Georgia attempts to expel Armenians from Kvemo Kartli region

Georgia attempts to expel Armenians from Kvemo Kartli region
29.08.2009 13:54 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Following active protests and statements regarding
Georgian authorities’ anti-Armenian policy in northern Lori (Kvemo
Kartli), particularly waterline cutoff in Armenian village Damya, we
observe certain progress, Edward Abramyan, expert at Mitk analytical
centre, told a PanARMENIAN.Net reporter. To prevent conflicts between
Armenian and Georgians residing in villages, officials from Marneul
region are carrying out visits to the region to understand the causes
of waterline cutoff.

`Despite such spontaneous interest, Georgia does not pursue positive
plans in the long-run. Particularly, under Tbilisi’s direct
instruction, several Georgian marionettes with Azerbaijani origins
attempt to incite tension between local Armenians and Azeris so as to
distract both nations’ attention from Georgia’s on-going anti-Armenian
and anti-Azerbaijani policy. In that regard, we attach more importance
not only to the Armenian public-political organizations’ visits to
inhabited areas but also the voiced questions regarding Armenian
frontier villages of Kvemo Kartli. In the meantime, we add that some
Azeri marionettes like Abiala Askerov, leader of Azeris’ Popular
Movement in Georgia, has already flooded Azerbaijani press with
anti-Armenian statements,’ expert stressed.

Askerov reported to Azerbaijan’s Trend News agency that several water
reservoirs were constructed by the assistance of donor
organizations. `On behalf the region’s Armenian population, I’d like
to ask Mr. Askerov’s where those facilities are. Besides, I don’t
understand why Azeri media have not so far published their corrupt
activist’s statement in that regard. Alibalah Askerov is known to have
actively supported Georgia in populating Kvemo Kartli with
Georgians. In the 1990s, Askerov had relationship ties with Head of
National Security Service in Kazakh region, Azerbaijan. He and Askerov
were actively engaged in arms trade. They sol
o Armenians, namely, `Armenian National Army’ which used to fight for
Karabakh’s freedom and independence. Besides, Askerov has his arms
blood-stained up to the elbows. Receiving his Georgian bosses’
approval, he ordered the murder of 6 Armenian activists who were set
on fire in a car near the Azerbaijani village of Saral. This was
followed by the arrest of Smbat Urumyan, Head of `Armenian National
Army’s’ regional organization, who wanted to take revenge for such
heinous crime. However, considering several factors, organization’s
leadership closed eyes to all that. Hence, Alibala Askerov owes much
to Armenian side for its tolerance.’

NOCA Chairman Calls Diasporan Sportsmen For Performing Under RA Flag

NOCA CHAIRMAN CALLS DIASPORAN SPORTSMEN FOR PERFORMING UNDER RA FLAG

Noyan Tapan
Aug 27, 2009

YEREVAN, AUGUST 27, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. Gagik Tsarukian,
the Chairman of the National Olympic Committee of Armenia, made a
statement calling all leading Diasporan sportsmen (prize-winners of
European and world championships) for performing under Armenia’s
flag. The statement read that all authoritative and experienced
sportsmen will be provided with an apartment, car, high salary (2-5
thousand USD) and all necessary conditions.

Everybody who wishes can apply to NOCA: tel.: (+374 10) 52-84-14,
e-mail: [email protected]:

Ankara Seeks To Accuse Yerevan Of Suspending Armenian-Turkish Proces

ANKARA SEEKS TO ACCUSE YEREVAN OF SUSPENDING ARMENIAN-TURKISH PROCESS

PanARMENIAN.Net
25.08.2009 15:57 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ No real changes have been observed in
Armenian-Turkish relations over the past 2-3 months. Armenia has many
times declared its position on normalizing ties with Turkey without
preconditions, Eurointegration NGO’s chair Karen Bekaryan told
journalists today. "Recent development in the process was Armenian
Presidents statement on going to Turkey only in case the border opens
or parties are in the run-up to lifting the blockade. Such statement
was followed by a pause, although process develops in an invisible
manner," Armenian expert noted.

According to him, Turkey will do its utmost to prove to the world
that such suspension was caused by Armenia. "No wonder Turkish
media characterized Armenian leader’s statement as precondition set
by Yerevan. Turkey already creates all prerequisites for accusing
Armenia of destructive policy in case Serzh Sargsyan does not go
there to watch return football match," Karen Bekaryan said.

The return match between Turkish and Armenian national teams is due
on October 14 in Bursa, in the stadium named after Ataturk.

