Armenia faces real threat of losing secretary general post in CSTO

Aysor, Armenia
Nov 11 2018
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Armenia is facing serious risk of failure in the CSTO, newly elected first deputy president of Republican party Vigen Sargsyan told the reporters today, referring to the results of the session of heads of CSTO member states in Astana.

“I think our government must do everything not to lose the post of the secretary general in the CSTO at the session in St. Petersburg on December 6. If we lose the post it will be the biggest failure of the government,” he said, adding that the risk of losing the post should have been considered before undertaking steps against former secretary general of CSTO Yuri Khachaturov.

“Our government exerted serious efforts for having posts in the EAEU and CSTO and I think it really gave us serious privileges,” Vigen Sargsyan said.

He stressed that Khachaturov’s appointment as CSTO secretary general was significant considering his participation in Karabakh war as well.

“Armenia has always been an active role-maker in the CSTO and had a weighty position. I think it was a value and I have a big hope that PM Pashinyan’s words that Armenia will not change its political vector are real otherwise we will face rather serious issues,” Sargsyan said.

At the November session in Astana, president of Kazakhstan Nursultan Nazarbayev offered to pass the position of the CSTO secretary general to Belarus which is the next in turn after Armenia. Meanwhile the post of the secretary general in the establishment belongs to Armenia until 2020.

The heads of the CSTO members states will make final decision on CSTO secretary general post on December 6 in St. Petersburg.

RPA proportional list to be headed by Vigen Sargsyan

News.am, Armenia
Nov 11 2018
RPA proportional list to be headed by Vigen Sargsyan RPA proportional list to be headed by Vigen Sargsyan

21:28, 11.11.2018
                 

Authorities that enjoy great trust must have an opponent, Armenian ex-Defense Minister Vigen Sargsyan told reporters on Sunday.

“The opposition is the strongest lever of the people towards the government,” he said.

According to him, the political calculation in the conduct of a hasty election is to ensure that the force headed by Nikol Pashinyan, using his high rating, receives enough votes so as not to share power with other forces.

“I will head the list. It will include both our friends who are members of the party, and a number of representatives of other parties or non-party candidates,” he noted.

Armenia wants price cut for Russian gas

New Europe
Nov 11 2018
Armenia wants price cut for Russian gas

The post-revolutionary government of Armenia wants a price cut for consumers of natural gas supplied to the South Caucasus country by Russian energy giant Gazprom.

Garegin Baghramyan, Armenia’s acting minister of energy and natural resources, told reporters on November 8 that “negotiations are being conducted toward the reduction” of prices, without providing details.

Gazprom sells gas to its Armenia-based subsidiary at a price of $150 per thousand cubic meters of gas.

The Armenian subsidiary, which owns Armenia’s gas-distribution network, then sells it to consumers in the country for about $284 per thousand cubic meters.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan reportedly discussed the price of gas that Moscow supplies to Armenia during his meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Moscow in September. At that time, Putin asserted that Yerevan receives Russian natural gas “at the lowest prices Gazprom sells gas in the world — $150 per 1,000 cubic meters.”

In 2015, hundreds of thousands of Armenians took to the streets in mass protests against a hike in electricity prices after a Russian-owned company managing Armenia’s power grid was granted a tariff rise by Armenia’s ousted former president , Serzh Sargsyan.

Trump blames Obama for Ukraine’s loss of Crimea

US President Donald J. Trump blamed the “regime” of his predecessor Barack Obama for Ukraine’s loss of the strategic Crimea Peninsula in the Black Sea, which was invaded and annexed by Russia in March 2014.

“About the fact that President Obama allowed a very large part of Ukraine to be taken [by Russia],” Trump said during a press conference in Washington, to which he added that he had cordial, and often warm discussions with Russian President Vladimir Putin

“The fact is I had a very, very good meeting with President Putin,” Trump said. “A lot was discussed — about Syria, about security, about Ukraine.

When pressed by the international media about his position on Ukraine, Trump said, “That was President Obama’s regime. That was during President Obama. Right?” Russia sent thousands of troops into Crimea following Ukraine’s pro-Western Euromaidan Revolution toppled the government of Moscow-friendly Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych in February 2014.

