30 Countries Including Armenia Attend Syria Meeting In Tehran

30 COUNTRIES INCLUDING ARMENIA ATTEND SYRIA MEETING IN TEHRAN

Panorama.am
17:47 09/08/2012 ” In the world

About 30 countries including Armenia attend the consultation conference
on Syria in Tehran. The participant countries, which are from different
continents, play important roles at regional and international levels,
Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister for Arab and African Affairs Hossein
Amir-Abdollahian told the Mehr News Agency.

Some of the countries attending the meeting are: Pakistan, Algeria,
Oman, Zimbabwe, Iraq, Venezuela, Tajikistan, India, Russia, China,
Kazakhstan, Armenia, Nicaragua, Cuba, Sudan, Jordan, Tunisia, Belarus,
Mauritania, Indonesia, Kyrgyzstan, Georgia, Turkmenistan, Benin,
Sri Lanka and Ecuador.

Putin’s Answer To Excited Armenians

PUTIN’S ANSWER TO EXCITED ARMENIANS
Yeghisheh Metsarents

Story from Lragir.am News:

Published: 16:10:54 – 09/08/2012

On August 8, during the press conference that followed the meeting
of Serzh Sargsyan and Vladimir Putin, an interesting incident which
at first sight seems to have nothing in common with politics revealed
more than political statements did. Presumably, each mass media outlet
had the opportunity of asking only one question.

The first question that was asked to the presidents concerned the
Olympic Games and the presidents’ impressions about their national
teams. The person to ask the question underlined that the first gold
medal of Russia was won by a boxer of Armenian origin.

Although it is not noted in the Russian president’s website who the
question asked, ostensibly it was an Armenian reporter. Since it was
the first question, the guests would most probably be invited to ask
it. Besides, judging by the content, the second question about the
recent Russian-Georgian war and whether he had called Medvedev from
Beijing could hardly be asked by an Armenian.

But Putin was not caught in the trap of the kind question of the
Armenian reporter and poured cold water on the Armenian excitement.

“We congratulate athletes for success in the Olympic Games regardless
of their ethnic origin”, said Putin without saying anything about
the Russian Olympic Champion of Armenian origin.

In other words, Putin didn’t promote the witty Armenian trends of
making Russia feel indebted to Armenia for the Olympic gold medals won
by Armenians. Putin obviously hinted that he does not pay attention
to the nationality of the champions.

Besides, Serzh Sargsyan answered. “Sure, for those people who
appreciate the Armenian-Russian partnership, Galstyan’s victory is
an important symbol. It reiterates that we are stronger together”.

No doubt, Serzh Sargsyan’s answer was prepared before but the Armenian
side when working out this response didn’t think Putin would be so
indifferent towards the “Armenian” victory.

Against the background of Putin’s indifferent answer, Sargsyan’s warm
answer become self-humiliating and the Armenians come out to be trying
to seize nice words from Russia on what happened. Putin ignores the
“Armenian gold”, and Armenia is insisting.

It is interesting whether this circumstance will be a national lesson
to Armenians not to overvalue our weight to make its small size or
absence obvious. Maybe thanks to this lesson, in cases like this, the
situation will be more sober and pragmatic in order to avoid further
humiliation. The point is not only about our relations with Russia,
but with the whole world.

Photo from the official website of the Russian president

http://www.lragir.am/engsrc/comments27086.html

Hadjinian Announces Commission Appointments

HADJINIAN ANNOUNCES COMMISSION APPOINTMENTS

ASBAREZ
August 8th, 2012

Newly-appointed Montebello Youth Commission member Poghos Iskajyan
with Councilman Jack Hadjinian

MONTEBELLO-City Councilman Jack Hadjinian appointed Poghos Iskajyan
to the City’s Youth Commission on July 27. Iskajyan will enter the
11 grade this fall at Armenian Mesrobian School and is the fourth
Armenian to be appointed to a City commission by Councilman Hadjinian.

“I decided to appoint Poghos Iskajyan to the Youth Commission because
he has demonstrated good leadership skills at Mesrobian School and
in the AYF. His willingness to work with others makes me believe he
will represent our community well on a City commission”.

Hadjinian announced three other appointments.

Erik Pulatian – Golf Course Commission Erik Pulatian is the owner
and operator of All Service Catering, a mobile food & special
event catering company. Pulatian will bring a new perspective to
the golf course operation since he understands the food concession
business. Pulatian is a member of the Mesrobian School alumni and
serves on the steering committee of the Holy Cross Cathedral’s Annual
Armenian Food Fair & Festival. Erik Pulatian enjoys traveling and
boating in Lake Tahoe with his family & friends.

