No Specific Information Received On The Upcoming Visit Of Poland For

NO SPECIFIC INFORMATION RECEIVED ON THE UPCOMING VISIT OF POLAND FOREIGN MINISTER TO ARMENIA

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
12.08.2009 21:12 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ No specific information has been received on the
upcoming visit of Poland’s foreign minister Radoslav Sikorsky to
Armenia. "The RA FM Edvard Nalbandian during his visit to Poland in
February 2009, invited Radoslav Sikorski to visit Armenia, but specific
dates of a possible visit are not determined yet," press service of the
ministry of foreign affairs of Armenia told a PanARMENIAN.Net reporter.

According to the MFA press service, If Radoslaw Sikorski expresses
a wish to visit Armenia, the RA ministry of foreign affairs to make
the visit’s dates public.

Some Armenian media reported that Radoslaw Sikorski will visit Armenia
in early October.

ARS Regional Executive Members Visit Consul-General Hovhannisyan

ARS REGIONAL EXECUTIVE MEMBERS VISIT CONSUL-GENERAL HOVHANNISYAN

Asbarez
08/11/ars-regional-executive-members-visit-consul- general-hovhannisyan/
Aug 11, 2009

GLENDALE-The newly-elected Armenian Relief Society of Western U.S.A.,
Regional Executive board members paid an official visit to the Consul
General of the Republic of Armenia, Honorable Grigor Hovhannisyan,
last week, at the recently dedicated consular offices in Glendale.

ARS Regional Executive Chair, Sossie Poladian, led the delegation
and expressed her enthusiasm for the consular move to Glendale, less
than a half a mile away from the ARS Regional headquarters. She said,
"They have come to the heart of the community. This was a chance to
exchange ideas about our shared interests about the welfare of our
communities here in the Southland and homeland."

Poladian presented a golden ARS emblem with the Karabagh Mamig and
Babig statue image to the Consul General, Grigor Hovhannisyan, who
pledged to make a return trip to the ARS Regional headquarters and
Social Services and counseling offices

http://www.asbarez.com/2009/

Jermuk 2009 Under Way: President Says: "I Am Sure, Expectations Will

JERMUK 2009 UNDER WAY: PRESIDENT SAYS: "I AM SURE, EXPECTATIONS WILL COME TRUE"

Panorama.am
14:15 10/08/2009

President of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan made opening speech at FIDE
"Grand Prix" fifth "Jermuk-2009" tournament dedicated to 80th jubilee
of Tigran Petrosyan.

President said welcome to the participants and the guests and said that
Armenia has been hosted a chess tournament which would be honorable
for any country.

"Those who love chess, know its value and understand it, chess
tournaments become festivals for them. World chess players and
fans are going to direct their attention on Jermuk in the following
several days. Everybody expects a good and valuable game, interesting
tournament and I think, our expectations will come true," President
said.

It was also mentioned that the tournament is dedicated to Tigran
Petrosyan’s 80th jubilee. Tigran Petrosyan was a chess player
who proved that Armenian chess can have and should have serious
victories. It was forty four years after that Armenian chess team
became Olympic champion and Armenia – land of those champions.

American Baptists Take Delight In Diversity

AMERICAN BAPTISTS TAKE DELIGHT IN DIVERSITY

The Christian Century
August 25, 2009

The American Baptist Churches USA convention this summer was typical of
many church gatherings in displaying ethnic and racial diversity. But
many ABC leaders think that their denomination may be the most diverse
among mainline Protestant churches.

Worship services and other events at the June 25-28 biennial convention
in Pasadena, California, featured traditional hymns, mariachi bands,
gospel choirs and even Hawaii’s first African-American hula dance
troupe. Delegates enjoyed Latin and Asian cuisine at a reception called
"We Are ABC: A Multi-Cultural Family Fest."

Small-group caucuses included those for African-American,
Asian, Hispanic, Haitian and Portuguese-speaking churches and
ministers. Baptist Burmese refugees held their first-ever caucus.

Backstage during the closing-day ceremony David Coffey of Great
Britain, president of the Baptist World Alliance, told Roy Medley,
general secretary of the ABC, "I love the diversity in this
denomination," adding that the degree of cultural mixture was rare.

