No military solution for Karabakh problem – Armenian FM

Itar-Tass, Russa
TASS
March 29 2005

No military solution for Karabakh problem – Armenian FM

YEREVAN, March 29 (Itar-Tass) – Armenian Foreign Minister Vartan
Oskanyan said there can be no military solution for the Nagorno
Karabakh problem.

“It can only be settled through compromise at the negotiations
involving three parties – Armenia, Azerbaijan and Nagorno Karabakh,”
Oskanyan said at a parliamentary hearing in Yerevan on Tuesday over
the settlement of the Karabakh conflict.

Armenia’s main approach envisions the right for Karabakh Armenians
for self-determination and its international acknowledgement, the
minister noted.

A settlement — including the elimination of consequences of military
actions, i.e. the liberation of the occupied territories — is only
possible if Azerbaijan recognizes this right which then should be
committed to record.

Oskanyan reminded about Yerevan’s position on the principles of
settlement of the Karabakh problem. They foremost rule out Nagorno
Karabakh’s subordination to Azerbaijan and envision a direct
geographic link between Nagorno Karabakh and Armenia, and the
guarantied safety of the enclave.

At present, the parties have not yet reached uniform approaches to
the settlement issues under discussion, the minister said, noting
that the new meeting between the Presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan
– Robert Kocharyan and Ilkham Aliyev — will take place in May.

A ‘warehouse of evil’

A ‘warehouse of evil’
By S. Rob Sobhani

Washington Times
March 28 2005

The recent arrest of 18 people planning to smuggle Soviet-made
grenade launchers, shoulder-fired missiles and other Russian military
weapons into the United States is a disturbing national-security
problem connecting unresolved conflicts in the former Soviet Union to
our homeland security.

According to various news reports, the participants in this
dangerous scheme included both Georgians and Armenians, citizens of
two former Soviet republics with continuous ethnic and territorial
conflicts. Georgia is embroiled in a conflict to protect its
territorial integrity from Russian-backed separatists in Abkhazia and
Ossetia. Armenia, on the other hand, is engaged in a 15-year conflict
with neighboring Azerbaijan over the territory of Nagorno-Karabagh.

While continued ethnic conflict in the territory of Georgia
should be of concern to Washington, the more important and worrisome
connection is the involvement of Armenians and that country’s
continued occupation of Azerbaijan. Left unchecked, the conflict
between Armenia and Azerbaijan presents an immediate danger to
America’s energy and homeland security.

Soviet dictator Josef Stalin decided to play the ethnic card to
consolidate power by pitting one group against the other and imposing
artificial boundaries within the Soviet empire. The lingering war
between Azerbaijan and Armenia over the territory of Nagorno-Karabagh
is a tragic result of this ethnic gerrymandering. In 1988, the
ArmeniansofNagorno-Karabagh declared their “independence” and
unification with Armenia. With substantial support from Russia,
Armenia started a full-fledged military campaign in 1991. The ensuing
war led to the occupation of 20 percent of Azerbaijan’s territory by
Armenia and forced about a million Azerbaijanis into the status of
refugee or internally displaced person.

Despite a Russian-brokered cease-fire in 1994, Moscow has
transferred $1 billion in illegal arms to its historic ally, Armenia,
between 1994 and 1997. And although the government of Armenia is
cooperating with U.S. law-enforcement agencies, it now appears that
some Armenians are turning their country into a “warehouse of evil”
and are trying to sell these Soviet missiles and other armaments to
Al Qaeda terrorists for use against the United States. The FBI has
expressed serious concern over shoulder-fired missiles that pose a
major security threat to American airlines.

Ironically, Congress has singled out Armenia for special favor
and Azerbaijan for special disfavor. Between 1992 and 2003, Armenia
received $1.336 billion in assistance from the U.S. government.
Azerbaijan, however, received only $335 million during this same
period. Despite its unjust treatment by the U.S. Congress, Azerbaijan
has remained a steadfast ally of the United States. When tragedy
struck America on Sept. 11, 2001, Azerbaijan offered immediate and
unconditional support.Today, its troops are working side-by-side with
U.S. forces in Kosovo, Afghanistan and Iraq.

