Armenian Public TV snubs Church leader’s New Year address amid political rift

eurasianet
Jan 3 2024
Lilit Shahverdyan Jan 3, 2024

The annual address by the head of the Armenian Apostolic Church was not broadcast this New Year's by Armenia's public broadcaster, a first in the history of the country's independence.

It's the latest episode in the deepening row between the clerical establishment and the government of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, which enjoys the support of Public TV. 

The Church's governing body, the Mother See of the Holy Etchmiadzin, reported late on New Year's Eve that "at the last minute, the Public Television Company informed us, without giving a reason, that His Holiness' New Year's message will not be broadcast before midnight." 

Traditionally, the Patriarch of All Armenians' recorded annual message has been aired on Public TV, and other channels,  immediately before the address of the country's top political leader. This year, the broadcaster instead offered to show the Patriarch's message during the evening news bulletin several hours earlier. The Mother See declined.

Patriarch Karekin II's message was therefore conspicuously absent from state-funded broadcaster's airwaves and YouTube page.

As the rumors about the exclusion of the Patriarch's address started to circulate on New Year's Eve, several news platforms affiliated with family members of senior officials, including the Armenian Times, owned by Pashinyan's wife Anna Hakobyan, accused the Church of stoking controversy. 

"Karekin II  gave an ultimatum to TV channels that his speech must be broadcast at 12 o'clock, otherwise it should not be aired. Naturally, this ultimatum sparked unwarranted controversies, and many TV channels have no choice but to exclude Karekin II's address," pro-government blogger Roman Baghdasaryan wrote in a remark widely reported by pro-Pashinyan online media. 

In fact, the address was shown at the usual time by the country's private TV channels.

The Church's relationship with the Pashinyan government has been uncomfortable from the start. It had enjoyed friendly ties with the previous regime that was swept out of power by the Pashinyan-led "velvet revolution" in 2018. Shortly afterward clerical elites faced an internal uprising of their own which was ultimately not successful.  

Church-state tensions were at a low boil until Armenia's defeat against Azerbaijan in the Second Karabakh War in late 2020. The Church boldly struck out against Pashinyan's government, accusing it of compromising national interests by recognizing Azerbaijani rule over Karabakh and presented a series of political demands, including the PM's resignation.

The Church stepped up its criticism following Azerbaijan's lightning offensive to capture all of Nagorno Karabakh on September 19-20 that resulted in the forced displacement of the region's 100,000-some Armenian population. 

Late last year, the Church objected to what it called inaccuracies in narrating key events related to Christianity in a new 7th-grade history textbook for public schools and to a map in the book that places Nagorno-Karabakh inside Azerbaijan. 

On December 26, the Holy See disclosed a letter it had addressed to the Minister of Education, Sciences, Culture, and Sports in late November that asked for a review of the alleged "omissions and errors" in the textbooks.

During a professional conference on the revision of textbooks last week, Minister Zhanna Andreasyan told the Church to stay out of it. "The ministry respects the position of the church, but the state organizes education," she said.

This episode followed the government's decision last April to remove the History of the Armenian Church as a separate subject from the public school curriculum, a move criticized by Patriarch Karekin II as "short-sighted."

It's not clear what led the government-friendly broadcaster's decision not to air the top cleric's address at the usual time this year. It contained no direct criticism of the Pashinyan administration  – or indeed any political statement – over the painful issue of Karabakh. 

"Let us surround our sisters and brothers forcibly displaced from Artsakh [Nagorno-Karabakh] with caring love; let us increase hope in them so that the vision of returning to native Artsakh never fades and faith in God remains strong. Let us support the needy and distressed and seek the help of the Most High for our missing and captured ones and their families," Karekin II said in the address, according to an English translation posted on the Church's website. 

Public TV's refusal to carry the address as normal was seized on by critics of the incumbent authorities.

Arman Tatoyan, who served as human rights ombudsman during the previous government, denounced the decision as "[An] encroachment against the values of the Armenian people and our national identity, undermining the moral foundations of Armenian statehood. It is an insult to our history."

Shortly after the Church's announcement, members of a student group affiliated with the opposition Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF) hung banners outside the entrance of Public TV headquarters reading "SHAME" and "TRT1," the latter being the name of the first channel of the state broadcaster of Armenia's historical rival Turkey.

In a Facebook post featuring images of the banners, the union stated, "SHAME on the management of the Public Television Company for serving the regime that handed over Artsakh to Azerbaijan instead of upholding the public interest."

Lilit Shahverdyan is a journalist based in Stepanakert. 

 

Armenian Church Celebrating Christmas in January!

Bangladesh  – Jan 3 2024

Did you know Christmas is celebrated on January 6 at the Armenian Church in Dhaka? In fact, the Armenian Apostolic Church is an Orthodox Christian institution still practising a very old version of Christianity.

According to Liz Chater, heritage coordinator, Armenian Church Bangladesh, the exact date of Christ's birth has not been historically established — neither is it recorded in the Gospels. However, historically, all Christian churches celebrated Christ's birth on January 6 until the fourth century.

According to Roman Catholic sources, the date was changed from January 6 to December 25 in order to override a pagan feast dedicated to the birth of the Sun which was celebrated on December 25. Mithra or Mitra (Sun-god) is believed to be a mediator between god and man, between the sky and the earth and it is said Sun took birth in the cave on December 25.

At the time Christians used to continue their observance of these pagan festivities. To undermine and subdue this pagan practice, the church hierarchy designated December 25 as the official date of Christmas and January 6 as the feast of Epiphany.

Armenia was not affected by this change for the simple fact that there were no such pagan practices in Armenia on that date and the fact that the Armenian Church was not a satellite of the Roman Church. Thus, remaining faithful to the traditions of their forefathers, Armenians have continued to celebrate Christmas on January 6 until today.

"At the Armenian Church in Dhaka, we do not have a service ourselves, but our friends from the local Catholic Church hold one on or around the January 6. We are very happy that our church is used on this special day. The doors of the church are open and welcome everyone who wants to celebrate this special occasion. There is no Armenian community in Dhaka, therefore we do not have a priest. However, we are very happy to share our church with other Christian churches in Bangladesh who wish to have a service at Christmas time," says Liz Chater.

