US-Azerbaijan Relations: Capitol Hill Hearing Testimony: Statement O

US-AZERBAIJAN RELATIONS: CAPITOL HILL HEARING TESTIMONY: STATEMENT OF DR. SVANTE E. CORNELL

CQ Congressional Testimony
February 12, 2015 Thursday

U.S.-AZERBAIJAN RELATIONS: COMMITTEE: HOUSE FOREIGN AFFAIRS

SUBCOMMITTEE: EUROPE, EURASIA, AND EMERGING THREATS

CAPITOL HILL HEARING TESTIMONY

Statement of Dr. Svante E. Cornell , Director, Central Asia-Caucasus
Institute School of Advanced International Studies The Johns Hopkins
University

Committee on House Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on Europe, Eurasia,
and Emerging Threats

February 12, 2015 2

Introduction

This hearing occurs at a low point in relations between Azerbaijan and
the United States, a relationship that was once a well-functioning
strategic partnership characterized by a high level of trust. To
understand the reasons behind this state of affairs, and especially to
seek ways to improve the current situation, it is necessary to briefly
delve into Azerbaijan’s regional security situation and its politics;
and not least, the policy of the U.S. in Eastern Europe and Eurasia
more broadly.

Azerbaijan’s situation has unique characteristics, but the topic
today is part and parcel of several larger trends: first of all,
it is an acute case of the declining influence of the West, and
particularly the United States, in all of post-communist Europe
and Eurasia – in all sectors, including security, energy and human
rights. Secondly, the decline of Azerbaijan’s relationship with the
U.S. bears similarities to tensions in America’s ties with a number of
other allies, from Israel to South Korea, that have grown wary of U.S.

foreign policy.

Before delving into these matters, it is important to review briefly
why Azerbaijan and its region matters to America’s interests.

Why Does Azerbaijan Matter, and What Are U.S. Interests?

The main importance of Azerbaijan and the Caucasus lies in its crucial
geographical location at the intersection of multiple crossroads. It
lies between the Black and Caspian seas, and thus between Europe and
Asia as well as providing the land link between Russia and the Middle
East. Its key strategic value is twofold. On one hand, it lies at the
intersection between Russia, Iran and Turkey, powers playing key roles
in international politics. On the other, it is the bottleneck of the
burgeoning east-west corridor connecting Europe to Central Asia and
beyond. In this Caucasus corridor, Azerbaijan is the only country
bordering both Russia and Iran, and therefore the geopolitically
most pivotal country. Former National Security Advisor Zbigniew
Brzezinski acknowledged this in his 1997 book The Grand Chessboard,
in which he termed Azerbaijan one of the five geopolitical pivots of
Eurasia together with Ukraine, South Korea, Turkey and Iran.

As a result, Azerbaijan and its region is key to western efforts to
shape the future of the intersection of Europe and the Middle East, and
to any reaction to crises occurring in this wider area. It also plays a
central role in western access to the heart of the Eurasian continent,
whether it be for energy, transport, trade, or military purposes. The
strategic importance of Azerbaijan and its region can also be stated
in terms of the current difficult moment in international politics,
where the two most salient challenges to the transatlantic alliance
are Russia’s aggressive expansionism, and the Islamic radicalism
emanating from the Middle East.

The states of the Caucasus and Central Asia, Azerbaijan in particular,
are unique as they are an important pressure point in both directions.

The task of countering Putin’s Russian imperialism goes beyond Ukraine,
and requires a firm strategy to bolster the states on Russia’s
periphery, and especially to maintain the crucial east-west corridor
to Central Asia open. But the Caucasus and Central Asia also include
fully one half of secular Muslim-majority states in the world.

These states may have far to go in terms of democratic development,
but their governments and populations are committed to the separation
of state and religion, to secular laws, and to the protection of
state and society from religious extremism. Azerbaijan is unique in
being a majority Shi’a Muslim state, bordering Iran, which is based
on a secular form of statehood.

Thus, the Caucasus (and Central Asia) should be seen as bulwarks
against both Moscow and the Islamic radicalism of the Middle East.

This is amplified by other regional trends. The Iranian theocracy
continues to assertively expand its regional influence, as events
from Syria to Iraq to Yemen indicate. In Turkey, the deterioration
of secular government has given rise to a growing anti-western
authoritarianism with Islamist underpinnings, endangering the
Turkish-American alliance. As a country sharing linguistic bonds
with Turkey and religious ties with Iran, Azerbaijan is once again
uniquely situated.

As mentioned, Azerbaijan is the lynchpin in the land bridge that
the Caucasus constitutes linking Europe with Central Asia. This is
important concretely in terms both of Europe’s energy security,
and America’s military access to the heart of Eurasia, including
Afghanistan.

The creation of a pipeline system connecting Azerbaijan’s Caspian
Sea oil and gas resources via Turkey to Europe, which began a decade
ago, broke the Russian monopoly over the exportation of Caspian
energy resources, and provides Europe with an important source of
diversification. Through Azerbaijan, Europe has the opportunity to
access Central Asia’s even larger natural gas resources. Second,
after the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, the U.S. faced
the enormous challenge of waging a war in the heart of the Eurasian
continent, thousands of miles from the closest U.S. military base.

