ANKARA; Gov’t losing reformist tone, missing historic opportunity

Today’s Zaman , Turkey
Aug 2 2009

Yapıkredi economist: Gov’t losing reformist tone, missing
historic opportunity

According to YapıKredi chief economist Cevdet Akçay, the
Turkish economy is faring worse than expected, largely due to the
Justice and Development Party’s (AK Party) failure to allay people’s
fears and positively affect their expectations about the future.

The blame falls mostly on the AK Party as the governing body, but the
whole system failed the test as no one succinctly provided a set of
prudent measures, and chaos has reigned for a long time.

The tragedy, according to him, is that the economic quagmire in which
Turkey has found itself mired was largely avoidable and mostly
resulted from the AK Party’s loss of momentum on the reform front and
the party’s consequent drift towards the center of an unhealthy
political spectrum in dire need of reform.

As the party moves towards the center, he feels, it has begun adopting
the center’s unsettling populist political and economic rhetoric. This
shift in the party’s orientation is even more tragic because Turkey
was poised to be one of the countries least affected by the
crisis. Turkey’s gross domestic product (GDP) contraction and
unemployment figures are now registering some of the steepest drops in
the world.

`If someone asked me to describe a country at the beginning of the
crisis that would be exposed to minimal damage,’ said Akçay, `I
would describe a country which had the following main tenets: an
economy as large as possible; a finance sector that seems like a
midget when compared to the size of the economy; low levels of
leveraging in the financial sector; a banking sector in good health;
and a country where growth is not led by exports. I just described
Turkey. ¦ We were supposed to be exposed to minimal damage.’

Most economists agree that trade is a factor that is fundamentally
affected by external forces beyond the hands of any one particular
government. And international finance, largely affected by
international liquidity, is beyond any country’s control.

However, expectations and confidence in the market are ultimately in
the hands of the government, and the degrees to which these can be
instilled in the market have profound implications for domestic
consumption and investment — two areas that ultimately determine the
health of economies such as Turkey. In Turkey, private consumption
accounts for 74.7 percent of GDP, while private investment accounts
for 17.4 percent.

`The problems people contemplated a year ago about non-bank corporate
rollover problems did not materialize’ to the degree expected,
Akçay said. But hardly anyone expected the clobbering
experienced by the domestic sector. Nor were the banks expected to
slam on the brakes with respect to the extension of credit to the real
sector, especially small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs), which
have choked many weaker companies.

Banking sector not to blame

In stark contrast to some — such as the Independent Industrialists
and Businessmen’s Association (MÃ`SÄ°AD), who have claimed
that banks, whose profitability increased by 30 percent during the
first quarter during a time when the real economy contracted by 13.8
percent bear much of the responsibility — Akçay places the
lion’s share of the blame on the government’s failure to adequately
affect expectations.

`The duty of the banks is not to extend credit,’ he emphasized. `If
you are a bank open to the public and listed on the Ä°stanbul
Stock Exchange [Ä°MKB], your duty is to protect your
shareholders’ interests.’

`Any bank can commit two mistakes, with respect to credit extension:
extending credit to someone who is not creditworthy, or refusing
credit to someone who is worthy. In normal times, you might prefer to
extend credit to someone you maybe shouldn’t have if you have a good
loan book, even if that person is risky.’ But, he says, during times
of crisis banks are prone to choose the second error — refusing
credit to normal-risk borrowers — which he describes as `a knee jerk
reaction, because you can’t see what’s coming.’

`It’s the duty of the government to convince the public at large —
including the banking sector — that they have everything under
control,’ he said. `If you can contain people’s expectations to
reasonable levels,’ Akçay continued, `then the system has a
chance of working. But if people have too much uncertainty and if they
are unconfident that the proper policies will be implemented, then
they put the brakes on with respect to investment and consumption.’

He implies that had the government taken more prudent measures, there
may have even been an increase in credit extension by some
banks. `Suppose the cleverest bank in the system sees that despite the
crisis there are prudent measures being taken by the government to
handle the crisis successfully. Then that bank would not cut credit
lines. And if it sees other banks reacting differently, they would
probably be over-extending, to capture market share. Because they are
very much assured that the top management is doing exactly what’s
supposed to be done and that these troubles will soon pass.’

