Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan Meets With Argentinean Billionaire

ARMENIAN PRESIDENT SERZH SARGSYAN MEETS WITH ARGENTINEAN BILLIONAIRE OF ARMENIAN ORIGIN EDUARDO EURNEKIAN

ArmInfo
2009-11-25 16:33:00

ArmInfo. Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan has met with Argentinean
billionaire of Armenian origin Eduardo Eurnekian.

The press service of the President reports that Eurnekian told
Sargsyan about the investment programs he is implementing or is going
to implement in different sectors of the Armenian economy. He said
that the global crisis has not hindered them. Sargsyan pointed out
the importance of the construction of the new complex of Zvartnots
Airport. The new complex will be able to serve as many as 3,000,000
passengers a year. The President also pointed out the need to improve
the quality of postal service in both cities and rural areas.

He pointed out Eurnekian’s efforts in the field of agricultural
processing. Sargsyan said that Armenia supports the use of innovative
and fresh ideas in the field of agriculture. The use of modern
technologies and innovative solutions in agriculture will stimulate
other industries and will foster the complex development of rural
communities.

Eduardo Eurnekian is the owner of Converse Bank. His companies are the
concessionaires of the national post operator Haypost and Zvartnost
and Shirak airports. His Tierras de Armenia company owns 2,300 h of
agricultural lands.

Swine Flu Not Confirmed With The Dead Patient

SWINE FLU NOT CONFIRMED WITH THE DEAD PATIENT

armradio.am
24.11.2009 17:20

A man died of flu at the Infection Hospital of Nork. The type of
flu has not been confirmed yet, chief infectologist Ara Asoyan told
"Radiolur." The patient had been hospitalized 8-9 days ago.

"If a death case has been registered at the reanimation department of
the infection hospital, it must not necessarily be tied to swine flu.

We’ll announce the final results after we get the results of bacterial
examination in three weeks," Ara Asoyan said.

The chief infectologist informed that 23 out of 25 patients with
swine flu have already been discharged from hospital.

"Only two patients are in hospital now. They are completely healthy,
but they will be kept in hospital for another two days in order not
to infect the family," he said.

Rumblings of Instability in Azerbaijan http://www.businessweek.com/g

Eastern Europe November 24, 2009, 9:52AM EST

Rumblings of Instability in Azerbaijan Rich on oil, the Caspian
nation said it had escaped global downturn until the evidence was
irrefutable. Now dissent is rising – and the call of Islam is growing

By Maciej Falkowski
< os/Maciej_Falkowski.htm>

Although it is just the beginning of June, the sun has instantly warmed the
old Soviet buildings of Patamdart, a quarter of Baku located in the city’s
southern hills. Around noon staying inside becomes unbearable, and there has
been no running water for the last few days. On some evenings the flat is
lit only by the light of a cheap candle. The warm, dusty wind blowing from
Iran rattles the windows and stirs up piles of rubbish. Dawn brings the
crowing of cocks and the noises of cows and sheep that are being slaughtered
and flayed in the street.

Jaga, a taxi driver, roams the streets of Baku every night, fighting for
every fare with other self-appointed cabbies. In his spare time he visits
his friend Ludmila in a neighboring block of flats or drinks vodka with his
buddies, smoking marijuana and cheap cigarettes under the portraits of the
ancient Shia imams Ali and Hussein that hang on the walls. They chat about
the good old Soviet times, recalling their past Armenian neighbors, and
mocking the TV news in which President Ilham Aliev once again promises to
recapture Karabakh from the Armenians.

"They lie and deceive us every day," said Ramiz, who along with Jaga’s two
other friends helps build mobile phone towers. "It’s all about money. You
have to pay the doctors, clerks, police. Where am I supposed to get the
money for all the bribes? Prices keep rising, but our salaries don’t."

Economic data published by the government and international organizations
are marvelous. In 2006, the country’s GDP rose by 30.5 percent, in 2007, by
23.3 percent, according to the IMF. At that time Azerbaijan was the world’s
fastest growing economy. The country remains financially stable, its budget
is balanced, and unemployment does not exceed several percent.

Baku flaunts its oil money. It’s in the good road from the new airport, the
skyscrapers springing up in the center, the lavish *dachas* by the seaside,
villas belonging to government officials surrounded by several-meter-high
fences with black Hummers parked in front. The fountains on Neftchilar
Avenue, continually watered lawns surrounding the Old Town, and thousands of
billboards showing old Baku that have recently been erected all around the
city. The expensive perfume shops, the restaurants and air-conditioned
hotels for foreigners.

Most of those foreigners will never come to Patamdart, nor to the villages
of the Apsheron peninsula a few kilometers from Baku, where time stopped
over a hundred years ago. Here, people live next to oil wells, children play
in puddles of oil, and rivers look like a mixture of sewage and petrol.

In the wake of the global financial crisis the government remained silent
about the effects on Azerbaijan and its economy.

"The whole world was already struggling with the crisis, but our government
still claimed that it had miraculously bypassed Azerbaijan thanks to the
weak integration of the Azerbaijani economy with the global market," said
Hikmet Hajizade, director of the FAR Center for Political and Economic
Research in Baku. "It wasn’t until oil prices dramatically fell and Baku’s
construction sites came to a standstill that the government officially
admitted that there was something to it."

The crisis is hitting ordinary people increasingly hard. Many factories have
stopped production, the construction industry is plagued with enormous
problems, wages are paid only after long delays, and, although down from
about 20 percent in 2008, inflation is expected to remain troublesome this
year, according to the IMF.

Compared with Georgia and Armenia, where opposition demonstrations and other
destabilizing events happen relatively often, Azerbaijan seems stable. The
country saw the last turbulent moments in 2003, when the authorities put
down opposition protests staged after rigged presidential elections. But the
lack of visible signs of potential destabilization in Azerbaijan is
misleading.

Beliefs about Azerbaijan’s internal stability are based on the common
conviction that Aliev’s position is strong and that he sets the rules and
makes most important decisions independently, especially those on foreign
policy and the oil industry. That he is like his father, Heidar, president
from 1993 to 2003, a cunning and experienced player whom officials simply
feared.

But when speaking privately, Azerbaijani experts question the position of
Aliev Jr.

"Ilham is an indecisive man who fears contacts with journalists, avoids
speaking in public, and has a weakness for risk," commented a well-known
Azerbaijani political scientist speaking on condition of anonymity. "He has
proved during his first term in office that he is a gifted and clever
politician, but cannot equal his father as far as political games are
concerned."

Indeed, Ilham differs from his father in almost everything. He has a
different character, personal and political experience. Heidar was a product
of the KGB and the leader of a strong clan from Nakhichevan, an Azeri
exclave sandwiched between Iran and Armenia. By contrast, Ilham studied at
the prestigious Moscow University and has much closer ties to Baku’s
intellectual elite and the community of his Baku-born wife, Mehriban, than
to the people of Nakhichevan.

Perhaps the best measure of an autocrat’s power is his ability to conduct
political purges, to remove his predecessor’s people and nominate his own.
Turkmen President Gurbanguly Berdymukhammedov’s purge of the state
administration following his rise to power after the death of Saparmurat
Niyazov is one example. Ilham has come close only once: in November 2005,
when he imprisoned two cabinet ministers, Farhad Aliev and Ali Insanov.
Nevertheless, most members of the old guard kept their offices. Many
commentators on the Azerbaijani political scene claim that it is they,
especially the chief of the president’s administration, Ramiz Mekhtiev, and
Interior Minister Ramil Usubov, not the president, who rule from behind the
scenes.

Adding to the president’s weakness is the growing dissatisfaction of the
elites with the rule of two clans: the Nakhichevan clan and one that groups
Azerbaijanis originally from Armenia (the so-called Eraz – from the Russian
phrase *erevanskie azerbaidjantsy* meaning Yerevan Azerbaijanis), who have
dominated the political life of Azerbaijan and whose members hold almost all
offices in the central and regional administrations.

"The conflicts and tensions within the ruling elites, including those
between the Nakhichevanis and the Eraz, are another threat," said Leyla
Aliyeva of the Center for National and International Studies, a
pro-democracy think tank in Baku. "They are fueled by the rivalry over the
division of oil money."