The warden of the church is Armen Arslanian. He oversees every aspect of the administration and maintenance of the Armenian Church in Dhaka. Under his direction, a team of staff carries out various necessary work around the church and compound. 

"Upkeep and preservation are very important aspects of our work. Also, very important is our Michael Martin Food Assistance Program where we offer local families around us meals once a week.

The numbers for this programme are now nearly reaching 600 people and we are very happy to help everyone who needs it," Chater explains.

The big iron gate opens to the white stone graveyards of Armenians, who came to Dhaka around the 17th century. The church was built in 1781 on Armenian Street in Armanitola, which was then a thriving business district.

The church with arched wide, white doors and windows, gives a feeling of mystery shrouded in the history of a time gone by. Researches and studies point out that it was built around an Armenian graveyard and the tombstones there chronicle the Armenian life in the area. A small garden of local trees and flowers, adds to the sombreness of the place.

Inside the church, you see the pulpit enclosed by railings and it has a main section where all the prayer activities take place and two rectangular wings of sitting pews on either side. There is a spiral staircase leading to the second floor of the church, which has a small seating arrangement upholstered in red velvet. Legends have it that the clock on the tower of the church, could be heard four miles away, and people synchronise their watches with the sound of the tower's bell.

The Armenian Church in Dhaka is architecturally aesthetic and it transports you back to the period when Old Dhaka was the most sought-after trade centre. A visit there is a must, especially if you are a history buff, and this 6 January Christmas is the perfect time to re-cap a history lesson.

Due to the national election, the church authorities have deferred the mass time to a later day, which will be notified after the polls.

https://www.thedailystar.net/my-dhaka/news/armenian-church-celebrating-christmas-january-3509366

Memoir: Clinching the Baku-Ceyhan pipeline

eurasianet
Jan 3 2024
Steven Mann Jan 3, 2024

This essay is part of a series by American diplomats sharing their impressions of the dramatic early years of Central Asia’s independence from the Soviet Union. These memoirs were written at the invitation of the DavisCenter for Russian and Eurasian Studies at HarvardUniversity. We publish these with special thanks to Nargis Kassenova, director of Davis’s Program on Central Asia.

Beginnings

Joe Presel was a singular American diplomat. When I was stationed as US ambassador to Turkmenistan in the late 1990s, Joe served as the US envoy in Uzbekistan. Fluent in Russian, Turkish, and French, Joe was a true bon vivant, yet also a streetwise product of Providence, Rhode Island.

Joe was visiting me in January 2001, near the end of my Turkmenistan assignment, when I opened an email from Beth Jones, the State Department’s Caspian energy envoy. “Have I got a job for you!” it read. Beth had been promoted to a new assignment, so she needed a successor. Though she never made it to Ashgabat, I had worked closely with her predecessors, John Wolf and Dick Morningstar, exhorting the then-Turkmen dictator, Saparmurat Niyazov, to greenlight a trans-Caspian gas pipeline.

I told Joe I was turning the job down; I didn’t think I’d thrive in a job so free-wheeling. “Wadda you, nuts?” he rejoined, conjuring visions of top-tier negotiations and billion-dollar projects. A reflective cup of coffee later, I took the job. I have long been indebted to the Hon. Ambassador Presel for that nudge to new vistas.

Happiness is Multiple Pipelines

In the 1990s Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan, and Turkmenistan had massive oil and gas fields that had languished under Soviet management. These countries were, in energy-speak, the “upstream.” Oil and gas money could transform those emerging nations if they could lure companies to develop the fields, and if they could get adequate volumes to market.

The first “if” happened fast. Soon after the Soviet implosion, companies thronged, led by Chevron, developing Kazakhstan’s supergiant Tengiz oil field. Turkmenistan had the world’s fourth largest natural gas reserves. Azerbaijan had the massive Azeri-Chirag-Guneshli (ACG) fields. BP, Total, Shell, Exxon, Mobil, and others soon followed. 

The second “if” was harder. Export routes – the “midstream” – had long existed: the Soviet Union had shipped oil and gas from the Caspian region into the industrial heartlands of Russia and Ukraine. Now, in the independence era, those pipelines were controlled by the Russian monopolies of Gazprom (for gas) and Transneft (for oil), and they squeezed the producers on transit fees. 

That was bad enough economically, but Gazprom and Transneft, then as now, were under the thumb of the Kremlin. If Moscow wanted to crack the political whip on its former vassals, the pipelines were easy-to-use instruments of coercion. Meanwhile, the United States wanted new, strong independent countries to emerge from the rubble of the old empire: new, multiple pipelines outside of Moscow’s grasp were thus a geopolitical game-changer. Accordingly, the Clinton administration created a special envoy for Caspian Basin energy diplomacy in 1998, and that was the assignment I took. 

Pipelines in Play         

By May 2001, when I started the job, some of the lines were settled, for good or for ill. That year the Caspian Pipeline Consortium (CPC) line opened, carrying oil from Tengiz in western Kazakhstan to the Russian port of Novorossiisk. True, the route ran through Russia, but legal agreements helped shield the route from Russian interference, and Kazakhstan has benefited to this day.

Two Turkmen gas pipelines had been in play: TAP, the Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Pakistan pipeline; and TCP, the Trans-Caspian gas pipeline. Taliban rule in Afghanistan killed TAP, and Niyazov’s mercurial governance twisted the knife on TCP. Ashgabat’s investment-hostile policies daunt those pipelines to this day.

The process of elimination, then, made one trans-Caucasus pipeline the centerpiece of US policy: BTC, the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline, designed to carry 1 million barrels per day of Azerbaijani crude oil to the deep-water Turkish port of Ceyhan. From there, the crude would reach world markets via supertankers. BTC construction would make it feasible to build a parallel South Caucasus gas pipeline (SCP) in the same hundred-meter corridor, sending Azerbaijani gas to Georgia and Turkey, but BTC had to come first. 

My predecessors had done the heavy lifting on BTC, forging regional cooperation and tightening the ties among governments and investors, leading to President Clinton presiding over BTC milestone agreements at a November 1999 Istanbul summit. Still, years of work remained.