America’s response was made possible by the introduction of U.S.

military power into Central Asia – which was achieved in turn through
the air corridor across Georgia and Azerbaijan. Later, a Northern
Distribution Network was created which includes access through Russia;
but given the state of Russia-West relations, that corridor cannot
be counted on. Moscow has already on two occasions in the past few
months blocked the German Air Force from using Russian territory to
supply its presence in Afghanistan. Thus, access through Azerbaijan
will remain crucial for any continued presence in Afghanistan or
future contingencies.

In sum, therefore, the Caucasus and particularly Azerbaijan has an
important place in the western strategy to meet imminent threats
in Eastern Europe and the Middle East, as well as in long- term
contingencies for a variety of challenges in the wider region. The
U.S. has a serious and strategic interest in ensuring that the
Caucasus, and Azerbaijan, maintain a positive relationship with the
West, and remain open for western access.

Concrete U.S. Interests

The title of this hearing correctly assumes that the relations
between Azerbaijan and the United States occur in diverse areas,
usually summarized as security, energy and human rights; and that
the U.S. has important interests in each area. In more specific and
concrete terms, American interests in Azerbaijan and the region can
be summarized as follows:

For Azerbaijan and the states of the Caucasus to be stable, sovereign
and self-governing states controlled by none of their neighboring
powers; and cooperating actively with Western governments and
institutions on regional security, counter- terrorism and conflict
resolution.

For the conflicts of the Caucasus, particularly the Armenian-
Azerbaijani conflict, to be placed on a path toward long-term and
peaceful resolution, within the framework of international law,
and with the degree of manipulation of external powers minimized.

For Azerbaijan to be a state with secular laws in a geographical
environment that includes theocratic Iran, Iraq, the North Caucasus,
and Turkey.

For Azerbaijan and its neighbors to evolve gradually but assuredly
into a zone of self-governing, law-based states that respect human
rights, are free of corruption, and are responsive to citizens’ needs.

For Azerbaijan and its neighbors to be a source and transit corridor
for energy, in particular contributing to diversifying the sources
of Europe’s energy supplies, and to function as a reliable territory
for Western access by land and air to and from Central and South Asia.

For Azerbaijan and its neighbors to develop into an important land
trade corridor connecting Europe, China, and India not controlled by
any of them but protected by all.

Unfortunately, developments over the past decade have not
furthered these interests. The sovereignty of the regional states
is increasingly under question as blatant interference by Russia
has mounted, complemented by lesser degrees of meddling by Iran and
Turkey. The Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict is on a path of escalation,
not resolution. Azerbaijan remains committed to secular laws, but the
political development of the country and its rights record has come
under increasingly strong criticism. The development of the energy
corridor to the West has been stalled and faced multiple hurdles in
the past decade. Progress toward making the Caucasus a land corridor
is proceeding, but at a slow speed.

Meanwhile, for most of the past decade, America’s ability to affect
developments in Azerbaijan and the entire region has been in decline.

In retrospect, the 2008 Russian invasion of Georgia was a turning
point, after which the situation in the region, and western influence
there, has deteriorated. In fact, it is no exaggeration to state that
at no time since the collapse of the Soviet Union has the U.S. had
less influence over regional matters than today.

Changes in the Region: Impact on the U.S.-Azerbaijan Relationship

The U.S.-Azerbaijan relationship is the most acute exhibit of a
trend of declining American influence. A decade ago, this was a
relatively strong strategic partnership, characterized by mutual
respect and a functioning dialogue between two governments. Today,
its main characteristic is bitter acrimony on both sides.

What are the reasons for this? It is customary to blame Azerbaijan’s
domestic evolution for the decline in the relationship. While this is
one factor, the question that should be asked is how the U.S. could
have allowed a relationship with a geostrategically pivotal country
like Azerbaijan to deteriorate so badly, and without taking serious and
visible efforts to engage its leadership until very recently. A decade
ago, the Azerbaijani government was considerably more responsive to
U.S. criticism and advice concerning its domestic political system,
management of elections, and human rights record.

What has changed in the past decade, and why is this no longer
the case?

First, Azerbaijan has benefited from a large inflow of wealth from
its oil and gas industry. It was the fastest-growing economy in the
world for several years – a major change in a country that was in a
dilapidated condition, indeed a failing state, only twenty years ago.

That has brought an ability to provide adequate funding to state
institutions; co-opt large portions of the elite, particularly young
professionals; as well as acquire legitimacy in considerable chunks of
society. Opinion polling from the respected Caucasus Research Resource
Centers shows that the broader population’s approval of government
services is growing, not falling. This new-found wealth has led to
a growing reluctance to take advice from abroad; this factor has
been compounded by the intra-elite politics within the government,
as discussed below.

