Germany to allocate 6m euro to Armenia for reconstruction of powerst

Germany to allocate 6m euro to Armenia for reconstruction of power stations

Public Television of Armenia, Yerevan
26 May 04

[Presenter] As a result of the two-day (25-26 May) working session
of the Armenian-German financial and technical cooperation it was
confirmed that Germany will allocate Armenia a grant of 6m euros in
July. This financial aid will be channelled to the reconstruction
of small hydroelectric power stations. During the 11 months of the
Armenian-German cooperation programmes the Germans assisted Armenia
with more than 150m euros.

[Correspondent over video of meeting] A protocol adopted during the
two-day interparliamentary session of the Armenian-German financial
and technical cooperation, confirmed and signed over some champagne,
was headed by Armenian Finance and Economy Minister Vardan Khachatryan
and the head of Transcaucasus and Middle Asia Department of Germany
Ministry of Economic Cooperation and Development, Wolfgang Armbruster.

[Wolfgang Armbruster, captioned, in Germany with Armenian voice
over] Our cooperation is within the framework of the economic
reforms achieved by the Armenian government. These are water supply,
reconstruction of small hydroelectric power stations, assistance to
the communities, health programmes, etc.

[Correspondent] The finance and economy minister said that all the
programmes have been discussed one by one. There is a problem in the
water supply system which is being resolved in Armavir town and also
10 communities. Noragung company is implementing the programme.

Similar programmes will be implemented in Lori and Shirak
Regions. Among the republic’s regions, Armavir is the first which
will have a 24-hour quality water supply system. Lori and Shirak will
follow after Armavir this year.

An additional programme on the reconstruction of small hydroelectric
power stations will be confirmed in Bonn in July.

The next interparliamentary negotiations will be held in Bonn, in
the spring of 2005.

Susan Badalyan, “Aylur”.

Melkonian teachers to go on strike in increasingly bitter battle for

Melkonian teachers to go on strike in increasingly bitter battle for school
By Jean Christou

Cyprus Mail, Cyprus
May 27 2004

STAFF at the Melkonian Educational Institute (MEI) in Nicosia will
strike today and announced they would also refuse to give year-end
grades in protest over the school’s governing body’s insinuations
that education standards are not up to scratch.

“We are left with no other option than to bring the above grievances
to public attention,” a statement from the teachers said yesterday.

The loss making MEI, which is sitting on £40 million worth of real
estate in the capital’s commercial district, has been slated to close
in June 2005 by the foundation that governs it, the New York based
Armenian General Benevolent Union (AGBU), which oversees 22 Armenian
schools worldwide.

The teachers claimed that during the past few days, members of the
administrative staff, had on instructions from the AGBU quietly
been ringing students’ parents to discourage them from sending their
children to the MEI next year.

“This is in total contradiction to the fact that last April the AGBU
published an advertisement in the press for new enrolments for the
academic year 2004-2005,” a staff statement said.

Among the reasons cited by the AGBU for the closure of the 78-year
old boarding school were claims that teaching standards were not up
to scratch. In their statement, MEI staff said they would refuse to
give year-end grades or engage in writing any end-of-year reports
“until the AGBU retracted its unfounded and damaging assertions about
the quality of teaching and learning that goes on in our school.”

“If the AGBU considers us, the teaching staff of MEI, as incompetent
teachers it cannot expect us to function as competent assessors. The
AGBU cannot have it both ways,” the statement added.

Last November, the AGBU said the school was not for sale, but then
changed tack and announced the closure. The schools alumni are
convinced the foundation’s only aim is to “take the money and run”.
“Since the announcement of the AGBU’s declared intention to close
the Melkonian… in the year 2005, we the teaching staff have shown
tremendous restraint and patience towards the AGBU’s insulting and
unfounded assertions,” the staff statement went on.

Since then, it said, staff had been told by Gordon Anderson, the
AGBU’s representative on site, that the AGBU did not intend to close
the school – only the dormitories which host over 75 per cent of
the students.

“This is an insult to our intelligence,” said the staff statement.
“How can anybody expect a school to be run when its student population
is reduced from 210 students to just over 50.” It added that last
year the school’s population was reduced from 260 to 210 after the
AGBU unilaterally decided to reduce scholarships to underprivileged
children from the Armenian Diaspora. “Closing the dormitories amounts
to closing the school,” it said.

