President Harutyunyan receives new Primate of Artsakh Diocese

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 09:48, 4 February, 2021

STEPANAKERT, FEBRUARY 4, ARMENPRESS. President of Artsakh Arayik Harutyunyan received on February 3 Primate of the Artsakh Diocese, Bishop Vrtanes Abrahamyan and Pontifical Nuncio-at-large, Archbishop Pargev Martirosyan, the Presidential Office told Armenpress.

President Harutyunyan expressed gratitude to Archbishop Pargev Martirosyan for his decades-long patriotic mission in Artsakh and for standing by the people of Artsakh at the crucial moments, attaching great importance to his role in the development of the Fatherland and the preservation of spiritual values. According to the President, Pargev Martirosyan has always been and will remain the symbol of Artsakh and the heroic pages of its history for all generations.

President Harutyunyan also congratulated Bishop Vrtanes Abrahamyan on appointment as the Primate of the Artsakh Diocese, expressing confidence that his activity will greatly contribute to the joint efforts and the strengthening of the people’s faith.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Bodies of nine more servicemen found in search operations in Fizuli direction

Panorama, Armenia
Feb 2 2021

Nine more bodies of killed were found during the search operations in Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh) on Monday, Artsakh’s State Service of Emergency Situations reported.  According to the initial information, all of the killed are servicemen (reservists and volunteers) and are yet to be identified through a forensic DNA analysis. 

A total of 1,354 bodies of fallen soldiers and civilians have been found during the search operations. 

Search operations will continue today in Hadrut region, the source said. 

Yerevan to host international duduk festival

Panorama, Armenia
Feb 1 2021

Dudukman Production company and Lecturer at Yerevan State Conservatory Emanuel Hovhannisyan have initiated an international duduk festival-contest to take place in Yerevan from April 5 to May 5. As the organizers of the festival report, the event is aimed at promoting the legacy of the Armenian unique instrument as well as reveal new talents among young musicians. 

The festival-contest is open to young duduk players under 22 from over the world. 

The contest will take place in three stages. All performances of the contest will be recorded and shared on social media platforms of Dudukman Production. The best musicians will have an opportunity to cooperate with well-known musicians as well as take master classes from best specialists of the sphere. 

The Jury of the competition will comprise of renowned musicians and specialists. The deadline for participation is March 15 with submission to be sent to  and [email protected] email addresses. 

https://www.panorama.am/en/news/2021/02/01/Yerevan-duduk-festival/2444703

Members of Armenian "Voice of the Homeland" initiative holding discussion meeting

News.am, Armenia
Jan 25 2021

(LIVE)

Members of Armenia's "Voice of the Homeland" initiative are holding a discussion-meeting in the large hall of Congress Hotel in Yerevan.

The initiative and the movement of Armenian intelligentsia have gathered over 300 cultural, scientific and educational figures. The meeting will be attended by not only figures, but also army generals and high-ranking clergymen. The movement supports the immediate resignation of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, and the main goal is to achieve resignation of the authorities that have failed and are leading the country to a deadlock.

The initiative’s first meeting was held on December 8, followed by the second meeting held on January 12.

Asbarez: Iran Strongly Supports Armenia’s Territorial Integrity

January 27,  2020



Iran’s Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif (left) meets with his Armenian counterpart Ara Aivazyan in Yerevan on Jan. 27

YEREVAN (Azatutyun.am)—Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif visited Yerevan on Wednesday, reaffirming his country’s desire to continue seeking closer relations with neighboring Armenia after the recent war in Nagorno-Karabakh.

Zarif also expressed Iran’s strong support for Armenia’s territorial integrity as he discussed regional security and bilateral ties with his Armenian counterpart Ara Ayvazyan.

“The Islamic Republic of Iran attaches importance to the territorial integrity of all countries and strives to ensure that the religions and rights of all peoples are always protected. Our red line is the territorial integrity of the Republic of Armenia and we have made that clear,” he told Ayvazian at the start of their talks.

“We stand ready to deepen our relations with Armenia in the political, economic, cultural and security fields,” he said.

“We have many common concerns. Our concerns include the presence of terrorists and foreign fighters,” Zarif added, seemingly alluding to the widely documented participation of Middle Eastern mercenaries in the six-week war on Azerbaijan’s side.