VoA: When Can It Be Considered Genocide And Why It Matters

WHEN CAN IT BE CONSIDERED GENOCIDE AND WHY IT MATTERS

Voice of America News
August 25, 2009

Historians today recognize the Holocaust of the mid-20th century
in which victims of Nazi Germany were killed " based on their
ethnicity, religion, or nationality " as the quintessential example of
"genocide." Six million of those victims were Jews.

But what about other ethnic or religious groups targeted for extinction
during the 20th and 21st centuries? Can their deaths also be called
genocide? And why does that designation matter so much?

The Definition

Bridget Conley-Zilkic, project director of the United States Holocaust
Memorial Museum’s Committee on Conscience, says Rafael Lemkin, an
international lawyer at the Nuremberg War Trials after World War II,
first used the term "genocide" in 1944 in a book describing patterns of
destruction in Nazi-occupied Europe that he believed were unique. "He
was trying to describe the cumulative effect of multiple attacks
against a people. And in his mind this included cultural genocide,
murder, and destruction of religious and other cultural artifacts."

But later, the legal definition of genocide would change, Conley-Zilkic
explains, and it would be restricted to "the intent to destroy " in
whole or in part " an ethnic, national, racial, or religious group
as such." But the emphasis on intent makes genocide very difficult
to prove, she notes.

Armenians in World War I

Lemkin’s understanding of genocide was greatly influenced by his
study of what had happened to more than one million Armenians in
the Ottoman Empire. And in his later work he cited Armenia as an
example of atrocities, of genocide," Conley-Zilkic says. But Turkey,
the successor state to the Ottoman Empire, denies the genocidal intent
of the mass murder of the Armenians, beginning in 1915 and continuing
beyond the end of World War I. Armenia is a controversial case today,
but the Holocaust Memorial Museum has not taken a stand one way on
the matter, Conley-Zilkic points out. Part of the controversy centers
on historical discussions between the Turkish government and the
relatives of survivors in other countries. "But another part of the
controversy is political," she notes. "Although determining what the
facts are should be a matter of study for historians," she emphasizes,
"history is not without political consequence."

"There is a lot at stake in being able to say that genocide happened,"
Conley-Zilkic explains. Group identity often gets caught up in the
question. "What is at stake for a lot of groups is an existential
threat to their existence " the sense that the entire group’s
capacity to survive has been put at risk," she says. "Genocide is a
crime that not only kills individuals but also involves an attempt
to erase a group’s record from society. And that’s what makes groups
extremely protective of the historical record around their suffering,"
she observes.

Roma and Sinti in World War II

Conley-Zilkic notes that the Roma and Sinti (Gypsies) were also
targeted in a systematic way during the Nazi period. Based on their
belief in a superior "Aryan race," the Nazis justified getting rid of
other targeted non-Aryan groups. The events of World War II raise the
question of what to do with this history, Conley-Zilkic says. "I think
there is a lot we can " and must " learn from these other histories."

Under the legal definition, those acts that constitute genocide
are biological. But other questions linger, Conway-Zilkic says. "For
example, can you destroy a group by enforced assimilation, by changing
languages, or blocking access to cultural identity?" Bosnian Muslims
in the Former Yugoslavia The International Criminal Tribunal for
the Former Yugoslavia has ruled that only one incident from the
1992-1995 war constitutes genocide " Srebrenica. In 1993, the United
Nations declared the small town in eastern Bosnia a safe haven for
Bosniaks. Conley-Zilkic says, "When the Bosnian Serbs took the town
in 1995, they systematically executed some 8,000 men and boys."

Tutsi Minority in Rwanda during War of 1994

For too long, atrocities that occurred against civilians in Africa were
treated almost as if they were a natural phenomenon, Conley-Zilkic
says. During the 1994 war in Rwanda, for example, world leaders
described the killing as tribal conflict. But she calls Rwanda the most
thorough and brutal and clear-cut case of genocide since the Holocaust.

