Turkey, Azerbaijan trying to legitimize use of force as effective conflict solving means – FM

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YEREVAN, MARCH 12, ARMENPRESS. Foreign Minister of Armenia Ara Ayvazian gave an interview to Al-Arabiya news agency, referring to the domestic political situation in Armenia, Turkey’s participation in the war against Artsakh unleashed by Azerbaijan and the Nagorno Karabakh conflict.

As ARMENPRESS was informed from the MFA Armenia, the interview runs as follows,

Question: Now from Abu Dhabi via ZOOM we connect with His Excellency Ara Aivazian, Foreign Minister of Armenia. Welcome to the program. First, what are the reasons for President Sargsyan to decline the signing of the decree. 

Ara Aivazian: Well, thank you, indeed, it is a pleasure to be with you. Of course, you know that we have a very complicated situation in the aftermath of the aggression unleashed by Azerbaijan against Nagorno-Karabakh. The situation also had its repercussions on the internal situation in Armenia. Of course, we are now confronting internal difficulties, but I would like to emphasize the fact that Armenia is a democracy, may not a perfect one. And the recent years we witnessed significant achievements in this regard. This is the path of development that we have chosen and we are not going to backtrack from this path. As for the internal processes within Armenia, this is going on strictly upon the provisions of the Constitution. And it’s my conviction that the current difficulties can be overcome through dialogue, consolidation and unification of our society both in Armenia and Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh) to safeguard and protect our state and national interests. 

Question: Mr. Ayvazian, you said the situation around Nagorno-Karabakh was the cause of the political crisis in Armenia and the attempted coup.

Ara Aivazian: Of course, the results of the aggression unleashed by Azerbaijan had its negative impact on internal stability in Armenia but I strongly disagree with the qualification of the attempted coup d’etat in Armenia. 

Question: This is not an attempted coup, so what is it Minister? 

Ara Aivazian: This was a kind of political positioning of some members of General Stuff. They just made a political statement, which is not  an attempted coup itself. This was also the assessment of different countries and international organizations. There are no elements of a coup d’etat in Armenia. And Armenia continues to be a democracy and the current situation, as I said, will be dealt according to democratic standards in our society. 

Question: Minister, Armenia said, that without Turkey’s support to Azerbaijan, Azerbaijan would not have achieved military victory against Armenia. What is your assessment of Turkey’s involvement in the crisis? 

Ara Aivazian: Well, it’s not a secret that Turkey played and continues to play an extremely destabilizing role in our region. That role was vividly exposed during recent 44-day aggression unleashed by Azerbaijan. That country not only merely supported Azerbaijan, but was strictly involved in all military actions and phases of this aggression started from planning to ground operations. I’d like to recall that Turkey together with Azerbaijan on the threshold of the war conducted a large-scale military drill with the involvement of Turkish air force. That country resorted to the non-usual toolkit: export of foreign terrorist fighters to our region for its power projection. 

The involvement of Turkish-affiliated foreign terrorist fighters in the war is a well-known fact that was confirmed by international media, world leaders, and many international bodies, such as the UN Working Group on Mercenaries. And it is also verified by captured terrorists who revealed the chain from recruitment to their transfer to the region. 

Hundred and six years have passed since the Armenian Genocide, yet Turkey continues to spearhead new atrocities against Armenia now in our region. 

Yet the South Caucasus is not the only target of Turkey. World has continuously witnessed the destabilizing role of Turkey in the Middle East, in the Eastern Mediterranean and now in the South Caucasus. Impunity inspires and entails new crimes, and these words are fully describing the attitude and stance of Turkey towards its neighbours. 

Question: Minister, you spoke about Turkey’s role in the crisis in Nagorno-Karabakh. And you said Turkey provided fighters in the conflict. Is this role of Turkey still going on?