A more important factor is the regional environment, which has worsened
considerably. Aggressive Russian efforts to reassert control over the
former Soviet republics have contributed to a siege mentality. In the
past seven years, Russia has invaded two post-Soviet states (Georgia
and Ukraine) militarily, helped orchestrate a coup d’etat in a third
(Kyrgyzstan), and strong- armed a fourth (Armenia) to drop all efforts
at European integration in favor of the Eurasian Union. Russian
subversion is on the rise across the former Soviet sphere, as it
is in western countries. To this should be added constant Iranian
subversive activities, as well as a growing tendency by Turkey to
interfere in Azerbaijan’s internal affairs. This, put together, has
formed a powerful inhibitor against loosening government control over
state and society.

Missteps in American Policies

However, U.S. policies – or the lack thereof – have been an important
contributing factor. It is important to recall that America’s
relationship with Azerbaijan, like all former Soviet states, was
built on several components. A constructive dialogue on human rights
and democracy was one of these. Another was American engagement in
supporting the development of the east- west energy corridor, which
enabled Azerbaijan to market is resources independently. A third
was close cooperation on security issues, which included America’s
efforts to help resolve the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict, as well
as bilateral cooperation on defense, security, intelligence sharing
and counter-terrorism.

These three areas, then, formed a tripod upon which U.S. policy was
based. But in the past decade, that tripod has for all practical
purposes faltered. American engagement in energy issues was strong
down to the completion of initial pipeline infrastructure ten years
ago; it has declined since then. The position of a U.S. Special Envoy
for Eurasian Energy has been abolished; and America’s role in the
efforts to bring Caspian natural gas to Europe is minimal. Security
interests gained salience after 9/11, but began a slow decline after
2003 as U.S. attention shifted to Iraq and European governments
were unwilling to pick up the slack. Not least, U.S. leadership in
resolving the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict has been missing.

As a result, for most practical purposes, the promotion of democracy
and human rights has been the only leg of U.S. policy proceeding at
full speed, leading to an imbalance in the tripod that forms the
underpinning of American strategy. Furthermore, this is certainly
the way the relationship is seen from Baku’s perspective. In large
parts of the elite, this is leading to a growing questioning of U.S.

motivations, and a growing inclination to entertain conspiracy theories
(propagated not least by Russian media) on alleged American plots to
overthrow governments.

To be clear, the argument here is not that the U.S. has engaged too
deeply in democracy promotion. The problem is that the U.S. has not
balanced that important commitment with equal attention to security
and energy, and has not adapted its methods to be successful in view
of evolving regional realities.

In this context, the period following the 2008 war in Georgia was a
watershed. That war laid bare the brute force Russia was willing to
deploy to achieve its interests; it also showed that the West did
not function as an effective deterrent against Russia. Not staying
at that, the two American initiatives that most affected Azerbaijan
were profoundly counter-productive for the bilateral relationship.

First, rather than causing Russia to pay a price for its invasion of an
independent state, the Obama administration rewarded Moscow with the
“Reset” initiative. U.S. officials claimed it would not come at the
price of relations with smaller post-Soviet states; but in practice,
it did. America’s weak response to the invasion of Georgia, it should
be said in retrospect, led the Kremlin to conclude it could get away
with an even more brazen attack on Ukraine without lasting, serious
consequences. In Baku, it led Azerbaijani leaders to question the
rationale of the country’s westward orientation.

Second, the Obama administration did not conclude from the Georgia war
that it should spend additional efforts and energy on resolving the
other unresolved conflict in the Caucasus – that between Armenia and
Azerbaijan. Instead, it decided to embark on a project to normalize
Turkish-Armenian relations. The core of that initiative was to open
the Turkish-Armenian border, which Turkey had closed in 1993 because
of Armenia’s occupation of Azerbaijan’s territory. Since that time,
a link had been maintained between Turkish-Armenian relations and the
Armenia- Azerbaijan conflict. The United States now pushed to cut that
link, something that would heavily damage Azerbaijan’s interests,
without offering Baku anything in the process. This initiative
effectively was understood in Baku to mean that Azerbaijan’s most
important national security issue was no longer an American concern.

At roughly the same time, America’s handling of the Arab upheavals, and
its perceived endorsement of revolutions that brought Islamist forces
to power, further exacerbated perceptions of American intentions.

Further, the U.S. has failed to draw the implications of Azerbaijan’s
complex and opaque internal political scene. Because the formal
opposition is marginalized, American observers have generally assumed
that President Aliyev exercises autocratic power. On this basis they
pay little attention to intra- government politics. Yet Azerbaijan’s
internal politics are complex, and take place to a significant extent
within the government rather than between government and opposition.

Notwithstanding the formidable powers that the Constitution accords
the President, his power are in reality far from complete.

In fact, since the 1990s, Azerbaijan’s government developed a number
of autonomous fiefdoms, the masters of which have shown an ability to
effectively check the chief executive’s powers. Internal rivalries
exist in many countries, and can debilitate effective governance
anywhere. But in Azerbaijan, two factors exacerbate them: first,
these forces are strongest in the chief repressive organs of the state.

Second, they have a thinly disguised (and in some cases overtly
stated) affinity for Russia over the West, and maintain close ties to
counterparts in Moscow that date back to the Soviet period. These
forces have tended to oppose, and even undermine, Azerbaijan’s
relations with the West. While President Aliyev and his appointees
have consistently sought to deepen Azerbaijan’s relations with the
West, resilient forces whose positions date back to before Aliyev
came to power in 2003 have used their power to repress civil society
organizations and cracked down on dissidents at times often chosen
specifically to undermine the country’s relations with the West.