The assassination of Deputy Defense Minister Rail Rzayev in February could
have been a signal that the rivalry is getting fierce, according to many
commentators. In early October General Prosecutor Zakir Garalov said the
general was probably killed by his subordinates.

NOT THE WEST, BUT ISLAM

Among the major threats to Azerbaijan’s internal stability are massive
corruption, nepotism, and the dependence of the economy on energy resources.
No country struggling with such problems can be considered securely stable.

Few seem to notice the growing discontent in Azerbaijani society. But based
on dozens of conversations I had with political analysts and ordinary
people, I would say that many Azerbaijanis have lost their belief in a
better future. Common people often stress that they no longer believe that
they will share the profits from oil and gas sales. They do not trust the
government, perceiving its members as "parasites" who care only for their
own interest.

Tofiq, who has lived in Patamdart since 1993, when his family fled the
now-Armenian-occupied Zangilan region, is typical. "How can I trust the
government, which promises to recapture Karabakh from the Armenians every
year, but has so far done nothing to fulfill these promises? Why are they
lying? All they care about are their own pockets, not ordinary people."

Azerbaijani society has been passive for years and has represented no threat
for the regime. But signs of change are there for those who look.

"Unrest among young people is on the rise: they discuss, set up their
organizations, opposition websites, and blogs," said Hajizade, of the FAR
Center. "Baku’s walls are splattered with hundreds of belligerent graffiti:
from ‘F**k Bush’ to ‘Allah Akbar.’ Leftist movements are also gaining
popularity."

The events that took place in Baku after a gunman killed between 13
and 30 people (the actual number remains undisclosed) at the State Oil
Academy on 30 April were another measure of the growing
dissatisfaction. After the attack people expected the government to
announce national mourning and disclose detailed information about the
results of the investigation. Meanwhile, the government tried to
cover up the incident and did not even call off the Holiday of Flowers
on 10 May, Heidar Aliev’s birthday. In response, students organized a
street march that attracted more than 2,000 people and was dispersed
by the police. Possibly fearing that protests might continue, the
authorities called off all events planned to celebrate the end of the
academic year.

The growing influence of Islam, including its radical versions, could also
help destabilize the internal situation. As recently as a few years ago
everyone would stare at a woman dressed in a *hijab*, whereas today there
are so many that nobody seems to pay attention. On Fridays, the Baku mosques
fill up, unthinkable only a few years ago in this strongly secular society.
And the city was the site of demonstrations in support of the Palestinians
during the recent conflict in the Gaza Strip.

"Only Islam can save Azerbaijan from the influence of the rotten West," said
Mukhtar, a student at the State Oil Academy. "The role of Islam in
Azerbaijan’s public life should be stronger, and the government should
cooperate not only with the U.S., but also with Muslim countries."

That disillusionment with the West is a new phenomenon in Azerbaijan, and it
is getting stronger. Many Azerbaijanis perceive the West as a cynical player
that calls for democratization but values Azerbaijani oil more. The West is
also commonly perceived as supporting Aliev’s authoritarian regime.
Azerbaijani opposition politicians, advocacy groups, and pro-Western elites
criticize international organizations and Western governments who they say
are not sufficiently critical of the government and who try not to let
authoritarian practices and human rights abuses impede relations with Baku.
They often recall the government’s violent suppression of the demonstrations
against the rigged presidential election of 2003. Although the West
criticized the government at the time, opposition and civil society
activists had hoped for a "color revolution" and looked on bitterly as
Western officials continued to do business with Aliev.

"The strongest criticism is directed toward the U.S., on whose support
everyone relied and counted only a few years ago," said Arif Yunusov from
the Institute for Peace and Democracy. "The Azerbaijanis do not like the
materialism and high-spending lifestyle of Western diplomats and NGO workers
living in Baku, who isolate themselves from the local people, often even
despise them. The policy of the West toward the world of Islam and its
insufficiently active stance in the Karabakh conflict is also regarded with
common disapproval."

In view of such an attitude toward the West and the common disillusionment
with Western values, assurances made by politicians about the pro-Western
course of the government sound barely credible.

"We’ll get by," said Jaga, opening another bottle of Xirdalan beer, "if only
things don’t get worse." But what if they do?

Maciej Falkowski is an analyst with the Center for Eastern Studies in
Warsaw, specializing in the Caucasus and Central Asia.

http://www.businessweek.com/print/bi

Former Soviet States: Battleground For Global Domination

FORMER SOVIET STATES: BATTLEGROUND FOR GLOBAL DOMINATION
By Rick Rozoff

ticle_5302.shtml
Nov 24, 2009, 00:19

A Europe united under the EU and especially NATO is to be strong
enough to contain, isolate and increasingly confront Russia as the
central component of U.S. plans for control of Eurasia and the world,
but cannot be allowed to conduct an independent foreign policy,
particularly in regard to Russia and the Middle East. European NATO
allies are to assist Washington in preventing the emergence of "the
most dangerous scenario . . . a grand coalition of China, Russia,
and perhaps Iran" such as has been adumbrated since in the Shanghai
Cooperation Organization.

Four years after the publication of The Grand Chessboard, Brzezinski’s
recommended chess move was made: The U.S. and NATO invaded Afghanistan
and expanded into Central Asia where Russian, Chinese and Iranian
interests converge and where the basis for their regional cooperation
existed, and Western military bases were established in the former
Soviet republics of Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan, where they
remain for the indefinite future.

As the United States escalates its joint war with NATO in Afghanistan
and across the Pakistani border, expands military deployments and
exercises throughout Africa under the new AFRICOM, and prepares to
dispatch troops to newly acquired bases in Colombia as the spearhead
for further penetration of that continent, it is simultaneously
targeting Eurasia and the heart of that vast land mass, the countries
of the former Soviet Union.

Within months of the formal breakup of the Union of Soviet Socialist
Republics in December of 2001, leading American policy advisers
and government officials went to work devising a strategy to insure
that the fragmentation was final and irreversible. And to guarantee
that the fifteen new nations emerging from the ruins of the Soviet
Union would not be allied in even a loose association such as the
Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) founded in the month of the
Soviet Union’s dissolution.

Three of the former Soviet republics, the Baltic states of Estonia,
Latvia and Lithuania, never joined the CIS and in 2004 became full
members of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, in all three cases
placing the U.S.-led military bloc on Russian borders.

That left 11 other former republics to be weaned from economic,
political, infrastructural, transportation and defense sector
integration with Russia, integration that was extensively and
comprehensively developed for the seventy four years of the USSR’s
existence and in many cases for centuries before during the Czarist
period.

A change of its socio-economic system and the splintering of the nation
with the world’s largest territory only affected U.S. policy toward
former Soviet space insofar as it led to Washington and its allies
coveting and moving on a vast expanse of Europe and Asia hitherto
off limits to it.

Two months after the end of the Soviet Union then U.S. Undersecretary
of Defense for Policy Paul Wolfowitz and his deputy in the Pentagon,
Lewis Libby, authored what became known as the Defense Planning
Guidance document for the years 1994-99. Some accounts attribute the
authorship to Libby and Zalmay Khalilzad under Wolfowitz’s tutelage.

Afghan-born Khalilzad is a fellow alumnus of Wolfowitz at the
University of Chicago and worked under him in the Ronald Reagan
State Department starting in 1984. From 1985-1989 he was the Reagan
administration’s special adviser on the proxy war against the
Soviet Union in Afghanistan and on the Iran-Iraq war. In the first
capacity he coordinated the Mujahideen war against the government
of Afghanistan waged from Pakistan along with Deputy Director of
the Central Intelligence Agency Robert Gates, now U.S. Secretary of
Defense. (Gates has a doctorate degree in Russian and Soviet Studies,
as does his former colleague the previous U.S. secretary of state
Condoleezza Rice.)

The main recipient of U.S. arms and training within the Mujahideen
coalition during those years was Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, whose still
extant armed group Hezb-e-Islami assisted in driving American troops
out of Camp Keating in Afghanistan’s Nuristan province this October.

Hekmatyar remains in Afghanistan heading the Hezb-e-Islami and top
U.S. and NATO military commander General Stanley McChrystal in his
Commander’s Initial Assessment of September — which called for a
massive increase in American troops for the war — identified the
party as one of three main insurgent forces that as many as 85,000
U.S. and thousands of NATO reinforcements will be required to fight.