Ara Aivazian: Well, both Azerbaijan and Turkey are now claiming that conflict is solved. And by saying this they tried to validate the use of force as an effective means, legitimate means to solve the conflicts. I would like to stress that this is a very dangerous precedent for conflict resolutions in international relations. Now we are hearing confusing messages from official Ankara. And I would like to say that based on the common past with Turkey, it’s high time not to be guided by the messages but real actions. And I believe that the international community should play a conducive role that Turkey changes its aggressive attitude towards Armenia. 

Regarding foreign terrorist fighters and mercenaries, which were exported, transferred to our region, I think this is an issue of regional and international security and that issue should be solved by an unequivocal stance of the international community. The terrorist fighters and mercenaries should be pulled out from our region. 

Question: Minister, does Armenia consider that the international community is working hard to find a solution for the Nagorno-Karabakh crisis?

Ara Aivazian: First and foremost, Armenia does not consider that the aggression unleashed by Azerbaijan creates the basis for the solution of the conflict, nor an opportunity for regional cooperation. Armenia stands ready for the resumption of the peace process, under the auspices of the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs, and they are Russia, US and France. We have to address the core pending issues, which are not addressed in the statement of November 9, signed by the leaders of Armenia, Azerbaijan and Russia. I would like to remind that the essence of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict is not a territorial dispute; it is about the survival of autochthonous population of Artsakh of the Armenian origin, which lived there for thousands of years; it is about their rightful self-determination, their right to master their own destiny. So, we have to address the right of those people to self-determination, which entails also the issue of the status of Nagorno-Karabakh. It should be very clear for Azerbaijan and Turkey that the current status quo, which occurred after the aggression and the illegal use of force can neither be stable, nor acceptable for ensuring a lasting peace, security and stability in the region.

Armenia’s President meets Bright Armenia faction head

Aysor, Armenia

Armenia’s President Armen Sarkissian within the framework of discussions with parliamentary and non-parliamentary forces initiated by him, met today with the head of Bright Armenia parliamentary faction Edmon Marukyan.

President’s press service reports that during the meeting the interlocutors discussed the situation created in the country, the ways of resolving and overcoming the domestic political crisis.

In this pre-context they attached significance to the dialogue between the political forces and reaching mutual understanding over conduction of snap parliamentary elections.

Armenia’s president meets head of My Step faction

Aysor, Armenia

Armenia’s President Armen Sarkissian within the framework of discussions initiated by him, met today with the head of My Step parliamentary faction Lilit Makunts.

President’s press service reports that during the meeting the interlocutors discussed the situation created in the country, the ways of resolving and overcoming the domestic political crisis.

In this pre-context they attached significance to the dialogue between the political forces and reaching mutual understanding over conduction of snap parliamentary elections.


Tatoyan deplores bill to cut funding of Ombudsman’s Office as ‘discriminatory’

Panorama, Armenia

Armenia’s Human Rights Defender (Ombudsman) Arman Tatoyan on Saturday deplored a government-drafted bill which would cut the funding of the Ombudsman’s Office as “discriminatory”.

“It seeks to cut only the funding of the human rights defender,” Tatoyan told a news conference on Saturday.

Examining the financing of other state institutions, the Ombudsman’s Office found out that there are ministries which receive 9 billion drams, 32 billion drams, 211 billion drams and 200 billion drams. There are institutions independent of the government, which have funding in the amount of more than 1 billion drams. There are independent bodies, the funding of which has increased to over 100 million drams, the ombudsman said.

Arman Tatoyan highlighted the increase of complaints filed with the Ombudsman’s Office, noting in 2015 they received 5,214 complaints, while in 2020 – almost 15,000 complaints.

“In the first two months of this year alone, we received 3,000 complaints. In 2020, we received 300 complaints per month for a while. In 2020, we received 12,000 calls only through the hotline. These numbers do not include our visits. The issues that received positive solutions also increased several times,” Tatoyan said.

He stressed that after the 2020 war in Artsakh the workload of the Human Rights Defender’s Office has increased dramatically, covering new issues and areas, including issues related to prisoners of war, missing persons and Armenia’s borders.