Private investment most important factor

According to the latest figures, domestic consumption in Turkey
contracted 9.2 percent in the first quarter — a figure not all that
out of line with the rest of the world. But private investment plunged
a staggering 35.8 percent in real terms. In a paradigm where export
markets are contracting, international liquidity is becoming ever
scarcer and where the vast majority of the economy is predicated on
domestic investment, affecting expectations can be seen as a
make-or-break endeavor. Indeed, the effects of this have been
devastating and have played a significant role in the skyrocketing
rates of unemployment, which clocked in at 14.9 percent for the month
of April, and the unprecedented GDP contraction of 13.8 for the first
quarter.

`People must understand that you [the government] interpret the
domestic and global and domestic pictures correctly and that you will
be implementing effective and prudent measures,’ Akçay argued.

It was not an insurmountable task, he maintains, provided
confidence-building measures were taken by the government. Turkey was
not very exposed to risk: the financial sector was well capitalized,
toxic assets did not exist on banks’ balance sheets and the overall
lack of sophistication in the Turkish system with respect to financial
instruments made it so that highly leveraged instruments were almost
nonexistent.

`The derivatives markets had just started developing when the crisis
struck,’ said Akçay. `If the crisis hit three years later, we
would have been much harder hit. We could have had toxic assets. The
crisis hit at just the right time for this country.’ Nor were Turkish
households and the real sector highly leveraged like elsewhere in the
world.

IMF agreement would have made the difference

For the large part, Akçay feels that the AK Party’s rhetoric on
the country’s thorny relations with the International Monetary Fund
(IMF) constituted considerable reason to distort expectations; not
only did the government’s ambiguous statements spook investors, but
the rhetoric contributed to erode the confidence, both domestically
and internationally, required to implement any confidence building and
convince the public that the government was on top of the situation
and hence encourage investment.

AK Party rhetoric, including statements made last October by Prime
Minister Tayip ErdoÄ?an, who said the IMF would `squeeze
Turkey’s throat’ and added that `we will not cast our tomorrows into
darkness by bowing to IMF demands in this time of crisis,’ was largely
to blame, Akçay feels.

`If I were AK Party, I would have marketed the IMF as a good partner
if you know how to use them,’ Akçay explained. `I would have
said, as the AK Party I am competent enough to work with this
institution, but the guys before me were not — that’s why the IMF
failed before.’

Turkey has signed 19 agreements with the IMF throughout the country’s
decades-long affair with the institution, 17 of which have failed. The
only two successfully completed agreements occurred under the
leadership of the AK Party. In Akçay’s view, had the government
successfully argued that the `IMF is not a monster, it’s a partner’
and convinced the public that the game with the IMF is not zero-sum,
an ensuing agreement would have much better laid the groundwork for
Turkey to better weather the crisis.

Critics of the IMF have long asserted that IMF austerity measures
would only serve to exacerbate Turkey’s woes during the crisis and
require further cuts to government funding in the real sector.

`The IMF has been very lenient on Turkey. If people say that the IMF’s
policies were strict, they should take a look at the numbers
again. They have been lenient to Turkey in normal times. Now, they
would be particularly lenient.’

Observers have long held that the twin anchors of the IMF and the EU
have been instrumental to the economic and political reform process in
Turkey. On the economic front they point to numerous macroeconomic
indicators as well as the success of the AK Party government in
preparing budgets over the last seven years under IMF tutelage. Six
budgets went off without a hitch, despite critics’ initial denigration
for being overly ambitious. The 2008 budget has been the only budget
to be way off the mark, and it was prepared without an IMF agreement.

Supporters of an IMF agreement say that it’s hard to imagine a
scenario whereby a $35-45 billion agreement with the fund would not
have helped Turkey. The Turkish Treasury would be more secure, there
would not be rollover rates of 100 to 110 percent and financing
problems would be solved.