The Wolfowitz-Libby-Khalilzad Defense Planning Guidance prototype
appeared in the New York Times on March 7, 1992 and to demonstrate
that the end of the Soviet Union and the imminent fall of the
Afghan government (Hekmatyar and his allies would march into Kabul
two months later) affected U.S. policy toward Russia not one jot
contained these passages:

"Our first objective is to prevent the re-emergence of a new rival,
either on the territory of the former Soviet Union or elsewhere,
that poses a threat on the order of that posed formerly by the
Soviet Union. This is a dominant consideration underlying the new
regional defense strategy and requires that we endeavor to prevent
any hostile power from dominating a region whose resources would,
under consolidated control, be sufficient to general global power."

"We continue to recognize that collectively the conventional forces
of the states formerly comprising the Soviet Union retain the most
military potential in all of Eurasia; and we do not dismiss the
risks to stability in Europe from a nationalist backlash in Russia or
efforts to reincorporate into Russia the newly independent republics
of Ukraine, Belarus, and possibly others. . . . We must, however,
be mindful that democratic change in Russia is not irreversible, and
that despite its current travails, Russia will remain the strongest
military power in Eurasia and the only power in the world with the
capability of destroying the United States."

In its original and revised versions the 46-page Defense Planning
Guidance document laid the foundation for what would informally
become known as the Wolfowitz Doctrine and later the Bush Doctrine,
indistinguishable in any essential manner from the Blair, alternately
known as Clinton, Doctrine enunciated in 1999: That the U.S. (with its
NATO allies) reserves the unquestioned right to employ military force
anywhere in the world at any time for whichever purpose it sees fit
and to effect "regime change" overthrows of any governments viewed
as being insufficiently subservient to Washington and its regional
and global designs.

Five years later, former Carter administration National Security
Adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski, who launched the Afghan Mujahideen support
project in 1978 and worked with Khalilzad at Colombia when the latter
was assistant professor of Political Science at the university’s School
of International and Public Affairs from 1979 to 1989 and Brzezinski
headed the Institute on Communist Affairs, wrote an article called
"A Geostrategy for Eurasia."

It was in essence a precis of his book of the same year, The Grand
Chessboard: American Primacy And It’s Geostrategic Imperatives, and
was published in Foreign Affairs, the journal of the New York-based
Council on Foreign Relations.

The framework for the piece is contained in this paragraph:
"America’s status as the world’s premier power is unlikely to be
contested by any single challenger for more than a generation. No
state is likely to match the United States in the four key dimensions
of power — military, economic, technological, and cultural —
that confer global political clout. Short of American abdication,
the only real alternative to American leadership is international
anarchy. President Clinton is correct when he says America has become
the world’s ‘indispensable nation.’"

Brzezinski identified the subjugation of Eurasia as Washington’s chief
global geopolitical objective, with the former Soviet Union as the
center of that policy and NATO as the main mechanism to accomplish
the strategy.

"Europe is America’s essential geopolitical bridgehead in Eurasia.

America’s stake in democratic Europe is enormous. Unlike America’s
links with Japan, NATO entrenches American political influence and
military power on the Eurasian mainland. With the allied European
nations still highly dependent on U.S. protection, any expansion of
Europe’s political scope is automatically an expansion of U.S.

influence. Conversely, the United States’ ability to project influence
and power in Eurasia relies on close transatlantic ties.

"A wider Europe and an enlarged NATO will serve the short-term and
longer-term interests of U.S. policy. A larger Europe will expand the
range of American influence without simultaneously creating a Europe
so politically integrated that it could challenge the United States on
matters of geopolitical importance, particularly in the Middle East. .

. ."

The double emigre — first from Poland, then from Canada — advocated a
diminished role for nation states, including the U.S., and Washington’s
collaboration in building a stronger Europe in furtherance of general
Western domination of Eurasia, the Middle East, Africa and the world
as a whole.

"In practical terms, all this will eventually require America’s
accommodation to a shared leadership in NATO, greater acceptance of
France’s concerns over a European role in Africa and the Middle East,
and continued support for the European Union’s eastward expansion even
as the EU becomes politically and economically more assertive. . . . A
new Europe is still taking shape, and if that Europe is to remain
part of the ‘Euro-Atlantic’ space, the expansion of NATO is essential."

While giving lip service to the role of the European Union, he left no
doubt as to which organization — the world’s only military bloc —
is to lead the charge in the conquest of the former Soviet Union as
well as the world’s "periphery." It is NATO.

Already stating in 1997, two years before his native Poland, the Czech
Republic and Hungary would become full members of the Alliance, that
"Ukraine, provided it has made significant domestic reforms and has
become identified as a Central European country, should also be ready
for initial negotiations with the EU and NATO," he added:

"Failure to widen NATO, now that the commitment has been made,
would shatter the concept of an expanding Europe and demoralize the
Central Europeans. Worse, it could reignite dormant Russian political
aspirations in Central Europe. Moreover, it is far from evident that
the Russian political elite shares the European desire for a strong
American political and military presence in Europe. . . . If a choice
must be made between a larger Europe-Atlantic system and a better
relationship with Russia, the former must rank higher."

That a former U.S. foreign policy official and citizen of the country
would so blithely determine years before the event which nations
would join the European Union went without comment on both sides of
the Atlantic. That the nominal geographic location of a nation —
placing Ukraine in Central Europe — would be assigned by an American
was similarly assumed to be Washington’s prerogative evidently.

Despite vapid maunderings about desiring to free post-Soviet Russia
from its "imperial past" and "integrating [it] into a cooperative
transcontinental system," Brzezinski presented a blueprint for
surrounding the nation with a NATO cordon sanitaire, in truth a wall
of military fortifications.

"Russia is more likely to make a break with its imperial past if
the newly independent post-Soviet states are vital and stable. Their
vitality will temper any residual Russian imperial temptations.

Political and economic support for the new states must be an integral
part of a broader strategy. . . . Ukraine is a critically important
component of such a policy, as is support for such strategically
pivotal states as Azerbaijan and Uzbekistan."

Adding Georgia and Moldova, the three states he singles out became
the nucleus of the GUUAM (Georgia, Ukraine, Uzbekistan, Azerbaijan,
Moldova) bloc originally created in the same year as Brzezinski’s
article and book appeared. (Uzbekistan joined in 1999 and left
in 2005.)

GUAM was promoted by the Bill Clinton and Madeleine Albright
administration as a vehicle for planned Trans-Eurasian energy projects
and to tear apart the Commonwealth of Independent States by luring
members apart from Russia toward the European Union, the so-called
soft power preliminary stage, and NATO, the hard power culmination
of the process.

In the above-quoted article Brzezinski also wrote, in addressing
Turkey, that "Regular consultations with Ankara regarding the future
of the Caspian Sea basin and Central Asia would foster Turkey’s sense
of strategic partnership with the United States. America should also
support Turkish aspirations to have a pipeline from Baku, Azerbaijan,
to Ceyhan on its own Mediterranean coast serve as a major outlet for
the Caspian sea basin energy reserves."

Eight years later, in 2005, the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline
transporting Caspian Sea oil to Europe came online, followed
by the Baku-Tbilisi-Erzurum natural gas pipeline and the
Kars-Akhalkalaki-Tbilisi-Baku railway, with the Nabucco natural gas
pipeline next to be activated. The last-named is already slated to
include, in addition to Caspian supplies, gas from Iraq and North
Africa.

The book whose foreword Brzezinski’s "A Geostrategy for Eurasia" in a
way was, The Grand Chessboard: American Primacy And It’s Geostrategic
Imperatives, laid out in greater detail plans that have been expanded
upon in the interim.

The volume’s preface states, "It is imperative that no Eurasian
challenger emerges capable of dominating Eurasia and thus of also
challenging America. The formulation of a comprehensive and integrated
Eurasian geostrategy is therefore the purpose of this book. . . .

Potentially, the most dangerous scenario would be a grand coalition
of China, Russia, and perhaps Iran. . . . Averting this contingency,
however remote it may be, will require a display of US geostrategic
skill on the western, eastern, and southern perimeters of Eurasia
simultaneously."

