Armenia To Partake In Caucasus Platform Conference

ARMENIA TO PARTAKE IN CAUCASUS PLATFORM CONFERENCE

PanARMENIAN.Net
23.01.2009 13:33 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Mr. Shahen Avakian, Secretary General of the staff of
the office of the Foreign Minister of Armenia and Mr. Armen Yedigarian,
head of arms control and international security department at the RA
MFA, will represent Armenia at the international conference on Caucasus
Stability and Cooperation Platform due in Istanbul on January 26 and
27, Mr. Tigran Balayan, RA MFA acting head of the media relations
division told PanARMENIAN.Net.

Azerbaijan will be represented by Deputy Foreign Minister Araz Azimov.

Caucasus Stability and Cooperation Platform supposed to unite Turkey,
Russia, Azerbaijan and Armenia was offered by Ankara following the
August 2008 hostilities in South Ossetia.

Moscow readies for crucial summit on gas dispute

Moscow readies for crucial summit on gas dispute

13:03 | 17/ 01/ 2009

MOSCOW, January 17 (RIA Novosti) – Representatives of countries
consuming and transiting Russian natural gas gather on Saturday in
Moscow as efforts intensify to resolve the gas dispute between Russia
and Ukraine.

The summit was proposed by Russian President Dmitry Medvedev on
Wednesday at an emergency meeting with the prime ministers of Bulgaria,
Slovakia and Moldova, among the countries worst-hit by the cut in
Russian gas deliveries via Ukraine, which were halted on January 7.

An EU-brokered deal signed on Monday to have transits restarted has not
been enough to resume deliveries, even though international monitors
were deployed to ensure gas would not be siphoned off.

Eighteen EU member states and several other European countries have had
gas supplies either halted or seriously disrupted. A senior European
Union spokesman warned on Friday that "the meetings in coming days
offer the last and best chance for Russia and Ukraine to demonstrate
they are serious about resolving this dispute."

The prime ministers of Russia and Ukraine meet on Saturday in Moscow
for talks on the crisis. Yulia Tymoshenko declared on Friday that her
government had sole responsibility in Ukraine for negotiating a way out
of the crisis.

Vladimir Putin was in Berlin on Friday leading Russia’s efforts to form
a consortium of gas companies to help move towards a solution to the
dispute, particularly in terms of providing Ukraine with the technical
gas it says it needs to transit Russian exports to Europe.

Gazprom, Germany’s E.ON, Ruhrgas and Wingas, Gaz de France and Italy’s
Eni have agreed to join the consortium and more firms could soon follow
suit.

Putin said the technical gas would cost $730 million for the first
three months of 2009, noting that Ukraine had asked for 360 million
cubic meters of technical gas in January, 600 million in February and
600 million in March.

The final makeup of participants in the gas summit is not yet known,
but Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said on Friday invitations
had been sent to European Union members and other countries affected by
the dispute.

EU Energy Commissioner Andris Piebalgs and Czech Energy Minister Martin
Riman, whose country holds the EU presidency, are expected to take
part, while Serbia will be represented by its energy minister and the
head of national gas utility Srbijagas. Armenian president and
Kazakhstan’s prime minister have both confirmed they will attend.

Russia suspended supplies to Ukraine on January 1 after the former
Soviet neighbors failed to agree on debt and prices for 2009. The halt
in shipments to the EU came a week later, with Gazprom accusing Kiev of
stealing gas intended for EU consumers. Ukraine has denied the
accusation.