Furthermore, Azerbaijan has stood beside the United States on a
major foreign-policy priority of Washington — the uninterrupted
exploration, development and transportation of Caspian Sea oil to
international markets. The anchor of this policy has been the
Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) pipeline running from Baku, the capital of
Azerbaijan, to the Turkish port of Ceyhan on the Mediterranean. On
May 25, this historic pipeline will become operational. Crude oil
from the Caspian Sea — home to 10 percent of the world’s remaining
crude-oil reserves — will be on its way to the East Coast of the
United States.

Clearly, the resolution of this conflict must be of utmost
importance to President Bush, because it does indeed affect our
national security. According to the State Department’s 2005 fact
sheet, the United States does not recognize Nagorno-Karabagh as an
independent country. Washington supports the territorial integrity of
Azerbaijan.

With this in mind, the Bush administration should take a more
robust approach to a swift resolution of the Nagorno-Karabagh
conflict in a fair and balanced manner. The presidents of both
Azerbaijan and Armenia have expressed strong support for a peaceful
resolution of their conflict and Washington should seize on this
goodwill.
A summit at the White House hosted by President Bush could serve
as a catalyst to end this festering regional conflict with its direct
threat to American security. There is international consensus on the
broad outlines of a solution. Armenians must withdraw from all
occupied territories. Azerbaijan should regain full sovereignty over
Nagorno-Karabagh.
The rights of Armenians to live in peace within the territory of
Nagorno-Karabagh must be secured and guaranteed, as must the right of
Azerbaijanis to return to their ancient homeland if they so desire.
The introduction of NATO peacekeepers into the conflict zone would be
a first step towards a permanent solution, thus keeping the region
from manipulation by criminal elements whose goal is to harm America.

When Afghanistan became a “warehouse of evil” for criminals like
Osama bin Laden, Americans paid a heavy price on September 11. We
cannot afford another region of the world to fall prey to criminal
elements. The United States must act now before it is too late.

S. Rob Sobhani is president of Caspian Energy Consulting and a
member of the Committee on the Present Danger.

Armenian Priests assaulted in Jerusalem’s Old City

Armenian Priests assaulted in Jerusalem’s Old City
By ETGAR LEFKOVITS

Jerusalem Post, Israel
March 28 2005

An intoxicated Jewish man who assaulted two Armenian priests near
the Church of the Holy Sepulcher in Jerusalem’s Old City Sunday night
was placed under arrest, police said.

The two clergymen did not require medical treatment, and the assailant
was in police custody.

The attack on the priests, which took place during the Jewish festival
of Purim when it is customary to get drunk, was the third such incident
in the last six months.

ANKARA: Ottoman Archives To Be Promoted

Ottoman Archives To Be Promoted

Turkish Press

Published: 3/25/2005

ANKARA – Prime Ministry State Archives Director General Yusuf Sarinay
said on Friday that allegations of so-called Armenian genocide were
based on subjective works and evaluations like memories instead
of scientific documents, adding, “there are tens of thousands of
documents in our archives refuting these allegations.”

Stressing that Turkey had one of the most important archives in the
world with the Ottoman heritage of 700-year rich historical archives,
Sarinay said that the Ottoman Archives would be promoted at a meeting
on March 28th.

“These archives have an authentic value about history of not only
Turks, but also Middle and Near East, Balkans, Mediterranean, Northern
Africa and Arab countries,” he said.

Noting that there were more than 100 million documents about the
Ottoman era in the archives, Sarinay said, “we are aware of that any
regional or world history written without examining those documents
would be deficient. We have opened the classified documents to use of
both Turkish and foreign researches. Our efforts have been continuing
to classify the remaining documents.”

