Military Protocol Signed Between Iran And Armenia An Open Betrayal T

MILITARY PROTOCOL SIGNED BETWEEN IRAN AND ARMENIA AN OPEN BETRAYAL TOWARDS AZERBAIJAN -IRANIAN POLITICAL SCIENTIST

"Trend" news agency
09.11.2007 19:44:51

Azerbaijan, Baku / Trend corr. D.Khatinoglu / The military agreement
signed between Iran and Armenia when the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict
over Nagorno-Karabakh was raging is not good for Tehran. "The military
protocol signed between Iran and Armenia is an open betrayal against
Azerbaijan," Alireza Nourizadeh, the Iranian political scientist, said.

The military agreement between Iran and Armenia was signed during
the visit of the Iranian Defence Minister, General Mustafa Najar,
to Armenia on 7. The military protocol, signed without regard
to the continued Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict, will damage the
Iranian-Azerbaijani relations.

The agreement is not good for Iran, Nourizadeh said to Trend news
agency by the telephone from London on 9 November. Iran does not
differ with professional games among diplomatic ones.

Iran needs in Azerbaijani support in its pro-west policy. The Iranian
President’s visit to Armenia on 22 October was not a deliberate action.

As a result the President had to stop visit and return his country,"
the political scientist said.

According to Nourizadeh, the United States deputy Defence Minister’s
visit to Azerbaijan intended to calm Azerbaijan in its relation
to Iran.

During the United States deputy Defence Minister’s visit to Azerbaijan
he promised defence to Azerbaijan and submitted a security project. The
project was ratified by the Milli Majlis (Azerbaijani Parliament)
after signing the protocol between Iran and Armenia.

"Iran keeps isolating itself unsuccessful and betrayal
diplomacy. Iran as an older brother can settle the Armenian-Azerbaijani
conflict. However, Iran supports Armenia stirring up the situation,"
the Iranian political scientist said.

If Baku Doesn’t Want To Hold Talks With Stepanakert, Yerevan Will Ne

IF BAKU DOESN’T WANT TO HOLD TALKS WITH STEPANAKERT, YEREVAN WILL NEGOTIATE WITH ANKARA BUT NOT WITH BAKU

PanARMENIAN.Net
06.11.2007 12:35 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ ARF Dashnaktsutyun estimates highly the activities
of the Armenian President for the settlement of the Nagorno Karabakh
conflict, member of ARF Dashnaktsutyun, vice speaker of the RA National
Assembly Vahan Hovhannisian told reporters today.

However, he said, Nagorno Karabakh should join the talks. "We are told
that Azerbaijan’s concession is peace. But "peace for peace" formula
doesn’t reflect the reality, since mutual compromises should have a
different shape. Azerbaijan avoids this variant by all means. If Baku
doesn’t want to hold talks with Stepanakert, Yerevan will negotiate
with Ankara but not with Baku. Unfortunately, Turkey is a member
of the OSCE Minsk Group on the Nagorno Karabakh conflict settlement
and influences on the process. Official Yerevan and Diaspora should
counteract this and urge to expel Turkey from the Minsk Group as an
interested party," Mr Hovhannisian said.

The decision to convene in Minsk an international conference on Nagorno
Karabakh was taken March 24, 1992 at the extraordinary sitting of the
Council of Ministers of the OSCE member states. Bulgaria, Germany,
Italy, Russia, U.S., Turkey, France, Czechia and Sweden formed the
Minsk contact group to settle the armed conflict between Azerbaijan
and Armenia.

Presently, the MG is chaired by Russia, U.S. and France.

Till 1997 Nagorno Karabakh was a full party in the talks. Now talks
are held between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

Turkey Determined On Cross Border Operation In Northern Iraq

TURKEY DETERMINED ON CROSS BORDER OPERATION IN NORTHERN IRAQ

PanARMENIAN.Net
06.11.2007 14:23 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Turkey’s Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said
he came out of his private meeting with U.S. President George W. Bush
reassured about prospects for Turkey’s showdown with Kurdish rebels.

After the meeting at the White House, Erdogan delivered a speech at the
National Press Club. "We decided to launch a cross-border operation,"
he said.

Erdogan stated that they would use their right for intervention
stemming from international law and said, "We have no tolerance left
for mechanisms that did not bear any results." Erdogan said that
Turkey’s target was only the terrorist organization PKK based in the
North of Iraq and underlined that the international community should
understand this clearly.

Asked by an audience member about a possible Turkish military
operation, Erdogan said, "When the time comes, it will be done."

"We talked about the need to have better intelligence-sharing,"
Bush said after the meeting.

"In order to chase down people who murder people you need good
intelligence. We talked about the need for our militaries to stay in
constant contact."

"I made it very clear to the Prime Minister that we want to work in
a close way to deal with this problem," Bush said, ITAR TASS reports.

With Turkish troops massed on his country’s border with Iraq, Erdogan
is weighing a major cross-border attack against PKK rebels. The
guerrillas have killed more than 40 Turks in the past month in
cross-border raids, and pressure is growing on Erdogan to hit back.