In pursuance of "America’s role as the first, only, and last truly
global superpower," Brzezinski noted that "the chief geopolitical prize
is Eurasia. For half a millennium, world affairs were dominated by
Eurasian powers and peoples who fought with one another for regional
domination and reached out for global power. Now a non-Eurasian power
is preeminent in Eurasia — and America’s global primacy is directly
dependent on how long and how effectively its preponderance on the
Eurasian continent is sustained."

The military fist inside the diplomatic glove is and will remain NATO.

"The emergence of a truly united Europe — especially if that should
occur with constructive American support — will require significant
changes in the structure and processes of the NATO alliance, the
principal link between America and Europe. NATO provides not only the
main mechanism for the exercise of US influence regarding European
matters but the basis for the politically critical American military
presence in Western Europe. . . . Eurasia is thus the chessboard on
which the struggle for global primacy continues to be played."

In a section with the heading "The NATO Imperative," the author
reiterated earlier policy demands: "It follows that a wider Europe
and an enlarged NATO will serve well both the short-term and the
longer-term goals of US policy. A larger Europe will expand the range
of American influence – and, through the admission of new Central
European members, also increase in the European councils the number of
states with a pro-American proclivity – without simultaneously creating
a Europe politically so integrated that it could soon challenge the
United States on geopolitical matters of high importance to America
elsewhere, particularly in the Middle East."

A Europe united under the EU and especially NATO is to be strong
enough to contain, isolate and increasingly confront Russia as the
central component of U.S. plans for control of Eurasia and the world,
but cannot be allowed to conduct an independent foreign policy,
particularly in regard to Russia and the Middle East. European NATO
allies are to assist Washington in preventing the emergence of "the
most dangerous scenario . . . a grand coalition of China, Russia,
and perhaps Iran" such as has been adumbrated since in the Shanghai
Cooperation Organization.

Four years after the publication of The Grand Chessboard, Brzezinski’s
recommended chess move was made: The U.S. and NATO invaded Afghanistan
and expanded into Central Asia where Russian, Chinese and Iranian
interests converge and where the basis for their regional cooperation
existed, and Western military bases were established in the former
Soviet republics of Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan, where they
remain for the indefinite future.

Western-controlled pipelines traverse the South Caucasus — Azerbaijan
and Georgia — to drive Russia and Iran out of the European and
ultimately world energy markets, with a concomitant U.S. and NATO
takeover of the armed forces of both nations. The two countries have
also been tapped for increased troop deployments and transport routes
for the war in South Asia.

The West is completing the process described by Brzezinski in his
1997 book in which he stated "In effect, by the mid-1990s a bloc,
quietly led by Ukraine and comprising Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan,
Azerbaijan and sometimes also Kazakhstan, Georgia and Moldova, had
informally emerged to obstruct Russian efforts to use the CIS as the
tool for political integration."

Note, not to obstruct a new "imperial" Russia from exploiting the
Commonwealth of Independent States to dominate much less absorb
former parts not only of the Soviet Union but of historical Russia,
but to integrate — or rather maintain the integration of — nations
which were within one state until eighteen years ago. At that time,
1991, the Soviet Union precipitately disintegrated into fifteen new
nations and four independent "frozen conflict" zones — Abkhazia,
Nagorno-Karabakh, South Ossetia and Transdniester — and Russia made
a 180 degree turn in its political structure and orientation, both
domestically and in its foreign policy.

The response to those developments by the U.S. and its NATO cohorts
was to scent blood and move in for the kill.

Starting in 1994 NATO recruited all fifteen former Soviet republics
into its Partnership for Peace program, which has subsequently
prepared ten nations — all in Eastern Europe, three of them former
Soviet republics — for full membership.

As noted above, in 1997 the West absorbed four and for a period
five former Soviet states — Georgia, Ukraine, Azerbaijan, Moldova
and Uzbekistan — into the GUAM, now Organization for Democracy
and Economic Development, format, which has recently been expanded
to include Armenia and Belarus with the European Union’s Eastern
Partnership initiative. The latter includes half (six of twelve) of
the CIS and former CIS nations, all except for Russia and the five
Central Asian countries. [1]

Armenian, Azerbaijani, Georgian and Ukrainian troops have been enlisted
by the U.S. and NATO for the war in Afghanistan, with Moldova to be
the next supplier of soldiers. All five nations also provided forces
for the war and occupation in Iraq.

The five Central Asian former Soviet republics — Kazakhstan,
Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan — have provided
the Pentagon and NATO with bases and transit rights for the war in
South Asia and as such are being daily dragged deeper into the Western
military nexus. Kazakhstan, for example, sent troops to Iraq and may
soon deploy them to Afghanistan.

In recent days the West has stepped up its offensive in several former
Soviet states.

GUAM held a meeting of its Parliamentary Assembly in the Georgian
capital of Tbilisi on November 9 and the leader of the host nation’s
parliamentary majority, David Darchiashvili, said "GUAM has significant
potential, as its member states have common interests while the CIS
is a union of conflicting interests" and "It is important for GUAM
members to have a specific attitude to the EU. GUAM has a potential
to develop a common direction with the EU under the policy of the
Eastern Partnership." [2]

Georgian Foreign Minister Grigol Vashadze said at the event that
"Our relations are extending, new partners appear. The US, the Czech
Republic, Japan and the Baltic states will become GUAM partners soon.

They will participate in economic projects with us." [3]

The Secretary General of the Council of Europe Torbjorn Jagland met
with GUAM member states’ permanent representatives to the Council of
Europe and during the meeting "the Azerbaijani side emphasized the
need to intensify the Council of Europe’s efforts in the settlement of
‘frozen conflicts’ in the GUAM area." [4] The allusion is again to
Abkhazia, Nagorno-Karabakh, South Ossetia and Transdniester where
several thousand lives were lost in fighting after the breakup of
the Soviet Union and, in the case of South Ossetia, where a Georgian
invasion of last year triggered a five-day war with Russia.

Later at the NATO Parliamentary Assembly meeting in Edinburgh,
Scotland from November 13-17, Azerbaijani member of parliament Zahid
Oruj said that "the territories of both Georgia and Azerbaijan were
occupied and the Collective Security Treaty Organization’s policy
in the region proved that" and he "characterized these steps as an
action against NATO." [5] The Collective Security Treaty Organization
(CSTO) is a post-Soviet security bloc consisting of Russia, Armenia,
Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan. Belarus
(initially) and Uzbekistan both boycotted the creation of the new CSTO
rapid reaction force last month and the Eastern Partnership is designed
in part to pull Armenia and Belarus out of the organization. Comparable
initiatives are underway in regards to the four Central Asian members
states, with the Afghan war the chief mechanism for reorienting them
toward NATO.

During the NATO Parliamentary Assembly session, for example, a Turkish
parliamentarian said "Armenia’s releasing the occupied Azerbaijani
territories [Nagorno Karabakh] will create a security zone in the South
Caucasus and pave the way for NATO’s cooperation with this region."

An Azerbaijani counterpart was even more blunt in stating "NATO
should defend Azerbaijan" and stressing "that otherwise, security
will not be firm in the region, stability can be violated anytime
[and a] new military conflict will be inevitable." [6]

The day after the NATO session ended the president of Azerbaijan,
Ilham Aliyev, revealed the context for NATO "defending Azerbaijan"
when he announced that "There is strong support for building the
national army. Our army grows stronger. We are holding negotiations
but we should be ready to liberate our territories any time from the
invaders by military means." [7]

The same day Daniel Stein, senior assistant to the U.S. Special Envoy
for Eurasian Energy, was in Azerbaijan where he confirmed strategic
ties with the nation’s government and said that as "global energy
security is one of the priorities of US foreign policy, his country
supports diversification of energy resources while delivering them
to world markets." [8]

Also on November 18 Stein’s superior, U.S. Special Envoy for Eurasian
Energy Richard Morningstar, addressed the European Policy Center, a
Brussels-based think-tank, and said "Turkey will become a very strong
transit country in transporting the gas of the Caucasus and Central
Asia to Europe" — via Azerbaijan and Georgia — and "Turkmenistan and
Iraq could join in as other suppliers besides Azerbaijan. . . ." [9]

The following day, November 19, a conference on NATO’s New Strategic
Concept: Contribution to the Debate from Partners was held in Baku,
the capital of Azerbaijan. The host country’s deputy foreign minister,
Araz Azimov, stated at the meeting:

"I offer the signing of bilateral agreements between NATO and partner
countries to cover security guarantees for partner countries along
with the responsibility and commitments of the parties.