Monks arrested in J’lem church brawl

Monks arrested in J’lem church brawl

Nov 9, 2008 13:27 | Updated Nov 9, 2008 19:00

Jerusalem Post

Monks arrested in J’lem church brawl Police rushed into
one of Christianity’s holiest churches Sunday and arrested two
clergyman after an argument between monks erupted into a brawl next to
the site of Jesus’ tomb. The clash broke out between Armenian and
Greek Orthodox monks in the Church of the Holy Sepulcher, revered as
the site of Jesus’ crucifixion, burial and resurrection. It began as
Armenian clergymen marched in an annual procession commemorating the
4th-century discovery of the cross believed to have been used to
crucify Jesus. It ended with the arrival of dozens of riot policemen
who separated the sides, seizing a bearded Armenian monk in a
red-and-pink robe and a black-clad Greek Orthodox monk with a bloody
gash on his forehead. Both men were taken away in handcuffs. Six
Christian sects divide control of the ancient church. They regularly
fight over turf and influence, and Israeli police are occasionally
forced to intervene.

The feud revolves around a demand by the Greek Orthodox to post a
monk inside the Edicule – the ancient structure built on what is
believed to be the tomb of Jesus – during the Armenian procession. The
Armenians refused, and when they tried to march the Greek Orthodox
monks blocked their way. We were keeping resistance so that the
procession could not pass through … and establish a right that they
don’t have," said a young Greek Orthodox monk with a cut next to his
left eye. The monk, who gave his name as Serafim, said he sustained
the wound when an Armenian punched him from behind and broke his
glasses.

Father Pakrat of the Armenian Patriarchate said the Greek demand was
"against the status quo arrangement and against the internal
arrangement of the Holy Sepulcher." He said the Greeks attacked
first. Archbishop Aristarchos, the chief secretary of the Greek
Orthodox patriarchate, said his monks had not initiated the
violence. "I’m sorry that these events happened in front of the Holy
Sepulcher, which is the most holy religious monument of Christianity,"
he said.

After the brawl, the church was crowded with police holding assault
rifles and equipped with riot gear, standing beside Golgotha, where
Jesus is believed to have been crucified, and the long smooth stone
marking the place where tradition holds his body was laid out. Police
spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said police were forced to intervene after
fighting was reported. They arrested two monks, one from each side, he
said.

The feud is only one of a bewildering array of rivalries among
churchmen in the Holy Sepulcher. The government has long wanted to
build a fire exit in the church, which regularly fills with thousands
of pilgrims and has only one main door, but the plan is on hold
because the sects cannot agree where the exit will be built. In
another example, a ladder placed on a ledge over the entrance sometime
in the 19th century has remained there ever since because of a dispute
over who has the authority to take it down.

More recently, a spat between Ethiopian and Coptic Christians is
delaying badly needed renovations to a rooftop monastery that
engineers say could collapse.

Armenian Political Expert: Visit Of The Turkish President To Armenia

ARMENIAN POLITICAL EXPERT: VISIT OF THE TURKISH PRESIDENT TO ARMENIA WAS OF GREAT REGIONAL IMPORTANCE

ArmInfo
2008-09-08 17:18:00

ArmInfo. Visit of the Turkish President Abdullah Gul to Armenia
was of great regional importance, Head of the Analytical Center on
Globalization and Regional Cooperation Stepan Grigoryan said at today’s
international conference in Yerevan ‘Situation in the Caucasus. Role
of NATO and EU’.

‘I am sure that , somehow or other, one cannot but call the Turkish
president’s visit to Yerevan a political action even if A. Gul said
no word about politics during the meeting with S. Sargsyan’, he said.

The political expert thinks that the Turkish president’s visit to
Yerevan had also a psychological component besides the political one
as, against all the odds, A. Gul was received normally and the loss
of our national team did not especially our fans: the people showed
no aggression.

‘Moreover, I am sure that the latest events in Georgia have become
an impulse for A. Gul’s visit to Yerevan as both Turkey and all
the countries of the region felt notable changes in the region’s
geopolitical situation.

Consequently, new tendencies also appeared in the political direction
of the Turkish foreign policy’, S. Grigoryan resumed.