17,000 Signatures 

I’m a diplomat. I can’t map a subsurface reservoir or calculate return on capital invested. That’s private sector work, and BP, as the main energy investor in Azerbaijan, oversaw BTC construction and appointed two top oilmen, David Woodward and Michael Townshend, to spearhead the project. 

But a clock was ticking. BP and its partners agreed to put up 30 percent of the project’s $3-billion cost, in addition to the billions they were spending for work on the ACG fields. Commercial and development banks agreed to finance the remaining 70 percent. To get this cash, the bankers’ severe standards had to be met, not just financial metrics, but environmental, social, and pipeline security criteria. 

The toughest lending conditions came from the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) and the World Bank: the environmental and social documentation submitted to them filled 11,000 pages in 45 volumes. We had to have those banks because their participation provided needed confidence to the commercial lenders involved. Each bank also had to be sure that the political will to make the pipelines happen remained strong. At the end of the day, it would take 17,000 signatures on project-related agreements to get the BTC and SCP pipelines off the drawing board. 

The Caspian envoy had two key tasks. First, reassuring the Caspian governments (and the onlooking banks) that the United States was rock solid in its support for the pipelines, and that the transition from the Clinton to Bush administrations in early 2001 had not changed this. Secondly, the envoy mediated between the companies, banks, and governments, brokering, badgering, and problem-solving on the unending actions needed to make the projects a “go.” What did it profit the Caspian governments if they attracted upstream investments only to have the projects bog down in bureaucracy? 

At this point I should note: in this account, I describe my own experiences, but the record should be clear that the Caspian envoy was just one part of an exceptional US team, including Dan Stein of the US Trade and Development Agency (USTDA), Ed Chow, a USTDA consultant, Bud Coote of the CIA intelligence directorate, Geoff Lyon of the Energy Department, and a series of my long-suffering assistants: Justin Friedman, Eric Green, Mary Doetsch, and Rebecca Kinyon. 

Colorful Conversations

Travel as the envoy was a treadmill: midnight arrivals, 2:00 am room-service burgers, predawn departures in armored Chevy Suburbans, and more pilfered hotel soaps and shampoos than my guest bathroom could hold. To reinforce political will, I thumped the theme of “sovereignty and independence” across Eurasian conferences like an old-time politico stumping for votes. The centerpiece event was Dan Yergin’s annual Tale of Two Seas conference in Istanbul, and the Turks were key players, thanks to the calm humor and negotiating prowess of Energy Undersecretary Yurdakul Yigitguden. 

Solving practical problems meant governmental meetings, starting in Baku. All successful pipelines begin at the upstream, and for BTC, that meant Baku. Azerbaijan had been producing oil since 1846 and built its first pipeline in 1878. The Azerbaijanis were old hands at the oil business, and the state oil company (SOCAR) was stocked with smart execs, starting with their incisive chief negotiator, Valekh Aleskerov. We had few pipeline issues there.

And as for Georgia. . . since 1995, Georgia had been under the wise but sclerotic rule of Eduard Shevardnadze. A joke made the rounds: Shevardnadze was playing with his grandson, who asked;

“Grandfather, do you think in our free and independent Georgia, someday I could be president?”

“Why would Georgia need another president?”

Winters were hard in Georgia at the time, thanks to corruption and the country’s dependence on Gazprom. “There are only two seasons in Georgia: winter and preparing for winter,” went one proverb. The BTC and SCP pipelines promised to help this, but hard work was needed. Across the entire project, Washington liberally offered aid: on pipeline security and geological analysis, helping to rewrite outmoded legal codes, and offering export credit funding and insurance. Particularly in Georgia, environmental concerns proved a major issue: politicos and citizens had scores of questions and concerns. BTC needed Georgian officials to approve an environmental decree before it could sign an accord with the government and move ahead. 

Georgia’s point man was the late Gia Chanturia, the whirlwind CEO of the Georgian national oil company. Despite his hard work, the decree was entangled in the country’s bureaucracy as the 2002 Georgia Oil and Gas Conference began in Tbilisi. Then, at the opening ceremony, Gia proclaimed that all obstacles had been overcome. TV cameras rolled and spectators applauded as he and BP inked the environmental accord.

That night we convened for a celebratory banquet. Georgians prize a good tamada, or toastmaster, and Gia was in exuberant form that night. Yet as the wine bottles toppled, he confided: “You know, the president hasn’t gotten around to that decree yet.” Brilliant rascality! A conference splash Gia wanted, and a splash he got. Only months later, however, did the actual decree emerge. 

Kazakhstan, like Azerbaijan, had a deep and skillful bench, with no official sharper than the President’s energy advisor, Maksat Idenov. But the state energy company, KazMunayGas, along with the Ministry of Energy, while professional, had some quirks. March 2002 saw the first US-Kazakhstan Energy Partnership meeting in Astana. At nine o’clock on the morning of the meeting, our US and Kazakh teams met to begin a day of expert talks, and Energy Minister Vladimir Shkolnik and I, with senior staff, repaired to a conference room. Shkolnik was the rare non-ethnic Kazakh in Nazarbayev’s cabinet, a learned physicist with his heart in nuclear energy, not oil. He spoke: “I gotta get to Shymkent. Write what you want for a declaration, and we can sign it. This was the concluding declaration, summarizing the day’s talks and our plans for the next meeting. We scribbled something out, Shkolnik barked a quick assent, then cracked open the vodka. 

We traded toasts, stories, and jokes in a well-lubricated start to the partnership. The minister, a doppelganger for comedian Rodney Dangerfield, brought down the room with a few humorous anecdotes before dashing to his plane, leaving the rest of us to walk out to a room full of experts whose talks had already been summarized and praised.

No capital, of course, was quirkier than Turkmenistan’s Ashgabat. In April 2002, Ashgabat hosted the first Caspian Sea delimitation summit. Delimitation had long been a thorny issue. The adults in the room – Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan, and Russia – all held reasonable positions, while Iran and Turkmenistan were outliers, making extreme demands. Iran claimed a flat 20 percent of the Caspian Sea, and Turkmenistan claimed most of Azerbaijan’s oil fields. 

