Pashinyan holds political consultations with extra-parliamentary forces: meeting held with Republic party leader

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 15:38,

YEREVAN, JUNE 22, ARMENPRESS. Caretaker Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan is holding political consultations with the leaders of several political forces. On this occasion, Pashinyan received today leader of the Republic party Aram Sargsyan, Pashinyan’s Office told Armenpress.

Aram Sargsyan congratulated Pashinyan on his Civil Contract party’s victory in the June 20 snap parliamentary elections.

“Thank you very much. I am happy for this meeting and want to thank you for accepting the invitation. I also want to state that I was following your campaign, and frankly speaking I had a very good impression. I thought the Republic party would pass the 5% threshold”, Pashinyan said.

He noted that the main topic of today’s meeting will be to hear Mr. Sargsyan’s views on the domestic political developments, their party plans, etc.

“Well. The elections have really put everything in its place. And today there are three parliamentary forces in the elections. I congratulated the other two forces as well on election and think that the best option for the overall processes will be if the discussions move to the National Assembly’s platform and an attempt is made there to find a main formula of communication between the parliamentary forces aimed at getting the country out of this situation.

The task of the extra-parliamentary forces is much easier in that sense. I think that the influences are much smaller. Here the main key work is your being the prime minister of everyone, no matter which team they belong to”, he added.

“As for our part, I think we will always stand by the state, the statehood. This is a high priority for us, the independence of Armenia is a high priority”, he said.

The meeting sides also discussed issues relating to capacity and potential unity, as well as further cooperation opportunities.

 

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Newspaper: How "hijacked" plane is managed to be transported to Armenia?

News.am, Armenia
June 16 2021

YEREVAN. – Zhoghovurd newspaper of the Republic of Armenia (RA) writes: Zhoghovurd daily was informed that the Civil Aviation Committee has completed the professional investigation of the incident that took place during the one-time technical transfer flights of the Boeing B737-300 EK-FAA aircraft being operated by "Fly Armenia Airways" LL company.

It is about the hijacked plane which had made an unauthorized landing at Tehran's Mehrabad airport on February 20 of this year. And we were informed that a decision has been made to suspend the license of the operator of Fly Armenia Airways airline plane No. 070. As a result of the professional examination, the committee has recorded flaws threatening flight safety.

Zhoghovurd daily spoke with Aram Yeghoyan, head of the flight activity department of the RA State Civil Aviation Committee, and we inquired about the details of the plane's unauthorized landing in Tehran. "I personally was in Tehran; we went [there] with five people from the committee to bring the plane [back]. At first they [the Iranians] were not giving [it], [but] then thanks to the work of our embassy [in Tehran], the plane was managed to be brought [back] to Armenia. The plane is here now, a [criminal] case has been filed, it is being investigated, and the plane is under hold," informed the representative of the Civil Aviation Committee.

Opposition Prosperous Armenia Party leader says border security is primary issue for Armenians

News.am, Armenia
June 16 2021

The primary issue for us and our people is the ensuring of border security. Gagik Tsarukyan, leader of the Prosperous Armenia Party and its candidate for premier ahead of the snap parliamentary elections, said this during a campaign meeting in Lori Province.

Tsarukyan added that the people of Armenia need security, which will allow to ease the tension caused after Armenia was defeated in the war. “This can only be ensured with Russia, which is Armenia’s centuries-old ally. We need to sign a new pact with Russia,” Tsarukyan said and called everyone’s attention to the recent meeting of the leaders of Azerbaijan and Turkey in Shushi where they signed a joint declaration on allied ties. In this regard, Tsarukyan proposed to accelerate the signing of a document on the military-political cooperation between Yerevan and Moscow.

Armenia 3rd President: We will set up committee to lead probe into 44-day Artsakh war after coming to power

News.am, Armenia

After coming to power, we will immediately decrypt the process of unblocking of roads. This is what third President of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan said today.

“In addition, we will incorporate the Armenian national interest in the process.

We will set up a committee that will lead a probe into the circumstances behind the 44-day war in Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh), and after the probe, those who led the country to capitulation will be severely punished. We will restore Armenia’s territorial integrity, as well as develop and approve plans to modernize the Armed Forces.

