Memorial reopened to Beirut-educated doctors who perished in WWI

Memorial reopened to Beirut-educated doctors who perished in WWI
by Hratch Kestenian

Published: Sunday November 11, 2012

Hovhannes Terzian, Ovesea Hekimian and Dikran Halajian were among the
AUB MDs honored.

BEIRUT – In the early evening of June 26, 1923, a great congregation
of doctors and pharmacists gathered in the upper foyer of West Hall at
the American University of Beirut (until 1920 it was called the Syrian
Protestant College) to witness the unveiling of a tablet inscribed
with the names of fellow AUB medical alumni who perished in the course
of World War I.

Dr. Yusuf Hitti presided over the ceremony calling upon Acting
President Edward Nickoley and Dr. Harry Dorman, Dean of the Medical
School, to unveil the tablet and read the list of names inscribed. Two
addresses in Arabic followed; one by Dr. Yusuf Azuri and another by
Mr. Anis Sidawi, instructor in Arabic and English at the college
1911-1912.0

This tablet, a temporary construction of walnut wood, was replaced
three years later with a permanent bronze memorial. During the second
installation ceremony, held on February 9, 1926, Dr. Najib Ardati,
Clinical Professor of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, and Dr.
E. St. John Ward, Dean of the Medical School, gave an compelling
speech on the spirit of devotion and self-sacrifice that the departed
alumni had demonstrated through the course of their medical careers
and in their military service.

During the Lebanese civil strife in 1976, the bronze memorial tablet
was moved to the university’s College Hall to protect it from damage
and the possibility of theft.. In 1991, when an explosion leveled
College Hall, the tablet was lost.

36 years after its removal from West Hall, on November 1 a
reconstructed tablet was permanently installed and displayed in its
original home, in commemoration of AUB medical doctors who gave their
lives so that others can live in a more just and peaceful world. Where
it can be remembered that these doctors with their sacrifice also
saved the college at that time from closure, as said by Dr. Bayard
Dodge, president of AUB (1923-1948).

During World War I, Ottoman Empire’s Jemal Pasha was willing to
compromise on any issue raised by the college except actions that
could lead to losing its medical team. And when he discovered that the
only doctors whom he could trust to work on front line hospitals and
typhus wards were Beirut graduates, he furnished the college with
wheat and other supplies at military prices. And this turned to the
advantage of the Syrian Protestant College to bargain with him on
academic and personal matters.

I am writing this article with the intention of finding the
descendants of these Medical Doctors who lost their lives during the
First World War. It should be noted that a total of 232 Armenians
graduated from the medical schools of the American University of
Beirut and the Universite Saint Joseph from their inception until
1918, out of which 134 graduated from AUB. According to the booklet
published by the Armenian Students Union for the Commemoration of
their 25th anniversary, a total of 28 medical doctors and pharmacists
were murdered during the First World War. Out of these 28 Alumni only
16 are mentioned, may because the remaining 12 didn’t serve in the
Turkish army.

These 12 doctors and pharmacists are:

1. Sarkis K. Azoyan (grad. 1887)
2. Hovhannes K. Kasabian ( grad. 1903)
3. Kevork S. Krajian (grad. 1906)
4. Vahan H. Ghazarian ( grad. 1907)
5. Garabed K. Melikian (grad. 1907)
6. Armenag Seradarian (grad. 1907)
7. Bedros T. Benne-Torossian (grad.1910)
8. Baghdasar Barsamian ( Pharm. 1889)
9. Khosrov Keshishian ( Pharm. 1902)
10. Meguirdich G. Baloyan (pharm. 1902)
11. Aramayis A. Chikejian (pharm. 1902)
12. Hagop Sarigian (pharm. 1902)

The following is a brief biographical description of the medical
alumni appearing on the tablet.

1. Michel Tannus Rubayz Born in Beirut to a Greek Orthodox family. He
received his Medical Degree in 1890 from the Syrian Protestant
College. He was married, and held the position of practitioner in
Beirut, but during the First World War he was deceased in Asia Minor.

2. Najib Jamal Born in Nazareth, Palestine to a Protestant family. He
received his Medical Degree in 1891from the Syrian Protestant College.
Served as a physician in Jerusalem, Palestine, but during the First
World War he was deceased.

