Before I go on about President Putin's state visit to Armenia, I would like to take this opportunity to call on the Armenian authorities to crackdown on the nation's Western-led political activists, provocateurs and agitators ahead of the Russian President's arrival.
According to recent "Radio Liberty" reports, along side Raffi Hovanissian's and Paruyr Hayrikian's idiots, a well known psychologically disturbed political activist in Yerevan is also expected to protest President Vladimir Putin's arrival in Armenia on December 2. The following is a video clip of this character in action a little over one year ago -
"Political activist" Vardges Gaspari: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6M-AEcZEOvA
Now, back to the main topic.
A little over one year ago there were widespread reports that Vladimir Putin's visit to Armenia was imminent. But the visit back then never materialized due to outstanding disagreements between Moscow and Yerevan over Yerevan's "complimentary politics" at the time. Now that Armenia's counterproductive foreign policy approach that has kept the country politically unstable and economically stagnant for the past twenty years has been corrected as of September 3, I expect a visit by President Putin. I really hope to see large numbers of our people turnout to greet him, I hope to see Armenian officials going out of their way to make him feel comfortable. The man is after all a living legend and in many ways, a savior. The Armenian nation needs to welcome him with open arms.
More importantly: This is the perfect occasion to embrace - and have the ear of - perhaps the most powerful man in the world today. Are we as a people truly grasping the implications and the potentials of this state visit?
This is the perfect occasion to begin pushing Armenian national interests amongst top level Russian officials. This is the perfect occasion to get together a delegation of Armenians from around the world and hold closed-door meetings with one of the most powerful men on earth. This is the perfect occasion to begin discussing Javakhq, Artsakh, Western Armenia, the Black Sea, common borders with Russia, the problem of Western operatives in Armenia, etc. This is the perfect opportunity to lure Russian businessmen and industrialists (by whatever means necessary) to setup shop in Armenia. In fact, it is also being reported that hundreds Russian businessmen will be attending an economic forum in Yerevan during the same time President Putin will be visiting.
As I have been proclaiming throughout Cyberia for nearly ten years: The Russian-Armenian community is the single most important Armenian Diaspora on earth and the Russian Federation is a historic opportunity for the fledgling Armenian state, an opportunity to help it breakout of its mountain prison. The historic merger of Armenian and Russian national interests in recent times is an opportunity that needs to be thoroughly explored and fully exploited.
Once more I'd like to remind the reader that the keys to Armenia's future successes (and failures) in the south Caucasus are found within the highest offices of the Kremlin. Instead of the constant complaints and fear-mongering over Russia's growing influence in the south Caucasus, Armenians would do well to accept reality and embark on a pan-national effort - similar to what Jews do in the West - to promote Armenia's national interests within the Kremlin.
Armenians have wasted twenty years pursuing Western fairytales with only crony capitalism, oligarchy, political instability, closed borders, cultural decline, population loss, demoralization and abject poverty to show for it. Moreover, politically and thus economically, Armenia has stagnated and languished as a result of staying in the middle. While this "complimentary" approach to international relations made a lot of sense in the 1990s while the Great Game in Eurasia was in its height and no one side was dominant, maintaining it in today's political climate in the south Caucasus is counterproductive to Armenia. Yerevan has to adapt to the changing times. Thankfully, it is beginning to.
For better or for worst, Armenia is wed to Russia.
I believe it's for the better. With its Orthodox Christian and Slavic national culture, powerful military, massive landmass, immense natural wealth, a large and an increasingly affluent population and easy accessibility for Armenia, the Russian Federation is an ideal ally for Yerevan and an ideal environment for Armenian scientists, businessmen, industrialists and more importantly - Armenian political activists.
We Armenians need to collectively work on turning Armenia's national interests into an extension of Russia's foreign policy. We need to work on this more obsessively and more persistently than we have worked on gaining genocide recognition in the Western world. The geostrategic foundation, the political basis to merge Armenian and Russian national interests currently exists to begin this very process. It also helps greatly that Russian society is by nature Turcophobic and Islamophobic. We Armenians simply need to begin seeding the Armenian and Russian landscapes with this long term goal.
Do Armenia's sons and daughters have the foresight to take advantage of this historic opportunity, or is the legendary Armenian mind only reserved to be used for personal matters or in competition against other Armenians?
I really hope I'm wrong but being that Armenians will be Armenians (i.e. Armenia's biggest obstacle), I have a feeling that those who will make the most effort and the most noise come early December will be our political opposition freaks and Captain Americas. Therefore, we can all expect a frenzy of anti-Putin hysteria by our nation's Western-led political activists and psychopaths masquerading as nationalists. The following is one of their early attempts: The Lord's Prayer has been blasphemed and turned into anti-Putin hate speech -
I wouldn't call him God, but he has been responsible (in fact more so than the entire Armenian Diaspora combined) for Armenia's survival in a nasty and unforgiving place like the south Caucasus.
Despite the fact that Moscow has fully embraced Armenia as an ally and has accordingly protected Armenia from all regional predators, I expect many of Washington's shameless street whores to spread fear, hate and disinformation ahead of President Putin's visit. I can just hear our Captain Americas and psychopaths posing as nationalists: Armenia is losing its independence... Armenia is being taken over by Russia... Armenia is being forced back into the Soviet Union... Armenia is becoming a dirty Russian province... Armenia is being enslaved by Putin...
And we didn't have to wait long: The following are some more early attempts to cast a dark shadow on President Putin's upcoming visit. One comes by the way of Washington's longest serving agent in Armenia Paruyr Hayrikian; one by Igor Muratyan, an imbecile working at Lra-glir; one by David Shahnazarian, a former Levon Petrosian official (you know, the ones who put Armenia in much of the mess it is in today); one by US agent John "the horse face" Hughes' ArmeniaNow; one by a disgruntled Georgian at the Western-funded EurasiaNet, and one by a bimbo activist on Facebook -
Paruyr Hayrikian says Armenians oppose Customs Union, plans protests: http://www.armenianow.com/news/50162/armenia_russia_customs_union_eu_paruyr_hayrikyan
Igor Muradyan says Armenian hate for Russia is not new but is acquiring a radical content: http://www.lragir.am/index/eng/0/comments/view/31352
David Shahnazarian says membership in Customs Union runs counter civilization: http://arka.am/en/news/economy
Agent John Hughes' ArmeniaNow sounding the alarm about Russian schools in Armenia: http://www.armenianow.com/society/49331/custom_union_russia_armenian_language
Armenia's Gyumri Becomes Putinville: http://www.eurasianet.org/node/67789
Armenia Vs. Putin: https://www.facebook.com/ArmeniaVsPutinThey are trying to prepare their field of play. We can expect to see more activity as President Putin's arrival date nears. And mark my words, in the coming days, Richard Giragosian and Raffi Hovanissian will also be farting through their mouths. Unfortunately, we may also see ARF officials participating in Uncle Sam's anti-Putin circus. Having been left out of serious politics in Armenia, it seems that the old "revolutionary" party will be participating, at least to some degree, in the anti-Putin hysteria. This is yet another desperate attempt by the ARF to find that ever elusive niche in Armenia's political landscape. Because I expect more political wisdom, backbone and substance from a political party that has been around for 125 years and espouses nationalism, I will single out the ARF for further criticism.
ARF concerned about Russia’s anti-Western drive?
Party leader Vahan Hovhanessian made some curious statements at a Russian-sponsored event in Armenia recently. Excerpts of his nonsense can be read in the following news report -
Armenia’s political elite concerned about Russia’s pronounced anti-Western drive: http://arka.am/en/news/politics
Nevertheless, Vahan's comments are like Russian officials telling Armenians that the "political elite" in Moscow is concerned about Yerevan's "anti-Turkish" policies, and that Armenians are keeping themselves isolated due to their bad relations with Turks and Azeris.
Vahan went on to say Russia is left alone? Alone? Aren't two of Russia's largest trading partners Germany and Holland? Isn't Russia in the G8 and the G20? Isn't Russia in the World Trade Organization? Doesn't Moscow supply the EU with over 50% of its energy needs? Don't Westerners go crawling to Moscow for things like Syria and Iran? Doesn't China have very close relations with Russia? Besides, who needs toxic "partners" like the political West? Besides, why should an Armenian "nationalist" care about Russian-Western relations? Why is Vahan so worried? Does Armenia have borders with the EU? Is Armenia entering the EU? And what EU nation does Armenia have such a large economic relationship with that Armenia's "political elite" (what a laughable term) is so worried about Russian attitudes towards the West ruining it for Armenia?
And it's not only Vahan and the topic is not just Russia.
Just recently, ARF representatives were on a landmark visit to Istanbul to attend a "Socialist International" meeting where open borders and trade relations between Turkey and Armenia were discussed. The following is Asbarez's whitewashed article about the event in question -
Is this what Vahan had in mind when he was talking about "diversifying" Armenia's relations? During their historic visit to Istanbul (kept hush-hush for the most part), did our pseudo-nationalists make the same kind of bellicose statements against Turks as Vahan did against Russians in the Russian-sponsored venue in Armenia?ARF's historic but hush-hush visit to Istanbul: http://asbarez.com/116203/turkey%E2%80%99s-railway-announcement-%E2%80%98aimed-to-appease-baku%E2%80%99/
Also just recently, the ARF was politically irresponsible enough to shamelessly join Raffi Hovanissian's Heritage Party and vote for a bill in the Armenian parliament calling for the recognition of Artsakh's independence, even after Artsakh's leadership and top level Armenian military officials had been warning against such a haphazard step because of it being fraught with serious risks -
ARF's political pandering at the expense of Artsakh: http://asbarez.com/116175/armenian-parliament-refuses-karabakh-recognition-bill/
Regardless of what our Western-led, self-destructive peasantry and political imbeciles will say or do in conjunction with President Putin's upcoming state visit to Armenia, the Armenian nation will be deeply honored to host an illustrious leader like him on Armenian soil. Let's all do our part in extending a hearty welcome to President Putin. His visit to Armenia was very long in coming. But let's not take his lateness too personally because that is just how he is -
Even the Pope Waits for Putin: http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-11-26/even-the-pope-waits-for-putin.html
Prior to his 2005 visit, President Putin was in Armenia in 2o01, which was merely a year after his election. The following picture is a video still of him laying flowers at the Armenian Genocide memorial at the time -
It certainly feels like the Russian President's visits to Armenia was a very long time ago. Times have certainly changed since then and this time around the official visit trip and its geopolitical implications promises to be momentous. Due to recent political developments in the Middle East, Armenians (even the more rigidly ignorant ones) no longer need to be convinced of Russia's crucial role in the region anymore. The Great Czar of Eurasia will be in Armenia to build on the foundations he laid back in 2001 and 2005. President Putin will be in Armenia to bolster the small, landlocked, blockaded and embattled nation's political standing in the south Caucasus and to further cement bilateral relations between the two brotherly former Soviet nations.
Coming a year after the CSTO's large scale military exercises and on the heals of the recent announcement by Yerevan that Armenia will seek to join the Russian led Customs Union, Vladimir Putin's appearance in Yerevan will be yet another powerful message to Turks, Azeris and Western officials alike. The news of his impeding visit was preceded by the unprecedented announcement by the commander of the Russian 102nd military base stationed in Armenia that Russian troops under his command reserve the right to intervene on Armenia's behalf if Azerbaijan attacks Artsakh. Other very positive news developments have also been preceding his visit. Some of the articles in question are posted below this commentary. Please make time to read them.
Sometime during the 1990s, former U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright is believed to have said that the natural wealth found in the vastness of the Russian Federation was too much for one country to posses. It is very obvious that the West would have loved to indefinitely live-off the carcass of the Soviet Union, and they managed to do so somewhat during the 1990s. But President Putin's rise to power put an abrupt end to their plans. Within a few short years he turned what in essence was a failed state into a great world power once again.
Under the brilliant leadership of Vladimir Putin, the Russian Federation has managed to rollback virtually all of the West's advances in Eurasia and begin its multi-pronged advance to bring back under its umbrella regions traditionally considered to be its spheres of influence.
The Bear's return has been astounding.