Ashod Mooradian – Planning Commission Ashod Mooradian currently is
employed with the State Bar of California as a deputy Trial Counsel
and formerly served on the City’s Traffic & Safety commission from
2010-2012. Ashod Mooradian is happily married with 3 children. A
member of the San Gabriel Valley-ANC and a Mesrobian graduate class
of 1987; he went on to attend the University of Southern California,
and Southwestern Law School. Mooradian will bring his legal expertise
to the commission as the only attorney serving alongside other members
who are either civil engineers or businessmen.

Berj Aliksanian – Traffic & Safety Commission Berj
Aliksanian is a geotechnical specialty engineer with the firm
EarthSpectives. Aliksanian is a licensed civil engineer and a
Mesrobian School graduate class of 2004. While in high school Berj
Aliksanian participated in an internship program Hadjinian organized
with then Assemblyman Ron Calderon’s office and the Armenian Mesrobian
School. “It was then as a high school student I realized Berj had an
interest in public service, I remember the Assemblyman’s staff telling
me he was always prompt and ready to help everyone”. Aliksanian is

Hadjinian also appointed George Pacheco Esq. to the City’s Investment
Committee, Joe Lucero to the Civil Service Commission, and Vivian
Romero to Parks & Recreation. Currently, there are two other Armenian
Americans serving on City commissions; Denise Hagopian-Civil Service
Commission, and Murad Minasian-Planning Commission.

Councilman Hadjinian currently serves on the Governing Board of the
San Gabriel Valley Council of Governments, member of the Board of
Directors of Gateway Cities, and serves on the Board of Directors of
ACE Construction Authority with Supervisor Michael Antonovich. The
ACE Construction Authority has 14 rail-roadway separation projects
and has a total budget of $1.3 billion dollars.

The San Gabriel Valley Chapter of the Armenian National Committee of
America is proud of the selection of appointments made by Hadjinian
and looks forward to their professionalism as City Commissioner.

BAKU: Armenia Websites Hacked By Azerbaijanis

ARMENIA WEBSITES HACKED BY AZERBAIJANIS

News.Az
Tue 07 August 2012 16:36 GMT | 17:36 Local Time

The Azerbaijani hackers of the MetaizM and BOT_25 of the anti-armenia
TEAM have hacked the famous Armenian websites in their ‘anti-terror’
operation.

According to Gun.Az, the hackers have hacked hayastan.com.

The photo of the Azerbaijani national hero Ibad Huseynov who
terminated the Armenian terrorist, as well as the Armenian atrocities.

Please, find below the names of the websites and their mirror
reflection.

http://ecard.hayastan.com/
http://zone-h.org/mirror/id/18186351
http://top.hayastan.com/
http://zone-h.org/mirror/id/18186393
http://armenia.hayastan.com/
http://zone-h.org/mirror/id/18186399

Early Christian Tombs Found In Shushi

EARLY CHRISTIAN TOMBS FOUND IN SHUSHI

ARMENPRESS
9 August, 2012
YEREVAN

YEREVAN, AUGUST 8, ARMENPRESS: Many valuable relic samples have
been found during Artsakh’s Tigranakert excavations. In the words of
Artsakh archeological expedition head Hamlet Petrosyan in the course
of the excavations carried out the adjacent northern yard of basilica
church a huge monumental structure was disclosed, reportedly works in
this direction are in the process. ” It is clearly noticed monumental
structure’s floor had been slabbed: the expedition group has already
opened a part of the sallbed floor reportedly works are conducted
for having entire view of the monument “Petrosyan told Armenpress.

The archeologist says residential, a kind of economic type complex
is going to come up as a result of the launched excavations, by the
way made by interesting materials which come to prove Tigranakert
international state in first centuries BC. ” The main goal of
Tigranakert excavations is the expansion of the district attached to
northern stone wall, as up to now it is vague where is the entrance
of the attached district” the interlocutor came forth with.

Tigranakert expedition archeologist Vazgen Safaryan told in the
briefing with Armenpress, Christian tombs are found in Shushi.”

Excavations in Shishi are of high importance for us”.

Tigranakert city excavations started from June 25 are set to last
until August 21-22. Though these are all scheduled for this year,
yet the excavations are expected to continue in Shushi during August.

