Armenia And Bulgaria Not Satisfied With Bilateral Commodity Turnover

ARMENIA AND BULGARIA NOT SATISFIED WITH BILATERAL COMMODITY TURNOVER

PanARMENIAN.Net
13.11.2007 18:43 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The visit of Bulgarian Prime Minister Sergei
Stanishev to Armenia was fruitful and constructive, Armenian PM Serge
Sargsyan said at a joint news conference in Yerevan today.

He said a number of agreements in the economic, educational and
cultural fields were signed in the framework of the visit.

"This is the first-ever visit of a Bulgarian top-ranking official to
Armenia and we do attach importance to it," PM Sargsyan said.

At that he noted that the commodity turnover between Armenia
and Bulgaria makes $30 million in all and doesn’t satisfy both
states. "Armenia has goods Bulgaria is interested in. Prospects
of economic cooperation will be discussed at an Armenian-Bulgarian
business forum due next year," he said.

In 2008, The Armenian Government Will Present To The Parliament A Nu

IN 2008, THE ARMENIAN GOVERNMENT WILL PRESENT TO THE PARLIAMENT A NUMBER OF DRAFT LAWS, DIRECTED TO DEEPENING OF FINANCIAL MEDIATION

Mediamax News Agency, Armenia
Nov 13 2007

Yerevan, November 13 /Mediamax/. Armenian Prime Minister Serzh
Sarkisian stated in Yerevan today that "the financial system of
Armenia has real potential for becoming the regional financial center".

Mediamax reports that the Prime Minister said this, presenting in
the parliament the draft state budget of Armenia for 2008.

"Our cooperation with the Stockholm Exchange gives grounds for
making such a statement", the Prime Minister stated, noting that
"the realization of a joint program will provide serious perquisites
for reaching the goal set".

Serzh Sarkisian stated that in 2008, the government will present to
the parliament a number of draft laws, directed to the establishment
of auspicious atmosphere for deepening the financial mediation. The
draft laws, in particular, will concern the credit bureaus, mortgage
securities, as well as the protection of consumer rights.

NKR: To Moderate Wishes

TO MODERATE WISHES

Azat Artsakh Tert, Nagorno Karabakh Republic
Nov 13 2007

The newspaper of "Aravot" placed a photo of a car with the following
words on an issue on the first page. "Foreign cars are not rare in
Armenia". But, perhaps, too less owners of such cars can think to get
state numbers cars with own initials on it (the owners’ name’s and
surname’s first letters). They get car state numbers for satisfying
their boundless high, ambitions. The matter is not that someone or
dozens of people owned state personal numbers and pay much money for
that. The defect of such actions is in another thing. There is no
end in human wishes and if they are not directed to legal river-bed
restricted by law, the thirst for owning and mastering, undoubtedly,
will bring to destruction of public and state bases. Let me explain
this sociologic expression clearer. When a man is half-starved, his
mind thinks about food. As soos as the food is reachable for him he
begins to think about cheese and butter. And when he gets them, the
sausage and chop become wishable and so on. After having ordinary
roof, then mansion, making voyages to Mediterranean, Pacific ocean
islands, the wish oroginates in him to own these islands. And so ,till
endlessness. I want to say that in the former-Union space, moreover,
in our Armenian reality, the state must outline the wishes of those
officials strictly who serve in its structures. But when it’s not done,
all the efforts of the authorities to make the construction qualitable,
become useless, senseless. And first of all, it’s senseless in such a
situation to have a hope for any improve of the sphere of personnel,
therefore it’s senseless also from the point of view of the sphere’s
organization. For clear discussion of our problems I often refer to
the Russian reality. First. we have much in common with Russia: the
same political system is in action. Second is that V. Putin unlike
our leaders comparebly often criticizes the state machine. Two weeks
ago in his national call "Message to the Federal Assembly" by name,
he said the following. "Our army consists of one million and 300
thousand soldiers officers but they were not defenders. Mobile forces
are only 54 thousand but scattered in different provinces of the
country". V. Putin meant the following: armed technics, finance for the
army, the military educational establishment are available ,meanwhile,
the organisational work is absent. The expression of "organisational
work" means that he people who are able to organize definite work,
affair, that’s, if there are no people, there is no personnel. But
I’ll say in such a way: the people as skilled specialists are always
available in any sphere. It would be more correct to say that there’s
no basis for their professional growth. Public-political land is so
contageous that even the sprouts, young branches become withered and
stop growing. Above the written, if the selected personnel is better
and qualitable, they will not grow in today’s public. Political
land, will not take roots, unless the land is cleared. I’ll be more
concrete. Let’s propose that for middle level of state officials
(prosecutor’s office, police, army and so on) existed the definite
level of life conditions, which they and their families strived to. For
instance, to have three-roomed flat, middle-class car, salary of 150
thousand drams etc. And the state from its side helps the officials for
reaching the normal level of life in order not to allow them to look
"at the left". But what is reality, real life. About 5-10 percent of
them rush forward as they think, that the post is too near the money,
the others due to the protectorate ("roof") or relatives, the thirds
due to their skillfulness, quickmindedness and slyness make money even
from "nothing". As a result, artificially, independent of economic
position of the state, they increase the plank of life-level appointed
for their social class. For them 3-roomed become 6-roomed flats, in
place of middle-class "Zhigouli" cars they own middle-class foreign
cars and so on. But the state machine winks at this process, saying:
"What’s bad in it, people improve their life conditions".