Two years hence, the ABC convention will meet in Puerto Rico.

The church region that played host this year is exceptional: "We
are 62 percent immigrant congregations. The gospel is preached in 48
languages in American Baptist Churches of Los Angeles," said Samuel
Chetti, the executive minister of ABC of Los Angeles and Congregations
of the Southwest and Hawaii.

"I’d say 30 percent or so are purely multiethnic congregations; they
have everybody," said Chetti. Once predominantly Anglo churches have
become multi ethnic. "I can’t imagine one church that’s truly Anglo."

But the very reason Chetti’s region exists in its present form points
to theological and social conflicts that sometimes accompany such
broad diversity.

Formerly a local association of churches in Los Angeles and its
immediate suburbs, Chetti’s region ended up taking in liberal and
centrist churches from the reconfigured ABC of the Pacific Southwest.

The 2006 denominational breakup in the region started after dozens
of conservative churches in the area split from the national church,
mainly over their perception that the ABC was insufficiently resolute
in denouncing homosexuality and excluding gay-friendly congregations.

Of seven mainline denominations polled in 2007 in Pew’s U.S. Religious
Landscape Survey, American Baptists had the lowest percentage of
members, 40 percent, who said that homosexuality is a way of life
that should be accepted by society.

[Chetti told the Century in June that out of 280 congregations in
the old region, nearly 100 conservative ones joined a new group,
Transforming Ministries. "The rest stayed with the ABC at some level,"
Chetti said, "although many congregations may take another 12 to 18
months to make a decision."

[The Baptist tradition of autonomous congregations only loosely tied
together creates some imprecision in counting membership levels and
the number of affiliated congregations. ABCUSA has 1.3 million members
and 5,558 congregations, according to lists at church headquarters
in Pennsylvania. Speakers in Pasadena, however, spoke regularly of
5,200 congregations. Medley explained that some of the additional 300
churches on official ABC rolls are "new church starts that are not yet
chartered and voted in as full-member churches."] Some continuing
tensions over sexuality and other issues were reflected in the
delegates’ rejection June 29 of a massive restructuring proposal,
which fell short of a required two-thirds majority. American Baptist
officials had worked two years on the cost-cutting proposal, which
would have turned two agencies into semiautonomous bodies.

But progressive American Baptist leaders and some others expressed
serious misgivings about the plan, with some claiming that the
restructuring would make it harder to advance social justice issues
in churchwide policy statements and resolutions.

Chetti acknowledged that conservative evangelical views are common in
many ethnic groups in the ABC. "For example, we have here the Armenian
Evangelical Baptist Church in Glendale," he said. The pastor "is from
[the country of] Georgia, and they are traditional Baptists-men on one
side [of the church], women on one side," he said. "Very orthodox-very
orthodox scripturally . . . and hierarchical.

"On the other hand, you have much more egalitarian Anglo and
African-American congregations. So, it’s both sides."

For Tim Bonney, pastor of First Baptist Church of Greater Des Moines,
Iowa, the denomination’s diversity can be cumbersome, but rewarding. "I
don’t think American Baptists have generally felt like there has to
be a majority group in the denomination," he said.

"It doesn’t mean that we have to agree on all these other finer points
of theology and issues of politics," said Bonney. "My congregation
also is politically diverse, theologically diverse; we like that.

"It’s both our greatest strength and greatest weakness," the pastor
said. "It certainly would be easier if we all agreed with each
other, but I’ve always found that kind of diversity to be very
refreshing." -Associated Baptist Press

Award Giving Ceremony Of 25th World Summer Student Games Held In Yer

AWARD GIVING CEREMONY OF 25TH WORLD SUMMER STUDENT GAMES HELD IN YEREVAN

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
10.08.2009 15:25 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Award giving ceremony of 25th World Summer Student
Games, held July 1-12 in the capital of Serbia, Belgrade, was organized
today in the ministry of education and science of Armenia.