Le Nouveau Mensonge D’Erdogan : La Flamme Olympique A Des Racines Tu

LE NOUVEAU MENSONGE D’ERDOGAN : LA FLAMME OLYMPIQUE A DES RACINES TURQUES
Stephane

armenews.com
jeudi 9 aout 2012

La Turquie fait regulièrement des tentatives pour deformer l’histoire.

Quand le Premier ministre turc Recep Tayyip Erdogan s’est entretenu
avec le president du CIO, Jacques Rogge a Londres recemment, il a
clairement indique que la Turquie voulait le retour de la flamme
olympique.

Selon le portail Aipsmedia, le ministre turc de la jeunesse et des
sports Suat Kilic a parle de la reunion de son Premier ministre avec
le president du CIO.

La flamme olympique est allumee a partir de l’ancienne colonie
grecque d’Olympe. Or selon le journaliste turc les racines remontent
du flambeaux se trouvent en fait en Turquie.

Selon Suat Kilic le Premier ministre Erdogan est ” si honnete et très
sympathique ” et ” si j’avais ete dans le fauteuil de M. Jacques Rogge,
j’aurais ete très impressionne “.

Lorsqu’on l’interroge sur la reaction de Jacques Rogge le ministre
turc a declare que le president du CIO ” a ete très professionnel et
n’a pas vraiment donner la moindre idee “.

” Mais M. Erdogan a fait valoir que Istanbul est la seule ville où
vous pouvez organiser les Jeux olympiques sur deux continents “.

Armavia Reste L’Une Des Dernieres Compagnies A Assurer Des Vols Vers

ARMAVIA RESTE L’UNE DES DERNIÈRES COMPAGNIES A ASSURER DES VOLS VERS LA SYRIE
Ara

armenews.com
jeudi 9 aout 2012

La compagnie aerienne Armavia a declare qu’il n’a toujours pas
l’intention d’annuler ses vols reguliers a destination d’Alep, malgre
l’intensification des combats qui ont provoque mardi la mort d’au
moins un habitant d’origine armenienne de la ville assiegee .

Un porte-parole du ministère armenien des Affaires etrangères a declare
a RFE / RL (Azatutyun.am) que Viken Kalayjian (55 ans) a ete abattu
dans la matinee. Aucun autre detail sur sa mort n’a ete donne.

Kalayjian est le huitième citoyen syrien d’origine armenienne tue
depuis le debut de la revolte antigouvernementale en Syrie plus il
y a 17 mois. Deux de ces victimes etaient des conscrits de l’armee
syrienne.

La dernière victime armenienne a trouve la mort au milieu des violents
combats qui continuent de faire rage entre les troupes gouvernementales
et les rebelles syriens retranches dans certaines parties d’Alep. Selon
certains articles de presse, les forces loyales au president Bachar
al-Assad ont tente d’encercler le quartier Salaheddine, fief des
rebelles.

Ces combats ont entraine le depart de nombreux Armeniens de la ville.

Plus d’une centaine d’entre eux sont arrives a Erevan lundi soir a
bord d’un avion Armavia .

” La situation n’etait pas bonne aujourd’hui, ” , a declare l’un d’eux,
Harutiun Terzian, a RFE / RL (Azatutyun.am). ” Les combats sont encore
loin des quartiers armeniens, mais ils se rapprochent. ”

Les passagers arrivant comprenaient 14 membres d’une famille
armeno-syrienne. L’une d’eux, Astghik Kuyumjian, a indique qu’ils
devraient beneficier de la citoyennete armenienne, mais ne sais pas
encore combien de temps ils vont rester en Armenie.

Armavia a effectue six vols Erevan-Alep et transporte environ 540
Armeno-Syriens dans le pays de leurs ancetres depuis la reprise de
son service hebdomadaire le 9 juillet. La compagnie aerienne nationale
assure egalement un vol sur cette ligne a cette meme frequence.

Armavia a annonce la semaine dernière qu’elle effectuera cinq vols
supplementaires en août afin de permettre aux Armeniens de fuir
la guerre civile. La societe privee a annonce mardi qu’elle allait
intensifier ses les vols en depit de la deterioration de la situation
dans la plus grande ville de la Syrie.

Armavia reste donc l’une des rares compagnies aeriennes assurant
encore des vols avec la Syrie. L’escalade de la violence a conduit les
principaux operateurs europeens tels qu’Air France et British Airways
a annuler leurs vols a destination de Damas depuis ce printemps.