“Can you imagine how overloaded we are? Complaints about all the ministries and state structures are filed to us,” he said.

Tatoyan reminded that earlier the government had taken some of the official cars from the Ombudsman’s Office.

“At first, the government proposed to take 8 cars, most of which were purchased through EU funds. Then, without waiting for our opinion, to be honest, I delayed because of the heavy workload, it was decided to take 7. It made 70-80% of our cars. Such a decision would create serious obstacles, thus a decision was made to take only 3,” he said.

Tatoyan underlined that they use these cars to visit psychiatric institutions, boarding schools, penitentiary institutions, children’s homes, border settlements and police departments. Moreover, in most cases, these visits are confidential.

“In addition, our drivers are obliged to keep secret the findings and our discussions in the cars … There are completely different principles here,” he said.

Armenian ombudsman says he will apply to top court if parliament passes funding-related bill

Panorama, Armenia

The possible move to cut the funding for the Armenian Human Rights Defender’s Office will have a negative impact on its A status and will clear the way for a process of reviewing the accreditation of the office sought by Azerbaijan for a long time, Ombudsman Arman Tatoyan told reporters on Saturday, noting that this status gives them an opportunity to be elected to and participate in elections of the governing bodies of international human rights institutions.

“Today we are part of the governing bodies of various institutions. It allows us to deliver speeches at such venues where countries with the B status cannot, for example, the Azerbaijani Human Rights Defender’s Office,” Tatoyan said.

“If not for our status, it is not ruled out that Azerbaijan’s efforts to make numerous complaints against us would succeed. I must say that the stronger the institution of the ombudsman, the higher the democracy in the country. Whether I like it or not, the issue is at the center of attention of international organizations. You saw how the Freedom House reacted,” the ombudsman said.

Tatoyan does not rule out that the bill seeking to reduce the funding for the Ombudsman’s Office approved by the government will be adopted by the National Assembly, stating the move is politically motivated.

“This is obviously an unconstitutional bill. If it is passed, I will immediately apply to the Constitutional Court to challenge its constitutionality. Moreover, I will immediately file a motion to the court to suspend this provision, as it will cause problems for the country’s legal security and democracy,” he said, adding that he will await the conclusions of international organizations and institutions. 

Today marks 124th birth anniversary of Yeghishe Charents

Panorama, Armenia

Today, March 13, marks the 124th birthday anniversary of prominent Armenian poet, writer and public activist Yeghishe Charents.

Yeghishe Charents (Yeghishe Soghomonyan) was born in Kars (then a part of the Russian Empire) in 1897 to a family engaged in rug trade.

He first attended an Armenian, but later transferred to a Russian technical secondary school in Kars from 1908 to 1912. In 1912, he had his first poem published in the Armenian periodical Patani (Tiflis).

Amid the upheavals of the First World War and the Armenian Genocide in the Ottoman Empire, he volunteered to fight in a detachment in 1915 for the Caucasian Front. Sent to Van in 1915, Charents was a witness to the destruction that the Turkish garrison had laid upon the Armenian population, leaving indelible memories that would later be read in his poems. He left the front one year later, attending school at the Shanyavski People’s University in Moscow. The horrors of the war and genocide had scarred Charents and he became a fervent supporter of the Bolsheviks, seeing them as the one true hope to saving Armenia.

Charents joined the Red Army and fought during the Russian Civil War as a rank and file soldier in Russia and the Caucasus. In 1919, he returned to Armenia and took part in revolutionary activities there. A year later, he began work at the Ministry of Education as the director of the Art Department. Charents would also once again take up arms, this time against his fellow Armenians, as a rebellion took place against Soviet rule in February 1921. Then, Charents published his satirical novel, Land of Nairi (Yerkir Nairi), which became a great success and twice published in Russian in Moscow during the life of poet.

In 1924-1925 Charents went on a seven-month trip abroad, visiting Turkey, Italy (where he met Avetik Isahakyan), France, and Germany. When Charents returned, he founded a union of writers, November, and worked for the state publishing house from 1928 to 1935.