3. Ali Sulayman Alam-ud-din Born in B’aklin, Lebanon in 1870 to a
Druze family and had the title of Sheikh. He received his Medical
Degree in 1892 from the Syrian Protestant College. In 1893 he got
married, and had 3 sons and 6 daughters. His last position was captain
in the Turkish army and contributed many articles to Al-Muktataf and
other magazines. He was deceased in Homs in 1916.

4. Mikhail Hakim Born in Tripoli to a Greek Orthodox family. He
received his Medical Degree in 1892 from the Syrian Protestant
College. He was married and worked as physician in Tripoli before
becoming captain in the Turkish army. During the First World War, he
was deceased in Beirut in 1915.

5. Iskander Khalil Zayn Born in Zahleh to a Greek Orthodox family. He
received his Medical Degree in 1902 from the Syrian Protestant
College. His last position was captain in the Turkish army. During the
First World War, he was deceased in Islahiyyah, Asia Minor in 1916. He
was married and had a son.

6. Ovsea Kevork Hekimian Born in Kessab in 1880. He received his BA
from Central Turkey College (also Known as Aintab College) and his
Medical Degree from the Syrian Protestant College in 1903. After
graduating he served in Kessab as a physician, and his last position
was captain in the Turkish army during the First World War. He was
married to Miss G. Enjejikian, but in May, 1915 he was shot.

7. Joseph Kaisermann Born in Safad to a Jewish family; and received
his Medical Degree in 1904. His last position was physician at the
Jewish Clinic, in Beirut. He was married and had a son and a daughter.
During the First World War he was deceased in Hamah in 1915.

8. Minas Yarmayan Born in Tokat, Asia Minor. He received his Medical
Degree in 1904 from the Syrian Protestant College. During the First
World War, he served in the Aziziya Hospital as captain in the Turkish
army, and was shot at the courtyard of the hospital in June, 1915.

9. Hagop Serovpe Eminian Born in Rhodes in 1878. He received his BA in
1899 from Anatolia College and his Medical Degree in 1905 from the
Syrian Protestant College. His last position was teacher in hygiene
and general practitioner in Merzifoun, Asia Minor, but during the
First World War he was murdered in 1915.

10. Levon Karekin Sewny Born in Sivas to an Armenian Protestant
family. He received his Medical Degree in 1905, and his last position
was surgeon at the Armenian National Hospital and visiting surgeon at
the governmental hospital in Sivas, Asia Minor. During the First World
War he was deceased from typhus.

11. Vosgian K. Topalian Born in Marash in 1878 to an Armenian
Apostolic Family. He received his BA from Central Turkey College and
his MD in 1905 from the Syrian Protestant College. During the war, he
served as captain in the Turkish army at the Aziziya Hospital, and was
shot in Erzinga in June, 1915.

12. Sarkis K. Chilingirian Born in Banderma, Asia Minor in 1884 to an
Armenian Apostolic family. He received his Medical Degree in 1906 from
the Syrian Protestant College, and was deceased in the Dayr el Zor
desert during the First World War as part of the Armenian Genocide.

13. Gulbenk Kevork Gulbenkian Born in Talas, Asia Minor in 1883 to an
Armenian Apostolic family. He received his BA from Anatolia College in
1903 and his Medical Degree from the Syrian Protestant College in
1907. He worked as practitioner in Talas from 1907 to 1913, and was
deceased on the Russian front during the First World War.

14. Lutfi Harutyune Halebian Born in Aintab in 1882 to a Protestant
family. He received his BA from Central Turkey College in 1902 and his
Medical Degree from the Syrian Protestant College in 1907. He worked
as practitioner in Aintab and Malatya from 1907 to 1914, and served as
captain in the Turkish army during the war and was known as Sir Tabib
Lutfi. He was shot on July, 1915 at the Erzinga road with his friend
Dr. Hovhannes Terzian. From his family , only his sister and her
fiancée L. Levonian survived the Armenian Genocide , and they settled
in Watertown, Massachusetts, USA.

15. Zeroun K. Hekimian Born in Kessab in 1886 to a Protestant family.
He received his BA in 1903 from Central Turkey College and his Medical
Degree from the Syrian Protestant College in 1908. His last position
was captain in the Turkish army, and was shot in Antioch during the
First World War.

16. Abdallah Rizk Sawaya Born in Btighrin, Lebanon. He received his
Medical Degree in 1908 from the Syrian Protestant College. During the
First World War while serving in the Turkish army as captain, he was
deceased.

