Israel Bolstering Forces At Syria Border

ISRAEL BOLSTERING FORCES AT SYRIA BORDER

July 10, 2013 – 17:33 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – Israel is bolstering its forces on the once-quiet
frontier with Syria where it believes Lebanese Hezbollah militants are
preparing for the day when they could fight Israel, Reuters reported.

Israel last fought Hezbollah in a 2006 Lebanon war and still closely
monitors the Lebanese border. Israel says Hezbollah has tens of
thousands of rockets in its south Lebanon stronghold.

The Jewish state is worried Hezbollah is making initial preparations
for future confrontation with it on a new front with Syria and is
accruing valuable combat experience on the Syrian battlefield. An
Israeli source said the group is gathering intelligence on Israel’s
deployment on the strategic Golan plateau.

“It is not at an alarming level now but we understand their
intentions,” said the source, who asked not to be identified because
of the sensitivity of the security and political situation in the area.

Hezbollah’s leader, Hassan Nasrallah, threatened in May to turn the
Golan into a new front against Israel.

“Since Nasrallah’s threat, more (Israeli) army companies have been sent
up, more tanks,” an Israeli military source at the Booster military
outpost on the Golan. “Hezbollah has an intelligence presence (in
the Golan) that we know of.”

Booster is about 2 km (1 mile) from a disengagement line set after
Israel and Syria fought on the Golan in 1973 and Israeli tanks have
just moved back into the position for the first time since then.

Usage Of Deep Waters In Armenia To Be Billable

USAGE OF DEEP WATERS IN ARMENIA TO BE BILLABLE

YEREVAN, July 10. /ARKA/. Armenian government set today the cost for
water usage – 15 drams per one cubic meter for internal water and 5
drams for surface water.

Andranik Andreasyan, the chairman of Armenian State Water Committee,
said these waters were used illegally and for free.

It is planned to spend the money to be collected for closing down
some 700 illegal wells in Ararat province.

Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan said that things in Ararat Valley are
worsening, since the levels of deep waters there are going down.

“It is necessary to embark on this without delay,” he said. “About
4 million drams are needed for conserving each of these wells…

Self-gushing wells will be closed first of all.” ($1 – AMD 411.76).

–0—

– See more at:

http://arka.am/en/news/society/usage_of_deep_waters_in_armenia_to_be_billable/#sthash.7PcfNZ2V.dpuf

Armenian Business Entities Must Not Raise Prices Due To Gas Tariffs

ARMENIAN BUSINESS ENTITIES MUST NOT RAISE PRICES DUE TO GAS TARIFFS

July 10, 2013 | 13:49

YEREVAN. – Armenian business entities should not raise prices reasoning
it by increase in gas tariffs, head of Armenian NGO said.

Chairman of Informed and Protected Consumer NGO Babken Pipoyan said
representatives of public sector, media and economists must work
together to inform consumes whether an increased price for certain
goods is justified.

“We will study the data on major commodity pricing, including food
and public transportation,” Pipoyan said during the Wednesday press
conference.

In response to the Armenian News – NEWS.am reporter’s remark that it
will be difficult to control the products having uncontrolled weight,
especially bread, Pipoyan said: “In this case, the manufacturer must
be required to send documents for each batch of bread, mentioning
the sort of flour and the weight.”

News from Armenia – NEWS.am

Armenia’s Ombudsman Petitions To International Organizations Concern

ARMENIA’S OMBUDSMAN PETITIONS TO INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS CONCERNING MOLDOVAN PARLIAMENTARY ADVOCATE

July 10, 2013 | 16:20

YEREVAN. – Armenia’s Human Rights Defender, Karen Andreasyan, on
Wednesday applied to the three renowned international organizations
in which the ombudsmen of both Armenia and Moldova are members.

Andreasyan called upon the International Ombudsman Institute, the
European Ombudsman Institute, and the Association of Francophone
Ombudsmen and Arbitrators, to no longer invite Moldovan parliamentary
advocate Aurelia Grigoriu to their international conferences.

As per Armenia’s defender of human rights, Grigoriu has discredited
herself with her lies and unacceptable conduct.

