Sargsyan, Kiriyenko Discuss New Power Unit Construction In Armenia

SARGSYAN, KIRIYENKO DISCUSS NEW POWER UNIT CONSTRUCTION IN ARMENIA

PanARMENIAN.Net
09.09.2008 19:08 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan met September
9 with Rosatom Director General Sergei Kiriyenko to discuss the
Armenian-Russian energy cooperation and implementation of joint
programs, the RA leader’s press office reported.

"The Armenian Nuclear Power plan is in an excellent condition and
disposable for secure service," Mr Kiriyenko said.

The two also discussed the possibility of construction of a new power
unit in Armenia.

Russia Assembly Its Allies And Ponders The Content Of Its Privileged

RUSSIA ASSEMBLES ITS ALLIES AND PONDERS THE CONTENT OF ITS "PRIVILEGED INTERESTS"
By Pavel K. Baev

Eurasia Daily Monitor
Sept 9 2008
DC

The Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) has never amounted
to much as an alliance which ties Russia with six post-Soviet
states: Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan,
and Uzbekistan. Its summit in Moscow last Friday, however, was
perhaps the most important event in the 16 years of existence
of this organization because the Russian leadership needed a much
stronger show of support for its policy than it received a week prior
from the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (Nezavisimaya gazeta,
4 September). Convincing the ambivalent allies to condemn Georgian
"aggression" and praise Russia’s "peace-enforcement" efforts was
easy, but making them recognize the independence of Abkhazia and
South Ossetia proved to be nearly impossible.

Russia’s political needs, however, are not limited to the Caucasus. The
"five-day war" has acquired a massive international resonance
and triggered a sharp crisis of relations with the West. Moscow
had to demonstrate that it is not slipping into self-isolation but
indeed consolidating its "pole" in a new multi-polar world where the
geopolitical power-play typical for the 21st-century is complicated
by the existence of nuclear weapons and enriched by the complex
effects of globalization (Gazeta.ru, 5 September). Conceptualization
of these highly competitive international relations is lagging behind
but Russia needs to establish that it is fundamentally different from
the Cold War model, which it certainly would not be able to sustain
(Ezhednevny zhurnal, 2 September). Hence the pronounced emphasis in
the CSTO deliberations on warning NATO against its eastward expansion
and on strengthening its own military "component" as a contribution
to a new "security architecture" (Kommersant, 6 September).

The logic of arguing against erecting "walls" and drawing "red lines"
but for closing ranks against "others" is never straight, but Moscow’s
diplomacy is energized by a remarkably strong conviction that Russia,
despite making risky steps in a force majeure situation, is basically
on the right course. This righteousness clashes with the dominant
perception in the West that Russia was turning in a wrong direction
and has now gone too far in the Caucasus. Old schemes of "containment"
are gaining new currency in Brussels but Moscow remains undeterred,
and Medvedev announced at the special meeting of the State Council last
weekend that external "political pressure" amounted in real terms to
very little because "they will not be able to do anything." Reinforcing
CSTO "solidarity" with high-level networking that stretches from China
to Venezuela and concentrates particularly on the Southern neighborhood
(leaders of Iran, Jordan, Syria, and Turkey were engaged), Moscow seems
to be bracing itself for the next round of virtual confrontation with
the West.

Two key events that have opened this round are the speech of US
Vice President Dick Cheney at the Ambrosetti Forum in Italy and the
visit to Moscow of the European troika, including French President
Nicolas Sarkozy, EU High Representative for the Common Foreign and
Security Policy Javier Solana, and the European Commission President
Jose Manuel Barroso. Nobody in Moscow is stunned or even impressed
with Cheney’s resounding criticism, but for Putin and Medvedev, it
is imperative to prove him wrong in one central point – that they
cannot have it both ways: "to gather up all the benefits of commerce,
consultation, and global prestige, while engaging in brute force,
threats, or other forms of intimidation against sovereign, democratic
countries." Negotiations with the Europeans are crucial in this respect
since it is in the trade with Europe that Russia gains those enormous
benefits that sustain its outstanding growth.

Sarkozy is deeply irritated by the Russian reinterpretation and abuse
of the six-point ceasefire agreement that he so skillfully put into
effect during the first week of fighting, and Medvedev does not need
to antagonize him further. Withdrawal of Russian troops from Poti
and Zugdidi could be presented as a "good-will" gesture, and some
form of international monitoring over the "security zone" beyond the
borders of Abkhazia and South Ossetia might be offered as another
"concession." That might not be enough to spoil the fragile unity that
has emerged in the deeply shocked EU, so some lucrative deals could
be offered to those states that are perceived as Russia-friendly;
Finland, for instance, might be tempted with a compromise over the
issue of timber export.

