The Limits Of Change: What To Expect From The Obama Administration O

THE LIMITS OF CHANGE: WHAT TO EXPECT FROM THE OBAMA ADMINISTRATION ON THE FOREIGN POLICY FRONT
by Justin Raimondo

AntiWar.com
n/?articleid=13709
Nov 2 2008

As I write this, we are 24 hours away from the end of this seemingly
endless presidential campaign, and all the signs point to a victory –
some would say an overwhelming victory – by Barack Obama. I won’t make
any predictions here, what with the Bradley Effect and other unknowns
– including the possibility of a "hanging chad"-like situation – but,
given the polls, it’s incumbent on me to give my readers an indication
of what to expect from an Obama administration in the foreign policy
department, and this is undoubtedly reflected in the personnel he’ll
assemble on his foreign policy team.

So who’s up for major appointments? A number of names have been
floated, some of them Republicans, for key positions like secretary of
defense and secretary of state, notably the idea of keeping Robert
Gates, the current defense chief, and bringing in Richard Lugar
for secretary of state. Both possibilities underscore the essential
continuity of our misguided and increasingly dangerous foreign policy
of global intervention. Bill Richardson is also being mentioned for
state, along with John "I Was For It Before I Was Against It" Kerry.

This particular appointment, however, doesn’t tell us much about the
foreign policy favored by Obama. Recent secretaries of state have
had minimal influence on actual policymaking and have often been at
odds with the White House; look at Colin Powell. This is due to the
ever-increasing power of the president over the conduct of U.S. foreign
policy, a realm surrendered to the executive by Congress, in principle,
long ago. Under President Bush, the process accelerated and the
foreign policymaking bureaucracy took on a distinctly monarchical
flavor. The president’s national security adviser, the one with
direct access to the king, became the key player. Condi Rice, with
her personal friendship with Bush II, was perfect for this role,
and the next national security adviser is liable to play a similarly
important part in shaping Obama’s decisions.

The most troubling possibility here is Dennis Ross, a career
foreign policy bureaucrat who was instrumental in shaping America’s
Israel-centric policy in the Middle East under George H.W. Bush and
Bill Clinton. He is a longtime associate of the Washington Institute
for Near East Policy (WINEP), the scholarly adjunct of AIPAC, Israel’s
powerful lobbying organization in the U.S., which he co-founded.

The beginning of Ross’ career as a civil servant is a good indicator
of what we might expect from him, and from the Obama administration
when it comes to setting Middle Eastern policy. When Ronald Reagan
was elected in 1980, he brought in Paul Wolfowitz to run the
policy planning at the State Department, and Wolfie brought in his
neocon buddies: I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby, Francis Fukuyama, Zalmay
Khalilzad, James Roche, Stephen Sestanovich, Alan Keyes (yes, that
Alan Keyes!), and Ross. In short, Ross has always been a reliable
member in good standing of the neocon foreign policy cabal, the very
same group that lied us into war with Iraq – and is now intent on
doing the same with Iran. Although the neocons who came to Washington
were mostly ex-Democrats, Ross stayed with his old party, although
partisan allegiances seem not to mean much to him. He has served
under three secretaries of state: James Baker, Warren Christopher,
and Madeleine Albright.

As special Middle East coordinator under President Bill Clinton, Ross
was responsible for managing the Israeli-Palestinian negotiations,
a process described by former negotiating team member Aaron David
Miller as follows:

"With the best of motives and intentions, we listened to and followed
Israel’s lead without critically examining what that would mean for
our own interests, for those on the Arab side and for the overall
success of the negotiations. The ‘no surprises’ policy, under which
we had to run everything by Israel first, stripped our policy of the
independence and flexibility required for serious peacemaking. If
we couldn’t put proposals on the table without checking with the
Israelis first, and refused to push back when they said no, how
effective could our mediation be? Far too often, particularly when
it came to Israeli-Palestinian diplomacy, our departure point was
not what was needed to reach an agreement acceptable to both sides
but what would pass with only one – Israel."

"Without critically examining what that would mean for our own
interests" – that’s the key phrase here, one that fully describes
the effect (and also, perhaps, the intention) of our Middle Eastern
policy, one that puts Israel, not America, first.