Armenie, Turquie affichent leur volonte de resoudre leurs differends

Le Monde, France
6 Septembre

L’Arm?Ã?©nie et la Turquie affichent leur volont?Ã?© de r?Ã?©soudre leurs
diff?Ã?©rends

Le pr?Ã?©sident turc Abdullah G?Ã?¼hl et son homologue arm?Ã?©nien Serge
Sarkissian ont affich?Ã?© samedi leur "volont?Ã?© politique" d’apaiser les
relations apr?Ã?¨s des ann?Ã?©es d’acrimonie entre les deux pays, ?Ã? 
l’occasion de la premi?Ã?¨re visite d’un chef d’Etat turc en Arm?Ã?©nie
depuis 1991. Hu?Ã?© ?Ã?  son arriv?Ã?©e ?Ã?  Erevan, le pr?Ã?©sident turc a
encore une fois ?Ã?©t?Ã?© siffl?Ã?© quand il est venu assister au match de
football entre la Turquie et l’Arm?Ã?©nie comptant pour la qualification
?Ã?  la Coupe du monde et qui avait donn?Ã?© aux deux pays l’occasion de
ce rapprochement.

En savoir plus avant les autres, Le Monde.fr vous fait gagner du
temps. Abonnez-vous au Monde.fr : 6??¬ par mois + 30 jours
offerts"Nous avons la volont?Ã?© politique de r?Ã?©soudre les diff?Ã?©rends
entre la Turquie et l’Arm?Ã?©nie. J’esp?Ã?¨re que cette visite pourra
cr?Ã?©er la possibilit?Ã?© d’am?Ã?©liorer nos relations", a affirm?Ã?©
M. G?Ã?¼l, lors de la premi?Ã?¨re visite d’un chef d’Etat turc en Arm?Ã?©nie
depuis l’ind?Ã?©pendance en 1991 de cette ex-r?Ã?©publique sovi?Ã?©tique.
"Nous avons la volont?Ã?© politique de r?Ã?©soudre les diff?Ã?©rends entre
nos deux pays pour ne pas les laisser aux g?Ã?©n?Ã?©rations ?Ã?  venir", a
?Ã?©galement d?Ã?©clar?Ã?© M. Sarkissian lors d’une conf?Ã?©rence de presse
commune. Le pr?Ã?©sident arm?Ã?©nien a annonc?Ã?© que M. G?Ã?¼l l’avait
invit?Ã?© en Turquie ?Ã?  l’occasion de Turquie-Arm?Ã?©nie, le match de
football retour entre les ?Ã?©quipes des deux pays.

9/06/l-armenie-et-la-turquie-affichent-leur-volont e-de-resoudre-leurs-differends_1092423_3214.html

http://www.lemonde.fr/europe/article/2008/0

McCain: Georgia Conflict Is The ‘First Serious Crisis Internationall

MCCAIN: GEORGIA CONFLICT IS THE ‘FIRST SERIOUS CRISIS INTERNATIONALLY SINCE THE END OF THE COLD WAR.’
By Damozel

The Moderate Voice
August 15th, 2008

I am becoming quite worried about McCain.

RockRichard at VetVoice says bluntly:

Forget about Afghanistan, Osama bin Laden and REAL Al-Qaeda. That
isn’t a major conflict. Let’s not dwell too much on figuring out this
Iraq problem. It isn’t an international crisis. And maybe he was just
having a "senior moment" and completely forgot about the Gulf War,
apartheid, and genocide in Darfur, Rwanda and the Balkans.

If you are reading this and are currently deployed or about to deploy
which at the current OPTEMPO should include anyone who is active duty,
keep that chin up. Its not like this is a crisis or anything. And
if you’re a loved one of someone who made the ultimate sacrifice,
remember that Senator McCain seems to think that your loved one died
for something so trivial that it doesn’t even break the "crisis"
threshold.

Andrew Sullivan asks:

What if Obama had said this?…. It’s this kind of emotional hyperbole
that should worry people about McCain in the White House. He’s a
drama queen on these issues. With a finger on the trigger.