We will effectively coordinate the relations between Armenia and Artsakh in order to protect the interests of Armenians of Artsakh so that they don’t have to rely only on Russian peacekeepers. In addition, we will restore settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict in the format of the OSCE Minsk Group, with a guarantee for exercise of the right of the people of Artsakh to self-determination and the priority of the status of Artsakh.

We will review the structure of the Government of Armenia and reinstate the Ministries of Agriculture, Culture and Diaspora, as well as carry out reforms in the education system.

The Armenia-Artsakh-Diaspora relations will be revisited and reinterpreted, and the trilateral ties will be coordinated successfully. We will launch talks over the Comprehensive and Enhanced Partnership Agreement signed between the European Union and Armenia,” he added.

Tension on Armenian-Azerbaijani border abating, says Russian Foreign Ministry spox

Panorama, Armenia

Russia states that tension on the border of Armenia and Azerbaijan has abated in the past few weeks, Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said on Thursday, according to TASS.

"Over the past few weeks, it has been possible to reduce the tension as a whole. The corresponding consultations on settling the border dispute will continue," the Russian diplomat said.

Russia continues active mediatory efforts aimed at de-escalating the situation, the spokeswoman said.

"Close coordination has been organized with Baku and Yerevan through the Foreign and Defense Ministries and the Border Guard Services," the diplomat added.

"We see the sustainable and lasting solution of the problem in the quickest start of the work for delimiting the border between the two countries with its subsequent demarcation. We confirm the readiness to render the most active assistance to this process," the Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman stressed.

President of Switzerland highlights Russia’s role in ensuring ceasefire in Nagorno Karabakh

President of Switzerland highlights Russia's role in ensuring ceasefire in Nagorno Karabakh

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 21:41,

YEREVAN, JUNE 15, ARMENPRESS. President of Switzerland Guy Parmelin highlighted the role of Russia in stopping the military operations in Nagorno Karabakh, ARMENPRESS reports he said in a press conference after meeting with US President Joe Biden, hoping that on June 16 the issue will be discussed also during his meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin.

''The ceasefire that still remains in force was possible to reach due to the efforts of Russia'', the President of Switzerland said.

The Russian President and his delegation are scheduled to hold talks with the Swiss side on June 16 after meeting with the U.S. President Joe Biden.

Artsakh Foreign Ministry issues statement on 29th anniversary of occupation of Shahumyan region

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 15:22,

STEPANAKERT, JUNE 16, ARMENPRESS. The Foreign Ministry of the Republic of Artsakh has issued a statement on the occasion of the 29th anniversary of the occupation of the Shahumyan region of Artsakh, the ministry told Armenpress.

The statement says:

“These days mark the 29th anniversary of the occupation of the Shahumyan region of the Republic of Artsakh. As a result of a large-scale offensive launched on June 12, 1992, the Shahumyan region had been completely captured by the Azerbaijani armed forces by mid-June 1992.

During the occupation, the Azerbaijani army committed numerous war crimes and crimes against humanity, including deliberate execution of people who tried to leave the occupied settlements, extrajudicial killings of prisoners and hostages, preventing the evacuation of civilians, shelling from heavy weapons civilian infrastructure.

As a result of the occupation of the Shahumyan region and the ensuing ethnic cleansing, about twenty Armenian villages were looted, burned and destroyed, over 20 thousand people were forced to leave their homes and became internally displaced persons and refugees, hundreds of people were brutally killed or have gone missing. The subsequent offensive of the Azerbaijani armed forces on the Martakert region led to the occupation of almost half of Artsakh and drove the Republic to the verge of humanitarian catastrophe. However, thanks to their unshakable spirit and strong will, perseverance and selfless struggle, the people of Artsakh, with the support of All Armenians, managed to undermine Azerbaijan's plans to annihilate the Republic of Artsakh and its citizens.

In September-November 2020, Azerbaijan, with the direct military participation of Turkey and international terrorists, again tried to implement its criminal and xenophobic plans and do what it failed to do in 1991-94. In the course of the new armed aggression, Azerbaijan and its supporting forces committed war crimes and crimes against humanity on an even larger scale and with greater regularity. The new war has led to even greater human suffering, a new wave of refugees and internally displaced persons, and the occupation of a large part of the Republic of Artsakh.