Armenia was represented by 4 sports: judo, table tennis, fencing
and tae kwon do. Three out the 14 Armenian athletes managed to take
prizes. The best result was achieved by judoist Hambardzum Tonoyan
(w/c 66 kg), who won the only silver medal of the Armenian team. Two
bronze medals were awarded to judoists Arthur Srapyan (w/c 60 kg),
and tae kwon doist Arman Yeremyan (w/c 78 kg). Awards were given
to the coach of Judo Artur Gevorgyan and mentor of tae kwon do team
Gevorg Danielyan.

Cheesy Convention A Mouthful

CHEESY CONVENTION A MOUTHFUL

UT The Daily Texan
Francisco Marin
Daily Texan Columnist

Cheese lovers attend the 2009 Festival of Cheese sponsored by the
American Cheese Society on Saturday in the Governor’s Ball room of
the Hilton Austin.

Dozens of cheese-heaped tables filled the Governor’s Ballroom at the
downtown Hilton on Saturday night, where the American Cheese Society
held its annual Festival of Cheese. Gruyères and goudas, Muensters and
mozzarellas, pepperjacks and provolones – about 1,100 varieties of the
delicious delicacy were put on display for hundreds of guests to eat.

"Cheese creates a humanity in us, and it creates a spirit and
love of life," said John Greeley, co-chair of the event’s tasting
competition. "I think cheese can make us happier and can spark
creativity in us."

While there were nearly limitless opportunities to indulge in cheese,
there were also plenty of other treats to go around. Mouth-watering
varieties of Leinenkugel craft beers – including Honey Weiss, my
favorite – were chilled to perfection, in addition to old Texas
favorites Shiner Bock and Firemans #4.

A table, hosted by Gracious Gourmet founder Nancy Wekselbaum, held
about 15 small glass containers of tapenades – a typically Provencal
sauce that consists of finely chopped olives, capers, anchovies and
olive oil – as well as chutneys, spreads and pestos.

Nancy’s husband Natan, an elderly, hunched-over man, waved at me from
across the table.

"You, you come here."

He took a delicate cracker and meticulously spread soft goat cheese
on it, hands shaking, and topped it off with a small dab of fennel
blood orange tapenade, made with carmelized fennel and red onions,
chopped kalamata olives and smashed blood oranges.

I took the cracker and scarfed it.

"Mmm, that’s good." Natan lit up and shook my hand.

People from all over the nation came to enjoy the cheese festival, and
each had their own stories to tell. Daniel Utano and Grace Coughlin,
a young couple from a hip neighborhood in Brooklyn, were smartly
dressed in matching black outfits and sampling soft chevres on wheat
toast. Jessica Hughes and Nick Wagner, who have resided in Austin for
a year, were recently married. Their friends Becky and Mike got them
the expensive passes to the cheese festival as a wedding gift.

"I’m a total cheese slut," Nick said.

"Stop it!" Jessica said, laughing and slapping Nick’s chest. "Cheese
can bring out the aggression in a woman."

Whitney Tyler, a UT nutrition junior and self-described "cheese-monger"
and cheese-buyer for the Wheatsville Co-op, said there are
misconceptions when it comes to cheese’s nutritional value.

"Cheese is so good for you! It’s got calcium, it’s got protein –
everybody needs a little cheese," Tyler said, adding that the
Wheatsville’s "Hopelessly Bleu" cheese was especially popular at
the festival.

Three recent UT graduates, Dominique Tremino, Becca Aiello and Katie
Gannon, were huddled around a fresh mozzarella table and giggling as
they watched me try "cocoa cheddar" and a cheddar aged for 10 years,
which they affirmed were the "nastiest" cheeses at the festival.

A young, dark-haired Armenian woman standing alone by her table
looked around at the festival participants, smiling. Sylvia Tirakian,
co-founder of preserves company Harvest Song, offered me a spoon
of her rose petal preserves – soft, floral, almost overwhelmingly
sweet – as well as a small plate of fresh walnut preserves in a dark,
bittersweet syrup.