In a few short years, Moscow was able to: nationalized virtually all of Russia's national assets, including its vast natural wealth; chase out all of Russia's problematic Western/Israel backed oligarchs; begin shutting down many of the nation's meddling Western NGOs and propaganda outlets; reverse the nation's population shrinkage; create a growing and vibrant middle class; defeat the Western/Turkish/Saudi Arabian backed Islamic insurgency in northern Caucasus; monopolize the distribution of Central Asian gas and oil; secure Europe's and China's energy needs; win the allegiance of Central Asian republics; evict US forces from former Soviet territory in Central Asia; develop unprecedentedly close relations with China; stop military aggression against Syria; support Iran's nuclear development program; stop Washington's missile defense shield deployment; stop NATO's advances in Eastern Europe; end Western, Turkish and Israeli military presence in Georgia; liberate Abkhazia and South Ossetia; place Russia-friendly leaders in Georgia; keep Turkey and Azerbaijan out of Armenia; end Ankara's pan-Turkic dreams in the Caucasus and Central Asia; place a Russia-friendly government in Ukraine; ensure Armenia's long term allegiance; and lure Armenia into the Customs Union. And just recently, Moscow has managed to put Kiev and Moldova on the path to joining the Customs Union as well -
Ukraine drops EU plans and looks to Russia: http://www.aljazeera.com/news/europe/2013/11/ukraine-drops-eu-plans-looks-russia-20131121145417227621.html
The grossmeister in the Kremlin has played his chess pieces brilliantly on the Eurasian chessboard. As a result, the Russian Bear is back on the global scene as a major competitor to the West. There continues, however, to be some unfinished business in places such as Serbia and Kosovo. All in due time. Nevertheless, dumbfounded and reeling from their setbacks in recent years, Western policymakers are still trying to figure out who is this Vladimir Putin and what went wrong with their grand plans. The following scene from inside Georgia in 2008 probably best describes the resurrection of the Russian Bear -Thousands of Moldovans rally against Euro-integration: http://rt.com/news/moldova-anti-eu-protest-210/
I dare the well informed reader to imagine the political state of world today without the existence of the Russian Federation. I dare any rational individual to imagine where Armenia would be today had Russia been pushed out of Armenia in the 1990s. I dare any rational individual to imagine where the entire Caucasus would be today had Russia been defeated there. I dare any rational individual to imagine how much worst the situations in the places such as Syria, Lebanon and Iran would have been today had Russia been eliminated from the global political stage. Russia's resurgence as a global power not only saved Armenia by stopping the Caucasus from turning into a Western-financed playground for oil companies, Turks, Azeris and Islamists, it also saved the world from the clutches of the Anglo-American-Zionist global menace.Russian Soldiers Burn American Flag: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zKciOFc5zYM
Vladimir Putin's appearance on the political stage was, in a strong sense, God sent. What President Putin and his supporters in the Kremlin managed to accomplish during the past decade was in my opinion one of history's most important turning points. I firmly believe that President Putin will someday be ranked amongst the world's finest rulers for the man turned me, an Armenian nationalist and an American libertarian - into a Russophile.
At the end of the day, I firmly believe that western civilization, apostolic Christianity and political sanity on earth will prove to have been preserved as a result of the emergence of the Russian Federation as a superpower reasserting itself in global affairs. The Russian Federation today is the last and only front against the Anglo-American-Zionist global empire; it is the only front against Pan-Turkism; the only front against Islamic extremism; and the only front against the world's newest form of Bolshevism - Globalism.
They loved Gorbachev because he killed the Bear. They adored Yeltsin because he allowed them to feed on the carcass of the Bear. They now hate Putin because he resurrected the Bear.
Deeper Russian involvement in Armenia simply means closer, more effective political, economic and financial cooperation between former Soviet states - and not the lose of Armenia's "independence" as our Western funded Russophobes are desperately trying to convince us. I'd like to once again remind the reader that unlike a genocidal West, the Russian nation has preserved (unfortunately in some cases) many-many ethnic minorities within its national boundaries. Unlike many of our Captain Americas, Cold War rejects and nationalist nutjobs, I do not fear the return of Bolshevism nor do I think the Russian nation has the appetite - or is stupid enough - to seek the resurrection of the Russian Empire.
Thus, when we talk about greater Russian involvement in the context of former Soviet republics, what we are essentially talking about is a Russian-led confederation of independent states closely working with each other. Suggesting anything else is utter nonsense derived from Western propaganda, political illiteracy and/or paranoia. There has been other, somewhat unexpected, positive developments coming out of Yerevan's decision to move closer to Moscow. Washington and Ankara are all of a sudden expressing desires to reengage Yerevan in financial and economics matters -
Armenia to Apply for Additional US Aid: http://asbarez.com/116216/armenia-to-apply-for-additional-us-aid/
US Energy Giant to Pump $180 million into Armenia: http://hetq.am/eng/news/30938/investment-or-takeover?---us-energy-giant-to-pump-$180-million-into-armenia%E2%80%99s-hydro-power-sector.html
Davutoglu Invited to Armenia for BSEC Summit: http://asbarez.com/116452/davutoglu-invited-to-armenia-for-bsec-summit/
Turkey issues new roadmap, relations with Armenia included: http://www.panarmenian.net/eng/news/172824/
ANCA Welcomes Results Of U.S.-Armenia Economic Talks: http://asbarez.com/116590/anca-welcomes-results-of-u-s-armenia-economic-talks/
It's basically Uncle Sam's turn to start kissing some Armenian ass.
Having taken some twenty years to get its act in order, a resurgent Moscow is now strongly invested in Armenia and it is flaunting it for the world to see. I'm very glad that Moscow is finally making its full presence felt in the south Caucasus. I am extremely satisfied that Armenia, Moscow's only reliable partner in the south Caucasus, has become the epicenter of Russian activity in recent times. As a result, an independent Armenia's borders have not been this secure in well over one thousand years, and Armenia's political weight has risen significantly.
There is an important nuance here that also needs to be recognized: Armenia's recent rise as a regional power has only been possible due to the near total control Moscow has had over Armenia's energy and military sectors. In the world of realpolitik, Moscow would be much less willing to empower Armenia had it not been able to secure Yerevan's total dependence. Why trust anyone? Moscow will only trust Yerevan if it can verify Yerevan's allegiance to it. The only way Moscow can do so is if it keeps Yerevan dependent on it by controlling sensitive sectors within Armenia.
Armenia's near total dependence on Moscow is an opportunity in disguise.
Armenians can strengthen Armenia militarily and economically by ensuring that Moscow remains fully and unequivocally convinced that Armenia will be staying firmly within its orbit for the foreseeable future. Armenians can strengthen Armenia militarily and economically by convincing top level policymakers in Russia that a more powerful but fully dependent Armenia in the south Caucasus can be exploited by Moscow to achieve a strategic balance of powers between Armenians, Georgians and Turks and can project Russian power throughout the region via Armenia.
As I have said, as long as the Armenian language remains Armenia's national language and as long as Armenia is able to maintain its homegrown armed forces, I prefer deeper Russian involvement inside Armenia.
What I am saying is this: I rather have an Armenia that is economically prosperous and militarily powerful but dependent on Russia - than have an Armenia that is "independent" of Russia but politically unstable, economically depressed and dependent on Turkey. In the harsh realities of the south Caucasus there are simply no alternatives for Yerevan.
Moreover, those, such as myself, who greatly appreciate western/European civilization (not to be confused with Anglo-American-Zionist Westernization or Western Globalism) and want to see its preservation have to come to the realization that the Russian Federation today is gradually turning into the cradle of western/European civilization - as the Western world (i.e. Northern America, Britain and the European Union) commits cultural suicide.
Nevertheless, Armenia today stands on the verge of becoming a major Russian-backed regional trade hub. Armenia stands poised to be a strategic point between the Eurasian Customs Union and the Middle East, Turkey and Europe.
But all this came after many years of neglect by Moscow.
Armenia needs DIRECT Russian involvement, if only to balance out and eventually rid the country of its twenty year old Western poisons, infectious diseases such as American pop music, American film, religious cults, English language, Western propaganda, Democracy peddling, multiculturalism, multiracialism, atheism, individualism, substance abuse, Holocaust worship, consumerism and ultra-liberalism, to name only a few...
In my opinion, Moscow is guilty of allowing Armenia to turn into a Western playground during the past two decades. Russian officials cannot continue thinking that by merely dealing with Armenia's top leadership or by coming to control its infrastructure they will have no worries in the country. For much of the past twenty years Moscow executed politics in Armenia via conventional, old world methods - disregarding the nation's base and simply dealing directly with the top and by using strong arm tactics when need be. Such an approach is of course a lot less complicated and a lot less costly. However, such an approach also left a serious void. Because the top leadership in Yerevan were essentially spoken for, Western interests simply began working on the rest of Armenia. Moscow's negligence and "old world" tactics has thus allowed Western interests to embed itself deep within Armenian society. Exploiting the services of an army of political operatives, activists, NGOs, Think Tanks, aid agencies, various government funded programs and western-inspired television programing, Washington began its efforts to hijack the fledgling nation from the bottom up.
Moscow needs to step into the modern world and recognize the paramount importance of Public Relations, Social Engineering and, more importantly, Soft Power. Russian officials must begin recognizing that their most serious flaw in Armenia has been their severe lack of PR in the country.
I would like to call on Russian officials get more proactive inside Armenia, for Armenia's sake, for Russia's sake.
I am nevertheless glad to see Moscow getting noticeably more proactive inside Armenia. Former Russian ambassador to Armenia Kovalenko's recent activity is just one example. Although it seems a bit awkward, we are indeed seeing Western-style Public Relations (PR) coming from the Russian camp recently. Perhaps having learned dearly from the methods with which the political West sometimes gets things done around the world (i.e. before Western leaders resort to blackmail, sanctions, terrorism or war when things don't go their way), Moscow has clearly begun using a powerful tool known as Soft Power as a means of projecting its political agenda as well.
In the aftermath of President Putin's historic visit, I hope to see deeper cooperation and collaboration between Yerevan and Moscow in all realms, be it business, finance, military, politics, culture or tourism. I expect to see a few breakthrough developments. I hope to see powerful symbolism to be on display during the historic visit. Specifically, I would like to see President Putin lay a wreath at the Armenian Genocide memorial once again. More importantly, I hope to see Armenian politicians, businessmen and activists seize this historic opportunity to engage the Russian president on a personal level and discuss topics that are important to Armenia and Armenians.
As I have mentioned in previous commentaries, we cannot expect or demand Russians to do the right thing with regards to matters pertaining to Armenia. Armenia's current well being and her future is not a Russian responsibility, it's an Armenian responsibility. Therefore, it is up to us Armenians to use whatever levers we have at our disposal to ensure Armenia's survival and prosperity. It so happens that the Russian Federation is Armenia's only real lever today. Therefore, let's wake-up from our EUrotic fantasies and American dreams and use this historic opportunity for the betterment of our Armenian homeland.
Let's also never forget that for Armenia, independence from Russia will only result in DEPENDENCE ON TURKEY -
George Friedman: "Russian presence in Armenia is bad for Turkey, Keep Armenia isolated": http://theriseofrussia.blogspot.com/2010/11/arye-gut-israeli-jewish-expert-in.html
Therefore, Armenian lobbyists, politicians, businessmen and military leaders must be a constant presence within the walls of the Kremlin. While Armenia's military is its tactical advantage, Armenia's alliance with the Russian Federation must be utilized as its strategic advantage on the global stage. Armenia's only hope for progress and survival in the south Caucasus lies with closer integration with the Russian Federation. Armenia's most important diaspora is the Russian-Armenian diaspora. The only hope the Caucasus has for peace and stability is Pax Russicana.
A new era in Eurasia
Humanity could once again breathe a sigh-of-relief when the great Czar of Eurasia came back into power in 2012. The great son of the great Russian nation had returned to his rightful place. In what turned out to be a landslide victory, Vladimir Putin had again been elected president of the Russian Federation and his rabid enemies worldwide were taking note. As grateful nations such as Syria have found out, the soft approach the Kremlin had flirted with for the previous four years under the leadership of President Dmitri Medvedev had effectively come to an end. The Russian Bear is roaring back with a vengeance and the two century old Anglo-American-Zionist era is today in decline.
An era of top heavy, nationalistic Eurasian governments are on the rise once again.
The center of gravity in global affairs is gradually shifting eastward. Finally. The twenty-first century promises to be a muli-polar political period in human history where no single political system reigns supreme. I hope to see someday the rise of a powerful and nationalistic leader like Vladimir Putin in Armenia. I hope to see someday the rise of a powerful and nationalistic government like that of the Russian Federation in Armenia. We Armenians have unfortunately wasted too much of our time and precious resources on pursuing elusive Western fairytales. Western officials have had us chasing our tails with nonsense like "Civil Society" and "Democracy" for too many years. It's actually disturbing how some of our well-meaning idiots talk about “Democracy” as if it’s a drug: Just take it and you’ll be fine, we are told.
Well, it is a drug. But the problem is that it’s a very toxic drug that has hallucinatory side effects.
The kind of Democracy being promoted by Western powers around the world in recent decades - with its system of beliefs known as Globalism - are for the Western world today what religion used to be for European powers during the past one thousand years, and what Roman civilization and Hellenism was in the preceding centuries: A means of manipulation, control, subjugation, exploitation and when needed, destruction.
