President Of The Czech Senate To Visit Armenia

PRESIDENT OF THE CZECH SENATE TO VISIT ARMENIA

armradio.am
10.09.2008 18:02

On September 11 the delegation headed by the President of Senate
of the Czech Republic Prsemil Sobodka will arrive in Armenia on an
official visit.

On September 12 the Presidents of Parliament of the two countries
will be present at the opening of the Armenian-Czech business forum.

The same day the President of the Czech Senate will have a meeting
with RA National Assembly Speaker Tigran Torosyan, and members of
the Czech delegation will meet with members of the Armenia-Czechia
Deputy Friendship Group.

The President of the Czech Senate Prsemil Sobodka will lay a wreath
of flowers at the Memorial to the Armenian Genocide victims.

On September 12 Prsemil Sobodka will be received by RA President Serzh
Sargsyan, Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan and Foreign Minister Edward
Nalbandian. The meetings at the National Assembly will be summed up
with a joint press conference.

On September 13 the President of the Czech Parliament will be received
by the Catholicos of All Armenians Garegin II. The same day the
delegation will leave Yerevan.

Political Analyst: Karabakh Needs Guarantees Of Non-Use Of Force By

POLITICAL ANALYST: KARABAKH NEEDS GUARANTEES OF NON-USE OF FORCE BY AZERBAIJAN

ARKA
Sep 8, 2008

YEREVAN, September 8. /ARKA/. Guarantees of non-use of force by
Azerbaijan became indispensable amid Georgian-Ossetian tension, Suren
Zolyan, political analyst and rector of Yerevan State Linguistic
University, said at a press conference on Saturday.

He pointed out developments in South Ossetia as example of
ineffectiveness of using force for settling conflicts.

The political analyst finds this guarantee especially important,
especially taking into account statements coming from Baku when
Georgian-Ossetian tension escalation reached its peak that in May
1994 the sides of Karabakh conflict signed a cease-fire agreement,
not truce.

Zolyan said that now such statements are being voiced rarer.

He said the Karabakh process is now in mixed situation – two of OSCE
Minsk Group co-chairs – representatives of Russia and the United
States – supports independence of formerly unrecognized South Ossetia
and Kosovo.

"Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, speaking about principles of
territorial integrity and national self-determination right in case of
South Ossetia and Abkhazia, prefers the second. Hence, Russia should
remain stuck to its stance also in considering Karabakh problem",
Zolyan said.

He also said that Georgian-Ossetian conflict had considerable impact on
Karabakh process – Karabakh will be considered as an independent entity
=0 Abuilding relations with Armenia and Azerbaijan at own discretion.

"Time has come for signing an agreement between Armenia and
Nagorno-Karabakh Republic on comprehensive cooperation", he said.

The Karabakh conflict broke out in 1988 when Artsakh, mainly populated
by Armenians, declared its independence from Azerbaijan.

On December 10, 1991, a few days after the collapse of the Soviet
Union, a referendum took place in Nagorno-Karabakh, and the majority
of the population (99.89%) voted for independence from Azerbaijan.

Afterwards, large-scale military operations began, as a result of
which Azerbaijan lost control over Nagorno-Karabakh and the seven
regions adjacent to it.

On May 12, 1994 after the signing of the Bishkek cease-fire agreement,
the military operations were stopped.

Since 1992, negotiations over the peaceful settlement of the conflict
have been carried out within the OSCE Minsk Group, co-chaired by the
USA, Russia and France.

The recent presidential election in Karabakh took place on July
19, 2007.

According to preliminary summary data of the NKR Central Electoral
Committee, 59,316 people out of 92,128 (64% of electorate) voted for
Bako Sahakian.

ANKARA: Yerevan After Gul: Half Way There: Open Borders With Armenia

YEREVAN AFTER GUL: HALF WAY THERE: OPEN BORDERS WITH ARMENIA BY 14 OCTOBER

Radikal
Sept 8 2008
Turkey

He began by saying, "Yesterday was a very important and historic day
for us." At some point in his speech he said: "Half the journey is
taking the first step. The presidents have come half way. Having
reached the half-way point they instructed their ministers to
accomplish the rest of the journey."