It’s good that they build houses and open shops. At last, they are
our guys. So the plank begins increasing for some members of the
society. "The principle of domino" operates. If the consciencious
young personnel (by whoes help the state leadership is planning
to bring to order the state machine a little) by their character
are able to stand, to pass exam, not to break the law and justice,
they’ll not be able to do it in reality. Why? Because they are not
alone and not single. All of them have families, wives and children.

They are sociable with their neighbours and collegues, receive each
other as a guest, celebrate birthdays, weddings and etc. Saying
imaginarily, the child will not wish the ice-cream if it’s not before
his eyes. And so the wife is…But this specialist is young. Despite
he has the strengh of spirit, but nevertheless, his soul is not made
from stone. He’ll stand his wife’s and child’s wishes for a month. He
will live like others for two months or half a year but at last he
will not stand. And the problem will be solved in favour of stable
weather in the family. And one beautiful day he will be melted in the
atmosphere dominating in the society, in our real life which can be
changed only by well-thought operation. The surgeons must be chosen
carefully and be the most qualitable. Gleb Pavlovski who is leading
weekly analytical programme on the NTV channel and who is considered
the chief political technologist of Kremlin on 20th of May showed the
following picture in his next programme. Poutin and the prosecutor
are standing near a big metallic pillar which symbolizes the vertical
line of organized criminality. Another pillar is of the same height,
situated a little further. Poutin asks: -What a vertical line is this,
where did it appear from? -Unlike our built pillar, it grew itself,
– the general prosecutor answers. -short or cut it down, – Poutin
orders and then adds, – Wait, don’t hurry, it must be cut in such a
way when it falls, not to harm our pillar. The meaning is that when
the organized criminality begins to be cleaned thoughtlessly (about
which Poutin declared lately), in this case, the authorities risk
to be burried in these ruins. Gleb Pavlovski would like to say that
the highest circles of the bureaucracy are so near the shady life
of the state and it’s so spread everywhere that it’s necessary the
time and worked out plan of actions. It means: "Dear people-citizens,
put yourself in VI. Poutin’s place, doesn’t claim him to bring order
in an hour. He is not a magician ,not a witch.