In addition, Karen Andreasyan conveyed to the Moldovan parliament his
demand and legal justification for the dismissal of Aurelia Grigoriu.

As Armenian News-NEWS.am informed earlier, during last week’s
international forum that was held in Armenia’s capital city Yerevan,
Grigoriu had said: “Armenia has occupied 20 percent of Azerbaijan’s
territories committing genocide against Azerbaijanis.”

This statement caused a negative reaction in Armenia and in Moldova,
alike. The statement was condemned and it was considered a provocation
aimed at exacerbating the situation.

In addition, the Armenian community of Moldova informed about its
intention to formally demand from the Moldovan parliament the remove
Aurelia Grigoriu from office.

Photo by Arsen Sargsyan/NEWS.am

News from Armenia – NEWS.am

Armenia’s Minister Of Transport Speak Of Expected Fare Rise

ARMENIA’S MINISTER OF TRANSPORT SPEAK OF EXPECTED FARE RISE

16:40 ~U 10.07.13

A rise in fares is inevitable, but it must not seriously affect people,
Armenia’s Minister of Transport and Communication Gagik Beglaryan
told journalists on Wednesday.

Without specifying the fare rates, the minister said that different
routes have different distances.

“We cannot equally raise fares for all the routes, and no fare rise
is expected in some cases,” the minister said.

“We are announcing a contest. The winner company will inform us of the
fare rates and the commission will make a decision,” the minister said.

Armenian News – Tert.am

Edward Snowden Interview: Stuxnet Created By NSA, Israel

EDWARD SNOWDEN INTERVIEW: STUXNET CREATED BY NSA, ISRAEL

Tue Jul 09, 2013 3:20

TEHRAN (FNA)- In an interview conducted using encrypted e-mails,
whistleblower Edward Snowden discusses the power of the NSA, how it
is “in bed together with the Germans” and the vast scope of Internet
spying conducted by the United States and Britain, where he disclosed
that the Stuxnet virus which infiltrated Iranian computers had been
co-written by NSA and Israel.

Shortly before he became a household name around the world as a
whistleblower, Edward Snowden answered a comprehensive list of
questions. They originated from Jacob Appelbaum, 30, a developer
of encryption and security software. Appelbaum provides training to
international human rights groups and journalists on how to use the
Internet anonymously.

Appelbaum first became more broadly known to the public after he spoke
on behalf of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange at a hacker conference
in New York in 2010. Together with Assange and other co-authors,
Appelbaum recently released a compilation of interviews in book form
under the title “Cypherpunks: Freedom and the Future of the Internet.”

Appelbaum wound up on the radar of American authorities in the
course of their investigation into the WikiLeaks revelations. They
have since served legal orders to Twitter, Google and Sonic to hand
over information about his accounts. But Appelbaum describes his
relationship with WikiLeaks as being “ambiguous,” and explains here
how he was able to pose questions to Snowden.

“In mid-May, documentary filmmaker Laura Poitras contacted me,”
Appelbaum said. “She told me she was in contact with a possible
anonymous National Security Agency (NSA) source who had agreed to be
interviewed by her.”

“She was in the process of putting questions together and thought
that asking some specific technical questions was an important part
of the source verification process. One of the goals was to determine
whether we were really dealing with an NSA whistleblower. I had deep
concerns of COINTELPRO-style entrapment. We sent our securely encrypted
questions to our source. I had no knowledge of Edward Snowden’s
identity before he was revealed to the world in Hong Kong. He also
didn’t know who I was. I expected that when the anonymity was removed,
we would find a man in his sixties.”

“The following questions are excerpted from a larger interview that
covered numerous topics, many of which are highly technical in nature.

Some of the questions have been reordered to provide the required
context. The questions focus almost entirely on the NSA’s capabilities
and activities. It is critical to understand that these questions were
not asked in a context that is reactive to this week’s or even this
month’s events. They were asked in a relatively quiet period, when
Snowden was likely enjoying his last moments in a Hawaiian paradise —
a paradise he abandoned so that every person on the planet might come
to understand the current situation as he does.”