Michael Stickings writes:

[McCain is] providing yet more evidence — and it’s really piling up
— that he is not the straight-talking maverick with international
relations expertise…but a dim-witted buffoon who actually knows very
little about the world and who is prepared to do and say anything to
score political points….

Let’s face it, McCain has no clue what to do about the conflict in
Georgia. His message, however, is this: "It’s the Cold War all over
again! I was there! I get it! Russia is the Evil Empire! I know what
to do! Vote for me!"

And this is what really bothers me.

McCain is exploiting an extremely serious situation that will affect
US and Russian relations for years to come in order to score political
points. And they called Barack Obama "presumptuous"? Consider this
(from The Washington Post):

Standing behind a lectern in Michigan this week, with two trusted
senators ready to do his bidding, John McCain seemed to forget for
a moment that he was only running for president.

Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili says he talks to McCain, a
personal friend, several times a day. McCain’s top foreign policy
adviser, Randy Scheunemann, was until recently a paid lobbyist
for Georgia’s government. McCain also announced this week that
two of his closest allies, Sens. Lindsey O. Graham (R-S.C.) and
Joseph I. Lieberman (I-Conn.), would travel to Georgia’s capital of
Tbilisi on his behalf, after a similar journey by Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice.

The extent of McCain’s involvement in the military conflict in Georgia
appears remarkable among presidential candidates, who traditionally
have kept some distance from unfolding crises out of deference to
whoever is occupying the White House. The episode also follows months
of sustained GOP criticism of Democratic Sen. Barack Obama, who was
accused of acting too presidential for, among other things, briefly
adopting a campaign seal and taking a trip abroad that included a
huge rally in Berlin. (WaPo)

Obama made a speech and shook hands with a couple of people. He
also apparently stirred up the Iraqis and got all that discussion
going about withdrawal deadlines. He was criticized for meddling in
foreign policy.

But this is several notches further up the meddling scale. My
colleague remarked:

John McCain says he is speaking on the phone every day to Georgia’s
President…. Doesn’t Bush mind?….. I’d mind. For once I kind of
admire Bush’s restraint.

I’d be like, "Dude? Excuse me; I believe I am still the president
here?"

For all the Cold War comparisons I’m seeing, the situation in Georgia
involves other factors (such as the argument of the separatist enclaves
within Georgia and the matter of the Georgian president’s initial
attack on South Ossetia). Nobody’s hands are completely clean with
respect to the factors which initiated the conflict. A nuanced response
is needed in dealing with Georgia’s territorial integrity and with the
people within its borders. The bad blood goes back hundreds of years.

On August 11, The Christian Science Monitor published an article by
Professor Charles King of Georgetown University. (Professor King is
professor of international affairs in the Edmund A. Walsh School of
Foreign Service at Georgetown University…and the author of "The
Ghost of Freedom: A History of The Caucasus.") He wrote:

Russia illegally attacked Georgia and imperiled a small and feeble
neighbor. But by dispatching his own ill-prepared military to resolve a
secessionist dispute by force, Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili
has managed to lead his country down the path of a disastrous and
ultimately self-defeating war….

[T]his is not a repeat of the Soviet Union’s aggressive behavior of
the last century. So far at least, Russia’s aims have been clear:
to oust Georgian forces from the territory of South Ossetia,
one of two secessionist enclaves in Georgia, and to chasten a
Saakashvili government that Russia perceives as hot-headed and
unpredictable.Regardless of the conflict’s origins, the West must
continue to act diplomatically to push Georgia and Russia back to the
pre-attacks status quo. The United States should make it clear that
Saakashvili has seriously miscalculated the meaning of his partnership
with Washington, and that Georgia and Russia must step back before
they do irreparable damage to their relations with the US, NATO,
and the European Union.