Darfur Region in Sudan Today

Conley-Zilkic says that for the 10th anniversary of the genocide
in Rwanda, she and her colleagues at the Museum worked together on
projects to ensure that Rwanda was remembered and that the real lessons
of history had been learned. By 2004, she says there was widespread
agreement that what was happening in Darfur constituted crimes against
humanity. When civilians are targeted in large numbers, it is never a
natural phenomenon. It takes enormous planning and organization, and
the role of leaders is of extreme importance. Issue of Responsibility
by Governments

Although political leaders alone cannot create genocide, they can
choose the basic dynamics. They can choose to escalate the level
of rhetoric and hate speech. They can also choose to arm militias,
Conley-Zilkic says. Holding them accountable for those decisions
afterward is important. Some historians have suggested that other mass
atrocities bear a resemblance to genocide " for example, Stalin"s
forced famine in 1932-32 resulting in the death of seven million
Ukrainians, Japan"s killing of an estimated 300,000 Chinese in Nanking
in 1937-38, and the murder of two million Cambodians by the Khmer
Rouge in 1975-79. Other historians have raised questions about the
Trail of Tears, the forced march of the Cherokee Indian nation from
America"s southeastern states to Oklahoma in the early 19th century.

In 1948, the United Nations General Assembly adopted a resolution that
requires member nations to prevent acts of genocide during times of
war and peace. But the U.N. treaty was passed with the proviso that no
claim of genocide could be brought against signatory nations without
their consent. So, there are still barriers to enforcement.

There is probably no country on this earth, Conley-Zilkic says,
that does not have some history in its formation of some atrocity or
assault against minority groups. Facing our own difficult history is
the starting point for protecting human rights today.

Armenian-Turkish Cooperation: The Trafficking Of Armenian Women To A

ARMENIAN-TURKISH COOPERATION: THE TRAFFICKING OF ARMENIAN WOMEN TO ANTALYA
Ararat Davtyan

2009/ 08/24 | 16:21

Feature Stories

Laura Azaryan left for Turkey alone in 2001. There she married a
Turkish man Oumit Ramazan Poujlu. In 2008, she telephoned her brother,
Gagik Karapetyan and told him that they owned a casino in Turkey. She
made a proposal to her brother; that he locate young, attractive
girls in Armenia and send them to the casino to "wait on tables".

Gagik, comprehending what his sister and her husband had in mind, the
nefarious exploitation of the girls once they arrived, nevertheless
gave his verbal consent to the plan.

This is part of the descriptive file in the criminal case that has
been launched against Laura and Gagik. The case is now being heard
in the Aragatzotn Regional Court, Judge Souren Mnoyan presiding.

Gagik Karapetyan, in his preliminary testimony, noted that after many
years of living in Ukraine he moved back to Armenia in February,
2008. Two months later his sister in Turkey made the proposal to
round up girls in Armenia. He says that he told his sister that
he didn’t know where to look. His sister was persistent and Gagik,
feeling ashamed, sought the assistance of Armineh, a family in-law.

"It was May of last year. One day Gagik came to our house and said
that his brother Roubo had opened a restaurant in the Ukraine. Gagik
said that if he could find 4-5 good workers he’d turn the place into
an Armenian restaurant and it would be a success. I told him it was
great news and that I’d go as well," 51 year-old Armineh stated in
court. It was through Armineh that Gagik met with 49 year-old Rima,
who was supposed to work as a cleaner.

"A day later Gagik said that we have to leave for Turkey; that
his sister had a house and casino there where we could work. I was
supposed to work in the bar as a cashier for $500 a month. Rima would
be a dishwasher. This Gagik was a relation I trusted him. We left
for Turkey," Armineh continues.

Gagik paid for all the expenses. On May 31, 2008, he, along with
Armineh and Rima, boarded a bus for Trabzon. From there they would
travel to Antalya.

"Laura and her Turkish husband were there to greet us when we
arrived. They were very nice and hospitable. They took us to the
sea-side and showed us around the town. Ten days later however,
I had to return to Armenia to take care of some matters. Before I
left I had asked Laura several times what bar would we be working
at and why they hadn’t shown us the place. Laura told me that the
casino was quite far from where we were staying; that we’d start to
work after I returned from Armenia," recounts Armineh.

In her court testimony, Laura claims that she made no such proposal
to her brother and she was quite surprised when he arrived in Turkey,
let alone accompanied by two women.

"Armineh is a relation but Rima was a total stranger. Armineh told me
that Rima owed her $200 and asked if she could work a bit and make
some money to pay off the debt. I told Armineh that Rima was sickly
and that she couldn’t work in the bar. Armineh persisted however
and being a relation, I couldn’t refuse. I told Armineh that Rima
could stay and work sorting fruit in a factory we’d be opening in
September. She could work and pay off the debt," Laura said.

All the while, Rima told the court that after Armineh had left for
Armenia, Laura had suggested that she work in their house for $300
a month. "I did the laundry, the dishes and cleaned the house. I did
it all. I worked there for six months but never got paid," says Rima.

