tennessee who attacked an Armenian journalist and made
bigoted anti-Armenian statements last week.

Congressman Steven Cohen, one of the most strident opponents of
recognition of the Armenian Genocide, is seeking reelection to represent
a district in Memphis, Tennessee. On the eve of his Democratic primary
election last week, Cohen conducted a press conference that was attended
by Armenian-American journalist Peter Musurlian. In a bizarre incident
that was covered by the local television news, Cohen physically
assaulted Musurlian and forced him out of the press conference. Cohen
went on to justify his outrageous conduct by referring to Armenians as
assassins and murderers.

Assemblymember Krekorian, who represents the largest Armenian community
in the United States, was outraged by the inexcusable behavior of the
Congressman. In a strongly worded letter to Cohen, Krekorian demanded a
formal apology to the Armenian people. (A complete copy of Krekorian’s
letter is attached). Krekorian has also asked the Speaker of the House
of Representatives, Nancy Pelosi, to investigate possible disciplinary
actions that can be taken against Cohen for this misconduct.

"I cannot tolerate this kind of bigoted slander against the Armenian
people from anyone, and especially not from a member of Congress,"
Krekorian said. "I’m deeply disappointed that a man with such
intolerant and ignorant views will be returning to Congress for another
term."

Television reports about Cohen’s behavior can be seen at
ws/Politics/Detail?conten
tId=3D7150474&versio n=3D1&locale=3DEN-US&layoutCode=3DVSTY&amp ;pageId=3D3.14.1

###

ASSEMBLYMEMBER KREKORIAN’S LETTER TO CONGRESSMAN COHEN

August 11, 2008

Congressman Steve Cohen
1004 Longworth HOB
Washington, DC 20515-4209

Dear Congressman Cohen:

As a member of the California State Legislature, I have the privilege of
representing the largest Armenian community in the world outside
Armenia. I am also an American of Armenian descent. As such, I must
tell you how disgusted and infuriated I was as I viewed your recent
bigoted tirade against Armenians – which I consider to be an attack
against me, my family, and the millions of good and decent and patriotic
Americans who share our ancestry. Frankly, your actions and words were
a disgrace and an embarrassment to the Congress and to our Party.

The journalist whom you physically attacked and forced out of your press
conference, and to whom you referred as "the Armenian guy" and a "yahoo
from Glendale, California" was Peter Musurlian, one of my constituents.
He is a well known, Emmy-nominated journalist and filmmaker who is
admired and respected by Armenians and non-Armenians alike in our area.
I would have been outraged by your inexcusable behavior toward my
constituent under any circumstances, but the fact that you tried to
justify your misconduct to the media by spewing hateful, slanderous and
racist invective makes the matter much more serious.

I’ve been in very tough campaigns myself, and I can sympathize with a
candidate who might temporarily lose emotional control in the heat of
the battle. What I cannot understand is how any member of the United
States Congress, and especially one claiming to be a Democrat, can make
the outrageous statement that you made to the press last week:
"…there have been Armenians who have assassinated and killed many
people, including people in this country in Los Angeles in the ’70s and
’80s, and so I don’t rest very comfortable with one of those fellows
coming into my home. . . .I don’t want these people in my home."

Given your fear of people of my ethnic background, I can only imagine
you must be downright terrified when you go to work at the Capitol and
find yourself having to deal with potentially murderous colleagues like
Armenian-American Congresswomen Jackie Speier and Anna Eshoo.

Sir, I don’t know any assassins or killers, but I know thousands of
hard-working, patriotic American citizens who are of Armenian ancestry
whom you gravely insulted with your remarks. Some of these Armenians
serve our country proudly and bravely in our Armed Forces – people like
my constituent Carla Stewart, an Armenian-American woman who was killed
in action in Iraq; and like my dad, who fought in the Battle of Okinawa
with the US Marines; and yes, like Peter Musurlian – the man you
assaulted for merely filming you at a press conference – who is a US
Army veteran who served our country in Bosnia and Croatia.

There are about two million Armenian-Americans who contribute
significantly to the great fabric of this country in countless other
ways every day. Is it too much to ask that a member of the United
States Congress not slander us all as potential terrorists and
murderers?