Give him the time. But the main is that Mr Pavlovski, one of the main
ideologists and propogandists of the Kremlin, made the country realize
that they are not blind and don’t wish to pretend to be blind as if
we see everything and know about everything, but the situation was
"left on the surface" before us, but now the president must be given
time. Don’t make him hurry! The Kremlin ideologist is right. He is
correct in picturing real situation. But, in my opinion, it doesn’t
justificate Poutin because he came to power not yesterday. He is
leading the country more than seven years with iron hand. And there
was enough time to bring order in the country, a) he neglects the
West roarings when he’ll make "just trial", b) he has natural big
resources and the trust of the majority of ordinary people. In order
to correct the situation created after the down fall of the Soviet
Empire, in order to make order in the country, the laws and courts of
Justice act, in order to regenerate, inspire the masses of people,
it’s not necessary to be Napoleon. It’s enough to find and choose
the best from the talented part of the people, the best political
organizer, in order to begin organizing the rest state system of
management originally and typically. As it was done in distant
colonial America 230 years ago. If the nation or the people are not
used to such quality, it remains to make up with the situation, which
is available today. I say about it because the same is carried out in
our country. It’s necessary to claim, to punish the authorities. It’s
necessary because it’ll be worse otherwise. But opposite political
powers in Armenia, Russia, as well as in Artsakh must know that the
created system can not be corrected by 5 or 10 honest persons. So,
if they critisize, let’s permit them critisize, they are right but
it’s forbidden to say that if we come to power, the law and order will
be in the country. Coming to power, these persons will make minority
in newly formed governing political class… As a result, they are
mixed in it. The freshest example. Suppose, Arthur Baghdasaryan came
to power. What will change? Nothing will change. 11 MPs from 19MPs
left the party as soon as he lost symphathy of authorities. They
were comfort searchers. And those who stayed with A. Baghdasaryan
have hopes that their party is the most democratic party so they had
expectations to win in the parliamentary elections. From this point
of view we can’t say that the situation is better in other parties.

It will be correct to say that the situation is worse. But, above
mentioned must not make the authorities calm, all the more ,to
justificate the acting authorities. For instance, if Poutin wished
to recruit qualitable people (otherwise how to overcome system
corruption? Or as he expressed himself, "organized criminality")
he would assemble them within 7 years. But instead of this, he
got rid of them. I remember my first disappointment with Poutin
perfectly.Investigator on especially important cases Volkov worked in
General prosecutor’s office. He is a very conciencious man who dared
to write out an order for arresting Berezovski in Yeltsin’s times.

Poutin dismissed him in 2001y for daring to deepen in the case of
Borodin. Borodin is the person under whose submission Poutin went into
service in Kremlin. Poutin’s step foretold that the new, energetic,
strong-willed president is not going to hold on systematic struggle
against corruption. His steps also witness that this man is not from a
group who’s able to organize the construction of qualitably new public
building. His strict, willed line directed to the centralization of
the power around him and around the ideology, world outlook position
which is reachable for his intellectual abilities. I speak about it
with pain because ,at any rate, Russia and Russian people always and
with all parametres are more nearer to us than any other country or
nation. So we are directly interested in growing mightiness of our
ally and not interested in bad development.

Good leader must wish him to be said to justice, because in such a
way it’s possible to bring the mistakes to a minimum. On the other
hand, I refer to the Russian examples generally in order to make my
conclusions and argumentations understandable and expressive.

The Formation Of Two Poles

THE FORMATION OF TWO POLES
Armen Tsaturyan

Hayots Ashkharh Daily, Armenia
Nov 13 2007

Difficult Alternative For "The Third"

After the nomination of Prime Minister Serge Sargsyan for presidency,
by the 11th Congress of the Republican Party the formation of the two
poles that are going to campaign during the forthcoming Presidential
elections on February 19, 2008 came to an end.

By this influential counter-step taken by the government in power,
after ex-President Levon Ter-Petrosyan’s self nomination during October
26 meeting, the pro-governmental and pro-opposition sectors have been
equally "closed" for all the other potential opponents.

Whether it is attractive for them or not, it as an accomplished fact,
and no one is able to change it.

In the formula of the rivalry between "the present and the former ones"
the present ones are evidently superior. Moreover as the recent survey
conducted by the authoritative British company "Comres" displayed,
Serge Sargsyan apparently surpassed other candidates for presidency,
whereas in the list of the pretenders Levon Ter-Petrosyan engaged
only the 5th place.

But there are all the bases to think that in the anticipated
unavoidable two-poled confrontation all the other candidates between
the two rivals will simply "drop out".

>From his political steps, taken from September 21, and especially after
his strict and aggressive speech Ter-Petrosyan polarized the political
domain in such a way that he completely blocked the opportunity of
transferring the forthcoming political campaign into the plane of
political programs tended towards the future.