The attack on South Ossetia, along with Russia’s inexcusable reaction,
have pushed both sides down the road toward all-out war – a war that
could ignite a host of other territorial and ethnic disputes in the
Caucasus as a whole. (CSM)

He also wrote:

Like the Balkans in the 1990s, the central problems of this region are
about the dark politics of ethnic revival and territorial struggle. The
region is home to scores of brewing border disputes and dreams of
nationalist homelands….

Farther afield, other secessionist entities and recognized governments
in neighboring countries – from Nagorno-Karabakh to Chechnya – are
eyeing the situation. The outcome of the Russo-Georgian struggle
will determine whether these other disputes move toward peace or
once again produce the barbaric warfare and streams of refugees that
defined the Caucasus more than a decade ago.

For Georgia, this war has been a disastrous miscalculation. South
Ossetia and Abkhazia are now completely lost. It is almost impossible
to imagine a scenario under which these places – home to perhaps
200,000 people – would ever consent to coming back into a Georgian
state they perceive as an aggressor. (CSM)

Calling out Russia for its inexcusable opportunism (and previous
meddling in the separatist movements with the exact intention of
stirring up this sort of trouble) or even–if it is possible–punishing
them for it is not going to solve Georgia’s internal problems. The
separatist enclaves have not been under Georgia’s control since
the Nineties. Rightly or wrongly, they do not acknowledge Georgia’s
sovereignty over them or their territories.

The BBC’s Sarah Rainsford has reported: "Many Ossetians I met both in
Tskhinvali and in the main refugee camp in Russia are furious about
what has happened to their city.

"They are very clear who they blame: Georgia’s President Mikhail
Saakashvili, who sent troops to re-take control of this breakaway
region."

Human Rights Watch concluded after an on-the-ground inspection:
"Witness accounts and the timing of the damage would point to Georgian
fire accounting for much of the damage described [in Tskhinvali]." (BBC
News)

The Bush administration is working with the EU to resolve the
situation. Bush has told the Russians to get out now.

McCain needs to let them get on with it. But will McCain, who seems,
as Sullivan says, to be caught up in the drama, who claims close
friendship with the Georgian president, and who said "We are all
Georgians," simply exacerbate the situation? On August 13, The New
York Times wrote:

Despite Western governments’ public statements of support for
Saakashvili, some Western diplomats now privately say that the Georgian
leadership or military made a serious and possibly criminal mistake
last week by launching a massive barrage against the South Ossetian
capital of Tskhinvali, which inevitably led to major civilian deaths
and casualties.

Russian officials have said 2,000 people were killed in the Georgian
offensive, a figure that has not been confirmed independently. But
it is indisputable that large numbers of civilians were killed in
and around Tskhinvali. (Reuters)

What I’d really like to see is for McCain to disengage from any actual
meddling at this juncture. He should step away from the phone and
recall his two envoys.

I’m sure McCain means well. But in a situation like this, good
intentions count for very little.

At Obsidian Wings, Dr. Hilzoy says:

Like the neocons surrounding him, McCain’s worldview was forged in
the fires of the Cold War. To him, foreign policy is essentially
about nation-states, some of which are evil, some of which are
good. In McCain’s eyes, there’s always an imperialist existential
threat threatening to expand and gobble up the world. Yesterday it
was communism. Today it’s "Islamofascism." Tomorrow, probably China.

In reality, the Russia-Georgia dispute involved a tiny ethnic enclave
with deep historical ties to Russia that resides in a tiny post-Soviet
Union country. If Russia wanted to re-conquer Eastern Europe, it’s
an odd place to start.

But rather than seeing the situation as the complicated mix of history
and ideology that it is, McCain sees it as a reaffirmation of the Cold
War worldview that informs his foreign policy. A man who wears red
glasses sees everything as red. And so, it his pre-existing assumptions
(and not the facts) that are driving his response….

if the Georgia crisis had happened on President McCain’s watch,
these assumptions could similarly lead to some bad results. The worst
result of all of course would be military entanglement. But even if
McCain wasn’t quite that dumb, he could needlessly antagonize Russia,
who remains (for good or bad) a key and nuclear-powered partner on a
whole host of transnational issues and crises. That’s not to say that
we shouldn’t speak up against an overbroad military response. But the
response needs to be proportional. Citing disapproval (even strong
disapproval) is one thing — "we are all Georgians" is quite another.