What has Western style Democracy brought to Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, Egypt and Syria in recent years? Utter chaos and destruction!
What has Western Democracy brought to Europe? Decadence, the lose of identity and the very decline of western and European civilization!
The political West (i.e. those who do most of the Democracy drug peddling around the world, as well as real narcotics peddling but that's another story) is actually very far from being an actual Democracy. In other words, the West is not what it preaches to be. The Western world is ruled by an elite-based political system where top level military leaders, government officials and financial executives make major decisions. Their well conditioned (i.e. socially engineered) populations are allowed very limited say primarily in some domestic matters. Western official know better than allowing their masses a say in politics.
Before the leadership of a developing countries are capable of allowing their citizenry to safely participate in the nation's political processes, political system in the country first needs to develop well established national institutions and only a tidy number of domestically funded political parties that are subservient to them. Before a government can allow its people a limited say in political matters, it also needs a well conditioned citizenry.
A nation cannot risk playing with democracy when the nation is culturally not ready and politically immature. A nation cannot risk playing with democracy when it does not have a democratic tradition or lacks powerful national institutions. As mentioned above, powerful national institutions overseeing and sometimes guiding the so-called "democratic process" in a political system is exactly how the Western world is currently run. Developing nations such as Armenia are in no shape to risk playing with such a drug.
In their transitional phase, developing nations need powerful leaders with courage and vision. Until Armenia matures as a state, Armenians need men like Vladimir Putin in power. Until Armenians mature as a people, God save Armenia from democracy and all it's street peddlers.
The Armenian Diaspora in the US and Europe is wasting our time and limited resources in an anti-Armenian viper's nest like Washington and Brussels. The time has come to take our political activism to Russia, which hosts the largest Armenian diaspora and to the the Kremlin, our only natural ally. And instead of acting like a bunch of worthless Arabs complaining about Jews doing this or that, let's for once stop admiring Jews and start learning from them - at least in political terms.
Netanyahu aide says Boston bombing, 9/11 are good for Israel: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aOsIuVq0Wdc
How do Armenians compare?
When a murder committed by an Azeri in Moscow set-off major riots by Russian nationalists or when a Muslim extremist from the Russian republic of Dagestan blew-up a commuter bus in southern Russia, did we Armenians try to take advantage of the situation at hand by organizing meetings with Russian officials or civic organizations in the Russian Federation to discuss the "growing threat of Muslims, Chechens, Tatars, Turks or Azeris to Russian society"? No. Did we Armenians try to take advantage of the situation at hand by organizing meetings with prominent Russian-Armenians and ask them to exploit the situation via their professional positions within the Russian Federation? No. From what I recall, most of our imbeciles in Armenia and in the Diaspora were instead complaining about "Russian racism" and "Russian xenophobia", thereby siding with Muslims, Chechens, Tatars, Turks and Azeris.
Again, instead of envying or fearing Jews, let's learn from what they have managed to accomplish in the US and in western Europe.
We need to closely engage Russians. We need to closely engage Russian-Armenians. Unlike the desolate wasteland known as the American-Armenian Diaspora, we Armenians have the fortune of having A LOT of prominent Armenians throughout the Russian Federation to work with. In fact, prominent Armenians are found in virtually EVERY LAYER of Russian society. The following is only a partial list:
Sergei Lavrov (Foreign Minister of Russia)Artur Chilingarov (Duma spokesman, Scientist, Hero of Russia)Sergey Avakyants (commander of Russia's Pacific Fleet)Margarita Simonyan (director of Russia Today, married to film director Tigran Keosayan)Tigran Keosayan (film director, actor, writer, married to Russia Today director Margaret Simonyan)Michael Pogosian (director of Russia's United Aircraft Industry)Andranik Migranyan (PhD, political scientist, author, professor, director of Institute of Democracy and Cooperation)Armen Oganesyan (CEO of Voice of Russia radio broadcasts)Ashot Eghiazaryan (Russian State Duma member)Karen Shakhnazarov (CEO of Mosfilm, Russia's largest studio)Karen Karapetyan (vice President at Gazprom)Albert Avdolyan (telecommunications tycoon)Sergey Galitsky (billionaire owner of Magnit)
Karen Brutents (author, historian, Communist Party Central Committee member, senior KGB operative)Ruben Vardanyan (billionaore former CEO of Troika Dialog Group)Ruben Aganbegyan (millionaire owner Renaissance Capital Micex)Danil Khachaturov (billionaire chairman of RosGosStrakh)Sergey Khachaturov (billionaire, brother of Danil Khachaturov)Oleg Mkrtchyan (billionaire industrialist, football kingpin)Gennady Melikiyan (deputy chairman of Bank of Russia)Samvel Karapetyan (billionaire owner of Tashir group)Sergey Sarkisov (billionaire owner of RESO-Garantia insurance company)Nikolay Sarkisov (billionaire commodities trader, brother of Sergey Sarkisov)Gagik Gevorkyan (president of Estet Jewelry House and new head of the prestigious Russian Jewelers Guild)Artur Janibekyan (television producer and head of Russia's most successful Comedy Club)Ara Abrahamyan (billionaire businessman, president of the Union of Armenians in Russia)
In the following television interview we see billionaire Ara Abrahamyan, one of Russia's most prominent Armenians and one who enjoys a personal relationship with Russian President Vladimir Putin, sounding the alarm about the lack of political activism by Armenians in Moscow -
It's time to heed to Mr. Abrahamyan's warnings and suggestions. Instead of looking at our compatriots in Russia as "Russified" (better Russified than westernized in my opinion), let's embrace them, let's pursue efforts to working with them. Enough of our primitive ways. Let's aggressively and collectively work on helping better organize our compatriots in Russia. Let's use our energy, our wits and our intellect to become a ubiquitous presence in the Kremlin through them.Ara Abrahamyan interview: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rpf0iLdCJmU&feature=youtube_gdata_player
This isn't all theoretical talk on my part. There actually exists the foundational basis for closer collaboration and cooperation with the influential and affluent Russian-Armenian community -
Moreover, for the past few years, Russian-Armenian community, by far the world's largest and the most affluent Armenian Diaspora, has been getting very active in the fund raising efforts of the Hayastan All-Armenian Fund. In fact, in recent years Russian-Armenians have come on top in contributions -Largest Armenian Cathedral complex consecrated in Moscow: http://www.armradio.am/en/2013/09/17/armenian-cathedral-in-moscow-consecrated/
Telethon 2013 Receives Largest Donations from Russia: http://armenpress.am/eng/news/741913/telethon-2013-receives-largest-donation-from-russia.html
Collective demoralization and the destruction of the Armenian spirit is the price we have payed in the US for the constant doom&gloom style reporting about Armenia. Washington's not so little army of street whores and smut peddlers have succeeded in poisoning the very air we Armenians breath.
When about ten years ago I first began telling Armenians that Armenia's most important diaspora is the Russian-Armenian community and that Armenia's most important political agenda was to enter into a close alliance with the Russian Federation, I was laughed at by our "proud" compatriots in the US.
Well, I'd be the one laughing now had it not been for the realization on my part that the one million strong American-Armenian community is terminally ill and dying an ugly death right before our very eyes. Seeing however that the US Armenian community has become a serious liability for our fledgling and embattled nation in the south Caucasus, the sooner it ceases to become a noticeable factor in Armenia's existence the better it may be. In the meanwhile, we need to do all we can stop American-Armenian activists from treating Armenia as a laboratory experiment where they enthusiastically concoct toxic brews for their spirutual and sometimes financial masters in Washington.
If Armenians are truly concerned about Armenia's future and its long term well being, we need to wake up and recognize the historic opportunity we have waiting for us in Russia. As I have been proclaiming for nearly then years, the keys to Armenia's successes as well as its failures in the south Caucasus are found in Moscow. We need to get proactive in Moscow. The Armenian nation will pay dearly if we do not recognize this potential and take advantage of this opportunity.
Don't worry about the sheeple.
We need not be too concerned about convincing the Armenian sheeple about the dangers of Western integration or of the great importance of Russia and the Russian-Armenian Diaspora for Armenia. Due to the typical Armenian's political ignorance, arrogance, egotism, materialism and individualism, it will be a virtually impossible task to convince a typical Armenian of anything simply by 'explaining' things. The knife has to reach the bone before Armenians wake up. Armenians have to have their noses rubbed in shit, before they realize what is going on around them. We can't be too concerned about the Armenian because the typical Armenian will always have problems and complaints and they are never wrong nor are they ever satisfied. This is one of the reasons why I say "Democracy" is one of the most dangerous threats facing Armenia today. Simply put, patriotic Armenians simply need to by-pass the sheeple and just remain concerned about Armenia.
Therefore, we need to do what we know is best for our homeland.
In the absence of a support base, I think a good strategy for true Armenian nationalists would be to seek out like-minded individuals (those who more-or-less espouse the kind of political rationale/reasoning expressed within this blog) and begin organizing small groups of cyber-based, grassroots sociopolitical movements. We need to use their tools - internet, social media and the English language - to counter the relentless Psy-Ops and the information war being waged against Armenia by Washington's many operatives. Our political ideologies need to become a serious factor in Armenia's political dialogue and a permanent fixture in its political landscape. We need to create a new political culture in Armenia, one that is based in nationalism, realpolitik, pragmatism and a healthy understanding of international relations and world history.
Let us all recognize that Armenia's number one enemy today is Turkey, Azerbaijan, Anglo-American-Zionist alliance and Western Globalism, with all its assets currently operating in Armenia. But let us also realize that the aforementioned are not the only enemy Armenia faces today. Once Armenia has secured its borders from the Turkic threat and eliminated the dangers posed to the republic by the political West and Globalism, we need to turn our attention to the our country's 1990s era monopolists popularly known as oligarchs.
As I have repeated many times in the past, the current government and its support base is merely the lesser of evils in Armenia today. If we did not have President Sargsyan today we would have had dangerous men such as Levon Petrosian, Raffi Hovanissian or Paruyr Hayrikian at the helm. If we did not have our oligarchs, we would have had even worst oligarchs from the US, Europe, Turkey and Israel calling the shots in Armenia. But this does not excuse or justify our monopolists.
That is why I am saying, once we are successful in keeping Armenia fully within the Russian orbit and stabilizing her politically and economically - we need to begin convincing Russia's security services of the importance of helping us eliminate some of Armenia's unsavory monopolist businessmen and impose the rule of law in the country. Armenians must be made to fear and respect law enforcement bodies and law enforcement bodies need to begin enforcing the law.
In other words, after we cleanse Armenia of is Western operatives, we need to cleanse Armenia's government of its 1990's era chobans-in-Armani-suits.
Nevertheless, I am extremely satisfied that Moscow has turned Armenia into an epicenter of Russian activity in the south Caucasus. Armenia's political stature has risen significantly in recent years as a result. Armenia today stands on the verge of becoming a major trade hub and an important crossroads connected north, south, east and west. Armenia is now finally on the right path. I can finally see some light at the end of our long and dark tunnel. I believe better times are ahead.
God bless Armenia. God bless Russia. And may God help protect the historic alliance between Yerevan and Moscow from all enemies both foreign and domestic.
Regardless of what our Western-led self-destructive peasantry and political imbeciles will say or do in conjunction with President Putin's state visit to Armenia, self-respecting patriotic Armenians with a healthy understanding of the world they live in will be deeply honored to host an illustrious leader - and ally - like Russian President Vladimir Putin on Armenian soil. Therefore, I ask you all to do your part, however little or however large, be it in Cyberia or in Armenia, to extend him a warm welcome.
Arevordi
Source: http://armenianow.com/news/49857/armenia_visit_president_putin_sargsyan_ara_abrahamyan
Russian President Vladimir Putin’s expected early-December visit to Armenia has stirred a variety of speculations and predictions ranging from Armenia’s further steps for joining the Customs Union to turning Gyumri, hosting Russian military base #102, in the north of Armenia, into a closed city. There is some news circulated in the local media that Putin’s airplane would land directly at Gyumri’s airport, and that his Yerevan visit would come only afterwards. There are also predictions on his visit to the military base.
Whether the speculations are grounded or not, there are large-scale preparatory works ongoing in Armenia’s second biggest city – the roads to the airport and memorial to the victims of the 1988 earthquake are being repaired and asphalted, also Vardan Atchemyan Drama Theatre is under renovation. Gyumri will be hosting an Armenian-Russian economic forum with participation of many governors, ministers and businessmen from Russia. The Russian president’s delegation will reportedly include around 500 people, among them Russia-based businessmen.
Gyumri mayor Samvel Balasanyan says he is not certain about Putin’s visit to Gyumri and believes the road repairs are related to the economic forum.