Lord Russell Johnston’s Regional Visit Postponed

LORD RUSSELL JOHNSTON’S REGIONAL VISIT POSTPONED

PanARMENIAN.Net
05.11.2007 18:33 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The visit of Lord Russell Johnston, chief of the PACE
Ad Hoc Committee on Nagorno Karabakh, scheduled for early November,
has been postponed. "My visit to Armenia and Azerbaijan is due till
the yearend but the exact date has not been fixed yet," he said Monday
in Berlin.

Earlier, Lord Russell Johnston informed that the date should be
coordinated with Presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan. The visit was
approximately scheduled for November 9, Trend news agency reports.

Criminal Case Against "Karabakh" Committee Disappears From RA Prosec

CRIMINAL CASE AGAINST "KARABAKH" COMMITTEE DISAPPEARS FROM RA PROSECUTOR GENERAL’S OFFICE

Noyan Tapan
Nov 5, 2007

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 5, NOYAN TAPAN. NT correspondent was informed
that the criminal case (containing several dozen volumes) against
the "Karabakh" committee has disappeared from the RA Prosecutor
General’s Office. An internal investigation was launched by the
Prosecutor General’s Office in order to reveal the circumstances,
under which the case disappeared. The criminal case was initiated in
1988, as a result of which the members of the "Karabakh" committee
were imprisoned for several months.

End Current Genocides Rather Than Sift Through The Ashes Of History

END CURRENT GENOCIDES RATHER THAN SIFT THROUGH THE ASHES OF HISTORY
Laina Farhat-Holzman, Sentinel Staff Report

Santa Cruz Sentinel, CA
Nov 4 2007

Genocide is an ancient historic institution that never had that
name until after World War II, when the United Nations defined it
as a crime. Unfortunately, the U.N. does not have legal authority
to intervene in an ongoing genocide and the Security Council has too
many conflicting national agendas to do so either. World War II did
not end genocide. It is alive and well today in more places than make
it into the news.

However, the history of genocide is in the news a great deal lately.

The extremely well-documented Nazi genocide against Jews and Gypsies
[and Slavs, if they had had enough time], are the only genocides that
faced an international tribunal, hanging some of its most notorious
practitioners. Since then, nothing. Even Nazi genocide is questioned
by Holocaust deniers [a group as stupid as the Flat Earth folks, but
much more vicious]. Iranian president Ahmadinejad appears to belong
to both groups, although he sets aside the flat earth notion for the
high science of nuclear development.

Documented genocide goes back to antiquity, where it was a regular
practice in warfare for the winners to execute all men and boys
and take all women and girls into slavery. This practice certainly
prevents the losers from getting revenge a generation later. Read
the Greek play "The Trojan Women" for an intimate portrait of this
practice, and there is plenty of other literature documenting genocides
throughout the Middle Ages and Renaissance in Europe.

In our fairly recent history, two hideous genocides were carried
out — one in Cambodia and the other in Rwanda. Cambodian Marxists
committed genocide against city people [marching them out to slave
labor camps where most died] and intellectuals [wearing glasses
identified them]. The worst ongoing genocide is in Sudan, which has
been an active practitioner for many decades. Their first attempt was
against their black non-Muslim population and currently it is against
a peasant black-but-Muslim population. Men are killed and women raped
and their villages destroyed. The "world community" talks and talks,
but there is political unwillingness to physically intervene. Nobody
wants to establish that precedent.

But genocide as history suddenly appeared in the American Congress in
the form of a resolution condemning the Ottoman Empire’s murder of a
million and a half Armenian citizens during World War I, a century
ago. I grew up with a mother reminding me to eat everything on the
plate and think of the "starving Armenians" who did not have this
food. I do not think that anyone educated in the Western world does
not know about this catastrophe. The question is: was this a deliberate
policy — like that of the Nazis later — to wipe out an entire people
on the basis of their religion or ethnicity? The Armenians today say
it was, but the Turks hotly deny this. They do not deny that millions
died, but they do say it was another government, that of the crumbling
and war-torn Ottoman Turkish Empire, not modern Turkey, that deserves
this criticism — and furthermore, they say it was not a policy but
rather a response to a war in which there was internal disloyalty. If
the Ottomans really wanted to wipe all Armenians off the face of the
earth, they would have rounded up those living in Istanbul and Smyrna,
which they did not do.

What makes digging up this history even more touchy is that the
majority of Armenians evacuated into the desert were provided with no
water, no refugee camps, with apparently no plan for this order at all,
and even touchier is the fact that most of the murder and rapes were
done by Kurds — yes, those same Kurds in the news today — who were
then themselves oppressed by the Ottomans and the successor Turkish
government. Not a nice story.

The Turks are terribly thin-skinned about this issue and have
stubbornly failed to apologize [a modern practice that has become
popular in the West]. The Armenian massacres have been recognized
by numerous governments mostly in Europe, but the American Armenian
lobby wants the U.S. to join this condemnation officially.