Armenian’s Foreign Minister Edvard Nalbantyan invited us to lunch. In
the Foreign Ministry, one of the splendid buildings surrounding
Republic Square in Yerevan, we sat in his office and talked about
Abdullah Gul’s "historic visit" and we lunched together. Sitting
at the table and translating for us was Arsen Avakyan, who had
translated for Gul and Sarkisyan during their meeting. By us I mean
myself, Hasan Cemal, Ali Bayramoglu and Mustafa Karaalioglu. Also at
this desk-cum-dining-table sat Ministry Spokesman Tigran Balayan
and Armenia’s representative for the KEIB [Black Sea Economic
Cooperation Union] in Istanbul. In order to emphasize just how
seriously Turkish-Armenian relations were normalizing Nalbantyan
said time and time again that both presidents had "the will" to do
this and that this "will" would with Foreign Minister Ali Babacan’s
resolve speed itself along. Another two stopping points on this "road"
are "the establishment of diplomatic relations between Turkey and
Armenia" and "the opening of borders." Neither of these points can
exist without the other.

We witnessed just how seriously this business was being treated. After
our soccer team beat the Armenian team 2-0 we went up to the highest
part of the spectators’ box. We joined a small party held in the
back in honour of Abdullah Gul and the Turkish delegation. Suddenly
before us appeared Armenia’s President Serj Sarkisyan and our President
Abdullah Gul. Abdullah Gul introduced each one of us in turn. Sarksiyan
launched into the subject right away. The final score was not
important for him. The event was a means of "rapprochement." His
mood was one of a relived childhood. He said he would be coming to
Turkey on 14 October, not neglecting to add laughingly, "But not for a
grudge match." Nalbantyan told us at yesterday’s lunch that the visit
would be on the date on which another Turkish-Armenian soccer match
would be played, and would be just as "historic." Both countries’
foreign ministers have immediately started work on what needs to
be done between "Historic Saturday" in Yerevan and 14 October in
order to "complete the other half of the journey." After the party
Gul and Sarkisyan left the Hrazdan stadium for Gul’s trip back to
Turkey. Sarkisyan’s senior adviser, who was at these high level talks,
was left to take us back to our hotel. He gave us a lift in his car. On
the way he said that "both presidents had agreed to the principles
and that both ministers would begin working to bring those principles
to life and to provide logistics." We arrived at the hotel and set up
"our HQ" in the cafe in front. We chatted about the historic day and
the soccer match. At 0215 [local] Ali Babacan and his entourage left
the Foreign Ministry building directly opposite us. Nalbantyan told
us yesterday what happened that evening after the match: "After the
match Babacan and I spoke for two-and-a-half hours. We are going to
meet up again in New York in two weeks’ time. After that there will
be no more pauses. To date there have been too many halts and at each
one we have waited a long time. That is not going to be the case from
now on. In the days ahead we are going to talk about concrete stuff
now. Armenia has the intention and the desire for this. We saw that
same intention on the part of Turkey. There are no countries in the
world that have closed borders while having diplomatic relations." You
can find in Nalbantyan’s words an indicator of the rapprochement
created between Turkey and Armenia. We also spoke about the Turkish
initiative: Caucasus Stability and Cooperation Platform. Armenia
accepts this 100 per cent and considers it important. Although nobody
wants to make any promises or take responsibility it would not come as
a surprise, looking at the mood in Yerevan, to hear that diplomatic
relations between Turkey and Armenia have been resumed and that the
borders have been opened before 14 October. However, in the spirit of
"once bitten twice shy" we still have reservations: we shall believe
it when we see it.

Having arrived in Yerevan before Abdullah Gul and stayed after he
returned we were in a position to measure the outcome of this "soccer
diplomacy" and the climate both before and after this "historic"
visit. We can say that the silent protests along Gul’s trip from
the airport to the city, the Dashnak placards that were opened and
immediately closed again during the soccer match plus the whistles that
were heard when our national anthem was played are too insignificant
to overshadow the "spring climate" that has been created between
Turkey and Armenia as fall sets in. One Dashnak official wanting to
stress that they were not opposed to Abdullah Gul’s visit said not to
take the protests too seriously adding in a semi-jokingly fashion,
"Had we not done that much we may just as well have dissolved our
Dashnak Party." Like I said before, this "first" visit by Abdullah
Gul needs to create concrete results that really can be considered
"historic." This means establishing diplomatic relations between
Turkey and Armenia and opening the borders. Edvard Nalbantyan told
us yesterday, "We are half way there." The rest of the journey has
already begun as of yesterday and in a mood of optimism.

