Shadow of War Looms as Israel Flexes its Muscle

Shadow of War Looms as Israel Flexes its Muscle

Published on Sunday, June 29, 2008 by the Guardian/UK
by Peter Beaumont/Rory McCarthy/Tracy McVeigh/Paul Harris

Israeli fighter jets flew 1,500 kms across the Mediterranean this
month, in a dry run for an attack on Iran’s nuclear facilities. Tehran
has threatened to treat such a raid as a declaration of war. As the
Middle East braces itself for a stand-off of epic proportions, how
close is the region to that nightmare scenario?

The meeting at the home of Israel’s Prime Minister Ehud Olmert was not
supposed to be public. The man invited into Olmert’s official residence
in Jerusalem was Aviam Sela, architect of Operation Opera in 1981, when
Israel launched a long-range strike against Iraq’s Osirak nuclear
reactor. Regarded as a brilliant aviation tactician, in particular in
the field of in-flight refuelling, Olmert’s office tried to play down
the meeting. But the rumours in Israel’s defence establishment were
already flying.

Sela, according to sources close to the meeting, had been called in so
that Olmert could ask his opinion on the likely effectiveness of a
similar raid to Opera on the nuclear installations of Iran.

Peace in the Middle East depends on Sela’s and Israel’s answer.
Yesterday, responding to the Israel’s increasingly bellicose language,
Iran’s top Revolutionary Guards Commander, General Mohammad Ali Jafari,
warned that it would respond to any attack by hitting Israel with
missiles and threatened to control the oil shipping passage through the
Straits of Hormuz.

If Israel were to attack it would have to overcome considerable
practical problems. There is no one who believes that an attack on
Iran’s nuclear facilities would be anything like Opera, when eight
F-16s and a similar number of F-15s crept into Iraq. For one thing, in
pursuing its nuclear ambitions, Iran took note of the Osirak lessons.
Its facilities, including a light water reactor at Bushehr and the
controversial uranium enrichment process at Natanz, are dispersed and,
in the case of Natanz, protected by up to 23 metres of hardened
concrete.

To destroy the uranium centrifuge halls at Natanz alone, analysts have
argued, might require up to 80 5,000lb penetrating bombs dropped in
almost simultaneous pairs to allow the second bomb to burrow through
the crater of the first. Opera required just a handful of bombs.

To strike even the bare minimum of so-called target sets associated
with Natanz and Bushehr without the assistance of US cruise missiles
fired from their ships in the Persian Gulf would require a massive
military effort and, according to the Israeli air force’s own
assessments, might risk the loss of large numbers of its aircraft for a
temporary impact.

But the rumours keep circulating and the hushed briefings are
multiplying. In the Israeli Prime Minister’s traditional round of
interviews on the eve of Passover earlier this year, Olmert vowed that
Iran `will not be nuclear’.

Since then, a series of senior Israeli officials have added their own
warnings of the threat of an Israeli strike. Most strident has been
Deputy Prime Minister Shaul Mofaz who said earlier this month that
Israel would have no choice but to attack Iran.

Other officials, too, such as Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni and Israeli
ambassador to the US Sallai Meridor, have made less inflammatory
remarks but in a similar vein.

If the rhetoric, coming in the midst of an effort by the so-called G5+1
to persuade Iran to accept incentives to suspend uranium enrichment, is
alarming, then so too are Israel’s ostentatious preparations for war.

Earlier this month, the Israeli Air Force conducted one of the largest
aerial exercises in its history, flying 100 F-15 and F-16 fighter jets,
supported by midair fuel tankers and rescue helicopters, 1,500kms west
over the Mediterranean. That precisely matches the distance from Israel
to Iran’s nuclear facilities.

And while some of the messages amount to signalling, to warn Iran as
well as the EU and the US that Israel does not intend its nuclear
monopoly in the Middle East to be challenged, it is clear that Israel
has launched an aggressive information campaign apparently designed to
soften up public opinion for the case for war, reminiscent of the
run-up to the war against Iraq. Indeed, some of the same cast are back
on stage, not least the former US ambassador to the UN, John Bolton,
who has loudly been making the case for an Israeli strike.