“If our family is going to host a guest, clearly we have to make our city look its best,” he says.
As for the speculations on turning Gyumri into a closed city, the mayor says such assumptions are ridiculous, close to absurdity: “There is no such thing. I can’t help wondering where such information comes from!”
Member of Gyumri’s City Council Levon Barseghyan is convinced that if Putin pays a visit to Gyumri twice a year and also attends its suburbs, Gyumri would turn into a decent city. (Once prosperous Gyumri has suffered immensely from the earthquake 25 years ago and has recovered only partly; in addition, almost every other person in northern Shirak province is poor, as recent official statistics show).
“In general, hosting a guest of Putin’s rank is quite costly – security details come, people from inside and outside the country are brought to be placed even on the roofs. As much as I know there will be absolute surveillance – secret agents, intelligence. And besides, although they said he would come on December 2, he will, surely, arrive later. And something like an economic forum is scheduled, so a rather aloof environment will be created not to let accidental people in,” Barseghyan told Tert.am.
Media further spread news that Gyumri would not only become a closed city, but would also be renamed back into Alexandrapol – the city was named so in 1837 in honor of Empress Alexandra, after Tsar Nikolay’s visit. In 1924, it was renamed again, this time into Leninakan, after communist leader Vladimir Lenin. In 1991, after independence, the city restored its historic name Kumayri, then Gyumri.
Shirak Center NGO leader Vahan Tumasyan writes in his Facebook page in this reference: “Even during the 90 years of being called Alexandapol, its residents never stopped calling it Gyumri and referring to themselves as Gyumretsis (natives of Gyumri), just as everybody else called them. The name Alexandrapol never really got attached to the city, people never called themselves alexandrapoltsi. By the way, the same can be said about Leninakan. So leave alone the city which has too many challenges as it is and mind serious business, without looking for sensations at Gyumri’s expense.”
Source: http://armenianow.com/news/50401/armenia_russia_president_putin_gyumri_visit
The visit of the President of the Russian Federation Vladimir Putin to the Republic of Armenia will contribute to the strengthening of the bilateral relations and is in the interests of the two nations. The Prime Minister of Armenia Tigran Sargsyan stated about it at the press conference in Gyumri. “We are happy that the President of the Russian Federation will visit not only Yerevan but also Gyumri. The high ranking visits contribute to the expansion and deepening of the relations and the strengthening of the bilateral ties”, - said Tigran Sargsyan.
The visit of the President of the Russian Federation Vladimir Putin to the Republic of Armenia is expected in the beginning of December. Putin is intended to attend the Armenian-Russian economic forum in Gyumri.
The Republic of Armenia exceeds Australia with the indicator of the trade turnover with the Russian Federation and is close to Argentina. Armenpress reports that during the months of January-September 2013 the total Armenia-Russia trade turnover indicator ($908,1 million) exceeded the indicators of Portugal ($830,8 million), Australia ($632 million), Chili ($558,9 million), Tajikistan ($552,6 million), Georgia ($427,2 million), Peru ($347,3 million), New Zealand ($341,9 million) and other countries. During the nine months of the current year the export indicator from Armenia to Russia made $239,7 million. With its export indicator to Russia our country exceeded New Zealand, Turkmenistan, Tajikistan, Hong Kong, Kyrgyzstan, Georgia, Cyprus and other countries. With its import indicator from Russia, Armenia exceeded Canada, Mexico, Argentina, Norway, South African Republic and other countries.
Source:http://armenpress.am/eng/news/741515/armenian-pm-highly-values-putin%E2%80%99s-visit-to-armenia.html
"Armenia is the only CIS country where Russia maintains its military base since Soviet times, and Yerevan insists that the base remain there for ever," said Dubnov, pointing out the vital importance of Russian military presence for the security of the South Caucasian country.
For Russia, the 102nd military base with 5,000 personnel in service has been the only one which serves as an outpost against NATO's member Turkey and other potential threats from southern direction, he said. For Armenia, an alliance with Russia is the only guarantee of its security in a hostile surrounding involving Azerbaijan and Turkey.
Armenia and Azerbaijan have been locked in a bitter dispute over the mountainous Nagorno-Karabagh region, which Armenian-backed forces seized in 1991. The two sides have been holding peace talks mediated by the OSCE Minsk Group since 1994. The expert noted that Putin and his Armenian counterpart Serzh Sargsyan could sign a formal agreement on Armenia's accession to the Russia-led Customs Union (CU) and, later, to the Eurasian Union expected to be set up in 2015.
"For Yerevan, participation in the CU is more than just an economic issue. This is one more step to counterbalance Azeri-Turkish unfriendly power," Dubnov said, reminding that while Armenia participates in the Collective Security Treaty Organization along with Russia and four other CIS countries, Azerbaijan does not.
Armenia's way to the tripartite economic block could be shorter compared to the other aspirants such as Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan, Dubnov said, pointing out that Sargsyan expressed Yerevan's desire to integrate into the CU as recently as in September.
The fact that Putin agreed to turn a blind eye to the lack of common border between Russia and Armenia -- which Moscow once cited as a reason to reject Tajikistan's application -- highlights that the two countries actually feel some common "geopolitical chemistry," the expert said.
Dubnov believes it was not a coincidence that Moscow and Yerevan announced their plans in September, when Ukraine's preparations for rapprochement with the European Union were in full swing. After Kiev made a U-turn, Moscow received one more stimulus to integrate Armenia in Russia-dominated geopolitical entity, Dubnov said.
"Putin wants to utilize the momentum for confirming Russia as the 'natural' center of gravitation on the Eurasian space, to demonstrate that the former Soviet republics have no alternative but to gather under Moscow's umbrella," the expert noted.
If Armenia will be fast-tracked into the Eurasian economic space, this will be a clear hint to Kiev to follow Yerevan's example, he said. With the Armenians mostly support closer ties with Russia and see it as a brotherly nation, Putin's visit to that country is bound to succeed, Dubnov said.
Source: http://www.globaltimes.cn/content/828960.shtml#.UpuHFyeIqXY
A total of 72% of the population of Kyrgyzstan, 75% of Tajikistan and 67% of Armenia advocate this decision. In Ukraine the level of support reaches 50% and in Moldova 54%. These are the results of EDB’s annual research The Integration Barometer.
St. Petersburg, 24 September 2013. In Belarus, Kazakhstan and Russia public support for the Customs Union and the Single Economic Space (SES) remains high at 65%, 73% and 67% respectively, as shown by the second survey of public preferences in the CIS with respect to various issues of Eurasian integration undertaken by Eurasian Development Bank’s (EDB) Centre for Integration Studies and the Eurasian Monitor international research agency. More than 14,000 people in eleven CIS countries and Georgia were polled — between 1,000 and 2,000 in each of the countries.
As compared to 2012, the survey has shown that public support for the Customs Union and the SES reduced by 7% in Kazakhstan and 5% in Russia. This happened, largely, because of the increase in the number of respondents who stated they were indifferent to the participation of their countries in the Customs Union and the SES. In Belarus the level of support for its membership of the Customs Union and the SES grew from 60% to 65%.
Among non-members, the highest level of public support for possible joining these two structures was expressed in Uzbekistan (77%), Tajikistan (75%), Kyrgyzstan (72%) and Armenia (67%). An interesting fact is that Georgian citizens also express significant support for the country’s joining the Customs Union and the SES: the share of positive answers has doubled over a year to 59%. This suggests that cooperation between Georgia and the Customs Union countries should be stepped up.
In Ukraine and Moldova 50% and 54% of the public respectively support the Customs Union. However, compared to 2012, the share of negative attitudes to the Customs Union has grown from 7% to 24% in Moldova and from 5% to 28% in Ukraine.
Azerbaijan has demonstrated the lowest level of support for joining the Customs Union and the SES (37%). At the same time the country’s population has shown the record high level of negative attitudes to both unions (53%).
However, along with predominantly high assessment of the Customs Union, The Integration Barometer has also fixed troubling signs in the area of investment attractiveness, research cooperation and education.
In particular, the most attractive source of foreign capital is the countries “of the rest of the world” (beyond the European Union and the CIS region). The highest contributions to this result were made by Tajikistan (66%, although this figure decreased by 9% year-on-year, and the priority for it is China), Georgia (60%, the U.S.), Uzbekistan (62%, Japan) and Azerbaijan (56%, Turkey). The EU capital attracts predominantly the citizens of Moldova (58%, up 7% year-on-year), Ukraine (55%, up 15%) and Russia (43%).
Investments from the former Soviet countries are mainly preferred by respondents from the Central Asian region: Kyrgyzstan (71%), Tajikistan (63%) and Uzbekistan (60%). The interest in CIS investments is growing in Georgia (+13% compared to 2012) and Uzbekistan (+11%). In terms of attractiveness, Russia remains the leading CIS country. In Tajikistan the economic attraction of the CIS countries has weakened.
Among key partners in the area of research, the leading countries are again those beyond the CIS and EU (primarily Japan and the U.S.). These received the highest ratings in Tajikistan (70%), Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan (67% in each), Azerbaijan (62%) and Georgia and Russia (61% in each), followed closely by Kazakhstan (59%), Ukraine (57%) and Belarus (56%). The EU cluster is preferred by the citizens of Moldova (55%), Ukraine (53%, up 9% year-on-year) and Georgia. The former Soviet Union group was the most popular in Kyrgyzstan only (63%).
The CIS region is characterised by low competitiveness in the area of education. The most attractive countries in terms of education are the EU member states (preferred by 58% of respondents in Georgia, 47% in Armenia, 45% in Ukraine and 34% in Russia) and these figures are growing.
A separate issue is the demand for goods supplied from neighbouring countries. The Belarusian products are obviously popular. In terms of competitiveness, Ukraine’s citizens have ranked Belarusian goods (20%) second after Russian supplies and in Russia Belarusian goods are the most preferred supplies (20% of responses as well).
If to combine three factors — economy, politics and culture — the priority vector for a relative majority of the respondent countries is the post-Soviet space and the key factor for this choice is political. Respondents from seven countries (Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan) expressed their orientation to the post-Soviet space in 2013.
In terms of integration preferences, respondents from Russia, Georgia, Moldova and Ukraine predominantly favour the European Union (the U.S. in Georgia and Russia in Moldova are comparable preferences). In Azerbaijan third countries, primarily Turkey, are mostly preferred. The autonomy indicator (“no attraction for any country”) is at the same time high in Russia and Ukraine and, with respect to certain questions, in Armenia, Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan.
The Integration Barometer has proven Azerbaijan’s predominant orientation to Turkey. In Georgia a noticeable positive dynamics of preferences for the CIS region in many areas and in particular with respect to the Customs Union and the SES was recorded.
Moldova, Ukraine and, in part, Uzbekistan demonstrate multi-vectored integration preferences among their citizens. At the same time, the population of Russia, which remains a centre of attraction for many former Soviet countries, does not show an apparent inclination for integration, preferring autonomy instead.
The Centre for Integration Studies is a specialist research centre of Eurasian Development Bank. The Centre organises research and prepares reports and recommendations on regional economic integration.
Source: http://arka.am/en/news/politics/
Russian troops stationed in Armenia could openly side with it in case of a renewed Armenian-Azerbaijani war for Nagorno-Karabakh, according to their top commander, Colonel Andrey Ruzinsky.
“If Azerbaijan decides to restore jurisdiction over Nagorno-Karabakh by force the [Russian] military base may join in the armed conflict in accordance with the Russian Federation’s obligations within the framework of the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO),” Ruzinksy told the Russian Defense Ministry’s “Krasnaya Zvezda” newspaper in a recent interview.
Ruzinksy answered a question about the mission of the Russian base headquartered in Armenia’s second largest city of Gyumri. That mission was upgraded by a Russian-Armenian defense agreement signed in 2010. The agreement extended Russia’s basing rights in Armenia until 2044. It also committed Moscow to supplying its South Caucasus ally with more weapons and military hardware.
“A decision has been made to form a helicopter squadron in addition to the fighter squadron at the Erebuni base by the end of this year or in the beginning of the next year,” Col. Alexander Petrov said.
Source: http://armenpress.am/eng/news/737026/
Moscow and Minsk signed an agreement on the joint protection of the Russia-Belarus Union State’s airspace and the creation of an integrated regional air defense network in February 2009. The network reportedly comprises five Air Force units, 10 air defense units, five technical service and support units, and one electronic warfare unit. It is part of the integrated air defense network of the Commonwealth of Independent States.
Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu said in April that a number of Su-27SM3 fighter jets will be put on alert duty at the Lida airbase in Belarus. Russia will also deliver four battalions of S-300 surface-to-air missiles to Belarus next year in addition to Tor-M2 air defense batteries earlier deployed in the country. Russia announced plans to set up regional air defense networks with members of the Collective Security Treaty Organization, a regional security bloc that also includes Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan.