Russia’s key potential allies, however, are the big European companies
that have large stakes in this fast-expanding consumer market:
Mercedes ships the S-class models that were planned for the US to
Russia where car sales jumped by 40% in the first half of this year,
Carlsberg expands on its insatiable beer market, and Danone expects
strong demand for quality dairy products. Russia’s investment climate
did suffer from the post-war tensions, and the "correction" on the
stock market hit bottom last Friday at a level some 40% lower than the
peak in May (Vedomosti, 8 September). The government is confident,
however, that the fundamentals remain strong and falling inflation
will calm down the traders. At the same time Moscow also is seeking
measures to reassure European investors. For example, the peaceful
resolution of the noisy conflict in the TNK-BP is meant to be a
signal to reassure those investors (RBC Daily, 5 September). Now a
new compromise on the Kovykta project could be hammered out, while
new lucrative deals on developing the Caspian oil- and gas-fields in
partnership with Gazprom may be offered to Italian ENI or French Total.

The guns of August so far have not caused any expansion of state
interference in the economy or redistribution of resources towards
national defense and military industry; to the contrary, both
Medvedev and Putin are pledging to maintain the business-friendly
course of "innovation" and insist that the ambitious social
programs would not suffer from any Soviet-style "mobilization"
(Gazeta.ru, 5 September). Indeed, every step in liberalizing
domestic economic policy delivers a blow to Western readiness to
punish Russia for its misbehavior. Attention-seeking politicians in
Brussels might declare the end of "business-as-usual," but the EU
balancing on the brink of a potentially deep recession in fact needs
"business-as-never-before." The newly assertive Russia is firmly
set to defend its "privileged interests," but Medvedev’s interesting
choice of adjective might indicate that he is ready to move on from
the pointless arguments about "territorial integrity."

Coersive Methods Of Conflict Settlement Have No Prospects, Armenian

COERSIVE METHODS OF CONFLICT SETTLEMENT HAVE NO PROSPECTS, ARMENIAN PRESIDENT STATES

ARKA
Sep 8, 2008

YEREVAN, September 8. /ARKA/. At his meeting with Goran Lenmarker,
Special Representative of the Chairman of the OSCE Parliamentary
Assembly for Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, RA President Serge Sargsyan
stated that any attempts to settle conflicts by force are dangerous
and have no prospects.

The sides discussed the situation in the South Caucasus,
Nagorno-Karabakh peace process, Armenian-Turkish relations.

"Armenia expects the relevant international agencies to respond to
the unprecedented build-up of armaments by some of the countries
in the region, as well as to regular militaristic statements," said
President Sargsyan.

Lenmarker pointed out that the latest developments in the region have
proved conflicts cannot be settled by means of force. It is only by
means of negotiations that real solutions can be found, he said.

Lenmarker expressed his appreciation of Armenia’s policy in the region
and of the Armenian President’s invitation to visit Yerevan addressed
to his Turkish counterpart.

It was not a simple decision in the context of the problems between
Armenia and Turkey, Lenmarker said. However, the Armenian President
showed reasonableness and made a decisive step, he said.

The RA President pointed out it was a hard to make, but necessary
decision, because any problem must be resolved by means of
negotiations.

0D "I have no illusions, but all the issues will be settled I a
short space of time, but I consider it right to launch the process,"
Sargsyan said.

Armenia and Turkey have no diplomatic relations, and the
Armenian-Turkish border was closed in 1993 on Turkey’s initiative.

Turkey sets a number of preconditions for bilateral relations,
namely, Armenia’s abandoning the policy of international recognition
of the Armenian Genocide and recognizing Turkey’s present-day
borders. Besides, Turkey holds an overt pro-Azerbaijani position in
the Nagorno-Karabakh peace process.

NKR President: Cooperation Of Two Armenian States In Foreign Policy

NKR PRESIDENT: COOPERATION OF TWO ARMENIAN STATES IN FOREIGN POLICY IS PRESENT DAY’S IMPERATIVE NECESSITY

Noyan Tapan

Se p 8, 2008

STEPANAKERT, SEPTEMBER 9, NOYAN TAPAN. Issues related to the
situation in the region, the negotiaton process on settlement of the
Karabakh conflict, and the monitoring on the contact line of NKR and
Azerbaijani armed forces were discussed at the September 4 meeting of
the President of the Nagorno Karabakh Republic Bako Sahakian and the
Personal Representative of the OSCE Chairman-in-Office, Ambassador
Andrzej Kasprzyk.