L’Aeroflot russe leur a emboîte le pas lundi, invoquant ” des raisons
commerciales. ”

Art: The Eye Of Paris

THE EYE OF PARIS

Moscow News
August 6, 2012 Monday
Russia

Through Oct. 7 at the Multimedia Art Museum Moscow, 16 Ul. Ostozhenka,
m. Kropotkinskaya, Tue.-Sun. noon-9 pm, closed Mon.

George Brassai was a pioneer in photo-reportage on the Parisian
underworld. Like the renowned artist Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec before
him, he went strolling through the city at night, taking photos
of prostitutes, pimps, bar flys, rare gay clubs, transvestites,
or simply couples dating in the middle of the night.

This August, the Multimedia Art Museum, with the support of the Estate
Brassai in France, brings to Moscow a retrospective exhibition of
Brassai’s selected works. The show consists of three parts: photos
of Paris in the 1930s; portraits of Brassai’s friends, Pablo Picasso
and Salvador Dali, in their studios; and surrealistic experimental
photography. Among the items on display are also photos of graffiti
on Parisian streets that look like cave art, nudes, the famous
albums ‘Paris at Night’ (which was called ‘the eye of Paris’ by the
writer Henry Miller) and ‘Mysteries of Paris,’ graphic drawings by
the photographer, a 1948 sculpture of Picasso’s head, and a movie
directed by Brassai ‘Tant qu’il y aura des bêtes’ (As long as
there are beasts), awarded ‘The Most Original Film’ in Cannes in 1956.

A sculptor, photographer and artist, Brassai was one of several of the
world’s most influential photographers who happened to be working in
Paris from the 1920s to the 1960s (among them Henri Cartier-Bresson,
‘the father of modern photo reportage’). Most of Brassai’s works were
dedicated to Paris; he lived and worked in the city, so he is often
named among the great photographers of the socalled French school.

Origins

George Brassai was a pseudonym of Gyula Halasz, meaning ‘from Brasso’.

The son of a Hungarian professor of French literature and an Armenian
mother, Halasz was born in Brasso, Transylvania (then within the
Kingdom of Hungary). Leaving it in 1920 to work as a journalist in
Berlin and Paris, he never returned to his fatherland, and stayed in
France from 1924 till his death in 1984.

Working as a journalist, Brassai often asked his friends to
provide photos for his articles, among them another Hungarian-born
photographer, Andre Kertesz, a celebrated master of photographic
composition. A trained artist, Brassai reportedly didn’t initially
respect the new art of photography, considering it a craft. However,
upon borrowing a camera from Kertesz, he realized that ‘the thing
that is magnificent about photography is that it can produce images
that incite emotion based on the subject matter alone,’ and started
taking photos himself, capturing mysteriously lit streets of the city
and its insomniac, shadowy inhabitants.

No ordinary eyes

Brassai’s works in many ways differ from those of his contemporary
fellow Parisians. Most of them photographed romantic or funny scenes
of the city, usually in daytime. Brassai chose a more complicated way,
waiting for the sunset like some kind of a vampire photographer, and
using any light he could find outside, car headlights or street lights.

‘Night does not show things, it suggests them,’ he said. ‘It disturbs
and surprises us with its strangeness. It liberates forces within us
which are dominated by our reason during the daytime.’

Along with the Parisian underground, which he often explored with his
American friend Henry Miller, Brassai was acquainted with the city’s
luckier citizens. He had friends among the city’s high society and
intellectual elite, and captured their prosperous lives as well. ‘When
you meet the man, you see at once that he is equipped with no ordinary
eyes,’ Miller said of him.

Explaining the mystique and surrealism of his story-telling pictures,
Brassai used to say that his only aim was to show reality, which
was more surreal than anything else. ‘If reality fails to fill us
with wonder, it is because we have fallen into the habit of seeing
it as ordinary,’ he said. He also said that he can penetrate to the
extraordinary by ‘capturing reality in the humblest, most sincere,
most everyday way.’

With his photos of street graffiti from 1933 to 1956, Brassai wanted
to show what worried and amused teenagers of his time: animals with
human heads, empty-eyed faces, love declarations, skulls and gibbets.

During World War II, Brassai stayed in France while many of his
colleagues fled. His kind of photography was restricted by the Nazis,
though, and meanwhile the streets changed, so Brassai went back to
drawing. Picasso never approved of him switching to photography from
his initial art. When the famous artist first saw Brassai’s drawings,
he called him ‘crazy’ and said: ‘You have a gold mine and you spend
your time exploiting a salt mine!’