Apart from Belarus, Moscow signed an agreement to establish a regional air defense network with Kazakhstan last year. A similar deal with Armenia has been in the works for some time, and Moscow will help Yerevan to expand and modernize its relatively small air force, according to CSTO officials.
Source: http://asbarez.com/116368/russia-plans-air-defense-boost-with-armenia/
One of them is located inside the Yerevan’s Erebuni military airport that currently hosts both Armenian and Russian warplanes. The government said the Russians will build there a fuel depot for the choppers. The other property is located nearby. A government statement referred to it as a “cantonment” where the helicopter gunships and their Russian pilots will be based.
Plans for their deployment were first made public last month by Colonel Aleksandr Petrov, the commander of the aviation unit of the Russian base. Petrov said the Russian military also plans to modernize its 16 MiG-29 fighter jets stationed in Armenia.
An explanatory note released by the Armenian government revealed that Russian and Armenian defense officials agreed on the helicopter deployment at a meeting in Yerevan last April. “The Russian side offered to strengthen the Russian military base No 102 and to that end 18 helicopters are due to be provided to the Republic of Armenia in November,” it said.
The Defense Ministry refused to clarify whether this wording means that some of the helicopters will be given to the Armenian armed forces. The ministry spokesman, Artsrun Hovannisian, said only that the deployment is part of growing Russian-Armenian military cooperation. “The Russian side has repeatedly spoken about the enlargement of its military base,” he told RFE/RL’s Armenian service (Azatutyun.am).
Hovannisian also stressed, “The Erebuni airport will in no case be fully handed over [to the Russians] because the airport also hosts an Armenian air force unit.”
Russian and Armenian officials announced in June that that Russia will help Armenia expand its relatively small air force within the framework of the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO). But they did not elaborate. Earlier this year, Moscow reportedly bolstered the base headquartered in Armenia’s second city of Gyumri with Iskander-M ballistic missiles capable of striking targets up to 400 kilometers away.
Source: http://www.azatutyun.am/content/article/25176068.html
Source: http://www.panarmenian.net/eng/news/170483/
Source: http://news.am/eng/news/178663.html
Nagorno–Karabakh’s ties with Russia should be as strong as with Armenia, Mikhail Alexandrov, head of the Caucasus Department of the CIS Institute in Moscow, told ARKA. Alexandrov is one of many historians, researchers and political analysts from Russia and the Caucasus taking part in an international conference in Moscow dedicated to the 200th anniversary of Gulistan Treaty The Gulistan Treaty concluded between imperial Russia and Persia in 1813 as a result of the first Russia-Persian confirmed inclusion of modern day Azerbaijan, Dagestan and Eastern Georgia into the Russian Empire.
"This is a very important aspect. The treaty defined the role of Russia as the main foreign power in the region. This is prescribed by the treaty. This should now be realized by all,” he said. He added that the treaty laid the basic parameters for the existence of the Caucasus in the last 200 years, and not only of the Caucasus, but also parts of Russia's North Caucasus. He said this is why this treaty is of fundamental importance for the situation that now exists in the Caucasus and the Caspian region.
He said according to some reports at the conference, the status of the Caspian Sea is also largely determined by the parameters that were laid in the Gulistan Treaty. "So, it is quite right to mark the 200th anniversary of this important event," he said.
The purpose of the conference, he said, is to emphasize the historical significance of the Gulistan Treaty, and also to consider its relevance to the current situation in the Caucasus. He said the historians and researchers are from Russia, Armenia and Russia’s republic of Dagestan. A representative of the Talysh people is expected to also make a report.
‘Unfortunately, we do not have scientists from Azerbaijan, but Azerbaijani reporter has arrived in Moscow to cover this event. In my opinion, they are even more than Armenian reporters,’ he said.
Source: http://arka.am
The Nagorno-Karabakh Republic may be eligible to join the Russian-led Customs Union only after settlement of the Karabakh conflict and determination of its status, Viktor Khristenko, head of the Eurasian Economic Commission, said Thursday during a meeting with the Yerevan State University’s professors and students. Along with that, Khristenko stressed that the conflict can’t bar Armenia from joining the Customs Union, and added that membership would even improve things over Nagorno Karabakh.
Khristenko also turned to Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko’s recent remark.
In early September, Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian and his Russian counterpart, Vladimir Putin, made a joint statement announcing that Armenia has decided to join the Customs Union and to take part in the future formation of the Eurasian Union.
Source: http://asbarez.com/116005/karabakh-has-place-in-customs-union-says-russian-official/
Source: http://armenpress.am/eng/news/741935/
“This choice reflects the geopolitical imperatives of the efficiency of the independent Armenian state as a guarantor of the sustainable development and security of the ten-million Armenians of the Republic of Armenia, the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic, and the Diaspora. Meanwhile, we should note that the complementarity in the foreign policy of Armenia does not mean equal and similar relations with all partners. The strategic ally and number one security partner for Armenia is Russia. Armenia successfully complements the bilateral security strategic alliance with Russia with the strategic partnership with her and other states within the framework of the CSTO. The key to the deep and creatively updated dialogue between Armenia and Russia is the multi-vector search for optimal integration solutions by Moscow itself that is based on the innovative interpretation of Peter the Great’s strategic guidelines for the development of both the Asian and European dimensions of the Russian statehood’s modernization,” he said.
According to Mr. Kotanjian, Armenia also keeps productive contacts with the Euro-Atlantic power centers such as the United States, NATO and the EU.
“We can expect, that the forthcoming visit of the Head of the Russian State to Armenia will help to clarify the strategic horizons of the allied cooperation between our two friendly states in the context of the security dialogue between the West and the East – so essential for guaranteeing international security and sustainable development of the people in our volatile region, as well as in Eurasia and the World at large,” he said.
Also, Russia is ready to lift a 30 percent customs duty on export of natural gas to Armenia, Movsisyan said. Currently Armenia pays $270 for one thousand cubic meters of Russian gas supplied to the country across Georgia. Of that amount $189 dollars is the price of gas, and the rest is the 30% customs duty.
"We have done quite a lot of work with the Russian side. After the September 3 announcement on Armenia’s joining the Russia-led Customs Union, the gas delivery contract between the two governments will be revised and simplified. This means the Russian side will not apply customs duty on gas exports to Armenia. We hope that a revised contract will be signed before the end of this year," Movsisyan said.
According to the minister, the price of gas for Armenia will be the same as in Russia plus transportation costs. However, Movsisyan said this will not affect the price for local consumers. “Our calculations show that revised contract will not entail a price rise or price drop,” he added.
Russia is ready to finance 35 percent of the cost of construction of a new power unit for Armenia’s nuclear power plant, Vahram Petrosyan, the secretary of a presidential council on nuclear power safety, said today.
Armenian authorities said they will build a new nuclear power plant to replace the aging Metsamor plant. The new plant is supposed to operate at twice the capacity of the Soviet-constructed facility. Metsamor currently generates some 40 percent of Armenia’s electricity. But the government has yet to attract funding for the project that was estimated by a U.S.-funded feasibility study to cost at as much as $5 billion.
“We are looking for new investors. As for Russia, they are willing to participate in the project by funding 35 percent of its cost. The money will be used to purchase the necessary equipment,” Petrosyan said at a news conference after a meeting of the council.
The plant is located some 30 kilometers west of Yerevan. It was built in the 1970s but was closed following a devastating earthquake in 1988. One of its two VVER 440-V230 light-water reactors was reactivated in 1995. On September 3, Russian president Putin said experts from Russian state nuclear company Rosatom and Armenian experts will work to extend the service life of the Armenian nuclear power plant in Metsamor for another 10 years until 2026.
Petrosyan said the extension of the service life of the facility requires at least $150 million. On Wednesday, President Serzh Sarkisian met with the chairman of the presidential Nuclear Energy Safety Council (NESC), Adolf Birkhofer, who has arrived in Armenia to participate in the regular session of the NESC.
The President of Armenia and Chairman of NESC spoke about planned works aimed at the enhancement of the security level of the Metsamor nuclear power plant and its current state. In that regard, the parties stated that the Metsamor plant has the necessary projected level of seismic stability. Serzh Sarkisian and Adolf Birkhofer also spoke about issues related to the future operation of the plant, the construction of a new energy unit, and cooperation with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), including the results of the OSART mission.
After the meeting, President Serzh Sarkisian and Chairman Adolf Birkhofer participated in the session of the NESC. The President began by underscoring that it would be difficult to overestimate the importance of cooperation in the council, considering the special role that nuclear energy plays in ensuring energy security for Armenia. President Sarkisian thanked the IAEA, the governments of the Russian Federation, US, Czech Republic, Great Britain, and Italy, and the European Commission for their assistance.
“The Republic of Armenia has been constantly improving its domestic legislation and has been fulfilling, in good faith, her international obligations,” the President said.
The governments of the Republic of Armenia and the Russian Federation will soon sign an agreement on cooperation in the area of nuclear safety, the President said. The agreement will allow Armenia to:
– develop infrastructure for nuclear safety in preparation for the construction of new energy units based on Russian designs.
– train, re-train and upgrade specialists of nuclear safety, taking into consideration IAEA recommendations.
– expand the framework of cooperation in nuclear energy.
In October 2012, the Governments of the Republic of Armenia and the United States signed a memorandum of understanding pertinent to the energy (including nuclear energy) sector. The document allows the two countries to cooperate more closely in the area of peaceful use of nuclear energy.
President Sarkisian mentioned that a great amount of work has been done with the assistance of the IAEA and international experts towards improving the seismic stability of the Metsamor plant. In 2012, during routine, preventive renovations, supporting structures were installed to enhance the seismic stability of the main structures and components of the plant, which are pivotal from a safety point of view.
In 2013, the IAEA OSART sent a mission to Armenia that registered sufficient progress but also raised concerns related, particularly, to the management of radioactive waste. The President said experts have already started to develop a strategy on safe management of radioactive waste with the technical assistance of the European Union.
“Armenia reiterates her intention to develop nuclear energy which has a special place in the country’s energy development program. Only nuclear power can allow us to maintain the proper level of the country’s energy security and independence,” President Sargsyan stressed in his remarks.
‘Unequivocally this will benefit Armenia’s interests because a sound competition usually results in lower interest rates,’ he said.
In comments on the possible impact of Armenia’s anticipated membership in the Customs Union on the banking system of Armenia he said it will be very small. He said also Armenia’s accession to the Russia-led Customs Union is vitally important and is a correct move. According to Armenia’s Central Bank, in 2012 Russian banks accounted for 15.3 percent of charter capitals of Armenia-based banks. EU member countries accounted for 31.6 percent. According to official data, non-residents account for over 73 percent of charter capital of Armenia-based banks.
Source: http://arka.am
Russia perceived the Armenia’s decision to join the Customs Union positively. The former Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the Russian Federation to Armenia, the Regional Program Director of the Caspian Cooperation Institute Vyacheslav Kovalenko stated about it at the Yerevan-Moscow telebridge “Armenia-Customs Union: Public Measurement of Eurasian integration”.
He stated that after joining the Customs Union Armenia will get $170 million annually, as a number of customs duties will be liquidated and the GDP will register an annual growth of 4,4%. “Europe would not be able to offer Armenia the working market conditions suggested by Russia. Armenia will get from the Customs Union what it needs. That is the Union’s logic”, - said Vyacheslav Kovalenko, Armenpress reports. In the result of the negotiations on September 3, 2013 in Moscow the Presidents Serzh Sargsyan and Vladimir Putin confirmed the aim of the Republic of Armenia and the Russian Federation in the direction of further development of economic integration processes in the Eurasian territory.
In that context the President of the Republic of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan announced about the Armenia’s decision to join the Customs Union and the necessity of implementation corresponding steps for that aim and in future about participating in formation of the Eurasian economic union. The President of the Russian Federation Vladimir Putin expressed his support to the abovementioned decision of Armenia and informed about the readiness of the Russian side to support the process. Serzh Sargsyan noted that this decision is not refusal from dialogue with European organizations.
On November 6 the Prime Minister of the Republic of Armenia Tigran Sargsyan and the Chairman of the Eurasian Economic Commission's (EEC) Board Viktor Khristenko signed a memorandum on strengthening cooperation in Yerevan. The memorandum provides the unification of all the Armenian structures with the Customs Union bodies ranging from the Supreme Eurasian Council to the Eurasian Economic Commission.
Source: http://armenpress.am
"It is elementary, and it is unclear on what Armenia’s aspiration to sign association agreement with the EU was based, which would block, in my opinion, the only possible option for Yerevan to consolidate its allied relations with Russia through the Eurasian process ," said Kovalenko.