Meanwhile, the U.S. has effectively linked improved bilateral relations
in all areas with the advancement of democratic reforms and human
rights. This is certainly laudable in principle. But in practice,
in the absence of a solid American strategy toward the region,
the implication has been to give the most anti-Western forces in the
government a de facto veto over Azerbaijan’s relations with the United
States. This has benefited only the forces in the region seeking to
diminish U.S. influence.

Put otherwise, American actions in response to deplorable acts of
repression have inadvertently reinforced the most retrograde elements
in the government and contributed to isolating the very forces in
the government that advocate for reform, and for integration with the
West. By curtailing engagement in other areas of common interest, e.g.

security and energy, American and European leaders have inadvertently
alienated some of their closest potential partners in the region.

In the final analysis, the problem with U.S. policy has been, at
the basic level, the absence of a concrete strategy that defines
America’s interests in the region, appreciates the existence of
separate interests, while at all times taking into account the
interactions between these areas of interest.

The Way Forward

Taking as a starting point that the U.S.-Azerbaijan relationship
is important to the U.S. national interest, what can be done to
improve it?

It is sometimes implied that Azerbaijan is building closer ties
with Russia. In a sense, at least for the caricature of Azerbaijan
prevalent in Western media, turning toward Moscow would seem to be a
natural choice. But in fact, Azerbaijan is one of the former Soviet
states that has been the most determined in resisting Russian efforts
at Eurasian integration. Instead, Azerbaijan fundamentally remains
oriented toward the West, even though that orientation is increasingly
tenuous. Aside from pipeline infrastructure, the country is a member
of the Council of Europe, and joined the European Union’s Eastern
Partnership in 2009. European identity remains an important element
of Azerbaijan’s self-image, as the country’s eagerness to host the
first European Games in 2015 shows.

As Baku’s relationship with the West has cooled, it has nevertheless
moved gradually toward a position of non-alignment: while abstaining
from deeper integration with Russia, Azerbaijan also eschews
integration with Europe, attempting instead to “go it alone”. In view
of the turbulence of its region, western missteps, and growing Russian
pressure detailed above, Azerbaijan’s foreign policy orientation has
in fact been remarkably consistent. In many ways, Azerbaijan’s view of
the United States is similar to that which can be found in numerous
other American allies from Israel to South Korea and from Bahrain to
Saudi Arabia: confusion bordering on disbelief over America’s policies
and intentions, and a sense of frustration and abandonment. In other
words, it is indicative of a broader problem regarding America’s
place in the world.

That said, at this time of considerable turmoil both to Azerbaijan’s
north and south, the United States both can, and should, develop
a new approach to Azerbaijan and its region, as the current policy
is clearly not working. To this effect, several observers including
former senior officials, have argued for an approach that is even
tougher on Azerbaijan, including punitive measures. Such an approach
would be sure to fail, because it presupposes a level of American
leverage that is simply not in existence. In the current environment,
a policy that would make U.S. policy even more one-dimensional would
have almost no prospect of bringing positive results. The ruling elite
does not perceive that it benefits from its association with the U.S.

in key matters of national security; therefore, the U.S. simply does
not have the leverage it once had to influence Baku’s policies by
the use of the proverbial stick.

Furthermore, singling out Azerbaijan makes little sense in the
absence of similar measures against regional countries with worse
human rights records. Frustration with western indifference to the
plight of the hundreds of thousands of displaced people from the
Armenian-occupied territories in Mountainous Karabakh and western
Azerbaijan is already high in Azerbaijan, and any further targeting
of Azerbaijan would reinforce the sense of western double standards,
which officials at very high levels already denounce.

In fact, given the prevailing frustration with the west and the
character of the country’s intra-elite politics, such steps would
be likely to alienate Azerbaijan even further, and could in fact
extinguish whatever influence the U.S. still commands in the country.

The main victims of such an outcome would be not the ruling elite,
but the proponents of human rights and democracy in Azerbaijan itself.

Instead, what is needed is a policy rooted in a regional strategy,
which is based on a broad engagement of the region. A new American
policy must coordinate and find the right balance and sequence among
its priorities. In this context, a much stronger engagement in issues
pertaining to sovereignty and security will do more than anything else
to pave the way for progress in other areas, including human rights.

The history of the past twenty years shows that whenever the U.S. has
been strongly involved in energy and security affairs of the Caucasus,
the Azerbaijani government has been responsive to criticism. When
that has not been the case, as in the past several years, America’s
leverage has declined.

In short, going forward, the U.S. cannot expect progress on governance
and human rights without a clear commitment to security issues;
concomitantly, Azerbaijan’s leaders must understand that they cannot
expect Western support for their security without a commitment
to reforms in governance and human rights. As already noted, this
does not mean that a new policy should have less of an emphasis
on human rights issues. But it means the U.S. must do more also
to address the issues on which it worked effectively a decade ago:
bolstering sovereignty and independence, addressing security issues,
working seriously to resolve the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict,
and re-engaging on energy politics – all of which happen to be in U.S.

national interest. In sum, for both Azerbaijan’s domestic situation
and the bilateral relationship to improve, America’s presence must
once again be felt in the region.