17. Hovhannes Giragos Terzian Born in Dikranagerd in 1884 to an
Armenian Apostolic family. He was one of the four members of the
Central Committee of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation in Lebanon.
He received his Medical Degree in 1910 and served as a physician in
Diyarbakir, and also took part in the Balkan Wars as captain in the
Turkish army. During the First World War, he served in the Aziziya
Hospital as captain in the Turkish army, and was shot on July, 1915 at
the Erzinga road with his friend Dr. Lutfi Halebian. It should also be
noted that he is one of the founders of the Armenian Students Union
established in the Syrian Protestant College in 1908.

18. Jacob Berghert Born in Kakowka, Russia in 1883 to a Jewish family.
He received his Medical Degree in 1911 and worked as a physician in
Tiberias, Palestine from 1911-1914. During the First World War he was
deceased on the Gaza Front in 1916.

19. Haroutune Minas Kavafian Born in Constantinople in 1885 to an
Armenian Apostolic family. He received his Medical Degree in 1911 and
worked in the Baghdad Railway service, Aleppo in 1913. During the
First World War, he served in the Aziziya Hospital as captain in the
Turkish army, and was shot at the courtyard of the hospital in July,
1915.

20. Sulayman Salih Salibi Born in Beirut in 1881 to a Protestant
family. He received his Medical Degree in 1911 and was married in 1913
and had 3 daughters. During the First World War while serving in the
Turkish army, he was deceased in Aleppo in 1917.

21. Demetrios E. Theocharides Born in Tarsus in 1872 to a Greek
Orthodox family. He received his BA in 1904 from St. Paul’s Institute
and his MD in 1911 from the Syrian Protestant College, and worked as a
physician from 1912 to 1914 in Tarsus. During the First World War, he
was deceased in Palestine.

22. Dikran V. Hallajian Born in Gurin in 1882 to a Protestant family.
He received his BA from Euphrates College and his Medical Degree in
1912 from the Syrian Protestant College. From 1913 to 1915, he worked
as physician in Gurin, and his last position was captain in the
Turkish army. During the First World War, he served in the Aziziya
Hospital as captain in the Turkish army, and was shot at the courtyard
of the hospital in June, 1915. He was also married and had a daughter
by the name of Persape, who survived the Armenian Genocide and settled
in the USA.

23. Dikaran A. Kassabian Born in Diyarbakir, Asia Minor to an Armenian
Apostolic family. He received his Medical Degree in 1912, and worked
as a physician at the German hospital in Urfa. His last position was
captain in the Turkish army, and was murdered in Erzurum in 1915.

24. Tanyus Mansur Bikhazi Born in Beirut in 1892 to a Greek Orthodox
family. He received his pharmacy decree in 1913, and worked as a
pharmacist in Beirut from 1913 to 1915 and as a captain in the Turkish
army from 1915 to 1918. He was deceased on the Gaza front in 1918.

25. Maksud Hagop Apikian Born in Tokat, Asia Minor in 1888 to an
Armenian Apostolic family. He received his BA from Anatolia College
and his Medical Degree in 1914 from the Syrian Protestant College. He
worked as a physician in Anatolia College hospital in 1914, and while
serving as captain in the Turkish army, he was murdered in 1915.

26. Nishan Hovsep Bakkalian Born in Diyarbakir, Asia Minor to an
Armenian Apostolic family He received his BA from Central Turkey
College and his Medical Degree from the Syrian Protestant College in
1914. While serving as captain in the Turkish army, he was murdered in
1915.

27. Abraham Jacob Grun Born to a Jewish family, and received his MD in
1914. While serving as captain in the Turkish army, he was deceased in
1915.

28. Mesrob Sarkis Vartanian Born in Zera, Asia Minor to an Armenian
Apostolic family in 1888. He received his MD in 1914 and while serving
as captain in the Turkish army, he was murdered in 1915.

29. Jibran Bassil Diyab Received his MD in 1915. While serving as
captain in the Turkish army, during the First World War, he was
deceased in 1915.

30. Shukri Jurjus Rizk Born in Brummana, Lebanon in 1896 He received
his M.D. in 1915, while serving as captain in the Turkish army, during
the First World War, he was deceased on the Gaza front in 1917.

31. Salim Isbir Abbud Born in Zahleh, Lebanon in 1892 to a Protestant
family. He received his Medical Degree in 1916 and his last position
was captain in the Turkish army. He received two war medals from the
government, and was deceased in the Caucasus in 1918.