BAKU: NGOs Of Turkish Igdir Region Protests Against Opening Borders

NGOS OF TURKISH IGDIR REGION PROTESTS AGAINST OPENING BORDERS WITH ARMENIA

Trend News Agency
Sept 8 2008
Azerbaijan

Azerbaijan, Baku, 8 September / TrendNews, corr. I.Alizade / The NGOs
which function in the Igdir region of Turkey protest against opening
borders with Armenia.

"We are against opening borders with Armenia because Armenian policy
was established on enmity with the Turks," the statement provided by
12 NGOs of Igdir says.

Armenia has occupied 20% of Azerbaijan’s territory. Due to Armenia’s
so-called ‘Armenian genocide’, territorial claims against Turkey and
occupation of Azerbaijan’s territories, official Ankara has closed
borders with Armenia.

The statement says that the Igdir NGOs protest against Turkish
President Abdulla Gul’s visit to Armenia.

"We are concerned by the issue that Armenia will justify its occupation
of the Azerbaijani lands, Armenia’s arguments will strengthen, strong
opportunities will appear for the country to hold international
propaganda, harms will be brought to the international interests of
Turkey and Turkic world," Igdir NGOs said.

The authors of the statement emphasized that they are concerned that
Gul’s visit to Armenia will disappoint Azeri people and will give
umbrage to Turkish people.

"Finally we are concerned that a requirement of opening borders will
be made before Turkey," the statement says.

The document emphasizes that over the recent period, during these
processes, the Gars municipality establishes close relations with
Armenia. "All these are wrong and are processes brining harms to the
international interests of Turkey and Turkish-Azerbaijani friendship,"
mentioned in the statement.

Secretary General Of BSEC Arrives In Yerevan

SECRETARY GENERAL OF BSEC ARRIVES IN YEREVAN

ARMENPRESS
Sep 8, 2008

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 8, ARMENPRESS: Secretary General of the Black
Sea Economic Cooperation (BSEC) organization Leonidas Krizantopulos
arrived today in Yerevan. Armenian Foreign Ministry press service
told Armenpress that in Yerevan the secretary general of BSEC will
meet with the Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan, Foreign Minister
Edward Nalbandian.

Leonidas Krizantopulos is also expected to meet with the Transport and
Communication Minister Gurgen Sargsyan, Energy and Natural Resources
Minister Armen Movsisian and Culture Minister Hasmik Poghosian.

A month on, Georgia crisis becomes US-Russia struggle: analysts

Agence France Presse
September 7, 2008 Sunday

A month on, Georgia crisis becomes US-Russia struggle: analysts

by Christopher Boian
MOSCOW, Sept 7 2008

"The world changed after August 8 this year."

That, at least, is Russia’s view — a view articulated again in the
Kremlin during the weekend by President Dmitry Medvedev. And a view,
say analysts, that today no nation on earth is in a position to
dismiss out of hand.

But a month after the outbreak of conflict in ex-Soviet Georgia, as
the world struggles to come to grips with a shifting international
landscape, the question no one can yet answer is: Exactly how has the
world changed?

Russia is demanding a new "multipolar" world structure, the United
States is vowing to fight anywhere for "democracy," Europe seems
somewhere in the middle as it gropes for its own "unity," Asia quietly
watches as events unfold.

On a smaller scale, NATO power Turkey has suddenly decided the time is
ripe to talk with Caucasus neighbour Armenia after a century of
enmity, while a few ex-Soviet republics seem to be cautiously humming
to Moscow’s tune again.

Against this background of deep and shifting currents, the United
Nations has practically gone off the air, seemingly unable to
formulate a coherent thought beyond expression of "concern" over a
burgeoning international crisis.

Amid the general confusion, however, one thing — the identities of
the real protagonists in what is shaping up as an epic struggle —
have become crystal clear: It is Russia versus the United States.

That came into sharper focus last week as the United States continued
to dispatch warships on what it said were humanitarian aid missions
for Georgia, prompting open charges from Moscow that it was quickly
rearming its ally.

"Neither Russia nor the Europeans nor the Americans have a strategy
now for moving forward," said Sergei Mikheyev, deputy head of the
Center for Political Technology, a privately-funded think tank that is
politically close to the state.

