Our People In The World

OUR PEOPLE IN THE WORLD

Hayots Ashkhar Daily
18 Sep 2008
Armenia

Radio station "Liberty" reports the Founding President of Eurasia
House International located in London, ex Armenian Prime Minister
Armen Sargsyan has been elected the President of the Council of World
Energy Security.

Touching upon the future activity Armen Sargsyan said: "In the
multi-layer sphere of energy security, it is very important to find
long-term viable solutions, otherwise it will be very difficult to move
forward economic development, social progress and peace in the world."

He said the complex settlement of similar issues requires cooperation
on the world level and the newly established council is aimed at
coordinating the efforts in this direction.

By cooperating with World Economic Forum, Armen Sargsyan, as the
President of the Council of the World Energy Security, will nominate
the candidacies of the world leaders to be included in the council and
will coordinate the work of that international body. Armen Sargsyan
will submit the new ideas and the results of the Councils’ activity
to Davos yearly meeting of the World Economic Forum and other world
economic gatherings.

Later this year Armen Sargsyan will preside over the first World
Economic Forum dedicated to Europe and Central Asia, which will open
in Istanbul on October 30.

BAKU: The Presidents Have Agreed Upon Their Interests

THE PRESIDENTS HAVE AGREED UPON THEIR INTERESTS

Azadliq
Sept 18 2008
Azerbaijan

The frame of relations between the two countries are obvious,
therefore, they do not overstep the frame

Zardust Alizada: ‘ They are prepared to do anything neither for the
people of Russia nor for Azerbaijan’

[Azerbaijani President] Ilham Aliyev’s Moscow visit has been topping
the agenda over the last two days. Moscow is keen to know what position
Azerbaijan will take following its neutral stance to the events in
Georgia. Russia has started to display more interest on the issue
especially after the visit of US Vice President Dick Cheney to the
region [on 4 September]. Statements issued by the Russian leadership
are proof of this.

Commenting on the visit, political expert Zardust Alizada said that
the presidents are only driven by their crony interests: "Medvedev told
Ilham Aliyev that everything should remain unchanged. They also spoke
about gas prices. They are not prepared to and will not do anything
for the peoples of Russia or Azerbaijan. Both presidents have their
own crony interests.

"After this, they asked about the visits of Cheney and [Turkish
President Abdullah] Gul [to Baku]. They elaborated what they had
spoken about here. Russia’s position on the Karabakh issue also
remains unchanged."

Alizada believes the course of Russian and Azerbaijani relations
is obvious and it is inappropriate to expect anyhting new: "The
frame of relations between the two countries is obvious. They do
not overstep the frame. Russia is now cornered at the international
level. Therefore, Moscow invites those presidents who are more or
less loyal to it. This creates an illusion that it is not in isolation
when, in fact, an isolation is in place. The attitude towards Russia
worldwide has changed sharply. People who love Russia understand
that indifference to senseless violence will not go unpunished by
the international community.

Haut-Karabakh: De Belles Perspectives De Reglement Du Conflict (Pres

HAUT-KARABAKH: DE BELLES PERSPECTIVES DE REGLEMENT DU CONFLIT (PRESIDENT ALIEV)

RIA Novosti
18 Sept 2008
Russie

MOSCOU, 16 septembre – RIA Novosti. De bonnes possibilites existent
pour le règlement du conflit dans le Haut-Karabakh, a estime mardi
le president azerbaïdjanais, Ilham Aliev, intervenant devant les
journalistes a l’issue de negociations a Moscou avec son homologue
russe Dmitri Medvedev.

"Malgre toutes les difficultes, il existe aujourd’hui de belles
possibilites pour regler le conflit", a-t-il indique.

Et d’ajouter que si le conflit etait regle dans l’immediat, de
nouvelles perspectives de cooperation s’offriraient.

"Nous sommes voisins, et nul ne demenagera de cette region. Aussi
doit-on chercher des voies de bon voisinage", a souligne le president
de l’Azerbaïdjan.

–Boundary_(ID_uOOfNpEo5eum6P 9py7d06A)–

Turkish Ex-President: Gul Was Right To Visit Armenia

TURKISH EX-PRESIDENT: GUL WAS RIGHT TO VISIT ARMENIA

PanARMENIAN.Net
18.09.2008 19:05 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The visit of Turkish President Abdullah Gul to
Armenia was a right thing to do, said ninth president of Turkey
Suleyman Demirel, reports Day.az with reference to Turkish Cihan
news agency.