On behalf of all Armenian-Americans, and in fact on behalf of Americans
of every background who care about living in a society of tolerance and
who reject bigotry, I demand that you make a full and public apology for
your sickening conduct.

Very truly yours,

PAUL KREKORIAN

Assemblymember, 43rd District

###

http://www.myfoxhamptonroads.com/myfox/pages/Ne

Cargo Flow From Armenia Via Georgia Has Grown By Several Times In Th

CARGO FLOW FROM ARMENIA VIA GEORGIA HAS GROWN BY SEVERAL TIMES IN THE LAST FEW DAYS

arminfo
2008-08-14 19:02:00

ArmInfo.The cargo flow from Armenia via Georgia has grown by several
times after the end of the military actions in the Georgia-Ossetian
conflict zone.

The Ministry of Transport and Communication of Armenia reports that
127 carriages with cargo left Armenia on Aug 8-10 against 57 carriages
before the war – on Aug 4-7.

19 carriages with grain came to Armenia from the Georgian port of Poti
on Aug 14. Presently, there are 4 ships with grain in the port. One
of the ships and a ferry with 76 carriages are being unloaded.

There are 27 carriages with grain in Tbilisi and 10 carriages with
petrol in the port of Batumi.

The South-Caucasian Railways (subsidiary of Russian Railways)
carried 108 carriages with different cargoes from Georgia to Armenia
on Aug 11-14. 28 carriages with export cargo (mostly cement and
metal concentrate) left Armenia on Aug 11, 14 carriages on Aug 12,
23 carriages on Aug 13 and 16 carriages on Aug 14.

Tribulation Day In Russia And Georgia

TRIBULATION DAY IN RUSSIA AND GEORGIA

Panorama.am
14:47 13/08/2008

August 13 is announced as tribulation day by the President of
Russian Federation Dmitri Medvedev commemorating the victims of
South Ossetia. By the order of the President all the official flags
are taken off besides, cultural institutions and TV/Radio stations
are to delay the entertaining events and broadcast. It is written in
President’s register book that genocide is implemented against people
of Southern Ossetia, Tskhinvali and other towns are destroyed which
resulted in humanitarian aid crisis in South Ossetia.

The President of Georgia Mickail Saakashvili said to "Interfax"
agency that three-day tribulation is announced in Georgia.

"Tribulation day is to be announced in Georgia to commemorate victims
dead under the aggression of Russia," said Georgian President.

According to Russian mass media 1600 peaceful citizens are dead during
the military activities in South Ossetia, 18 of them were from Russian
side and 90 from Georgian.

From 13,007 Applicants 10,001 Became Students

FROM 13.007 APPLICANTS 10.001 BECAME STUDENTS

Panorama.am
20:52 12/08/2008

This year 10.001 applicants became students of the universities and
institutes of Armenia, said the Minister of Education and Science
Spartak Seyranyan.

Note that according to the official data provided by the Ministry
of Education 13.007 applications were received in 2008-09 education
year. The Minister said that 2242 students received full scholarships,
3327 are in payable sections and 4401 won’t get deferment.

The Minster of Education said that this year vacant places remained
after the exams. He added that if some of the students decide not to
attend the studies recalculation won’t be organized.

Tbilisi’s German Coach Flees Georgian Capital

TBILISI’S GERMAN COACH FLEES GEORGIAN CAPITAL

International Herald Tribune
The Associated Press
August 11, 2008
France

FRANKFURT, Germany: The German coach of Dinamo Tbilisi and six foreign
players have fled the Georgian capital and traveled to Germany because
of the conflict with Russia.

The group left Tbilisi by bus to the border with Armenia, crossed
on foot and then took another bus to the Armenian capital Yerevan,
from where it flew to Germany, coach Rainer Zobel told German news
agency DPA on Monday.

"Strategic points around Tbilisi have been attacked so we had to
leave," Zobel was quoted as saying.

Russian jets launched new raids on Georgian territory Monday,
continuing the Russian-Georgian conflict that blew up over the weekend
after a Georgian offensive to regain control of the other breakaway
province of South Ossetia.