For Akçay, the matter is quite simple: `Does anyone know
whether there will be a financing problem at the end of the year?’ His
answer is `no’ — although there has not yet been one. `But, if the
IMF was in the picture, is there any guarantee that there will not be
financing problems at the end of the year? The answer is yes, which
means I wouldn’t have to worry about upward pressure on the effects of
foreign exchange or non-bank corporate repayment problems.’

`It’s all about expectation management. They missed the train for no
good reason.’

AK Party losing its reformist nature cost it the election

Akçay feels that the AK Party’s handling of the IMF debate is
part and parcel of a larger ailment that the party is succumbing to as
the party loses much of its former reformist glory in favor of moving
towards the center of the political spectrum — an unhealthy center,
in dire need of reform. `The AK Party must change the center, make it
more EU-compatible, more Obama-compatible. Changing the center would
be the biggest service it could do for the country. ¦ What they
said could have come from the ODP [Freedom and Solidarity Party], the
MHP [Nationalist Movement Party], the CHP [Republican People’s Party]
or a leftist faction.

`I think the rhetoric that differentiates you from the rest of the
parties is going to work best. The thing that helped AK Party was that
they were different from the rest of the bunch. They lost votes in the
last election because they began speaking like the rest of the bunch.’
This applies to the handling of a host of issues, from the Kurdish
question to the Armenian issue to problems in Iraq.

As a final note, which he calls the last but not the least, he claims
that there is one very common mistake committed by all who attempt to
assess the AK Party’s performance. And that is the attempt to assess
the AK Party without trying to understand the constraints within which
they were working and the psychology that they operated under. The
post-non-closure decision era is a very indicative case, he
claims. The AK Party could and should have felt victorious after the
decision, but they felt beaten up and reprimanded. He states that his
prediction before the closure case was the following, which he notes
materialized almost exactly: `The AK Party will not be closed, this is
virtually impossible in today’s Turkey, but the AK Party will not be
the smooth operator that it was prior to the case, and that is the
biggest risk going forward, as it entails weaker governance and higher
uncertainty.’

02 August 2009, Sunday
DAVID NEYLAN Ä°STANBUL

Electrical Sub-Station Fire In Syunik

ELECTRICAL SUB-STATION FIRE IN SYUNIK

2009/07 /31 | 12:06

Society Marzes

A fire broke out at the Southern Electrical Network’s "Davit-Bek"
branch #35-10 sub-station in Syunik Marz on July 30 at around 11:50
am. The sub-station is located on the Kapan-Kajaran hifgway.

By 1:00 pm local emergency services had brought the blaze under
control.

http://hetq.am/en/society/hrdeh-4/

Jehovah’s Witnesses Denied Registration In Karabakh

JEHOVAH’S WITNESSES DENIED REGISTRATION IN KARABAKH
Lusine Musayelian

Armenialiberty.org
http://www.azatutyu n.am/content/article/1789989.html
July 31 2009

Authorities in Nagorno-Karabakh have refused to allow Jehovah’s
Witnesses and another non-traditional religious group to legally
operate in the self-proclaimed republic, citing their "methods of
psychological influence" on the population.

A new law adopted by the Karabakh parliament recently obligated all
religious denominations to re-register with a government department on
religious affairs and ethnic minorities within a six-month period. All
but two faiths active in Karabakh have already been granted such
registration.

Ashot Sargsian, head of the department, told RFE/RL on Friday
that activities of Jehovah’s Witnesses and the other group, called
Rebirth of Fire, were effectively banned on the basis of a "negative
expert conclusion." "It is mainly conditioned by the fact that those
religious organizations operate in Artsakh in violation of our laws,"
Sargsian said, citing their "proselytism" and "methods of psychological
influence."

Artur Ispirian, a Yerevan-based lawyer for Jehovah’s Witnesses,
dismissed the explanation, saying that the Karabakh law does not define
the term "proselytism." Levon Sardarian, a local Fire of Rebirth
leader, likewise denounced the government claims as "unfounded" and
"ludicrous." He said no Karabakh official has ever attended religious
services held by his sect.