"Yes, we (partner countries) are important for NATO in general for the
security architecture of the Euro-Atlantic area. Today Azerbaijan’s
borders are the borders of Europe." [10]

On November Azerbaijan hosted an international conference titled
Impediments to Security in the South Caucasus: Current Realities and
Future Prospects for Regional Development, co-sponsored by Britain’s
International Institute for Strategic Studies. Speakers included
Ariel Cohen, Senior Research Fellow at the Heritage Foundation, and
the Washington, D.C.-based Jamestown Foundation’s President Glenn
Howard and Senior Fellow Vladimir Socor.

Socor, a Romanian emigre and former Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
employee, in addressing the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict over
Nagorno Karabakh, "stressed the necessity of an undertaking by NATO
of analogous steps in this conflict taken for the settlement of the
conflicts in the Balkans and former Yugoslavia." [11]

Novruz Mammadov, head of the Foreign Relations Department of
Azerbaijan’s presidential administration, said that "Azerbaijan is the
only country in the post-Soviet space usefully and really cooperating
with the West," and Elnur Aslanov, head of the Political Analysis
and Information Department for the President of Azerbaijan, said:

"The Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan, Baku-Tbilisi-Erzurum and Baku-Tbilisi-Kars
projects . . . stimulate the development of regional cooperation,
and also are important from the security standpoint. . . . Azerbaijan
is a reliable partner of the European security architecture . . . the
country plays an important role in ensuring European energy security."

[12]

Jamestown Foundation chief Glenn Howard added "that Azerbaijan is an
important partner for NATO in terms of energy security," and backed
the nation’s deputy foreign minister’s demand the previous day that
NATO must offer Yugoslav war-style support to its Caucasus partners
"especially after the war in Georgia last year."

Howard added:

"NATO can give security guarantees to a country in case of an attack,
which is what happened in 1979 in the Persian Gulf — after the
fall of the Shah of Iran the US gave security guarantees to countries
through bilateral agreements with those countries. . . . If Azerbaijani
troops are going to help in one area, that will lessen the need for
NATO troops in this particular area, so that they can be involved in
some other area, for example, that helps put more troops in fighting
the Taliban. . . ." [13]

Azerbaijan is not the only former Soviet republic the U.S. intends to
use to penetrate the Caspian Sea Basin. After leaving Baku the State
Department’s Daniel Stein arrived in Turkmenistan where he stated that
"The United States offers its mediating mission in Turkmen-Azerbaijan
disputes over the Caspian status," in relation to a border demarcation
conflict in a sea that the two nations share with Russia and Iran. He
added, "The U.S. and EU member countries try to assure Azerbaijan
and Turkmenistan that they should reach an agreement on the division
of the Caspian to create real opportunities for Nabucco and other
projects." [14]

The same day U.S. Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for South and
Central Asia George Krol was also in the Turkmen capital to deliver
an address at the the annual Oil and Gas Conference there and said,
"The U.S. considers energy security as a priority issue, and Central
Asia is an important region in the global energy map." [15]

In Azerbaijan’s fellow GUAM member state Moldova, the new government
of acting president Mihai Ghimpu, which came to power after April’s
so-called Twitter Revolution, announced that it was establishing a
national committee to implement an Individual Partnership Action Plan
for NATO membership. To indicate the importance the new administration
attaches to integration with the bloc, "Minister of Foreign Affairs
and European Integration Iurie Leanca has been appointed committee
chairman." [16]

Earlier this month it was reported that the government’s Prosecutor
General’s Office had "dropped criminal proceedings against the
people accused of masterminding riots in the republic’s capital
in April, following the Opposition’s protest against the results
of the parliamentary election. . . . After the early parliamentary
election on July 29 when the Opposition came to power, most cases were
closed" and instead "When the new prosecutor general was appointed,
criminal cases were opened against police who took part in driving
the protesters from the city center and their arrests." [17]

On the same day that the Jamestown Foundation’s Glenn Howard and
Vladimir Socor were in Azerbaijan advocating NATO intervention in
the South Caucasus, U.S. Vice President Joseph Biden held a phone
conversation with Georgian president and former U.S. resident Mikheil
Saakashvili in which the first "reiterated the United States’ ‘strong
support’ for Georgia´s sovereignty and territorial integrity" and
"underscored the importance of sustaining the commitment to democratic
reform to fulfill the promise of the Rose Revolution." [18]

Also on November 20 a major Russian news source reported that
Washington had shipped nearly $80 million in weapons to Georgia in
2008 and plans to supply more in the future.

"Despite the economic crisis, Georgia is increasing expenditure on
arms purchases in the U.S.," although "Independent sources say[ing]
Georgia´s unemployment stands at about one-third of its able-bodied
population." [19]

On the same day a delegation from the Pentagon was in the
Georgian capital to meet with Temur Iakobashvili, the nation’s
State Reintegration Minister — for "reintegration" read forcible
incorporation of Abkhazia and South Ossetia — and the Georgian
official announced "We introduced to the guests our plan to ensure
security in the occupied territories. We also talked about the role
the U.S. will play in assisting the ensuring of regional security."

[20]

The U.S. Defense Department representatives, including Deputy Assistant
Secretary of Defense for Russia/Ukraine/Eurasia Celeste Wallander, met
with Georgian Defense Minister Bacho Akhalaia "to hold consultations
on defence cooperation issues concerning the two countries," and
"Wallander personally inspected ongoing military trainings aimed at the
preparation of the 31st Battalion of the GAF [Georgian Armed Forces]
for participation in the ISAF operation in Afghanistan. The sides
evaluated the US assistance provided during 2009 and considered in
detail future cooperation prospects for 2010/2011.

"Under the visit’s agenda the high-ranking US official met with the
Security Council Secretary, Eka Tkeshelashvili, State Minister for
Reintegration Temur Iakobashvili and Defence and Security Committee
members of parliament." [21] The inspection mentioned above was of
training following that conducted by U.S. Marines. The first contingent
of new Georgian troops thus prepared was sent to Afghanistan four
days before.

Two days earlier NATO spokesman James Appathurai announced that the
Alliance was forging ahead with plans for both Georgia’s and Ukraine’s
full membership and that "assessments would be made at a meeting of
the NATO-Ukraine and NATO-Georgia Commissions to be held in Brussels
in early December at the level of NATO foreign ministers." [22]

Also on November 18 Georgian Vice Premier and State Minister for
Euro-Atlantic Integration Giorgi Baramidze met with NATO Secretary
General Anders Fogh Rasmussen in Brussels. "The Georgian delegation
also included Deputy Foreign Minister Giga Bokeria and Deputy Defense
Minister Nikoloz Vashakidze. A meeting of the NATO-Georgia Commission
at the ambassadorial level was also held in Brussels." [23]

The day preceding the meeting, U.S. Assistant Secretary of State
Michael Posner and Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for European
and Eurasian Affairs Tina Kaidanow were in Georgia to convene
"working meetings with Georgian authorities within the Strategic
Partnership Charter.

"The delegation will monitor the implementation of the U.S.-Georgia
Strategic Partnership Plan" inaugurated in January of this year,
less than four months after the war with Russia. [24]

The prior week Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov accused Western
and allied nations of continuing to arm Georgia, stating "I hope
many take lessons from last year’s August events. But I have to say
that according to the reports of various sources, some countries are
sending arms and ammunition demanded by the Georgian leadership via
different complicated schemes." [25]

Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Grigory Karasin warned on the same
day that "[Georgian] military drones have started flying over South
Ossetia and Abkhazia" [26} and the day before Nikolay Makarov,
Chief of the General Staff, said "Georgia is getting large amounts
of weapons supplied from abroad" and "Georgian military potential is
currently higher than last August." [27]

Makarov’s contention was confirmed by Georgian Defense Minister
Bacho Akhalaia on November 14 when he said "the country’s defense
capabilities are now better than they were a year ago and they are
further improving."

The defense chief added, "a strong army will be one of our key
priorities until the last occupant leaves our territories." [28]
The "occupants" in question are Russian troops in Abkhazia and South
Ossetia.