Moscow has since backed pro-Russian separatists in eastern Ukraine where the fighting has killed more than 10,300 people since April 2014.

Commentary: Quantum politics and predicting the US-China rivalry

Channel News Asia, Singapore
Nov 11 2018

A paradigm shift is needed to understand modern geopolitics, says University of Hong Kong's Andrew Sheng.

China is currently in an escalating trade war with the Trump administration (Photo: AFP/STR)

HONG KONG: US President Donald Trump’s recent United Nations address provoked a number of responses. One of the most interesting came from former physicist and current President of Armenia, Armen Sarkissian. 

In an interview with the Financial Times, Sarkissian argued that we need to think about politics like we think about "quantum behaviour". He went on to suggest that "we are living through a dynamic process of change" and that "we have to look at our world in a completely different way".

But what has "quantum politics" got to do with geopolitical rivalry?

The West’s underlying worldview derives from an empirical perspective of science that emerged during the scientific revolution. 

In the 18th century, leading thinkers pushed for scientific methodologies that were both rational and mechanical. They assumed the world could be observed and objectively measured independently of human sentiment.

This paradigm began to dominate Western philosophy and the human sciences. Ever since science and mathematics began being taught in schools, this classical paradigm has dominated non-Western and Western societies alike. 

It was a comforting view of the world — science could remove uncertainty in the quest for human improvement.

But when Albert Einstein’s theories of relativity emerged in the early 19th century — followed by the quantum theory of Niels Bohr and Werner Heisenberg’s uncertainty principles — views began to diverge as to what science was telling us. This uncertainty also spread to the social sciences.

WORLD FILLED WITH UNCERTAINTIES

Flora Lewis was the first to observe this schism in scientific thought, arguing that modern physics proves that "the world is a mass of uncertainties" where "predictions of reality must be based only on waves of probability". 

The social sciences appeared to be offering solutions with certainty under circumstances where apparently there was none. Lewis suggests that "the quantum mechanics of politics" demands from us an understanding that flux is inevitable.

Armen Sarkissian, who was chosen by Armenia's parliament as the country's new president, attends a parliamentary session in Yerevan, Armenia March 2, 2018. (Photo: REUTERS/Vahram Baghdasaryan/Photolure)

When the Global Financial Crisis broke out in 2007, the British Academy admitted to the Queen of England that they failed to see the crisis coming. It was an admission that mainstream economic and political theory did not correspond with reality.

Indeed, the failure of polls to predict Brexit or Trump’s election confirms that expert paradigms are flawed. The idea that economic systems are inherently stable is being challenged. Without economic stability, political instability is a likely consequence.

So what concepts in quantum theory might help us understand international relations today? The non-classical world is one of multi-states, entanglement and relativity — all of which put uncertainty at the heart of natural and human behaviour.

Classical social science suggests that everything is well defined and either good or bad, so truth is absolute. But quantum theory suggests that multiple states can exist simultaneously, like Schrodinger’s cat, both dead and alive simultaneously. 

This leads to entanglement, where purity becomes unattainable. In economic terminology, the externalities are always non-zero.

US-CHINA RIVALRY

What relevance is this to current US–China tensions?

Henry Kissinger once said that to Americans, every foreign policy problem has a unique and elegant solution. For the Chinese, every solution brings multiple problems. Historian Wang Gungwu suggests that Americans think in terms of ideology, whereas the Chinese think in terms of systems.

With is obsession with the US–China bilateral trade deficit, the President Donald Trump thinks that any deficit is a win for China. Classical game theory suggests that, absent knowledge, the two countries will not cooperate so as to avoid costly tariffs. 

But even in situations of uncertainty, cooperation on global issues can be a win–win. Global and national political problems are more complicated than ever and classical paradigms cannot readily explain how this has come to pass.

China's trade deficit with the US jumped almost 20% in the first quarter of the year (Photo: AFP/Johannes EISELE)

Brexit and the US–China trade war are all about disentanglement, an unravelling of systems and processes that will be extremely costly and unpredictable. 

Classical thinking suggests that the shift to unilateral decision-making and bilateralism might be a win for the United States in the short-term. But the complex long-term consequences for the global system will not come cheap.

Sarkissian’s observation suggests we need to break out of classical modes of thinking in order to understand how a complex world is affected by what is akin to "quantum behaviour". 