32. Vartan Hagop Piranian Born in Gurin, Asia Minor in 1885 to a
Protestant family. He received his BA from Central Turkey College and
his Medical Degree from the Syrian Protestant College in 1917. His
last position was captain in the Turkish army, and was murdered in
Tiberias, Palestine in 1918.

For sure the number of AUB medical alumni who died for various
reasons, during the First World War, was much higher than Thirty-two.
Armenian sources indicate that: sixty-seven physicians and surgeons,
fifty-four pharmacists, ten dentists and five medical students, died
during the Armenian Genocide. Having around one-third of these medical
alumni who perished during the war, as AUB graduates, gives a great
value to this Memorial Tablet. And it also acknowledges the forgotten
role of AUB medical graduates, and asserts the important role which
the American University of Beirut has played over the year since its
inception.

http://www.reporter.am/go/article/2012-11-11-memorial-reopened-to-beirut-educated-doctors-who-perished-in-wwi-

Pétrole : Gazprom sommé de choisir entre le Kurdistan et l’est de l’

KURDISTAN
Pétrole : Gazprom sommé de choisir entre le Kurdistan et l’est de l’Irak

Le gouvernement irakien a sommé la compagnie pétrolière russe Gazprom
de choisir entre le contrat passé avec lui sur l’exploitation d’un
champ pétrolier de l’est de l’Irak et son engagement avec la région du
Kurdistan, en querelle avec Bagdad sur plusieurs dossiers.

`Nous avons demandé à Gazprom de dire au gouvernement irakien s’il
préférait annuler ses contrats avec le Kurdistan ou bien quitter (le
champ pétrolier) de Badra`, situé au sud-est de la capitale irakienne,
a expliqué à l’AFP Fayçal Abdullah, porte-parole du vice-Premier
ministre chargé de l’Energie, Hussein Chahristani.

Gazprom avait remporté avec d’autres compagnies l’exploitation du
champ de Badra lors d’enchères en décembre 2009. Mais en août dernier,
le groupe avait signé deux contrats d’exploration et de production
avec la région autonome du Kurdistan irakien.

Qualifiant ces derniers contrats d’`illégaux`, M. Abdullah a réitéré
la position du gouvernement fédéral, selon laquelle tout contrat
portant sur l’exploitation des ressources énergétiques de l’Irak doit
avant tout être approuvé par Bagdad.

Le gouvernement irakien est en effet furieux de voir nombre de
compagnies pétrolières étrangères faire affaires directement avec la
région autonome du Kurdistan sans solliciter son accord.

Mercredi, l’américain ExxonMobil a répondu à un ultimatum semblable
posé par Bagdad en disant préférer un contrat signé avec le Kurdistan
à l’exploitation d’un champ pétrolier du sud de l’Irak.

L’exploitation des hydrocarbures est le principal enjeu des relations
houleuses qu’entretiennent Erbil et Bagdad. Le Kurdistan jouit d’une
grande autonomie par rapport au reste du pays et gère sa propre
administration.

dimanche 11 novembre 2012,
Stéphane ©armenews.com

Montélimar propose l’exposition « Plénitude de Toros »

CULTURE-MONTELIMAR
Montélimar propose l’exposition « Plénitude de Toros »

La ville de Montélimar offrira du 15 décembre 2012 au 12 mai 2013 une
rétrospective des `uvres du sculpteur Toros intitulée « Plénitude de
Toros » au Musée d’Art Contemporain Saint-Martin de Montélimar.

Le vernissage de l’exposition en présence de l’artiste, de Franck
Reynier Député de la Drôme et Maire de Montélimar, S.E. Vigen
Tchitetchian Ambassadeur d’Arménie en France, ainsi que de nombreuses
personnalités du monde de la culture et des arts, le vendredi 14
décembre à 18h30 au Musée d’Art Contemporain Saint-Martin (Avenue
Saint Martin, Place de Provence, 26200 Montélimar).

Toros (Toros Restkélénian) le célèbre sculpteur arménien né à Alep
(Syrie) et résidant à Romans (Drôme) est l’auteur de très nombreuses
`uvres dont plusieurs dizaines dédiées au génocide arménien. Toros a
exposé en France mais également à l’étranger. Il reçut en 2009 la
médaille Movses Khorénatsi » (Moïse de Khorène) décernée par le
Président de la République d’Arménie. L’Arménie où son ouvre sur Sayat
Nova est désormais exposée sur une place. Toros a reçu également de
très nombreuses décorations, dont la Légion d’Honneur. Après la ville
de Valence l’an dernier, Montélimar rend un juste hommage à cet
artiste profondément proche des valeurs humaines ainsi que de ses
origines.