“At a later point, I also had direct contact with Edward Snowden in
which I revealed my own identity. At that time, he expressed his
willingness to have his feelings and observations on these topics
published when I thought the time was right.”

Editor’s note: The following excerpts are taken from the original
English-language version of the interview. Potential differences in
language between the German and English versions can be explained by
the fact that we have largely preserved the technical terms used by
Snowden in this transcript. Explanations for some of the terminology
used by Snowden as well as editor’s notes are provided in the form
of footnotes.

Interviewer: What is the mission of America’s National Security Agency
(NSA) — and how is the job it does compatible with the rule of law?

Snowden: They’re tasked to know everything of importance that happens
outside of the United States. That’s a significant challenge. When
it is made to appear as though not knowing everything about everyone
is an existential crisis, then you feel that bending the rules is okay.

Once people hate you for bending those rules, breaking them becomes
a matter of survival.

Interviewer: Are German authorities or German politicians involved
in the NSA surveillance system?

Snowden: Yes, of course. We’re 1 in bed together with the Germans the
same as with most other Western countries. For example, we 2 tip them
off when someone we want is flying through their airports (that we
for example, have learned from the cell phone of a suspected hacker’s
girlfriend in a totally unrelated third country — and they hand
them over to us. They 3 don’t ask to justify how we know something,
and vice versa, to insulate their political leaders from the backlash
of knowing how grievously they’re violating global privacy.

Interviewer: But if details about this system are now exposed, who
will be charged?

Snowden: In front of US courts? I’m not sure if you’re serious. An
investigation found the specific people who authorized the warrantless
wiretapping of millions and millions of communications, which per
count would have resulted in the longest sentences in world history,
and our highest official simply demanded the investigation be halted.

Who “can” be brought up on charges is immaterial when the rule of
law is not respected. Laws are meant for you, not for them.

Interviewer: Does the NSA partner with other nations, like Israel?

Snowden: Yes. All the time. The NSA has a massive body responsible
for this: FAD, the Foreign Affairs Directorate.

Interviewer: Did the NSA help to create Stuxnet? (Stuxnet is the
computer worm that was deployed against the Iranian nuclear program.)

Snowden: NSA and Israel co-wrote it.

Interviewer: What are some of the big surveillance programs that are
active today and how do international partners aid the NSA?

Snowden: In some cases, the so-called Five Eye Partners 4 go beyond
what NSA itself does. For instance, the UK’s General Communications
Headquarters (GCHQ) has a system called TEMPORA. TEMPORA is the
signals intelligence community’s first “full-take” Internet buffer
that doesn’t care about content type and pays only marginal attention
to the Human Rights Act. It snarfs everything, in a rolling buffer to
allow retroactive investigation without missing a single bit. Right
now the buffer can hold three days of traffic, but that’s being
improved. Three days may not sound like much, but remember that
that’s not metadata. “Full-take” means it doesn’t miss anything,
and ingests the entirety of each circuit’s capacity. If you send a
single ICMP packet 5 and it routes through the UK, we get it. If you
download something and the CDN (Content Delivery Network) happens to
serve from the UK, we get it. If your sick daughter’s medical records
get processed at a London call center … well, you get the idea.

Interviewer: Is there a way of circumventing that?

Snowden: As a general rule, so long as you have any choice at
all, you should never route through or peer with the UK under any
circumstances. Their fibers are radioactive, and even the Queen’s
selfies to the pool boy get logged.

Interviewer: Do the NSA and its partners across the globe do full
dragnet data collection for telephone calls, text and data?

Snowden: Yes, but how much they get depends on the capabilities of the
individual collection sites — i.e., some circuits have fat pipes but
tiny collection systems, so they have to be selective. This is more
of a problem for overseas collection sites than domestic 6 ones,
which is what makes domestic collection so terrifying. NSA isn’t
limited by power, space and cooling PSC constraints.

‘US Multinationals Should Not Be Trusted’

Interviewer: The NSA is building a massive new data center in Utah.

What is its purpose?

Snowden: The massive data repositories.