Trump is hard to predict using conventional logic, but his strategies and tactics have a pattern — he uses uncertainty to disrupt opponents that presume conventional thinking.

The current trade war is more psychological than real — it will take time for the effects of higher tariffs to impact on the macro economy and consumer decisions. But the rules of psychological warfare seem to suggest that threats have zero marginal cost, with high payoff if opponents yield to threats.

Sun Zi’s classical phrase is embedded in over 3000 years of Chinese thinking — know yourself before knowing your enemy. 

There are no easy battles, only long wars and the most difficult task of all is conquering one’s self. In this, the insights of quantum theory, which have similarities with Chinese systemic thinking, might just help.

Andrew Sheng is Distinguished Fellow at the Asia Global Institute, University of Hong Kong. This commentary first appeared in East Asia Forum.


Europe, Middle East map redrawn by World War I By AFP 13 hours ago

Rudaw, Kurdistan Province of Iraq
Nov 11 2018
 
 
Europe, Middle East map redrawn by World War I
 
By AFP
 
PARIS, France — Empires would fall, regions reconfigure, new countries form: the end of World War I overhauled the global balance of power and redrew the maps of Europe and the Middle East.
 
Here is an overview.
 
Revolution in Russia
  
The war rang the death knell for a Russian empire already in bad shape.
 
Repeated defeats, crippling military spending, famines, popular anger at the World War I bloodbath: all came together in the Marxist Bolshevik Revolution of 1917.
 
In March that year a first revolution lead to the abdication of Nicholas II, Russia's last tsar, and the formation of a new government that proved unable to assert control.
 
In November the Bolsheviks seized power in a second revolution. They immediately sought an exit from the devastating war, in which Russia had sided with the Allies against the Central Powers coalition of Germany, Austria-Hungary and others.
 
By December Bolshevik leader Vladimir Lenin had agreed an armistice to end combat; in March he agreed to a peace treaty with Germany and its allies that saw Russia give up large swathes of territory at the cost of 30 percent of its population.
 
Four states were created from territory once held by Russia: Estonia, Finland, Latvia and Lithuania.
 
Demise of old Austria-Hungary
  
At the outbreak of war in 1914, the Habsburg dynasty's Austro-Hungarian empire — which had dominated central Europe for five centuries — stretched from Switzerland to Ukraine, grouping within it a dozen nationalities and more than 52 million people.
 
By the end of the conflict, the empire had exploded into several new countries, amid a nationalist fervour for autonomy.
 
Czechoslovakia was the first to be created, proclaimed in October 1918, and followed immediately by Yugoslavia, made up of Slavs in the southernmost parts of the empire.
 
Austria-Hungary's break-up was sealed in November with its signing of an armistice with the victorious Allied powers led by Britain, France and the United States.
 
The Paris Conference of 1919, where the final post-war peace treaty was reached, recognised the new countries and also resulted in the birth of Poland, previously divided between Austria and Russia.
 
Hungary lost two-thirds of its land, with Italy getting a section of the Alps region of Tyrol. And "the rest is Austria", as the French prime minister, Georges Clemenceau, famously put it.
 
The separated Austria and Hungary that remained were reduced to small, landlocked countries.
 
Ottoman fallout
  
When Ottoman sultan Mehmed V proclaimed the "holy war" against France, Britain and Russia in November 1914, siding with the Central Powers, his empire had already lost most of its European possessions.
 
The setbacks it went on to suffer on the Russian front from 1915 served as a pretext to turn on its Armenian minority, labelled as traitors and suspected of harbouring nationalist sentiment.
 
Armenians say up to 1.5 million of their people were killed during the war, and almost 30 countries have recognised the killings as genocide. Turkey refuses the term but accepts that massacres took place that, along with a famine, resulted in the deaths of 300,000-500,000 Armenians and as many Turks.
 
The Ottoman defeat in World War I led to the final break-up of the once-mighty empire.
 
A first treaty signed with the victors in Sevres, France, in 1920 chopped off enormous parts of its territory, including Arab lands, and provided for an independent Armenia and autonomous Kurdistan and ceding other areas to Greece.
 
It was rejected by Turkish nationalists, led by Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, who went on to topple the sultan and establish a Turkish republic.
 