He also noted that it is inexpedient to pursue a policy of enmity
between the two countries till the end.

Turkey’s President Abdullah Gul was in Yerevan on Sept. 6 to watch
a World Cup qualifier between the Armenian and Turkish national
teams. He also invited President Sargsyan to a return match due in
Istanbul in 2009.

Galust Sahakian: Today Political Situation Does Not Pressupose Chang

GALUST SAHAKIAN: TODAY POLITICAL SITUATION DOES NOT PRESSUPOSE CHANGE OF PRIME MINISTER

Noyan Tapan

Se p 15, 2008

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 15, NOYAN TAPAN. "We believe that the change of
the National Assembly speaker will proceed more actively in terms of
discussion of laws, political opinions, and other processes, which
in its turn will strengthen the direct links of the society and the
parliament," member of the National Assembly "Republican Party of
Armenia" (RPA) faction, deputy chairman of the RPA Galust Sahakian
said at Hayeli Club on September 15. In response to the question
about whether it is poissible to ensure regular participation of NA
deputies in sittings and rule out their voting instead of each other
by replacing Tigran Torosian with Hovik Abrahamian, the speaker noted
that "the NA speaker is a person organizing the parliamentary work
rather than a registering person".

In his words, it is the RPA that mainly carries on its shoulders
the responsibility for the country, so the party decides itself the
ways and forms of this responsibility, while the party’s supreme –
executive body has already taken a political decision about the
replacement of the NA speaker.

It was mentioned that the decision will also be discussed at the
September 16 sitting of the RPA board with the participation of the
heads of the regional organizations of the party, and "an attempt will
be made to approve it again by a vote." According to G. Sahakian,
although a decision about the change may be made only by the given
body or "RPA" faction, "the problem concerns a colleague, especially
as he is the speaker of the National Assembly, so it is mandatory
to informs all the links of the party about it, as well as to take
their opinions into account."

As regards the possibility of opposing the indicated decision of the
party, G. Sahakian said that it is mandatory for all the members, and
if anyone does not accept a political decision of the majority, he/she
must either leave the party or come to certain conclusions. G. Sahakian
stated that he does not think that by their step the RPA members
"hit" or "discredit" Tigran Torosian. "There is only one post of
the National Assembly speaker, the RPA has the absolute majority,
there has been an agreement within the coalition, and the RPA decides
itself who will play that role and at what moment," he noted. As for
further activities of T. Torosian, according to G.

Sahakian, he may properly show his worth both in executive power and
other branches of power, but in his opinion, "his work will prove
most efficient at European structures", taking into consideration
his long work experience in such bodies.

Responding to reporters’ questions about the possible change of
the prime minister and the possible appointment of former Armenian
president Robert Kocharian to this post, G. Sahakian declared that
"in general, today the political situation does not presuppose a
change of the prime minister."

http://www.nt.am/news.php?shownews=117434

Marie Yovanovitch To Arrive In Yerevan Sept. 17

MARIE YOVANOVITCH TO ARRIVE IN YEREVAN SEPT. 17

PanARMENIAN.Net
15.09.2008 13:58 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The U.S. newly elected Ambassador to Armenia,
Ms. Marie Yovanovitch, will arrive in Yerevan on September 17, the
U.S. Embassy told PanARMENIAN.Net.

The position has been unfilled since Ambassador John Evans was recalled
two years ago by the Bush Administration for recognizing the Armenian
Genocide. Another Ambassador-designate, Richard Hoagland, was withdrawn
last year after a Senate hold.

The nomination of Ms. Yovanovitch was confirmed in August 2008.

Deepening of Russia-NK issues discussed at NKR President’s Office

Deepening of Russia-Karabakh issues discussed at NKR President’s Office

armradio.am
13.09.2008 13:07

On 13 September NKR President Bako Sahakyan met a delegation of Russian
Society of Friendship and Cooperation with Armenia headed by the
society’s president Viktor Krivopuskov. The delegation consisted of
famous writer Andrei Nouikin, editor-in-chief of the `Literatournaya
Gazeta’ newspaper Yuri Polyakov, Russian public figures, cultural
workers and journalists, Central Information Department of the Office
of the NKR President reported.

A wide range of issues related to deepening and enlarging
Russia-Karabakh relations were discussed at the meeting.