Niyazov, the self-styled “Turkmenbashi” (leader of all Turkmen), often boasted that he could solve the delimitation issues “in one day.” (What is it about blowhards that makes them love that phrase?) That day came in April 2002, when he convened the summit, with the leaders of all five Caspian littoral states meeting in Ashgabat. No US official attended, but I heard an identical readout from members of two delegations.

The foreign ministers and their experts negotiated throughout a long day, but came up time and again against Turkmen and Iranian intractability. Niyazov had scheduled an evening banquet to celebrate his expected triumph, and he pressed on despite the diplomatic flop. Iran’s then-president Muhammad Khatami flatly boycotted the banquet, ostensibly because alcohol was served. (Niyazov notoriously loved long, alcohol-soaked fests. In my time as ambassador in Ashgabat, I struggled to ambulate out of a few.) Niyazov also loved the role of tamada, and at the banquet, he announced: “Well, guys, we had this summit to solve our problems and we failed. Whose fault was that? Ours! We’re no better than the Soviet Politburo!” This instantly frosted the Kazakh leader Nursultan Nazarbayev and Vladimir Putin. 

The feast proceeded, and when the dishes had been cleared, Niyazov stood up again and said, “Guys, we have another hour left! What should we do?” Directed merriment often followed Turkmen banquets. In Turkmenbashi’s gala for Ukrainian President Leonid Kuchma, for example, he split the delegations and diplomatic corps into two teams for a song contest.

But on this occasion, Azerbaijani leader Heydar Aliyev snapped, “We can go home!” 

Turkmenbashi turned on him: “Heydar, I don’t know what’s the matter with you! When you were young, you used to drink and dance all night! Now that you’re old, you don’t want to do that anymore!” This had a predictable effect on Azeri-Turkmen relations. With dignitaries alienated, the first Caspian summit concluded.

And what of Russia’s stance on the new pipelines? Russia kept a watchful eye on our energy diplomacy, and sent its own special envoy, Viktor Kaluzhny, on the Caspian trail. Viktor was a former deputy energy minister. He and his ambassadorial deputy, Andrei Urnov, were consummately professional and knowledgeable, but burdened by an unclear brief. Putin was still consolidating control; in those years Russia didn’t oppose the new export routes, but wasn’t quite comfortable with them either. Viktor and I paneled and podiumed from Tbilisi to Houston, and in a quiet moment, he asked me, how do you think America would feel if we named a Great Lakes envoy and sent him to Canada? Whatever fumbled reply I had was only l’esprit de l’escalier, when you think of an answer too late. What I should have said was, what is it in our behavior that would make our neighbor welcome such an envoy?

Presidential Meetings 

The most valuable part of the envoy’s work was done in small-group meetings with the presidents and their ministers. We had to go to the top to crack the bureaucracy, and I entered each meeting with a list of government actions needed to keep the projects on track.

The US ambassador joined me in every presidential meeting, and for our chiefs of mission, the envoy’s visit was welcome. Energy was one of those rare issues where the US and the host government sang in harmony, and those meetings contrasted with the steady and necessary encounters our embassies had on tense topics, from political reform to human rights to ties with Iran.

I was a frequent traveler to Kazakhstan, beginning in March 2002, when I met with President Nazarbayev in Astana, still a small city with construction everywhere. Nazarbayev was foursquare behind energy development, and with CPC achieved, much of our talk involved the next-phase concept of connecting Kazakh oil south into BTC. He had a suitably cavernous office, and we sat at a long, polished side table. 

The discussion turned to Caspian delimitation, and how, the previous summer, Iranian gunboats chased away a BP research vessel from a disputed Azerbaijani field. Always happy to discredit Tehran, I noted that for Iran to take its claimed 20 percent of the Caspian Sea, Kazakhstan, with the longest coast, would have to shrink its sector. In short, “Iran hit Azerbaijan, but they were aiming at you.” Nazarbayev boomed to his notetaker: “Write that down!”

The president extolled Kazakhstan’s development, rightly so: Kazakhstan then as now outpaced the rest of Central Asia. Then pounding the table with his fist, he thundered: “They say there is corruption in Kazakhstan! Where, where is corruption!?” 

For an eyeblink, I thought of quipping, “And how are your children, Mr. President?” – but opted instead just to nod thoughtfully. Nazarbayev continued, “They say my children shouldn’t be in business, they say they are making a lot of money! But it’s a free country. Everyone is free to pursue his activities. What can I do?” 

What indeed?

In that moment, why didn’t I pursue the issue of corruption, and in other top-level Caspian talks, push the other issues that were and are important to the United States: democratization, human rights, regional conflict? Fundamentally, I had a specialized brief to carry out on behalf of the US government, building the energy infrastructure that would help these countries break free of Moscow’s gravitational pull. Securing that degree of independence was a prize in itself, something that could open a path for these countries to shed the Soviet legacy and the crippling imprint of Leninism. 

I also saw how difficult it is to advance our human rights goals with presidents who relished power and the wealth it brought. I knew from 25 years as a diplomat that blunt demands win kudos at Cleveland Park dinner parties, but rarely deliver the goods. I knew also that you have to build a relationship before you can trade on that relationship, and working as partners on energy was a way to build that connection – not for me to cash in, but for the resident US ambassadors. The ambassador was the quarterback; I was a special-teams player. 

And finally, I held the conviction that the way to advance our democracy and human rights goals was through stressing the rule of law, and the practical starting point for the rule of law was commercial law: property rights, land ownership, contract adjudication, and business creation. With the help of the American Bar Association and others, we worked to put into practice these new legal standards, while exchange programs sent dozens of local lawyers abroad. I also valued the social change aspect of Western companies moving into the Caspian: hiring local employees, then sending them to the US and Europe for training; introducing them to international standards of management; enshrining safety and environmental safeguards; and having personnel systems in which you didn’t have to kick back money to the boss, or sleep with him to keep your job. 

Success with BTC

As 2003 began, momentum was on the side of the BTC pipeline. Financing was falling into place, so I was able to travel to Iraq in August 2003 and take on new tasks after the US invasion, managing the end of the UN Oil-For-Food program and transitioning its $10 billion in assets to the new Iraqi government. The UN set a November 21 deadline to end the program. 