Academics and journalists who have recently visited Israel have come
back from meetings convinced the country is getting ready for war. The
campaign has been assisted by the American Israel Public Affairs
Committee (Aipac) in the US and the Britain-Israel Communications and
Research Centre in the UK, two influential Jewish lobby groups who have
brought over experts to brief the media.

Last week, Bicom invited journalists to meet Shmuel Bar, a former
military intelligence officer and civil servant in the Prime Minister’s
Office. Now an academic, Bar writes on Iranian defence doctrine. On
Monday the same organisation will be hosting a member of Israel’s
security cabinet, Isaac `Bouji’ Herzog, who once again will answer
questions, among other issues, on the threat posed by Iran.

And at the centre of the present flurry of activity is the question of
exactly what threat is posed. The National Intelligence Estimate, the
official view of the US intelligence community is that Iran ceased work
on its secret weapons programme in 2003 (a view disowned by George
Bush). Israel’s assessment is that Tehran is two years from a bomb.

The mutual suspicion between Israel and Iran is at historic levels.
Israel cites the existential danger posed by an Iranian regime that has
suggested that the Jewish state would `vanish from the page of time’.

Iran points to statements such as the one made last week by the Israeli
Infrastructure Minister Benjamin Ben-Eliezer, a former defence chief.
In an interview published in the Russian press, Ben-Eliezer said that
Iran would be annihilated if it tried to attack Israel. In truth,
Israel’s concerns are as much concerned with regional strategic issues
as they are with the threat posed by Tehran, and in particular
maintaining the status of sole nuclear power in the region. A repeat of
the 2006 attack on Tehran’s ally Hizbollah in Lebanon would be more
difficult to contemplate with a nuclear Iran. By the same argument, a
nuclear Iran might embolden not only Hizbollah but Hamas in Gaza, too.

What is clear is that the push inside the Israeli establishment for a
strike is not being driven by the timetable of Iran’s mastery of the
technical aspects alone, but by geopolitical considerations. That point
was reinforced by Bar last week when he identified a window of
opportunity for a strike on Iran – ahead of the November presidential
election in the United States which could see Barack Obama take power,
and possibly engage with Syria and Iran. An Obama presidency would
close that window for Israel, says Bar.

`The support is almost unanimous for this in Israel. One hundred
percent. I don’t think there is anybody within Israel who sees Iran’s
threats as rhetoric. So the question is, when do we reach that bridge?’
he said, adding that the West is naive to believe that any kind of
negotiation will work. `The only thing that can stop Israel’s intent
[to bomb] would be extremely robust steps on the part of the West – a
blockade of Iranian refined oil, something that would indicate that
steps were meant to force regime change. Since that is not on the
cards, only bombing Iran will work.

`If it’s an Israeli attack they will put pressure on Iran’s Arab
neighbours to respond to the problem also. It will be
counter-productive for Iran to launch a major attack on Israel.

`So they will launch a few rockets at us; that is not devastating for
Israel,’ he said with a shrug. Israel’s case, as put by Bar, is that
`most of the Arab Middle East will side with the hope that Israel does
the job and not the US. And make no mistake that they all want the job
done. They will condemn it in public of course and then get on with
their lives,’ he said.

Har added that there would probably be another war with Lebanon – `a
month or two months, that is as long as the Middle East has wars for.
We can easily cope with that. That’s the nature of life in this region.
We will set the Iranian programme back and yes, then we will need to
come and take it out of existence again after that timeline. There will
be no total conclusion, I hesitate to call it the `final solution’, but
there are no such solutions.’

But despite Israel’s insistence that it has the will to go it alone, it
is aware that it must secure at the very least the agreement of the US
to turn a blind eye. And there are signs that the Bush White House is
deeply split on the issue of any possible Israeli military strike
against Iran.

Bush, vice-president Dick Cheney and the remnants of the
neoconservative lobby in Washington are believed to be sympathetic to
the idea. However, there are also those in strong positions, such as
Defence Secretary Robert Gates and some senior military chiefs, who are
thought to be privately opposed to such a move. `If it were up to Bush
and Cheney they would want to see this thing done,’ said Larry Johnson,
a former top CIA analyst. `But they are now up against a lot of
fundamental military realities that make it hard. The military has been
pushing back against this.’