The question is, according to the U.N. genocide rules, an ongoing
genocide must be halted by force, if necessary, once the member states
use the term "genocide." Outside intervention has only happened
once, when Vietnam marched into Cambodia to stop their genocide,
which got them nothing but condemnation. During the mass killings
in the Ottoman Empire, the American ambassador and [yes] the German
ambassador both protested to the authorities and publicized the
horrors to the world. That was the closest we have come to doing the
right thing. To condemn modern Turkey with such a resolution will not
bring the dead back to life, but will inflame U.S.-Turkish relations
perhaps beyond repair.

Obviously, the world is not organized in such a way as to deal with
current genocides. Our efforts should be aimed at this end, not at
ineffectually dragging out a century-old horror that may not even
have been an organized campaign. The Ottoman Empire was a brutal,
chaotic mess, and its collapse occurred long after it had internally
imploded. We should be spending our moral capital better than this.

More attention to active genocides would be much better, but
unfortunately, presidential politics are already in play.

Laina Farhat-Holzman is a historian, lecturer and author of ‘Strange
Birds from Zoroaster’s Nest’ and ‘God’s Law or Man’s Law.’ Contact
her at [email protected] or visit her Web site at

http://www.santacruzsentinel .com/story.php?storySection=Opinion&sid=44725

www.globalthink.net.

October 2007 saw 0.7% Rise in Prices of Non-Food Commodities

IN OCTOBER 2007 THERE IS 0.7% RISE IN PRICES OF NON-FOOD COMMODITIES IN
ARMENIA

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 2, NOYAN TAPAN. In comparison with September, a 0.7%
inflation was recorded in the market of non-food commodities in Armenia
in October 2007 due to the 1.3% and 4.2% inflation of petrol and diesel
fuel, correspondingly.

According to the data of the National Statistical Service of the
Republic of Armenia, a 0.1-3% inflation of textiles, furniture, woven
fabrics, clothes, jewelry, construction materials, footware, sanitary
and cosmetic commodities was recorded in the republic in October 2007
in comparison with September. In the above-mentioned period a 0.1-2.2%
deflation of cultural commodities, medicinal means, domestic electrical
appliances, washing means, horicultural commodities, and writing
materials was recorded. The level of prices has remained the same in
comparison with the previous month in the other commodity groups being
observed.

Oct 07 over Dec 06 saw 4.6% Increase in Petrol, Decrease in Diesel

IN COMPARISON WITH DECEMBER 2006 IN OCTOBER 2007 THERE IS 4.6%
INCREASE IN PRICE OF PETROL AND 0.5% DECREASE IN THAT OF DIESEL FUEL
IN ARMENIA

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 2, NOYAN TAPAN. In comparison with December 2006,
there is a 4.6% increase in the price of petrol and 0.5% decrease in
that of diesel fuel in Armenia in October 2007.

In October 2007 there is a 1.3% rise in the price of petrol and a 4.2%
rise in that of diesel fuel in comparison with September.

According to the data of the National Statistical Service of the
Republic of Armenia, in comparison with October 2006, there is a 7.5%
and 6% deflation of petrol and diesel fuel, correspondingly, in October
2007.

Russia Has No Time For Deep Engagement In Karabakh Conflict Settleme

RUSSIA HAS NO TIME FOR DEEP ENGAGEMENT IN KARABAKH CONFLICT SETTLEMENT

PanARMENIAN.Net
02.11.2007 18:49 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ "It would be better to resolve the Nagorno Karabakh
conflict in the framework of the CIS," said Russian State Duma member
Oleg Kulikov.

"The only wayout for Azerbaijan and Armenia is to encourage integration
processes, i.e. to establish closer ties at the post-soviet space and
strengthen the CIS. Only a renewed post-soviet union will manage to
resolve these problems," Oleg Kulikov said.

"There is a little chance for resolution of the Karabakh problem in the
near future because it’s gainful for outer forces. Russia is sincerely
interested in settlement of the conflict but now it has more pressing
issues to resolve – relations with Ukraine and Belarus, problem in the
Islamic world, consolidation of the Afghan factor and fundamentalist
factor in the North Caucasus," he said, Trend news agency reports.

From Iran To Armenia Through Illegal Roads

FROM IRAN TO ARMENIA THROUGH ILLEGAL ROADS

Panorama.am
15:25 02/11/2007

The 150 km section of the state border between Georgia and Armenia
is clarified. Arrangements are taken for 5 other sections running on
75 kms. According to a statement released by state customs committee,
the mentioned section is open so far and requires a lot of supervision.

Taking into consideration the problem, customs violation committee head
Robert Yeritsyan has visited the region. He has made assignments to
respective bodies on spots. Yeritsyan informed that Armenian-Georgian
75 km section includes also customs point "Bavra." The statistics
shows that customs violations are conducted particularly through this
check point.

Customs committee press services say that drugs are smuggled also
from Iran through Meghri check point. In the words of Yeritsyan,
drug smuggling is often reported in this region. The department head
says that the customs committee cooperates with Iran customs agency
in the form of exchange of information and investigation services.