Given the epic incompetence of Donald Rumsfeld’s Pentagon, our team of logisticians and lawyers was quarter-staffed, but we finished the work in time. I left Baghdad in December, spent Christmas at home, and the BTC team and its lenders polished the details early in the new year. On February 3, 2004, in Baku’s Gülüstan Palace, the final agreements were signed, and though two years of construction remained, BTC was a reality. The South Caucasus gas pipeline (SCP) was soon to follow.

More Pipelines in Prospect 

Even as BTC progressed, we were looking at the next phase of pipelines. How would the companies export the volumes from new exploration in the central Caspian? And what about exports from the gargantuan Kashagan offshore oil field in Kazakhstan’s zone of the Caspian?

Production estimates for Kashagan’s three phases of development were 475,000 barrels per day; then 1 million barrels; and eventually 1.5 million barrels per day. The Caspian Pipeline Consortium (CPC) line, and even a parallel CPC line could handle exports to the Black Sea, but what then? Oil tanker capacity through the treacherous Bosporus Straits had long been a challenge, and the Straits would be hard-pressed to handle new huge volumes. Thus, we and the companies eyed two options: sending Kazakh oil south and into BTC; and creating new pipelines from the Black Sea to bypass the Bosporus. 

The US steadily encouraged Azeri-Kazakh cooperation and convened the first Aktau-BTC talks in London in 2002, with Kairgeldy Kabyldin representing Kazakhstan, and then-SOCAR vice president Ilham Aliyev – soon to get a major promotion – in the chair for Baku. Meanwhile, entrepreneurs proposed a variety of Bosporus bypass solutions: Samsun-Ceyhan, Burgas-Alexandropolis, Burgas-Vlore, Constanta-Omišalj. Against all sober advice, Ukraine built the Odessa-Brody oil pipeline on spec in 2002 and watched it sit empty. No one had coordinated with oil companies to make sure there were entities ready to ship oil into it, or refineries ready to buy the oil from it. But this was Kuchma‘s Ukraine, a time when normal commercial practices didn’t apply.

Kashagan’s halting progress, however, made our brainstorming moot. Costs skyrocketed, thanks to development missteps, and to the sheer difficulty of developing a high-sulfur, high-pressure field in the shallow Caspian. Delays and cost overruns made it a nightmare, the most expensive infrastructure project on the planet. The cost burden meant that Kashagan might never get beyond the first-phase development. As a result, the idea of a Bosporus bypass pipeline faded from thought.

By the time I left the Caspian envoy position in the summer of 2004, BTC and SCP were assured, CPC was running smoothly, Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan had become familiar destinations for Western energy investment, and the State Department phased out the envoy position.

Lessons in Energy Diplomacy

At a key moment in the post-Soviet era, America catalyzed energy development for countries whose destinies were still uncertain. Energy was the foundation of three new nations’ economies, and critical to an ever-threatened fourth, Georgia. The United States’ convening power and hard work as an honest broker infused international companies, development agencies, and banks with much-needed confidence to make these multibillion-dollar projects a reality.

And now, as Europe shuns Russian gas, this Caspian energy corridor is bringing modest gas volumes into Southern Europe. It will be challenging and very expensive to go beyond modest deliveries, but if Ashgabat ever gets serious about cross-Caspian gas exports – a steep “if” – the volumes could be profound.

A few lessons emerge from this experience. First, that was then, this is now. In that special dawn of post-Soviet sovereignty, energy diplomacy was key in making that link between fledgling governments and the expeditionary private sector. Today’s Eurasian energy challenges are not as simple and involve the complex tasks of alliance management and security affairs, framed by the overarching issue of climate change. 

Yet now as then, the private sector plays a seminal role. Diplomacy and political will alone can’t deliver the goods. The private sector needs to thrive for energy diplomacy to succeed. BTC and its sister pipelines succeeded because credible corporations invested billions in oil and gas fields. A few years later, promoters proposed the Nabucco pipeline, a line to bring gas across Turkey into Europe, but Nabucco never partnered with upstream producers, so despite cascades of political will and years of US cheerleading, the pipeline never happened.

And now Europe is successfully replacing Russian pipeline gas with liquefied natural gas (LNG), but those volumes aren’t moving because of government pledges and pleas – they are moving because companies and energy traders are reacting to price signals. And to get more pipeline gas into Europe from the Caspian and Mediterranean, international oil companies will have to step up their upstream and midstream investments in those regions.

For the Caspian, that’s tricky. The Caspian region is no longer as “hot” in investment terms as it was. Azerbaijan’s oil production is in a steady decline. The expense of Caspian oil and gas development remains high. Oil and gas excitement has moved to Guyana, Africa and, powerfully, US shale. The industry is always shifting, always exploring. Governments from Astana to Kyiv – to Washington – can get new volumes onto the market by offering competitive investment terms and by slashing the bureaucracy and tax burdens that impede oil and gas production. Ultimately, new oil and gas volumes flow because of decisions in boardrooms, not situation rooms.

In Debt Again

The years that followed saw other assignments, including a return to Eurasian energy diplomacy in 2008. Congress had become concerned about Russian energy leverage, after the January 2006 cutoff of gas to Ukraine and Europe, and ordered the State Department to get more active, so Ambassador C. Boyden Gray and I formed a duo to press the Europeans for energy diversification and the Caspian governments to keep their investment climates healthy. 

Just after New Year’s 2009, however, ExxonMobil called me with an offer to join their international affairs group. I pushed off the answer. My heart was firmly in the Foreign Service. My 32 years as a diplomat had seemed to pass in the blink of an eye, and I wanted to keep it going. The Obama administration was about to take office, and the day before the inauguration, I had sandwiches with one of the incoming president’s lieutenants, an old friend. I reminded him of the new president’s campaign pledge to give major ambassadorships to career officers, not as payoffs to campaign donors.

“He said that?” Pause to digest, and not the sandwich. “Ok, what do you want?” I named a couple of European posts; I didn’t want to keep treading the same career ground. “Sounds reasonable to me, I’ll ask the guys.” 