Krikor Amirzayan

dimanche 11 novembre 2012,
Krikor Amirzayan ©armenews.com

Fin de la grève des ouvriers du port de Poti

TRANSPORTS
Fin de la grève des ouvriers du port de Poti

Après la grève de quelques jours, les ouvriers du port de Poti
(Géorgie) ont repris leur activité hier à 2 heures du matin. Selon
Gaguik Aghadjanian, le directeur de la société « Abavén » l’activité
du port sera renforcée pour faire face au retard et l’accumulation du
fret. Près de 300 containers venus d’Arménie pour l’exportation
étaient dans l’attente de leur chargement sur les bateaux. « Tout
rentrera dans l’ordre dans quelques jours » d’après Gaguik
Aghadjanian. Par ailleurs trois ou quatre bateaux dont le chargement
était destiné à l’Arménie furent dirigés vers le port de Batoumi pour
leur déchargement.

Krikor Amirzayan

dimanche 11 novembre 2012,
Krikor Amirzayan ©armenews.com

Taner Akçam publie un livre sur les biens arméniens spoliés lors du

GENOCIDE ARMENIEN-LIVRES
Taner Akçam publie un livre sur les biens arméniens spoliés lors du génocide

L’historien et sociologue turc Taner Akçam vient de publier avec Ümit
Kurt aux éditions Iletishim un ouvrage en turc « Kanunlarin Ruhu
Emval-i Metruke Kanunlarinda Soykirimin Izini Sürmek » (L’me des
lois, suivre les traces du génocide par les lois sur « Biens spoliés
»). L’ouvrage présente les biens spoliés lors du génocide arménien et
leurs destinations après le génocide. « Le grand malheur de 1915 dans
l’Empire ottoman n’a pas seulement ôté des vies mais également des
biens et propriétés » écrit Taner Akçam et se pose la question de la
restitution de ces derniers à ses propriétaires. Le livre contient
également de nombreuses citations de Hrant Dink le rédacteur d’« Agos
» assassiné en janvier 2007.

Krikor Amirzayan

dimanche 11 novembre 2012,
Krikor Amirzayan ©armenews.com

Armenian govt confirms safety requirements for new nuclear units

Interfax, Russia
Nov 8 2012

Armenian govt confirms safety requirements for new nuclear units

YEREVAN. Nov 8

The Armenian government on Thursday adopted draft safety requirements
for new nuclear power units.

Government Nuclear Safety Regulation Committee Chairman Ashot
Martisrosyan said at the meeting that these requirements had undergone
international review, including by the International Atomic Energy
Agency (IAEA). The new requirements are necessary because Armenia
plans to build a new unit at the existing nuclear power plant.

Russia and Armenia signed an agreement in August 2010 to build a new
unit at the Armenian NPP with a VVER type reactor with 1,060 megawatt
capacity. To implement the project Armenia and Russia’s CJSC
Atomstroyexport established the joint company Metsamorenergatom,
which is also seeking investors for the project.

Construction was to begin in the second half of 2012 – 2013 and end by
2017. The cost is estimated at $4 billion to $5 billion.

Armenian Energy and Natural Resources Minister Armen Movsisyan said
last month that Armenia decided to extend the term of operation of the
existing Armenian NPP unit for 10 years. The minister said the
operation term needed to be extended for 10 years because that is how
long it would take to complete the new unit.

Armenian NPP currently has one reactor with capacity of 400 megawatts.
The projected resource is due to end in 2016, although Armenia has
said it will only mothball the reactor when a new one has been built.
IAEA experts said the resources of the existing unit can be extended.

Iraqi President Receives Message from Armenian Counterpart

Qatar News Agency
November 8, 2012 Thursday 10:04 PM EST

Iraqi President Receives Message from Armenian Counterpart

Sulaymaniyah, November 08 (QNA) – Iraqi President Jalal Talabani
Enhanced Coverage LinkingJalal Talabani -Search using:Biographies
Plus NewsNews, Most Recent 60 Dayshas received a message from his
Armenian counterpart Serzh Sargsyan connected with bilateral relations
and the need to develop them in various areas, as well as Armenia’s
support for the political process and the reconstruction and stability
drive in Iraq.