"Russia gave up a lot with the collapse of the Soviet Union and the
Kremlin considers it has every right to assert influence in the
‘post-Soviet space’.

"However the Americans now also regard this space a legitimate ‘zone
of US influence’" and will bring considerable US means, economic and
otherwise, to bear in reinforcing it, Mikheyev said.

Washington’s determination to put its own economic and political lock
on at least part of the strategic Caucasus and Central Asian regions
was on clear display last week in the person of US Vice President Dick
Cheney.

Visiting oil-rich Azerbaijan, Cheney, whose personal fortunes are
closely tied to the US oil industry, evoked Washington’s "deep and
abiding" interest in these ex-Soviet states, notably in developing new
energy supply routes.

Routes, it was clear, over which Russia would have no control.

Predictably, Kremlin anger over what it sees as a none-too-subtle US
drive to take control of the regions sitting on Russia’s western and
southern borders is now on the rise.

At the same time, Moscow’s annoyance with a European Union seen
increasingly here as Washington’s strategic proxy despite being a
valued trading bloc is also approaching a level not seen in years,
analysts say.

In a commentary posted on the liberal gazeta.ru website, Semyon
Novoprudsky, deputy editor of the centrist daily Vremya Novostei, said
events today had the same disturbing feeling as those preceding both
world wars of the 20th century.

US insistence in placing new missile defences near Russia’s borders,
pushing for further expansion of NATO and sending warships to deliver
aid to Georgia was only "militarising" Russian consciousness and
boosting Russian hawks.

"In this generalised pushing and shoving toward war, the European
Union looks something like a dog that ‘understands everything but
cannot speak’," Novoprudsky wrote.

"Among the nearly 30 countries of the EU there is no unified,
unanimous position on any of the key issues of international security
and they are unable to present anything resembling a ‘balanced
position’," he added.

It was Prime Minister Vladimir Putin who most succinctly described
Russian frustration with Europe, saying recently that if EU policy
continued to toe the US line then Moscow "may as well talk with
Washington about European affairs."

This is the atmosphere — angry, suspicious and unbending — that will
greet French President Nicolas Sarkozy when he and two top EU
officials come to Moscow on Monday to discuss the crisis with Medvedev
before heading to Georgia.

Indeed, as Sarkozy prepared for the trip Russian officials bluntly
alleged that crucial wording in the ceasefire agreement brokered by
France — a document whose interpretation is hotly disputed — had
been altered in the hours after Moscow signed it and before Georgia
signed.

"In the 15 years since the Soviet collapse, Europe has merely followed
the United States," Mikheyev said.

"This greatly irritates the Kremlin — it harms relations between
Russia and western Europe," he added. "The anti-Russian mood is pushed
by the Americans who will sit on their island and let the Europeans
man the front lines."

Though the Kremlin insists that its strategic aim in the present
conflict is clear and limited — to end what it says is a US monopoly
on global decision-making — some say Russia has already overplayed
its hand.

"The Russian leadership is trying to spin and justify after the fact
its hysterical and historic break-up with the West and its
institutions," Andrei Kolesnikov, deputy editor of the weekly magazine
The New Times, wrote recently.

Russia, he said, was living under the illusion that it can recreate
something of its lost Soviet and Tsarist-era empires though in reality
it has neither the economic, political nor even military means to do
so.

That kind of scepticism however is in the minority today in Russia,
where Western diplomats say they hear almost no voices against
Moscow’s current actions even among liberal, pro-Western elites who
usually oppose the Kremlin.

Alexander Dugin, a hardline theorist described by the US daily Los
Angeles Times as a "father figure for contemporary Russian
nationalism," was in no doubt that, a month after the Georgia conflict
erupted, the world had changed.

"It is very far from the end," he told the paper last week. "It is
only the beginning of a real, and maybe very serious, and very
dangerous for all of the sides, confrontation between us and the
Americans."

President met special representative of OSCE PA chairman

Armenian president met special representative of OSCE Parliamentary
Assembly chairman

2008-09-06 15:24:00

Arminfo. Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan met today special
representative of OSCE Parliamentary Assembly chairman on Nagornyy
Karabakh conflict Goran Lenmarker.