Mankind managed to survive the first Cold War without destroying
itself. I’d prefer not to have another roll of the dice just to show
how hairy-chested we are. (Obsidian Wings)

This isn’t about acquiring foreign policy cred; civilian lives are
at stake all over Georgia. Like all civilians everywhere, they’re
inevitably pawns in a larger international chess game. But they
shouldn’t be pawns in the American presidential election as well.

H. Demoyan" "President’s Announcement Message For International Soci

H. DEMOYAN: "PRESIDENT’S ANNOUNCEMENT MESSAGE FOR INTERNATIONAL SOCIETY"

Panorama.am
20:38 01/07/2008

The announcement on Armenian Genocide made by the President of Armenia
Serzh Sargsyan during his Moscow visit was a certain "message"
for the international society, which has proved that Armenia is
ready to discuss any question with Turkey concerning the Genocide,
said Hayk Demoyan, the director of museum-institute of Genocide,
to Panorama.am reporter.

According to the expert, Turkey should involve in the group of
historians studying the genocide both those who refuse the fact of
genocide and those who say that it really took place. "If Turkey does
not manage to involve those two groups, then we’ll send our second
message to the world saying that Turkey did not manage to provide
pluralism and keeps the same fault," said H. Demoyan.

According to Demoyan Armenian side can dictate what kind of
specialists should be involved in the group as the recommendation
was made by Turkey. Hence, the establishment of such committee will
not be comfortable for Turkey.

One Nation – One Culture Festival Slated For August

ONE NATION-ONE CULTURE FESTIVAL SLATED FOR AUGUST

ARMENPRESS
May 28, 2008

YEREVAN, MAY 28, ARMENPRESS: One Nation-One Culture pan-Armenian
festival will be held this year in Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh on
August 17-23. The festival will be held under the high sponsorship
of Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian.

The press information department of the Ministry of Culture told
Armenpress that tens of musical groups and individual performers will
participate in the pan-national festival for joint presentation of
cultural values and joint discussion of cultural problems.

During the festival prominent dancers and singers will conduct
master classes.

This festival is held once in two years since 1999.

It attracts musical groups from Armenia, Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenian
Diaspora.

Monument to Armenian Genocide in Cyprus

AZG Armenian Daily #085, 06/05/2008

Armenian Genocide

MONUMENT TO ARMENIAN GENOCIDE IN CYPRUS

On May 1, according to Cyprian "Philiephteros" newspaper, a monument
dedicated to the Armenian Genocide was erected in Larnaca (Cyprus).

The opening ceremony will be held in June, Turkish press
reported. Armenian delegation led by RA President Serge Sargsian will
participate in the opening ceremony.

The decision on raising a monument to the Armenian Genocide was made
by Larnaca Municipality. Cyprus Parliament and Government members
affirmed the decision unanimously.

Apparently, the monument is created in Armenia, and according to the
supposition of Turkish press on April 1 it was in port Larnaca.

To recall, the foundation of the monument was laid by former President
of Armenia Robert Kocharian.

By Hakob Chakrian, translated by L.H.

Russian Energy Ties With Iran Send U.S. A Message

RUSSIAN ENERGY TIES WITH IRAN SEND U.S. A MESSAGE

Reuters
Friday, February 22, 2008

DUBAI/MOSCOW (Reuters) – As the United States warns the world away
from business with Tehran, Moscow’s tightening ties to Iran’s energy
sector underline Russia’s differences with Washington over Iranian
nuclear plans and Kosovo’s independence.