“Also, we have started publishing catalogues of documents in
our web-page in order to provide scientific circles with some
facilities and to remove obstacles in front of information. Those
who are interested in these documents can visit our web-page:
Number of foreign scientists applying
to use the Ottoman Archives have increased in recent years. More
than 3,500 researches from 80 different countries benefited from the
archives so far,” he said.

-ALLEGATIONS OF SO-CALLED ARMENIAN GENOCIDE-

Noting that allegations of so-called Armenian genocide were based on
subjective works and evaluations like memories instead of scientific
documents, Sarinay said, “there are tens of thousands of documents
in our archives refuting these allegations. Some Armenian circles
have been defaming Turkish nation by bringing such allegations from
scientific grounds to political grounds in order to maintain their
baseless allegations.”

“Scientific research of our archives will put an end to such baseless
political prejudices. Otherwise, subjective approaches which are not
based on archives, the objective sources of the history, will serve
nothing, but reviving the buried enmities and hatred among nations,”
Sarinay added.

www.devletarsivleri.gov.tr.

Kocharian and Putin Consider Cis A ‘Useful Club’

KOCHARIAN AND PUTIN CONSIDER CIS A ‘USEFUL CLUB’

Azg/arm
26 March 05

Putin Officially Opened ‘Year of Russia in Armenia’

At a joint press conference on March 25 Armenian and Russian presidents
labeled the CIS a “useful club” and a “good tribune for solving
practical issues”. The presidents agreed that the CIS has to keep
functioning though said that hopes hope pinned on the Commonwealth
were not justified.

Robert Kocharian and Vladimir Putin think it’s meaningless drawing
parallels between the CIS and the EU. “If the states within the EU
work together in direction of unity then the CIS was formed for a
civilized divorce”, Putin said.

The Russian President reminded that the CIS never pursued major goals
in economical sphere. “If anyone is expecting that CIS will have
special achievements in economic, political and military cooperation
than he will be disappointed as there was none and could not be”,
he said.

“I think that the CIS should remain. Everybody is interested in it
regardless the authorities in power. There are always issues to be
solved, and people expect that they will be solved”, Putin said.

“The CIS is a good tribune for settling practical issues. We should be
glad to have such a tribune as there are always issues and problems
that need to be discussed and solved. At every CIS summit I meet at
least my three colleagues and it yields its results”, Kocharian said.

As it is known, the Russian President arrived in Yerevan to officially
open “The Year of Russia in Armenia”. After a meeting behind the
closed doors the presidents told that they discussed bilateral economic
issues, regional and international issues including the Karabakh issue.

In particular, Putin stated that Russia is ready together with
all other partner states to help the peaceful settlement of Nagorno
Karabakh issue. “We are looking forward to the next meeting of Armenian
and Azerbaijani presidents and hope that it will be productive”,
he said.

Speaking of the Armenian-Russian economic relations, Putin underscored
the importance of launching Kovkas-Poti ferry passage that will open
vast perspectives for the Armenian and Russian businessmen. “We hope
that this line will be beneficial for all the countries of the region”,
Putin said.

The Armenian President highlighted the transport sphere in the
Armenian-Russian economic relations. “We certainly need time for
setting tariffs and prices in order to open the Kovkas-Poti passage.
But I am sure that its exploitation will open broader perspectives”,
Kocharian said.

By Tatoul Hakobian

BAKU: Azerbaijan to beef up embassies’ security on Armenian “genocid

Azerbaijan to beef up embassies’ security on Armenian “genocide” anniversary

Lider TV, Baku
23 Mar 05

[Presenter] While Armenia is going to mark the 90th anniversary of
the so-called Armenian genocide, they are planning to take dangerous
steps against Turks and Azerbaijanis. Therefore, Azerbaijani diplomatic
missions abroad have been given special instructions over this matter.

[Correspondent over archive pictures] Armenia is making preparations
to mark the 90th anniversary of the so-called Armenian genocide
worldwide on 24 April. Armenia, which is planning to mark this date
in an unusual manner, is said to have planned large-scale attacks on
the Azerbaijani armed forces on the contact line. Armenians admit that
brief shootings on the front line will be permanent until 24 April.