They imposed a new treaty that was signed in Lausanne in 1923 and in which the republic retained Anatolia and areas around the Bosphorus Strait.
 
Arab raw deal
 
 The British were able to triumph over the Ottoman empire thanks to the revolt of the Arab tribes in Mesopotamia and Palestine, for whom they held out the promise of independence.
 
But Britain was also in secret talks with France to share out the Middle East between them, as set out in the Sykes-Picot Agreement signed in May 1916.
 
They decided that Lebanon and Syria were to go to France, and Jordan and Iraq to Britain.
 
The partition would feed Arab frustration. This mounted with the 1917 Balfour Declaration that led to the establishment within Palestine of "a national home for the Jewish people".
 
The state of Israel was created 30 years later, its troubled foundations causing a conflict that continues to disrupt the region today.
 

Construction of a complex for IT companies is planned in Yerevan

Arminfo, Armenia
Nov 10 2018
Construction of a complex for IT companies is planned in Yerevan

Yerevan November 10

Alina Oganesyan. Dalan Technologies Group presented the Chief Architect of Yerevan Artur Meschyan and the Chairman of the City Planning Committee of the Republic of Armenia Avetik Eloyan a project to create a complex for IT companies in the territory adjacent to the Tsitsernakaberd crossroad. This is the press service of the Committee.

Group leader Armen Ter-Tachatyan noted that there are practically no infrastructures in Armenia for IT companies whose offices are mainly located in Soviet buildings. "In such conditions, it is difficult to provide appropriate conditions for quality work," he stressed.

The complex, which was developed according to the criteria of the International Association of Managers and Building Owners, is designed for 2,600 employees and will include office space, leisure infrastructure, training center, equipped with modern technologies.

"Free Democrats" and "Republic" will participate in the upcoming parliamentary elections as part of the bloc

Arminfo, Armenia
Nov 10 2018
"Free Democrats" and "Republic" will participate in the upcoming parliamentary elections as part of the bloc

 November 10

Yerevan

Naira Badalyan. The Republican Party and the Free Democrats will go to early parliamentary elections as part of the We bloc. The corresponding memorandum was signed on November 10 by party leaders – Aram Sargsyan and Khachatur Kokobelyan.

According to Aram Sargsyan, the "We" bloc holds the view that the velvet revolution in Armenia will achieve its final goal if there are important changes in both the domestic and foreign policy of the republic. Note that in December 2016 the Enlightened Armenia Party (the leader – Edmon Marukyan), "Republic" (leader – Aram Sargsyan) and "Civil Contract" (leader – Nikol Pashinyan) announced the unification into the "Elk" bloc and jointly participated in the parliamentary elections in spring 2016. In the last elections to the Council of Elders of Yerevan, the Republic Party took part, together with Enlightened Armenia, with the Luys bloc. Meanwhile, on November 4, the Enlightened Armenia Party announced that as a result of lengthy discussions with the Republic Party, it decided to independently participate in the upcoming elections to the National Assembly according to its list – with its own vision and program.

Early parliamentary elections will be held on December 9, 2018. About 3 billion drams will be directed to the organization and holding of parliamentary elections. The campaign starts on November 26th. Parties and blocks may submit applications for participation before 6 pm on 14 November. Registration at the CEC is held until 6 pm on November 19. The time for campaigning is November 26 – December 7. According to IC, a period of 12 days is granted.

Film: ‘Yeva’ receives 3 nominations at US’ Arpa Filmfest.

Mehr News Agency (MNA), Iran
Saturday
'Yeva' receives 3 nominations at US' Arpa Filmfest.
 
 
TEHRAN, Nov. 10 (MNA) – The feature movie 'Yeva', written and directed by Iranian-Armenian Anahid Abad, has received three nominations at 21st Arpa International Film Festival (AIFF) in the United States.
 
'Yerva' has been nominated to receives best feature, best script and best director award at the 21st editin of Arpa International Film Festival (AIFF) in Los Angeles.
 
Written and directed by Iranian-Armenian Anahid Abad, 'Yeva' is the story of a young woman who is forced to flee Yerevan with her daughter Nareh. She would have to stand trial there because she allegedly killed her husband. Uncle Ruben and the remote village in Nagorno-Karabakh are her last chance to go into hiding. But the villagers recognize her from the days of war when she had cared for the wounded as a doctor at the front.
 