As press-service of the president told ArmInfo, over the meeting they
touched on the current situation in the South Caucasus region, the
process of the Karabakh conflict settlement and the Armenian-Turkish
relations. Serzh Sargsyan said once again there is no prospect in
resolving of conflicts by means of force. He also added that Armenia is
waiting for an adequate reaction international structures at
unprecedented raising of military potential by some countries of the
region and at the bellicose statements sounding from time to time.

Armenia, Turkey inch toward rapprochement

Eurasia Daily Monitor, DC
Sept 5 2008

ARMENIA, TURKEY INCH TOWARD RAPPROCHEMENT

By Emil Danielyan
Friday, September 5, 2008

Months of confidential diplomatic contacts and exchanges of unusually
cordial statements have left Armenia and Turkey on the verge of an
historic rapprochement that would have far-reaching ramifications for
regional security. This weekend President Abdullah Gul will become the
first leader of modern-day Turkey to set foot in Armenia, in what
could be a prelude to the normalization of extremely strained
relations between the two neighboring states.

Gul was officially invited by his Armenian counterpart, Serzh
Sarkisian, last June to visit Yerevan to watch the first-ever match
between Armenia’s and Turkey’s national soccer teams on September
6. The invitation underlined Sarkisian’s positive response to a
Turkish offer of `dialogue’ that came just days after he took over as
Armenia’s new president in early April. Gul was one of the first
foreign leaders to congratulate Sarkisian on his hotly disputed
victory in the February 19 presidential election. Turkey’s Prime
Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Foreign Minister Ali Babacan sent
similar congratulatory messages to their newly appointed Armenian
counterparts.

According to the Armenian government, Erdogan spoke of unspecified
`certain steps’ that could be taken to improve Turkish-Armenian
relations. Senior diplomats from the two countries met secretly in
Switzerland in early July to discuss those steps. Turkish officials
leaked news of the talks to the domestic media following Sarkisian’s
April 9 op-ed in The Wall Street Journal, in which he made a case for
a `fresh start’ in bilateral ties. The Armenian president has since
repeatedly expressed hope that Gul will make an historic trip to
Yerevan. His government decided on August 14 to waive Armenia’s visa
regime with Turkey from September 1 to 6 to make it easier for Turkish
soccer fans to flock to the Armenian capital for the World Cup
qualifying match.

For its part, Armenia’s main opposition alliance led by former
President Levon Ter-Petrosian postponed a planned September 5 rally to
enable the national police to concentrate on ensuring security in and
around Yerevan’s Hrazdan stadium (Haykakan Zhamanak, August 30). In
contrast, Sarkisian’s overtures to Ankara were openly criticized by
his predecessor Robert Kocharian and the Armenian Revolutionary
Federation (ARF, or the Dashnak Party), a nationalist party
represented in Armenia’s governing coalition. ARF leaders reaffirmed
last week they plan to stage street protests during Gul’s arrival in
Yerevan.

Predictably, the United States, which has long been pushing for
Turkish-Armenian dialogue, welcomed Sarkisian’s invitation, with
Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Matthew Bryza saying that Gul’s
arrival in the Armenian capital could be a `real ground-breaking
moment’ (RFE/RL Armenia Report, July 18). Citing diplomatic sources in
Ankara, the Turkish newspaper Vatan reported on August 30 that Gul had
decided to accept the invitation. The report came as a team of Turkish
security officials was due in Yerevan to discuss with their Armenian
colleagues the tight security measures that would be taken in the
event of the trip.

Gul reportedly insisted on August 30 that he had still not decided
whether to visit Armenia. Erdogan, however, implied the same day that
the visit would take place and that the Turkish leader would be
accompanied by Babacan (Hurriyet, September 1). The Turkish Foreign
Minister told journalists in Istanbul on August 31 that a Turkish
government delegation would fly to Yerevan this week to discuss
preparations for Gul’s trip. He said it would also discuss with
Armenian officials the idea, which was recently floated by Erdogan, of
forming an alliance of the three South Caucasus states as well as
Turkey and Russia. Ankara is ready to include Armenia in the proposed
Caucasus Stability and Cooperation Platform despite having no
diplomatic relations with Yerevan.

Successive Turkish governments have made the establishment of
diplomatic relations and the reopening of the Turkish-Armenian border,
which Ankara closed in 1993, conditional on a resolution of the
Karabakh conflict acceptable to Azerbaijan. They have also demanded a
halt to the decades-long Armenian campaign for international
recognition of the 1915-1918 mass killings and deportations of
Armenians in the Ottoman Empire as genocide. Both Turkish
preconditions have been and will be non-starters for the authorities
in Yerevan, who want an unconditional normalization of bilateral
relations, a position essentially backed by the United States and the
European Union.