The Shahumyan region is an integral part of the Nagorno Karabakh Republic, the historical territory of Artsakh, where our people realized their inalienable right to self-determination and subsequently established their statehood. The de-occupation of the Shahumyan region and other territories of Artsakh occupied in 1991-1994, 2016 and 2020, along with the recognition of the right to self-determination exercised by its people, is a key element of a comprehensive settlement of the Azerbaijan-Karabakh conflict and the establishment of a lasting peace in the region. The ongoing illegal occupation of the territories of Artsakh is a constant source of threats to regional peace and security in the South Caucasus”.

After Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, uneasy calm prevails at new border

Deutsche Welle, Germany

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The end of the recent conflict in the Nagorno-Karabakh region in the Caucasus led to a new border between Azerbaijan and Armenia. What is the situation on the ground? Do people feel safe? A DW report from the frontier.


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The new border between Armenia and Azerbaijan has left villagers on either side feeling vulnerable

It's 170 kilometers (106 miles) from the Armenian capital, Yerevan, to the mountainous region of the Armenian province of Gegharkunik. Since the last clashes over Nagorno-Karabakh, it has become the border area between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

According to Yerevan, the Azerbaijani military advanced up to 4 kilometers into the new border area as recently as mid-May. In the process, it occupied more than a dozen heights near the Armenian villages of Kut and Verin Shorzha and began building fortifications. Both Armenian and Azerbaijani posts can be seen on the hills, sometimes with less than 15 meters (50 feet) between them.

During the Soviet era, Nagorno-Karabakh, inhabited predominantly by Armenians, was an autonomous region in the Republic of Azerbaijan. In the late 1980s, a bloody ethnic conflict broke out there, and the Caucasus region declared itself independent. The self-proclaimed republic also controlled parts of the surrounding Azerbaijani districts. In the 1990s, the situation was referred to as a "frozen conflict."

But in late September 2020, war flared up again, and an estimated 6,000 people died in fighting. The conflict ended after barely a month and a half through a cease-fire agreement announced by Azerbaijan, Armenia and Russia. Azerbaijan restored control over large parts of its former province of Nagorno-Karabakh and surrounding districts.

| Europe| News and current affairs from around the continent | DW | 12.06.2021

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The village of Kut lies on the way to the outposts of the Armenian military. Today, fewer than a hundred people live there; only 18 children attend the local school. There are more Armenian soldiers in Kut than residents. The village has turned into a virtual fortress to guard against a possible Azeri attack.

The head of the village administration, Sima Chichyan, said the people here live as if on a powder keg. "We can no longer let our cattle graze in the meadows because danger now lurks at every turn. We have planted potatoes only in fields that are out of the line of fire. And now it's time for the hay harvest, but we probably won't be able to prepare fodder for the winter," she said.

Sima Chichyan is worried about what the winter may bring

A resident of Kut who did not want to be named advised driving to the already fortified border between Gegharkunik and the Kalbajar district now controlled by Azerbaijan. "In the trilateral cease-fire agreement of November 9, there was a point about opening roads and communication links. But see for yourself what this looks like in practice," he said, clearly disgruntled.

Two roads connecting Gegharkunik with Kalbajar and further with Stepanakert in Nagorno-Karabakh are completely closed. On the road, in several rows, are hundreds of large wire baskets filled with stones and poured round with concrete. On the other side, fortifications of the Azerbaijani army are visible. Armenians say the Azerbaijanis already consider this section of the border delimited (legally agreed) and demarcated (physically designated). Soldiers watch each other, but there are no armed conflicts here. But the closures are affecting the region's economy. There are also no more bus lines to Nagorno-Karabakh, which is why tourists are staying away.

The next village in the border area on the Armenian side is called Verin Shorzha. Only a few families still live here. They only stayed because there are several soldiers in the village, the Armenian military said. The village was largely destroyed during the first war over Nagorno-Karabakh.

Since the latest fighting, the inhabitants of Verin Shorzha are also afraid to shepherd their cows and sheep to their usual pastures. They don't know where the respective military positions are located and where danger lurks. They now graze their cattle near their village and even in it — for example, in an old Armenian cemetery from the 10th century where tombstones have long been overgrown with red moss.

There is an increasing lack of grass here, but for inhabitants, livestock is almost the only source of income. Many say that recently, the Azerbaijanis fired on a herd and injured several animals. The residents claim they then chased them over the next hill, into their own territory.