The Head of the State underlined that Artsakh was interested in
establishing close cooperation with Russia, stressing the need to
systemize such cooperation. Both sides noted the importance of making
such meetings regular.

BAKU: Over 150.000 Signatures Collected To Bring An Action Against R

OVER 150.000 SIGNATURES COLLECTED TO BRING AN ACTION AGAINST ROBERT KOCHARIAN

Azeri Press Agency
Sept 12 2008
Azerbaijan

Yerevan-APA. Over 150.000 signatures have been collected to bring
an action against former Armenian president Robert Kocharian at the
International Criminal Court of the Hague, Arman Musinian, Spokesman
for Armenian first president Levon Terpetrosian, APA reports quoting
Arminfo.

Popular Movement and Armenian National Congress accused Kocharian in
crimes committed against mankind.

Kocharian stated that this initiative was ridiculous and he approached
towards it with a sense of humour.

Disqualified Swedish Wrestler Appeals To Court Of Arbitration For Sp

DISQUALIFIED SWEDISH WRESTLER APPEALS TO COURT OF ARBITRATION FOR SPORT

The Canadian Press
Sept 11 2008

LAUSANNE, Switzerland — The Swedish wrestler stripped of his bronze
medal at the Beijing Olympics for protesting during the medal ceremony
filed an appeal Thursday with the Court of Arbitration for Sport.

Ara Abrahamian, who was disqualified from the games after the protest,
asked the top court in international sports to downgrade his punishment
to a warning. CAS said it would rule within four months.

Abrahamian became incensed when a disputed penalty call decided his
semifinal against Italy’s Andrea Minguzzi, who went on to win the
gold medal in the Greco-Roman 84-kilogram division.

During the medal ceremony, the Armenian-born Abrahamian took the bronze
from his neck and angrily, dropped it on the mat as he walked away.

The International Olympic Committee executive board stripped him
of his medal after ruling Abrahamian’s actions violated the Olympic
charter and was disrespectful toward other medallists.

Abrahamian already has received support from CAS in an Aug. 23 ruling
after he lodged a complaint claiming that a penalty in the second round
of the semifinal wasn’t assessed until after the round had ended, that
his coach had been denied a request for a video review and that the
sport’s international governing body had refused to consider a protest.

Book Review: It’s Just War

IT’S JUST WAR

The National
2/REVIEW/795039476/-1/SPORT
Sept 12 2008
United Arab Emirates

In his new history of humanitarian intervention, Gary Bass attempts
to construct a model for international action today. Easier said than
done, writes Matthew Price.

Freedom’s Battle: The Origins of Humanitarian Intervention Gary J
Bass Knopf DH128

There are few more loaded phrases than "humanitarian intervention". At
once too broad and too narrow, it lends itself perfectly to empty
sloganeering, and worse. After all, Vladimir Putin defended the
invasion of Georgia partly on humanitarian grounds – to defend ethnic
Ossetians – even if much of the world saw things differently. But Putin
invoked the same kind of language Nato used to justify its campaign
in Kosovo, an action Russia vigorously opposed. If any war with a
humanitarian component can be called a humanitarian intervention,
the term is so broad as to be meaningless. But if the term is defined
narrowly, one could argue that few, if any, wars, have been fought
for humanitarian reasons alone.

The American Supreme Court justice Potter Stewart famously said,
of pornography, "I know it when I see it." But can we say no more
about humanitarian interventions?

In the learnt, witty, and well-meaning Freedom’s Battle: The Origins
of Humanitarian Intervention, Gary Bass argues there is a distinction
to be made. Against the brutish cynicism of Putin, or, even worse,
Adolf Hitler, who invaded Czechoslovakia to "protect" the country’s
ethnic German minority, Bass makes the case that genuine humanitarian
interventions are deeply grounded in the ideology of liberalism. Though
Bass doesn’t fully address the term’s nagging ambiguities – he knows
a genuine intervention when he sees it – his intention is to recover
an honourable tradition of foreign interventions dating back to the
19th century, one which might guide today’s liberal states and help
promote international justice.

Using history as a guide for policy-making has its perils, but Bass is
not shy about drawing analogies between the 19th century and our own
time. Humanitarian interventions, however, are not always what they
seem, and the story he tells tends to complicate his prescriptions.