Ross recently signed on to a plan, being pushed by something called
the Bipartisan Policy Center, that is nothing but a roadmap to war
with Tehran. The report, written in the form of recommendations
to an incoming president, says he must begin a military buildup
directed at Iran from "the first day [he] enters office." The plan
is to begin "pre-positioning additional U.S. and allied forces,
deploying additional aircraft carrier battle groups and minesweepers,
placing other war material in the region, including additional missile
defense batteries, upgrading both regional facilities and allied
militaries, and expanding strategic partnerships with countries such
as Azerbaijan and Georgia in order to maintain operational pressure
from all directions."

Yes, Georgia, America’s Israel of the Caucasus, is to be used as a
forward base of operations against Iran. Then there’s the oil-rich
tyranny of Azerbaijan, which is locked in a vicious ethnic war
of attrition with Armenia (and its own Armenian population). The
U.S. footprint, instead of shrinking under Obama, promises to grow
even larger.

So you wondered why, during the debates, Obama was so belligerent on
the Georgian question. Obama and McCain both hew to the War Party’s
Orwellian view, which grotesquely inverts the truth, decrying "Russian
aggression" when it was the Georgians who started that war. One
would normally expect this of McCain, whose chief foreign policy
adviser was, until very recently, a paid lobbyist for the Georgians,
but Obama, too, refuses to acknowledge Tbilisi’s aggression against a
"breakaway province." Ossetia has been de facto independent for more
than a decade, and the supposedly smart Obama is no doubt aware of
this – never mind the hundreds killed in the siege of Tskhinvali,
the Ossetian capital city mercilessly assaulted by Georgian troops.

It gets worse, however. Underscoring the point we have long made
at Antiwar.com – that it is impossible to separate these various
"theaters" of U.S. aggression, and that the Iraq and Afghan wars are
bound to spread – the report goes on to note:

"The presence of U.S. troops in Iraq and Afghanistan offers distinct
advantages in any possible confrontation with Iran. The United States
can bring in troops and material to the region under the cover of
the Iraq and Afghanistan conflicts, thus maintaining a degree of
strategic and tactical surprise." [Emphasis added.]

Obama has long stressed he would immediately begin escalating the
Afghan campaign, and perhaps open up a new front in Pakistan. Certainly
the Bush administration has laid the groundwork for this eastward
shift of U.S. military resources – and so the stage is set.

When Rachel Maddow asked Obama the other day why our intervention
in Afghanistan wouldn’t end up like the Iraq war, or more so, he
emphatically rejected the comparison, yet he never addressed her
underlying concern. She just smiled, rather wanly, and went on to
the next question. I have another question, however, and it is this:
what if the Afghan "surge" is a feint, directed not at some vague
Taliban-affiliated tribes in the godforsaken wilds of Waziristan,
but at the mullahs of Tehran?

Under the pretext of going after Osama bin Laden, they can sneak
enough troops into the region through the back door, then easily
launch an attack from the east, and also from the north, where the
Azeris and the Georgians are talking about entering NATO. (Obama,
by the way, fully endorses Georgia’s NATO membership application,
although he hasn’t said anything, as far as I know, about the Azeris’
ambition to join the club.)

Whether or not Ross gets the national security post, the fact remains
that the War Party, far from being banished from Washington, will
have an inside track in the new administration. What’s different
about Obama, however, is that the other side also has a seat at
the table – or, at the very least, isn’t completely locked out of
the deliberations. I was astonished to learn that none other than
Gen. Anthony Zinni, retired Marine commander and trenchant critic
of the neocon influence on the making of American foreign policy,
is up for the job. A 2003 Washington Post profile of Zinni reports:

"The more he listened to [Deputy Defense Secretary Paul] Wolfowitz
and other administration officials talk about Iraq, the more Zinni
became convinced that interventionist ‘neoconservative’ ideologues
were plunging the nation into a war in a part of the world they
didn’t understand. ‘The more I saw, the more I thought that this was
the product of the neocons who didn’t understand the region and were
going to create havoc there. These were dilettantes from Washington
think tanks who never had an idea that worked on the ground.’ …

"The goal of transforming the Middle East by imposing democracy by
force reminds him of the ‘domino theory’ in the 1960s that the United
States had to win in Vietnam to prevent the rest of Southeast Asia from
falling into communist hands. And that brings him back to Wolfowitz and
his neoconservative allies as the root of the problem. ‘I don’t know
where the neocons came from – that wasn’t the platform they ran on,’
he says. ‘Somehow, the neocons captured the president. They captured
the vice president.’"