"You know Noah’s Ark? That ark landed in the volcanic soils of the
Ararat Valley, which is where we grow our preserves," Tirakian said,
proffering a spoon for me and motioning toward a jar of apricot-white
cherry preserves. She wrapped her lips around a spoon of her own,
holding wild strawberry preserves, and smiled in satisfaction.

Local food blogger Erin Krenek, a UT government graduate, perused a
table of aged cheddars, which she said are her favorite.

"Not a fan of the bleus, though – way too strong-tasting," she said,
grimacing in mock disgust.

At the end of the evening, festival-goers stumbled around the ballroom
in drunken revelry, glasses of complimentary merlot finally empty,
bottles of Dos Equis lying atop filled trash cans – and yet there
still seemed to be limitless amounts of cheese left on each table.

The festival-goers poured out of the downtown Hilton around 10 p.m.,
some laughing, some bloated and tired, some too drunk to drive –
but all left with a smile and the barbed, sharp smell of cheese on
their breath.

Comments Be the first to comment on this article!

Limit Wall Street’s political power too, says economist Acemoglu

Limit Wall Street’s political power too, says economist Acemoglu

The debate about financial regulation in the banking sector is in full
swing. "I certainly understand why people are angry at bankers,"
prominent American economist Daron Acemoglu says in an interview with
NRC Handelsblad.

NRC Handelsblad (Netherlands)
6 August 2009

By Marc Leijendekker

The American investment bank Goldman Sachs saw a profit of 2.7 billion
dollars in the second quarter of 2009. Should we be happy about this?
Is it a sign that at least the United States is scrambling its way out
of the financial crisis? Daron Acemoglu, a prominent American
economist, has his doubts.

He points out that Goldman Sachs was in danger of bankruptcy last
autumn and received billions in aid from the US government. Ten
billion dollars was recently paid back, with interest.

"In a way, it is a good thing that Goldman Sachs is making profit
again," says 41-year-old professor Acemoglu. "Profit pumps capital
into society. That is the function of the banking system. But is it a
‘fair’ profit?"

Business as usual

Not when you realise that these profits would have been impossible
without state aid, he says, which moreover came at a time when no one
else was willing to lend Goldman Sachs money. The fact that so much
profit was made again so quickly, that bonuses are once again to be
paid out and that banks now want to return to business as usual
worries him.

"The financial crisis would be a good time to restructure the American
financial system. But at the moment, I don’t see that happening."

Acemoglu, a professor of applied economics at the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology (MIT), was in Utrecht for two days for a world
conference of economic historians. In his keynote speech at the
conference, he stressed the importance of legislation and regulation
for the economy. Are property rights being protected? Are there
controls on the actions of both the business elite and the government?
If not, he says, problems will arise.

In an interview wi
Before the crisis a political, ideological choice was made to equate
the market economy with a lack of regulation, he says. In this
equation ‘the market’ is good ` a sentiment Acemoglu wholeheartedly
endorses. ‘Regulation’ is not; regulation disrupts the market ` and
this is a notion that Acemoglu challenges. "Markets cannot function
without institutions. There have to be rules."

Wall Street’s political clout

He thinks, for example, that clear limits should be imposed on
leverage, on what you can do with borrowed money. He also argues that
deposit guarantees should be regarded as government subsidies that
justify government control and influence. And if the government says
that some financial institutions are simply "too big to fail," then
there should be oversight and regulation on those as well.

Acemoglu: "Why was Goldman Sachs not bailed out the same way the
American auto industry was bailed out? Don’t give banks billions of
dollars to use as they wish, but take shares in the banks. That
enables you to keep control."

He also feels more attention should be focused on the political power
of Wall Street: "We should not only regulate the financial world, but
the politics of the financial world as well."

This is not just about campaign contributions for politicians either.

Acemoglu: "The system was designed to give the financial sector’s vote
the greatest influence possible. The Fed, the American system of
central banks, is in many aspects a part of the financial sector. The
oversight is exercised by the Federal Reserve Board and the bosses of
the large financial institutions. The idea itself is not a bad one,
because this ensures a great deal of communication among the various
people in the sector. But it also means that they do not do the right
thing if this would mean going against the interest of the financial
industry."