According to the criminal case file, when Laura found out that Rima’s
sister had two young, attractive daughters, she, along with her
brother Gagik and husband Oumit, traveled to Armenia in June 2008
to recruit the girls and that it was through Armineh that they got
acquainted with 20 year-old Irina and 18 year-old Nvard.

"Laura was trying to convince me and my sister to go to Turkey. She
would always point out the poor living conditions here in
Armenia. She’d always say how pretty I was; trying to butter me
up. I had just graduated from high school and still didn’t have a
passport. Laura told me not to fret; that she’d wait for as long as
possible. I turned her down but my sister was naïve. She trusted
Laura and left," Nvard told the court examiner.

"We really had a hard time back then. We had a $1,200 debt to pay
off. I was studying in one of the colleges in Yerevan. It was the
summer vacation, so I decided to go to Turkey for two months," says
Irina, "Laura said we’d get paid $500 a month waiting tables in the
bar, handing out tea. She even promised that I could return the next
day if things didn’t work out. Laura told my mom that she’d take care
of me like her own child."

Irina also tended to believe in Laura since she got a phone call from
her Aunt Rima in Turkey, saying that everything was OK and that there
was nothing to worry about.

During questioning in court, Rima claimed that every time she made
a phone call Gagik was watching over her like a hawk and that she
couldn’t utter a word about what was really happening. Rima also
claimed that Gagik would slip her some pills, allegedly headache
medicine, that would leave her in a "drunken stupor".

Nuneh, born in 1985, also believed Laura’s promises of easy money and
a better life in Turkey. Nuneh, along with Irina, left for Antalya
in the company of Oumit Poujlu on August 8, 2008. Laura, on the other
hand, remained in Armenia. On her return to Armenia, the Turkish border
guards noticed that her visa had expired so they deported her. In order
that she could once again enter Turkey she entered into a sham marriage
with a man named Azaryan and officially had her last name changed.

Irina recounts, "Laura and Oumit took care of the visas and travel
expenses. After arriving in Antalya they treated us well for the first
four days; they showed us the sites, the sea. Later they invited us
out to a casino-bar, which was really a night club. We were seated
around a large table in the presence of some scantily clad older
Turkish women. They were there to entertain the customers. Oumit and
Gagik told us right there that we’d be doing the same thing."

The criminal case file reads, "…threatening that they would leave
them alone, hungry and without passports in a foreign land, depriving
them of freedom of movement and any possibility to return to Armenia,
Oumit Poujlu and Gagik Karapetyan, in prior agreement with Laura
Azaryan, forced the girls to perform belly dances and perform the
wishes of clients; to sit on their laps, allow them to be kissed
and to place their hands on intimate body parts. This took place
in the "Melody" and "Kartila" night casino-bars in Antalya. These
establishments belonged to others."

"…There was no other alternative. We were forced to work in these
bars and entertain the clients, however disgusting the work. We get
the clients to drink up. The daily minimum we’d make off the drinks
was about $200. It all went to Oumit and Gagik. We never got paid a
dime. They’d even get angry when the daily take was low."

Nuneh testified in court that, "We’d eat once a day and sleep on the
floor. They generally wouldn’t let us leave the house, fearing that
we’d get picked up by the police and give them away. They’d lock us
inside the house and take us to the bar by car."

"You can’t imagine the state I was in. I held back my tears and put on
a fake smile for the customers; so that they wouldn’t complain. The bar
owners weren’t satisfied with how Rima was working. Gagik then began
to threaten me and even slapped me around a few times, saying I wasn’t
pulling my weight and wouldn’t get anything to eat. We showered with
cold water. Gagik said heating the water used up too much electricity.

Irina remembers that, "From day one Gagik tried to butter me up, saying
that he was in love with me. He even proposed that we live together
and said that if I didn’t agree to marry him he’d throw me from the
10th floor…They had taken my passport and only handed it back when I
went to work. They said it was just in case authorities from Istanbul
came. If only just one policeman had shown up. But no one ever came."

During court interrogation Gagik stated, "I’m a 40 year-old man and
never in my life would I allow myself to do such things. Irina didn’t
get along with me because I would make comments about her cleaning." He
added that he proposed marriage as a joke. Laura, Gagik’s sister,
testified that she was in Armenia and knew nothing about what was
going on.