Pasture is not being used amid the threat of artillery fire from military positions

In the cemetery, several shepherds are playing cards. When asked how they assess the situation, they said, "Everything will be fine, our army is here …" But actually, the villagers are just reassuring each other this way. In reality, what worries them is that the Azerbaijani positions are only 400 meters away from the fields and reservoirs. "We don't understand who is negotiating with whom, but the situation is getting worse. There is hardly any bloodshed, but that may change, and then open confrontation is inevitable," they say.

The road from the village to a position of the Armenian army leads by car through high grass to a hill. There's a tent with a flag and fortifications made of old car tires, tree trunks and stones. Soldiers stand around, armed with machine guns and wearing protective vests and black masks. Only 10 meters away, Azerbaijani soldiers are stacking stones to build a wall. And on the neighboring hills are the firing positions of the Azerbaijanis, who are watching the events below closely.

This wall is being built by Azerbaijani soldiers just 10 meters (33 feet) from Armenian positions

"We are military. But there are no orders to obstruct the Azeris in this area," an Armenian officer tells us. At all posts, soldiers confirm: Orders are not to open fire, but to try to resolve all disputes through negotiations. Warning shots in the air, however, are allowed.

From time to time, representatives of both sides meet at the contact line to discuss the situation and outstanding issues. In the process, the situation often gets out of hand, soldiers say. Representatives of both sides then allegedly poke and hit each other with rifle butts, shoot in the air and curse. Often, they sustain injuries such as bruises and cuts. Videos of such brawls keep surfacing on the internet. In one recent video, an Armenian soldier was even killed.

Today, it's difficult to track who controls which area in the mountainous region of Gegharkunik. Since the cease-fire agreement, there have been frequent border incidents in Nagorno-Karabakh. There has been no mutually recognized determination of the exact course of the border between the two countries. According to the Armenian side, that can happen only after the Azerbaijani military withdraws to its original positions. Meanwhile, Yerevan has turned to Moscow for military assistance.

However, despite the complex situation in the Gegharkunik region, there are no Russian troops here. They have established several posts in Armenian Zyunik and Goris right on the border with Nagorno-Karabakh. A group of the Russian 102nd Military Base stationed in Gyumri is housed there. The number of Russian border guards has also been increased. Additional Russian soldiers now control the airport in Sissian, Armenia.

This article has been translated from the German. The original was written in Russian.

US reclaims Turkey for the Western alliance

Asia Times



[Turkey’s importance as a 'swing state' in US regional strategy has
increased dramatically as tensions rise with Russia]

 By MK Bhadrakumar
 

Less than 48 hours will separate US President Joe Biden’s meeting with
his Turkish counterpart Recep Tayyip Erdogan in Brussels from his
summit with Vladimir Putin at Geneva on June 16. In between falls the
shadow of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) summit. This
is simply exquisite as far as planning of sequential activities go in
diplomacy.

Biden’s meetings in Brussels and Geneva are, arguably, the most
consequential “bilaterals” he’ll be having in this entire eight-day
trip to Europe. The two events have variables, but their correlation
is not in doubt.

Most of the issues that will figure in Biden’s meeting with Erdogan
are related to Russia. Even when some US-Turkey issues do not directly
concern Russia, they do affect Russia’s vital interests.

The advantage goes to Biden insofar as the personal chemistry between
Erdogan and Putin is no longer what it used to be. Turkish-Russian
relations are fraught with growing friction on several fronts.

On the other hand, Turkey’s importance as a “swing state” in the US
regional strategy has increased dramatically, even as US-Russia
tensions spiked in recent months. The Biden administration’s
diplomatic overture to Turkey needs to be assessed from such a
perspective.

Without doubt, there are major differences in the Turkey-US
relationship. Both sides have a long list of problems. But the good
part is that the two sides are realistic and willing to focus on areas
where partnership is possible. Both have a sense of urgency to mend
their relationship.

Biden and Erdogan know each other well and their private conversation
can help turn a new page in the relationship. Conceivably, they will
aim for a relatively achievable relationship. In sum, manage
differences and revive the partnership – that is going to be the
leitmotif of the Biden-Erdogan meeting on Monday.

The differences are of three categories: political, geopolitical and
personal. On the political-personal part, the crux of the matter is
that Erdogan deeply distrusts US intentions toward Turkey and him
personally. The genesis of this estrangement is to be traced to former
president Barack Obama’s administration, and Biden happens to be
associated with it.