The message was conveyed by Deputy Prime Minister of Armenia Armen
Kevorkian during a meeting with Talabani here today.

During the meeting the Iraqi president stressed that his country has
become an attractive investment arena for many international companies
in various fields, stressing the importance of Armenian companies
contribution, in hasty and practical steps, to the process of
reconstruction and diverse investments in Iraq.

He pointed out that there is a vast common ground for strengthening
and expanding bilateral relations between Iraq and Armenia in various
political, economic and trade fields, as well as other areas of
bilateral cooperation.(QNA)

OM

Iran minister pledges help to Armenia’s energy sector

Islamic Republic News Agency IRNA, Iran
Nov 8 2012

Iran minister pledges help to Armenia’s energy sector

Tabriz, 8 November: Energy Minister of Iran Majid Namju said on
Thursday [8 November] that Iran will use all its capacities to help
Armenia improve its energy sector.

Namju made the remarks addressing a ceremony on the start of operation
of a joint power plant on the Aras River on the Iran-Armenia border.
Namju expressed his satisfaction with the current level of amicable
ties between Tehran and Yerevan.

Armenian Minister of Energy and Natural Resources Armen Movsisyan,
too, appreciated Iran’s close and friendly cooperation with his
country.

Hundreds of people meet Patriarch Kirill with applause in Jerusalem

ITAR-TASS, Russia
November 9, 2012 Friday 10:52 PM GMT+4

Hundreds of people meet Patriarch Kirill with applause in Jerusalem

JERUSALEM November 9

– Applause and welcoming shouts could be heard at the Jaffa Gate of
the Old City of Jerusalem Friday, as hundreds of people representing
the different religious denominations gathered to welcome the
Patriarch of Moscow and all Russia Kirill I who is making a pilgrimage
to the Holy Land.

One could see there the hierarchs of the Eastern Orthodox Church of
Jerusalem, the Franciscans, members of the Armenian and Coptic
Churches, and many others.

Disciples of Judaism, who were hurrying to round up the routine daily
business before the beginning of Shabbat, also showed friendly
curiosity.

The Russian Patriarch arrived at the main shrine of all the
Christians, the Church of the Holy Sepulcher. His walk along the
streets of the Old City was accompanied by the strikes of wands of the
Church’s guards of honor.

Kirill I was greeted warmly by Theophilos III, the Eastern Orthodox
Patriarch of Jerusalem.

The Russian Patriarch said in his speech he had come to pray at the
holy sites – and especially in the Church of the Holy Sepulcher – “for
peace across the whole world, for the prosperity of Churches and for
the salvation of all and everyone.”

“Every Christian certainly has a wish to get to the Holy Land at least
once, to walk along Via Dolorosa, and to venerate the stone, on to
which Jesus’s body was placed,” he said with an apparent sign of
excitement.

Kirill I underlined a special feature of his pilgrimage, saying he
would pray in the name of the entire Russian Orthodox Church.

He recalled that Moscow Patriarchate’s canonical territory embraces,
apart from the Russian Federation, Ukraine, Belarus, Moldova, and a
number of other countries.

“The situation in the Holy Land is far from quiet or stable today and
we’ll especially ask in our prayers for the descent of peace and
concord among people onto the land where Christ’s Great Victory came
into being,” Kirill I said.

The six-day itinerary of his visit of the Holy Land includes dozens of
places related to the life of Jesus Christ and Christian saints.

Armenian General Threatens Azeri Economic Facilities

ARMENIAN GENERAL THREATENS AZERI ECONOMIC FACILITIES

Eurasia Daily Monitor – Jamestown Foundation
Nov 8 2012

Publication: Eurasia Daily Monitor Volume: 9 Issue: 205
November 8, 2012 05:12 PM Age: 1 days

By: Fuad Huseinzadeh

Armenian S-300 missile battery

In a little-noticed development last month, a senior Armenian military
official has announced Armenia’s willingness to use military force
against Azeri economic facilities in the event of an outbreak of war
in Karabakh. On October 15, Major General Artak Davtyan, Chief of the
Operative Department, Armenian Armed Forces, made an oblique reference
to Armenia’s S-300s which it recently acquired from Russia as a measure
of retaliation against Azerbaijan. During a press conference, General
Davtyan told journalists on October 15 that the Armenian Armed Forces
consider long-range missiles a priority and, if necessary, are ready
to attack the enemy’s economic facilities, particularly gas and oil
pipelines ().