Bass highlights the era in which a "human rights" doctrine emerged,
taking a vivid historical tour of a series of diplomatic crises that
pitted the Ottoman Empire against Britain, Russia, and France, as well
as the Armenian genocide during the First World War. These conflicts,
like the one over Bulgaria in the 1870s, where Ottoman irregulars
massacred thousands of Christians, were driven less by traditional
reasons for war – economic gain and territorial conquest – than by
newfangled principles devoted to saving threatened populations and
halting mass slaughter. "Humanitarian intervention," Bass concludes,
"emerged as a fundamental enterprise, wrapped up with the progress
of liberal ideas and institutions." Bass points to the evolution of
a free press in Britain and France as a key component in the first
humanitarian interventions: newspapers publicised atrocities, moved
the public, and gave politicians fits. Public opinion was mobilised,
which in turn spurred politicians to take action abroad.

The structure of Freedom’s Battle is awkward, the equivalent
of an overstuffed sandwich. Bass’s preliminary and concluding
theoretical chapters, which lay out a case for interventions in
the 21st century, are laboured, repetitive, dryly analytic, but the
meat of his story is colourful and evocative, teeming with a who’s
who of politics and culture from the Victorian era and after – Byron
and Dostoyevsky; Benjamin Disraeli and William Gladstone, great foes
and political titans; Metternich and Lord Castlereagh, architects of
the post-Napoleonic European order; Theodore Roosevelt and Woodrow
Wilson. Bass is an entertaining historian, and he livens his text with
pungent quotes and sharp appraisals of his dramatis personae. About
Gladstone, Bass writes: "Originally not much of a democrat, he
had learnt to appreciate the genius of the masses, so long as they
agreed with him." On TR, Bass sharply observes that "Roosevelt’s
humanitarianism was always militarised." (See John McCain.)

The terms of humanitarian intervention were ferociously argued, and
Bass’s pages resound with passionate arguments for and against. (A
better subtitle for Freedom’s Battle might be "The Origins of the
Debate over Humanitarian Intervention".) Bass, though he can twist
himself into knots, is keen to show that the strictures of realpolitik
and the moral fervour of humanitarianism need not be incompatible. It’s
a trick, however, that requires some historical sleight of hand.

After Napoleon rampaged all over Europe, his victorious opponents
were determined to ensure peace at all costs. For Castlereagh,
the British foreign secretary, "the safety and repose of Europe"
were paramount. But the stirrings of independence in Greece in the
1820s would put the post-Napoleonic order to the test. After Greek
insurgents attempted to break away from the Ottoman Empire, their
rulers responded savagely, burning Orthodox churches and killing Greeks
in Constantinople and Smyrna. In London, philhellenes like Byron and
Jeremy Bentham, carried away with romantic ideas about ancient Greece –
"the first enlightened nation", as Bentham dubbed it – took up the
Greek cause. (Some, like Byron, even volunteered to fight in Greece;
the poet would die there in 1824).

Bass is too thoughtful a historian to present these conflicts
in terms of good versus evil, and, throughout Freedom’s Battle,
he stresses just how murky the terms of intervention are, even in
the most clear-cut cases. The Greeks were responsible for several
atrocities, murdering some 7000 Turks, many of them civilians, in
1821 at Tripolitza. But the philhellenes won the propaganda battle,
even if Castlereagh and Metternich furiously resisted calls for
intervention. For an arch-reactionary like the Austrian Foreign
Minister Metternich, all the swooning over Greece recalled "certain
addresses presented in a time that nobody likes to recall…that
is, the gory horrors of the French Revolution." (Metternich rooted
outright for an Ottoman victory.) With Russia clamouring for war to
defend its Orthodox coreligionists, and Britain straining to remain
neutral, the Ottomans pressed their campaign against Greece.

After brokering a treaty in London, the Allies eventually forced
concessions on the Ottomans, and sank their fleet at the Battle of
Navarino in 1827 to drive home the point. But was this the first
humanitarian intervention of the modern age? The answer remains
complicated. Much as in the present day, it is difficult to extract
the pure humanitarian motives from conflicts that pay clear strategic
dividends to the combatants. Certainly, Russia’s interests were served
by an independent Christian state that bordered on Ottoman territory.

While many Britons were moved by the suffering that unfolded in Greece,
Britain had its eye on checking Russian expansion as much as it did on
the oppression of the Greeks. For much of the 19th century, Britain
favoured the Ottoman Empire as a vital counterweight to Russian
expansionism. After Greece, humanitarian actions became much the
exception, not the regular practice, of Europe’s liberal powers. As
Bass himself points out, Britain did little to counter Austria’s
violent suppression of Italian and Hungarian revolutionaries during
upheavals of 1848; nor could it do much when Russia crushed a Polish
uprising in 1863. Liberal solidarity had its limits.