According to the Central Information Department of the NKR president’s
office, on the same day B. Sahakian met with the members of the
delegation that arrived in Artsakh in connection with the annual
assembly of the staff of the Armenian foreign ministry and the heads
of Armenia’s diplomatic missions and consulates.

A wide range of problems related to the foreign policy of the two
Armenian states was discussed at the meeting. B. Sahakian said that
foreign policy is one of those strategic links where the cooperation
of the two Armenian states is an imperative necessity of the present
day. In his words, the recent geopolitical developments require further
deepening the current cooperation, reaching a new qualitative level,
developing new mechanisms and showing new approaches.

B Sahakian restated official Stepanakert’s position, according to
which the Karabakh problem should be solved only in a peaceful way,
through a direct and immediate dialog of the conflict parties. "We
have repeatedly stated that Artsakh’s independence has no alternative
and is not subject to bargaining," the NKR president said.

http://www.nt.am/news.php?shownews=117143

The John Smith fellowship programme 2009

Caucasus Environmental NGO Network (CENN)
T +995 32 75 19 03/04
F +995 32 75 19 05
[email protected]

THE JOHN SMITH FELLOWSHIP PROGRAMME 2009

The John Smith Memorial Trust is currently seeking applications from
potential candidates for its 2009 Fellowship Programme, to take place in
June/July next year.

The Programme aims to strengthen and deepen democratic awareness and good
governance through a study programme in the UK and placements that show the
workings of democratic organisations and their role within a democratic
society.

Applications for Fellowships are invited from:

Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Kyrgyzstan, Moldova, Russia, Ukraine

The Trust only accepts applications from these seven countries.

The Trust aims to recruit high-flying and influential young leaders who will
make a substantial impact on the future development of their countries. The
Fellowship Programme is open to political leaders, government or local
government officials, journalists/media experts, lawyers and influential
young leaders from civil society or the NGO sector. The "ideal" candidate
will be aged 25-35, with a track record of concern for good governance and
promoting democratic values. Good written and spoken English is essential.

Further information about recruitment criteria, application details and
deadlines can be obtained from the Trust’s website:

eb/Site/Programme/how_to_apply.asp

http://www.johnsmithmemorialtrust.org/W
www.cenn.org

Armenian And Turkish FMs Intend To Promote Normalization Of Relation

ARMENIAN AND TURKISH FMS INTEND TO PROMOTE NORMALIZATION OF RELATIONS

PanARMENIAN.Net
08.09.2008 14:11 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian held a
2-hour meeting with his Turkish counterpart Ali Babacan on Saturday
night to discuss Turkey-initiated Caucasus Stability and Cooperation
Platform, the Nagorno Karabakh conflict settlement and other regional
and international issues, the RA MFA press office told PanARMENIAN.Net.

Welcoming the quest, Minister Nalbandian said the visit offered a good
opportunity to open dialogue between the heads of state. He confirmed
Armenia’s willingness to establish relations without preconditions.

The Foreign Ministers said they are resolute to work for normalization
of bilateral relations and agreed to meet late September during the
UN General Assembly session.

Turkey’s President Abdullah Gul was in Yerevan on Sept. 6 to watch
a World Cup qualifier between the Armenian and Turkish national
teams. Before the match, the heads of state discussed possibilities to
normalize bilateral relations. "We hope we will be able to demonstrate
goodwill to solve the problems between our countries and not leave
them to future generations," Armenian President Sargsyan said after
the meeting.

Head Of Oppositional Heritage Party’s Faction Has Been Changed

HEAD OF OPPOSITIONAL HERITAGE PARTY’S FACTION HAS BEEN CHANGED

arminfo
2008-09-08 17:30:00

ArmInfo. The head of the oppositional Heritage Party’s faction has
been changed.

As Heritage’s press-service told ArmInfo, by the suggestion of Raffi
Hovannisian, who had held the post of the faction’s head since 2007,
Armen Martirosyan was unanimously chosen the new head of the faction.

Raffi Hovannisian called Armen Martirosyan a promising young leader
and expressed confidence that in the new post Martirosyan will be
more useful for the party.