I wouldn’t bet the farm on Zinni getting it, but the fact that he’s in
the running at all is astonishing. If that’s the amount of change you
want in American foreign policy, then you’ll be happy with the Obama
administration – even as they escalate the conflict in Afghanistan,
spread it to Pakistan, and prepare for war with Iran.

http://www.antiwar.com/justi

Armenia confident Moscow meeting to further Karabakh settlement

Armenian Public TV, Armenia
Oct 30 2008

Armenia confident Moscow meeting to further Karabakh settlement

[Presenter] Before the tripartite meeting between [Russian President
Dmitriy] Medvedev,[Armenian President Serzh] Sargsyan and [Azerbaijani
President Ilham] Aliyev to be held in Moscow on Sunday [2 November],
the foreign ministers of Armenia, Russia and Azerbaijan will meet in
Moscow on 31 October. They will prepare the presidents’ meeting. On 1
November, the Armenian and Azerbaijani foreign ministers will meet the
OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs.

[Correspondent] The Armenian foreign minister is sure that the
tripartite meeting between Medvedev, Sargsyan and Aliyev in Moscow
will open a new page in the Karabakh settlement process. The
settlement format has not changed, says Minister [Edvard] Nalbandyan,
adding that Yerevan welcomes the Russian president’s initiative to
boost the talks.

[Armenian Foreign Minister Edvard Nalbandyan, addressing journalists
at a news conference] We think that the talks are at a very important
phase, we think the talks may be boosted especially after Russian
President Medvedev’s initiative, and we hope that the meeting of the
presidents will add momentum to step up the talks.

[Correspondent] The minister dismissed the reports that the Karabakh
settlement was discussed during the meeting between the Armenian,
Azerbaijani and Turkish foreign ministers in New York in
September. The meeting lasted only 15 minutes and discussed Turkey’s
initiative to set a platform for stability and cooperation in the
Caucasus. Turkey may only assist in the settlement of the Karabakh
conflict, Nalbandyan said, by normalizing its relations with Armenia,
opening the border and influencing Azerbaijan’s position in order to
make the Karabakh talks more constructive.

[Nalbandyan] Today we are in talks with Turkey with regard to the
establishment of diplomatic relations, the opening of the border and
Armenian-Turkish relations in general without any precondition. This
means exactly that there can be no precondition that may be linked
with the Karabakh settlement.

[Correspondent] The minister does not share the views of some analysts
that Armenia’s foreign policies were more predictable 10 or 15 years
ago than today.

[Nalbandyan] Maybe, 10 or 15 years ago, not many things were
planned. That’s why they could be more predictable. Our foreign
policies are sustainable, if someone notices a change in relations
with Russia, I would like to assure you that this change can only be
aimed at the further strengthening, expansion and deepening of our
allied and strategic relations with Russia.

[Correspondent] Nalbandyan dismissed the statements of the radical
opposition that the settlement of the Karabakh conflict is a matter of
two or three months. The real picture is that it is possible to reach
an agreement with Azerbaijan and this may happen if the neighbouring
country [Azerbaijan] shows political will and starts to move towards a
settlement instead of initiating destructive steps by making various
statements in international organizations, the minister said.

Gyumri Is Already Gasified

GYUMRI IS ALREADY GASIFIED

A1+
[12:19 pm] 31 October, 2008

The Gyumri branch of Armrusgasard CJSC ensures that the gas price
will not go up by April 2009. Taking into account the grave social
conditions in Gyumri gasification is carried out without the advance
payment of 40 000 drams.

The Company is taking measures to provide regular gas supply during
severe winter months.

Some 400 families were gasified from January to October, 2008. Another
150 families are expected to have gas in November. The city is already
gasified with the exception of one district.