Interviewer: How long is the collected data being stored for?

Snowden: As of right now, full-take collection ages off quickly (a
few days) due to its size unless an analyst has “tasked” 7 a target or
communication, in which the tasked communications get stored “forever
and ever,” regardless of policy, because you can always get a waiver.

The metadata 8 also ages off, though less quickly. The NSA wants to be
at the point where at least all of the metadata is permanently stored.

In most cases, content isn’t as valuable as metadata because you can
either re-fetch content based on the metadata or, if not, simply task
all future communications of interest for permanent collection since
the metadata tells you what out of their data stream you actually want.

Interviewer: Do private companies help the NSA?

Snowden: Yes. Definitive proof of this is the hard part because the NSA
considers the identities of telecom collaborators to be the jewels in
their crown of omniscience. As a general rule, US-based multinationals
should not be trusted until they prove otherwise. This is sad, because
they have the capability to provide the best and most trusted services
in the world if they actually desire to do so. To facilitate this,
civil liberties organizations should use this disclosure to push them
to update their contracts to include enforceable clauses indicating
they aren’t spying on you, and they need to implement technical
changes. If they can get even one company to play ball, it will
change the security of global communications forever. If they won’t,
consider starting that company.

Interviewer: Are there companies that refuse to cooperate with the NSA?

Snowden: Also yes, but I’m not aware of any list. This category will
get a lot larger if the collaborators are punished by consumers in
the market, which should be considered Priority One for anyone who
believes in freedom of thought.

Interviewer: What websites should a person avoid if they don’t want
to get targeted by the NSA?

Snowden: Normally you’d be specifically selected for targeting based
on, for example, your Facebook or webmail content. The only one I
personally know of that might get you hit untargeted are jihadi forums.

Interviewer: What happens after the NSA targets a user?

Snowden: They’re just owned. An analyst will get a daily (or scheduled
based on exfiltration summary) report on what changed on the system,
PCAPS 9 of leftover data that wasn’t understood by the automated
dissectors, and so forth. It’s up to the analyst to do whatever they
want at that point — the target’s machine doesn’t belong to them
anymore, it belongs to the US government.

Footnotes:

1 “We’re” refers to the NSA.

2 “We” refers to the US intelligence service apparatus

3 “They” refers to the other authorities.

4 The “Five Eye Partners” is a reference to the intelligence services
of United States, Britain, Australia, New Zealand and Canada.

5 “ICMP” is a reference to Internet Control Message Protocol. The
answer provided here by Snowden was highly technical, but it was clear
that he was referring to all data packets sent to or from Britain.

6 “Domestic” is a reference to the United States.

7 In this context, “tasked” refers to the full collection and storage
of metadata and content for any matched identifiers by the NSA or
its partners.

8 “Metadata” can include telephone numbers, IP addresses and connection
times, among other things. Wired Magazine offers a solid primer
on metadata.

9 “PCAPS” is an abbreviation of the term “packet capture”.

http://english.farsnews.com/newstext.aspx?nn=13920418000528

"Customs Union Will Be Either Collapsed Or Reformed"

“CUSTOMS UNION WILL BE EITHER COLLAPSED OR REFORMED”

July 9 2013

“I do not see any contradiction between initialing Association
Agreement with the EU and Customs Union and, moreover, I think
the discussions about Customs Union artificial”,-so expressed his
opinion Stepan Grigoryan, Chairman of the Board of ‘Analytical
Center on Globalization and Regional Cooperation’ in a conversation
with “Aravot”. In response to our question that opinions were heard
recently that pressure was applied over Armenia by Russia to join the
Customs Union and to fail initialing the EU Association Agreement in
November in Vilnius, Mr. Grigoryan said that initialing the Association
would take place. “I do not think that we need to contradistinguish
our cooperation with Russia and other CIS countries each other with
another treaty. The Customs Union, which includes Russia, Kazakhstan
and Belarus, the rules of the game, here, are contrary to the ones of
the World Trade Organization (WTO). And as Russia has already become
a WTO member, and now Kazakhstan is striving to become a WTO member,
it is obvious that the Customs Union will be either reformed, or
collapsed. There is no need to orient on Customs Union because we
have nothing in the Customs Union, we have no border, and Customs
Union will not give us anything.”