Whether the current Turkish leadership is ready to drop these
preconditions remains unclear. Sarkisian held out hope for a policy
change in Ankara in an interview with the Turkish daily Radikal on
August 28. The two governments, he said, `have reached the
decision-making phase’ in their dialogue. `Those will not be easy
decisions,’ he said without elaboration. `Those decisions will not be
approved by the entire public in Armenia and Turkey; but I am sure the
majority of the public will support positive decisions.’

According to Turkish Daily News, Turkish policy toward Armenia was the
subject of a heated discussion during a July meeting in Ankara of
Turkey’s ambassadors abroad. The paper wrote on July 25 that some of
them had called for a rapid normalization of Turkish-Armenian
relations, complaining that they were finding it increasingly
difficult to justify the preconditions on the international stage and
to keep more foreign nations from recognizing the genocide of the
Armenians. But other, more hawkish diplomats urged the Erdogan
government to stay the course and continue to isolate Armenia.
`Turkish policy on Armenia and Armenian claims of genocide will depend
on which of the groups in the [Turkish foreign] ministry will be
successful in convincing the government,’ concluded Turkish Daily
News. `The ruling Justice and Development Party would rather opt for
the group in favor of reconciliation.’

Good Guys, Bad Guys: So What Kind Of Guys Are We?

GOOD GUYS, BAD GUYS: SO WHAT KIND OF GUYS ARE WE?
by Svyatoslav Kaspe

Politkom.ru
Aug 29 2008
Russia

It is this bizarre-sounding question that seems to have become
central to Russian foreign policy (and actually to domestic policy
too) today. However, before trying to substantiate its validity we
should clearly indicate one point that must be taken into account if
the subsequent discussion is to be correctly interpreted.

It is this: There is no doubt that all the outrages that are currently
taking place were initiated by Saakashvili. Of course the bomb was
planted long ago, and moreover by the joint efforts of all the parties
involved; however, it was set off by those who started the assault
on Tskhinvali, that is to say, the Georgian Government. Incidentally,
in the first days of the conflict Georgian officials not only did not
deny, as they do now, the very fact of their massive attack on the
capital of South Ossetia, they actually announced it with unconcealed
pride. Provoking a global crisis in order to resolve problems that
are, in fact, rather minor and partly personal shows an excessive
level of irresponsibility on the part of a political leader.

All of this is beyond dispute. But Saakashvili is the president
of another country, and it is the Georgians who must now live with
what he did and deal with it. It is Russia that should interest us –
and the decisions made by our own authorities.

In fact, as of now, the number of crucial decisions is, strictly
speaking, two. It is too late now to discuss the first one, dated 8
August – the decision on the immediate armed intervention – especially
since it was enforced by the speed of the development of the situation
and with hindsight even seems the only possible decision. The second
is the recognition of the independence of South Ossetia and Abkhazia. I
think this is a step in the wrong direction. Because it is illogical.

In fact this entire episode is ideally suited to being described in the
well-known terms "good guys" – "bad guys." These terms are generally
used ironically, but without good reason – this is a totally accurate
system of ethical coordinates. The "good guys" do good, the "bad guys"
correspondingly do evil – what could be clearer and, incidentally, more
useful for the needs of the legitimization of political action? So,
in the first days of the development of the crisis a very promising
line could be observed in the associated publicity: We are the
"good guys"; for that reason, and only that reason, we could not
have acted otherwise. I am not saying that it would have been easy to
maintain this line – but we should have tried, with, moreover, a strong
chance of success. It would have been possible to inundate the media
sphere with evidence of the Georgian Army’s crimes; it would have
been possible to flood the conflict zone with Western journalists,
politicians, and experts, rather than being limited to lightning
visits by Hammarberg [EU commissioner for human rights] and Guterres
[UN high commissioner for refugees]; it would have been possible to
express regret and offer apologies for the outrages that occurred,
for instance the deaths of civilians during the bombings of Gori,
rather than issuing stony-faced denials that such instances had ever
happened – ultimately, in war, people make mistakes; that is terrible,
but it is common knowledge. But most importantly, it should have been
stated that Russia remains the guarantor of Georgia’s territorial
integrity even against the will of its own leadership – that is, the
"bad guys" on that side. That the Russian intervention was motivated by
precisely this – first, of course, by the categorical moral imperative
speedily to save civilian lives, and second, by the desire not to allow
Georgia, through its own crazy actions, to close off forever its own
path to reconciliation with the rebel provinces. I repeat – it would
not have been easy; but it would have been possible, given sufficient
patience and the desire. But either one or the other was lacking.