Right-wing think-tanks, however, such as the American Enterprise
Institute and the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, have been
vocal in their advocation of confronting Iran. Indeed, the institute
recently produced a report on a theoretical military attack on Iran
authored by Patrick Clawson and Michael Eisenstadt, entitled `The Last
Resort: Consquences of Preventive Military Action Against Iran’.

The study fell short of recommending such an attack but it did provide
an exhaustive argument on why and how such an attack would work. That
led critics to dub it a blueprint for war with Iran. It suggested that
the possible best line of attack would in fact not be against Tehran’s
nuclear programme but against its oil industry, thus cutting off the
source of Iran’s current wealth. `The political shock of losing the oil
income would cause Iran to rethink its stance,’ the report suggested.

It comes at a time when a resolution has been put forward in Congress
calling for a naval blockade of Iran led by US warships. The proposal
calls for the United States to lead an international effort to cut off
the country by sea, something that would almost certainly by seen as an
act of war by Iran. The resolution has got huge support from Israeli
politicians and the country’s highly effective lobbying industry in
Washington, led perhaps inevitably by Aipac, which has made the issue
its legislative priority. `The war drums are beating. There is no doubt
about that,’ said Johnson.

A recent flurry of bilateral meetings between senior US and Israeli
military officials in recent weeks has contributed to a sense that
planning for a strike may be far advanced. Admiral Michael Mullen, the
chairman of the US joint chiefs of staff, travelled to Israel last week
for the second time in seven months, cutting short a tour of Europe to
meet with Lieutenant General Gabi Ashkenazi, Israel’s military chief.

Also last week, a senior Israeli foreign ministry official reportedly
travelled to Vienna for a rare meeting with the International Atomic
Energy Agency to encourage them to work more quickly on strategies to
block Iran’s nuclear programme. Although an American government
spokesman in Washington said the meeting had been scheduled several
months in advance, he added: `Obviously, when Chairman Mullen goes to
Israel and speaks with the Israelis, they will no doubt discuss the
threat posed by Iran.’

Paradoxically, Israel has adopted a much less confrontational approach
elsewhere in the region: there is the admittedly tenuous Gaza ceasefire
and a prisoner swap with the Lebanese militant group Hizbollah is
close. There are indirect talks under way with the Syrians and Israel
has called for a direct dialogue with Lebanon. Talks with the
Palestinians, however frail, none the less continue.

And amid the talk of windows of opportunity and the dry runs for
missile strikes, more moderate voices are managing to make themselves
heard. Ephraim Halevy, a former head of the intelligence agency Mossad,
told a meeting of the Jewish Agency in Jerusalem on Tuesday that Iran’s
nuclear ambitions did not represent an existential threat to Israel.

`I am convinced that Israel cannot be destroyed,’ Halevy said. `We
should not sink into the doldrums of `Israel is on the verge of
extinction’.’ Ultimately, he said, the United States would talk to
Iran, and Israel needed to be part of that dialogue.

Martin Van Creveld, Israel’s leading military historian, said there
were some in the Israeli government who were indeed serious about a
military option. But he said the Iranian president, Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad, would probably not be affected by Israel flexing its
military muscles. `I would be very surprised if the Iranians cave in. I
think they are going to follow the same road as every nuclear country
has followed since the 1960s [including Israel]; namely they are going
to build nuclear weapons without admitting it,’ he said. `And I don’t
see this made the world into a worse place. I am convinced the outcome
is going to be a balance of power and I personally think that a nuclear
Iran may not be such a bad thing for the world¦ Iran is a third-world
country. I don’t see why people are so afraid of it.’

Prime Minister Olmert, and the hawks around him, may take some
convincing of that.

OSCE MG Co-chairs off to Stepanakert

PanARMENIAN.Net

OSCE MG Co-chairs off to Stepanakert
28.06.2008 15:21 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ On June 28, the OSCE Minsk Group Co-chairs,
Ambassadors Yuri Merzlyakov, Matt Bryza and Bernard Fassier left
Yerevan for Stepanakert to discuss Madrid proposals with the NKR
leadership. OSCE CiO’s Personal Representative, Ambassador Andrzej
Kasprzyk will also be present at the meetings.

Then the mediators will return to Yerevan.

Further consultations will be held in Moscow and Vienna where the
mediators will brief on the outcomes of their regional visit.