Senior Lieutenant Arrested As Suspect In Death Of Armenian Soldier

SENIOR LIEUTENANT ARRESTED AS SUSPECT IN DEATH OF ARMENIAN SOLDIER

19:03, February 12, 2015

Taron Gedoyan, a senior lieutenant serving in the Artsakh Defense Army,
was arrested today as a suspect in the February 10 death of conscript
soldier Tigran Simonyan.

Simonyan died from gunshot wounds sustained while serving at a military
base, where Gedoyan was also posted, in the north of the country.

An official investigation has concluded that Gedoyan violated the
sentry duty rules which, in turn, led to the death of Simonyan.

The report failed to specify what the violation was and how the
soldier was shot.

http://hetq.am/eng/news/58503/senior-lieutenant-arrested-as-suspect-in-death-of-armenian-soldier.html

Armenian Government Earmarks AMD 150 Million For Industrial Parks In

ARMENIAN GOVERNMENT EARMARKS AMD 150 MILLION FOR INDUSTRIAL PARKS IN GYUMRI AND VANADZOR

YEREVAN, February 12. /ARKA/. Armenia’s government decided Thursday
to allocate AMD 150 million in 2015 to support industrial parks in
Gyumri and Vanadzor.

Economy Minister Karen Chshmaritayn, presenting the draft decision
to the Cabinet ministers, said that no less than 300 specialists
are planned to be trained and retrained in the technology center in
Gyumri, no less than three companies attracted to cooperation and no
less than 20 companies provided with business consulting.

he said.

($1 – AMD 479.47). —0—–

http://arka.am/en/news/business/armenian_government_earmarks_amd_150_million_for_industrial_parks_in_gyumri_and_vanadzor/#sthash.xsxEvMGZ.dpuf

Vanadzor Murder Case Suspect Confronted With Police Officer Who Tort

VANADZOR MURDER CASE SUSPECT CONFRONTED WITH POLICE OFFICER WHO TORTURED HIM

02.12.2015 16:03 epress.am

Karen Kungortsev, who is charged with the murder of 15-year old
Davit Hovakimyan in a scandalous murder case, is now involved in a
criminal case related to his being tortured by police. The Special
Investigative Service (SIS) has initiated a criminal case based
on RA Criminal Code article 309.2, “actions willfully committed
by an official which obviously exceed his authorities committed
with violence, weapons, or special measures”. In an interview with
Epress.am, The Helsinki Association for Human Rights NGO president
Mikayel Danielyan discussed the fact that their organization had
been raising the issue of Kungortsev’s torture for over a year,
however no entity gave any attention to it.

“According to our reliable information, a confrontation has already
taken place between Kungortsev and a high-ranking police official in
order to clarify the fact of Kungortsev’s torture. The police official
was one of the officers who beat Kungortsev. Other investigative
processes also occurred, various people, connected to Kungortsev’s
beating and the attempt to frame him, were questioned,” said Danielyan.

According to the latter, when the preliminary investigation of the
case ended and it was handed over to the courts for trial process,
it became clear that Kungortsev’s rights, as well as those of multiple
otherwitnesses, mostly minors, have been grossly violated

“Despite the fact that the investigation of the case is still ongoing,
it is already clear that the charge against Kungortsev is obviously
baseless, and he is imprisoned instead of someone else,” stated the
Helsinki Association’s director.

Recall, Karen Kungortsev does not admit guilt, and human rights
defenders and his attorney indicate violations recorded during the
preliminary investigations.

While behind bars, the accused has resorted to self harm, as well as
beginning a hunger strike. His mother said that her son was beaten
by police while under police custody and forced to confess.

The charges against Kungortsev were changed from murder to attempted
murder last August. At the same time, the investigation accused and
detained Vanadzor Medical Center company doctor Vladimir Ghukasyan for
unfair treatment and improper implementation of professional duties.

http://www.epress.am/en/2015/02/12/vanadzor-murder-case-suspect-confronted-with-police-officer-who-tortured-him.html

People To Gather Outside Armenian Prosecutor General’s Office To Dem

PEOPLE TO GATHER OUTSIDE ARMENIAN PROSECUTOR GENERAL’S OFFICE TO DEMAND PERMYAKOV’S TRANSFER TO ARMENIA’S LAW- ENFORCEMENT

by Ashot Safaryan

Thursday, February 12, 10:56

An action of protest will be held outside the Prosecutor General’s
Office in Yerevan at 4:00pm local time on February 12. The action
initiators demand Valery Permyakov’s transfer to the law- enforcement
of Armenia. They demand Prosecutor General Gevorg Kostanyan to
make public his Russia counterpart’s response to the petition for
Permyakov’s transfer to the country’s law-enforcement. The activists
will demand the prosecutor general to give guarantees that Permyakov
will stand trial within the Armenian laws in line with the legal
categories and the international regulatory acts, and not the
Constitution of the other country, namely Russia.