In 1930 Charents’s book, “Epic Dawn”, which consisted of poems he wrote in 1927-30, was published in Yerevan. It was dedicated to his first wife Arpenik.

His last collection of poems, “The Book of The Way”, was printed in 1933, but its distribution was delayed by the Soviet government until 1934, when it was reissued with some revisions. In this book the authors lays out the panorama of Armenian history and reviews it part-by-part. William Saroyan met him in 1934 in Moscow and thereafter described him as a courtly, brilliant man who was desperately sad.

Excepting few poems in journals, Charents could publish nothing after 1934 (at the same time, in December 1935 Stalin asked an Armenian delegation how Charents is).

In July 1936, when Soviet Armenian leader Aghasi Khanjian was killed, Charents wrote a series of seven sonnets. After Komitas’s death he wrote one of his last great works, “Requiem Æternam in Memory of Komitas” (1936).

Actress Arus Voskanyan told about her last visit to Charents: “He looked fragile but noble. He took some morphine and then read some Komitas. When I reached over to kiss his hand he was startled”. He became a morphine addict under the pressure of the campaign against him and because he was suffering from colic, caused by a kidney stone. The hypodermic needle Charents used for his habit is on exhibit in his museum in Yerevan.

A victim of Stalinism, he was charged for “counterrevolutionary and nationalist activity” and imprisoned during the 1937 Great Purge. He died in prison hospital. All his books were also banned. Charent’s younger friend, Regina Ghazaryan buried and saved many manuscripts of the Armenian poet. Charents was rehabilitated in 1954 after Stalin’s death.

Charent’s works were translated by Valeri Bryusov, Anna Akhmatova, Boris Pasternak, Arseny Tarkovsky, Louis Aragon, Marzbed Margossian, Diana Der Hovanessian, and others. His home at 17 Mashtots Avenue in Yerevan was turned into a museum in 1975. The Armenian town of Charentsavan was named after him.

 

Day of the Drone

International Policy Digest

  Conn Hallinan  

In the aftermath of the recent war between Armenia and Azerbaijan over the Nagorno-Karabakh region, drone warfare is being touted as the latest breakthrough in military technology, a “magic bullet” that makes armored vehicles obsolete, defeats sophisticated anti-aircraft systems, and routs entrenched infantry.

While there is some truth in the hype, one needs to be especially wary of military “game changers,” since there is always a seller at the end of the pitch. In his examination of the two major books on drones–Christian Brose’s The Kill Chain: Defending America in the Future of High-Tech Warfare, and Michael Boyle’s The Drone Age–military analyst Andrew Cockburn points out that the victims of drones are mostly civilians, not soldiers. While drones can take out military targets, they are more commonly used to assassinate people one doesn’t approve of. A case in point was former President Trump’s drone strike that killed Qassem Soleimani, a top Iranian general, a country we are not at war with.

In just the first year of his administration, Trump killed more people–including 250 children–with drones in Yemen and Pakistan than former President Barack Obama did in eight years. And Obama was no slouch in this department, increasing the use of drone strikes by a factor of 10 over the administration of George W. Bush.

Getting a handle on drones–their pluses and minuses and the moral issues such weapons of war raise–is essential if the world wants to hold off yet another round of massive military spending and the tensions and instabilities such a course will create.

That drones have the power to alter a battlefield is a given, but they may not be all they are advertised. Azerbaijan’s drones–mostly Turkish Bayraktar TB2s and Israeli Harpys, Orbiter-1Ks, and Harops–did, indeed, make hash of Armenian tanks and armored vehicles and largely silenced anti-aircraft systems. They also helped the Azeri artillery target Armenian positions. But the Azerbaijanis won the recent war by slugging it out on the ground, with heavy casualties on both sides.