Sarkozy Praises Turkish President’s Historic Armenia Visit

From: "Katia M. Peltekian" <[email protected]>
Subject: Sarkozy Praises Turkish President’s Historic Armenia Visit

Deutsche Welle, Germany
Sept 7 2008

Sarkozy Praises Turkish President’s Historic Armenia Visit

Turkish President Abdullah Gul made a landmark visit to long-time foe
Armenia — a trip French President Nicolas Sarkozy called "courageous
and historic."

Turkish media reported that both countries were pleased with the
half-day trip on Saturday, Sept. 6, and described it as a good start
for resumption of relations.

"While the region is in the midst of a serious crisis, (the visit) is
a courageous and historic gesture for Turkish-Armenian relations,"
said Sarkozy, whose country currently holds the European Union’s
rotating presidency, in a statement.

"It allows for progress soon in establishing normal relations between
Turkey and Armenia," he added.

Football diplomacy

In the Armenian capital Yerevan for less than eight hours, Gul met
with his counterpart Serzh Sarkisian for an hour before the two
watched Turkey defeat Armenia 2-0 in a World Cup qualifying match.

Turkish television reported that the two leaders had discussed a
number of issues, including a Turkish initiative to establish a joint
historical committee to look at the genocide issue, Turkey’s bid to
set up a Caucasus platform to solve regional problems and Armenia’s
continuing occupation of Nagorno-Karabakh.

Bildunterschrift: Großansicht des Bildes mit der Bildunterschrift:
Some people in both countries opposed the presidents’ talks Gul also
invited his Armenian counterpart to join him in Istanbul in October
when Turkey next plays Armenia in the World Cup qualifiers, Turkish
media reported.

Small groups of Armenians protested Gul’s arrival at Yerevan’s
Zvartnots Airport Saturday, while others demonstrated in different
parts of the city, but there were no reports of violence.

At the match itself, protests against Gul were restricted to some
booing of the Turkish national anthem and small groups of people
holding anti-Turkish posters. Gul was seated in a special bullet-proof
area.

Historic strain runs deep

Turkey and Armenia do not have diplomatic relations and the land
border between the two countries was closed by Turkey in 1993 in
protest of the Armenian occupation of Nagorno-Karabakh.

Relations are also strained by Turkey’s refusal to accept as genocide
the deaths of up to 1.5 million ethnic Armenians in the last days of
the Ottoman Empire between 1915 and 1917. Turkey says that while there
were massacres of ethnic Armenians, the events do not constitute
genocide, and were instead the result of a civil uprising during World
War I.

Gul’s visit was the first by a Turkish head of state to Armenia since
the country gained independence from the Soviet Union in 1991.

"I hope that the match that will be played today will be a catalyst to
eliminating obstacles that are preventing the two peoples, who share a
common history, from getting closer, and that it will contribute to
regional friendship and peace," Gul said at Ankara’s Esenboga Airport
earlier on Saturday.

Gul’s visit has split the Turkish public, with newspapers reporting
that around 60 percent were against the trip.

,2144,36 24484,00.html

http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0

Kosovo prelude to Georgia?

Washington Times, DC
Sept 7 2008

Kosovo prelude to Georgia?

James George Jatras
Sunday, September 7, 2008

COMMENTARY:

In anticipation of Russian President Dmitry Medvedev’s recognition of
the independence of Abkhazia and South Ossetia, President Bush said
"Georgia’s territorial integrity and borders must command the same
respect as every other nation’s."

Critics of Russia’s action include Sens. Barack Obama, Joseph Biden
and Joseph Lieberman; Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice; former
United Nations Ambassador Richard Holbrooke; and many others in the
bipartisan establishment.

Among the specific criticisms are Russia’s violation of the sovereign
territory of Georgia, a fledgling democracy and a member of the United
Nations; a disproportionate response to Georgian President Mikhail
Saakashvili’s attempt to settle South Ossetia’s status by force,
including Russian military operations well outside of South Ossetia;
and Moscow’s tardiness in withdrawing its forces under a deal brokered
by French President Nicolas Sarkozy.

Evidently irony is not much appreciated in Washington. It seems
critics have forgotten President Bush’s recognition of the
independence of Kosovo, a province of democratic, U.N. member
Serbia. President Bush’s reference to "every other nation" whose
"territorial integrity and borders must command the same respect"
apparently has at least this one exception. If he can violate the
United Nations Charter and the Helsinki Final Act, which guarantee
sovereign borders, what right does he have to accuse others of doing
the same?