Maj Ilqar Verdiyev of the [Azerbaijani] Defence Ministry’s press
service said that the Azerbaijani army was not worried by these
reports. If the Armenian army launches attacks or provokes us on the
front line on 24 April, they will be undoubtedly rebuffed.

As for the allegations of the Armenian side that the Azerbaijani
army has weak positions in Agdam, Fizuli, Qazax and Beylaqan, a
source at the Defence Ministry said that this was a trick of the
Armenian occupiers.

Apart from the contact line, Armenians are plotting bloody terrorist
acts worldwide on 24 April, which is typical of them. Representatives
of the separatist regime, funded by the Armenian diaspora, are not
hiding their intentions. So, 24 April will again see victims.

Azerbaijani diplomatic missions abroad have already received special
instructions in this regard and are taking serious security measures.

[Foreign Ministry spokesman Matin Mirza] Our embassies abroad have
appealed to the foreign ministries of the appropriate countries to
step up the security of the embassy buildings.

[Passage omitted: more criticism of Armenia]

Armenian Caucus Co-Chairs’ Joint Letter To Secretary Rice StressesIm

ARMENIAN CAUCUS CO-CHAIRS’ JOINT LETTER TO SECRETARY RICE STRESSES
IMPORTANCE OF U.S. RECOGNITION OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

WASHINGTON, March 22 (Noyan Tapan). Congressional Caucus on Armenian
Issues Co-Chairs Joe Knollenberg (R-MI) and Frank Pallone, Jr. (D-NJ)
expressed to U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice their support
of recent affirmations of the Armenian Genocide by leading U.S.
officials. According to the Armenian Assembly of America, in a joint
letter sent to Secretary Rice on March 18, the Co-Chairs declared
their support for remarks made by U.S. Ambassador to Armenia John Evans
who publicly stated, “The Armenian Genocide was the first genocide of
the twentieth century.” The Co-Chairs also noted former Ambassador to
Armenia Harry Gilmore’s comments to the media that the crimes against
the Armenians do indeed constitute genocide. Knollenberg and Pallone
explain in their letter that both Evans’ and Gilmore’s comments are
in keeping with the past statements of Presidents Ronald Reagan in
1981 and George Bush, who in 2001 employed the textbook definition
of the Genocide in his April 24 remarks to the Armenian-American
community. Additionally, the Co-Chairs reason that the U.S. National
Archives contain thousands of pages documenting the crimes and that
over 120 renowned Genocide and Holocaust scholars have proclaimed the
Armenian Genocide as an “incontestable historical fact.” Furthermore,
the letter also references the findings of a key legal study
backed by the State Department. That study, by the International
Center for Transitional Justice, concluded that: “The Events, viewed
collectively, can thus be said to include all of the elements of the
crime of genocide as defined in the Convention, and legal scholars
as well as historians, politicians, journalists and other people
would be justified in continuing to so describe them.” In other news,
Knollenberg and Pallone are asking their colleagues to sign on to a
letter urging President Bush to honor the United States’ historic
leadership in defending human rights and to properly characterize
the Armenian Genocide as such in his remembrance statement next
month. Over 80 Members of Congress have signed on to this letter,
however, many more signatures are needed in order to make an impact.

A New Look at Old Buildings

A New Look at Old Buildings
By Victor Wishna

Humanities Magazine, DC
March 22 2005

>>From the nave floor of the Amiens Cathedral in northern France,
Stephen Murray’s gaze sweeps upward to the vault high above. “This
really is my favorite view inside the cathedral,” he says, pointing
out the diagonal and transverse ribs that crisscross the ceiling of
this Gothic structure completed in 1269, a mere forty-nine years
after construction began. “It was really quite quick,” he says.