Of course, hardly will this contribute to the growth of his rating. But
due such a step taken by the ex-President whole "prism" of the campaign
regressed. At present people compare Ter-Petrosyan’s political activity
with that of the government in power.

The problem of what has been and hasn’t been done by "the former and
the present ones" and the issues of clarifying their responsibilities
have appeared. Without it Armenia can’t even think of looking forward.

In such circumstances all the attempts of the "third power" to
be a success or as people like to say "to creep in" will collide
with the same problem – with the necessity to evaluate the contents
and political side of the "the former and the present ones". Which
means all the pretenders to the "third power" will turn into either
"the former ones" or "the present ones" and only after that can they
imagine themselves in the role of the third one.

Not to "be", but to imagine, because in order to "be" the third one
they have to capture one of the already existing real poles.

The accusations of the "third power" that "the present ones" have
brought the former ones onto the scene in order to close the path of
the new opponents, are also not excluded. But who will believe this
chimera, when the conversation is about a life and death struggle,
in the framework of which issues, fatal for Armenia, must be examined
– such as Karabakh issue and external political orientations. It is
evident that in this important ground "the black" and "the white"
are so clearly manifested that they blockade the chances of interim
solutions.

Some people can state that the formula of the campaign between "the
former ones – the present ones" is a deadlock for the country’s
future. But those who want to pass round it haven’t yet managed to
change this logic of campaign and to form a certain political pole
around them. And, by the way, soon it will be very late for them to
do so.

Moreover it is impossible to even think about the future without
overcoming the difficulties of the past and give a new meaning to
the future.

Hence the launch of the Presidential elections promises tough and
unbending campaign between only two political poles. This means all
the other possible candidates for presidency are facing a rather
difficult alternative.

In case of being nominated during the coming one month "the third
ones" must take the roles of either "the observers" or somehow try
to catch the train that has been detached from the platform and try
to be settled down in one of the two coaches.

Lies With A Life Of Their Own

LIES WITH A LIFE OF THEIR OWN
By George Gregoriou

Greek News, New York
Nov 12 2007

(Part I)

Instead of watching the news on the TV or reading the newspapers, I
think I would be better of watching the food or design channels. My
blood pressure will go down and I will not gain any weight watching
the chefs unload tons of butter into every pot. Nor do I take notes on
the recipes or buy the cookbooks they are pushing. I have no plans to
design or remodel anything. I have done that. The sight of a hammer
bothers me. On the other hand, watching the news or the presidential
debates depresses me.

I am not a decider, like Mr. Bush. I am much better at dithering. I
am pleased with my own cooking. It does not require much thought. I
like my own cooking. I have one recipe, with slight variations, to
trick myself into thinking that I am a "gourmet" meal. I am like the
Mexicans, documented and undocumented. The leftovers are back on the
stove the next day–rice and beans, beans and rice, chicken and rice,
beef and rice, rice and chicken, occasionally rice and pork. But,
mine is Greek cooking. I can do my Greek cooking with my eyes closed,
just like I was trained in the US Army to disassemble and assemble
an M-1 automatic rifle, blindfolded, in case the gun got jammed and
I had to shoot Russians, at night.

We avoided World War III with the Russians, though we came close in
1962, with Cuban missiles crisis. The consequences were unthinkable,
complete annihilation of combatants and non-combatants alike. The
Cold War was costly. 15 trillion dollars were wasted in the world,
on militarism. One-half ($7.5 trillion) was spent by Washington. It
is the equivalent of $15,000 billion ($1 billion per year in the life
of the planet earth, which is calculated to be 15 billion years. The
earth is now in its mid-life crisis (7.5 billion years old), if the
scientists are correct in their calculations, and I got it right.

Anyway, $15 trillion is a lot of money.

The Cold War lasted for 70 years. A hot war here and there gave
the Cold War credibility. The money was good (great profits for
the military- industrial complex) and a rationale for people to
pay the price, that is, cut-backs in social services, tax-cuts for
the wealthy, and the flag for the wounded, for those in body-bags,
and for the lies by government officials. Patriotism, flag waving,
and demonizing the enemy goes a long way. The lies are recycled,
for the next war, thanks to our short memory and the beating of the
war drums by state officials and their enablers in the media.