But Austria and Russia were military superpowers, where a weakened
Ottoman Empire was not. Britain and France would find themselves
drawn again into conflicts with the Ottomans, first over atrocities
against Syrians in 1860-1861, and then in Bulgaria in 1876-1877,
after a series of massacres against Christians that outraged public
sentiment in Great Britain. With the consent of Britain and the Ottoman
sultan, France sent troops to Syria to settle a conflict that pitted
Maronite Christians against the Druze, who had burnt Maronite villages
and churches. (In France, a hysterical press frothed about Christian
oppression, but, if anything, the Druze, who were dealt with severely
by the Ottomans and Christians alike, needed international protection.)

For Bass, the Syrian occupation is a model, however flawed: a limited
engagement, made possible by international co-operation, that preserved
Ottoman sovereignty. Even if the mission suited France’s imperial
aims in the Middle East, as Bass points out, France quickly left the
region as required by treaty. The situation in Bulgaria would prove
far more nettlesome, and plunge Russia into an ill-fated war with
Turkey. In one of the great political showdowns of the 19th century,
Gladstone and Disraeli clashed over Britain’s response to the outrages
in the East. Gladstone is one of Bass’s heroes – an anti-imperialist
and champion of human rights who denounced Disraeli’s support of the
Ottomans. Gladstone, "committed to co-operative multilateralism",
favoured a cautious alliance with Russia to protect the rights of
Christians. Russia, however, had its own strategic calculus to pursue,
and invaded Bulgaria without international consent.

Bass is not merely writing a scholarly study; he has a mind to
demonstrate that "humanitarian intervention can be a part of a wider
grand strategy of free republics." Bass writes that "The nineteenth
century shows how the practice of humanitarian intervention can be
managed." But does it? As with much of his argument, the answer is yes,
and no.

There is a kind of anarchy in international relations that passes
for order, and the historical lessons Bass wants us to draw are
perhaps less clear than he thinks. His consideration of the Armenian
genocide, which highlights Woodrow Wilson’s inaction, cautiously
lionises Theodore Roosevelt, who, it seemed, wanted to invade half
the countries on earth. Of Wilson’s plans for a new global system,
Bass comments "The world order envisioned after the First World War
did not aim to establish a regular way of stopping mass atrocity." And
so it continues to this day.

Bass concedes that intervention is a drastic measure, but he outlines
a series of protocols he suggests might be employed in worst-case
scenarios. The first is pursuit of diplomatic consensus, but even
this is not clear-cut: it might mean going outside the UN, where
China and Russia wield veto power, leaving us to debate how we define
"consensus" when certain states are sure to reject it.

Bass, mindful of critics on the left who see in humanitarian
intervention nothing but veiled imperialism, works to craft a
definition that eludes that charge, but he is not always successful. He
is keen to point out that many of the 19th century humanitarians –
Gladstone, chiefly – were also anti-imperialists. But it often takes
an imperial power to mount a humanitarian campaign, though Bass
suggests that regional powers might take the lead, as Australia did
in East Timor. (But where is South Africa on Zimbabwe?) If there
is to be a military action, Bass advises "keep the mission short,
keep the force size small, and give no advantages to the intervening
power. Humanitarian interventions are emergency steps, one should be
suspicious of a permanent emergency."

For all his recommendations, Bass still leaves us in a quandary. In
an alternative universe, liberal powers, per Bass’s protocols, might
have mounted interventions to halt genocide in Rwanda and Darfur, or
Cambodia; in the actual world, they did not. Bass points to Bosnia and
Kosovo, but these were limited actions that ignited controversies that
remain unsettled. If anything, by now the principles of humanitarian
intervention should be enshrined in the discourse of global politics,
but they remain as fraught – and, perhaps, unrealistic – as ever. That
the most powerful liberal state in the world invaded Iraq, a point
on which Bass is curiously muted, and then later used the rhetoric
of humanitarian concern to sanction a lengthy military campaign
only further challenges his case. Perhaps "free republics" have a
responsibility to protect human rights, but for now they are all of
them a coalition of the unwilling.

Matthew Price’s writing has been published in Bookforum, the Los
Angeles Times, The Boston Globe and The Financial Times.

http://www.thenational.ae/article/2008091