“In the meantime, our polite request for the AGBU to retract the
ridiculous assertions mentioned above to this day remains unanswered.”

Staff say there is no doubt that the AGBU is trying to use the teaching
staff as a scapegoat for their decision to close the school in order
to sell the land on which it stands and claim they are using devious
methods to reduce the student population of the school in order to
turn it into a non-viable school and ultimately close it down.

“The AGBU is implementing a preconceived plan. These actions by
the AGBU are coming at a time when the school has been attracting
an increasing number of students from the Greek Cypriot and other
communities in Cyprus,” the statement said “We are the ones that
genuinely care for the young people in our charge and, unfortunately,
must come to the conclusion that open, honest and reasonable behaviour
is simply taken advantage of, while others deal contemptuously with
students’ and teachers’ lives and careers.”

The staff are calling on the parents of existing students not to fall
victim to the AGBU’s attempts to discourage them from sending their
children to the MEI next year and to join their campaign to keep the
school open for future generations.

Last month the government slapped a preservation order on the
Melkonian, giving the school, slated to close next year, a temporary
reprieve, but so far there are no assurances about the school’s
continuation beyond June 2005.

Soccer: Greece gets second chance at Euro 2004

Greece gets second chance at Euro 2004
BY KYRIACOS CONDOULIS

FOX Sports
May 27 2004

Associated Press
May. 27, 2004 11:59 a.m.

ATHENS, Greece (AP)— Greece is playing in a European Championship for
the first time in 24 years with hopes of erasing past embarrassments.

A good performance at Euro 2004 in Portugal would also give the
country a sporting boost ahead of the Aug. 13-29 Olympics.

Greece’s German coach Otto Rehhagel is aiming high. After completing
a lap of honor with his players last year to celebrate qualification
for the June 12-July 4 finals, “King Otto” spelled out his team’s
intentions.

“We want to make an impact in Portugal. We don’t just want to put in
an appearance.”

Greece topped Group 6, forcing favorites Spain to the playoffs,
in a qualification stunner.

Having lost just one match in 16 encounters, Greece is feeling
optimistic despite a daunting fixture list – hosts Portugal in the
tournament’s opening match on June 12, followed by a revenge-hungry
Spain and unpredictable Russia.

On top of this, Greece’s record at the highest level is dismal. The
country has never won a game in the finals of any major competition.

Humiliation last came in 1994 in the United States, when Greece’s first
World Cup appearance ended in disaster with three heavy defeats. In
their first game against Argentina, Greece conceded a goal just 83
seconds into the match and went on to lose 4-0.

An early exit in Portugal would kill the sense of pride revived since
Rehhagel’s arrival in 2001.

The German triggered a change in the team’s fortunes after another
failed campaign in the 2002 World Cup qualifiers and a walkout by
Demis Nikolaidis and other star players disgusted at the state of
Greek soccer.

Rehhagel set out methodically to reinvent the team, luring back
Nikolaidis to join Angelos Haristeas and Zissis Vryzas in attack and
form a trio that fired Greece through the Euro 2004 qualification
campaign.

Early signs of recovery were evident in the 2-2 draw with England in
a 2002 World Cup qualifier at Old Trafford. Nikolaidis put the Greeks
ahead early in the second half and England only scraped through thanks
to David Beckham’s historic last-minute free kick.

The road to Portugal started badly for the Greeks who suffered 2-0
defeats at home to Spain in September 2002 and away to Ukraine a
month later.

But Rehhagel’s confidence in his men was rewarded and Greece bounced
back four days later to beat Armenia 2-0 at home with Nikolaidis
scoring both goals. Haristeas received the honors in April 2003 when
Greece beat Northern Ireland in Belfast with two goals from the Werder
Bremen striker.

Greece’s finest hour came last June when a stunning 1-0 away victory
against Spain, with the damage dome by Bolton Wanderers midfielder
Stelios Giannakopoulos.

Qualification was suddenly with reach, and victory against Ukraine
four days afterward with a late Haristeas goal put the Greeks squarely
back in contention.

Rehhagel’s men leapfrogged Spain to go top after the favorites were
held by Northern Ireland.

There was no looking back.

Greece traveled to Armenia to deliver a 1-0 defeat, in a match marred
by bribery allegations that were eventually dropped by Armenian
officials. And a final 1-0 victory over Northern Ireland sealed the
winning run.

Key to Greece’s revival was the squad’s newfound unity and attacking
mentality, with German rigor imposed on a traditionally undisciplined
side.