If Moscow stepped over the line in its crushing military response to
Mr. Saakashvili’s offensive, what do we call 78 straight days of
NATO’s bombing throughout Serbia, destroying most of that country’s
civilian infrastructure? If Russia is to be faulted for imperfect
implementation of the Sarkozy agreement, what can be said about
Washington’s violation of U.N. Security Council Resolution 1244, which
ended the 1999 Kosovo war and reaffirms Serbian sovereignty in the
province?

The standard reasons cited for making Serbia an exception to the rule
we demand in Georgia is that NATO intervened to stop genocide of
Kosovo’s Albanians and that they will never again accept being part of
Serbia. But after the war actual casualties among all ethnic groups –
whether by military action, atrocities committed by both Serbs and
Albanians, and the toll of NATO’s bombing – proved to be far fewer
than those cited in justification for the war. Compared to South
Ossetia’s much smaller population, mutual accusations of genocide
against South Ossetians and Georgians, respectively, are
proportionally larger than those at issue in Kosovo. And are South
Ossetians and Abkhazians less adamant that they will not submit to
Tbilisi’s rule than Kosovo’s Albanians are with respect to Belgrade?

It also should be kept in mind that Kosovo’s legal status is very
different from that of entities in the former Soviet Union. Under the
Yugoslav constitution – the same authority that justified the
secession of Croatia, Slovenia, etc. – Kosovo, part of Serbia since
before Yugoslavia was formed, has no legal claim to independence. In
contrast, the 1990 Soviet law on secession – which was the legal basis
of the independence of Union Republics such as Georgia – required that
autonomous entities within their borders be allowed, via referenda, to
remain in the Soviet Union, and by extension its successor, Russia.

Thus, while Kosovo’s status as part of Serbia is unquestionable, South
Ossetia and Abkhazia can make a good case they were part of Soviet
Georgia but never the current independent state of Georgia. (The same
would apply to Transdniestria with respect to Moldova and
Nagorno-Karabakh with respect to Azerbaijan. When will they follow
suit?)

By trashing the accepted international "rules of the road" on Kosovo,
Washington has created what amounts to the rules of the jungle. Each
power acts as it will, either to suppress restive minorities or to
compromise other countries’ borders: The United States tries to force
Serbia to accept Kosovo’s independence and pressures other countries
(without much success) to recognize it; Georgia tries to subdue the
Ossetians and the Abkhazians and fails; Russia moves to establish the
Ossetians’ and Abkhazians’ independence and now also will try to
secure wider recognition. In turn, the U.S.-supported separatist
Kosovo Albanian administration itself threatens a miniature version of
Mr. Saakashvili’s South Ossetia offensive to subdue Serbian enclaves,
where the remaining one-third of the province’s prewar community finds
refuge. Where does the logic of "big fish eat little fish" end?

In Kosovo, Washington sowed the wind, and now Georgia has reaped the
whirlwind. Only a return to the negotiating table to address
comprehensively Kosovo, South Ossetia, Abkhazia and similar trouble
spots elsewhere can prevent this malignant precedent from spinning
further out of control with incalculable consequences for global peace
and security. With each step down this road it will be harder to put
the genie of might-makes-right back in the bottle.

James George Jatras is a lawyer and director of the American Council
for Kosovo in Washington, an activity of Squire Sanders Public
Advocacy, LLC, and Global Strategic Communications Group, which are
registered agents for the Serbian National Council of Kosovo and
Metohija. Mr. Jatras formerly served as a foreign policy analyst of
the U.S. Senate Republican leadership.

sep/07/kosovo-prelude-to-georgia/

http://washingtontimes.com/news/2008/

Match of National Football Teams of Armenia and Turkey at Hrazdan

MATCH OF NATIONAL FOOTBALL TEAMS OF ARMENIA AND TURKEY TO BE HELD AT
HRAZDAN STADIUM ON SEPTEMBER 6

YERE VAN, SEPTEMBER 5, NOYAN TAPAN. A match of the 2010 World
Championship Qualifying Stage between the national football teams of
Armenia and Turkey will start at 9 pm of September 6th at Yerevan’s
Hrazdan Stadium.

A meeting of sports reporters with the chief coaches of the Armenian
and Turkish national teams will take place on August 5th, at 7 pm. A
training of the Turkish national team at Hrazdan Stadium is scheduled
for 8 pm on the same day.

To recap, Turkish fans have declined to come to Yerevan. Instead 100
reporters were sent to Yerevan.

http://www.nt.am/news.php?shownews=117108