Click. Now he is in Turkey, soaring over the rooftops and zipping
through the streets of historic Istanbul. “Ooh, look at that!” Murray
exclaims, pointing to the intricate stonework in the courtyard of the
Sultan Ahmet Mosque, built in 1616. “I’ve not seen that before.”

Click. A building looks familiar . . . the Parthenon? “This is the
treasury,” he says. “Let’s go into the main hall.” Suddenly he is
standing before the statue of Athena, her golden veneer shimmering in
the light rays reflecting off the pool at her feet.

Of course, he’s not really in the Parthenon; it’s a reproduction in
Nashville, Tennessee. And he’s not exactly in Nashville, either-nor
was he in Amiens or Istanbul, but in Room 605 of Schermerhorn Hall,
Murray’s comfortable but architecturally less impressive office at
Columbia University.

Murray, a professor in the Department of Art History and Archaeology
and founder of its Visual Media Center, conducts his whirlwind tour
across continents entirely on the small screen of his PowerBook. Each
tap on the touch pad reveals another lifelike panorama offering
360-degree views in every direction.

These “nodes”–image modules rendered in QuickTime Virtual Reality
(QTVR)–are all part of the Visual Media Center’s new History of
Architecture web project supported by NEH ().
When the site officially launches this spring it will contain more
than six hundred such nodes encompassing dozens of buildings, from
temples in Greece to the great churches of Europe and shrines of
Yemen and Iran, to Frank Lloyd Wright’s Fallingwater house in
Pennsylvania. Even in its nascent stages, the site is revolutionizing
the teaching of architecture and changing the way professors and
their students see and think about buildings that have stood for
centuries.

“There are a lot of new issues being raised-and that’s part of what
technology does,” says Robert Carlucci, who took over as director of
the Visual Media Center in 1999 and has overseen the rapid growth of
the History of Architecture project. “It’s a lot more information.
The psychology of the classroom is really changing.”

“What the media has done is not just unleash all these wonderful
images, but it allows you to ask questions that otherwise wouldn’t
have occurred to you,” Murray says, such as “‘How does it feel? What
do you hear?'”

The new technology, says Murray, allows for the dispersal of old
assumptions and for discussions that go beyond structural design. For
example, by enabling students to peer up into the corners, to see
where the vaulting shafts had been reinforced with chains and the
flying buttresses refortified and replaced, the node reveals that
Amiens was not the sturdy feat of engineering that stood the test of
time.

“There’s this old-fashioned view that Gothic architecture was driven
bit by bit, that it was so technical,” Murray says, when in fact, it
was the result of a series of creative leaps. “It was the ideological
that drove the thing, not the empirical.” He acknowledges that George
Lucas of Star Wars fame makes for a good analogy to a Gothic planner:
“Both projected a dream where the technology didn’t yet exist, but
that dream had an amazing effect.”

The lesson, he says, is that “scientific revolutions often come with
a paradigm shift,” that is, through grand visions rather than
incremental advancements. In the case of Gothic architecture, such
plans brought together great theologians, planners, and masons, who
otherwise wouldn’t interact.

An up-close look at the pilier columns and vault ribs reveals that
the magnificent concave and convex shapes of the cathedral were
created through the relatively low-tech methods of printing and
stamping, similar to how Jell-o retains the shape of a mold. For this
reason, Murray says, cathedrals were viewed as repositories of
memory; in medieval times, stamping-to stamp an image on the
brain-was the metaphor for memory. “Today, of course, that metaphor
is the computer,” he says.

The new technology has already been incorporated into the
undergraduate core curriculum at Columbia, one of the few
universities to include structural design in its required courses.
“The idea is that any educated person should have something to say
about a piece of architecture,” Murray says. Some of the nodes have
been used to teach at colleges and private high schools on an
experimental basis, and the goal of the site is to make them
accessible to teachers everywhere.

“More and more schools have electronic classrooms,” Carlucci says.
“That’s especially true at community colleges and state schools-more
than in the Ivy League in a lot of ways.”