"I telephoned my husband and asked if the girls had adapted and if
they were all-right. He said they were OK. They travelled around
there for more than a week. I gave them a place to stay. I’m not the
person that usually does that. I’m also upset that my husband took
the girls to the sea-side. I asked my husband on the phone whether
he wasn’t embarrassed of what the neighbors would say; that he left
our building with these girls in tow and drove off to the beach? I
told him to send them back to Armenia immediately," Laura testified,
arguing her innocence in the matter and denying any involvement in
any sexual exploitation of the girls.

"About 10-15 days after the girls left, Irina secretly called me from
Turkey and said that Laura had tricked them and that they were engaged
in some pretty ‘inappropriate’ work, recounts Armineh, who is included
in the case as a witness. "I immediately went to see Laura who said
nothing of the kind was taking place and that it was all a pack of
lies. She phoned her husband Oumit and conversed in Turkish with him,
but I could make out that she was angry with him for giving the girls
phone access. I directly went to the police and informed them about
the entire matter."

According to the time frame presented by Armineh, the police had been
informed about Laura and her Turkish operation no later than August
25, 2008. However, on September 3, 2008, she was able to cross the
Armenian border at Bagratashen and make her way to Batum. Her Turkish
husband Oumit was waiting for her there and for the "cargo" she was
bringing – Lilit, born in 1979, and her 8 year-old daughter.

http://hetq.am/en/hetq/laura-gagik/

President Serzh Sargsyan Participates In Closing Ceremony Of Grand P

PRESIDENT SERZH SARGSYAN PARTICIPATES IN CLOSING CEREMONY OF GRAND PRIX IN JERMUK

ARMENPRESS
YEREVAN, AUGUST 24, 2009

Chairman of the Armenian Chess Federation, President of Armenia Serzh
Sargsyan visited August 23 Armenian resort town of Jermuk to be present
at the closing ceremony of the Grand Prix "Jermuk-2009" tournament
dedicated to the 80th anniversary of Tigran Petrosyan. Greeting the
present Serzh Sargsyan noted that this tournament was a chess holiday
not only for Armenia but for the whole chess loving community of
the world.

In his speech the president thanked International Chess Federation
and its Chairman Kirsan Ilyumzhinov for cooperation in the conduction
of the tournament. The president also thanked the participating chess
players who showed a beautiful game. Serzh Sargsyan also congratulated
the winner Vassily Ivanchuk.

After the speech the Armenian President, Tigran Petrosyan’s son Vardan
Petrosyan, and leadership of FIDE awarded souvenirs and prizes to
the first three winners of the championship.

The participants of the ceremony warmly congratulated the winner of
"Grand Prix" Levon Aronyan. The president too congratulated Aronyan
and handed him a certificate on acquiring an apartment in one of the
newly built buildings in downtown Yerevan.

Armenia Sailer And Its Crew To Be Met In U.S.

ARMENIA SAILER AND ITS CREW TO BE MET IN U.S.

Noyan Tapan
Aug 19, 2009

LOS ANGELES, AUGUST 19, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. The Armenian
sailer named Armenia will reach California on August 24. According
to a correspondent of Noyan Tapan, on the initiative of the Armenian
Consulate General of Los Angeles the sailer and its crew will be met
on that day in Los Angeles. It began its voyage round the world on
the Diasporan ways from Spanish Valencia city this year on May 28,
the Day of the First Republic of Armenia.

The Armenia sailer has already passed Gibraltar, the Atlantic Ocean,
Barbados Island, Panama Canal, then it will reach New Zealand,
Australia, Indian Ocean, Indonesian Islands, Singapore, Indian
Peninsula, the Persian Bay, the Red Sea, the Mediterranean Sea through
the Pacific Ocean. The end of the navigation will be Beirut.

The Armenia sailer will cast its anchor in San Pedro port. Captain Zori
Balayan and his crew are sure that passing through their ancestors’
ocean route will be a tie between Diaspora and Armenia. They are going
to make excavations in all continents to discover and present the
Armenian memorials, they will meet the Armenians living in Diaspora
who have created a small part of their Homeland by keeping all signs
of the culture.

Both our compatriots of Diaspora and foreigners will have an
opportunity to see the Armenia sailer at San Pedro port on August
24. The symbol of Eternity, the Armenian Cross, and the 36 letters of
Mashtots alphabet (the Armenian alphabet) are located in the middle
of the sailer.

"Our compatriots of California wait for the Armenia sailer from
Armenia with great triumph and enthusiasm", a correspondent of Noyan
Tapan reported from Los Angeles.