Cohen’s Close Encounters: An Election-Eve Battle On Two Fronts

COHEN’S CLOSE ENCOUNTERS: AN ELECTION-EVE BATTLE ON TWO FRONTS

Memphis Flyer
oid=oid%3A46959
Aug 6 2008
TN

Even as one 5 o’clock local newscast was summing up a bizarre
development in the 9th District congressional race as a matter of
incumbent congressman Steve Cohen "losing his cool," a veteran
observer, looking at the same scenario from an ideological and
disinterested distance, saw the case in point in another light
altogether.

"I think it probably helped Cohen," said John Ryder, a well-known
local Republican and a GOP national committeeman. Like numerous other
Memphians, Ryder saw the TV footage of the congressman physically
ousting an uninvited Tinker supporter who, posing as a photo-journalist
and documentarian, was attempting to infiltrate a group of newsmen
convened at Cohen’s Midtown residence for a press conference.

"Maybe it’s a guy thing, and it goes beyond black and white," said
an admiring Ryder. "I think all of us around here realize that you
can’t just meekly put up with the presence of a hostile invader in
your own household."

Cohen’s close encounter occurred on the eve of what he hopes will be a
vote of confidence in Thursday’s Democratic primary. The set-to with
Peter Musurlian, a Californian of Armenian descent, occurred near
the beginning of the Wednesday morning press conference, called by
the congressman to rebut the second of two unusually virulent attack
ads this week from opponent Nikki Tinker.

Given the nature of the response to the new ad, which caused Tinker
to be all but repudiated by a major supporter, Cohen may have come
out ahead on that front as well.

A New Attack

Challenger Tinker’s first ad, appearing over the weekend, had
criticized Cohen for withholding support from a proposal to disinter
the late Confederate general Nathan Bedford Forrest. Among other
things, the commercial yoked the congressman’s image to that of a
hooded Klansman. The new ad, beginning with the voice-over of a child
at prayer, asserted that "the real Steve Cohen" was not the man who is
"in OUR churches clapping his hands and tapping his feet" but "the
Senator who thought OUR kids shouldn’t be allowed to pray in school."

It was arguable whether the "OUR " denoted "African-American" or
"Christian" or perhaps both, though the respected pundit Joshua
Marshall of the Talking Points Memo Web site was among several
observers who wasted no time pronouncing "anti-Semitism" to be at
the heart of the ad.

The two ads together meanwhile earned Tinker the stern disapproval
of the feminist PAC Emily’s List, which makes a point of supporting
women running for public office and had been one of her major nominal
sources of support. Said "Ellen Malcolm, the group’s president: "We
were shocked to see the recent ads run by the Nikki Tinker for Congress
campaign. We believe the ads are offensive and divisive. EMILY’s
List does not condone or support these types of attacks." (Though
Tinker has not, as of yet, been dropped altogether from the pro-choice
group’s roster of endorsees, she has been removed from the "Featured
Candidates" section on the Emily’s List Web site.)

Cohen had begun explaining to the journalists gathered in his den his
objections to Tinker’s new ad (among other things, he called himself
"a supporter of school prayer" and maintained that the 1997 state
Senate vote alluded to in the ad concerned a technical church-state
issue), when there were sounds of a disturbance in an adjoining room.

That turned out to be Musurlian, who had been in Memphis this week
confronting Cohen in the course of the congressman’s scheduled campaign
events. Cohen would later say that Musurlian has been stalking him
in retaliation for his role in defeating a House resolution that
would have formally condemned Turkey for its genocide against ethnic
Armenians almost a century ago. The Armenian activist had gained
entry into Cohen’s house and, claiming to be a legitimate media
representative, was involved in a heated argument with two of the
congressman’s aides, who tried to prevent him from disrupting the
press conference.

Ultimately Cohen himself, clearly perturbed, entered the anteroom
and, in the course of a shouting match, partly coaxed Musurlian and
partly shoved him through a doorway and out of the house. "He’s out
of here. Let’s start over," Cohen said. He then resumed the press
conference as scheduled – though he and everyone else present knew
that its subject matter had been superseded.