The diplomat said he never doubted that Armenia would eventually choose the Eurasian integration, noting that the allied relations between Armenia and Russia are based not only on military-technical , trade and economic, but also on humanitarian cooperation.
"Humanitarian cooperation implies development of close human relationships: it is the Russian language, mutual enrichment between the two cultures, it is the planned opening of the branch of Moscow State University in Armenia,” said Kovalenko.
According to him, the creation of the Armenian branch of the University will allow young people from the southern regions of Russia to pursue higher education not in Moscow but in Armenia and in the future to stay at homeland and serve it. He also stressed the importance of around 100 centers of Russian language in Armenia.
Director of the Caucasus Institute, Alexander Iskandaryan, said Armenia and Russia are interconnected by many threads, and neither side wants to cut them. "Russia is important for Armenia in terms of its security. Armenia in turn has strategic significance for Russia which wants to be present in the South Caucasus as a significant force,’ Iskandaryan said.
Director of the Armenian branch of the CIS Institute, Alexander Makarov, added that the military- political cooperation has always been a priority in relations between the two countries. "If we talk about economic cooperation, Russian investors are the main investors in Armenia, the Russian capital is present in almost all areas of the economy", he said.
Source: http://news.am/eng/news/180158.html
Armenia is not to choose between the Eurasian and European integration, rector of the Russian-Armenia (Slavonic) University Armen Darbinyan said at a round-table discussion on the Eurasian integration choice of Armenia. Armenia is choosing Russia as part of the European civilization, Darbinyan said.
The rector said Russia recorded a breakthrough in development over the last years having turned into an attractive partner to Armenia. “We have been and will always be with progressive Russia”, Darbinyan said adding progress, cultural and Christian values are the basis of the cooperation. According to Darbinyan, there is potential for close and effective cooperation between Armenia and Russia in the framework of the Eurasian project.
Russian ambassador to Georgia and Armenia (2009-2013), director of Caspian cooperation institute regional programs Vyacheslav Kovalenko said Armenia may play a great role in harmonization of the Eurasian and European integration modules. Kovalenko also said Armenia will immediately benefit over 100 million dollars from its accession to the Customs Union due to lifted customs limitations. New jobs will be opened and security guarantees will be provided.
The round-table discussion on Armenia’s Eurasian choice was held on November 8 in the Slavonic University of Armenia by North-South political center, history department of the Moscow State University and politics and law department of the Russian-Armenian (Slavonic) University.
“This is a disappointment not just for the EU but, we believe, for the people of Ukraine,” EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton said in a statement, claiming that “the most ambitious” pact ever offered to a partner by the EU would have helped the country’s economy.
The decree signed by Prime Minister Mykola Azarov's government on Thursday orders the “halt of the process of preparing the Association Agreement between Ukraine and the European Union.”
The decision was taken to “ensure the national security of Ukraine” and “restore lost trade volumes with the Russian Federation” after considering the effects on trade relations with Moscow, legislators said.
The announcement follows the Ukraine parliament's earlier refusal to pass a bill that would see jailed former Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko allowed to travel abroad for treatment - a key EU deal condition for the summit that was scheduled in Vilnius, Lithuania, next week. The EU envoy at the negotiations, Polish politician Aleksander Kwasniewski confirmed that the deal would not go ahead saying the “mission is over… The accord will not be signed in Vilnius.”
Many European politicians as well as Ukraine’s own opposition have already slammed Kiev’s decision. Swedish Foreign Minister Carl Bildt critcized Ukraine's decision, saying the “Ukraine government suddenly bows deeply to the Kremlin” due to the Russian “politics of brutal pressure.”
A “deep disappointment at the unilateral decision” was also voiced in a statement by EU envoys Aleksander Kwasniewski and Pat Cox, who highlighted what they call a “dramatically increased pressure from Russia in recent weeks.”
British Foreign Secretary William Hague in the meantime called the decision a “missed opportunity.” Not all European countries however have adopted such a critical approach. It was Ukraine's “sovereign right to make a decision which path she wants to follow,” German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle said.
Call to impeach
Arseniy Yatsenyuk Ukrainian opposition leader and a former Minister of Economy called for President Viktor Yanukovych to step down.
"If Yanukovych is refusing to sign the agreement, then it is not only state treason but also grounds for the impeachment of the president and the dismissal of the government," he said in parliament.
People have begun flocking to Kiev’s main Square and home of 2004 Orange revolution. More than 1500 protesters with banners gathered in the Maidan Square to voice their opposition to the government’s decision, local media reports. A number of MPs have also joined the protests, more are planned for this Sunday. Police have cordoned off the presidential administration building as more security vans arrive at the scene.
After the cabinet's decision, EU Enlargement Commissioner Stefan Fuele canceled his Friday trip to Kiev. President Yanukovych, however said that despite “difficulties” his country would continue towards European integration. Russia welcomed Ukraine's decision to actively develop ties with Moscow, while President Putin said he wasn't completely against Ukraine's association with EU. But trilateral trade talks should take place before Ukraine signs an agreement with the EU.
“We favor this, but only before decisions are made,” Putin said.“How can we hold negotiations on issues that have already been agreed upon and endorsed?”
The European Union has actually done nothing to convince Ukrainian leaders that association with the EU would actually solve its economic crisis, Polish MEP Pawel Zalewski stated earlier this week. As compared to hundreds of billions of euros channeled into Greek, Spanish and Portuguese economies, he said, one billion offered to Ukraine was inadequate and "ridiculous."
"It's a ridiculous amount compared to the resources allocated to rescue Southern Europe from bankruptcy," Zalewski said as cited by PR Newswire.
In the meantime Russia has the “means and willingness” to offer Ukraine what the EU lacks, which is money, Eric Kraus, Managing Director of Anyatta Capital told RT, adding that Ukraine is a “vital part” of the European Russian speaking space.
“The European Union offers a lot of words,” Kraus said, implying that nothing tangible would have come out of the deal. “What they don’t offer is what Ukraine needs – and that’s money.”
“Ukraine is not vital to the EU,” Kraus explained. “It is a part of a geopolitical chess game and they’d like to take that piece. They are not going to spend a lot of money for it. They can’t, they’ve got Portugal, they’ve got Greece. Pretty soon they’ve got France.”
The financial analyst also explained the economic problems that Ukraine is facing.
“The problem is that Ukraine is in dire economic strains. Ukraine is 2-6 months from default. They cannot raise money in markets. They are running a deficit. They are having a lot of trouble keeping the currency stable.”
The following are somewhat older yet still relevant news articles pertaining to Russo-Armenian relations:
Russian military experts offered forecasts and scenarios for possible conflicts Moscow could become drawn into. According to Russian media, resumption of a Karabakh war was named as one of the possibilities, with the geography of war capable of spreading beyond the borders of NKR. According to experts’ forecasts, in the event of a new war, Russian troops deployed at Armenia’s Gyumri military base will shield Armenia’s borders, thus enabling Armenian army soldiers to be more effectively used in Karabakh. According to a military expert Alexander Khramchikhin, Russia won’t gain from involvement in Karabakh war, with Moscow to find itself in a difficult situation should the conflict become “unfrozen.” According to the expert, Russia has managed to stay flexible in its Transcaucasia-oriented policy, cooperating with both Armenia and Azerbaijan. “Should the conflict break out between the two above-mentioned countries, Russia won’t be openly supporting Armenia, with Moscow agreeing to become involved in a war were the 3rd parties, like Turkey, to interfere,” the expert predicted.
Source: http://www.panarmenian.net/eng/news/130278/
2012
Three hypotheses explaining a dramatic enlargement of the Russian military group in Dagestan. Between 15,000 and 25,000 servicemen of the Defense Ministry and Internal Troops with heavy fighting vehicles were dispatched from Chechnya to Dagestan. The authorities call it planned rotation one day and establishment of the Interior Ministry's Tactical Force in Dagestan the following.
Eyewitness reports mentioned over 300 vehicles including armored personnel carriers, Ural ferries, and armored command vehicles on the way to Dagestan. T-90 tanks and multiple rocket launcher systems were already moved to Dagestan from Chechnya. According to official explanations, "some forces of the Provisional Task Force will be moved from Chechnya to Dagestan and transformed into the Interior Ministry's Tactical Force." Dagestani Security Council Secretary Magomed Baachilov, however, called it "planned rotation".
Both explanations are lame, of course. Official explanation is invalidated by the simple fact that no Tactical Force ever needs so many heavy armored vehicles and Grad launchers. Baachilov's is plain rubbish on account of the scope of the so called rotation. The impression is that a major operation against the extremist underground is planned in Dagestan. Or else the federal center knows something that warrants deployment of an equivalent of two divisions... in addition to the 136th Brigade quartered in Buinaksk, Marines in Kaspiisk, and countless OMON units.
There is, however, a third hypothesis as well. "As matters stand, there are between 55,000 and 57,000 servicemen quartered in the republic... discounting local law enforcement agencies... It is rumored here that come summer Azerbaijan will make another go at Nagorno-Karabakh and try to reabsorb the runaway region. All this military might concentrated in Dagestan is meant as a warning to Baku, a message that Russia will stand by Armenia," said a source in Dagestani security structures.
Source: Argumenty Nedeli, No 11, March 22, 2012, p. 2
Russia Hints At Intervention in Armenia-Azerbaijan Conflict
2012
Several days after apparent widespread skirmishes all along the Armenia-Azerbaijan border and the Nagorno-Karabakh "line of contact," there is still very little information about what actually happened. For a while, though, at least on the internet, it seemed that a serious escalation of violence was imminent. It's a bit odd that, amid all the rumors of massive fighting, there doesn't seem to have been any casualties on either side, suggesting that the reports may have been some sort of deliberate disinformation campaign. And that's what the Armenian Defense Ministry has suggested:
The rumors spread by Azerbaijani mass media on the possible combat operations on NKR–Azerbaijan line of contact towards Aghdam and Fizulai are nothing but imagination. In comparison to June 7-8, the ceasefire violations in different parts of the front line have become more frequent and have increased. This, however, did not affect and will not affect the general state.
Russian fighter jets stationed at a base in Armenia have conducted about 300 training flights since the beginning of 2012, and have increased the number of flying hours by more than 20 percent from last year... Colonel Gorbul said Russian fighter pilots were preparing for combat. “The main emphasis in performing aerobatic elements is made on the ability to apply them in real-life air combat conditions,” he said.
Source: http://www.eurasianet.org/node/65525
2012
Despite record growth in military spending and frequently heard threats by top officials to resume hostilities in Karabakh, Azerbaijani leadership is said to be "terrified" by a prospect of an Armenian military attack, a Stratfor memo made available via Wikileaks revealed. The memo was prepared by Reva Bhalla, Stratfor's director of analysis, following her August 2010 meeting with a source described as "Ambassador-at-large for energy security, Czech Republic." While the official is not named in the memo, Vaclav Bartuska has been the Czech envoy on energy security for the last several years.
2012
Chairman of the State Duma of the Federal Assembly of the Russian Federation Sergey Naryshkin and his delegation visited the Tsitsernakaberd Memorial Complex accompanied by Vice President of the National Assembly of the Republic of Armenia Edward Sharmazanov. Chairman of the State Duma of the Russian Federation laid a wreath at the memorial to the Armenian Genocide victims after which the members of the delegation put flowers at the Eternal Fire and honored the memory of the innocent victims with a minute of silence. Members of the Russian delegation visited the Armenian Genocide Museum where they get acquainted with the temporary exhibition titled “Book as a witness of the Genocide” dedicated to the 500th anniversary of the Armenian printing and proclamation of Yerevan as 2012 World Book Capital City by UNESCO. Afterwards Chairman of the State Duma of the Russian Federation left a note in the Commemoration Book. The delegates from the Russian Federation had a tour of the Memorial Alley where Chairman of the State Duma of the Federal Assembly of the Russian Federation Sergey Naryshkin planted a fir.
Source: http://www.armradio.am/eng/news/?part=soc&id=23471
2011
In a discussion on the situation in Karabakh, General Tretyak agreed with a participant’s assessment that the possibility of conflict in that region is high, but argued that it is gradually decreasing as a result of Russian efforts to reduce tension in the region. He disagreed with the suggestion that Russia’s relationship with Armenia is eroding and made clear that Russia will carry out its promises to that country. No one should see Russia’s refusal to intervene in Kyrgyzstan last summer as a precedent for Karabakh, as that was a very different situation.
Hmm, that can't make too many folks in Baku feel too confident. Tretyak also weighed in on Central Asia, and suggested that the Collective Security Treaty Organization could help fill the security vacuum that will be created by the U.S. leaving Afghanistan. And he seems to acknowledge that the CSTO kind of dropped the ball on Kyrgyzstan last year, when it did nothing to stop the pogroms that took place there in what many saw as the first big test of the collective security group: He also felt that what he saw as the inevitable US withdrawal from the region will have a negative effect on stability.