Zarif also mentioned those concerns during his separate meeting with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan held later in the day. Pashinyan said he looks forward to discussing with Iran’s top diplomat “developing and deepening our bilateral relations” and other “very important issues.”
An Armenian government statement on the meeting said the two men “exchanged thoughts” on the aftermath of the Karabakh war stopped by a Russian-brokered ceasefire on November 10.

“The prime minister noted that many issues, included Nagorno-Karabakh’s status, remain unresolved and that Armenia is ready to continue negotiations within the framework of the co-presidency of the OSCE Minsk Group,” said the statement.

According to the statement, Zarif and Pashinyan stressed the importance of “unblocking and reactivating regional transport links.”

The ceasefire agreement calls for the opening of the Armenian-Azerbaijani border for cargo and other traffic. It specifically commits Yerevan to opening rail and road links between the Nakhichevan exclave and the rest of Azerbaijan that will presumably pass through Armenia’s Syunik province bordering Iran. For its part, Armenia should be able to use Azerbaijani territory as a transit route for cargo shipments to and from Russia and Iran.

Speaking to RFE/RL’s Armenian Service after his talks with Ayvazian, Zarif said Iran too sees now a real chance to establish a rail link with Armenia passing through Nakhichevan. “
“That is one requirement for both Iran and Armenia as well as for the region, and we are working with both Armenia, Azerbaijan and Russia,” he said.

Zarif arrived in Armenia from Moscow as part of a regional tour which he began in Baku on Monday. Meeting with Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, he congratulated Azerbaijan on its “victory” in the war and expressed Iran’s readiness to help rebuild areas around Karabakh retaken by Azerbaijani troops.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 01/21/2021

                                        Thursday, 

Former Security Chief’s Death ‘Still Investigated’

        • Sargis Harutyunyan

Armenia - Georgi Kutoyan, the newly appointed director of the National Security 
Service, February 12, 2016.

Investigators believe that Georgi Kutoyan, a former head of Armenia’s National 
Security Service (NSS) found dead one year ago, committed suicide, a senior 
law-enforcement official said on Thursday.

“It has been corroborated, through not only investigative actions but also 
forensic tests, that it was a suicide,” Artur Melikian, the deputy head of the 
Investigative Committee, told reporters.

Nevertheless, Melikian said, a criminal investigation into his death is 
continuing.

The 38-year-old Kutoyan, who ran the NSS during the final years of former 
President Serzh Sarkisian’s rule, was found shot to death on January 17, 2020 at 
a Yerevan apartment belonging to the family. The Investigative Committee opened 
at the time a criminal case under an article of the Armenian Criminal Code 
dealing with suicides “induced” by others.

The law-enforcement agency said earlier this month that the probe has been 
suspended because investigators have not identified anyone who might have driven 
Kutoyan to kill himself.

Melikian insisted, however, that the probe is still not over even though “we 
have no suspects or accused individuals.”

“We do not maintain that [Kutoyan] was driven to the suicide,” he explained. “We 
only say that the investigation was launched into an induced suicide because we 
could not characterize the case under a different article at that moment.”

Kutoyan was appointed as director of Armenia’s most powerful security agency in 
February 2016. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian sacked him in May 2018 immediately 
after coming to power in the “Velvet Revolution” that toppled Sarkisian.



Government Vows Aid Program For Disabled War Veterans

        • Narine Ghalechian
        • Marine Khachatrian

Armenia - A cabinet meeting in Yerevan, .

The Armenian government on Thursday pledged to provide demobilized soldiers 
maimed during the recent war in Nagorno-Karabakh with modern prosthetics and 
help them find jobs and receive higher education.

Labor and Social Affairs Minister Mesrop Arakelian said the government will set 
up a commission of local and, if necessary, foreign prosthetic experts that will 
assess the individual needs of every disabled war veteran.

All veterans will be eligible for receiving, free of charge, artificial limbs 
recommended by the commission, Arakelian said during a weekly cabinet meeting in 
Yerevan. The government will pay for even the most expensive prostheses, he said.

Arakelian added that the government is also ready to provide financial 
assistance to local firms that can manufacture prosthetic hands, feet and other 
body parts meeting modern standards.