So Who Came Out Ahead?

What Musurlian gained from all of the above was some random video
of the unfriendly encounter which presumably can be put to use by
assorted Armenian pressure groups in their continuing full-court press
against Cohen’s reelection campaign. (Should such footage prove usable,
however, it would possibly undermine Musurlian’s claim that Cohen or
his aides had managed to "break" his video-camera.)

The Armenian also got the chance to speak at length about his cause
in an impromptu press conference of his own across the street from
Cohen’s house afterwards. Mursulian confirmed that supporters of the
Armenian cause like himself had contributed to Tinker’s congressonal
campaign (to the tune, Cohen would tell his press conference attendees,
of $30,000). He said that Cohen had been targeted not merely because
of his opposition to the resolution condemning Turkey but because
the freshman Memphis congressman had been a leader in quashing it.

What Cohen gained from the encounter was, first of all, the opportunity
to vent against a group — mainly composed of "outsiders," he
said – who had been tormenting him for weeks through a variety of
means, including longish, literal-minded non-sequitur screeds in
the blogosphere. He also got a chance to affirm that, while he was
against the war in Iraq, he wanted to safeguard and provision the
American troops there. He said his position on the Armenian resolution
had been partly determined by advice from General David Petraeus,
commander of the ground war, who had stressed to Cohen the importance
of not alienating the Turks, de facto allies who maintained a reliable
supply line to American forces in Iraq.

Cohen may also, as the Ryder comment indicates, have earned some macho
points for his do-it-yourself eviction – especially since Musurlian
was, on the clear evidence of the widely seen video, a stout sort who
enjoyed several pounds and more than a few years on the slightly built,
middle-aged congressman.

It was somewhat harder to see what down-in-the-polls challenger Tinker
may have gained from the day’s events – though her new ad, coupled
with her previous one, may have helped cement her pre-existing hold on
those voters for whom racial and religious loyalties outweigh all other
factors. But she has clearly lost traction with such undecided voters,
black and white, as subscribe to the amenities of polite discourse –
elements of which, in shadow form, survive even in politics. Even
Tinker’s true believers, if such really exist in the strict sense,
might have trouble exculpating her from charges of, consecutively,
race-baiting and Jew-baiting.

And there are quarters of the 9th District, as elsewhere in the
universe of Democratic voters, where there is no conceivable disgrace
like that of being designated "Worst Person in the World" by MSNBC
commentator Keith Olbermann,, who scoldingly bestowed the dubious
award on Tinker Wednesday night.

— Jackson Baker is senior editor of The Memphis Flyer and a
contributor to Memphis magazine. His primary concerns are political
coverage and general news; other duties include editorials, op-ed
contributions, and the paper’s online edition. He has worked as a
reporter for the Arkansas Gazette and as an aide in the U.S. House of
Representatives in Washington, D.C. He was a panelist on the WKNO-TV
series, Informed Sources and an assistant professor of English at the
University of Memphis. Jackson has won numerous journalism awards,
including four Green Eyeshade Awards from the Society for Professional
Journalists. A frequent TV commentator, he has written for such
periodicals as Time Magazine and the New York Times. He is married
and has four children and two grandchildren. He lives in Cordova.

http://www.memphisflyer.com/memphis/Content?

Shvarsh Kocharian Appointed Deputy Minister Of Foreign Affairs

SHVARSH KOCHARIAN APPOINTED DEPUTY MINISTER OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS

Noyan Tapan

Au g 5, 2008

YEREVAN, AUGUST 5, NOYAN TAPAN. Shavarsh Kocharian, chairman of
National Democratic Party, former member of the Armenian delegation
in the PACE, has been appointed Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs
by the president Serzh Sargsyan’s decree, the President’s press
service reported.

Shavarsh Kocharian was member of the National Democratic Union
(NDU). He was deputy of the RA National Assembly of the previous four
convocations, first as a member of the National Democratic Union’s
parliamentary faction, then as a member of the parliamentary faction of
"Ardarutiun" (Justice) Alliance.

(Shavarsh Kocharian left "Justice" Alliance in 2005.)

http://www.nt.am/news.php?shownews=116261