Gayane Manukian, United States, for Hayern Aysor

Russia/Georgia/U.S. One Year Later Who Came Out Ahead?

Week end Edition

August 21-23, 2009

Russia/Georgia/U.S. One Year Later
Who Came Out Ahead?

By ERIC WALBERG

War clouds refuse to disperse a year after Georgia waged war against
Russia. On the anniversary of Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili’s
ill-fated invasion of South Ossetia 8 August, Russian President Dmitri
Medvedev warned: "Georgia does not stop threatening to restore its
‘territorial integrity’ by force. Armed forces are concentrated at the
borders near Abkhazia and South Ossetia, and provocations are
committed," including renewed Georgian shelling of the South Ossetian
capital Tskhinvali.

What is the result of the Ossetia fiasco? Did Russia "win" or "lose"?
Has it put paid to NATO expansion? What lessons did Saakashvili and
his Western sponsors learn? Analysts have been sifting through the
rubble over the past few weeks.

Some, such as Professor Stephen Blank at the US Army War College,
dismiss any claim that Russia was justified in its response, that
"even before this war there was no way Georgia was going to get into
NATO." He insists that Russia lost, that its response showed Russian
military incompetence and weakness, resulting in huge economic losses,
with the EU now seeking alternative energy sources and the US
continuing to resist Russian sensitivities in its "near abroad".
Georgetown University Professor Ethan Burger compared the situation to
"Germany’s annexation of Czechoslovakia", with the US playing the role
of plucky Britain facing the fascist hordes. Apparently Burger sees
the Monroe Doctrine as a one-way street. Tell that to the Hondurans.

Indeed, the Russian military is a shadow of its former Soviet self, as
is Russia itself, having been plundered by its robber barons and their
Western friends over the past 20 years. Although the Georgian army
fled in disarray, "major deficiencies in operational planning,
personnel training, equipment readiness and conducting modern joint
combat operations became evident," though "it proved that it remains a
viable fighting force," writes Vladimir Frolov at russiaprofile.org.

And the West, angry at the de facto Russian "win" in Ossetia, pulled
out many stops to undermine the Russian economy afterwards. Beside the
$500 million military operation itself, "capital flight" reached $10
billion and currency reserves decreased by $16 billion. Overall, it is
estimated that the war cost Russia $27.7 billion.

Other analysts, such as German Council on Foreign Relations (CFR)
analyst Alexander Rahr, see the war as a blip in East-West relations.
"The West has forgotten the Georgian war quickly. Georgia and
Saakashvili are not important enough to start a new Cold War with
Russia. The West needs Moscow’s support on many other issues, like
Iran. The West is not capable of solving the territorial-ethnical
conflicts in the post-Soviet space on its own. The present status quo
suits everyone." He even predicts that if Moscow decides to stay in
Sevastopol after 2017, "there will be no conflict over this issue with
the West."

Sergei Roy, editor of the Russian Guardian, notes that the conflict
produced "greater clarity or, to use a converse formula, less
indeterminacy both in the international relations and domestically".
He recalls that Putin tried to reach Bush on the hotline established
for precisely such crises. "There simply was no response from the
other side. Dead silence," a definite sign of that other side’s
"direct complicity in Saakashvili’s bloody gamble." Roy mourns that
superpower rivalry is alive and well, though "Russia, has done
everything it realistically could (ideologically, politically,
militarily, economically, culturally) to embrace and please the West.
Everything, that is, except disappearing entirely. But disappear it
must."

Roy is referring to the overarching US/NATO plans to promote
instability and disintegration throughout the former Soviet Union (and
not only). The strategy is Balkanisation of the Caucasus (Dagestan,
Chechnya and other autonomous regions), with the same strategy
applicable to Iran, Iraq and China. The principle being, "Don’t fight
directly, use secessionist movements within your adversary to weaken
him." Though on the back burner as a result of the Ossetia setback,
the US has been perfecting this strategy for decades now, most
infamously in Yugoslavia, sometimes by direct bombing and invasion,
sometimes by bribery, NGOing and color revolutions.

While Western media accuses Russia of doing this in Georgia, South
Ossetia and Abkhazia are best viewed as stop-gap entities asserting
Russian hegemony in a world of US-sponsored pseudo-democracies. A new,
more sober Georgian political regime which recognizes the situation
for what it is and establishes a pragmatic, even cooperative
relationship with Russia could probably negotiate some kind of
compromise within the Commonwealth of Independent States, though
according to leader of the Georgian Labour Party Shalva Natelashvili,
"dozens of Latin American states, Bolivia, Venezuela, Cuba, Honduras,
Ecuador and others, intend to recognise Abkhazia and so-called South
Ossetia.While our poor president is busy preserving his throne,
Georgian disintegration continues and deepens."