“We are also going to solve [prosthetic] servicing issues … I think that this 
will also be included in the aid program,” said Deputy Prime Minister Tigran 
Avinian.

According to Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian, the program will cover employment 
and educational issues as well.

“For our disabled compatriots, we must also provide adequate professional 
retraining or assist in their education,” Pashinian told his ministers.

Minister of High-Tech Industry Hakob Arshakian announced in that regard that his 
ministry and private tech companies will help interested veterans find jobs in 
Armenia’s information technology (IT) sector. They are planning to organize free 
training courses for that purpose, he said.

“Thousands of people will get a chance to receive IT education,” said Arshakian.

The officials did not specify the number of Armenian soldiers who became 
disabled during the six-week hostilities and now need prosthetics.

The authorities have also not yet released the precise numbers of soldiers 
killed and wounded in action.

Avinian told the Armenian parliament on Wednesday that the bodies of 3,439 
soldiers and volunteer fighters have been recovered from Karabakh frontlines so 
far. He said 766 of them have still not been identified and DNA tests are 
carried out for that purpose.

Karabakh Armenian search teams are continuing to look for the bodies of dead 
soldiers in former battlefields in and around Karabakh. Avinian suggested that 
the total number of Armenian combat deaths will not exceed 4,000.

The vice-premier dismissed opposition criticism of the continuing lack of full 
information about war casualties. He said the Armenian Defense Ministry will 
provide such information in a report to be released soon.

The ministry has so far published the names of 1,898 Armenian soldiers killed 
during the war stopped by a Russian-brokered ceasefire on November 10.



Pashinian’s Resignation Still Nonnegotiable For Armenian Opposition

        • Naira Nalbandian

Armenia -- Edmon Marukian (L), the leader of the opposition Bright Armenia 
Party, talks to senior pro-government lawmakers on the parliament floor, 
Yerevan, January 18, 2021.

The two opposition parties represented in Armenia’s parliament continued to 
dismiss on Thursday Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s offers to hold fresh 
parliamentary elections, reiterating that he must resign and hand over power to 
an interim government.

“We haven’t changed our position that [Pashinian’s] resignation must happen 
without preconditions,” said Mikael Melkumian of the Prosperous Armenia Party 
(BHK). “The parliament must have a chance to elect a new prime minister who will 
stabilize the situation for some time, for up to one year … and we will hold the 
elections in that case.”

“Holding such elections in this situation one or two months later would be 
fraught with very serious dangers,” Melkumian told a news conference.

The BHK is a key member of an alliance of 17 opposition parties that staged late 
last year street protests in a bid to force Pashinian to resign. They blame him 
for Armenia’s defeat in the autumn war in Nagorno-Karabakh.

The Bright Armenia Party (LHK), the second parliamentary opposition force, is 
not part of the alliance called the Homeland Salvation Front. But the LHK too 
insists on Pashinian’s resignation, having nominated its leader Edmon Marukian 
as an interim prime minister.

Pashinian has rejected the opposition demands and offered to hold snap elections 
instead.


Armenia -- Mikael Melkumian, a senior member of the opposition Prosperous 
Armenia Party, speaks at a news conference in Yerevan, .

Under the Armenian constitution, such a vote can take place only if Pashinian 
resigns and the National Assembly twice fails to elect another prime minister. 
The ruling My Step bloc controls at least 82 seats in the 132-member parliament 
and should in theory be able to easily prevent the election of another premier.

Deputy Prime Minister Tigran Avinian revealed on Wednesday, however, that My 
Step has offered the BHK and the LHK to sign a “memorandum” on snap polls that 
would commit the parliamentary opposition to not fielding prime-ministerial 
candidates in the event of Pashinian’s tactical resignation.

Marukian rejected the proposed deal. The LHK leader suggested that it was put 
forward because Pashinian and his entourage fear that pro-government lawmakers 
would break ranks and vote to elect him prime minister.

“If they are not sure about [the loyalty of] their 82 deputies and think that I 
may get elected if I run, then it’s a different subject for discussion and let’s 
discuss it,” Marukian told reporters.