As military historian and editor of the Small Wars Journal, Lt. Col Robert Bateman (ret.) points out, drones were effective because of the Armenian’s incompetence in their use of armor, making no effort to spread their tanks out or camouflage them. Instead, they bunched them up in the open, making them sitting ducks for Turkish missile-firing drones and Israeli “suicide” drones. “While drones will be hailed as the straw that broke the camel’s back in this war,” he writes, “Azerbaijani success is also attributed to good ol’ fashioned mechanized infantry operations that took territory, one square kilometer at a time.”

U.S. airmen conduct maintenance on a drone. (Nadine Barclay/U.S. Air Force)

Turkey has made widespread use of drones in Syria, Iraq, and Libya, and they again have played a role on the battlefield. But Turkish drones have mainly been used to assassinate Kurdish leaders in Iraq and Syria. Last April, a Turkish drone killed two Iraqi generals in the Kurdish autonomous zone of northern Iraq.

In July 2020, Turkey deployed drones in Syria to block an offensive by the Damascus government against Turkey’s allies in Idlib Province, but failed to stop President Bashar al-Assad’s forces from reclaiming large chunks of territory. In short, they are not always “game changers.”

The selling point for drones is that they are precise, cheap–or relatively so–and you don’t have a stream of body bags returning home. But drones are not all-seeing, unless they are flying at low altitudes, thus making it easier to shoot them down. The weather also needs to be clear, and the area smokeless. Otherwise what drones see are vague images. In 2010, a U.S. drone took out what it thought was a caravan of Taliban trucks carrying weapons. But the trucks were filled with local peasants and the “weapons” were turkeys. The drone incinerated 23 civilians.

Nor do they always live up to their reputation for accuracy. In a 2012 test, the Air Force compared a photo of a base taken by the highly touted Gorgon Stare cameras mounted on a Predator drone and the one on Google Earth. The images were essentially identical, except Gorgon Stare cost half a trillion dollars and Google Earth was free. “In neither,” says Cockburn, “were humans distinguishable from bushes.”

Drones have killed insurgent leaders in Syria, Somalia, Iraq, and Afghanistan with virtually no effect on those wars. Indeed, in the case of Afghanistan, the assassination of first-tier Taliban leaders led to their replacement by far more radical elements. The widespread use of drones in the U.S. war on drugs has also been largely a failure. Drug cartels are bigger and more dangerous than ever, and there has been no reduction in the flow of drugs into the country.

They do keep the body bag count down, but that raises an uncomfortable moral dilemma: If war doesn’t produce casualties, except among the targeted, isn’t it more tempting to fight them? Drone pilots in their air-conditioned trailers in southern Nevada will never go down with their aircraft, but the people on the receiving end will eventually figure out some way to strike back. As the attack on the World Trade Center towers and recent terrorist attacks in France demonstrate, that is not all that hard to do, and it is almost inevitable that the targets will be civilians. Bloodless war is a dangerous illusion.

Drones certainly present problems for any military. For one thing, they are damned hard to spot. Most are composed of non-metallic substances, like Kevlar, and they have low heat signatures because their small motors run on batteries. Radar doesn’t pick them up and neither do infrared detectors. The Yemen-based Houthis drones that hit Saudi Arabian oil facilities at Abqaiq and Khurais in 2019 slipped right through the radar systems of three anti-aircraft networks: the U.S. Patriot system, the French supplied Shashine surface-to-air-missile system, and the Swiss Oerlikon 35mm radar directed cannons.

Those drones were produced on a 3-D printer supplied to the Houthis by Iran.

Drones also raised havoc with Armenia’s far more capable Russian-made S-300 air defense system, plus several other short and medium-range systems. Apparently, the drones were not detected until they struck, essentially obliterating Armenia’s anti-aircraft system.

The Russians claim that they beat off drone attacks on their two bases in Syria, Khmeimim Air Base and the naval base at Tartus, with their Pantsir air defense system. But those drones were rather primitive. Some were even made of plywood. Pantsir systems were destroyed in Nagorno-Karabakh, and Turkish drones apparently destroyed Pantsirs in Libya.