In the 1940s and 1950s, Brassai worked for the American Harper’s
Bazaar, and in 1948 he gained international acclaim with a solo
exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art in New York.

www.mamm-mdf.ruOpen

Music: System Of A Down Drummer John Dolmayan Wants To Hit The Studi

SYSTEM OF A DOWN DRUMMER JOHN DOLMAYAN WANTS TO HIT THE STUDIO IN 2013
Haris Ansari

News Pakistan

Aug 8 2012

System of a Down drummer, John Dolmayan, has expressed his desire
that the band enters the studio until the summer of 2013 and release
the record in 2014.

The Armenian American rock band, which was formed in 1992, released
five studio albums before the band was dismantled in 2006. However,
the rock band was reunited in 2011, and has been doing live shows
since then.

Although, it seems like that the band is not going to enter the studio
to record a new album in the near future, the drummer has expressed
his desire that he wants to see the new record hitting stores in 2014.

“We don’t know what will happen next, but I’d like to be in the studio
at this time next year … possibly making an album by 2014. If we
were concerned about what people think, System wouldn’t exist. I have
no concerns about what the album will sound like. I just worry about
when it will come out”, Dolmayan stated.

The drummer then went on to reveal about the band’s reunion.

“It was time. While I do think the hiatus was good for the band,
I wish it wasn’t so long”, Dolmayan added.

The musician also revealed that the band’s social and political
content does not intend to preach the masses.

“That’s not what people pay for. They pay to come see us play live,
create magic onstage, not to be told how to live their lives. … If
someone takes something positive out of our music, or what we say
on stage, that’s great. But we don’t ever want to force them”,
Dolmayan concluded.

http://www.newspakistan.pk/2012/08/08/system-drummer-john-dolmayan-hit-studio-2013/

Christianity Is Slowly Dying In Its Homelands

CHRISTIANITY IS SLOWLY DYING IN ITS HOMELANDS
by William Dalrymple

The Times (London)
August 7, 2012 Tuesday
Edition 1; National Edition

Forced out of Iraq and Gaza, Christians are now fleeing Syria. Their
future looks bleak in the Middle East

Wherever you go in the Middle East today, you see the Arab Spring
rapidly turning into the Christian winter. The past few years have
been catastrophic for the region’s beleaguered 14-million strong
Christian minority.

In Egypt, the rise of the Muslim Brotherhood has been accompanied by
a series of anti-Coptic riots and intermittent bouts of church-burning.

On the West Bank and in Gaza, the Christians are emigrating fast
as they find themselves caught between Netanyahu’s pro-settler
Government and their increasingly radicalised and pro-Hamas Sunni
Muslim neighbours. Most catastrophically, in Iraq two thirds of the
Christians have fled the country since the fall of Saddam.

It was Syria that took in many of the 250,000 Christians driven out of
Iraq. Anyone who visited Damascus in recent years could see lounging in
every park and sitting in every teahouse the unshaven Iraqi Christian
refugees driven from their homes by the sectarian mayhem that followed
the end of the Baathist state. They were bank managers and engineers,
pharmacists and businessmen – all living with their extended families
in one-room flats on what remained of their savings and assisted by
the charity of the different churches.

“Before the war there was no separation between Christian and Muslim,”
I was told on a recent visit by Shamun Daawd, a liquor-store owner
who fled Baghdad after he received Islamist death threats. I met him
at the Syrian Orthodox Patriarchate in Damascus, where he had come
to collect the rent money the Patriarchate provided for the refugees.

“Under Saddam no one asked you your religion and we used to attend
each other’s religious services,” he said. “Now at least 75 per cent
of my Christian friends have fled.”

Those Iraqi refugees now face a second displacement while their
Syrian hosts are themselves living in daily fear of having to flee
for their lives. The first Syrian refugee camps are being erected in
the Bekaa valley of Lebanon; others are queuing to find shelter in
camps in Jordan, north of Amman. Most of the bloodiest killings and
counter-killings that have been reported in Syria have so far been
along Sunni-Alawite faultlines, but there have been some reports
of thefts, rape and murder directed at the Christian minority, and
in one place – Qusayr – wholesale ethnic cleansing of the Christians
accused by local jihadis of acting as pro-regime spies. The community,
which makes up around 10 per cent of the total population, is now
frankly terrified.

For much of the past hundred years, and long before the Assads came
to power, Syria was a reliable refuge for the Christians of the
Middle East: decades before the Iraqis arrived the people of Syria
welcomed the Armenians escaping the Young Turk genocide of 1915. In
1948 they took in the Palestinians, both Christian and Muslim, driven
out of their ancestral homes at the creation of Israel; and during
the 1970s and 1980s their country became a place of shelter for
Orthodox Christians and Maronites seeking a refuge during Lebanon’s
interminable sectarian troubles.