Five lawmakers have defected from the parliament’s pro-government majority since 
a Russian-brokered ceasefire agreement stopped the war on November 10. One of 
them publicly demanded Pashinian’s resignation earlier this week.

Speaking in the parliament on Wednesday, Pashinian said vaguely that his 
political team “will formulate an appropriate position” if the opposition forces 
continue to reject its proposals to resolve the political crisis in the country. 
He did not elaborate.


Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2021 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

 


Russian peacekeepers escort over 170 Karabakh refugees who return home

TASS, Russia
Jan 17 2021
A total of 49,638 refugees have returned to their permanent places of residence in Nagorno-Karabakh, the Russian Defense Ministry stated

MOSCOW, January 17. /TASS/. Russian peacekeepers escorted another convoy with 177 refugees who have come back home in Nagorno-Karabakh from Armenia, the Russian Defense Ministry stated.

"The servicemen of the Russian peacekeeping contingent are ensuring the return of refugees to their home. The buses from Yerevan to Stepanakert have brought 177 refugees. A total of 49,638 refugees have returned to their permanent places of residence in Nagorno-Karabakh," according to the statement.

Russia’s peacekeepers are ensuring safe return of citizens to their places of permanent residence, providing humanitarian assistance and restoring civil infrastructure facilities. They are also monitoring the situation round-the-clock and controlling the ceasefire implementation at 23 observation posts.

The Russian peacekeeping contingent in Nagorno-Karabakh is comprised of units from the 15th separate motor rifle (peacekeeping) brigade of the Central Military District. The command is stationed in Stepanakert, the de facto capital of Nagorno-Karabakh.

On November 9, Russian President Vladimir Putin, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan signed a joint statement on a complete ceasefire in Nagorno-Karabakh starting from November 10. Under the deal, Azerbaijan and Armenia maintained the positions that they had held, some areas were handed over to Azerbaijan, and Russian peacekeepers were deployed to the region.

Armenia in talks to purchase Russia’s Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine

TASS, Russia
Jan 12 2021
 
The first vaccine shipment is expected to arrive in Armenia in late January or early February
YEREVAN, January 12. /TASS/. Armenia is in talks with several countries to purchase coronavirus vaccines, including Russia’s Sputnik V, Deputy Director General of the Armenian Health Ministry’s National Center for Disease Control and Prevention Gayane Sahakian said at a press conference on Tuesday.
"The first vaccine shipment is expected to arrive in Armenia in late January or early February. Talks are underway to purchase vaccines that have passed the necessary clinical trials, including Sputnik V and vaccines developed by Pfizer-BioNTech and AstraZeneca. At-risk groups will be prioritized for vaccination," Sahakian pointed out.
 
Armenia has recently extended its coronavirus quarantine for another six months. Mask wearing remains mandatory in the country and a ban on events involving more than 60 people is in place. The country’s borders are closed to foreign nationals, excluding diplomatic workers, close relatives of deceased Armenian citizens and those involved in international transportation.
 

Armenia: “Bring Our Sons Home”: Families of detainees demand answers about the fate of loved ones.

IWPR – Institute for War & Peace Reporting, UK
Jan 16 2021
Families of detainees demand answers about the fate of loved ones.
By Arshaluys Mgdesyan

Two months after hostilities ended in Karabakh, the whereabouts of many Armenian soldiers and civilians detained in Azerbaijan remains unclear, with relatives concerned that Yerevan is not doing enough to locate them.

The ceasefire agreement signed on November 9 by Yerevan, Baku and Moscow did not specify the time frame for implementing the “exchange of prisoners of war and other detainees.”

Yerevan and Baku recently announced that this would be carried out based on the “all for all” principle. According to official information, this means that even those who were captured before the second Karabakh war, which broke out on September 27, are eligible for exchange.

The first swap took place on December 14, when 44 detainees were returned to Yerevan and 12 to Baku.

However, there is no information about other detainees, and the number of Armenian prisoners has increased since the end of the war, despite the deployment of Russian peacekeepers in the conflict zone.

On December 10-12, more than 60 Armenian military personnel were captured following armed clashes with Azerbaijani troops in the villages of Khtsabert and Old Tager in the Hadrut province of Karabakh.

Many of them were from the Shirak province of Armenia, and their families said that they only learned of their detention when video footage was released on social networks.