Both Ispirian and Sardarian said the registration ban will be
challenged in court. They also made clear that their religious
organizations will not cease their activities in Karabakh in any case.

"Will certainly continue to operate," Sardarian told RFE/RL. "We are
ready for any persecution."

Sargsian warned, however, both cults against any engaging in any
"illegal activities." "I’m sure the state would take strict sanctions,"
he said. "First of all because, we have martial law in place."

Jehovah’s Witnesses has long been at odds with the authorities in
both Karabakh and Armenia because of its perceived threat to the
quasi-official Armenian Apostolic Church and strong opposition to
compulsory military service. Dozens of its young male members have
consciously gone to jail to avoid the two-year service.

The imprisonments have continued even after Armenia enacted a law
on alternative service in June 2004 under pressure from the Council
of Europe. The Armenian government legalized Jehovah’s Witnesses in
October 2004.

Artak Zakarian Appointed Head Of RA Ministry Of Diaspora Staff With

ARTAK ZAKARIAN APPOINTED HEAD OF RA MINISTRY OF DIASPORA STAFF WITH THREE-MONTH PROBATION PERIOD

Noyan Tapan
July 30, 2009

YEREVAN, JULY 30, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. By a decision made at
the RA government’s July 30 session Artak Zakarian was appointed Head
of the RA Ministry of Diaspora Staff with a three-month probation
period. Noyan Tapan was informed about it by the RA government
Information and Public Relations Department.

ANKARA: Armenia Insists On Border Opening For Turkey Visit Despite N

ARMENIA INSISTS ON BORDER OPENING FOR TURKEY VISIT DESPITE NO PROGRESS

July 29 2009
Turkey

Armania insists opening of border with Turkey despite any progress
between Baku and Yerevan.

Armenian President Serzh Sarksyan said on Tuesday he would only accept
an invitation to a football match in neighbouring Turkey on Oct. 14
if Ankara opens border.

Armania insists opening of border with Turkey despite any progress
between Baku and Yerevan.

Azerbaijan says "real steps on elimination of occupation" need to
be made before any kind of agreement with Armania and urges its main
ally Turkey to continue support.

"We expect to witness constructive steps soon, by which our colleagues
will try to provide a suitable environment for the return visit of
the Armenian president," Sarksyan told a news conference after meeting
his Serbian counterpart Boris Tadic.

"I will accept the invitation only in the event the agreements reached
are fulfilled, if we see real steps. I will go to Turkey if we already
have the border open or we are on the threshold of the blockade being
lifted," he said.

Sarksyan was invited to the return leg of the World Cup qualifying
tie between Turkey and Armenia when Turkish President Abdullah Gul
was in Yerevan last year to attend the first leg, the first visit to
Armenia by a Turkish leader.

The two countries announced a roadmap in April to normalise ties.

Turkey closed the frontier in 1993 in solidarity with Azerbaijan,
which was fighting Armenia that occupied the breakaway Nagorno-Karabakh
region.

Azerbaijan, a traditional Muslim ally of Turkey and supplier of oil
and gas to the West, reacted angrily to the thaw between Yerevan
and Ankara, prompting Turkey to say the roadmap would only come to
fruition with progress on the fate of Nagorno-Karabakh.

www.worldbulletin.net

RA President Departing For SCTO Informal Summit

RA PRESIDENT DEPARTING FOR SCTO INFORMAL SUMMIT

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
30.07.2009 11:02 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan will take part
in a CSTO informal summit which will be held in Kyrgyzstan on July
31-August 1, an informed source told PanARMENIAN.Net.

Leaders of Belarus, Kazakhstan, Russia, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan will
also attend the event to be held in the residence of Kyrgyz President
on Issyk-Kul lakeside.