Azerbaijan is not the only South Caucasus NATO partner preparing
for war.

Regarding the recently concluded two-week Immediate Response 2009
exercises run by the U.S. Marine Corps in Georgia, a leading Russian
news site wrote "Perhaps, the exercises were aimed at issuing a
warning to Russia." [29]

On November 13 the Russian General Staff revealed that "Russian secret
services have declassified information about Georgia’s plans to start
forming its special forces in a move that will be implemented in
close cooperation with Turkey," and "voiced concern about Georgia’s
ongoing push for muscle-flexing amid efforts by Israel, Ukraine and
NATO countries to re-arm the Saakashvili regime." [30]

In Ukraine, on November 19 Deputy Foreign Minister Kostiantyn Yeliseyev
said of American ambassador to Georgia and ambassador designate
to Ukraine John Tefft that "The U.S. Senate [Foreign Relations]
Committee has approved his candidacy and we are expecting him to
arrive soon." [31] In time for January’s presidential election.

Incumbent president and U.S. client Viktor Yushchenko is running dead
last among serious candidates and his poll ratings are never higher
than 3.5%. Tefft’s task is to engineer some variant of the 2004
"Orange Revolution."

Yushchenko is a die-hard, intractable, unrelenting advocate of forcing
his nation into NATO despite overwhelming popular opposition and for
evicting the Russian Black Sea Fleet from the Crimea.

On November 16 NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen addressed
High-Level NATO-Ukraine Consultations at the Alliance’s headquarters
in Brussels and said:

"In 2008 at the Bucharest Summit NATO Heads of State and Government
welcomed Ukraine’s aspirations for membership in NATO and agreed that
Ukraine will become a member of the Alliance. To reflect this spirit of
deepening cooperation, Ukraine has developed its first Annual National
Programme which outlines the steps it intends to take to accelerate
internal reform and alignment with Euro-Atlantic standards." [32]

The same day Reuters revealed that "Poland and Lithuania want to
forge military cooperation with Ukraine to try to bring the former
Soviet republic closer to NATO." Poland’s Deputy Defense Minister
Stanislaw Komorowski was quoted as saying of the initiative, "This
reflects our support for Ukraine. We want to tie Ukraine closer to
Western structures, including military ones." [33]

The agreement was reached at talks in Brussels attended by Ukraine’s
acting Defense Minister Valery Ivashchenko, Lithuania’s Minister of
National Defense Rasa Jukneviciene and Poland’s Komorowski.

The combined military unit will be stationed in Poland and include
as many as 5,000 troops. The joint buildup on Russia’s western and
northwestern borders "may have a political objective. It is meant
to set up an alternative center of military consolidation for West
European projects, a center which could embrace former Soviet republics
(above all Ukraine), now outside NATO. There is no doubt who will
control this process, considering U.S. influence in Poland and the
Baltics." [34]

On the same day that the Polish, Lithuanian and Ukrainian defense
chiefs reached the agreement, Poland hosted multinational military
exercises codenamed Common Challenge 09 with "2,500 troops from
Germany, Slovakia, Lithuania, Latvia and Poland — forming the
so-called EU Combat Group. . . . Common Challenge is being held for
the first time in Poland. Exercises are conducted simultaneously in
Poznan, western Poland, and the nearby military range in Wedrzyn."

[35]

In a complementary development, The Times of London published an
interview with Italian Foreign Minister Franco Frattini on November 15
in which he "said Italy would push for the creation of a European Army
after the ‘new Europe’ takes shape at this week’s crucial November
19 EU summit following the adoption of the Lisbon Treaty." [36]
A commentary from Russia, which of course will not be included in
the plans, mentioned that "NATO has been actively discussing the
possibility of establishing a joint European army for a long time"
and that Frattini had "reiterated the need for deploying a joint
naval fleet or air force in the Mediterranean or other areas crucial
to European security." [37]

In a Wall Street Journal report titled "Central Europe Ready To
Send More Soldiers To Afghanistan," Polish Foreign Minister Radoslaw
Sikorski, again emphasizing the connection between war zone training
in Afghanistan and preparation for action much closer to home,
was quoted as saying "The credibility of NATO will be decided in
Afghanistan. If NATO can be successful with what was a success in
the Balkans and Iraq, its deterrent potential will rise, and it is
in Poland’s national interest." [38]

On November 18 the ambassadors from all 28 NATO member states
gathered in Brussels commented on Belarusian-Russian military
exercises conducted months earlier, Operation West, and "expressed
concerns about the large scale of the exercises and a scenario that
envisioned an attack from the West. . . ." [39]

Sikorski’s allusion to so-called NATO deterrent potential is, then,
clearly in reference to Russia.

On November 17 the European Union’s Special Representative for
the South Caucasus Peter Semneby announced that the first foreign
ministers meeting of the Eastern Partnership program will be held
next month. He said that "The Eastern Partnership will be under the
jurisdiction of a new representative for foreign affairs and security.

The appointment will come after the Lisbon summit," [40] as will the
creation of the new European Army Italian Foreign Minister Frattini
spoke of earlier.

Participants will include the foreign ministers of Armenia, Azerbaijan,
Belarus, Georgia, Moldova and Ukraine, half — six of twelve —
of the members or former members of the Commonwealth of Independent
States and all those in Europe and the Caucasus except for Russia,
which is not invited.

Comparable efforts to pull the five Central Asian CIS members —
Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan — away
from cooperation with Russia through a combination of an analogous EU
partnership, energy project agreements and involvement in the Afghan
war are also proceeding apace.

The eighteen-year-old project of Paul Wolfowitz, Zbigniew Brzezinski
et al. to destroy the post-Soviet Commonwealth of Independent States
and effect a cordon sanitaire around Russia, enclosing it with NATO
member states and partners, has continued uninterruptedly since 1991.

Washington will not tolerate rivals and will ruthlessly attempt to
eliminate even the potential of any nation to challenge it globally
or regionally. In any region of the world. Russia, because of what it
was, what it is, where it is and what it has — massive reserves of
oil and natural gas, a developed nuclear industry and the world’s only
effective strategic triad outside the U.S. — is and will remain the
main focus of efforts by the United States and NATO to rid themselves
of impediments to achieving uncontested global domination.

Carthage must be destroyed is the West’s policy toward the former
Soviet Union.

http://onlinejournal.com/artman/publish/ar

Netherlands First, Russia & Armenia Second At Junior Eurovision

NETHERLANDS FIRST, RUSSIA SECOND AT JUNIOR EUROVISION

Kyiv Post
Nov 23 2009
Ukraine

Today at 10:22 | Interfax-Ukraine Ralf Mackenbach of the Netherlands
has emerged victorious from the 2009 Junior Eurovision song contest,
which has ended in Kyiv.

The 14 year-old Dutch singer of a song, "Click Clack," scored 121
points.

Katya Ryabova of Russia and Laura Hayrapetyan of Armenia share second
place, and each of them scored 116 points.

Ten year-old Laura Omloop of Belgium is in third place with 113 points.

Andranik Aleksanian of Ukraine is in fifth place and 13 year-old
Yura Demidovich of Minsk, Belarus, is in ninth place. Yura’s song,
"The Magic Rabbit," has gained enormous blog popularity.

Minsk will host the Junior Eurovision 2010 song contest.

Turkey Says Azerbaijan Is Bluffing

TURKEY SAYS AZERBAIJAN IS BLUFFING

Aysor
Nov 23 2009
Armenia

Turkey’s officials respond to Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliev’s
‘stunned statement’ on ‘use force to take back Nagorno-Karabakh
region’.

According to Turkey’s Sabah paper, this trigger-happy Aliev’s speaking
was perceived by Ankara just as a bluff. "Our wish is not to close
doors, but to provide solving in talks," told Sabah’s correspondent
a Turkish official.

Two days earlier, Azerbaijani President said in case of fruitless
negotiations in Munich will exhaust all hope, and will have no choice.

"We have the full right to liberate our land by military means,"
Aliev said.