At the turn of the 21st Century we have one super-power. Not for
long. It is in a state of decline. The deciders in the White House
are desperate. Empires are not forever. When in decline, desperate
things happen. The Ottoman rulers embarked on a genocide policy,
with vengeance, to make "Turkey for Turks Only." Millions of Greeks,
Armenians, Assyrians, and others, 33% of the Ottoman population
(1900), were deported or massacred (interchangeable words). One of
the Ottoman inventions was to "parboil" thousands of Greeks in Turkish
baths and then send them, barely clothed, on death marches in the snow,
to die of pneumonia and other related sicknesses.

Parboiling avoided spilling blood (whereas using axes and spades
to slaughter the victims was bloody), nor bullets, which were too
expensive. The British imperialists were much better at it. Forced
to pack up and leave, they had the Hindus and Muslims in the Indian
Sub-Continent, the Jews and Arabs in Palestine, the Catholics and
Protestants in Ireland, and the Greeks and Turks in Cyprus kill each
other. They even stood by as innocent by-standers, to keep law and
order. The French, Spanish, and Portuguese after WWII did the same.

What is certain is that a new state or an empire cannot be created
(or dismantled) without massacres or genocide. The fate of the
natives in America, the enslavement of Africans and the slave trade
by Europeans, the occupation of the Palestinians by the Zionists
escaping persecution in Europe, or the massacres of Christians by
the Ottoman Turkish invaders in Asia Minor were not mere coincidences.

They were part of this historical reality. An invasion and conquest
of another territory involves the enslavement, forced conversion
(religion), even physical elimination of the people inhabiting those
lands for hundreds or thousands of years.

Imperialist USA is in deep trouble. Most people in the world think
so, except those in the White House. They are trapped into lying,
and they want us to share their lies. In the last five years, the
only countries where the image of the US improved by a few points are:
Lebanon, Pakistan, South Korea, Ivory Coast, and Kenya. That was five
months ago. In Britain, France, and Germany, the favorable image of
the US dropped by minus 24, –23, and -30 points, respectively. In
the Czech Republic it dropped by minus 26, in Poland by -18, and
Indonesia by -32 (The N.Y.Times, 6/28/07, A12).

The lies to invade Iraq in 2003 are now repeated against Iran. This
is how it is done. No one seems to be interested in the Iraqi war
anymore, and those who do blame Bush and the neo-conservatives. The
jihadists are popping out of the ground like mushrooms. Even White
House lies and the culture of terror have a limited life span. They
need to be upgraded, but to the general public, the war is lost. So,
someone in the White House (I cannot say it is Mr. Bush. No one would
believe me anyway!) took a look at his watch and said "We have time
for another war, Iran seems to be the best candidate, all we have to
do is scare the hell out of the American people, to believe us. We
can also pass this war to our enemies, our critics at home. Let us
see if they can do a better job!" Is it that simple? It is only money
and body bags, which they, the people, do not see anyway. It is so
obvious. The officials in government have been reduced to repeating
the same lies, with a straight face, whether it is Iraq, Iran, Syria,
or any country not toeing the Washington line.

George Gregoriou Professor, Critical Theory and Geopolitics

s.php?name=News&file=article&sid=7637

http://www.greeknewsonline.com/module

Serzh Sargsyan: I’d advise LTP to beg people’s pardon

Serzh Sargsyan: I’d advise Levon Ter-Petrosyan, first president of
Armenia, to beg people’s pardon

2007-11-10 23:24:00

ArmInfo. "I’d advise Levon Ter-Petrosyan, the first president of
Armenia, to beg people’s pardon for the mistakes made during his term
in office," newly-elected Chairman of Board of the Republican Party of
Armenia (RPA), Armenian Prime Minister Serzh Sargsyan said at the 11th
congress of the RPA, Saturday.