Even then, the Armenian defence ministry failed to respond to their enquiries for two days, until the relatives began a series of public protests.

“We have only one demand – to return our boys,” the father of one of the captured Shirak soldiers, who asked to remain anonymous, told IWPR. “When the war broke out on September 27, my son went to defend his motherland. And now, I ask the government – where is my son? Who can guarantee that my son and his friends will come back? I know many from Shirak whose sons were taken prisoners.”

The head of the de facto Karabakh administration, Arayik Harutyunyan, subsequently confirmed that several dozen Armenian soldiers had been captured by Azerbaijan. The information was in turn verified by Baku through the commander of the Russian peacekeepers in Karabakh, Ruslan Muradov.

However, the governments of Armenia and Karabakh do not disclose the exact number of prisoners and missing persons. 

Siranush Sahakyan, a legal representative of the Armenian prisoners at the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR), said that she currently knew of 150 prisoners of war.

“Azerbaijan is hiding Armenian prisoners, violating the ‘all for all’ principle,” she continued. “We have already submitted 75 applications to the ECHR to defend the rights of Armenian prisoners in Azerbaijan. In the case of 65 detainees, the court applied an interim measure and requested a response from the Azerbaijani side.”

Her team collects data on prisoners from various sources, including videos posted by Azerbaijanis on social networks. As soon as enough data is collected, they

file a lawsuit with the ECHR and follow up through other international mechanisms. She said that the team would soon be submitting 60 new claims to the ECHR.

At the government level, issues related to prisoners of war and missing persons are handled by an interagency commission headed by the deputy prime minister Tigran Avinyan. This has already met several times, and Avinyan – along with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and Defence Minister Vagharshak Harutyunyan – has held meetings with the relatives of prisoners of war and missing persons.

However, official statements that everything possible is being done for the missing have not convinced their families and friends, who demand more effective and concrete measures.

“Nobody gives us clear answers about when our sons will be released from captivity,” Varduhi, the mother of a prisoner from Armenia’s Kotayk province, said. “They just repeat that ‘everything possible is being done’ to bring them back. This is my son; he went to war as a volunteer. And now they are keeping us in darkness.”

Varduhi’s son, whose name she did not disclose, went to fight in Karabakh on September 28. He has a wife and two small children.

“The children are waiting for their father; they fall asleep holding a photo of him in their hands, praying for his return from the war. What can I tell them?” she asked.

Varduhi last spoke to her son on the phone on October 30. The conversation was short.

“My son told me that everything was all right and there was no shooting where he was, no fighting. He asked how we were and asked me not to worry and hung up. Now I understand that he just wanted to calm us,” she explained.

A week later, she recognised her son in videos posted on Azerbaijani social networks about Armenian prisoners. She approached numerous government agencies, but all refused to either confirm or deny her son’s detention.

In despair, she and other parents of prisoners and missing persons held a rally at the Russian embassy in Armenia and wrote an open letter to Moscow pleading for them to “help find their relatives through Russian peacekeepers in Karabakh”.

Actors and celebrities in Armenia also organised a rally where they called on Russia, France and the US – the member states of the OSCE Minsk Group – to take action.

“We lost hope in our government,” said Hrant Tokhatyan, an Armenian actor and one of the rally organisers. “It is simply incapable. We call on the member states of the OSCE Minsk Group to put pressure on Azerbaijan so that Baku will return our children as soon as possible.”

“From the very beginning, the Armenian government liaised very badly with the relatives of the prisoners and missing persons. The communication was very poor,” said international law expert Ara Ghazaryan, adding that the country’s leadership should have focused on this issue as soon as the war ended.

“We are facing poor management, sometimes an information vacuum,” he continued. “Relatives of prisoners and missing persons do not know where to go and what to do. There is an impression that the state simply is not there.”

Many parents, dissatisfied with the answers of officials in Yerevan, have travelled to Stepanakert, the unrecognised capital of Karabakh, to try to find answers.

One father, Harutyun, from Echmiadzin, a town near Yerevan, said he had come to “sort things out on the ground”.  

“I sent two sons to war to protect this state and now this state does not want to talk to me,” he continued. “At first, I received news that my younger son died, but I knew that my older son was alive. And, now there is no news of him either.”