In this context, the CSTO may come to play a more important role in the region. General Tretyak pointed out that CSTO reforms are continuing. The major Russian military exercises in the summer and early fall will include CSTO states. The Russian military has looked at the issues that arose in conjunction with the Kyrgyzstan crisis and know how to act if a similar situation arises in the future; according to General Tretyak, there are no disagreements on this with Russia’s CSTO partners. The general further noted that the forces assigned to the CSTO are the best prepared of Russia’s forces, because Russia wants to increase the organization’s military effectiveness. General Tretyak reiterated the Russian position that it would like NATO to recognize the legitimacy of the CSTO and establish cooperation with it.
This seems to be a pointed message that the CSTO is learning from its mistakes in Kyrgyzstan -- and that those who expect it to stand aside in the future should think again.
Source: http://www.eurasianet.org/node/63627
2008
‘’Nagorno-Karabakh will come to recognition sooner or later. Karabakh will not return within Azerbaijan’’, Konstantin Zatulin, the deputy Chairman of Russia’s State Duma Committee on CIS Affairs, Director of the Institute of CIS Studies, stated in the course of a news conference held at the Novosti Press Center today. According to Zatulin, Azerbaijanis are also aware of the fact. However, in his words, the Azerbaijani politicians cannot exceed the established limits. Nevertheless, presenting, in his words, Russia’s official stand, Zatulin noted that Russia was not ready to recognize Nagorno-Karabakh’s independence, especially taking into consideration that Armenia had not done it yet. ‘’However, my own stand is as follows: it is possible not to recognize Nagorno-Karabakh de jure as much as one likes, however, it de facto exists’’, Konstantin Zatulin noted. At that, in Konstantin Zatulin’s words, no one can prove that nations’ right to self-determination yields priority to territorial integrity’s principle. Zatulin is sure that the final word rests with people, if they consistently display their will.
Source: http://www.defacto.am/index.php?OP=71340649
2008
Source: http://www.marketwatch.com/news/stor...A%7D&dist=hppr
2008
Some warming between Yerevan and Ankara is favorable. The Armenian-Turkish relations need gradual normalization, Andrey Areshev, expert at Strategic Culture Foundation said in an interview with PanARMENIAN.Net. “Consultations of diplomats are no longer a secret. Russian concessionaires of the Armenian Railways announced readiness to reconstruct Kars-Gyumri line. Foreign media circulated information that some oil companies negotiate construction of a gas pipeline with Armenia. The Ayrum-Gyumri-Akhuryan route (bypassing Georgia) is being discussed. Certainly, these are just variants but Georgia’s destructive role in the region becomes more and more evident not only for Russia or Iran but also for U.S. allies, such as Turkey, and the key EU countries, which are concerned over their energy security,” he said. “Possible normalization of the Armenian-Turkish relations and partial opening of the border should not be used as an argument for withdrawal of the Russian military base from Armenia. Furthermore, opening of the border should be a Russian but not a U.S. project,” Areshev emphasized. “The Armenian authorities’ flirtation with the U.S. and NATO, the forthcoming joint exercise in September are quite understandable as a part of complementary policy pursued by the republic. However, it’s clear that the west will use Caucasian nations as active storage (Georgia is a vivid example) Cooling with Russia in exchange for attractive offers can have deplorable consequences for Armenia and NKR’s security. The Karabakh conflict can’t be resolved with NATO’s assistance. Partial restoration of Russia’s positions in the Caucasus, Turkey and Iran’s firm opposition to resumption of hostilities may push Baku to search for more adequate way to resolve the Karabakh conflict. However, it will not happen before the presidential election in Azerbaijan,” he concluded.
Source: http://www.panarmenian.net/news/eng/?nid=27006
2007
National consensus has been reached in Nagorno Karabakh regarding the fact that “the republic must be an independent state,” so victory of one or another candidate at the presidential election will not radically change on the general situation, head of the Caucasus department at the Institute for CIS Studies Mikhail Alexandrov said. “The matter concerns nuances. For instance, Bako Saakyan is quite moderate and is orientated towards connection with Armenia and talks with Azerbaijan.
Masis Mailyan is tougher, he opposes returning of seven occupied areas to Azerbaijan and speaks for a more autonomous from Yerevan negotiation stance,” Alexandrov said adding that in any case, the key direction in Stepanakert will be dialog. At the same time, he noted that Ilham Aliev’s hopes for returning Karabakh through dialog are naïve.
“A military settlement is an affair that will result in collapse of Azerbaijan as a state. It is unreal for Baku to win over Armenia and the NKR, no matter how strongly they increase their military spending,” the expert believes. The matter concerns not only money, but efficiency of the Army. “Besides, Armenia is connected with Russia by military agreements; the most up-to-date military equipment is supplied there at lower prices. Some types of weapons are impossible for Azerbaijan to acquire in foreign markets; nobody will sell them to it.
So, it will be ungrounded to hope for superiority and a Blitzkrieg,” the analyst stressed adding that “this form of being looped” can result in Azerbaijan losing the seven areas of the Nagorno Karabakh security belt. Now, he believes, there is still an opportunity to implement the formula “peace for territories”: Azerbaijan recognizes Nagorno Karabakh independence and the latter returns the territories. “However, now, the time is not serving Baku. The Kosovo precedent that, most probably, will end with a one-sided recognition of the territory’s independence by the West will only encourage Karabakh in its intentions. ‘The Fifth Column’ and a coup in Stepanakert are ruled out, because there is no single Azerbaijani there,” Mikhail Alexandrov is quoted as saying by PanARMENIAN.Net.
Source: http://www.regnum.ru/english/860576.html
2005
Alarmed by a whole series of “Rose”, “Orange” and other revolutions, Russia is afraid of losing one of the last of its bulwarks in the area of the former USSR. In the context of the deepening of their strategic partnership the presidents of the two countries will discuss the problems of resolving the Karabakh conflict, as well as the prospects of deploying the Russian military bases on Armenian territory, which should be withdrawn from Georgia within the next few years. As regards the first problem, Moscow tries to soften the position of Yerevan in order to avoid the exacerbation of the relations with Baku. The Kremlin hoped to bring the President of Armenia, Robert Kocharyan, and the President of Azerbaijan, Ilkham Aliyev, to negotiations during the celebration of the 60th anniversary of Victory in the last war in Moscow in May.
However, judging by information coming in from Baku, President Aliyev will hardly come to Moscow for the occasion. The question of the withdrawal of Russian troops and arms from Georgia has been solved, in the main, as a result of negotiations with the Georgian leadership, although the deadlines have not been fixed. The most probable time will be 2007. After that Russia hopes to deploy its military units on Armenian territory, in the vicinity of the Russian base No 102. Yerevan agrees to it, but puts forward a number of conditions. The main one is a solution to the problem of the transport blockade of Armenia. This is why both Moscow and Yerevan hope to work out a concerted policy aimed at obtaining Georgia's consent to a free transport corridor by commissioning the Novorossiisk – Poti sea ferry, and also resuming the railway connection through the territory of Abkhazia.
Naturally, the questions of military cooperation will also be discussed. Armenia receives arms and ammunition from Russia at preferential prices. To date more than 500 Armenian army officers study in Russia free of charge, that is, at the expense of the Russian budget. This figure can be bigger. A range of problems to be discussed deal with the relations between Russia, Armenia and Iran. Teheran remains an important regional partner of Moscow, but it views rather cautiously the plans to build a gas pipeline between Iran and Armenia, which will later be one of the channels of supplying Iranian gas to Ukraine and Europe. But the deputy foreign minister of Armenia, Gegam Garibjanyan, has said that Russia should take part in the negotiations on the matter. President Putin will, no doubt, raise the question of “Gazprom” taking part in the implementation of this project.
Source: http://www.kommersant.com/page.asp?id=557608
2002
“Nezavisimaia”* (NG) raises an alarm: “the unrecognized states in post Soviet territories will cease to exist” and will become “an object of NATO expansion” under the conditions, when “Russia is not capable to prevent the West from ‘cultivating’ the post Soviet regions,” for “there are no effective measures left for Russia to apply to resist the ongoing trend.” (NG, March 2, 2002).
It is significantly important to recognize that we are constantly being provoked to argue and undermine our relationship with our strategic allies. The Pro Azeri lobby in Moscow has been especially active in these attempts, doing all they can to drive Russia away from Armenia. These groups present the Turkish-oriented Azerbaijan as “the Russian basis in the Caucasus.” At the same time we are being threatened with NATO military bases on Apsheron and a new war against NKR, if the latter refuses to dissolve itself as an independent state and accept sham autonomy within Azerbaijan. Pro Azeri lobbyists use lies and scare tactics, hoping that our memories are short. Suddenly, the infamous Mutalibov has remembered the “tragedy of Khodjali, when in February of 1992 hundreds of civilians were slaughtered in Nagorno Karabakh as a result of a joint operation of the Armenian military groups and 366th motor-division of the Russian Army.” But back in 1992, Mutalibov himself had admitted that “the tragedy of Khodjali” was, in essence, a provocation carried out not by Armenians but by Elchibei’s bandits against his presidency (see his interview for NG April 2, 92). Why would Mutalibov remember the old lies of Elchibei propaganda now? The answer is clear: to destroy Russian-Armenian relations. Those feeding from the Azeri lobby push Moscow to help Azerbaijan to fulfill their plans of annexing NKR territory.
The protanganists throw an oft-used theory of alleged “Pro Western” orientation of the present Armenian government into the controversy. Yet, the official Yerevan line simply tries to diversify its foreign ties, which is a reasonable and most rational way of survival for Armenia. In the current circumstances, Armenia needs neither “pro Western” nor “pro Russian” orientation. But it needs a “pro Armenian” one. Russia should understand these nuances, in which it is not able to assist Armenia fully. For example, would Russia be capable of sustaining and providing regular humanitarian aid, that amounts to hundreds of millions of dollars, and which Armenia has been receiving from the USA for the past ten years now? An honest appraisal will ensure Russia’s stance in the South Caucasus. However, Russia still has other measures to strengthen its positions in the Transcaucasus. One of those is a military cooperation, including air defense and border patrol. In that region, we have such presence only in Armenia. Another lever is to own industrial and scientific property of strategic economic and social importance in a country. Again Armenia reappears, as we are currently conducting negotiations on these issues with the state government. A third way is to effectively use the patronage offered by Russia to the Armenians, in the Karabakh question. This should be done without any fear of confrontation with Turkish-Azeri pressure, conflicting with our interests, for it is strongly connected with the far-fetched plans of pan-Turkism.
The words of the Russian President, uttered in Yerevan in September 2001, hold a special importance in light of these circumstances, i.e.: “the whole policy of Russia in the region will be directed to provide a reliable defense for Armenia;” and that the solution of the Karabakh problem should be coming out of the present status quo, by which “Russia, should not disturb the established balance between Armenia and Azerbaijan.” I believe that to be the position conforming to the Russian strategic interests. We should rid ourselves of the bad habit of taking on trust everything that Azerbaijan says. Here, we do business with a partner, who promises undying friendship to Moscow and acts as a complete vassal of Turkey in Ankara and conductor of pan-Turkism at home. Once we attempt to meet their interests and give up Karabakh to them, they will not need us, for the pan Turkism orientation of Baku is rooted deeply in its body.
All of this is not a call to stop having any business with Azerbaijan and impose any sanctions on the country. There are about three million citizens of Azerbaijan, who live and work in Russia. Some of them have become Russian citizens. Moreover, Azerbaijan is our neighbor. A neighbor should be treated in a friendly, neighborly way, despite the fact that it behaves otherwise. It is important to promote trade, cultural exchange and cooperation in possible and profitable areas. Nonetheless, we should not close our eyes and ignore its true goals, especially if they contradict the Russian interests. Armenia has been our strategic ally from the beginning and until the present day. Therefore we should act towards it in an appropriate fashion. We should be considerate of Armenia’s interests and Karabakh’s interests, for without Karabakh there is no independent and friendly Armenia. Furthermore, without the Armenians, Russia would not have any positions in Transcaucasus. My idea of Karabakh’s protectorate evolves exactly from that logic: we simply ought to protect Karabakh, assist in all possible ways to strengthen its security on its historical territory; that had its borders distorted by the Russian Bolsheviks, demanding restoration now. The entirety of NKR, deserves no lesser respect than entirety of territories of any other state.