Armenia first acknowledged receipt of the S-300s in December 2010, and
a few days later showcased a video of the missiles being tested (see
EDM, January 11, 2011). The surface-to-air missiles went on display to
the public in January 2011 when they were featured during a military
parade ().

Immediately following General Davtyan’s comments, Azerbaijani military
officials in Baku responded, noting the economic impact Armenia’s
actions would have, as well as Azerbaijan’s ability to protect its
threatened assets. According to Colonel Eldar Sabiroglu, a spokesman
for Azerbaijan’s defense ministry, “Firstly, Azerbaijan’s oil and gas
fields are being used jointly with the biggest states and companies.

Secondly, Azerbaijan is able to protect its oil and gas fields, all
measures needed for missile defense are in the focus of attention. The
enemy should understand that the new missile systems of Azerbaijani
Armed Forces can strike any strategic facility of Armenia”
().

At the same time that the statement by the Armenian military appeared,
information was released by Yerevan announcing that Armenia had
actually placed Russian-made S-300PS surface-to-air missiles
within seven kilometers of the border with Karabakh. Information
released by IMINT & Analysis, a US-based open-source military
analysis group, stated that according to Google Earth satellite
imagery of air defense systems, the deployment of the highly mobile
S-300PS complexes would allow Armenia, with Russian assistance,
to cover the entire air space over the occupied territories
of Azerbaijan. “[T]he placement of Armenian S-300PS batteries
adjacent to Karabakh, represent significant occurrences potentially
impacting various future scenarios in the region,” the source noted
().

More importantly, what does this all mean? First of all, the statement
by General Davtyan is likely the first instance in recent years of a
senior Armenian military officer quite clearly threatening Azerbaijan.

At the same time, his statement would also be a direct threat
against US and European oil investments since Azerbaijan’s major oil
facilities, such as the Sangachal oil terminal and other facilities,
are jointly operated in cooperation with western oil companies.

Officials in Baku also did not interpret the statements as solely an
impulsive statement made by Yerevan, but assumed they were made at the
likely urging of Moscow. As Azerbaijan’s defense ministry spokesman
Sabiroglu noted, “[Armenia’s] strength and sense do not belong
to itself,” which is a diplomatic way of indicating that Yerevan’s
posturing is directly backed and possibly inspired by Russian military
and political guarantees ().

With the peace process in a virtual deadlock, the recent statements
by such a senior ranking Armenian defense official and the subsequent
announcement of the deployment of the S-300s near the Armenian-occupied
territory of Karabakh stand to further inflame regional tensions. While
Russian forces based in Armenia have had S-300s in their hands for
over ten years, the actual transfer of the S-300s to the control
of Armenian forces is an entirely different matter. Moreover,
the announcement that they have been deployed near the border with
Karabakh is a destabilizing move. The highly mobile missile system
can easily be redeployed, but in the event of an armed conflict,
its current location would invite a potential retaliatory response
from Azerbaijan on a target within Armenia proper. Such a response
is legally vastly different than attacking a mobile battery within
the disputed Karabakh territory, which is internationally recognized
to be inside Azerbaijan.

Finally, these developments are occurring against the backdrop of a
complete absence of US activity in the South Caucasus as Washington
has largely deferred its role in the Karabakh peace talks to Moscow.

With the transfer of S-300s to the control of Armenian forces
next to Karabakh, and the Russian sale of S-300s to Azerbaijan in
mid-2011 (Armenianow.com, June 30, 2011), Moscow is now both the lead
negotiator in the talks over the future of Karabakh and the supplier
of destabilizing weapons to both Yerevan and Baku. This stands to
leave Moscow as the sole arbiter of regional stability in the South
Caucasus, both in the negotiating room and on the battlefield.

http://www.tert.am/en/news/2012/10/15/artak-davtyan/
http://www.azatutyun.am/content/article/24335604.html
http://news.az/articles/politics/70257
http://www.panarmenian.net/eng/news/127592/
http://news.az/articles/politics/70257
http://www.jamestown.org/single/?no_cache=1&tx_ttnews%5Bswords%5D=8fd5893941d69d0be3f378576261ae3e&tx_ttnews%5Bany_of_the_words%5D=Armenia&tx_ttnews%5Btt_news%5D=40080&tx_ttnews%5BbackPid%5D=7&cHash=a0e4d8d69aeab988ba314f7ad934c046