Boxing: In The Ring, Vic Darchinyan Is A Different Person

IN THE RING, VIC DARCHINYAN IS A DIFFERENT PERSON
Kevork Djansezian

Los Angeles Times
a-sp-boxing31-2008oct31,0,3703572.story
Oct 31 2008
CA

IBF champion Vic Darchinyan, above, will fight WBC/WBA champion
Cristian Mijares in a super-flyweight match on Saturday at the Home
Depot Center.

The IBF super-flyweight champion is remorseful for what happened to
Victor Burgos after pummeling him, but his mentality hasn’t changed for
his upcoming bout against Cristian Mijares at the Home Depot Center.

By Lance Pugmire October 31, 2008

Under the same spotlights and on the same canvas that he’ll perform
Saturday night, Vic Darchinyan last year nearly beat a man to death.

Darchinyan, constantly flinging a punishing left hand that his promoter
calls a "whipping hammer," knocked down Mexico’s Victor Burgos once
in the second round of their March 2007 flyweight title fight at the
Home Depot Center in Carson. He pummeled Burgos so badly in the 12th
that the referee stopped the fight and Burgos slumped trying to rest
on a stool.

Hours later, Burgos had emergency brain surgery to remove a blood
clot from his head. He remained comatose for days from what Armando
Garcia, the California State Athletic Commission executive officer,
described as "a boxing-related accident."

Southern California boxing publicist Alex Camponovo, a friend of
the Burgos family residing in Tijuana, said Burgos is "still in
rehabilitation. He has had to re-learn everything. How to walk. How
to talk."

Darchinyan on fight night was denied an opportunity to visit his fallen
opponent at the hospital, but he has followed Burgos’ progress from
a distance.

Darchinyan, 32, an Armenian who resides in Australia, said, "I called
through my promoter and heard he’s getting better. I found out he’s
OK. I was very happy."

This is the part of boxing that is nearly impossible to balance,
especially for a fighter.

"You know, it’s boxing," Darchinyan said. "There’s two guys in the
ring, and if you don’t punch him, he’ll punch you, and the same thing
that happened [to Burgos] can happen to you. At the end of the day,
I’m concerned with my opponent, and I want him to be able to go home
to his family, not to the hospital.

"But in the ring, I want to destroy him."

Darchinyan (30-1-1, 24 knockouts) doesn’t hesitate to say that’s
his plan Saturday when he returns to Carson as International Boxing
Federation super-flyweight champion to fight Cristian Mijares
(35-3-2, 14 KOs), the World Boxing Council and World Boxing
Assn. super-flyweight champ.

Mijares, a popular fighter from Mexico, is a slight favorite over
the southpaw Darchinyan.

"I’m going to press him, push him around, punish him, and knock him
out," Darchinyan said. "I’m going to destroy him."

If it sounds insensitive, that’s because Darchinyan is in fight mode,
promoter Gary Shaw said.

"He’s remorseful about Burgos, he was truly concerned and worried
about what happened, but when it comes to fighting, Vic’s a different
person," Shaw said. "He really wants to hurt the opponent. All he
thinks about is winning, winning by knockout and hurting the opponent.

"No one wants to make someone incapacitated, or ruin that person’s
family. Believe me, I’ve seen bad things happen in the ring, and I was
sick to my stomach over Burgos, but there’s two Vics at work here. I
eat all my meals with him, and I already know tonight’s dinner speech:
‘I’m going to break [Mijares] in half. . . .’ "

Darchinyan is 2-1-1 in the four fights post-Burgos. He was knocked
out by Nonito Donaire and lost his IBF flyweight title in his first
bout after the Carson victory. He rebounded in August to win the
super-flyweight belt with a fifth-round TKO of Dimitri Kirilov.

Now, he faces Mijares, a savvy, technical fighter who boasts
convincing victories over Jorge Arce and former U.S. Olympian Jose
Navarro. Darchinyan predicts a knockout by the third round.