A few days later, I opened an email: sorry, they’ve gone to contributors. How about Ukraine or Azerbaijan?” That week I accepted Exxon’s offer and began a rarefied education in energy from the private sector-side of the table. For that, I have long been indebted to the Hon. President Obama.

Editor’s note: In addition to serving as US ambassador to Turkmenistan and as the US Caspian energy envoy, Steven Mann was a fellow of the Harriman Institute at Columbia University in 1985-86.


‘Armenian Melodies’ Float Wins Grand Marshal Award at 135th Tournament of Roses

Jan 3 2024

In a resplendent display of cultural heritage and creativity, the ‘Armenian Melodies’ float, presented by the American Armenian Rose Float Association (AARFA), clinched the ‘Grand Marshal’ award at the 135th Tournament of Roses. The float’s theme, harmonizing with the Tournament’s emphasis on celebrating the world of music, was a tribute to the unyielding resilience and strength of Armenian matriarchs.

Dressed in traditional ‘taraz’, figures of Armenian mothers and daughters stood as the float’s centerpiece, encircled by symbols integral to Armenian heritage. These symbols included indigenous birds from the Armenian Highlands such as the crane, chukar, and little ringed plover, further enhancing the float’s cultural authenticity.

The float also showcased a range of traditional Armenian musical instruments like the duduk, shvi, blul, parkapzuk, dhol, and nagara. This resonated deeply with the Tournament’s theme of ‘Celebrating a World of Music: The Universal Language’, adding a unique Armenian melody to the global symphony.

Further enriching the float’s cultural portrayal were elements like the AARFA’s tricolor logo, pomegranates, apricots, and an ‘arevakhatch’ or sun cross, symbolizing eternal life. Participation from the Lilia Margaryan Dance Studio from Glendale, with 10 students performing alongside the float during the parade, added vibrancy to the event.

AARFA, a nonprofit organization, is dedicated to spotlighting the American Armenian community’s contributions and achievements. The association also seeks donations to perpetuate this tradition, allowing for the continued sharing and celebration of Armenian culture on such a grand platform.

Doctors without Borders: Three years, thrice displaced: A family flees Nagorno-Karabakh

Jan 2 2024

Adjusting to an uncertain future after displacement.

Mileta pauses often while speaking about her family's former home in Martakert/Aghdara, Nagorno-Karabakh, and the journey they endured fleeing to Armenia. Her family has lost their home due to war three times—first in 2020, then in 2022, and most recently, in 2023. 

Her 13-year-old daughter, Mane, was in school when explosions lit the sky of Karabakh on September 19. That day, all the students were quickly sent home. Mileta knew they would never come back.  

With no phone or internet connection, Mileta had no idea what to do or where to go to find safety, so she and her family locked themselves inside their home, terrified. A few hours later, a neighbor entered the home and urged them to leave, saying that soldiers were already advancing toward their village. Not knowing what to take with them and what to leave behind, Mileta instinctively went for the family albums.  

“I knew I had to take the photos of my family to cherish the memories, as we have nothing else left anymore,” Mileta says. "We have been stripped of our lives, left with nothing.” 

Mileta looks through the photos she packed in panic when she fled her home in Nagorno-Karabakh in September. Armenia 2023 © Arsen Aghasyan/MSF

On September 19, Azerbaijan launched an attack on various areas in Nagorno-Karabakh, a region that is a self-proclaimed republic internationally recognized as part of Azerbaijan, but has traditionally been home to many ethnic Armenians. After a ceasefire agreement was reached 24 hours later, more than 100,000 people from the region fled to neighboring Armenia. Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) teams in Armenia have been providing aid, including mental health care, to displaced people like Mileta and her family.

Before the war erupted, the people of Nagorno-Karabakh endured 10 months of blockade by Azerbaijan. During the last three months, it was becoming increasingly difficult to find food in totally isolated Karabakh, and Mileta's family ate only once each day. She says that pretty much every displaced person she met on the road had stomach problems from months of malnutrition.  

Mileta’s family managed to get to the capital of Nagorno-Karabakh from Martakert/Aghdara with the little gasoline they had. On the way, chaos erupted. There were rumors that civilians would be evacuated. Nobody knew whether the Lachin corridor connecting Armenia with Nagorno-Karabakh would be open for them to flee.

The rumors turned out to be false. The vast majority of people ended up sleeping wherever they could while waiting for their next move. Mileta and her children slept in their car in Stepanakert/Khankendi, not knowing where to go or what to do. Finally, Azerbaijan opened Lachin corridor on September 24, and Mileta’s family passed through to Armenia. 

It took Mileta's family two days to cross the Lachin corridor, and they witnessed several deaths on the road. Armenia 2023 © Arsen Aghasyan/MSF

Mileta recalls how hard her family worked to renovate their home in Martakert/Aghdara over the past few years. They dreamed of turning the ground floor into a dental clinic, so that when her son graduated from university, he could come back to their town and work as a dentist. 

Her family does not know whether they will stay in Armenia, as they would have to start over from scratch. Stress, insomnia, and uncertainty have set in. Mileta still wonders whether they will ever be able to go back to their homeland.  

“Wherever I am, it is not home for me," says Mileta. "I left my father’s cemetery, the church where I used to pray, and my home, which our family built with our own hands."

Alongside mental health support, MSF teams have been providing vulnerable families with non-food item kits, walking sticks, and wheelchairs. Armenia 2023 © Arsen Aghasyan/MSF

MSF teams have seen a high number of psychosomatic issues among displaced people from Nagorno-Karabakh in the villages of Ararat and Kotayk. Many people we see have been displaced three or four times during the past year, and many continuously experience grief, bereavement, and a feeling of disempowerment. Adults predominantly express fear while in children, the accumulated anxiety has resulted in sleeping disorders and enuresis.  

Anxiety about the future is the dominant theme for almost every person that MSF teams have met and spoken to. “I have to start from zero, and my biggest burden is to take care of my kids,” says Anyuta, another displaced person from Nagorno-Karabakh. “The trauma we went through is unfathomable, after months of blockade and food scarcity. But now we have lost our home on top of it." 