The war certainly destroyed any prospects of Georgia’s membership in
NATO (which were very real, despite Blank’s denial). However, NATO
plans for Georgia and Ukraine stubbornly proceed apace. Ex-deputy
assistant secretary of state for European and Eurasian affairs Matt
Bryza brought Saakashvili $1 billion as his parting gift to rebuild
tiny Georgia’s military in conformity to NATO specifications. Oh yes,
and to train Georgian troops bound for Afghanistan. In other words, to
prepare Georgia for incorporation into US world military strategy,
whether or not as part of NATO. After all, Columbia isn’t part of NATO
and is getting the same red carpet treatment, a conveniently placed
ally in the US feud with Venezuela. Perhaps NATO’s Partnership for
Peace can do the trick with Georgia.

The new Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for European and Eurasian
Affairs, Tina Kaidanow, explained her qualifications for US-sponsored
Balkanisation in April: "I worked in Serbia, in Belgrade and in
Sarajevo, then in Washington, and I went back to Sarajevo and am now
in Kosovo." Andrei Areshev, deputy director of the Strategic Culture
Foundation, warned on PanArmenian.net that her new appointment "is an
attempt to give a second wind to the politicisation of ethnicity in
the North Caucasus with the possibility of repeating the ‘Kosovo
scenario’." The US will simply continue its double standard of
recognising Kosovo’s secession while arming Georgia and Azerbaijan to
overturn the independence of Abkhazia, Nagorno Karabakh and South
Ossetia — none of which "seceded" from anything other than new
post-Soviet nations they never belonged to.

All this petty intriguing masks a much more important result of the
Russian response to last summer’s provocation. Very simply, Russian
resolve prevented a 1914-style descent into world war. This time,
quite possibly a nuclear war, especially in light of Russia’s much
taunted military weakness in relation to the US. A desperate nation
will pull out all the stops when backed to the wall, which is where
the US and its proxy NATO have positioned Russia. "Had Russia
refrained from engaging its forces in the conflict, the nations of the
northern Caucasus would have serious doubts about its ability to
protect them. This would in turn lead to an array of separatist
movements in the northern Caucasus, which would have the potential to
start not only a full-scale Caucasian war, but a new world war,"
according to Andrei Areshev.

Plans for carving up Russia by employing Yugoslav-style armed
secessionist campaigns were laid out in 1999 when the conservative
Freedom House thinktank in the United States founded the American
Committee for Peace in Chechnya, with members including Zbigniew
Brzezinski and neocons Robert Kagan and William Kristol, according to
Rick Rozkoff at globalresearch.ca. This frightening group has now
morphed into the American Committee for Peace in the Caucasus
"dedicated to monitoring the security and human rights situation in
the North Caucasus."

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov recently confirmed that plans
around last August’s war were on a far larger scale than merely
retaking South Ossetia and later Abkhazia, that Azerbaijan was
simultaneously planning for a war against Armenia, a member of the
Russian-sponsored Collective Security Treaty Organisation. NATO-member
Turkey could well have intervened at that point on behalf of
Azerbaijan, and a regional war could have ensued, involving Ukraine
(it threatened to block the Russian Black Sea fleet last summer) and
even Iran. Ukraine has long had its eyes on pro-Russian Transdniester.
It doesn’t take much imagination to see how this tangled web could
come unstuck in some Strangelovian scenario.

Just as the origins of WWI are complex, but clearly the result of the
imperial powers jockeying for power, the fiasco in Georgia can be laid
squarely at the feet of the world’s remaining imperial superpower. The
mystery here is the extent of Russian forebearance, the lengths that
Russia seems willing to go to accommodate the US bear. Over the past
decade, Russia watched while the US and NATO attacked Yugoslavia,
invaded Afghanistan, set up military bases throughout Central Asia,
invaded Iraq, assisted regime collapse/ change in Yugoslavia, Georgia,
Adjaria, Ukraine and Kyrgyzstan, and schemed to push Russia out of the
European energy market. The question is not why Russia took military
action but why it hasn’t acted more decisively earlier.