OSCE MG: Armenian, Azeri President Appreciated St. Petersburg Meetin

OSCE MG: ARMENIAN, AZERI PRESIDENT APPRECIATED ST. PETERSBURG MEETING

PANARMENIAN.NET
28.06.2008 14:09 GMT+04:00

Osce Minsk Group Co-Chairs Matthew Bryza (U.S.), Bernard Fassier
(France) And Yuri Merzlyakov (Russia) Have Finalized Their Visit
To Azerbaijan.

"AN AGREEMENT TO CONTINUE TALKS ON THE BASIS OF MADRID PROPOSALS WAS
ACHIEVED," AMBASSADOR MERZLYAKOV SAID.

He reminded that two weeks have passed since the St. Petersburg meeting
between the Armenian and Azerbaijani Presidents and said the co-chairs
try not to lose the time.

For his part, Amb. Fassier said the co-chairs didn’t submit
any new proposals. "We are trying to clarify some provisions of
Madrid proposals and introduce some amendments to improve them. The
presidents appreciated their meeting in St. Petersburg as positive
and constructive. Our meetings in Azerbaijan were also positive and
constructive, but we have huge work ahead".

Commenting on the visit, U.S. Co-chair Matt Bryza said, "We will
leave for Yerevan and then for Stepanakert. Essentially we will learn
Yerevan’s attitude about Madrid proposals. This visit is not different
from previous ones. Simply, it is our first visit to the region after
the presidential meeting in St. Petersburg. The Presidents should
keep intercourse with each other but first the Foreign Ministers
should meet to coordinate some issues," the Azeri Press Agency reports.

Western Prelacy News – 06/27/2008

June 27, 2008
Press Release
Western Prelacy of the Armenian Apostolic Church of America
H.E. Archbishop Moushegh Mardirossian, Prelate
6252 Honolulu Avenue
La Crescenta, CA 91214
Tel: (818) 248-7737
Fax: (818) 248-7745
E-mail: [email protected]
Website:

PRELATE TO CELEBRATE DIVINE LITURGY AND PRESIDE OVER PONTIFICAL THANKSGIVING
PRAYER
AT FORTY MARTYRS CHURCH

Sunday, June 29th, is the Feast of the Transfiguration of our Lord
Jesus Christ which is also known as Vartavar. On this occasion, H.E.
Archbishop Moushegh Mardirossian, Prelate, will celebrate Divine Liturgy and
deliver the sermon at Forty Martyrs Church in Orange County.
Given that it is also the 13th anniversary of the election and
consecration of H.H. Aram I, Catholicos of the Great House of Cilicia, by
the ordinance of the Prelate Pontifical Thanksgiving prayers (Hayrabedagan
Maghtank) will be offered in all Prelacy Churches. The Prelate will preside
over the Pontifical prayer service at Forty Martyrs Church during Divine
Liturgy.
Following Divine Liturgy, a reception will take place at "Gugasian"
Hall where faithful will have the opportunity to congratulate the Prelate on
his re-election.
At 2:30 p.m., Very Rev. Fr. Barthev Gulumian will lecture on the
topic, "Christian Education and the Armenian Youth". The lecture has been
organized by the parish Pastor, Board of Trustees, and Ladies Auxiliary.
At 5:00 p.m., the Prelate will preside over the renaming ceremony of
the Armenian Center which will be named in honor of Professor Harout
Barsamian who recently made a generous donation to the center.

EVENING SERVICES AT THE PRELACY CHAPEL ON THE FEAST OF ST. THADDEUS AND ST.
SANTOOKHT

Saturday, July 5th, is the Feast of St. Thaddeus and St. Santookht,
the first martyrs of the Armenian nation. On this occasion, the Prelate
will preside over evening services at the "St. Dertad and St. Ashkhen"
Chapel. Clergy members will also participate in the service which begins at
6:00 p.m.