MSF teams are visiting vulnerable families in the Kotayk and Ararat regions of Armenia— including hotels and apartments where displaced people are temporarily living—to offer mental health support and assess the most critical social needs. Since October 2023, MSF has provided 1,655 mental health consultations and distributed more than 200 non-food item kits.

https://www.doctorswithoutborders.org/latest/three-years-thrice-displaced-nagorno-karabakh

U.S. Military Official Aids in the Development of Armenian Military’s Enlisted Forces

Jan 3 2024

By: Momen Zellmi

Adding another chapter to the book of international military cooperation, Command Sergeant Major Robert Abernethy of the U.S. European Command (USEUCOM) has recently paid a visit to Armenia. The primary objective of this visit was to lend a hand in the establishment and fortification of Non-Commissioned Officer (NCO) objectives and policies for the Armenian military’s enlisted forces.

The focus of this collaboration is the enhancement of the professional growth and capabilities of the Armenian military’s NCOs. These individuals form the backbone of the armed forces, their development, and proficiency directly impacting the overall effectiveness and stability of the military. By aiding in the creation and implementation of robust NCO objectives and policies, the U.S. is assisting Armenia in strengthening this critical aspect of its defense apparatus.

This visit by a high-ranking U.S. military official is not a standalone event but a part of the ongoing support and partnership between the United States and Armenia in the realm of defense and military training. It is an assertion of the commitment of the U.S. towards aiding Armenia in bolstering its defense capabilities, particularly at the enlisted level. This level is often seen as the cornerstone for military readiness and leadership, and its fortification can lead to a significant increase in the overall defense capability of a nation.

Command Sergeant Major Robert Abernethy’s visit is a manifestation of the U.S.’s larger aim: to strengthen partnerships for a stronger future. The visit underpins the belief that the development of a robust, efficient, and well-trained military is not just beneficial for Armenia but contributes to regional and global stability. Through such collaborations, nations can work together to ensure a safer, more secure world for all.

Armenia takes over chairmanship in EAEU since January 1

Kyrgyzstan – Jan 3 2024

AKIPRESS.COM - Armenia has taken over chairmanship in the Eurasian Economic Union since January 1, 2024 and will preside in the Supreme Eurasian Economic Council, Eurasian Intergovernmental Council and Eurasian Economic Commission Council throughout 2024.

The meeting of the Supreme Eurasian Economic Council in Moscow on occasion of the 10th anniversary of the Eurasian Economic Council, the Third Eurasian Economic Forum, meeting of the Eurasian Intergovernmental Council and other events are planned.


https://akipress.com/news:752282:Armenia_takes_over_chairmanship_in_EAEU_since_January_1/

Alcohol Poisoning Among Minors Mars Armenian New Year Celebrations

Jan 3 2024

As the world marked the advent of a New Year, Armenia was grappling with a rather grim reality. A disturbing incident involving minors and alcohol poisoning cast a shadow over the festive cheer. Armen Muradyan, the head of the Yerevan State Medical University (YSMU), reported that 18 individuals had been admitted to the hospital due to various types of poisoning. The list included carbon monoxide, chemicals, and food-related issues. However, what was deeply unsettling was the fact that children between the ages of 10 and 15 were among those affected by alcohol poisoning.

The victims included a 10-year-old, two 16-year-olds, and three 15-year-olds. The figures, in themselves, are alarming – illustrating a disconcerting trend of underage drinking. But the context of the New Year celebrations adds an additional layer of concern, highlighting the urgent need to address the issue of alcohol consumption among Armenia’s youth.

Adding to the list of New Year’s Eve calamities, Muradyan disclosed that there were five cases of individuals seeking medical attention for injuries caused by fireworks. These incidents serve as a somber reminder of the potential dangers of misusing fireworks, particularly during large-scale celebrations.

In light of these incidents, the YSMU head emphasized the importance of adhering to safety rules and raising awareness to prevent such emergencies and tragic outcomes. Muradyan urged the public to be vigilant in taking care of themselves and their loved ones, stressing the significance of knowledge and caution in reducing the risk of such incidents in the future.

https://bnnbreaking.com/breaking-news/health/alcohol-poisoning-among-minors-mars-armenian-new-year-celebrations/

"The past year has resulted in losses and brought Armenia back to square one." Opinion

Jan 3 2024
  • Armine Martirosyan
  • Yerevan

2023 turned out to be difficult and even tragic for Armenia. Armenians left Nagorno-Karabakh, seeing no possibility for themselves to live as part of the Azerbaijani state. Baku seemed to have achieved the desired result, but there is still no peace treaty.

Armenia believes that peace is not beneficial to Baku “as long as there is something to take from Armenia”. Russia does not consider the affair finished, so it is withdrawing its troops from the territory. And in this difficult situation, according to some analysts, Armenia risks being completely isolated economically and becoming a “backward Russian exclave”.

Political observer Armen Baghdasaryan talks about the situation in which, in his opinion, Armenia found itself at the end of last year and what to expect.


  • 2023 in Armenia: dramatic, disappointing and hopeful developments
  • “It is necessary to negotiate with Baku on Nagorno-Karabakh’s autonomy” – Samvel Babayan
  • “2023 was quite successful for Armenia” – Finance Minister’s assessment

“There is a global geopolitical clash in the world, and hotbeds of tension have appeared in different regions. Among them are Ukraine, the Middle East (Israeli-Palestinian conflict). These are links in the same process. The South Caucasus is the most explosive region, where the situation can sharply deteriorate.

Armenia cannot maneuver for long between two geopolitical poles – Russia and the West. Moreover, both Russia and the West set a condition for Armenia: to finally determine the vector of its foreign policy and not to maneuver from now on.

It is impossible from the economic point of view to be under the influence of Russia and at the same time look for security guarantees in the West. It does not work that way.

Trying to sit on two chairs at the same time can lead to very dangerous consequences. Nikol Pashinyan’s jumping from one to the other today is not only belated and senseless, but also very dangerous.

His visit to St. Petersburg for the EAEU and CIS summit answered all these questions. Armenia has no more room for maneuvers. And if a peace treaty with Azerbaijan is indeed to be signed in the near future, it is very important to understand already now who should be the guarantor of its realization.

This is a very important issue, and we can already see the first signs of establishment of Armenian-Russian relations.”