The problem is that even if you do detect them, a large number of drones–a so-called “swarming attack” similar to the one that struck the Saudis–will eventually exhaust your ammunition supply, leaving you vulnerable while reloading.

The U.S. is working on a way to counter drones with directed energy weapons, including the High Energy Laser Weapons System 2, and a microwave system. At a cost of $30 million, Raytheon is building prototypes of both. President Biden’s Defense Secretary, Gen. Lloyd Austin (ret.), formerly served on the company’s board of directors.

If drones rely on GPS systems to navigate, they can be jammed or hacked, as the Iranians successfully did to a large U.S. surveillance drone in 2010. Some drones rely on internal maps, like the one used in the U.S. Tomahawk cruise missile. It appears that the drones and cruise missiles that hit Saudi Arabia were running on a guidance system similar to the Tomahawk. Of course, that makes your drone or cruise missile autonomous, something that raises its own moral dilemmas. The U.S. is currently working on weapons that use artificial intelligence and will essentially be able to “decide” on their own what to attack. Maybe not “Terminator,” but headed in that direction.

Drones are enormously useful for a range of tasks, from monitoring forest fires to finding lost hikers. They are cheap to run and commercial prices are coming down. Turning them into weapons, however, is not only destabilizing, it puts civilians at risk, raises serious moral issues about who bears the cost of war, and in the long run, will be very expensive. Drones may be cheap, but anti-aircraft systems are not.

India and Pakistan are in the middle of a drone race. Germany is debating whether it should arm its drones. Mexican drug cartels are waging war against one another using drones.

An international convention on drone use should be on any future arms control agenda.

Armenian opposition supporters surround government buildings

The Independent, UK

Hundreds of opposition supporters jave surrounded government buildings in Armenia’s capital to push for the resignation of the country’s prime minister

Via AP news wire

Hundreds of opposition supporters surrounded government buildings in Armenia’s capital on Saturday to push for the resignation of the country’s prime minister.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan has faced demands to step down since Armenia suffered a humiliating defeat last year in an armed conflict with Azerbaijan over Nagorno-Karabakh a territory within Azerbaijan that Armenia-backed separatists controlled for more than 25 years.

Demonstrators shouting “Nikol you traitor!” and “Nikol go away!” surrounded the Foreign Ministry s headquarters where Pashinyan had a meeting on Saturday. Later in the day, they ringed the residence of the country’s mostly ceremonial president, Armen Sarkissian when Pashinyan went there for talks on ending the political crisis.

Some of the demonstrators engaged in brief scuffles with police.

Pashinyan has defended a November peace deal that ended the six weeks of fighting over Nagorno-Karabakh as the only way to prevent Azerbaijan from overrunning the entire region.

Tensions spiked last month when the military’s General Staff demanded Pashinyan’s resignation. The prime minister responded by firing the country’s highest military officer, who appealed his dismissal in court.

Pashinyan has offered to hold an early parliamentary election later this year but staunchly rejected the opposition’s demand for him to step down before the vote. The 45-year-old former journalist has retained significant public backing despite the defeat in Nagorno-Karabakh, with thousands rallying in his support to counter the opposition-led pressure for his resignation.

President Sarkissian sought to play mediator by offering to host a meeting between Pashinyan and his political foes, but he had to call it off after the opposition said it would only accept a meeting to discuss the prime minister’s resignation.

More than 6,000 people were killed in the fighting over Nagorno-Karabakh, which lies within Azerbaijan but was under the control of ethnic Armenian forces backed by Armenia since a separatist war there ended in 1994.

The Russia-brokered peace deal let Azerbaijan reclaim control over large parts of Nagorno-Karabakh and surrounding areas.

____

Vladimir Isachenkov in Moscow contributed to this report.