BLESSING OF WATER WITH NEW HOLY MURON TAKES PLACE IN PRELACY CHURCHES

On Sunday, June 22nd, by the ordinance of H.E. Archbishop Moushegh
Mardirossian, Prelate, the blessing of water with new Holy Muron took place
in all Prelacy Churches during Divine Liturgy. The water was distributed to
the parishioners at the conclusion of the Liturgy so for them to be renewed
by the revitalizing Holy Muron.
The Prelate presided over Divine Liturgy at Holy Martyrs in Encino
and conducted the blessing of water with the participation of H.E.
Archbishop Yeprem Tabakian and clergy members. Executive Council Chairman
Dr. Garo Agopian, council members, and a large number of faithful were in
attendance.
In his sermon the Prelate spoke of the blessing of the Holy Muron
which had taken place two weeks prior on June 7th, and emphasized the deep
significance of the Muron for the Armenian Apostolic Church and in the lives
of each individual faithful as the bridge to our centuries-old spiritual
values.
The blessing of water also took place in the distant parishes of the
Prelacy by Archpriest Fr. Khoren Habeshian at the Armenian Apostolic Church
of Colorado and the Rocky Mountain Region, and Very Rev. Fr. Barthev
Gulumian at the Corona, Riverside County parish. On Sunday, June 29th, the
blessing of water will take place at St. Gregory Church in San Francisco by
Very Rev. Fr. Muron Aznikian. The blessing of water at the Las Vegas parish
was conducted by the Prelate during Divine Liturgy on Sunday, June 15th.

DELEGATION FROM THE A.R.F CENTRAL COMMITTEE
VISITS THE PRELACY

On the evening of Tuesday, June 24th, a delegation from the A.R.F.
Central Committee visited the Prelacy where they were welcomed by H.E.
Archbishop Moushegh Mardirossian, Prelate, and Executive Council members.
They delegation, which was headed by Mr. Avedik Izmirlian, had come to
congratulate the Prelate on his re-election to a fourth term.
After congratulating the Prelate and Executive Council on their
elections, Mr. Izmirlian conveyed his wishes for the successful realization
of the future endeavors of the Prelacy and Councils in their mission to
provide for the needs of our community.
The Prelate greeted the members of the delegation and outlined the
work that is carried out by the Prelacy and committees functioning under its
jurisdiction. The Prelate put special emphasis on the needs of our youth,
which are being provided for by the Prelacy youth groups, day schools and
Sunday schools, the challenges facing our youth and community in general and
means in which to overcome them.
Remarks were also offered by Executive Council Chairman Dr. Garo
Agopian who spoke of the collaboration that exists between the various
community organizations and of ways to develop and enhance that cooperation.
The meeting concluded with the Prelate presenting the guests with
mementos from the Blessing of Holy Muron.
PRELATE WELCOMES A DELEGATION FROM
THE ARMENIAN ECCLESIASTICAL BROTHERHOOD

On the morning of Tuesday, June 24th, H.E. Archbishop Moushegh
Mardirossian, Prelate, welcomed a delegation form the Armenian
Ecclesiastical Brotherhood who had come to congratulate the Prelate on his
re-election to a fourth term. Christian Education Directors Very Rev.
Fathers Muron Aznikian and Barthev Gulumian participated in the meeting as
well.
The Prelate commended the members for the work they carry out, which
involves passing on our Christian faith and national values to the next
generation. The delegation reported on their activities, which is in
keeping with traditions and canons of our church, and which spans from
Lebanon to the Diaspora.
At the conclusion of their meeting the Prelate presented the members
with mementos from the Blessing of Holy Muron which took place on June 7th,
and stressed that the collaboration between the Prelacy and the
Ecclesiastical Brotherhood will continue.

PRELATE ATTENDS ARMENIA FUND RECEPTION

On the evening of Tuesday, June 24th, a reception organized by
Armenia Fund took place at the Glendale Hilton with the participation of Mr.
Ara Hovsepian, Chief Executive Director of the Millennium Challenge Account
– Armenia, who gave the guests information about the projects of the MCC.
The Prelate attended the reception and conveyed his blessings,
support, and well wishes. Consul General of Armenia the Honorable Armen
Liloyan also participated in the meeting as well as board members.
On July 2nd the Prelate and Executive Council member Mr. Meher Der
Ohanessian will participate in the Armenia Fund Corporate Board Meeting,
during which the outcome of the recent international board meeting in
Armenia will be discussed as well as preparations for the Telethon.