"I don’t want to go to the hospital again, but I will knock him out
cold — and destroy him," Darchinyan said.

http://www.latimes.com/sports/printedition/l

World Bank Gives Additional 20 Million Dollar Credit For Restoration

WORLD BANK GIVES ADDITIONAL 20 MILLION DOLLAR CREDIT FOR RESTORATION OF ARMENIA’S WATER AND WASTE WATER INFRASTRUCTURES

Noyan Tapan
Oct 31, 2008

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 31, NOYAN TAPAN. The World Bank’s Board of
Directors made a decision to provide a 20 million dollar credit for
additional financing of the Armenia Munisipal Water and Waste Water
Project. According to a press release of the WB Yerevan Office,
the credit is provided on "hardened" terms of the International
Development Association (IDA) with a maturity period of 20 years,
including a grace period of 10 years. Armenia has been in the process
of graduating from IDA since July 1, 2006.

Additional financing by the WB for expanding the current project was
expected at the time of the project’s assessment, and the management
contract was prepared based on a six-year program. So the additional
financing will be used to extend the management contract and the
additional investments determined previously. It will help meet the
huge invetsment needs for improving the water supply network.

The head of the WB team designing the project Jonathan Kamkwalala
said that the the investment program is being implemented according
to the shedule, and the repair and rehabilitation program for the
Armenia Water and Wastewater Company’s water supply systems has
resulted in improved water quality and increased the availability of
clean and safe water: the weighted average daily hours of drinking
water availability have grown from 6 hours in 2004 to 12.2 hours in
2008. The structural and financial activity of the Armenia Water and
Wastewater Company has improved thanks to the projects.

However, according to him, there is still a significant need for
investments in the sector, and for that reason the World Bank will
continue to assist the Armenian government in improving the water
and waste water services.

Discoveries Internation At St. Norbert Teaches, Helps Charity

DISCOVERIES INTERNATION AT ST. NORBERT TEACHES, HELPS CHARITY
By Patti Zarling, [email protected]

Green Bay Press Gazette
e/20081030/GPG0101/810300629/1207/GPG01
Oct 30 2008
WI

Store sells only fair-trade goods

DE PERE — The goal of the Discoveries International Inc. store in
St. Norbert College’s bookstore is to raise money for charity, but it
also gives the college’s international business students experience
running a business.

The group buys fair-trade goods — goods that are a fair price and
meet social and environmental standards — from developing countries,
sells them and donates the profits to programs that benefit those
countries. Items in the nonprofit store, run for 30 years, include
blankets from Mexico, gloves from Pakistan, scarves from Ecuador and
China, and other goods from India, Zambia and other developing nations.

"We have a fair-trade policy," co-president Larisa Ryan said. "We
only work with wholesalers who use that policy."

Senior business students handle all aspects of the business, from
marketing to pricing and ordering goods, and sophomores work at the
store for one semester.

"Every year we have a sales goal, every department has a sales goal,
and every person has a goal," Ryan said. "Personally, I feel DI gives
hands-on experience. I feel like this experience will help me going
into the corporate business world.

The store’s customers are a mix of students and community members. The
students also sell at craft fairs and on campus. Next month, they will
participate in the Women’s Extravaganza at Shopko Hall in Ashwaubenon.

The profits are used for charitable donations that are chosen by the
students. This year, money raised will be go to San Lucas Mission of
Guatemala and Habitat for Humanity Armenia.

The store looks for ways to diversify sales, recently adding fair-trade
chocolate and tea.

"Students are very supportive," said senior Carly LaCosse.

http://www.greenbaypressgazette.com/articl

Meeting Of Armenian, Azeri And Russian Fms To Be Held In Moscow

MEETING OF ARMENIAN, AZERI AND RUSSIAN FMS TO BE HELD IN MOSCOW

De Facto
Oct 30, 2008

YEREVAN, 30.10.08. DE FACTO. On October 31 the RA FM Edvard Nalbandian
is leaving for Moscow, where a preparatory meeting of Armenian,
Azerbaijani and Russian FMs will be held.

In the course of a press conference held in Yerevan today the RA
FM Edvard Nalbandian said that the meeting’s goal was to prepare
a trilateral meeting of Armenian, Azerbaijani and Russian FMs to
be held in Moscow on November 2. The meeting of the three states’
presidents will be devoted to the issues referring to the Karabakh
conflict settlement. A meeting of Armenian and Azeri FMs with the
OSCE Minsk group Co-Chairs on the Karabakh conflict settlement will
be held in Moscow on November 1.