For example, Henry Paulson, the last treasury secretary under
president Bush, had previously served as chairman and CEO of Goldman
Sachs.

"Paulson did what he did and gave t
billions in support not only because this was the right thing from an
economic point of view, but also because it was a good political
move. He came from Wall Street. The fact that Obama’s treasury
secretary Geithner is continuing this line is no surprise. He too
worked in the system. He was president of the central bank of New
York, the most important of the central banks. It was inconceivable to
them to allow that financial system to fall apart."

Did Paulson and Geithner make the wrong decisions?

Acemoglu: "We don’t know that. We still don’t know exactly what
happened. Where was the real power in the large institutions? What was
the relationship with the government? Would these financial
institutions really have gone bankrupt otherwise? And would that
really have been so tragic?

"All things considered, I think that on the whole the right decisions
were made. President Obama acted statesmanlike and managed to reassure
people, for the time being. But beneath the surface, there is a great
deal of dissatisfaction. I certainly understand why people get angry
about an extremely costly bail-out operation paid for by the taxpayer,
designed by bankers and intended to help bankers and limit the damage
for those responsible."

How do you manage that, devote more attention to the political power
of the financial sector?

"This has become standard in developing countries. We are aware that
you cannot talk about the development of Indonesia, for example,
without looking at the political and institutional factors. But in
Europe and the United States, such factors are barely taken into
account. People actually suggest that these are apolitical solutions,
technical measures. That is how you end up with Goldman Sachs telling
its former executives, who now formulate government policy, that a
costly bail-out operation is the only possible solution from an
economic perspective. That is very convenient of course, if you can
present it like that."

What other lessons are there from the crisis?

"We need better econometric
ly and in practice at financial institutions, in order to be able to
better assess risks. The fact that weak companies collapse is part of
the dynamics of capitalism. It is a form of reallocation ` economist
Joseph Schumpeter called it ‘creative destruction’. That term is
already more than 50 years old and is the essence of a capitalist
economy, but we still do not know much about it."

You also argue that people should be reallocated.

"We have a problem when all our best people go into the financial
sector. If an MIT student who graduates with a degree in computer
science or physics goes to work for Microsoft, Apple or Google, the
salary for the first ten years is one tenth of what he can earn at
Morgan Stanley or Goldman Sachs. Are they more productive there?

"The profits that Goldman Sachs has made over the past months derive
from the fact that they can rapidly trade in shares, options and
futures. Their computer programmes are better. What is the value of
that? Are all financial innovations really innovations? Doesn’t it
just mean that Goldman Sachs made the profit instead of some other
institution? As nice as that is for those involved, it becomes a
problem when your ambition is channelled in a way that is purely about
taking profit from others. On the other hand, if you improve a search
engine or make and apply biotechnological inventions you contribute to
real innovation, to economic growth, to social benefit."

How can this banking culture change?

"We have to think about our payment structure. There has to be a limit
on the financial compensation for traders and bankers on Wall
Street. It is good for people to be paid on the basis of
performance. But if they are paid on the basis of short-term
performance and without any risks when things go poorly, there is
something fundamentally wrong.

"Can you change that without government intervention? And if the
government must intervene, can this occur without consequences for
innovations in the financial sector? In any event, we can no longer
leave th
rld."

PHOTO CAPTION: Acemoglu: "Goldman Sachs’ profits derive from the fact
that they can rapidly trade in shares, options and futures. What is
the value of that?"Photo Reuters

21244.ece/Limit_Wall_Streets_political_power_too,_ says_economist_Acemoglu

http://www.nrc.nl/international/article23

Nikol Pashinian Charged In Relation To Events Of 1 March, 2008 And 2

NIKOL PASHINIAN CHARGED IN RELATION TO EVENTS OF 1 MARCH, 2008 AND 23 OCTOBER, 2007

Noyan Tapan
Aug 7, 2009

YEREVAN, AUGUST 7, NOYAN TAPAN. The RA Special Investigation Service
has finished the investigation into the criminal case of Nikol
Pashinian, editor-in-chief of Haykakan Zhamanak (Armenian Time) daily,
the press service of the RA Prosecutor General’s Office reported. The
indicated case was investigated within the framework of the criminal
case initiated based on the facts of the organization of mass disorders
in Yerevan on March 1-2, 2008 and the use of violence by the disorder
participants, the commitment of acts of arson and beating, the damage
done to property, the use of explosives and explosive devices, and
the acts of violence and armed resistance against representatives
of authorities.