While the project has blossomed in the last few years, its seeds were
planted nearly a decade ago, at the dawn of userfriendly
virtual-reality technology. Murray had been interested in “animating
architecture” ever since, as an undergraduate at Oxford more than
thirty years ago, he was part of an expedition to film an
eleventh-century cathedral in Armenia.

By the time he arrived at Columbia to teach medieval architecture in
1986, he had grown frustrated with the visual resources available,
especially because most great cathedrals stood on the other side of
the ocean. “There’s only so many times I could take my students to
St. John the Divine, which is a beautiful building, and we’re lucky
to have it,” he says of the nineteenth-century church that rises a
few blocks from Columbia’s campus. “Otherwise, I had to rely on
pictures. I can’t bring Amiens Cathedral into my classroom.”

With the help of colleagues in the architecture school and a grant
from NEH, he created a three-part film series entitled The Amiens
Project to recreate the geometric conception and construction of the
cathedral. The experience gave Murray the idea to animate the
medieval segment of Columbia’s core curriculum. This initiative led
to the founding of the Visual Media Center, which has since been
folded into the Department of Art History and Archaeology.

Student response to the medieval component was so positive that it
seemed shortsighted to stop there. “That’s when the idea arose that
we could create a general resource for the history of world
architecture,” says James Conlon, a staff research associate who has
worked on the site since 1999, collecting much of the imagery from
Turkey and Yemen. “Medieval, Renaissance, Baroque, Byzantine,
Islamic, even modern–we kept expanding.”

Today, the site contains all those categories, and a few more. In
many cases, the nodes are paired with interactive floor plans of the
building, enabling users to click on a “hot spot” to see the
perspective from that point. Some views are from dramatic
locations-thirty feet up on the triforium, on the roof, even inside
the massive spire-where normal tourists never go.

There is almost no text on the site, which is by design. Carlucci
says the idea is to make the site as user-friendly as possible, a
place to explore and discover rather than read. “The kind of
intellectual excitement one gets from a building-it dies on the page
with all this boring prose,” Murray says. “The whole idea that we
don’t have to kill the work of art in order to study it is a fabulous
thing.”

Most of the photography from Amiens and other medieval
sites–particularly the precarious shots from the parapets–is the
work of Andrew Tallon, a doctoral student in early Gothic
architecture.

As Tallon explains it, the technology is, conceptually at least,
rather simple. A highresolution digital camera is attached to a
special tripod and carefully calibrated to take several dozen photos
around a central point. These photos are then stitched together using
virtual-reality software. It’s a little like the tourist who takes
several overlapping pictures, and then, after developing them, cuts
and pastes them together to create his own 360-degree panorama. Only
the site’s panoramic nodes are perfectly seamless spheres and can be
downloaded from the Internet.

On the site, most nodes are rendered at low resolution so they can be
accessed with low-speed connections. For classroom use, the nodes can
be rendered at high resolution for a teaching demonstration that’s
light years beyond blurry slides. “I was able to zoom into
individual, sculptural details and move around without ever having to
change photographs,” says Tallon, who taught an introductory art
history class at Columbia last year. “This is an extraordinary
advance in terms of teaching medieval sculpture. The node is able to
preserve an entire view of a space in a way that no other
photographic technology can.”

Beyond the classroom, the most beneficial aspect of the site may be
in how it lets anyone explore the great buildings of the world at
their own pace, in their own homes, without the interference of tour
guides “charging ahead with their brightly colored umbrellas,” Murray
says.

Murray says he had two objectives when he began the project: first,
that it should provide students access to the same resources their
professors use, and second, that it should bring together faculty
from different institutions to form new collaborative relationships.

The first mission has been a success. Rather than sending students
home with only their notes and memories of the slides they saw in
class, “now I can say, ‘Go study Amiens Cathedral,’ and they can.
It’s changed me as a teacher,” Murray says. “I’m a much better
teacher than I was just a few years ago.”