PRELATE WELCOMES REPRESENTATIVES FROM
"THE FRIENDS OF ARMENIAN ARTS"

On the afternoon of Tuesday, June 24th, the Prelate welcomed a
delegation from "The Friends of Armenian Arts". The representatives had
come to congratulate the Prelate on his re-election, as well as to convey
information about their work with the Tbilisi’s Petros Adamyan State
Armenian Drama Theatre. They reported to the Prelate that the theatre
troupe is scheduled to perform in September and October at Glendale High
School. The Prelate wished the representatives success in their future
endeavors.

PRELATE MEETS WITH REPRESENTATIVES OF
AUTISM INTERNATIONAL FOUNDATION

On the afternoon of Wednesday, June 25th, H.E. Archbishop Moushegh
Mardirossian, Prelate, welcomed representatives of Autism International
Foundation who had come to the Prelacy to familiarize the Prelate with their
work and mission. The delegation was comprised of President Dr. Ira
Heilveil, Arpi Arabian, and Arpine Avdalyan-Sargsyan.
To begin with, the representatives conveyed details to the Prelate
about the nature of the disorder and reported that the Autism International
Foundation provides services to children diagnosed with the disorder
domestically as well as internationally.
Members of the foundation first had the opportunity to work with
Armenian children in 2006 and now provide services to autistic children in
Armenia through the Armenian International Child Development Center in
Yerevan. Dr. Heilveil went on to say that the purpose of their visit was
primarily to keep the Prelate informed of the work of the center in Armenia,
and to receive his blessings and support.
The Prelate highly commended the representatives and the foundation
for their and requested further information on the nature of their
humanitarian work as well as expressed his full support of their endeavors.

PRELATE TO ATTEND 33RD NAVASARTIAN VICTORY BALL

On the evening of Saturday, June 28th, the 33rd Navasartian Victory
Ball will take place at CBS Studio Center in Studio City. The Ball has been
organized by the Homenetmen Regional Executive. The Prelate will attend and
convey his blessings.
The 33rd Navasartian Games/Festival will take place from July 3rd to
the 6th at Birmingham High School.

www.westernprelacy.org

In 2008 Union Of Banks Of Armenia Is Planning To Enlarge Its Interna

IN 2008 UNION OF BANKS OF ARMENIA IS PLANNING TO ENLARGE ITS INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION WITH FOREIGN PARTNERS

ArmInfo
2008-06-23 17:28:00

This year the Union of Banks of Armenia (UBA) is planning to enlarge
its international cooperation with foreign partners, the president
of the UBA Emil Sogomonyan said during the June 21 annual conference
in Dilijan.

The Union is planning to obtain information from the European Banking
Federation (EBF) and to provide to it to its members as well as to take
part in the EBF’s conferences and seminars. The UBA will actively work
to create favorable conditions for the activities of Armenian banks,
particularly, by improving the legislation and developing the banking
system in cooperation with the Central Bank, the National Assembly
and the Government.

The UBA is planning to carry out a number of projects to enhance
people’s confidence in banks.

In 2007 and in the first half of 2008 the UBA otganized a number
of events, particularly, the meeting of the managers of banks with
the president of Armenia and the "English debates" jointly with
AmRating/GlobalRating Group and USAID.

Demanding Reply From Government

DEMANDING REPLY FROM GOVERNMENT

A1+
19 June, 2008

Like every Thursday a group of people staged a protest action at
the Governmental Buildings today. Mothers of dead soldiers showed
their sons pictures demanding that the murderers be punished. Another
group of people held Arman Babajanian’s picture and demanded to set
him free. Still others, deprived of their property rights, shouted:
"Thieves!", "Robbers!"

Parents of the soldiers killed in the Army demanded a special
commission that would be engaged in the process of discovering the
real murderers. In their words their sons have been killed, but they
were severely beaten before they died.

"My 21-year-old son was killed in the military units of Stepanavan
last year on April 15. He used to be a junior sergeant. I do not
understand how they can conceal such kind of murders," said murdered
Gegham Sergoyan’s father.

"Who did our children die for?" asked the parents.

They were accepted by Defense Minister Seyran Ohanian who told
them that the murders were committed before he was appointed to the
post. He also noted that the Ministry had a special commission formed
to investigate the case.

Regarding the other groups staging a protest action MP of the
"Heritage" Party Zaruhi Postanjian stated: "The attitude of the
Government should be changed and Arman Babajanian should be released
ahead of the detention term together with the other political
prisoners."