According to him, there is no threat of revanchism in the country, but
the Armenian Pan National Movement, the former ruling party in Armenia,
is obviously trying to reactivate its forces. "Ter-Petrosyan’s desire
to run for president is conditioned only by one thing – to get back at
those who dared to say a single word of criticism against him. As
regards his intention to destroy the present state system in the
country, any attempts to do this will be suppressed," S.Sargsyan
stressed. He added that over the past 10 years the authorities have
never given political assessments to Ter-Petrosyan’s administration
"not to create tension in the society".

S.Sargsyan also emphasized that Levon Ter-Petrosyan had an excellent
opportunity to serve his Motherland when he was the president of
Armenia, however, he preferred voluntarily leave the post of the
President and Supreme Commander-in-Chief in hour of need. "But every
cloud has a silver lining – due to his nomination, people will be able
to compare his administration to the present one. Therefore, democratic
and free election will mark the political death of Ter-Petrosyan and
the Armenian Pan National Movement," he said.

Should Security Concerns or Moral Leadership Win in Genocide Debate?

Should Security Concerns or Moral Leadership Win Out in Genocide Debate?

FOCUS & FORUM

Daily Journal (Los Angeles’ daily legal publication)
Nov. 09, 2007
FORUM COLUMN

By John A. Hall

The Democratic leadership in the U.S. House of Representatives, led by
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, promised to bring to a floor vote a
resolution stating that the suffering of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire
between 1915 and 1917 constituted genocide. However, in the face of
warnings from the White House and others that such a resolution would
seriously damage U.S.-Turkish relations and imperil America’s military
effort in Iraq, support for the bill has crumbled. This is unfortunate.
The collapse of political support for the bill marks a victory of
perceived expediency over genuine moral leadership.

The term "genocide" was first coined in 1943 by the Polish-Jewish legal
scholar Raphael Lemkin in response to the barbarous events in
Nazi-occupied Europe. Lemkin’s notion that genocide should be considered
an offense under international law formed part of the legal foundation
for the Nuremberg Trials, and indeed the specific term was used in Count
3 of the indictment of the 24 Nazi leaders.

Subsequently, Lemkin successfully campaigned for the universal adoption
of the crime of genocide into international law, and on Dec. 9, 1948,
the United Nations General Assembly adopted Resolution 260 (III)A, the
Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide.

Article 2 of the Genocide Convention famously defines genocide as "any
of the following acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in
part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group, as such: killing
members of the group; causing serious bodily or mental harm to members
of the group; deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life
calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part;
imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group; forcibly
transferring children of the group to another group."

The case for the horrific abuse of Armenians in 1915 falling under the
rubric of "genocide" would seem to be, on its face, quite
straightforward. The historical record – Turkish denials notwithstanding
– appears overwhelming. In 1915, hundreds of thousands – most probably
in excess of 1 million – ethnic Armenians died as a direct result of
deportation policies instituted by the Ottoman Empire. They were abused,
maltreated, exposed to vile degradation, murdered and faced starvation
because of their membership in a minority ethnic group.

The Ottoman Empire, an ally of Germany and Austria during the First
World War, found itself at war with Russia in 1915. Ottoman armies
suffered a series of military reversals, and the Ottoman authorities
blamed the domestic Armenian population for tacitly and even overtly
supporting the Russians. The Armenians, it was claimed, posed an
internal threat, an unacceptable risk to the national security of the
empire.

Beginning in May 1915, Turkish military forces were utilized to
implement a brutal government policy of forced migration. Ethnic
Armenians were driven from their homes and villages in the eastern
provinces of the Ottoman Empire, and forced to march hundreds of miles
through appalling conditions. Turkish soldiers robbed, raped and
murdered the deportees along the way, leaving the survivors to die
without food or water in the desert and mountains. The Armenians died by
the tens of thousands, their corpses strewn along the route, until they
finally arrived at inhospitable resettlement camps in present-day Syria,
where many more died of neglect.

Not surprisingly, this widely studied event is claimed by many scholars
to have been the first example of genocide in the 20th century. Indeed,
Lemkin himself focused quite specifically on the atrocities unleashed
against the Armenians in articulating his theory of the "Crime of
Barbarity," which he presented to the Legal Council of the League of
Nations in 1933, and which was the legal and philosophical forerunner of
his subsequent "Crime of Genocide."