While the timing of Moscow’s announcement on Tuesday may have been
political, the deal for Russian state-controlled energy giant Gazprom
to take on big new Iranian oil and gas projects was a long time in the
making and dovetails with Gazprom’s strategic ambitions, analysts said.

Gazprom, the world’s biggest gas producer, will play a larger role
in developing Iran’s giant South Pars gas field and will also drill
for oil.

"The Russian government and the United States are at loggerheads over
how to engage with Iran, with Russia actively favouring a more open
relationship," said Ronald Smith, chief strategist at Alfa Bank. "This
makes Gazprom rather indifferent to American policy wishes."

The U.S. accuses Iran of using uranium enrichment to develop weapons,
while Tehran says it needs nuclear power. Russia has been reluctant
to impose more U.N. sanctions on Iran.

Despite voicing its own concerns about Tehran’s ambitions, Moscow is
building Iran’s first nuclear power plant and has supplied the fuel
it will use.

Russia opposes Kosovo’s split from Serbia, which the U.S. has backed.

Despite growing clout on the world stage, Moscow has proved powerless
to prevent Kosovo announcing its independence this week.

"There is probably a political element given what happened last week
in Kosovo," said Chris Weafer, chief strategist at UralSib bank.

"I would say this investment is in keeping with Gazprom’s declared
position to become as global as possible but the timing of the
announcement clearly has a political message as well."

FILLING THE VOID

Gazprom is advancing in Iran while U.S. political pressure has delayed
progress on gas projects by European companies such as Total and Royal
Dutch Shell and led to some European banks pulling their financing
for Iranian oil deals.

With European and U.S. companies out of the competition, Gazprom
has an edge as it bids for a bigger role in developing the world’s
second-largest gas reserves after Russia’s own.

"The Russians know full well that they are at a disadvantage in terms
of the quality of their technology compared to the West under normal
circumstances," said Ali Rashidi, a university economics professor
in Iran.

"Under conditions that Iran cannot attract real rather than token
Western foreign investment, the Russians are in an ideal situation
to fill the void."

Gazprom may also have been able to negotiate better terms due to
the lack of competition and Iran’s eagerness to press ahead with
development despite U.N. and U.S. sanctions, Rashidi said.

Strategically, a tie-up between Moscow and Tehran makes sense,
analysts said. Gazprom’s major market is Europe, which would also be
the likely destination for much of Iran’s future production. Gazprom
supplies a quarter of Europe’s gas needs.

The deal with Iran will do little to help Gazprom’s ambition to boost
its presence in the United States.

But for now, it’s exposure there is small, analysts said. That,
and Europe’s dependence on Gazprom, would limit the effectiveness
of any reprisal action from the United States, said Teymur Huseynov,
head of the Eurasia department at risk consultancy Exclusive Analysis.

"Gazprom’s vulnerability to U.S. sanctions is minimal," Huseynov
said. "And if you put sanctions on Gazprom you are basically
threatening Europe’s energy security and that would strain the
relationship with Europe and the United States."

Increased coordination between the two countries on investment
policy and pricing would also boost the chances of the formation of
a gas producers’ group resembling the Organization of the Petroleum
Exporting Countries (OPEC), Huseynov said.

Iran has called on Russia to set up such a group, which has caused
jitters in top customers and politicians in Europe.

Gazprom could also help Iran develop its pipeline system, potentially
linking the north of the country to fields in the south, Huseynov
added.

That would lessen dependency on gas imported from Turkmenistan, which
angered Tehran when it cut off gas supplies at the end of December.

The Russian gas export monopoly owns all the gas pipelines in Armenia,
to which Iran has recently completed a new export pipeline. Gazprom
will operate the section of that pipeline in Armenia.

Gazprom has been involved in Iran for years and invested about $4
billion in the country between 2000-2007, said Huseynov. It was
involved in an earlier phase of development at South Pars with Total
and Malaysia’s Petronas.