 

Jancis Robinson on the rise of eastern European wines

Financial Times, UK

 


‘There has been a dramatic revolution in the vineyards here over the past 20 years and the results are making an impression abroad’  

Jancis Robinson 

When asked to host another online wine tasting as part of the forthcoming FT Weekend Digital Festival, I did not hesitate to choose a theme. 

 Last time, in September, I opted for new wave California wines because I wanted to showcase exciting wines that are off the beaten track. For next week’s spring edition I have chosen a less expensive theme: eastern Europe. There has been the most dramatic revolution in the vineyards and cellars here over the past 20 years and the results are just beginning to make an impression on wine buyers abroad. 

 Mikhail Gorbachev’s campaign to impose sobriety on the Soviet Union in the late 1980s had a seismic effect on wine production. It was felt not just in Soviet wine-producing republics such as Moldova, Ukraine, Georgia and Armenia but in countries that had previously shipped vast quantities of wine to the USSR — Bulgaria, Romania, Hungary and Cyprus, in particular. Collective wine farms lost their principal customer. State monopolies, which oversaw production and shipments to Soviet cities, fell apart. Vineyards all over eastern Europe were abandoned, often without any obvious owner.  

Like so much else, the wine scene that emerged from behind the Iron Curtain was chaotic. Yet, as a new century dawned, EU membership beckoned alluringly and there was considerable and often well-considered investment in these newly independent countries that had been producing wine — usually much, much better wine than was shipped to the USSR — for millennia. The exciting results of those investments are now making their way west. 

 Of course, each country is different, with very distinctive terroir and traditions, so this article will try to cover a lot of varied ground. But if I can persuade a wine drinker in Coventry or Chicago not to turn their nose up at a wine from eastern Europe, then it will have done its job.  

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The first wine I chose for my online tasting was from the border of Europe and Asia, a haunting red blend of two local grapes from Armenia, a country that is currently sparring with its neighbour Georgia over which is the birthplace of winemaking. Last October, I included the Armenia Wine Company’s Yerevan Areni Noir/Karmrahyut 2016 in my recommended wines under £10. This led me to its importer, Shropshire family wine merchant Tanners. They have a more adventurous array of affordable eastern European wines than many, so we gave them the job of supplying wines for this FT tasting.


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Following the progress of the latest shipment of this wine, Tanners’ private sales director Robert Boutflower admits he suffered palpitations. In early January he emailed the news that “The Armenians are on the way . . . but have been since November.” Two weeks later: “Yerevan is en route.” Early February: “The Armenian Yerevan is currently ‘changing vessel’ in Turkey. They say it will be two weeks from the Black Sea.” February 17: “It has now cleared Turkey and is due into Liverpool on March 5.” February 25: “After two more delays and a further stop for the Yerevan, the earliest we can get it now is March 15 — too late.” (All orders for my tasting had to be in by March 9 to allow time for delivery by next weekend.)

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I am sad not to be able to share the very special qualities of Armenia’s signature grape Areni Noir with tasters but overleaf I recommend a more expensive yet inspiring clay-pot-aged example. It is made by Alberto Antonini, the Tuscan consultant winemaker to Armenian producer Zorah, who describes Areni as a cross between a Tuscan Sangiovese and a Burgundian Pinot Noir.

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To fill the place of the errant Armenian, I have chosen a Pinot Noir from Hungary’s red wine hotspot Villány — a pure, fragrant 2018 from producers Csányi. Hungary suffered less from Gorbachev’s temperance movement than the other countries cited above because a much higher proportion of its vineyards had remained in private hands and were duly better cared for.

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Bulgarian vineyards suffered terribly. British wine drinkers of a certain age will remember Bulgarian Cabernet Sauvignon as one of the great bargains of the early 1980s. But Gorbachev’s campaign left the country’s vineyards and distinctly industrial cellars in disarray.

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Bulgaria is one of the eastern European countries whose wine industry has been transformed most by outside investment. Its current winemakers are also notably female — about 50 per cent, as compared with just 14 per cent in perhaps the most right-on wine region of all, California, according to research from Santa Clara University last year.