According to Mr. Grigoryan, if the terms of Customs Union are amended,
then in that case there will be no conflict in terms of cooperation
of Armenia with Europe. “And discussions on the Eurasian Union can be
held at a time when Russia clearly specify as to what it is, whether
it is an interstate union, what this union should contain, whether
there will be state institutions, or not and so on and so forth. When
checked, then we will sit down and talk. And the Association Agreement
will be signed, because the last 2 years Armenia is actively working
and executes all the terms presented in the framework of the Eastern
Partnership Program with the European Union, including in terms of
free trade zone agreement.” In addition to this, in the opinion of
the expert, Armenia meets the EU requirements in the sector of policy.

“Armenia does not have the problem, which, for example, is available
in Ukraine related to Tymoshenko. The trade sector, the issue of visa
facilitation, readmission agreement, these come into collision with
those sectors where we are actively working with Russia. And we are
working in the military-political sector with Russia, and they are
different, not contravening sectors to each other.”

To the question of “Aravot”, as to in that case what does the
selling of weapons at such large scale and dangerous to Azerbaijan
by Russia mean if it was not ‘a message’ to join the Customs Union,
the politician said,- “I do not think that the gas price or selling
of arms is connected with our position regarding the Customs Union,
in addition, Russia’s policy, in the last few years, is not military
and political. Russia acts according to the moment: at this moment, it
is beneficial to increase the price in gas, it does, it is beneficial
to sell weapons to Azerbaijan, it does, because 1 billion dollars is
not a small amount for Russia, as well. I do not think Russia runs
a long-term policy, it is more tactical, but not strategic.” Nelly
BABAYAN

Read more at:

http://en.aravot.am/2013/07/09/155326/

More Arms At Azerbaijan’s Disposal, Higher Probability Of War

MORE ARMS AT AZERBAIJAN’S DISPOSAL, HIGHER PROBABILITY OF WAR

14:33 ~U 09.07.13

Russia’s sale of arms to Azerbaijan is not a legal violation. On the
other hand, Armenia did not expect Russia, its strategic partner, to
make such a step, Giro Manoyan, Head of the Hay Dat office, Armenian
Revolutionary Federation Dashnaktsutyun (ARF-D), told journalists
on Tuesday.

If a state like Azerbaijan acquires arms, the probability of war
is higher.

“In this respect, Russia’s behavior arouses concern however hard
they try to claim that the military balance has not been disturbed,”
Manoyan said.

Last month, Russia sold arms worth about $1bn to Azerbaijan.

He considers inadequate official Yerevan’s response to the
Russian-Azerbaijani transaction.

“Russia should feel that Armenia, its people, authorities and political
forces are discontented with this behavior,” he said.

Armenian News – Tert.am
Content-Type: MESSAGE/RFC822; CHARSET=US-ASCII
Content-Description:

MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=windows-1252
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
From: Mihran Keheyian
Subject: =?windows-1252?Q?More_arms_at_Azerbaijan=92s_disposal=2C_higher_probabi?=
=?windows-1252?Q?lity_of_war?=

More arms at Azerbaijan?s disposal, higher probability of war

14:33 ? 09.07.13

Russia?s sale of arms to Azerbaijan is not a legal violation. On the
other hand, Armenia did not expect Russia, its strategic partner, to
make such a step, Giro Manoyan, Head of the Hay Dat office, Armenian
Revolutionary Federation Dashnaktsutyun (ARF-D), told journalists on
Tuesday.

If a state like Azerbaijan acquires arms, the probability of war is higher.

?In this respect, Russia?s behavior arouses concern however hard they
try to claim that the military balance has not been disturbed,?
Manoyan said.

Last month, Russia sold arms worth about $1bn to Azerbaijan.

He considers inadequate official Yerevan?s response to the
Russian-Azerbaijani transaction.

?Russia should feel that Armenia, its people, authorities and
political forces are discontented with this behavior,? he said.