Nikol Pashinian was one of the most active supporters of
former Armenian President Levon Ter-Petrosian who ran as the
opposition candidate in the February 2008 presidential elections
in Armenia. N. Pashinian was noted for his passionate rhetorical
speeches. Following the March 1-2, 2008 events, he went underground. In
July 2009, he gave himself up to the Armenian police and was arrested.

According to the official source, based on the investigation results
Nikol Pashinian was charged under the RA Criminal Code’s Article 316
Part 1 and Article 225 Part 1 – committing violence not dangerous
to life and health agianst a policeman on October 23, 2007, as
well as organizing together with a group of persons mass disorder
on March 1-2, 2008. On August 4, 2009, the criminal case of Nikol
Pashinian was separated from the common criminal case into separate
proceedings. The Prosecutor’s Office also reported that on August 5
2009 the accused and his lawyers were informed about the completion
of the investigation. They were given all the materials and copies
related to the criminal case for familiarization.

Private Remittances Through Armenian Banks 33.2% Down To $446.7m In

PRIVATE REMITTANCES THROUGH ARMENIAN BANKS 33.2% DOWN TO $446.7M IN H1

ARKA
Aug 4, 2009

YEREVAN, August 4. /ARKA/. Private remittances to individuals through
Armenian banking system amounted to $446.7 million in the first half
of this year, says the monthly information bulletin of the Central
Bank of Armenia (CBA) for June.

It is a reduction of 33.2% (decline rate slowed down) or $221.9
million in the first half of the year. Non-commercial remittances to
individuals amounted to $102.4 million in June only.

Remittances from Armenia totaled $81.1 million in the reporting period
against $112.7 million in the same period of 2008 (28.1% reduction,
decline rate slowed down); in June only the remittances from Armenia
were $15.2 million.

Net proceeds amounted to $365.7 million in the first half of the
year against $555.9 million in the same period of last year (34.2%
reduction); net proceeds were $87.2 million in June.

Like in the previous year, the greatest net inflow was from Russia in
the first half of this year ($307.2m) that is 84% of all remittances
to the country over the period as compared with 87.8% in the first
half of 2008.

Oskanian Defends ‘Madrid Principles’

OSKANIAN DEFENDS ‘MADRID PRINCIPLES’
Anna Israelian, Aghasi Yenokian

Armenialiberty.org
tml
Aug 3 2009

Vartan Oskanian, Armenia’s former longtime foreign minister, has
defended the most recent international plan to end the Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict and warned that its blanket rejection could make the mediators
reconsider their apparent acceptance of continued Armenian control
over the disputed territory.

In an extensive weekend interview with RFE/RL, he insisted that the
basic principles of the Karabakh settlement that were formally put
forward in Madrid in November 2007 are "incomparably" more favorable
for the Armenian side than any of the peace proposals made by the U.S.,
Russian and French mediators in the past.

"Whereas in the past we were offered at worst a high degree of
[Karabakh’s] autonomy within Azerbaijan and at best horizontal ties
between Azerbaijan and Karabakh within the framework of a common state,
the Madrid principles … provide for the self-determination of the
Nagorno-Karabakh people, which obviously means Nagorno-Karabakh’s
independence or reunification with Armenia," said Oskanian.

"I am convinced that if we let slip this recognition of the
Nagorno-Karabakh people’s right to self-determination, it will be
very difficult to gain it again in the future and the negotiations
could go in a totally different direction and they could start
upholding [Azerbaijan’s] territorial integrity," he said. "Today we
have an advantage over Azerbaijan in terms of the upholding of this
[self-determination] principle. That is why I think we should be
careful in our statements, our criticisms and should pick the right
target."