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I have written previously about the vibrant wine scenes in Romania and neighbouring Moldova, and their wealth of indigenous grape varieties. One of the dry white wines in this tasting is a mature Feteasca Regala.

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The other white I chose represented a different sort of revolution in eastern European wine: breeding new vine varieties that are suitable for local conditions. The vine nurseries of the Czech Republic and, especially, Slovakia have been particularly active in this respect. But post-Brexit transport problems struck yet again and, at the very last minute, I have substituted a white 2018 version of the Armenian Yerevan wine, made from two local grape varieties like the original red.

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My other red wine next week is a complete contrast to the delicate Pinot Noir: a potent, spicy wine made from North Macedonia’s signature grape Vranec by the dominant wine producer Stobi. The price is a snip for a wine that will clearly continue to develop for many more years.

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Slovenia and Croatia, missing from this tasting, are sources of brilliant white wines, although tourists and locals lap them up so enthusiastically that we see too few of them abroad. Georgia, which is also missing, has the world’s most powerful wine culture and, after several false starts, I hope to get there one of these days and write about it in the detail it deserves. Apologies that I have tasted so few Georgian wines recently.

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I am deliberately excluding the riches of the eastern Mediterranean (Greece, Turkey, Lebanon, Cyprus and Israel) here. And I am braced for complaints from Poland (which now, thanks to climate change, has a thriving wine industry), Montenegro, Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia, Kosovo, Ukraine and Russia that I have not mentioned the transformation of their wine industries — but I continue to be fascinated by them.

And only last week I received my first invitation to taste the wines of Azerbaijan.

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Whites 
 • Paparuda Feteasca Regala 2017 Romania
£7.50 Tanners 
ovakia
 • Barta, Egy Kis Furmint 2019 Tokaj, Hungary
£14.95 Corney & Barrow 
 • Martin Pomfy Devín 2020 Sl £15.50 Tanners 
 • Chateau Vartely, Individo 2017 Moldova
£16 Moldovan Wine 
 • Urban Petrič, Natural White 2018 Slovenia 12.5%
£16.50 Wanderlust Wines 
 • Kolonics, Somloi Juhfark 2018 Nagy Somlo, Hungary
£17 Wanderlust Wines 
 • Gasper, Rebula 2016 Western Slovenia
£24.99 Golborne Fine Wine & Deli, £127 for six bottles The Fine Wine Co, Scotland 

 Reds 
 • Stobi, Vranec 2019 Tikves, North Macedonia
£8.95 Tanners
 • Armenia Wine Co, Yerevan Winemaker’s Blend Areni Noir/Karmrahyut 2019 Armenia
£9.95 Tanners 
 • Rumelia, Merul Mavrud 2016 Bulgaria
£9.95 The Old Cellar 
 • Via Verde, Expressions Cabernet Franc/Melnik 2015 Bulgaria
£12.60 The Old Cellar 
 • Fautor, Negre 2017 Moldova
£23 Moldovan Wine 
 • Zorah, Karasi Areni 2018 Armenia
£26.29 to £34.50 various independents including £29.50 Symposium Wine Emporium, £29.60 Hedonism Wines, £29.95 Saxtys Wines, £30.99  
The Wine Reserve  

Central Bank of Armenia: exchange rates and prices of precious metals – 12-03-21

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 17:20,

YEREVAN, 12 MARCH, ARMENPRESS. The Central Bank of Armenia informs “Armenpress” that today, 12 March, USD exchange rate up by 0.50 drams to 526.88 drams. EUR exchange rate down by 1.99 drams to 627.67 drams. Russian Ruble exchange rate down by 0.01 drams to 7.15 drams. GBP exchange rate down by 1.14 drams to 733.00 drams.

The Central Bank has set the following prices for precious metals.

Gold price up by 163.96 drams to 29208.08 drams. Silver price up by 10.66 drams to 444.66 drams. Platinum price up by 544.05 drams to 20463.02 drams.