The younger son was serving in the army when the war began, and the older one then volunteered and went to the front line to “be with his brother”.

“The younger, according to my information, died in mid-October,” Harutyun said. “I talked to the elder in early November. After that, he did not get in touch. I don’t want to believe that my second son is not alive either. I believe that he is alive, he will return, I can feel it.”

Defending the Indefensible

The Portugal News
Jan 8 2021
By Gwynne Dyer, in Opinion · 08-01-2021

The dispute was about territory – borders that were drawn almost a century ago by a Russian dictator, Joseph Stalin – and Azerbaijan had lost the last war and a lot of land.

So the Azerbaijanis spent a lot of money (they have oil), bought some key weapons (cheap Turkish-built drones), and took most of the land back. Human cost: around 5,000 dead on both sides, and a great many refugees. But at least it was about something real.

Now the United Kingdom is keen to buy some of those Turkish TB-2 drones, because they’re dead cheap ($1-2 million per copy), and they are very good at killing tanks. Armenia lost 224 tanks; Azerbaijan lost 36. But whose tanks is Britain planning to kill? Russia’s?

It’s 2,500 km.from London to Moscow, and most of the countries in between are part of the same NATO alliance that the UK belongs to. NATO countries have six times the population of Russia and ten times the GDP – and by the way, there are no territorial disputes between NATO countries and Russia. What are they all playing at?

You can see the same irrationality in the current weapons-grade squabble between the US Congress and the White House over next year’s defence budget. It is $740 billion, or $2,235 for each American man, woman or child.

That is more than the defence budgets of the next ten biggest-spending countries combined, although there is no evidence that the US government fears a simultaneous attack by Russia, China, India, Germany, France, the United Kingdom, Brazil, Saudi Arabia, Japan and South Korea.

Indeed, none of those national capitals is less than 5,000 km. away from the United States, and most of the distance in every case is open ocean. Only Mexico and Canada are physically able invade the United States, and either could be stopped with a few harsh words, or at worst by the highway patrol.

But what about nuclear weapons? We haven’t time to get into the arcane philosophy of nuclear deterrence, and fighting a nuclear war would actually be national suicide, so let’s just ignore the whole US nuclear establishment. The nuclear stuff in the US defence budget costs $98 billion, so how do you justify the other $642 billion?

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell explained that the disputed defence appropriations bill “will cement our advantage on the seas, on land, in the air, in cyberspace and in space,” but you have to ask: an advantage that enables the United States to do what?

Stay in Afghanistananother year? The US couldn’t win there in nineteen years, but just one more year will do the trick? Deter China from militarising some reefs in the South China Sea? Well, not so much deter the Chinese (for the airstrips are going ahead on those reefs – China is also playing the ‘Great Game’), as harass and annoy them about it.

You can see why Armenia and Azerbaijan spend money preparing for war, but for the great powers it’s just silly. They have no disputes worth going to war for, and conquering any of them has been out of the question since the advent of nuclear weapons 75 years ago. Why are they still doing it?

There is the ‘military-industrial complex’ in every developed country, of course: millions of jobs and billions in profits. But that still depends on a perception of threat, even if the threat isn’t really there. What really makes this nonsense plausible is a very ancient mindset.

In the 1960s an Americananthropologist, Napoleon Chagnon, went to the Brazilian Amazon to study the Yanomamo, some 25,000 ‘horticulturalists’ (slash-and-burn agriculture plus hunting) living in many villages of around a hundred people each. Each village was absolutely independent, completely responsible for its own survival – and always potentially at war with every other village.

There was enough land and food for them all, and nothing to be gained by grabbing more territory. In fact, they left huge buffer zones between the villages to discourage raiding.

They invited other villagesto feasts, intermarried, traded with one another, made complicated alliances, all in order to shrink the risk of the chronic, devastating wars that could annihilate whole villages. And still the wars happened.

So the only safety lay in being heavily armed and implacably ready to take revenge, even though there was really nothing at stake that was worth fighting about. Deterrence, in other words.

It’s exactly the same for today’s great powers, even though the ministers for war and secretaries of state for defence no longer wear feathers in their hair and bones in their noses. Except on State occasions, of course.