Another, directly opposite line prevailed – we decided to show that
we are real "bad guys." That we are willing to ignore the opinion
of our partners in global cooperation and structures, to ignore the
UN Security Council resolutions that we ourselves signed, and so
forth. That we can act crudely and comment even more crudely on our
actions, presenting the world with a fait accompli. We wanted to be
seen in that way, and we succeeded. Enjoy [word published in English].

But then legitimate suspicions arose that Russia wanted nothing else
from the outset. There is a paradox here: Hitherto we had reproached
the West in general and America in particular for precisely that
kind of behaviour, but now it turns out that Russia regards that
behaviour as normal for itself. And therefore for everyone else too,
thereby repudiating all its recent appeals to international law
and consenting to the irreversibility of its further erosion. The
ambiguity lies in the fact that attempts to follow the first line of
conduct are still continuing in parallel – only now they are becoming
totally unconvincing, and everything useful that was done along those
lines is being devalued. You can be either the "good guys" or the
"bad guys," but not both at once. So, prior to the recognition of
South Ossetia and Abkhazia we had a chance of convincing the world
that there really was genocide taking place in the former. Who will
believe that now? It is now very difficult, if not impossible, to
reverse the general conviction that Russia’s aim from the outset
was precisely and exclusively the dismemberment of Georgia. That,
incidentally, is a bad thing in relation to those who were killed,
whose killers are now hardly likely to be called to account.

However, what is done is done – decisions on such a scale and with
such repercussions cannot be revised. What next? Reassuring parallels
are already being drawn with the Turkish recognition of the Republic
of North Cyprus – there is nothing so terrible about it, people say,
nobody is expelling Turkey from NATO, and the sluggish settlement
process is no particular problem for anyone… The analogy is valid,
but not in that superficial form. Yes, the West has become reconciled
to this case; but only because Turkey provided convincing grounds
to regard it as a case that was not subject to replication in any
circumstances. If it could, for instance, have been placed in the
context of imagined "imperial revanchism," if fears had arisen for the
fate of other territories and peoples that once belonged to the Ottoman
state, if those fears had been extended to, for instance, the Armenians
– then the perception of the Cyprus problem would have been entirely
different. Turkey totally ruled out all such assumptions. Similar
tactics would appear the most productive for Russia today.

What does this require? In general terms – it is necessary to stop
all the frenzied campaigns to the effect that Russia has only "two
allies – the Army and Navy." That was said in the 19th century,
in entirely different historical conditions (and incidentally,
like almost every bon mot, it is factually inaccurate – it was under
[Czar] Alexander III, in 1891, that the Russian-French alliance from
which the Entente eventually grew was concluded). Of course, it is
wittily expressed – however, people should think about what it means
to apply this vision to ourselves in today’s realities. What, in the
21st century, do people usually call a country that nobody loves,
that nobody trusts, that is feared and which really does have no
allies (and the restrained – to put it mildly – atmosphere in which
the Shanghai Cooperation Organization summit took place shows that we
might even come to that)? Rogue state [preceding two words published
in English and then in Russian]. Who could want that for their country?

Really – very few people, no doubt; with the exception, of course,
of a few ardent campaigners and propagandists who were stunned in
their childhood by A.V. Mityayev’s Book of Future Commanders [Soviet
children’s military encyclopedia] (which in itself is not such a
terrible thing – it is a good book) and preserved their ideas of
war all their lives at approximately the same level and within the
framework of the same colourful, cheerful aesthetics, concealing the
blood and mud of real war (and that is a terrible thing). In their
longed-for isolation they would enjoy unhindered the erotic tremors
that the very word "war" provokes in them. There have already been
fairly convincing diagnoses of Saakashvili’s psychological condition,
based on his publicly eating his own necktie and other striking
scenes involving him; I think many of the texts that have generously
fertilized our public space in recent days could also provide valuable
clinical material. But these are ultimately only the publicists; where
the decisions are made, the situation is, as far as one can tell,
different. Also, admittedly, dangerous.