"Armenia attaches extraordinary importance and welcomes Russian
President Dmitry Medvedev’s initiative targeted at giving a new impetus
to the talks. We hope that it will open up a new way for the talks’
activation", the RA FM noted commenting Dmitry Medvedev’s proposal
concerning holding Karabagh talks in a trilateral format in Moscow.

Turkey And The Secular Card, Myth Or Reality?

TURKEY AND THE SECULAR CARD, MYTH OR REALITY?
By Lee Jay Walker

The Seoul Times
.php?idx=7483
Oct 29 2008
South Korea

Turkey is often praised for being secular and a future role model
for other mainly Islamic societies because of its rich history
of secularism. America and the United Kingdom, and other nations,
often claim that Turkey is a beacon of hope and that it is evidence
that democracy and secularism can exist within a mainly Muslim nation
state. However, during this so-called "golden age" of secularism it
is clear that religious and ethnic minorities have suffered greatly
in modern day Turkey. So how true is it that Turkey is secular?

If we look at the founding father of modern day Turkey, Ataturk, then
it is clear that he himself supported the destruction of Christianity
via the Armenian and Assyrian Christian genocide of 1915. Therefore,
it is clear that Turkish nationalism and secularism is tainted by its
anti-Christian nature and also its anti-Kurdish nature. After all, the
nation state of Turkey was about Turkish nationalism and secularism did
not protect the religious or ethnic minorities of this diverse nation.

In spite of this, the myth of modernity and secularism based on the
founding father prevails and Western nations are very optimistic about
Turkey. Yes, Ataturk faced many difficulties and from a Turkish point
of view he was very astute because he preserved a Turkish state when
it was threatened by others. Yet in order to do this he crushed others
and therefore the "bedrock" from the start was frail because it was
based on Turkish nationalism.

Ataturk did implement many reforms in order to modernize Turkey and
he did lay the foundation stone for a secular based state. In this
sense he crushed Islamist hopes of a Sharia Islamic state and he
gave more rights to females which did not exist in the old Ottoman
Empire. But his legacy of modernity and secularism is tainted by the
overt nationalism of old Turkey and this nationalism is still strong
in modern day Turkey.

So if secularism means having the right to crush Christian minorities,
moderate Muslim minorities like the Alevi, and ethnic minorities
like the Assyrians, Syriacs, Armenians, and, most notably, the
Kurds in modern day Turkey; then it is not the secularism which I
support. So surely modernization and secularism is tainted by this
overtly nationalist state and of course the Sunni orthodox mindset
means that religious inequality is the norm?

In the 1990s the Alevi Muslims witnessed an upsurge in attacks
against them. For example, David Zieden, who wrote an article called
The Alevi of Anatolia, states that "Renewed inter-communal violence
is sadly on the rise. In July 1993, at an Alevi cultural festival
in Sivas, a Sunni fundamentalist mob set fire to a hotel where
many Alevi participants had taken refuge, killing 35 of them. State
security services did not interfere and prosecution against leaders
of the riot was not energetically pursued. (41) In 1994, Istanbul
municipal leaders from the Refah Islamic political party tried to
raze an Alevi tekke (monastery) and close the Ezgi cafe where young
Alevis frequently gathered."

Meanwhile, if we focus on recent times then it is clear that
persecution is still continuing. After all, in 2007 three Christians
had their throats slit. Two of the victims had converted from Islam
to Christianity, therefore, Necati Aydia, 36, and Ugur Yuksel, 32,
were killed by Islamic fanatics on the grounds of merely leaving
Islam. While the other murdered Christian, Tilmann Geske, 46, was a
German citizen. One of the killers stated in the Hurriyet newspaper,
that "We didn’t do this for ourselves. We did it for our religion. May
this be a lesson to the enemies of religion."

Before concluding it is important to state that you have many positive
elements within Turkish society who desire change and who support a
genuine democratic Turkey, which is inclusive. Also, if we view this
nation from its past history and from a Turkish point of view, then
clearly this nation faced many obstacles. For Ataturk, the infancy of
Turkey was about survival and many Turks also suffered greatly. Given
this, it is apparent that you have many positive elements within
modern day Turkey and this nation does desire to join the European
Union. Also, for America, Turkey is a vital strategic ally and a
valued member of NATO.