It seems highly probable that were the events of 1915 to take place
today, they would quickly be decried as violating fundamental concepts
of international law. Modern-day Turkey, the successor-state to the
failed Ottoman Empire, has faced repeated pressure to accept the events
of 1915 as genocide. It has consistently refused to do so. Indeed it has
persecuted those who have done so, such as the Nobel Prize-winning
novelist Orhan Pamuk, who was charged with "insulting Turkishness" for
asserting that Turks did not care that 1 million Armenians perished.

More than 20 countries have now formally recognized the events of
1915-1917 as genocide. Why then has the effort to do so in the United
States failed? Why has congressional support for the recent Armenian
Resolution so spectacularly and suddenly collapsed? Why has what was
expected to have been a comparatively straightforward moral statement
about a horrific historical event suddenly and precipitously crashed and
burned?

What is clear is that the sponsors of the bill failed to fully
understand the political and emotional minefield they were entering. It
seems that they naively saw the bill as little more than an opportunity
to assert a clear moral position on a rather distant and unambiguous
historical event. In so doing, of course, they could address a central
concern of a highly vocal and highly motivated Armenian-American
constituency. In contrast, the Turkish-American political voice is
typically subdued.

What was perhaps missing from their calculation was the extent of the
fury such a bill would ignite in Turkey. This is surprising, given the
fact that Turkey had reacted with extreme anger when France recently
passed a similar piece of legislation defining the events of 1915 as
genocide.

Perhaps it was assumed that Turkey would react with more moderation when
responding to the United States. If so, the sponsors of the bill were
mistaken and/or arrogant. A wide cross-section of Turks saw the bill as
deeply and viscerally insulting. For many Turks, the story of 1915 is
not a narrative of genocide or any intentional policy of abuse, but
rather one of administrative miscommunication, governmental inefficiency
and poor logistics, in the midst of a brutal war and the ruinous
collapse of the Ottoman Empire.

For the United States to now move to declare that the Turks committed
genocide is seen as another example of American hubris and insensitivity
in its dealings with Muslims. Given America’s own historical record –
the slaughter and forced deportation of Native Americans to barren
reservations, as well as the abuses heaped on Japanese-Americans during
forced resettlement in World War II, for example – the U.S. position is
seen by many as being deeply hypocritical.

The Turkish government found itself faced with an outpouring of
anti-American sentiment domestically as a result of the Armenian
genocide bill, which played into the hands of Islamic extremists who
have long criticized Ankara’s cooperation with the United States.

Ankara perhaps had little choice but to react in a bellicose fashion to
what was popularly regarded as American arrogance and provocation, and
immediately threatened to curtail the future use of Turkey as a staging
ground for America’s war effort in Iraq. Faced with a suddenly
uncooperative ally, U.S. military planners scrambled to come up with
alternatives for their military supply chain.

Turkey also began to threaten military intervention in pursuit of
Kurdish terrorists into neighboring Iraq. Iraq is of course acknowledged
to be under the effective protection of the United States. By
threatening to send its armed forces into the territory of its sovereign
neighbor, Turkey is making clear the scope of the potential consequences
flowing from a worsening relationship with the United States.

And so, quite suddenly, support for the Armenian genocide bill
evaporated. Faced with the realpolitik consequences of the position they
were advocating, the supporters of the bill fled for the hills. How
appalling. If the slaughter of the Armenians in 1915 was genocide – and
there appears good reason to believe that it was – then saying so now
appears eminently appropriate.

To condemn the events of 1915 as genocide was the correct decision. To
have begun that process without having fully anticipated the
consequences appears at best naïve, at worst downright incompetent.
Backing down now under pressure from Turkey appears craven and lacking
in moral leadership. When dealing with genocide, we need to resist easy
but ultimately weak-willed moral grandstanding, and instead be prepared
to take a real stand.

How can we act against the genocide in Darfur, or elsewhere, if we lack
the will to take a stand against genocide wherever and whenever it
occurs? Shouldn’t we want that to be the position of the United States –
a nation that stands for human rights, human dignity and justice?