The manner in which the Obama administration coaxed Erdogan, who was a
close family friend of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, to join the
United States’ regime-change project in Syria and subsequently
disengaged itself from the project, leaving Turkey in the lurch,
profoundly upset Ankara.

Meanwhile, the US policy of assisting a faction of Syrian Kurds, the
YPG, began under the Obama administration, in 2014, and inevitably it
has been a ticking time bomb since then.

The strategic contradiction was simply far too much for Turkey to
accept – that the US got directly linked to a terrorist organization
that has long fought an insurgency against another NATO ally.

If that wasn’t bad enough, the failed coup attempt in 2016 to
overthrow Erdogan dealt a body blow to the Turkish-American
relationship. Turkey suspects that Obama was supportive of the coup
attempt and blamed the US for harboring the Islamist preacher Fetullah
Gulen. Washington simply stonewalled when Turks sought Gulen’s
extradition.

Suffice to say, Erdogan’s efforts during the past five-year period to
strengthen Turkey’s strategic autonomy, to develop relations with
Russia and to work toward building up Turkey as one of the great
powers in the region fall in perspective.

On the geopolitical plane, a whole lot of issues have cropped up
stemming out of Erdogan’s independent foreign policies in recent
years, but the issue that has driven a wedge between the US and Turkey
is, principally, Turkey’s purchase of the Russian S-400 missile
system.

Short of Turkey backing down on the S-400 missile deal with Russia,
Washington and Ankara are discussing some sort of mutually acceptable
formula such as the deployment of the missile system under US control
at the Incirlik airbase in southern Turkey, without any Russian
involvement in their operation and maintenance.

Turkey has reportedly given a written assurance to the Biden
administration that it will not activate the missile system. This
ingenious compromise could open a pathway for the lifting of the US
sanctions against Turkey under the Countering America’s Adversaries
Through Sanctions Act (CAATSA), which would revive Turkish
participation in the manufacture of parts for Lockheed Martin’s F-35
stealth fighter and give gravitas to the overall relationship.

This reconciliation could well be a key outcome of the meeting in Brussels.

f the S-400 hurdle that bedeviled Turkish-American relations in recent
years can be overcome, Russia will be suffering a major setback in its
regional strategies all across the board – and, Putin personally risks
a loss of face just before his summit with Biden, as the turnaround in
Russia-Turkey relations through the past few years was Putin’s
personal achievement.

No doubt, with the US backing, Turkey can be expected to revert to a
role it adroitly performed in the Cold War era as the vanguard of
Western strategies against Russia. Even more so, for the first time in
its history, NATO can consolidate a presence in the Black Sea. Of
course, with Turkish backing, Ukraine can push back at Russia with new
confidence.

Overall, it will be a game changer for US regional diplomacy in
Russia’s western and southwestern backyard. Interestingly, straight
after the meeting with Biden, Erdogan, in a symbolic move, will be
heading for the South Caucasus to visit the territories in
Nagorno-Karabakh that Turkey helped Azerbaijan conquer in recent
months.

Suffice to say, the geopolitics of the regions surrounding Turkey are
at an inflection point. The US has an urgent need to get Turkey on
board with its strategy to counter Russia in the entire region
stretching from the Caucasus and the Black Sea to Ukraine and Poland,
apart from West Asia proper. Turkey is potentially the best regional
partner in the United States’ efforts to contain Russia and Iran.

Most important, Turkey’s cooperation is critical to counter Russia’s
growing force projection in the Mediterranean where the US has been
establishing new bases lately. Turkey and the US also have a
congruence of interests in keeping Russia out of Libya (which NATO
visualizes as the gateway for its future expansion plans into Africa).

Equally, Washington and Ankara are negotiating a deal for the
deployment of Turkish troops to ensure that Kabul airport remains
operational and accessible to the NATO countries even after the
withdrawal of the US forces from Afghanistan, which is expected next
month.

Turkish Defense Minister Hulusi Akar said last Monday that Turkey is
willing to undertake the mission if it receives financial, logistical,
and political support from its NATO allies. This promises to be a
major step in confidence-building between the US and Turkey.