Armenia Fund Chairman Visits Armenian Assembly of America

Armenia Fund, Inc.
111 North Jackson St. Ste. 205
Glendale, CA 91206

Tel: 818-243-6222
Fax: 818-243-7222
Url:

PRESS RELEASE
Contact ~ Sarkis Kotanjian
[email protected]

Armenia Fund Chairman Visits Armenian Assembly of America

Washington, D.C. – On Tuesday, June 30, 2009 Armenia Fund U.S. Western
Region Chairman Ara Aghishian, Esq. and Public Relations Director Sarkis
Kotanjian visited the Armenian Assembly of America’s offices and met
with Executive Director Bryan Ardouny. The meeting, held at the
Assembly’s Washington offices, focused on reinforcing the relations
between the Armenia Fund and the Armenian Assembly with the common goal
of improving the lives of the people living in the Homeland, both in
Armenia and Artsakh.

Mr. Ardouny informed the Armenia Fund about the Armenian Assembly’s
public advocacy programs and planned projects. Mr. Aghishian spoke about
the Armenia Fund’s ongoing works in Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh and
future programs. The meeting concluded on a high note with continued
cooperation between the two organizations.

Armenia Fund, Inc., is a non-profit 501(c)(3) tax-exempt corporation
established in 1994 to facilitate large-scale humanitarian and
infrastructure development assistance to Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh.
Since 1991, Armenia Fund has rendered more than $190 million in
development aid to Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh. Armenia Fund, Inc. is
the U.S. Western Region affiliate of `Hayastan’ All-Armenian Fund. Tax
ID# 95 4485698

www.armeniafund.org

La Mesa man guilty of threats against Obama

La Mesa man guilty of threats against Obama

A La Mesa man finds out when free speech is no longer protected, after
he is convicted of making threats against a candidate for president.

FOX 5 News (San Diego, CA)
July 28, 2009

By Perette Godwin, FOX 5 San Diego Reporter

SAN DIEGO, California – Walter Edward Bagdasarian walked out of
federal court Tuesday morning the same way he walked in, wearing a
stoic expression on his face and clutching the hand of his wife. But,
when Bagdasarian came out of the Edward J. Schwartz Federal Building
he was a man guilty of threatening the man running for the country’s
top spot, now President Barack Obama.

"The government’s position essentially was that the defendent intended
to make a threat," said Assistant United States Attorney William
Cole. "Again, the law does not turn on whether he intends to carry it
out but whether he intends to make a threat."

Bagdasarian requested and was granted a bench trial, meaning no jury
decided his fate. In finding him guilty U. S. District Judge Marilyn
Huff found the two messages Bagdasarian posted on the internet October
22, 2008, were intended as a threat. The messages, one which read, "He
will have a 50 cal in the head soon," were discovered after a retired
air force officer saw them on a Yahoo finance website and called the
secret service.

Another email included racial slurs and read, "Shoot the n–. Country
f—– for another 4+ years, what n– has done ANYTHING right???? Long
Term???? Never in history, except s-mbos."

In defending his client, Defense Attorney Ezekial Cortez argued the
postings were political speech and protected by the first
amendment. He also told the judge his client was drunk when he went on
the website.

"Defense counsel proffered the idea that he was drunk at the time but
as we indicated in court there was very limited evidence to
intoxication," said Cole.

Cortez objected to the introducction of other emails Bagdasarian sent
to someone on November 4th, election day. One email included a YouTube
video link showing a car being blown up after it was hit by a round
from a weapon. Cole said the second emails were important because they
also showed intent.

"All these days later he is still talking about the same subject
matter," he said. Which in the government’s mind undercuts the notion
these statements were solely the result of drunkeness."

Phone calls to Bagdasarian’s business and to the office of his
attorney went unreturned.

Out on $100,000 bail, the 47-year-old will be sentenced in
October. Each count he is convicted of carries a maximum of five years
in prison. So what will he be sentenced to, if he spends any time in
prison?

"Theoretical maximum is 10 years in prison," said Cole. "But again the
government has not made a recommendation at this time and has no
prediction at all as to what the sentence will be."

obama-threat-suspect,0,1139589.story?track=rss

http://www.fox5sandiego.com/news/kswb-

Total Assets Of Armenian Banking System 1,117.7 Billion Drams By End

TOTAL ASSETS OF ARMENIAN BANKING SYSTEM 1,117.7 BILLION DRAMS BY END OF JUNE

ARKA
July 29, 2009

YEREVAN, July 29. /ARKA/. Total assets of Armenian banking system were
1,117.7 billion drams by the end of June 2009, which is a reduction
of 10.2 billion drams or 0.9% over the second quarter of 2009.