Rehhagel’s innovations including a strong defense line with Nikos
Dabitzas and Traianos Dellas joining Yiannis Goumas or Michalis
Kapsis. The fast footed Yiourkas Seitaridis played right and Stelios
Venetidis or Panagiotis Fyssas played down the left.

Superb goalkeeping from Antonis Nikopolidis kept the Greek unbeaten,
despite being sidelined by his own Athens club in a salary dispute.

Angelos Basinas, Vassilis Tsiartas – who grabbed the winning goal
against Northern Ireland – and captain Theodore Zagorakis are likely
to feature prominently in the Greek midfield. Inter Milan agile
midfielder Giorgos Karagounis adds an extra dose of creativity.

Greece conceded four goals in eight qualification matches, in the
face of attacking might of players like Real Madrid’s Raul Gonzalez
and AC Milan’s Andriy Shevchenko, both firing blanks.

Rehhagel, a former Werder Bremen coach, is not expected to make any
substantial changes to the spine of the team.

A reality check for Greece came on April 28 when the unbeaten streak
was finally ended by a 4-0 friendly defeat at the hands of fellow
qualifiers the Netherlands.

It was an uncomfortable reminder of their crushing 5-0 defeat to
England at Wembley prior to the 1994 World Cup. Greece went on to
concede 10 goals – scoring none – in the finals.

Greece didn’t heed the warning then. An entire nation is hoping they
will now.

BAKU: Iran Supports Azerbaijan’s Territorial Integrity, Karrazi Says

Iran Supports Azerbaijan’s Territorial Integrity, Karrazi Says

Baku Today
May 25 2004

Tehran will always stick to its policy of supporting Azerbaijan’s
territorial integrity in the settlement of Nagorno-Karabakh conflict,
Iran’s Minister of Foreign Affairs, Kamal Karrazi, said on Sunday,
according to Azertag news agency.

Iran has always supported Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity in the
United Nations and this policy will not be changed, Karrazi said in
a meeting with Azerbaijan’s deputy foreign minister, Khalaf Khalafov.
The Iranian foreign minister also said his country is for a peaceful
settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and that it would do its
best so that the conflict is resolved peacefully.

Azerbaijan’s former autonomous region of Nagorno-Karabakh — which
was home to 140,000 ethnic-Armenians and 40,000 Azeris, according to
1989 census, was occupied by Armenian army in 1991-94 war. The latter
also took control of seven Azeri administrative districts, Lachin,
Kelbejar, Aghdam, Fuzuli, Jebrail, Zengilan and Qubadli, in the war.

Despite a cease-fire agreement reached between the two countries
in May 1994, peace negotiations mediated by OSCE s Minsk group has
failed to find a final settlement to the conflict.

Karrazi also mentioned that the Iranian President Mahammad Khatami
is planning to make an official visit to Azerbaijan soon.

Alone in Turkey: Payne praises a brave novel that makes us questiono

Alone in Turkey Tom Payne praises a brave novel that makes us question our world
by Tom Payne

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH(LONDON)
May 22, 2004, Saturday

In 2001, an extraordinary book called My Name Is Red appeared in
English. It’s impossible to recommend it without sounding eccentric –
you try urging a friend to read a Turkish novel, brimming with stories
within stories and Koranic dialectic, about murderous miniaturists
working in the court of Sultan Murat III in 1591. The novel is set
around the 1,000th anniversary of Mohammed’s journey from Mecca
to Medina, when Islamic reformers were railing against artists in
Istanbul. Its opening chapter is a monologue about a corpse, and the
story takes in points of view from other perspectives: Satan says
his piece, as does a horse, Death, a coin and the colour red.

Its translation brought its author, Orhan Pamuk, greater fame in the
West, and, for all the book’s violence, it could almost be read for
entertainment. The book showed Pamuk could do everything – jokes,
horror, plot, structure, erudition, love.

In Snow, Pamuk uses his powers to show us the critical dilemmas of
modern Turkey. How European a country is it? How can it respond to
fundamentalist Islam? And how can an artist deal with these issues?

The novel is set in Kars, in the far east of Turkey, close to Armenia –
the Turkish massacre of Armenians in 1908 remains in the characters’
minds. For the three days of the story’s main action, the town
is cut off by snow, so, when a coup takes place, the world cannot
intervene. The local paper, the Border City News, has a circulation
of 320, and prints news before it happens. The residents watch TV
constantly, even when there’s nothing on, and most are paid to spy
on one another. There is a high rate of suicide among the town’s
young women.