The so-called Madrid principles, which the conflicting parties started
discussing years before November 2007, envisage a phased resolution
of the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict that would start with a gradual
liberation of the districts in Azerbaijan proper partly or fully
occupied by Karabakh Armenian forces during the 1991-1994 war. In
return, Karabakh would retain a land corridor to Armenia and be able
to determine its final status in a future referendum.

Like his predecessor Robert Kocharian, President Serzh Sarkisian
appears to have essentially accepted this peace formula. According
to the American, French and Russian diplomats co-chairing the OSCE
Minsk Group, Sarkisian and his Azerbaijani counterpart Ilham Aliyev
made significant progress in face-to-face meetings held this year and
could iron out their remaining differences before the end of this year.

The prospect of a breakthrough in the Armenian-Azerbaijani talks has
prompted serious concern from Armenian nationalist groups opposed to
major territorial concessions to Baku even in return for international
recognition of Karabakh’s secession from Azerbaijan. The largest
of them, the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun),
has warned that it will campaign for Sarkisian’s resignation if he
signs up to the Madrid principles.

Oskanian dismissed the hardliners’ position, saying that no
peaceful settlement is possible without the return of most of the
Armenian-controlled territories surrounding Karabakh. "If the Armenian
side wants to exclude the issues of return of territories, return of
[Azerbaijani] refugees from future principles and be guided by the
principle of ‘not a single inch of land to the enemy,’ which would
be a wonderful solution, then Armenia or Nagorno-Karabakh or both
of them should pull out of the negotiations," he said. "If we are to
negotiate, these principles will always be on the table."

The Madrid principles have also been rejected by some leading members
of the main opposition Armenian National Congress (HAK). The alliance’s
top leader, former President Levon Ter-Petrosian, was forced to
resign in 1998 because of his vigorous advocacy of a similar peace
accord drafted by the Minsk Group co-chairs in 1997. It too called
for Armenian withdrawal from at least six of the seven occupied
Azerbaijani districts but contained no mechanisms for determining
Karabakh’s status, the main bone of contention.

Some of Ter-Petrosian’s close associates say that the 1997 deal
is better than what the mediators have proposed to Kocharian and
Sarkisian. In particular, they claim that under that plan the occupied
lands would not necessarily be placed back under Azerbaijani control
after the Armenian pullout from them.

Oskanian, who served as foreign minister from 1998-2008, insisted
that in 1997 the international community sought Karabakh’s eventual
return under Azerbaijani rule and came to terms with its de facto
independence only during Kocharian’s presidency. "Sometimes we are
driven by revenge and don’t think before saying and doing something,"
he said in a clear reference to the Ter-Petrosian camp.

Oskanian argued that instead of rejecting the Madrid document out
of hand, Armenian opposition forces should focus on its crucial
details. "Today their task must be to clarify what the bar set by the
authorities is," he said. "Our bar was set high. I have many doubts
about today’s bar," he added, exposing fears that Sarkisian is ready
to make more concessions to Azerbaijan than Kocharian was.

The Minsk Group co-chairs said last week that they are working on
an "updated version" of the Madrid document to increase chances of
its acceptance by Baku and Yerevan. It is not yet clear just how
significant the changes made by them are.

Speaking in RFE/RL’s Yerevan studio, Oskanian also reaffirmed his
criticism of Sarkisian’s conciliatory policy towards Turkey that
has earned the latter plaudits in the West but has not produced any
tangible results so far. "Turkey has gotten from this Turkish-Armenian
process what it wanted," he said. "The Armenian side has not gained
anything yet."

Oskanian, who set up last year a private think-tank called Civilitas,
was unimpressed by Sarkisian’s recent announcement that he will
not travel to Turkey this October for the return match of the two
countries’ national football unless Ankara takes "real steps" to
reopen the Turkish-Armenian border. He said Sarkisian should have
made a more explicit linkage between the visit and an open border.

"He left the window open," the Syrian-born ex-minister said. "I
think that’s what the Turks want … I just don’t know when our
authorities will finally realize that the Turkish side is exploiting
the process. They should have realized that a long time ago."

http://www.azatutyun.am/content/article/1791603.h