Cash grew by 6.7 billion drams or 12.8% up to 59.3 billion drams
over the second quarter, says the banks’ review by the Central Bank
of Armenia (CBA).

In the reporting period, correspondent accounts in banks drastically
increased by 59.4% or 40.3 billion drams up to 108.1 billion drams.

Banks’ liabilities to the Central Bank (including correspondent
accounts) reduced by 2.1 billion drams or 1.3% down to 156.2 billion
drams in the reporting period.

Liabilities to banks and other financial organizations went down by
30.1% or 16.8 billion drams to 39.1 billion drams by the end of the
second quarter.

Possible loss reserve on assets grew by 4.2 billion drams or 28.3%
up to 18.8 billion drams in the period.

Credits to legal entities went down by 8.5 billion drams or 2.7%
to a total of 308.7 billion drams.

Credits to individuals reduced by 22.6 billion drams or 7.4% to a
total of 283.3 billion drams.

Credits issued to persons affiliated with banks were 3.8% down to
about 17 billion drams by the end of June 2009.

Investments in government securities reduced 7.8% or by 5.9 billion
drams down to 69.8 billion drams by the end of June.

Leasing and factoring transactions decreased by 23.6% down to 5.7
billion drams in the reporting quarter.

Investments in other securities grew by 25.2% up to 4.9 billion drams
by the end of June.

Banks’ fixed assets totaled 53.1 billion drams at the end of June
2009 against 51.8 billion drams at the end of March 2009; accrued
interest due was 7.3 billion drams, other assets were 24.1 billion
drams against about 21.4 billion drams in the beginning of the quarter.

According to the preliminary information based on interim financial
reports of banks for the second quarter of this year, the following
were the five biggest banks in the first half of 2009 in terms of
assets – ACBA-Credit Agricole Bank (143.2 billion drams), HSBC Bank
Armenia (133.9 billion drams), Ardshininvestbank (115 billion drams),
Bank VTB (Armenia) (99.3 billion drams) and Ameriabank (86.2 billion
drams).

There were 22 banks and 383 branches operating in Armenia on June 30
this year. ($1=367.15 drams).

Chess: Aronian On Mainz: I Wish Chess Could Always Be Like This

ARONIAN ON MAINZ: I WISH CHESS COULD ALWAYS BE LIKE THIS

Chessbase News
d=5613
July 27 2009
Germany

26.07.2009 – The 2007 Chess Classic starts on Monday, with a simul
on 40 boards by GM Levon Aronian. The Armenian Olympic Champion and
world number four goes on to defend his Chess960 title and then play in
the Rapid World Championship against World Champion Vishy Anand. What
does he think about the Mainz event? Levon clearly thinks it is great
fun. Light-hearted interview.

Chess Classic Mainz 2009

The 2009 Chess Classic will take place from July 27 to August 2 in
the Rheingoldhalle of the Congress Centre, Hilton Hotel in Mainz,
Germany. The event includes tournaments and Opens in traditional and
Random Chess, with stars like the current World Champion Vishy Anand,
Levon Aronian of Armenia, strong Russian junior GM Ian Nepomniachtchi
and top German GM Arkadij Naiditsch. Schedule below.

Interview: You need a good feeling for harmony Levon Aronian is
the current number four in of the world. He is also known as one
of the very best rapid players. During the 2009 Chess Classic the
Armenian Olympic Champion will be the main actor. He will open the
Chess Classic with a traditional simul on 40 boards, he will try
to defend his Chess960 title and he will fight for the crown in the
GRENKELEASING Rapid World Championship against World Champion Vishy
Anand. Levon is also a great fan of computer chess and you can be
sure that he will be a visitor of the Livingston Chess960 Computer
World Championship. Harry Schaack spoke with the regular guest in
Mainz who likes fun in chess, often has a twinkle in his eye, and
emanates surprising light-heartedness.