Ka, a poet, wants to know why. Some say it’s because the women are
beaten at home; others say they are protesting because they can’t
wear headscarves in school. “Why did your daughter decide to uncover
herself?” an Islamist asks Kars’s director of education, before
shooting him. “Does she want to become a film star?” The Islamists
don’t know what to make of the suicides, since the Koran forbids the
faithful to take their own lives.

Throughout the book, Ka stops to write poetry (mostly taken from the
dialogue around him). He asks a woman he loves, “Do you think it’s
beautiful?… What’s beautiful about it?” As a writer, Ka is at odds
with the intrigues and fear around him. He is often blissfully happy,
and we learn that one poem’s theme is “the poet’s ability to shut off
part of his mind even while the world is in turmoil. But this meant
that a poet had no more connection to the present than a ghost did.
Such was the price a poet had to pay for his art!”

And yet the artists in the story are lethally relevant. When the
coup comes, it comes on the stage of a theatre; even as members
of the audience are being killed, people mistake the events for a
fantastic illusion. For a while, Kars is run by an ageing actor who
regrets that he’s never played Ataturk. Even Ka, who is mistrusted
for being too Western, becomes integral to the action.

At one point, Ka reflects on the writers he’s known who have been
lynched by Islamists, and it’s a reminder that writing Snow has been
an act of bravery, too. It’s an unexpected sort of bravery, though,
because Pamuk has made great efforts to enter the Islamists’ heads.
The effect is like meeting the possessed anarchists in Dostoevsky –
these alternative views of the world find full expression, and make
us question our own.

If Pamuk wrote about real situations and tried to find sympathy with
true terrorists, more readers would be alarmed than already have
been. But he tailors the terrorists to his requirements – the most
seductive of them, Blue, hasn’t killed anybody and dotes on puppies.

The author’s high artistry and fierce politics take our minds further
into the age’s crisis than any commentator could, and convince us of
every character’s intensity, making Snow a vital book in both senses
of the word. Orhan Pamuk is the sort of writer for whom the Nobel
Prize was invented.

Snow by Orhan Pamuk tr by Maureen Freely

436pp, Faber & Faber, pounds 16.99

T pounds 14.99 (plus pounds 2.25 p&p) 0870 1557222

Kocharian on role of council of CIS DMs

ARMENIAN PRESIDENT ON ROLE OF COUNCIL OF CIS DEFENSE MINISTERS

RIA Novosti, Russia
May 21 2004

YEREVAN, May 21 (RIA Novosti’s Gamlet Matevosyan) – The Council of
CIS Defense Ministers is one of the most important and effective
structures in the Commonwealth, Armenian President Robert Kocharyan
told participants in the council’s session in Yerevan.

The President pointed out the importance of cooperation within the
framework of the Commonwealth of Independent States and the Collective
Security Treaty Organization (Russia, Belarus, Armenia, Kazakhstan,
Kyrgyzstan and Turkmenistan), Robert Kocharyan’s press service told
RIA Novosti. He believes that such meetings boost bilateral relations.

On his part, Russian Defense Minister Sergei Ivanov, the council’s
chairman, expressed satisfaction with the session.

According to him, a wide range of issues, mainly military-political
and military-technical cooperation, was considered in Yerevan.

The participants discussed reforms in the CIS armed forces and
technical re-equipment of the armies.

In conclusion, the Armenian President wished them success and service
“in efficient and disciplined armies”.

Major Russian armed forces exercises to be held in June

Major Russian armed forces exercises to be held in June

Pravda.RU:Russia

18:13 2004-05-17

The Russian Armed Forces will hold major exercises in June 2004,
acting Defense Minister Sergei Ivanov told President Vladimir Putin.

“In June, permanent alert units will be redeployed from one Russian
region to some other by Defense Ministry transport planes civilian
Il-62 and Il-86 aircraft,” Mr. Ivanov said at president’s Monday
meeting with cabinet members.

In addition, exercises within the framework of the Collective Security
Treaty Organization (Russia, Belarus, Armenia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan
and Tajikistan) will be held in the Central Asian strategic sector
from August to September, the acting defense minister noted.

“The central role will be given to the Russian permanent alert units
and our airbase in Kant [Kyrgyzstan],” Mr. Ivanov said.