Again, what role Turkey can play in Central Asia to advance US
interests remains to be seen. Interestingly, just before he leaves for
Brussels, Erdogan is hosting the newly elected president of
Kyrgyzstan, Sadyr Japarov, who has a reputation for being a staunch
nationalist and authoritarian ruler. Kyrgyzstan is a poor country with
few resources, but it borders China.

Evidently, Erdogan is also under pressure internally, as his party’s
popularity dropped lately and the Turkish economy is in bad shape, and
the public discontent is palpable. Turkey also has lost confidence
among its traditional friends and allies. Its relations with the
European Union are in stagnation and with Greece and France under
strain.

All said, Erdogan simply cannot afford an inconclusive meeting with
Biden. Erdogan’s strategy will be to promote Turkey as the United
States’ best regional partner. He has shown a willingness to act
against Russian interests. Erdogan hosted the leaders of Georgia,
Poland and Ukraine – all at odds with Russia – in quick succession
since April.

Erdogan has pledged full support for Georgia’s bid to join NATO,
sealed a drone contract with Poland and voiced all-around support for
Ukraine in its standoff with Russia. Also, Turkey took an active part
in NATO’s Steadfast Defender exercises in Romania at the end of May.

Make no mistake, Erdogan is playing for time to extend his rule for
another five years after the next election due in 2023. And he needs
Biden’s support. Erdogan is an experienced leader, and so is Biden. It
should not come as a surprise if they find common ground despite the
many disagreements between Washington and Ankara.


 

Asbarez: ANCA-WR Names 2 New Government Affairs Coordinators

June 4, 2021



Edward Barsoumian (left) and Ruben Karapetian

The Armenian National Committee of America–Western Region Board of Directors has announced the appointment of Ruben D. Karapetian and Edward A. Barsoumian as its new Government Affairs Coordinators.

“We are excited to welcome Edward Barsoumian and Ruben Karapetian to our Government Affairs team,” remarked ANCA-WR Chair Nora Hovsepian, Esq. “Having two qualified staff members exclusively dedicated to government relations will undoubtedly contribute to our advocacy efforts throughout the western U.S., especially during this critical moment for our community and nation.”

The ANCA-WR Government Affairs Coordinators will be in charge of executing the organization’s legislative strategy, further cultivating strong working relationships with elected officials and their offices to effectively advance policy priorities of the Armenian-American community on all levels of government.

“It is with great honor and pleasure that I accept the duties entrusted to me by the ANCA-WR Board of Directors, to work diligently alongside our capable team in service to the Armenian Cause and our people,” said Edward Barsoumian. “With this opportunity, I pledge to tirelessly carry on the mission laid out by generations of Armenian advocates before us on our righteous pursuit to give voice, justice, equality, and peace to Armenians everywhere.”

Barsoumian graduated cum laude and with two departmental honors from the University of La Verne, where he double majored in International Studies and Criminology. He also completed a special topics program and a certification course in Faith-Based Peacebuilding from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. He is also a confirmed member of Phi Alpha Theta (National History Honors Society). Prior to this position, Barsoumian worked with private investigators specializing in wrongful conviction cases in the California judicial system and interned with other Armenian-American advocacy organizations in Washington.

“At these unprecedented times, it is vital that the Armenian-American community engages in the political process and ensures that our voices are heard. Politics is not a hobby for me, or for most Armenians,” Ruben Karapetian noted. “However, the ANCA’s decades of advocacy and leadership have laid the groundwork for our community’s involvement. I am absolutely honored to join the ANCA-WR, fully realizing how far we’ve come as a community and noting that there is much more work to be done.”

Karapetian holds a B.A. in Political Science with a focus on Comparative Politics, obtained from the University of California, Berkeley. His primary areas of study were Eastern Europe, East Asia, and American Foreign Policy. Previously he had been an intern and research associate with the ANCA-WR analyzing and indexing global atrocity crimes and genocide.

Karapetian soon after participated in the ANCA’s Hovig Apo Saghdejian Capital Gateway Fellowship Program. Before his university studies, he worked on various film and multimedia projects in Burbank.

The Armenian National Committee of America – Western Region is the largest and most influential nonpartisan Armenian American grassroots advocacy organization in the Western United States. Working in coordination with a network of offices, chapters, and supporters throughout the Western United States and affiliated organizations around the country, the ANCA-WR advances the concerns of the Armenian American community on a broad range of issues in pursuit of the Armenian Cause.