Harry Schaack: Levon, this year you are the main act of the Chess
Classic because you will be playing in both main tournaments, the
Chess960 and the GRENKELEASING Rapid World Championship. Moreover, you
will be opening the event with the traditional simul on 40 boards. Let
us start with the latter: Do you want to break Anand’s record of 39-1,
or is that not on your mind?

Levon Aronian: Well, I like simultaneous events. I think it is a
friendly way to give amateurs the opportunity to play with a top
player. The most important factor in a simul is time. Since Vishy is
such a fast player, I am not sure I can keep pace with his speed. And
his score record is not on my mind. I don’t look for the points. I
just try to have fun and entertain my opponents.

You are the World Champion in Chess960. What do you think about this
unusual event?

In Chess960 you can’t really say this guy is the best. After all the
World Championship is played with rapid time control – which is ok for
now. Maybe in the future, other organizers besides Hans-Walter Schmitt
will start making Chess960 events. Then we can play a proper Chess960
World Championship with classical time control. But for now, I think
any format we choose is fine. This event is interesting entertainment.

You won the Chess960 title 2006 in a match against Svidler. 2007 you
defended your title in a round robin with a subsequent match between
the first and second placed player. Which format is better?

I think people benefit from looking at four players more than from
a challenge between two.

And which format is better for you?

I actually don’t really care. In a round robin format there is more
randomness and thus more tension. When you are playing in a match,
you know what you have to do. With more players, one unlucky result
can change the whole situation and decide about the qualification
for the final. This makes things exciting and I think the fight is
harder when you play with more players. I guess this format is more
interesting for the spectators.

This year, you have tough opponents. Have you already played a Chess960
game against one of the participants?

I don’t think so. But I would not call myself a person with a good
memory (laughs). I can be mistaken.

Who do you regard as your main rival?

Well, all the players are strong. Everyone can be a rival. And you
also have to take into account that this is Chess960, where lower-rated
players beat higher-rated players more often.

One of your opponents will be Hikaru Nakamura who is known as one of
the best rapid chess players in the world. Can you say a few words
about his style?

It’s already a long time ago that I played against him. So I can’t
really say something substantial. I like to play with someone to get a
direct impression of his chess – to establish a personal chess relation
with them. I guess that’s the only way to judge a chessplayer. To
comment on a player I haven’t played against would be mere guesswork.

Can you say a few words about Movsesian and Bologan?

Not so long ago I played against Movsesian. I think he has improved
because he now plays with more focus. And I am happy to see his
results in the last years. I think he is strong enough to pose a
threat to anyone. I played quite a few times with Bologan. He is
a solid and kind of all-round player. He is good at manoeuvring,
and that is why Chess960 suits him.

You have a preference for many chess variations like bughouse
etc. Above all, you are the world’s leading expert in Chess960. Can
you give our readers an idea what is most important in Chess960?

I think you need a feeling for harmony. You have to develop your
pieces properly and must know how to manoeuvre them. It is a very
tricky game. Tactics play a much bigger role in Chess960 than in
classical chess. Some players who play this game well survive because
of their tactical strength. But if you want to play a perfect game,
you need a strategic vision.

Why are tactics more important in Chess960 than in classical chess?

In Chess 960 unusual and tactical motifs often crop up, motifs, which
you might see in problems or studies but rarely in classical games.

The spectators can’t wait for the highlight of Mainz 2009, the
GRENKELEASING Rapid World Championship – also a round robin with four
players. You will try for the second time to dethrone World Champion
Vishy Anand, who has won the event eleven times. Many people remember
your fantastic matches in 2007 when you lost with 1.5-2.5 in the
final. What mistakes did you make in 2007?

I don’t think I made any big mistakes in 2007…

Anand vs Aronian in Mainz

Was it just bad luck?