JSC Comstar-UTS Gets Spectrum In Armenia For Wimax Services

JSC COMSTAR-UTS GETS SPECTRUM IN ARMENIA FOR WIMAX SERVICES

RIA Oreanda
June 18 2008
Russia

Moscow. OREANDA-NEWS . On 18 June 2008 United Telesystems, the
largest integrated telecommunications operator in Russia and the CIS,
announced that, CJSC Cornet-, a subsidiary of JSC Comstar-UTS in
Armenia, has been awarded the frequencies by the Armenian Commission
for Regulation of Public Services on June 11 in the 3660-3700 MHz
band for a ten-year period for the use in the following regions of
Armenia: Aragatsotn, Ararat, Armavir, Gegarkunik, Lory, Kotayk,
Shirak, Sunik and Tavush. The frequencies have been allocated to
Cornet- for operation of its wireless access network.

This spectrum part was needed to set up WiMAX-based telecom channels
in the Cornet- network now under construction and to provide wireless
access network services in general.

Construction of the wireless Internet access network based on WiMAX
802.16 started in spring 2008. Equipment for base stations is being
supplied by Airspan Networks (USA). The first stage of the project
implies installation of 24 base stations with capacity enough to
cover 19 cities of Armenia, including its capital Erevan. In future,
it is intended to expand the footprint. In parallel, Cornet- also
builds new backbone trunks of its own .

JSC Comstar-UTS is set to make the WiMAX network operational in
the second half of 2008. The network will enable such services as
broadband Internet, data transfer, VPNs, local and DLD/ILD calling.

JSC Comstar-UTS is actually building in Armenia a nationwide
telecommunication network. Wireless technologies will allow us to
deliver telecommunications services to the farthest corners of the
country.

Moreover, the regions will get the same telecom services, in terms of
quality and variety, as the Armenian capital, – underscored Boris
Demirkhanyan, CEO of Cornet-. With launching this new network,
we enter the residential market, and will provide services both to
corporate users and individuals.

$500mln Required For Complete Reconstruction Of Wine-Growing In Arme

$500MLN REQUIRED FOR COMPLETE RECONSTRUCTION OF WINE-GROWING IN ARMENIA

ARKA
June 18

About $500mln are required for complete reconstruction of wine-growing
in Armenia, the Chairman of Armenia’s Union of Wine-Makers Avag
Harutiunian said.

Under the long-term development program, the most important is to
take measures against phyloxera that is widely spread everywhere in
the world except the Ararat Valley and Vayots Dzor of Armenia, China,
Chili and Cyprus, he said.

According to Harutiunian, major investors do not come to the Armenian
market as they cannot effect phyloxera risks insurance. Foreign
investors insist on either replacing the grapes in Ararat
Valley with their own grapes (which contain a risk of phyloxera
infection) or replacing the grapes root with the American one
that is phyloxera-resistant (which is forbidden under the Armenian
legislation), he said.

Planting and growing grapes on a hectare will take 5 years and will
cost from 12,000 to 15,000 dollars, Harutiunian said.

He pointed out that under the minimum program about $4mln is needed
for construction of a small winery to produce up to 500,000 bottles
of wine every year ($6mln for a big winery).

Production of good wine is impossible without these investments,
he said.

Armenia can produce good wine costing 4-10 Euros not earlier than in
5-10 years and among wines costing between 15 and 30 Euros it can take
up a niche in some 20-25 years when new vineyards will be developed,
Harutiunian said.

Dutch Diplomat: Netherlands Interested In Strengthening Relations Wi

DUTCH DIPLOMAT: NETHERLANDS INTERESTED IN STRENGTHENING RELATIONS WITH ARMENIA

PanARMENIAN.Net
17.06.2008 17:15 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenia’s Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian
met with the Netherlands’ Ambassador to Armenia Onno Elderenbosch
(residence in Tbilisi) to discuss bilateral relations.

The RA Foreign Minister endorsed mutual visits and political dialogue
between Armenia and the Netherlands and appreciated the latter
for assistance in implementation of WB and IMF-sponsored programs
in Armenia.

For his part, Amb. Elderenbosch said that his country is interested
in strengthening relations with Armenia.