Armenian News – Tert.am

Taxi Fare Rises 20% In Average In Armenia

TAXI FARE RISES 20% IN AVERAGE IN ARMENIA
by Arthur Yernjakyan

ARMINFO
Tuesday, July 9, 14:50

Taxi fare increased 20% in average in Armenia following the rise in
the gas and electric power tariffs starting July 7 2013. ArmInfo’s
correspondent polled the taxi services in the city and revealed that
the taxi minimum fare increased from 500 drams to 600 drams (20%).

The taxi fare hikes as the gas filling stations began selling gas
for a price 17%-18% higher than before. Thus, a 1.6-liter gasbag is
now sold for 3800 drams versus the previous 3100 drams. In addition,
drivers are reluctant to pay the gas filling stations additional
‘fee’ in the amount of 500 drams for ‘proper filling.’

Some taxi services and private drivers have not finally decided
their fares yet. Public transport fares are left unchanged so far –
100 drams. However, the fare is not final.

It is noteworthy that over 70% of transport in Armenia (over 400,000
vehicles) operates on gas, which is relatively cheaper.

A month ago, Robert Nazaryan, head of the Public Services Regulatory
Committee, told media that the cost value of gas at the gas filling
stations should not rise more than 5% following the rise in the gas
tariff in the country. For commercial users the gas tariff rose to
$276.98 instead of the previous $243 per 1,000 cu m (a 14%). By data
of ArmRusgasprom CJSC, the sole importer of gas in Armenia, in 2012,
gas consumption by the gas-filling stations in the country grew 15.4%
to 418 million cu m.

Armenia Should Establish Sovereignty Over Kars Province

ARMENIA SHOULD ESTABLISH SOVEREIGNTY OVER KARS PROVINCE

Head of Modus Vivendi Center political scientist Ara Papyan dwelt
on the second pan-Armenian conference of lawyers held on July 5-6 in
Armenia. He attached importance to it in terms of the discussion of
the issue of compensation to Armenians by Turkey.

Papyan noted that the conference discussed issues relating to
individual compensation to the heirs of genocide victims, community
compensation, as well as property and territorial integrity. He
underlined the speech of the prosecutor general saying that
“elimination of consequences of the genocide means restoration of
territorial integrity of the Republic of Armenia”.

According to Papyan, for the return of property the Armenians need
to apply to Turkish courts. Once compensation is refused, they should
appeal to the Court of Human Rights. And for the Armenia-Turkey border
it is necessary to appeal to the UN Court of Justice.

As to weakening of Turkey’s foothold, Ara Papyan brought the example
of the Soviet Union. He says it will collapse like the USSR, falling
into several small republics. He says if in 1985 one said that the
USSR would collapse, one would be taken to a psychiatric hospital
or would be put to prison. According to him, it is necessary to be
ready for big changes that are expected in the Middle East.

The political scientist noted that there are countries which want
to control Turkey, and it is becoming less controllable due to its
economic and military powers.

He says that the entire West will benefit from Turkey’s weakening
and split. They will use Woodrow Wilson’s Arbitral Award regarding
Armenia’s borders for their own aims. No one will do it for Armenia’s
sake, only for their own goals but they may match with ours, Papyan
said.

The political scientist proposed that Armenia reestablish its
sovereignty over the province of Kars. He noted that that territory
belongs to the Republic of Armenia and is now occupied by Turkey. In
other provinces too, we could establish our rights. It is not necessary
to have full sovereignty there but demilitarization of territories,
free transit, free investments, management of cultural heritage etc,
Papyan says adding that intermediate solutions might be applied to
the other four provinces. They should not necessarily belong to either
Armenia or Turkey.

Papyan underlined that it is necessary to ensure the U.S. supports us.

“If you think Russians keep their bases here for our sake, you are
mistaken,” he said, adding that there is a possibility for deployment
of an American base here. This country helps us in many issues,
including military assistance without making a fuss.

14:39 09/07/2013 Story from Lragir.am News:

http://www.lragir.am/index/eng/0/politics/view/30406