Analyzing the political situation

“Armenia has tried to maneuver between Russia and the West in the past. Let us recall the former President Serzh Sargsyan when he sought to settle relations with Turkey. He tried to move westward by joining the Eastern Partnership project, but overnight became a member of the Russian-led Customs Union.

This maneuvering was unwise. We had no opportunity to choose.

Such an opportunity may come if we can mend our relations with our neighbors. But for that to happen, we are being asked to pay too high a price. We are being asked to give up our territory, to forget the past of the Armenian genocide, and to ban the activities of such parties on our territory.

If we pay such a price, if we make all these concessions, we can turn to the West. But what will remain after such concessions from Armenia and Armenian identity in general? Will there be anything left after that for integration with the West?”

“Nevertheless, we cannot say unequivocally that Armenia has made its choice of foreign policy vector.

Armenia has realized that signing a peace treaty alone does not solve the issue, it is necessary that these agreements do not remain on paper, that the treaty should have guarantors.

And, apparently, the authorities have come to the conclusion that the best guarantor of the implementation of the provisions of the peace treaty is Russia, that Moscow has more levers than the West.

Another question is what Russia will demand for such a guarantee. And this question should be one of the key issues in the new Armenian-Russian dialog that has begun. Most likely, it will be about the “Crossroads of Peace” project and control over Armenian communications.

When Armenia presented the “Peace Crossroads” project, Russia said that it stems from its interests. This means that Russia has certain expectations in terms of control over communications, and a dialogue is underway in this direction.”

Analyzing the political situation

“In a global sense, Russia does not need long-term peace in our region. It needs continued but controlled tensions through which Moscow can maintain leverage over both Armenia and Azerbaijan.

When we talk about the future of Artsakh or the possible return of the Artsakh people, Azerbaijan links it to the issue of the return of its refugees of the 1990s to Armenia. Russia is not against such a solution, because in this case Russia would have a chance to become a guarantor of security both for Armenians in Artsakh and for Azerbaijanis in Armenia. Again, retaining its leverage.

Therefore, although there are no Armenians in Artsakh anymore, Russian troops allegedly continue to ensure peace and security of civilians for the third month. The Russian Federation still has certain plans in this regard.

Russia does not consider the game to be over and hopes to get such a peace treaty between Armenia and Azerbaijan, in which its role and leverage on both countries will increase.”

“The issue of Artsakh and Azerbaijani refugees of the 1990s from Armenia are absolutely incomparable neither from the legal point of view, nor from the humanitarian point of view, much less from the status point of view.

Azerbaijanis from Armenia left non-violently – unlike Armenians from Soviet Azerbaijan. Besides, back in Soviet times Armenia paid material compensation to the Azerbaijan SSR, while Azerbaijan paid nothing to Armenia. This is only a purely social aspect.

As for the legal aspect. The Nagorno-Karabakh Republic, even if unrecognized, was a state entity, and in the Soviet years Nagorno-Karabakh was an autonomous region. An autonomous region is not an administrative unit, but a political one, while Azerbaijanis in Armenia did not have any autonomous formation. Hence, from a legal standpoint these issues are incomparable to each other.

Another issue is that Azerbaijan wants to draw parallels. And if these issues are to be discussed, Armenia’s task is to make sure that they are not considered on the same plane.”

“If Armenians are to return to Artsakh, they must return under international guarantees. It is clear that no one will return under Azerbaijani guarantees, in the status of an ethnic minority.

And international guarantees are not rights written on a piece of paper. It is someone who can ensure the implementation of agreements. International guarantors can be both UN peacekeepers (Blue Helmets) and Russian peacekeepers themselves.

Russian peacekeepers could have ensured the security of the Artsakh people if they wanted to. However, they did not do so, because they did not get Armenia’s consent to the FSB’s control over all raods and the renunciation of its pro-Western orientation.

Russia did not get what it wanted from Armenia and decided to punish Armenians by allowing military action in NK.

Thus Armenians lost Artsakh. Today Armenia goes to Moscow and gives its consent to everything, but Artsakh has already been lost.

Soon Nikol Pashinyan will say that he could have made these concessions two years ago and we would have had the same result, but without the exodus of Armenians from Artsakh. As it was after the 44-day war, when he said that he could have stopped the war earlier, we would have had the same result, but without casualties.”

“Having gained control over roads, Russia’s ambitions with regard to Armenia will end, but the issue is that Azerbaijan and Turkey do not agree with this.

We are talking about the median corridor [serving to increase the flow of cargo from China to Turkey and to European countries, as well as in the opposite direction], through which Russia must ensure its access from Central Asia to the West. If Russia controls the Armenian part of the corridor, the West will oppose it and the corridor will not function.

Azerbaijan and Turkey will then demand an extraterritorial corridor through Syunik [southern Armenia] or abandon the project. Armenia will continue to remain under blockade and will turn into a backward Russian exclave.

It will turn out that we have sacrificed everything, but gotten neither peace, nor “crossroads”, nor unblocking, which the Armenian authorities constantly talk about.

Turkey and Azerbaijan are against the presence of Russia’s FSB on the roads. They want their own presence. In the initial period, they may agree to joint Russian-Turkish control, similar to the Russian-Turkish monitoring center in Aghdam. In time, they will want full control over the roads.

“The West will not leave the region so easily, but the effectiveness of its actions will depend on the situation in Ukraine and the Middle East. If this geopolitical clash should continue, the West will create many problems for Moscow on different fronts, and the most convenient option here is the South Caucasus.

If there is a pause in Ukraine and Palestine, we will have a corresponding situation without any progress.

During this period Armenia will get weaker, being in economic hardship.”

Analyzing the political situation

“It is difficult to predict the situation in the coming year, we do not know what document the sides may sign. Will it be a document in the form of a first step towards peace or will it be a document legitimizing Azerbaijan’s right to new aggression against Armenia?

I think Azerbaijan in reality does not want peace. Aliyev believes that Armenia is weak, has no real allies, and the geopolitical situation is favorable to take everything possible from it.

Azerbaijan will want peace with Armenia when it sees that Armenia is getting back on its feet and can strengthen its negotiating positions and its army.”

https://jam-news.net/analysis-of-the-political-situation-in-armenia-for-2023/