Turkey’s Conduct Does Not Contribute To Improvement Of Armenian-Turk

TURKEY’S CONDUCT DOES NOT CONTRIBUTE TO IMPROVEMENT OF ARMENIAN-TURKISH RELATIONS, ARFD HAY DAT MOSCOW OFFICE EXECUTIVE SAYS

Noyan Tapan
Nov 23, 2009

MOSCOW, NOVEMBER 23, NOYAN TAPAN. An international conference under
the title The Prospects of New Security Structure in Europe: Russia’s
and NATO’s role was held on November 19 in Moscow. It was organized by
the Just World Institute and Friedrich Ebert Foundation. ARFD Hay Dat
(Armenian Cause) Moscow Office Executive Yuri Navoyan participated
in the conference and gave a speech.

Making a report on Caucasian security problems he touched upon
the normalization of Armenian-Turkish relations and the Nagorno
Karabakh settlement. Y. Navoyan, in particular, stressed that a
number of provisions existing in the Armenian-Turkish protocols and
Turkey’s conduct of conditioning the ratification of the protocols by
Armenian side’s concessions in the Nagorno Karabakh issue not only
fail to lead to improvement of the Armenian-Turkish relations but
also complicate one more regional process by making unpredictable
the further developments in the Nagorno Karabakh settlement.

The ARFD Hay Dat (Armenian Cause) Moscow Office Executive emphasized
that the above mentioned is also to certain extent caused by the
circumstance that at the current stage of international relations,
within the framework of Russia-West "reloading," a temptation to
as soon as possible show a joint result in any complicated region,
including Caucasus, is noticed. According to Y. Navoyan, it can result
in incomplete solutions and compulsions, which instead of contributing
to security in the region, can cause new problems.

Still Life: Despite A Lifetime Of Tragedy, Arshile Gorky Made His Ma

STILL LIFE: DESPITE A LIFETIME OF TRAGEDY, ARSHILE GORKY MADE HIS MARK AS A PRE-EMINENT PAINTER OF THE 20TH CENTURY
By Ilene Dube

CentralJersey.com
Nov 20 2009

MUSEUMS often get calls from people claiming to have treasure in their
attics, valuable paintings created by great masters. These often
turn out to be false alarms, but in 2004, when a woman called the
Philadelphia Museum of Art about an Arshile Gorky under her rafters,
it turned out to be the key painting in a collection, and one that
would lead to a major exhibition, the biggest since the artists’
retrospective at the Guggenheim in 1981.

The caller’s father, an architect, just happened to have been a
roommate of Gorky’s in New York in the 1920s. He acquired "Woman with
Palette" before Gorky (1902-1948) had achieved recognition as one
of the last great Surrealist painters and a forerunner to Abstract
Expressionism. PMA Curator of Modern Art Michael Taylor could identify
the painting because of a related study, and it filled a gap in the
museum’s collection.

Although he lived less than half a century and experienced a barn fire
that destroyed many of his paintings, Gorky left behind a prodigious
body of work. The Philadelphia Museum of Art is presenting the first
major retrospective of his work in more than 25 years through Jan. 10,
2010.

Born in an Armenian province of Ottoman Turkey, Gorky lived through
the Armenian Genocide, witnessing the ethnic cleansing of his people,
the minority Armenians, by Turkish troops. After the family fled
with other refugees, the 17-year-old artist watched his mother die
of starvation in his arms. This was to have a profound effect on his
life and work. The focus of the PMA exhibit is on Gorky’s Armenian
heritage, and the impact of the genocide.

Born Vosdanig Adoian, he changed his name when immigrating, with his
sister, to the Boston area to reunite with their father. He chose
his new name in honor of the Russian writer Maxim Gorky, who himself
adopted the pseudonym to reflect his desire to tell the bitter truth.

With little means but great ambition, Gorky set out to educate
himself. He visited museums and galleries and was a voracious reader.

Just as Paul Cezanne had educated himself by studying the work of
artists he carefully observed in the Louvre, Gorky "apprenticed"
himself to Cezanne, systematically studying and copying his work. And
just as Cezanne had been a rule breaker, Gorky, too, went ahead to
break with tradition.

>From his Cezanne period, Gorky went on to Cubism, emulating Pablo
Picasso, George Braque and Juan Gris, immersing himself in European
Modernism. Ultimately he worked his way through the biomorphic designs
of Jean Arp and Joan Miro, developing his own imprint.

"He came to this country in 1920 with no education, having fought
against the Turks since 1915, lived in a refugee camp and had no sense
of what art is, and within four years of his arrival he was teaching
art in New York City and Boston," says Mr. Taylor.

The art critic Harold Rosenberg wrote that Gorky was "a lifelong
student, an intellectual to the roots."

In fact, Gorky could tell a tall tale: In addition to claiming to be
a cousin of Maxim Gorky, he told people he’d studied with Kandinsky
in Paris. "He could pull it off because he was such an adept artist,"
says Mr. Taylor.

When Gorky saw Giorgio de Chirico’s 1914 painting "The Fatal Temple"
(on view in this exhibit), he was inspired to create a series
of more than 80 drawings and two paintings, Nighttime, Enigma
and Nostalgia. "De Chirico’s painting is about an artist and his
mother," says Mr. Taylor, "and with its suggestion of the mother-son
relationship it must have resonated with Gorky" who, by this time,
had begun two large canvases on the theme of the artist and his mother.

Exhibited here side-by-side, the two paintings titled "The Artist and
His Mother" were based on a photograph of Gorky and his mother, taken
in 1912 and sent to his father to remind him of his family back home.

Gorky’s father had moved to Boston to elude being drafted into the
Turkish army.

As with many survivors of genocide, Gorky did not discuss his
experiences of having to leave his home and travel more than 100 miles,
only to see his mother die. The paintings were a place where he could
work out these feelings.

Gorky reworked these canvases many times during the ’30s and ’40s,
perhaps as a way to hold on to his mother’s memory and his love for
her, according to Mr. Taylor.

With a studio in Union Square, N.Y., Gorky was able to support himself
as a painter by creating murals for the Federal Art Project of the
Works Progress Administration. Before then, "he couldn’t afford paints
and canvas, so his drawings have the feeling of worked up paintings,"
says Mr. Taylor.

His first mural came out of the ink studies for Nighttime, Enigma
and Nostalgia, but this was rejected, perhaps too edgy for the WPA
and the post offices where the murals would hang.

In 1936 he received a commission to create 10 murals for Newark
Airport Administration Building on the theme of aviation. He worked
on them from his Union Square studio because "he didn’t think murals
should be painted on the wall, where it would be subsumed into the
architecture," says Mr. Taylor. Gorky painted the murals on canvas
that would be installed on the walls.

The machinist style owes a debt to Fernand Leger. "But the murals
were only on view a short time," says Mr. Taylor. "During World War
II, the airport became a military base and the murals were covered
over and forgotten. The airport was expanded into an important hub
and the old administration building was turned into a post office,
where the murals were covered with 14 coats of paint."

All that paint probably protected them, adds Mr. Taylor.

In 1972, a worker removed an exit sign and pulled a nail that had
red paint and canvas on it, and the murals were discovered. Only two
survived — the remaining eight had been destroyed — and both can
be seen at PMA, where they have been restored.

If the murals had been painted on the walls, instead of canvas,
they might not have survived, according to Mr. Taylor. "This is the
largest painting he ever made."

With the income he received from the WPA, Gorky worked on some of his
most important paintings, such as "Organization." "This is one of his
most austere, coming out of Picasso and Mondrian… with a kind of
Dada humor that gets lost in the final painting," says Mr. Taylor,
pointing to the accompanying drawings.

Whereas Gorky’s paintings from the ’30s are worked up in thick layers
of paint, with a single canvas weighing as much as 90 pounds, the
works from the ’40s are thinned out with turpentine for more ethereal
washes. In the ’40s, Gorky became consumed with what Mr.

Taylor describes as the urban milieu of Cubism, with cafes and collages
of newspapers, glasses of wine and rum. By 1943, with the painting
"Waterfall," Gorky started to find his own voice. He was thinning the
paint, dripping it, abstract but with a reference to nature. "It was
a real breakthrough, as if a weight were lifted," says Mr. Taylor.

He went with his new wife, Agnes Magruder, whom he called "Magouch," an
Armenian term of endearment, to her parents’ farm in Virginia. The rich
farmland and bucolic atmosphere of rural Virginia reminded him of his
father’s farm in Armenia and inspired him to make abstract drawings in
the grass. The observations from nature held memories of his childhood.