John A. Hall is an associate professor of law and director of the Center
for Global Trade & Development at Chapman University School of Law in
Orange.

http://dailyjournal.com/

Government Discussed Children Needs In Bad Conditions

GOVERNMENT DISCUSSED CHILDREN NEEDS IN BAD CONDITIONS

Panorama.am
23:11 08/11/2007

Today Prime Minister Serjh Sargsyan held the government session. During
the session the executive confirmed the project to restore child’s
social-psychological problems. The main goals of the project are
to help the children to solve their social, health, educational
and psychological problems, and to integrate them into society. The
ministries of education and science, and social affairs were assigned
to confirm within one month "Children in bad conditions and their
social needs" evaluation methods. The Prime Minister mentioned that
serious means are prepared to solve the problem and everything will
be done to spend the sum effectively and under control.

Catholicos Met The Ambassador Of Italy

CATHOLICOS MET THE AMBASSADOR OF ITALY

Panorama.am
22:58 08/11/2007

Today the supreme patriarch of all Armenians Garegin B had a meeting
with recently appointed ambassador of Italy, Massimo Lavetsco
Kassinelli, in the cathedral of Snt. Etchmiadzin.

According to the cathedral the supreme patriarch congratulated the
ambassador on his appointment and added that the relationship between
the cathedral and Italy are cordial. The supreme patriarch said he
was confident that the newly appointed ambassador will extend their
relationships.

The ambassador of Italy assured that everything will be done to
develop the relationships between the two nations. During the meeting
they also discussed the similarities of two nations, close relations
between Armenian Apostolic and Catholic churches.

On Track: House Special With A Baltica Reduction

ON TRACK: HOUSE SPECIAL WITH A BALTICA REDUCTION
By William Dart

id=264&objectid=10474576
5:00AM Thursday November 08, 2007

It seems at times that Kim Kashkashian is ECM’s house violist, with
CDs that range from prize-winning Brahms and contemporary Hungarian
music collections to an novel 2002 release featuring two viola works
by Luciano Berio alongside field recordings of the Sicilian folk
songs which inspired them.

The American’s new album, Asturiana, has her joining up with pianist
Robert Levin playing their own transcriptions of songs by Spanish
and Argentinian composers.

Levin is a pianist provocateur, best known for taking Mozart to the
edge of improv; Kashkashian’s inspiration comes from closer to home.

For her, the project was inspired by the voice of her father singing
Armenian folk songs "with abandon, enthusiasm and an unashamed
all-embracing love towards his listener, be it his children, a stone
in the garden or his students".

The collection opens with the lingering melancholy of Falla’s Asturiana
and closes with two curious love songs from the Argentinian Carlos
Lopez Buchardo, the first of which is an infectious folk rumble.

AdvertisementThere is gusto and passion running through all 26 tracks,
with a high-class ECM recording job that makes you feel these musicians
might be playing to you in your own casa or hacienda.

If an occasional song, like Guastavino’s undeniably pretty Triste
makes one fearful of the danger of slipping into Julian Lloyd Webber
lollipop land, Kashkashian keeps such dangers at bay through the
sheer richness and earthiness of her tone.

Reading the lyrics to four Montsalvatge songs, one can imagine the
political edge behind the notes and, who needs castanets for Falla’s
Jota when Kashkashian makes so bold with the pizzicati.

Violinist Gidon Kremer and his Kremerata Baltica pair Mahler and
Shostakovich on another ECM release which might have been titled
"Songs and Dances of Farewell".

The opening transcription of the Adagio from Mahler’s Tenth Symphony is
a cri de coeur, emotionally draining with climaxes of aching intensity,
but incredibly life-asserting. Kremer’s own solo line is rapturous.

Shostakovich’s Fourteenth Symphony, with its wry, twisted settings of
Apollinaire and the like, is a live take from a 2004 Viennese concert.

Coughs and splutters irritate but don’t distract from the music, bleak
and savage by turns, with marvellous contributions from the relatively
low-profile Russian singers Yulia Korpacheva and Fedor Kuznetsov.

Kim Kashkashian & Robert Levin, Asturiana (ECM 476 6149)

Gidon Kremer & the Kremerata Baltica (ECM 476 6177, both through
Ode Records)

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/topic/story.cfm?c_