And, now, why it has given the US and NATO carte blanche in
Afghanistan. The US continues to strut about on the world stage and,
with its Euro-lackeys, to directly threaten Russia with war and civil
war, taking time out to sabotage its economy when it pleases. Its
plans for Afghanistan as a key link in its world energy supplies
(which could, of all goes well, exclude Russia) are well known. The
Russians are also not unaware of evidence of US complicity in the
production and distribution of Afghanistan’s opium, even as the US
piously claims to be fighting this scourge. Sergei Mikheev, a
vice-president of the Centre for Political Technologies, said, "NATO’s
operation in Afghanistan is dictated by the aspiration of the US and
its allies to consolidate their hold on this strategically and
economically important region," which includes Central Asia. He
criticised Russian compliance with US demands for troop and materiel
transport. According to Andrei Areshev, "Russia’s position on this
issue has not been formulated clearly."

More ominous yet, writes Sergei Borisov in Russia Today, the operation
in Afghanistan is "a key element of the realisation of the project of
transforming the alliance into an alternative to the UN." While the
original invasion of Afghanistan was rubber-stamped by the UN, it was
carried out by the US and NATO, and the UN has been merely a passive
bystander ever since. NATO is being transformed from a regional
organisation into a global one: "If the norms of international laws
are violated, then with time the Afghan model may be applied to any
other state."

Perhaps it’s a case of "Damned if you do, damned if you don’t." While
a direct attack like that of last August simply had to be met head-on,
Russia has to be careful not to unduly provoke the US, which can
unleash powerful forces against Russia on many fronts — economic,
geopolitical, military, cultural — picking up where it left off in
1991 with the destruction of the Soviet Union. Russians are not
cowards, but realists, and appear to be pursuing a holding action,
hoping to wait out the US, counting on its chickens coming home to
roost. Meanwhile, as Roy urges, Russia can use the current breathing
space it have gained from pushing back the NATO challenge to "lick its
armed forces into shape" and prepare for the next unpleasant surprise.

Eric Walberg writes for Al-Ahram Weekly
You can reach him at

http://counterpunch.com/walberg08212009.html
http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/.
http://ericwalberg.com/

Impulse suffers first repulse in Armenia’s championship of Football

Impulse suffers first repulse in Armenia’s championship of Football
First League
22.08.2009 16:38 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Dilijan Impulse in the 17th round of Armenia’s
championship of Football First League suffered its first defeat,
losing to Mika-2 with the score 1:2. In the current championship in 15
games Impuls won 11 victories and tied three games.
But despite the defeat, Impulse with 36 points continues to lead the
tournament table ahead of closest pursuer Yerevan’s Shengavit by 5
points.
The results of 16th round:
"Mika-2" – "Impulse" – 2:1
Goals: Stepan Gevorgyan – 31, Ashot Khachatryan – 87 (Mika-2), Arman
Minasyan – 36
"Banants-3" – "Pyunik-2 – 1:1
Goals: Sedrak Shahbazyan – 30 (Pyunik-2), Arman Arakelyan – 37
(Banants-3).
"Shengavit" – "Shirak-2 – 5:1
Goals: Galust Petrosyan – 28, Rafael Vardanyan – 33, Arthur Barseghian
– 35, Henrik Haroutyunyan – 52, Vilen Barseghian – 73 (Shengavit),
Michael Sargsyan – 87 (Shirak-2).
"Pyunik-3" – "Banants-2 – 0:6
Goals: Walter Pogosyan – 22.76, Tigran Barseghyan – 41, Gor Gugujyan –
43, 69, Narek Gyozalyan – 54.
Tournament position after 17 rounds:
1. "Impulse" – 36 points
2 "Shengavit – 31
3. "Banants-2" – 27
4. "Pyunik 2 – 27
5. "Mika-2" – 16
6. "Gandzasar-2" – 16
7. "Shirak-2" – 15
8. "Pyunik -3 – 14
9. "Banants-3 – 9.

RA President Has Telephone Conversation With U.S. Secretary Of State

RA PRESIDENT HAS TELEPHONE CONVERSATION WITH U.S. SECRETARY OF STATE ON AUGUST 20

Noyan Tapan
Aug 21, 2009

YEREVAN, AUGUST 21, NOYAN TAPAN. In the evening of August
20, RA President Serzh Sargsyan had a telephone conversation
with U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on the latter’s
initiative. According to a report by the RA President’s Press Office,
issues related to Armenian-American bilateral relations and regional
problems, in particular, the Armenian-Turkish dialogue, were discussed
at the meeting.