War, as the Greatest Game of all games devised by mankind, grips people
for real. Moreover, it really is possible to win; in particular,
practically all the players directly or indirectly involved have
gained significant bonuses from the South Ossetian war (analyses to
that effect have already appeared in abundance). The only losers are
the dead; they are always the losers. For those who remain at the
table and fling down more and more chips that turn into corpses, it
is psychologically difficult to stop – even the growing sense that
"something terrible is coming" is stifled by the desire to remain
just a little longer out in the open, to be in the Game if only for a
little while more. But the good player is the one to take his profit
in good time. Prior to the de jure recognition of Abkhazia and South
Ossetia (incidentally, de facto recognition could have been developed
without hindrance and to any convenient extent), Russia could have
done this and both remained in credit and retained its reputation as
the "good guy." The moment was lost. Now there is still a chance to
withdraw completely and finish the game at zero – but with every day
that the standoff with the West escalates, that chance fades and the
game begins to slip below zero. And the risks increase, because then
what is left is the desperate hope of regaining ground by raising
the stakes, even if the game is played with borrowed funds and for
the shirt on your back. We all know how that ends. You should wind
up the game quickly, leave the casino, and get your breath back,
before the losses become catastrophic.

What might this advice mean, not metaphorically, but in more concrete
terms? Here is a snapshot of a few points:

– it should be made quite definitely clear that the aims that Russia
was pursuing when it entered into the conflict have in general
been achieved and that there is not and never was any of the alleged
crypto-politics behind it, such as the total occupation of Georgia and
the overthrow of its president (which certainly does not mean that we
should start talking to Saakashvili again as if nothing had happened);

– it should be made quite definitely clear that Russia is not planning
any similar operations with regard to its other neighbours or their
territories, first and foremost Ukraine and Crimea (because wild
fantasies to that effect have already begun to proliferate);

– the plan prepared a long time ago by Russia for a Moldovan-Dniester
Region settlement should be brought into operation quickly and even
at an accelerated pace – this plan is based on a principle that
is diametrically opposed to what happened in Georgia, that of the
restoration of the territorial integrity of Moldova as an independent
state. If somebody in the Dniester Region has decided to torpedo the
plan and warm their hands on the fire in Tskhinvali, those hands
should be cut off, which, fortunately, there is every opportunity
to do. This – that is, an entirely different kind of "coercion to
peace" – would be a very strong move, since it would block or at
least radically deaden talk of the Russian-Georgian situation being
a potential precedent, letting it remain as merely an isolated case.

– Russia should declare its readiness to restore cooperation with
the West in full at any moment and call for joint efforts to bring
that moment closer;

– the cursing and insults should stop. Nothing else was to be
expected of Rogozin [Russian representative to NATO); but the highly
intellectual foreign minister could have expressed himself a little
more elegantly (not about Saakashvili – here it really is difficult
to restrain oneself, nor is it particularly necessary – but about
his G8 colleagues).

"That seems simple." Not at all, in fact – the inertia is building,
the next step into the abyss appears necessary simply because it flows
logically from the growing sum of the steps already taken. With every
day it becomes increasingly difficult to turn aside from the road,
to leave the game, to think things over and begin a new game. This
applies to all those involved in the events – but we should think about
our own measure of responsibility, and that is very great. Certain
historical analogies can impose themselves very forcefully. Once,
under very similar circumstances, all the players in the "European
casino" committed collective suicide simultaneously, and each of them
individually, until the last moment, seemed to be an intelligent,
rational being. That was also in August. August 1914. God forbid.

Avetik Isahakian Elected Director Of Literature Institute

AVETIK ISAHAKIAN ELECTED DIRECTOR OF LITERATURE INSTITUTE

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[03:45 pm] 03 September, 2008

During today’s sitting the presidency of the National academy of
Sciences of the Republic of Armenia elected the Directors of the Art
and Literature Institutes, reports the Press Service of the National
Academy of Sciences.

Honored Art Worker, PhD, Professor Ararat Aghasyan was unanimously
reelected the Director of the Institute of Art.

Doctor of Philology, Professor Avetik (Avik) Isahakyan was also
unanimously reelected Director of the Institute of Literature after
Mher Abeghyan.