"These are the most lyrical he ever made, and led to paintings in
the following year. They are filled with images of fecundity — he
was the father of a young baby — and he was enjoying himself with
the flora and fauna and bugs, but there’s also a sense of Armenia. He
saw in the fields his father’s farm.

"He would bring them back to the farm to show Agnes," continues Mr.

Taylor. "She said he was like a fisherman going out and coming back
every day." (Mr. Taylor conducted five years of interviews with the
artist’s 88-year-old widow.)

Agnes was his wife and source of immediate feedback, and it was the
first time he enjoyed the comfort and security of a loving relationship
since his childhood, but they were only together for seven years. The
last years of Gorky’s life were deeply tragic, starting with a studio
fire in 1946 that destroyed 27 recent paintings, then a painful
operation for colon cancer and a lengthy recuperation.

>From the ashes of his suffering he created the Charred Beloved series
— he called his paintings "beloved."

"They are very haunting, with their charred sooty backgrounds," says
Mr. Taylor. "The worst thing for an artist is to see his paintings
destroyed — no artist should have to endure that."

Images of fecundity and eroticism turned to beasts, spiky and
jagged. "There’s a tragic undertone to everything he’s expressing,"
says Mr. Taylor.

An automobile accident in 1948 left Gorky with a broken neck and
paralyzed his painting arm. Then Agnes left him to have an affair with
his friend and mentor. A broken heart was more than he could endure,
and a few weeks later, Gorky committed suicide.

"In his short life, he changed the history of art," says Mr.

Taylor. "The hardest thing for an artist to do is to translate feelings
into art, and he was brilliant at doing that. He changed the way
painting looked in the ’40s and opened the door to Expressionism."

Arshile Gorky: A Retrospective is on view at the Philadelphia Museum
of Art, Benjamin Franklin Parkway at 26th Street, Philadelphia, though

Primate Welcomes NK Delegation to Diocesan Center in New York

PRESS OFFICE
Diocese of the Armenian Church of America (Eastern)
630 Second Avenue, New York, NY 10016
Contact: Karine Abalyan
Tel: (212) 686-0710; Fax: (212) 779-3558
E-mail: [email protected]
Website:

November 20, 2009
___________________________________________

PRIMATE WELCOMES NAGORNO-KARABAGH DELEGATION TO DIOCESAN CENTER

On Tuesday, November 17, a delegation from the Republic of Nagorno-Karabagh
visited the Diocesan Center in New York, where they met with Archbishop
Khajag Barsamian, Primate of the Eastern Diocese; the Rev. Fr. Mardiros
Chevian, dean of St. Vartan Cathedral; Garnik Nanagoulian, executive
director of the Fund for Armenian Relief; Oscar Tatosian, chair of the
Diocesan Council; and Michael Haratunian, secretary of FAR’s Board of
Directors.

The delegation was led by Archbishop Barkev Martirossian, Primate of the
Artsakh Diocese, and NKR Prime Minister Ara Haroutyunyan.

The visit began at St. Vartan Cathedral, where Archbishop Barsamian greeted
Archbishop Martirossian, Prime Minister Haroutyunyan, and other guests –
including David Babayan, assistant to the NKR president; Robert Avetisyan,
NKR representative to the U.S.; Garen Nazarian, the Permanent Representative
of the Republic of Armenia to the United Nations; and Irina Lazarian,
executive director of ArmeniaFund USA – and gave them a brief tour of the
Eastern Diocese’s spiritual center.

Representatives then met at the Diocesan Complex to discuss recent
developments in Nagorno-Karabagh, the diaspora’s contributions to Karabagh’s
growth, and the annual international ArmeniaFund Telethon, which will raise
money for the NKR city of Shushi. The delegation is visiting Armenian
communities across the U.S. to encourage participation in the telethon,
which is scheduled to be broadcast live on Thanksgiving Day, Thursday,
November 26.

Archbishop Martirossian said that Shushi is currently the focal point for
development in the mountainous republic. Plans are underway to rebuild homes
and schools, improve infrastructure, and relocate several government offices
from the republic’s capital in Stepanakert to Shushi. He added that the city
is expecting significant investment in the coming years.

Archbishop Martirossian and Prime Minister Haroutyunyan thanked the Eastern
Diocese and FAR for their continued support of projects in Nagorno-Karabagh.
The Eastern Diocese and FAR have shared a warm relationship with the Artsakh
Diocese and the local government since the region’s independence movement in
the late 1980s.

FAR has implemented a number of programs in Karabagh, including the
Humanitarian Assistance Program, which was completed last year. With a $15
million grant from the United States Agency for International Development
(USAID), FAR teams rebuilt houses, hospitals, and clinics throughout
Karabagh. The money was also used for the installation of new pipelines to
provide water for irrigation and drinking.

In the past, FAR has organized shipments of medicine and medical supplies
and equipment to Karabagh, and helped local doctors receive advanced
training in Yerevan as part of FAR’s Continuing Medical Education Program.

Archbishop Barsamian said NKR representatives should always feel at home at
St. Vartan Cathedral and the Diocesan Center, and added that he was pleased
with the signs of growth and progress in Karabagh. He said it is especially
encouraging that the two dioceses have fostered a strong partnership and a
spirit of collaboration in the past two decades.

This fall, the Artsakh Diocese marked the 20th anniversary of its
re-opening. His Holiness Karekin II, the Supreme Patriarch and Catholicos of
All Armenians, traveled to Karabagh to preside over the celebration. As the
region continues to cast off the burdens of its years of Soviet rule,
efforts go forward to restore ancient churches and erect new houses of
worship.

Prime Minister Haroutyunyan said that the upcoming ArmeniaFund Telethon is
important not only as a fundraiser for Shushi, but also as a way to raise
awareness in the diaspora about developments in Armenia and Karabagh, and to
help Armenian communities worldwide establish closer ties with each other,
and with their homeland.

The annual telethon, which is broadcast live for 12 hours, has helped raise
funds for Armenian and Karabagh for more than a decade. Archbishop Barsamian
serves on the Board of Trustees of ArmeniaFund USA.

###

Photos attached.

Photo 1: Archbishop Khajag Barsamian, Primate of the Eastern Diocese, gives
a brief tour of St. Vartan Armenian Cathedral to the delegation from the
Republic of Nagorno-Karabagh.
Photo 2: NKR Prime Minister Ara Haroutyunyan presents Archbishop Khajag
Barsamian with a book about the Republic of Nagorno-Karabagh, during a visit
to the Diocesan Center in New York.
Photo 3: Archbishop Khajag Barsamian, Primate of the Eastern Diocese;
Archbishop Barkev Martirossian, Primate of the Artsakh Diocese; and NKR
Prime Minister Ara Haroutyunyan on the plaza of St. Vartan Armenian
Cathedral.
Photo 4: Members of the delegation from the Republic of Nagorno-Karabagh and
representatives of the Eastern Diocese pose for a group photo on the steps
of St. Vartan Armenian Cathedral.

www.armenianchurch.net

Effective Work Of Control Chamber To Be Guaranteed By Independence

EFFECTIVE WORK OF CONTROL CHAMBER TO BE GUARANTEED BY INDEPENDENCE

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
19.11.2009 17:10 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ "Control chambers in different states are different
in essence by virtue of being adjusted to the given country’s
conditions," Head of Poland’s Supreme Control Chamber Yatsek Yazersaky
told a joint news conference organized in RA National Assembly with
Head of Armenian Control Chamber Ishkhan Zakaryan.

Difference between Armenian and Polish control chambers is no
impediment to effective cooperation, he said. "Notwithstanding existing
differences, control chambers should be free and independent both in
financial and functional terms. That will only contribute to effective
control," Yazersky noted.

When asked by journalists about the most corrupt spheres in Poland and
Armenia, he said it was difficult to give definitely one answer. "The
important thing is that we were able to explain to our society to
what extent corruption may be destructive to state." Polish official
also added that corruption risks were more widespread in privatization
sphere.

Ishkhan Zakaryan noted in turn that RA Control Chamber has a working
group dealing with such issues and in 2010, he will make a statement,
determining the essence of corruption and indicating corrupt spheres
and tools designed to combat them.