A family of six was killed by Russian soldier Valery Permyakov in
Gyumri on Jan 12. The only survivor, six-month-old Seryozha Avetisyan,
who received stab wounds, died in hospital on Jan 19. On 14 January
Armenian Prosecutor General’s Office reported that they did not
discuss the issue of handing over of Permyakov to the Armenian party,
as according to the Russian legislation, a Russian citizen cannot be
handed over to another country. But after numerous protest actions
near the 102-nd Russian military base in Gyumri and the meeting at the
president’s residence, Armenia’s Prosecutor General Gevorg Kostanyan
said that the investigation of the case will be held according to the
legislation of Armenia and Russia through comparing the legislative
acts of the two countries. He emphasized that the criminal will
be imprisoned at the territory of Armenia and the process will be
transparent in order to avoid public resonance.

http://www.arminfo.am/index.cfm?objectid=98E8D9C0-B28C-11E4-89190EB7C0D21663

Armenian Genocide Conference To Be Held At University Of Nebraska-Li

ARMENIAN GENOCIDE CONFERENCE TO BE HELD AT UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA-LINCOLN

10:10, 12 February, 2015

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 12, ARMENPRESS: On the occasion of the Centennial
of the Armenian Genocide, the University of Nebraska-Lincoln (UNL)
will host a two-day conference from March 19-20, 2015 entitled
“Crossing the Centennial: The Historiography of the Armenian Genocide
Re-Evaluated” at the Wick Alumni Center – Great Hall, 1520 R Street,
Armenpress reports, citing Massispost.

Organized by Prof. Bedross Der Matossian from the Department of History
at UNL, the conference is sponsored by the Norman and Bernice Harris
Center for Judaic Studies, the National Association for Armenian
Studies and Research (NAASR) in Belmont, Mass., the Society for
Armenian Studies (SAS), the Department of History, the Faculty Senate
Convocation Committee, the Human Rights and Humanitarian Affairs
Program, the Women’s and Gender Studies program, and the Institute
of Ethnic Studies at UNL.

The conference will focus on four under-researched themes that
have recently gained scholarly attention and analytical depth:
a) humanitarianism and humanitarian intervention in the Armenian
Genocide; b) women and children in the Armenian Genocide; c)
comparative dimensions of the Armenian Genocide; d) and the impact
of the Armenian Genocide on society, politics, literature, and culture.

Twenty-two scholars from Armenia, Cambodia, Canada, Holland, Hungary,
Israel, and the United States representing 17 different academic
institutions will participate in five panels of the conference.

The conference will start at 2:00pm on Thursday, March 19, with
welcoming remarks by Prof. William G. Thomas III, the chair of the
Department of History at UNL, and opening remarks by Prof. Bedross
Der Matossian from the Department of History.

The first panel, entitled “Humanitarianism and Humanitarian
Intervention” will be moderated by Prof. David Forsythe (UNL), who is
widely regarded as being among the first scholars who have established
the study of human rights and humanitarian affairs in the disciplines
of political science and international relations. The panel will
feature the following speakers and topics: Dr. Hilmar Kaiser (Phnom
Penh, Cambodia), “Humanitarian Intervention and Ottoman Opposition to
Extermination: A Neglected Aspect”; Pe´ter Pa´l Kra´nitz (Pazmany Peter
Catholic University), “Armenian Refugees, Humanitarian Assistance and
Hungary”; and Prof. Mark Toufayan (University of Ottawa), “Between
Intimacy and Alienation: Armenian Property, Denationalization and
the Passions of ‘Protection’ in French Mandated Cilicia, 1918-1923”.

The second panel, which will be the featured one of the Conference,
will be moderated by Prof. Jean Cahan, the director of the Harris
Center for Judaic Studies and will include three speakers: Prof.

Richard G. Hovannisian (University of California-Los Angeles),
“The Centenary of the Armenian Genocide: What Have We Learned?”; Prof.

Michelle Tusan (University of Nevada-Las Vegas), “Humanitarian Empire:
Britain’s Response to the Armenian Genocide,”; and Prof. Keith
Watenpaugh (University of California-Davis), “Armenia, Armenians,
The League of Nations and Modern Humanitarianism.”

The second day of the conference will start at 9:00am and will feature
four panels. The first panel entitled “Women and Children during
the Genocide” will be chaired by Prof. Patrice McMahon, an expert on
international security, conflict, and human rights, and will feature
the following speakers and subjects: Prof. Benny Morris (Ben-Gurion
University), “Women and Children in the Turkish Ethnic Cleansing
of Armenians and Greeks, 1919-1923”; Prof. Carina Karapetian Giorgi
(Pomona College), “Critical Examination of the Historiography of Women
during the Armenian Genocide”; Anna Aleksanyan (Clark University), ”
‘Neutral home’ and the Issue of Identity of the Surviving Armenian
Women and Children”; and Tugce Kayaal (University of Michigan-Ann
Arbor), “A Critique of the Concept of the “Genocide Survivor”:
Armenian Orphans in Aleppo Between the Years of 1915-1918.”