“This will be a mobile redeployment of airborne and task force units,”
he added.

“The Russian Navy is planning major independent and international
campaigns in the Atlantic Ocean and the Mediterranean Sea in
August-September,” Mr. Ivanov said.

© RIAN

BAKU: Hungary under pressure urging tough punishment for jailed Azer

Hungary under pressure urging tough punishment for jailed Azeri officer – TV

ANS TV, Baku
13 May 04

[Presenter] The Hungarian Prosecutor-General’s Office has come under
pressure on different levels urging the toughest punishment for
Azerbaijani serviceman Ramil Safarov, charged with killing Armenian
officer Gurgen Markaryan in Budapest. ANS correspondent Parviz Soltanov
has a report from Budapest.

[Correspondent, on the phone] The preliminary investigation into
the case of Ramil Safarov is coming to an end. The precise date of
Safarov’s trial is still not known. The prosecutor said in connection
with Safarov’s case that they came under pressure from different
channels urging the toughest punishment for Safarov.

[Passage omitted: reported details]

The Hungarian press show great interest in this subject.

[Passage omitted: the newspapers reported on the history of the
problem and casualties and described it as an ethnic conflict]

The Armenian circles in Budapest are working together with lawyers
they invited from Yerevan.

Parviz Soltanov, ANS, Budapest.

Goergian IM expected in Tsalka to get first-hand information

GEORGIAN INTERIOR MINISTER EXPECTED IN TSALKA TO GET FIRST-HAND
INFORMATION

ArmenPress
May 13 2004

TSALKA, MAY 13, ARMENPRESS: Georgia’s interior minister is expected
to travel to Tsalka, the region of a recent clash between Armenians
and Georgians, to get first-hand information. The clash occurred on
May 9 after a football match in the center of Tsalka, leaving some
10 people with different injuries.

A local A-Info news agency said Georgian law-enforces have opened a
criminal case into the accident. It said the tension has somewhat
diffused now, quoting also the chief of the local administration,
Razmik Hanesian, as saying that 150 servicemen of the interior
ministry, dispatched to the region, will remain for several more days.

Members of the Georgian community are still complaining that Armenians
are armed and that they fear new clashes, but the agency said it
is the Georgians who are armed, citing several incidents when they
terrorized Armenians by their guns.

Earlier Georgian president Mikheil Saakashvili said one should not
consider the fight between Georgians and ethnic Armenians in Tsalka as
an ethnic conflict. “I don’t want to dramatize the situation. This is
not an inter-ethnic conflict. It was a common fight between Georgians
and Armenians. But we will not allow violation of law and order and
we are not going to be involved in a provocation,” he said.

Igor Ivanov and the Russian Retreat to Moscow

Igor Ivanov and the Russian Retreat to Moscow
By Mark Almond

Moscow Times, Russia
May 12 2004

It is getting to be a habit. Any post-communist leader seeing Igor
Ivanov across the threshold of his presidential palace knows his time
is up.

On Oct. 6, 2000, it was Slobodan Milosevic who received the
then-Russian foreign minister as graciously as a living political
corpse can receive his undertaker. Late last November, it was Georgian
President Eduard Shevardnadze who found Ivanov escorting him off the
premises of the presidential villa in Tbilisi.

Now Adzharia’s Aslan Abashidze and assorted family members and
hangers-on have been given a one way ride on Ivanov’s plane from
Batumi to Moscow.

Even after swapping his role from foreign minister to secretary of
the Security Council, Ivanov has carried on his role as an angel of
political death. Oddly, the victims of Ivanov’s political version of
euthanasia have all been on Washington’s rather than Moscow’s hit-list
of obvious geopolitical targets.

It seems that whenever popular discontent at poverty and corruption
reaches a critical mass fired by George Soros’ money and CIA muscle,
Ivanov is on hand to offer the coup de grace. Perhaps President
Vladimir Putin sometimes wonders whether one day — after seeking
a controversial third term? — he will receive a gentle nudge into
obscurity, or even a ticket to the Hague from Ivanov.

Russia has been in retreat since the collapse of the Soviet Union.
Many of us can remember how in the late 1980s people in Boris
Yeltsin’s camp explained that Soviet imperialism was bad for ordinary
Russians. Hadn’t the British or Dutch got richer as their empires
vanished? Wouldn’t Russians be even better off without the burdens
of Brezhnevian overstretch? In many ways they were right. Ordinary
Russians had paid a high price for the Kremlin’s superpower status.
But sadly, the opposite of imperialism is not necessarily any more
advantageous.