No, Vishy played better and won deservedly. But it has nothing to
do with dethroning or anything. "Going for it" is fun. When people –
for example me and Vishy – have played against each other for a while,
they establish a connection. They try to beat each other even without
any extra stimulus – just for the feeling of it. Because it is fun.

But it is also a competition, isn’t it?

Yes, but in rapid tournaments your rating doesn’t count. Nowadays,
rating is so important for a professional player. All invitations
are connected with rating. That means you are more relaxed and more
creative in rapid chess, I would say. And the players are in a more
friendly mood.

You are willing to take more risks in rapid games?

Yes. I think most people do. You go for lines that are entertaining
though not necessarily completely correct.

Is the surprise-factor in the opening more important in rapid chess?

Surprise is always important. But in rapid tournaments you can also
go for some dubious lines. Just to surprise your opponent, because
he doesn’t have so much time to refute your idea.

How do you assess your chances against Vishy this year?

Well, this time I want to win. That is the plan (laughing).

With Nepomniachtchi and the German number Naiditsch, two youngsters
want to make your life difficult. What do you expect from these
opponents?

It is a good field. Double A (Anand, Aronian) against double N
(Nepomniachtchi, Naiditsch). I have not played against them for quite a
while. I don’t know, but I’ve seen their games and they are dangerous.

You are a great fan of Computer Chess, and I am sure that you will
visit the Livingston Chess960 Computer World Championship. Why are you
so fascinated by this clash of chess programs? Or to put it this way:
can’t you have the same thing at home on your personal computer?

Yes, but you don’t get that amount of information. You sit next to
the people who developed these programs. And you see how much they
care and how important it is for them. They know everything about the
programs. I am fascinated by the atmosphere of joking and having fun.

Do you think you can learn anything about the programs?

I am not sure if that is the best way to learn something about the
programs. But just talking to people who do things which are very
important for chess players make me want to go there. The whole
atmosphere is nice.

You have been a regular guest of the Chess Classic for many
years. Before you won the Chess960 World Championship, you were the
only player ever to win the FiNet Chess960 Open twice. What does the
Chess Classic mean for your career?

Well, you know, the first time I won the tournament, my rating
was around 2600 or maybe even less. Winning that tournament gave my
self-confidence a boost. For me, Chess960 is a kind of pure chess. This
kind of chess somehow shows whether someone knows where to put his
pieces. Maybe that was the reason why I won this tournament twice,
to show that my success was no coincidence (laughs). In my opinion
Chess960 shows that a player has talent. And that was a good feeling.

You think Chess960 is a good indicator of talent because you cannot
hide behind your opening knowledge?

Yes, I think in Chess960 the more creative players are in a better
position than people who are more into remembering opening lines.

Did you play Chess960 in other tournaments or in private?

No, somehow I have never played it.

Did you do any preparation for Chess960?

Yes, I read some books and watched some movies (laughed). To be
relaxed is good training for your inspiration.

The Chess Classic is a big festival. What’s your impression of the
event? What is different compared to other events, what is unique?

Aronian with his girl-friend Arianne Caoili, who will also be playing
in Mainz

One thing is that a lot of people enjoy this form of chess. Everybody
is there and they say: "I wish chess could always be like this." For
me it is a meeting with people I haven’t seen for a long time. I
have many friends from that part of Germany. When I was playing for
Wattenscheid in the Bundesliga, I used to hang around that area. So
it is an opportunity to meet old friends. And the location is great:
a nice city and a good tournament hall. The organisation is pleasant,
everything is very relaxed. For me it is a nice holiday and a good
tournament. I am playing my favourite chess variant and I am around
people who love that game too. What could be better?

What are your most memorable experiences of the Chess Classic?

Probably the first time I beat Svidler and won the Chess960 World
Championship 2006. You want to win because that guarantees you an
invitation for next year’s tournament. I was kind of lucky that my
title defence from 2008 was delayed to this year because last year
I had other obligations. So I got an additional year.

But this year you will have two chances to be reinvited…

Yes, I will try to grasp this opportunity.

Thank you very much and good luck.

http://www.chessbase.com/newsdetail.asp?newsi