Arpa, according to the festival's website, is dedicated to cultivating cultural understanding and global empathy by creating a dynamic forum for international cinema.
 
The 21st edition of the event is scheduled for 19-21 November 2018.
 
 
 

Sports: Henrikh Mkhitaryan may finally find stability under Unai Emery within Arsenal’s flourishing quartet

The Independent, UK
Nov 11 2018
  • Tom Kershaw

During better-weather times at Borussia Dortmund, Henrikh Mkhitaryan was the type of wriggling winger whose niftiness became so nagging it warranted a hearty hack. 

A keen and confident dribbler, the Armenian forged a prolific partnership with Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang, Marco Reus and Shinji Kagawa at the Westfalenstadion – the quartet within which the 29-year-old was ordained Bundesliga Player of the Year in the 2015/16 season.

And for a short stint, it seemed as though Mkhitaryan might bring that same yellow vibrancy to England as he notched five assists in three Premier League games after joining Manchester United.

But to most purveyors of the Premier League, those days, when it was fathomable that Mkhitaryan was one of the world’s best midfielders, are a matter of mythology compared to the off-colour flaxen with which we have been treated in the following years. 

Slowly and systematically, his confidence was bled by Jose Mourinho – withdrawn in the FA Cup third-round, left out of seven out of eight matchday squads entirely, until the Special One enacted the last sweep of his sword upon the Armenian's exit: “He realised he was not ready for this reality – physical, mental, competitiveness."

And while many pointed to Mourinho’s peculiar propensity to neuter rather than nurture, what most unsettled Mkhitaryan at Manchester United was that he was never given time to settle and establish a bond with his teammates, crucially, on the pitch.

In his time up north, the likes of Marcus Rashford, Anthony Martial, Romelu Lukaku, Jesse Lingard, Juan Mata, Zlatan Ibrahimovic, and on the oft occasion Marouane Fellaini were all auctioned around like vintage clobber.

And in his first season at Arsenal, Mesut Ozil, Aaron Ramsey, Alex Iwobi, Alexandre Lacazette, Jack Wilshere and Danny Welbeck too were all interchanging – a far cry from that fabled season in North Rhine-Westphalia when Dortmund’s aforementioned foursome bedded in to claim 177 appearances between them. 

Perhaps that is why, when asked whether this front-four is the most exciting he has ever played in, the Armenian diplomatically sidestepped such a query.

“I think it makes your job easier [having world class strikers]," he said. "From the left side you have Auba, from the right side you have Lacazette, you can play in the middle where Mesut is taking position so it makes things more easy. It’s a [dream] for me and I think for the others as well."

After being afforded an unlikely start alongside those three against Liverpool, Mkhitaryan was a rare streak of light in an otherwise drear draw against Sporting on Thursday night. 

So is it this new atmosphere, the stable buoyancy, surrounding Arsenal one in which Mkhitaryan can finally find the comfort which both supports and stirs him?

“I can say, ‘Yes’," he grinned in regard to the upbeat atmosphere.

"The culture has changed a bit in the club. Now people are believing more in ourselves because we are playing a bit differently, we’re giving them confidence and playing the way they want us to play. We’re scoring goals and we’re winning games.”

And it's that imperative, yet so temperamental trait – confidence – which Unai Emery repeated in no less than four successive sentences during his post-match interview on Thursday. 

“The confidence can come,” the Arsenal boss said. “Firstly from winning matches, and then also from when you feel it on the pitch you have a capacity to battle against teams with the potential of a Liverpool.”

Perhaps now that self-belief can manifest in Mkhitaryan too. The harsh stint among the moods of Manchester over, the cruel thrust into Arsene Wenger's turbulent pasture aside, instead finally faced with the prospect of becoming party to a new quartet. On the brink of embarking on a last serenade, Mkhitaryan might have his opportunity for English football to bring out, and witness, the best of him.

https://www.independent.co.uk/sport/football/premier-league/henrikh-mkhitaryan-interview-arsenal-unai-emery-manchester-united-jose-mourinho-borussia-dortmund-a8628276.html