It would no doubt be nicer if Russians could just get on with trying
to make a living. Siren voices say that that is precisely what is
happening now. Economic growth is making life more bearable for more
Russians than at any time since the early 1980s. No longer is it just
a rich micro-percentage that benefits from reform. And so no wonder
Putin enjoys real popularity.

Yet Russia’s retreat from world power politics, personalized by the
prominence of Ivanov in the Kremlin policymaking apparatus, could
easily have dire domestic economic consequences.

At present, high oil prices buoy up the Russian economy. Even pensions
are getting paid on time. But step by step, Russia’s significance as an
independent actor in the world of natural resources is being cut back.

The reach of the United States deep into Russia’s hinterland has
reached the tipping point. With the whole of the southern Caucasus
within grasp and U.S. garrisons pock-marking Central Asia, Russia’s
own energy resources are falling under the shadow of U.S. power, and
the routes to export Russian oil or gas, independent of Washington’s
sphere of influence, are narrowing.

High oil prices temporarily obscure how parlous Russia’s geostrategic
position is in its only area of economic strength — the export of
natural resources.

The United States’ grab of Iraq’s oil reserves has misfired for the
moment, but Libya has been brought on side by Washington and London to
release oil to fill the tankers left empty by Iraqi sabotage. At the
same time, the West is closing in on Russia’s remaining export routes.

With the oil terminal at Batumi under the guard of President Mikheil
Saakashvili’s troops, who were parading on CNN under the banner
“Georgia-USA United We Stand,” the Silk Route to Central Asia is safely
in Western hands. Does anyone doubt that Gazprom’s export pipelines
via Ukraine and Belarus will soon pass through states enjoying the
same kind of “Rose Revolution” which Georgia has accomplished?

Armenian President Robert Kocharyan has an embryonic Rose Revolution
budding already and must be waiting for Ivanov’s visit. Ukrainian
President Leonid Kuchma has probably got an arrival date for Ivanov
pencilled in his diary. Even that refusenik against the New World
Order, Belarussian President Alexander Lukashenko, ought to expect
a knock on his door soon after the Ukrainian president goes into exile.

What have Russia as a state or Russians as people got out of a weary
withdrawal to a state smaller than Peter I’s?

Arabs used to raise the joke-question: Why is it better to be an
enemy of the British rather than their friend? And answer: Because
if you are their enemy they will certainly buy you, but if you’re
their friend they’ll certainly sell you.

Certainly Russia’s retreat has bought it no friends. The Western
media portray Putin as a war criminal worse than Milosevic over the
war in Chechnya and accuse him of meddling in Georgian affairs as
his lieutenant hustles Moscow’s friends into exile.

A huge gap exists between the Western media’s portrait of Russia under
Putin as a reviving great power playing and winning subtle games in
its former sphere of influence and the reality of a Russian retreat
which has been gaining pace since Yeltsin’s retirement. Ivanov is
a man who straddled the two presidencies in Russia. More than anyone
else he personifies the age of accelerating withdrawal.

For instance, Ivanov was working for the political demise of Milosevic
well before his arrival in Belgrade on Oct. 6, 2000. Ivanov played
a major role in advising the NATO states how to start the war in
Kosovo in 1999 that led to Milosevic’s ultimate downfall. Both
Madeleine Albright and German officials have revealed how Ivanov
urged them not to go to the United Nations Security Council so that
the Russian government could avoid pressure from its own people to
veto a U.S. resolution for war.

By all accounts, the signals from Smolenskaya Ploshchad to George W.
Bush in March 2003 were: Storm Iraq, then ask the UN to pick up the
pieces as in Kosovo. But Tony Blair needed to show the British public
that the Security Council was on his side, which forced Russia’s hand
into voting “No” alongside France and China.

What is to be done?

After Margaret Thatcher sent troops to fight the Argentine invasion
of the Falkand Islands in 1982, Henry Kissinger remarked, “No nation
retreats forever.”

No doubt Russia’s slinking back deeper into a Eurasian hinterland
will stop some day, but Russians must be asking themselves whether
the retreat to Moscow will stop before or after Ivanov tells Vladimir
Putin it is time to go.

Mark Almond, lecturer in modern history at Oriel College, Oxford,
contributed this comment to The Moscow Times.