For while the regime of the Assad dynasty was a repressive one-party
police state in which political freedoms were always severely and
often brutally restricted, it did allow the Syrian people widespread
cultural and religious freedoms. These gave Syria’s minorities a
security and stability far greater than their counterparts anywhere
else in the region. This was particularly true of Syria’s ancient
Christian communities.

The reason for this was that the Assads were Alawite, a syncretic
Shia Muslim minority regarded by Sunni Muslims as heretical, and
disparagingly referred to as Nusayris, or Little Christians: indeed
their liturgy seems to be partly Christian in origin. Alawites made up
only 12 per cent of Syria’s population and the Assads kept themselves
in power by forming what was in effect a coalition of Syria’s religious
minorities, through which they were able to counterbalance the weight
of the Sunni majority.

In the Assads’ Syria, the major Christian feasts were national
holidays; Christians were exempt from turning up to work on Sunday
mornings; and churches and monasteries, like mosques, were provided
with free electricity and were sometimes given state land for new
buildings. In the Christian Quarter of Old Damascus around Bab Touma,
electric-blue neon crosses would wink from the domes of the churches
and processions of crucifix-carrying boy scouts could be seen squeezing
past gaggles of Christian girls heading out on the town, all low-cut
jeans and tight-fitting T-shirts. This was something unknown almost
anywhere else in the Middle East.

There was also widespread sharing of sacred space. On my travels, in
a single day I have seen Christians coming to sacrifice sheep at the
Muslim Sufi shrine of Nebi Uri, while at the nearby convent of Seidnaya
(recently shelled by government forces) I found that the congregation
in the church consisted not principally of Christians but instead of
heavily bearded Muslim men and their shrouded wives. As the priest
circled the altar with his thurible, filling the sanctuary with great
clouds of incense, the men made prostrations on their prayer mats as
if in the middle of Friday prayers in a great mosque. Their women,
some dressed in full black chador, mouthed prayers from the shadows
of the narthex. A few, closely watching the Christian women, went
up to the icons, kissed them, then lit a candle and placed it in
the candelabra. They had come, I was told, to Our Lady of Seidnaya,
and to ask her for children.

Now that precious multi-ethnic and multi-religious patchwork is in
danger of being destroyed for ever. As in Egypt, where the late Coptic
Pope Shenouda supported Hosni Mubarak right up until his fall, the
established churches of Syria marked the beginning of the revolution by
lining up behind the regime. My friend Mar Gregorios Yohanna Ibrahim,
the urbane and multilingual Syrian Orthodox Metropolitan of Aleppo,
was quoted as saying: “We do not support those who are calling for
the fall of the regime simply because we are for reform and change.”

Initially many of the flock were unsure of the wisdom of that position,
and many young Christians were among those calling for the end of
the Assad regime, hoping for a new dawn of freedom, human rights and
democracy. But a year on, pro-revolution Christians are much harder
to find. There are more and more reports of violent al-Qaeda-inspired
salafists fighting alongside the Free Syrian Army, while Turkish
backing for the opposition Syrian National Council has terrified the
Syrian Armenians. As criminality, robbery, lawlessness and car-jacking
become endemic, even in places where outright fighting is absent, and
as the survival of the regime looks daily less and less likely, the
Christians fear they will soon suffer the fate of their Iraqi brethren.

As ever, the Christians here remain mystified by the actions of
Christian America. When George W. Bush went into Iraq, he naively
believed he would be replacing Saddam with a peaceful, pro-American
Arab democracy that would naturally look to the Christian West for
support. In reality, nine years on, it appears that he has instead
created a highly radicalised and unstable pro-Iranian sectarian
battleground. Now American support is being channelled towards
opposition groups that may eventually do the same to the minorities
of Syria.

As in 1980s Afghanistan, a joint operation between the CIA and Saudi
intelligence could end up bringing to power a hardline salafist
replacement to a brutally flawed but nonetheless secular regime. If
that happens in Syria, the final death of Christianity in its Middle
Eastern homelands seems increasingly possible within our lifetime.

William Dalrymple is the author of From the Holy Mountain: A Journey
in the Shadow of Byzantium. His new book Return of a King: The Battle
for Afghanistan 1839-42 will be published by Bloomsbury in February

>From the domes in Old Damascus electric-blue neon crosses wink