Despite this, if we look at the rights of Alevi Muslims and Christians
in modern day Turkey, and the persecution of Kurds; it is clear
that orthodox Sunni Islam and nationalism is still being used by
conservative elites. These elites still desire to crush both religious
minorities and ethnic minorities. So are minorities equal in modern
day Turkey? I think their treatment is the answer to this question and
in recent times we have heard about several Christian murders. Also,
for the more numerous Alevi Muslims and Kurds, then it is also clear
that they face huge discrimination. Therefore, I believe that secular
Turkey is a myth because in reality this nation state is focused on
nationalism and clamping down on all minority faiths.

Lee Jay Walker serves as Tokyo Corrsepondent of The Seoul Times. He
specializes in int’l relations and geopolitics. He is also involved
in analyst work and research on business. After finishing BA degree
in East European Studies at the University of London, He earned MA
degree in Asia Pacific Studies in Nottingham Trent University. He
also studied business at London Institute.

http://theseoultimes.com/ST/?url=/ST/db/read

Transfers To Armenia To Decrease By $1-1,5 Bln, An Expert Thinks

TRANSFERS TO ARMENIA TO DECREASE BY $1-1,5 BLN, AN EXPERT THINKS

ArmInfo
2008-10-28 19:12:00

ArmInfo. The volume of foreign exchange sent to Armenia will decline
by $1- 1,5 bln, Pro-rector for development of university education
at Russian-Armenian (Slavonic) University, Doctor of Economics Edvard
Sandoyan said, Tuesday.

"Volumes of transfers and foreign investment in Armenia’s economy
may abruptly decline due to the financial crisis, the inflow of
foreign investment in mortgage business may also be suspended in
the short-term outlook. On the whole, Armenia’s economy will undergo
a certain downturn as a result of the financial crisis, but at the
same time, the potential of the republic’s economic system will be
consolidated due to export opportunities of the republic", he noted. He
also stressed that problems may arise in Armenian export due to drop
in international prices of copper and other mineral resources.

Meanwhile, the level of population’s solvency may fall as the state
of about 35% of Armenian citizens depends on transfers. "All these
factors together may lead to considerable slowdown of economic growth
in the country which has been a two-digit index since 2002 and made
up 13.7% in 2007, and for 2008 the GDP growth is targeted at 10%
", Sandoyan said in conclusion.

To note, according to the Central Bank of Armenia, $1035,3 mln funds
of non-commercial character were transferred for individuals through
the banking system of Armenia in Jan-Aug 2008.

CA Gov. Schwarzenegger Appointments – Zeitlian to Architects Board

Office of Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger
Lisa Kalustian
Chief Deputy Director
300 South Spring Street, Suite 16701
Los Angeles, CA 90013
(213)897-0322
FAX (213)897-0319

[email protected]

The Governor announced he appointed Hraztan Zeitlian, of Los Angeles, to
the Architects Board. See the excerpt from the Appointments
announcement below for more information.

PRESS RELEASE

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger today announced the following
appointments:

Hraztan Zeitlian, 43, of Los Angeles, has been appointed to the
Architects Board. Since 2007, he has served as vice president and
director of design for the Los Angeles Office of Leo A. Daly. He served
as principal and director of design for Widom, Wein, O’Leary and
Terasawa from 2003 to 2007. Prior to that, Zeitlan was a senior project
design architect for Johnson Fain from 2001 to 2003. He worked as a
senior designer for Gensler’s Santa Monica Office from 1997 to 2001, and
at Rogers, Taliaferro, Kostritsky and Lamb from 1994 to 1997. Zeitlan
worked as a designer for Altoon+Porter from 1992 to 1994, RossWou from
1991 to 1992, Harshad Patel Design Consortium from 1990 to 1991 and
Skidmore, Owings and Merrill’s from 1988 to 1989. His portfolio of
projects includes the LAUSD Miguel Contreras Learning Complex, the
Irvine Entertainment Center, the Hollywood Cinerama Dome Entertainment
Center and the AMC Nakama Multi-Cinema. He has been a licensed architect
in California since 2001. This position does not require Senate
confirmation and the compensation is $100 per diem. Zeitlian is a
Republican.

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