The second panel entitled “The Armenian Genocide and the Holocaust”
will be chaired by Prof. Ari Kohen, the director of the Human Rights
and Humanitarian Affairs Program at UNL and will feature the following
speakers and subjects: Umit Kurt (Clark University), “‘Legal’ and
‘Official’ Plundering of Armenian and Jewish Properties during the
Armenian Genocide and the Holocaust within a Comparative Perspective”;
Prof. Stefan Ihrig (Van Leer Institute, Jerusalem), “From the Armenian
Genocide to the Holocaust – A Connected Perspective”; and Prof.

Harutyun Marutyan (National Academy of Sciences of Armenia), “The
Institute of Righteous Among the Nations in the Armenian and the
Jewish Cases.”

The last panel of the conference entitled “Aftermath of the Genocide:
Politics, Culture, Society, and Literature,” will be chaired by Prof.

Chantal Kalisa, an expert on the Rwandan Genocide and director of
the Women’s and Gender Studies program at UNL, and will feature the
following speakers and subjects: Prof. Tsolin Nalbantian (Leiden
University), “Armenian Nation Building through Sport: The Armenian
Olympiad Before and After the Armenian Genocide”; Prof. Heghnar
Watenpaugh (University of California-Davis), “Art, Heritage, and the
Armenian Genocide: Toros Roslin’s Zeytun Gospels between 1915 and
2015”; Prof. Talar Chahinian (California State University-Long Beach),
“Impossible Testimonies: Literature and Aesthetics in the Aftermath of
the Armenian Genocide”; and Dr. Seyhan Bayraktar (Historical Seminar
of the University of Zurich), “The Armenian Genocide and the Politics
of Denial: on Turkey, Civil Society, and EU Recognition Politics.”

Closing remarks will be delivered by Prof. Lloyd Ambrosius from
the Department of History. “It is a great honor for the University
of Nebraska-Lincoln to hold the largest conference in the Midwest
to mark the Centennial of the Armenian Genocide,” said conference
organizer Prof. Der Matossian. “It is not only that we are bringing
scholars from various disciplines to discuss different aspects of the
Armenian Genocide but that we also should think of this Conference as
a unique opportunity for the University community at large to benefit
from the expertise of top scholars in the field and understand better
one of the first genocides of the modern period.”

The poster of the conference was prepared by Ruben Malayan, a renowned
artist from Armenia. The poster displays Malayan’s expression of the
experiences of the Armenian nation (represented by women and children)
on the death marches of the Genocide. The white auras around their
heads symbolize the sanctity of the victims. The stark contrast of
black and white background represents the inhuman suffering people had
to endure before perishing. The work was inspired by a real photograph
of an Armenian family taken during expulsion and extermination of 1915.

http://armenpress.am/eng/news/793754/armenian-genocide-conference-to-be-held-at-university-of-nebraska-lincoln.html

Reply To Erdogan: Impossible To Close Door Locked From Inside

REPLY TO ERDOGAN: IMPOSSIBLE TO CLOSE DOOR LOCKED FROM INSIDE

Genocide | 12.02.15 | 10:13

It is impossible to close the door that is locked from inside,
Armenian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Tigran Balayan said on
Wednesday, commenting on the latest statement by Turkey’s President
Recep Tayyip Erdogan, reports News.am .

During his visit to Colombia, Erdogan said it was Armenia that closed
“the door of peace”.

“We know that the Armenian Diaspora has launched a negative campaign
against Turkey. We have spared no efforts for opening a new chapter.

On the 100th anniversary we offered to transfer the issue from the
political into a scientific level. We have invited [the Armenian
president] to Gallipoli on April 24, but Armenia closed the door of
peace,” the Turkish leader said.

In the past Turkey marked the anniversary of the Gallipoli Battle
on March 18, but this year it decided to stage commemoration events
on April 24, the day when Armenians around the world will be marking
the Centennial of the Armenian Genocide committed in Ottoman Turkey.

Months before Erdogan’s invitation, Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan
had already invited his Turkish counterpart to visit Yerevan on April
24, 2015, “to face up to history”. Erdogan has not responded to the
invitation yet.

http://armenianow.com/genocide/60547/armenia_turkey_erdogan_reaction_mfa_balayan

Armenian Genocide Exhibit In Burbank

ARMENIAN GENOCIDE EXHIBIT IN BURBANK

13:15, 12 Feb 2015
Siranush Ghazanchyan

Dr. Rouben Adalian, Director of Armenian National Institute (ANI),
will present the exhibit “The First Refuge and the Last Defense: The
Armenian Church, Etchmiadzin, and the Armenian Genocide” on February
18 and 19 at the Zorayan Museum at the Western Diocese of the Armenian
Church, 3, Burbank, California,Massis Post reports.

The exhibit was created by the Armenian National Institute,
the Armenian Genocide Museum of America (AGMA), and the Armenian
Assembly of America jointly, in cooperation with the Mother See of
Holy Etchmiadzin, the Armenian Genocide Museum Institute in Yerevan,
and the Republic of Armenia National Archives. The exhibit consists
of 20 panels with over 150 historic photographs documenting the role
of the Armenian Church during the Armenian Genocide.