While Murray and Carlucci have recruited colleagues at MIT, Bryn
Mawr, Mount Holyoke, and other institutions to contribute to the
site–Murray envisions a single great online course called Medieval
Architecture with each expert adding a segment-getting them to
actually use it has proven more challenging.

For some, the technology–and what it offers-may be intimidating.
“Say you’re a faculty member who’s been teaching the same image since
the beginning of time because that’s the only one that had been
published,” Carlucci explains. “And maybe that image was a view down
the center of the building. Well, now suddenly students can look up
and see something going on in the ceiling. Before you know it, you’ve
got questions being thrown at you that you were never prepared for.”

But Murray believes teachers will learn to welcome those
uncertainties. “I was amazed at how my students, on their own,
grasped the subtleties,” Tallon says from Paris, where he is
continuing to shoot for the site while completing his thesis on
flying buttresses. “They managed to understand spatial aspects of
Gothic architecture that would have taken an actual trip to the
building to communicate otherwise.”

And even then, says Murray, they may not get quite as good a look.
“The only way to get that perspective is to lie on your back in the
middle of the floor,” he says, studying his favorite view of Amiens.
“In reality, that’s not something you’re likely to do.”

Victor Wishna is a writer in New York City.

Columbia University received $575,000 from NEH to create the History
of Architecture web project. Stephen Murray received an NEH
fellowship and grant of $138,000 to create a multimedia education
tool on Amiens Cathedral. Murray has conducted four NEH summer
seminars for college teachers on the Gothic in the Ile-de-France.

www.mcah.columbia.edu/ha

FBI Agent: Investigation on illegal arms traffic conducted jointlywi

PanArmenian News
March 21 2005

FBI AGENT: INVESTIGATION ON ILLEGAL ARMS TRAFFIC CONDUCTED JOINTLY
WITH APPROPRIATE ARMENIAN BODIES

21.03.2005 08:35

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The investigation on the illegal trade in arms in
the US was initiated over a year ago and was conducted jointly with
the appropriated Armenian bodies, Bryan Parmar, FBI special agent,
US’s juridical attaché in the Caucasus stated at today’s press
conference in Yerevan. When commenting on the role of Georgia and
possibly Azerbaijan, he noted that Georgian specialists also take
part in the investigation, while Azerbaijan has nothing to do with
it. As for the participation of the Armenian military or the Russian
military bases, the FBI agent stated that he possesses no information
in this regard but did not rule such a possibility. Agreeing with the
statement that no single weapon was taken out from Armenia, the FBI
representative stated that there was efficient ground for the arrest
of the gang. When answering the question whether Solomonyan’s words
were mere bluff, intended for a possibility to earn some money. Mr.
Parmar noted that the bargain was not carried through and the arms
could fall into wrong hands. “If everything did not go beyond photos
we would not pay serious attention to it”, he noted. Mr. Parmar
also confirmed that Artur Solomonian mentioned of enriched uranium
but did not revert to the topic afterwards. According to the FBI
representative, several sources of weapons are located in the Caucasus.

–Boundary_(ID_xuRMGAPLFCbPTwG08Of1bg)–

OSCE mission holds routine monitoring on Karabakh front line

OSCE mission holds routine monitoring on Karabakh front line

Mediamax news agency
17 Mar 05

YEREVAN

An OSCE mission held a routine monitoring in the village of Seysulan
of Mardakert District of the Nagornyy Karabakh Republic [NKR] on the
contact line between the Nagornyy Karabakh and Azerbaijani armed
forces.

An incident [truce violations] took place precisely on this area
because of the Azerbaijani side’s fault between 7-9 March which led to
casualties.

The monitoring was carried out within the framework of the schedule,
our Mediamax correspondent reported from Stepanakert.

The representatives of the NKR Defence Ministry submitted a report to
the OSCE mission. It said that the Azerbaijani armed forces had opened
fire on the Karabakh positions. It also reported the results of the
Azerbaijani side’s actions to get its positions closer to the
positions of the Nagornyy Karabakh defence army.