His Eminence Archbishop Hovnan Derderian, Primate of the Western
Diocese, reports that this lecture and presentation by Dr. Rouben
Adalian, is a part of a series of Diocesan events dedicated to the
100th commemoration of the Armenian Genocide.

The Primate noted that the exhibit explains the importance of the
Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin during the Armenian Genocide. The
exhibit also examines the vital leadership role played by the clergy
during the Armenian Genocide especially the all-important intervention
of His Holiness Catholicos Gevorg V Sureniants in alerting world
leaders about the massacres, effectively issuing the first “early
warning” of an impending genocide. “The documents effectively
demonstrates the sacrifices of the Armenian clergy,” stated the
Primate, “thousands, among them several primates in Western Armenia
and other parts of the Ottoman Empire, paid the price of martyrdom
for their faith during the Armenian Genocide.”

The exhibit provides ample evidence of the aid extended by fellow
Armenians to the refugees fleeing Ottoman Turkey as the Young Turk
regime pursued its path toward the destruction of the Armenians. At
the epicenter of this outpouring of aid was Etchmiadzin, the primary
destination of the Armenians fleeing the massacres along the border
regions of the Ottoman Empire. With testimony from survivors and
witnesses, the exhibit reconstructs this particular chapter of the
Armenian Genocide, a chapter often overlooked in the context of the
mass deportation of the Armenians from all across Ottoman Turkey to
the interior of the Syrian Desert where hundreds of thousands perished
from hunger, thirst, and slaughter.

Dr. Rouben Adalian has had a distinguished career and is noted as a
specialist on the Caucasus and the Middle East. Dr. Adalian holds a
PhD in History from the University of California, Los Angeles. Among
other places, he has taught at the Elliott School of International
Affairs, George Washington University; School of Foreign Service,
Georgetown University; and School of Advanced International Studies,
John Hopkins University.

“The First Refuge and the Last Defense: The Armenian Church,
Etchmiadzin, and the Armenian Genocide” is the second digital exhibit
released by ANI, AGMA, and the Assembly. The first exhibit, “Witness
to the Armenian Genocide: Photographs by the Perpertrators’ German and
Austro-Hungarian Allies” was released in 2014, and a third exhibit,
” The First Deportation: The German Railway, the American Hospital,
and the Armenian Genocide ,” was issued this January.

The exhibit is open to the public and admission is free. For further
information contact the Zorayan Museum at the Western Diocese office
(818) 558-7474.

http://www.armradio.am/en/2015/02/12/armenian-genocide-exhibit-in-burbank/

Armenian Genocide Declaration Document For Future – Diplomat

ARMENIAN GENOCIDE DECLARATION DOCUMENT FOR FUTURE – DIPLOMAT

13:06 * 11.02.15

An Armenian diplomat on Wednesday shared his positive comments on
the pan-national declaration demanding recognition of the Genocide
and reparation of consequences.

Describing the document as a major foreign policy success targeted at
the future, Ambassador Arman Navasardyan said he believes it should
lay the foundations of future foreign relations. “Our diplomacy should
seek to put this document in the core of international relations,”
he told reporters.

The diplomat further called for considering possible counteractions
and tightened policies by Turkey, noting that the country now receives
backing from Azerbaijan, which it uses as a marionette.

He also stressed the importance of recalling the Armenia-Turkey
protocols signed in 2009 in Zurich. “The document is a bold step, as
it puts things into their right places for the first time ever. So
far, only the Diaspora had monopoly over that, but we now see it i
considered on the state level,” he said, considering the demand-making
policies the most sensitive issue for Turkey.

Navasardyan further addressed global political developments, sharing
his concerns of a looming war. Commenting on the January 12 brutal
murder in Gyumri, Navasardyan said he doesn’t expect the Russian side
to hand over the perpetrator to Armenia’s law enforcement authorities.

http://www.tert.am/en/news/2015/02/11/arman-navasardyan/1586320

Climate Changes Can Adversely Affect On Water Balance Of Lake Sevan:

CLIMATE CHANGES CAN ADVERSELY AFFECT ON WATER BALANCE OF LAKE SEVAN: SPECIALIST

16:23 February 10, 2015

EcoLur

Evelina Ghukasyan, Director of Hydroecology and Ichthyology Institute
of NAS RA, forecasts no increase in Lake Sevan level for 2015 due to
climate changes. “Climate changes can extremely adversely affect on
the water balance of Lake Sevan. The thickness of snow cover is very
low in Gegharkounik region, the flow of rivers can’t be sufficient to
increase the level of Lake Sevan in case of relevant water outlets,”
Evelina Ghukasyan said in her interview with EcoLur.

Reminder: in 2014 negative balance of Lake Sevan level was recorded
in 2014. As of 21.12.2014, the lake level made up 1900.13 m, which
is lower by 4 cm as compared with the last year (1900.17 m). The
officials don’t exclude additional water outlets from Lake Sevan for
2015 in case of water lack. The Armenian Government already hinted
about the lack of water at its meeting on 5 February.

http://ecolur.org/en/news/sevan/climate-changes-can-adversely-affect-on-water-balance-of-lake-sevan-specialist/7012/