In my view, the true settling of the Karabakh conflict suggests complete rejection by Azerbaijan of the primal Armenian lands. It is possible to resolve the problem of the refugees by providing them with opportunities in places where they live now. How come in almost every discussion on Karabakh the only refugees that are being consistently mentioned are the Azeri refugees? Why can’t the Armenians return to Baku, Gyandja, Sumgait, Artsvashen, Getashen, etc.? It seems to me that the most optimal resolution of the Karabakh problem is to legitimize the status quo within the borders on the confrontation lines, set by the truce of 1994. Aside from the war anything else is simply unrealistic. Azerbaijan pretty much hopes for a war. However, a war is not going to deliver anything good neither to the Armenians, nor to the Azeri people.
Dr. Vladimir Stupishin (Ph.D. in History, Ph.D. in Law) is the former Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the Russian Federation to the Republic of Armenia. Dr. V. Stupishin is a long-time supporter of self-determination rights of the people of Nagorno - Karabakh Republic. He is also a resolute advocate for a strategic alliance between Armenia and Russia.
During the period of 1992-1994, Dr. V. Stupishin was the first Russian Ambassador to then newly independent Republic of Armenia. In November, 1992 he was sent to Armenia to establish a permanent Russian embassy in Yerevan. Those were most difficult days for Armenia, which was struggling to survive in the blockade inflicted by Turkey and Azerbaijan.
While leaving Armenia to return to Russia in 1994 Dr. Stupishin promised not to forget the people of Armenia and Karabakh. "I will not betray you, no matter what," he said then.
That was not just a lip service. Now retired from the diplomatic service, Vladimir Stupishin continues his diplomatic efforts in media, actively protecting the natural rights of any nation for self-determination up to the creation of an independent state. In September 1997 he visited Nagorno Karabakh Republic (NKR) again as an independent observer of local presidential elections.
Dr. V. Stupishin was awarded a medal of "Gratitude" for his valuable services to NKR, including scientific substantiation of the self-determination rights of the Karabakh people, for his valuable contribution in publicizing the Artsakh issue and demanding its just resolution.
Recently Dr. Stupishin published his memoirs about the time he was the Russian Ambassador in Armenia with lots of insider information on the political situation in Armenia, armenian-azerbaijani conflict and Karabakh war in the early 1990s.
Vladimir Stupishin: Resolution of the Karabakh Conflict Without Karabakh People?
2001
In reply to the article Who failed the Karabakh resolution by Alan Kasaev and Armen Khanbabyan. See appendix.
The peace in the Transcaucasus depends on answers to questions raised in “Who has Failed the Karabakh Resolution” article by Alan Kasaev and Armen Khanbabyan.
The authors strongly exaggerated the prospects of a solid peace in the Transcaucasus. They suggest that those possibilities are bound to develop once Presidents Putin and Bush bring the resolution process under their direct control. The Russian President, by saying that “only Armenia and only Azerbaijan are able to reach an agreement,” has ruled out one of the parties, the Republic of Nagorno Karabakh. This Republic has an immediate interest in those prospects. But Mr. Putin’s position has shut down a real opportunity for resolution, which is possible ONLY if the conflicting parties negotiate (i.e., as in this case, negotiations between the Republic of Azerbaijan (RAz) and the Republic of Nagorno Karabakh (NKR)) with each other. Any alternative setting is doomed to be unsuccessful. I do not know what Mr. Bush thinks of all that. But, it is highly unlikely that he is more informed than Mr. Putin.
However, both presidents would like to play their part here as well. Why? It is widely assumed that they have “arrived to a common opinion that the peacemaking process has long as shifted to a stage of simulation, by which all meetings are strictly formal in nature and by definition cannot lead to any noticeable improvements.” Certainly they cannot, since others, not just enemies but friends as well, are trying to solve the problems of Karabakh for it and without it. All that is happening despite the fact that the people of NKR have been successfully taking care of their problems for more than a decade. This nation has created its governance in full compliance with international law, recognizing the right of any nation of self-determination and choice of a political status. The people of NKR have defended (armed, when forced to) their independence from RAz in full ordinance with the Soviet law of 1990 upon exit from the Soviet Union. The law was broken not by the Karabakh people, but by the politicians in Baku, at the time of disintegration of the Soviet Republic of Azerbaijan.
Yet, why would the “great powers” care whether Armenia and Azerbaijan, who are in conflict with each other not just because of Karabakh, do “simulate” or do not “simulate” their readiness for serious talk? It is no secret that Heidar Aliev has voiced more than once his territorial claims on Armenia, including as he has once said, the “Erivan khanate.” Armenia does not have any territorial claims to Azerbaijan, but it could have and on more legal and just grounds than its neighbor. Armenia could have claimed back Nakhichevan, which had been part of the Erivan gubernia until 1918 and had been transferred, by Bolsheviks and Kemalists, under the “protectorate” of self-declared Azerbaijani Republic, which had appeared on the territories where before 1918 there had been no sign of Azerbaijan at all. So, even if Mr. Aliev is “simulating,” perhaps it is a good idea to let Armenia and Azerbaijan alone: let them “simulate” as much as they want, as long as they do not go to war with each other.
Not by chance, probably, but because of some Freudian impulses a suggestion that the American administration is “somewhat inclined to accept Moscow’s priority right over geopolitical influence in the post Soviet Transcaucasus” has the fashion word “somewhat” in it. It is not a parasite, but a true reflection of the way things are: the Americans are indeed SOMEWHAT inclined to accept our prerogative role in the Transcaucasus, for it is not one of their foreign policy interests. Well, perhaps they do need to have security in the region in order to work out the transportation and oil-pipeline related plans of the Western companies (however, those so-called “plans” are actually policies directed to shifting Russia out of the Transcaucasus). Why should we, at the cost of our Armenian ally, support all that? “Pax Americana” in the Transcaucasus, that is not doing any favors for Russia; it will work against our national and state interests.
I absolutely disapprove the notion of Meghri transfer to Azerbaijan. Such a transfer not only would lead to surrounding and “choking” of Armenia by the Turks, but would also be a starting point for eventual realization of the ideas of Pan-Turkism on the way to the “Great Turan.” How could one ever forget, that these plans, which contradict Russian interests, have been initiated and supported for more than ten years by the US State Department?
It is unclear, why anyone, given such a setting, would ever tell me that “today Moscow and Washington have a lot in common in their approaches to a resolution.”
The declaration that “today the problem (i.e. obviously, Karabakh problem –V.S.) has finally shifted from the setting of nations’ self-determination into a territorial quarrel between the two states (i.e. Azerbaijan and Armenia)” seems to be rather odd. Even stranger are the words that “there is not anything say” about any mutual understanding between Russia and Armenia, that in reality there is a confrontation between Karabakh and Azerbaijan. Has the Russian diplomacy gone so mind-numbing that it has completely taken the side of a “small empire” that is refusing to give up Nagorno Karabakh, even cut in pieces, which the Soviet Azerbaijan had received from the Bolsheviks in 1921? Why is it a “finally” and a “not anything to say” process? There is still a room for maneuvering.
The nations’ right of self-determination is not something that is given by any state, but comes from God and is sealed by International Law. There could be, and could not be, some territorial disputes between Armenia and Azerbaijan. However those have no relation to the problem of the Karabakh Armenians. Even the Soviet power had recognized their right for their own territory within the autonomous oblast, which was documented in the Soviet laws, according to which Armenia and Azerbaijan lived.
They (Karabakh Armenians – AVG) opted out Azerbaijan with that “own territory”, which had never belonged to the Turks. They did so without breaking any territorial integrity of neither the Turks, the Lezgins, the Talishes nor of any other nation living in the artificially created state, which had not existed at all until 1918, and which has recently been coming up with some “native rights” to the lands of different nations.
If “there is not anything to say” about it, does this mean that we are also done with the International Law?
2000
Russia has to ensure that Armenia has the means to defend itself from threats in the Transcaucasus region, Russian Col-Gen Leonid Ivashov said in an interview published in the Armenian newspaper 'Ayots Ashkar' on 16th May. The USA and NATO countries want to prevent the military cooperation between Armenia and Russia, and "if we are weak it will be easy to rule us", the general said. The two countries have to forge still closer military relations, remembering the fact that many Russian and Armenian officers served together. Ivashov also said that Russia will keep its military bases in Georgia for the time being, until an agreement can be made on their withdrawal which would not entail something like "a retreat". The following is the text of the interview from `Ayots Ashkar' by Vahan Vardanyan entitled "Russian-Armenian strategic cooperation is a fact"
[Q] General, how can you evaluate the present stage of Armenian-Russian cooperation in the context of Russia's new military doctrine? In this case what is the role of the Russian military base located in Armenia?
[A] Today is the eighth anniversary of the signing of the CIS collective security pact. Armenia is one of the active country members of that pact and conducts the kind of policy that will ensure that the collective security pact is an effective mechanism for averting any aggression towards country members. Armenia also actively participates in the creation of an air defence system. Russian-Armenian bilateral relations in the military sphere are successfully developing. We don't make a secret of the fact that we are interested in the guaranteeing of Armenia's security. I can say that within the framework of bilateral relations meetings between Russian and Armenian military servicemen often take place. They meet every month on a high level and have the aim of finding new prospects for cooperation and improving our countries' defence. I would like to emphasize that it is not directed against any other country, everything is done within the framework of international obligations.
[Q] Can Armenian-Russian military cooperation be considered an existing fact or is a further deepening of relations possible?
[A] Yes, it may be established that Russian-Armenian strategic cooperation is an existing fact. But there is still an inner force for improvement. Armenian military staff are being trained in Russia, we are strengthening the military base located in Armenia by modernizing the military equipment. Whenever we have the chance we also support the Armenian armed forces. We have only the task of maintaining the necessary level of defence. Unfortunately, the situation in the Caucasus is not stable on the whole, and the armed forces and the balance of military potential are also a guarantee for averting conflicts.
[Q] It is often written in the military press that Armenian-Russian relations are dependent on individuals. In your opinion is it really so?
[A] The agreement on friendship, cooperation and mutual support is of course the strategic line of our two countries. Of course, it will be fulfilled more effectively if more than simply institutional relations are created in different structures. Many Russian and Armenian officers served together. How can that military brotherhood be broken? Do you suppose that we don't notice how often the US military servicemen try to put a wedge into our relations? NATO's military servicemen organize seminars where they speak only about Russian-Armenian military cooperation. It is not profitable for them. I can say that the USA and NATO countries actively work with the goal of preventing our consolidation. If we are weak it will be easy to rule us. Wherever real integration is observed, our transatlantic guests immediately intervene.
[Q] But sometimes we have the impression that because of a change of this or that official the relations between the countries also change. Is it really so? And what can you say about speculation that Russian generals are involved in the recent processes in Armenia and have their own interests?
[A] Undoubtedly the policy is being implemented by specific individuals. If those persons serve the strategic line of Armenian-Russian relations, in that case our military and political and allied relations will go on. A change in the state's political line may become a reason for our anxiety. As for the Armenian military servicemen, they are devoted to Armenian-Russian military cooperation. But it is not true that we military servicemen intrude in political processes. Yes, Russia has direct interests in Armenia. The essence of them is to maintain our strategic relations, so that Armenia is stable and strong from the strategic as well as the economic point of view, so that it is a friend and colleague for Russia. These are our interests. The speculation means that somebody does not like the fact that Russia assists Armenia. The US embassy is more active than we are. But that activity is directed towards breaking up our relations. The USA has managed to achieve quite serious success in relations with the other countries of the Transcaucasus, including in the military sphere.
[Q] What is the destiny of the Russian military bases located in the Transcaucasus?
[A] As for the withdrawal of Russian military bases from Georgia, we have finished only the first stage of negotiations and have presented our approaches. But when we were informed about the terms of all the bases being withdrawn, and they were brief, we drew Georgia's attention to the [OSCE] Istanbul summit. And there was no discussion of a withdrawal of military bases there. Yes, it is necessary to make an arrangement about the direct terms, but it must not be like a retreat. And it must not be a situation where immediately after the end of negotiations we start the withdrawal. So the question is about the maintenance of Russian military bases and facilities in Georgia and we shall continue this policy. As for Gyumri military base, that, according to our common opinion, is a factor of stability in the region, a factor averting aggressive actions towards Armenia.
[Q] Today the necessity of forming a Caucasus-wide security system is much spoken about. What is the position of Russian military servicemen with regard to this matter?
[A] If the question is about regional security, in that case it is necessary to talk about the whole region, and here there are the interests of Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia and Russia as well as Turkey. There are fewer US interests. And where there are US troops it will not make the region more stable. We are ready to participate in a discussion concerning the problems of regional security, but only taking into account the interests of all the countries. But the presence of NATO on the territory of the former Soviet republics is not acceptable for Russia.
[Q] Recently Armenian Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanyan stated that the Russian military base located in Armenia is there to prevent danger from a third side and to guarantee stability. Do you agree with this?
[A] Yes, I do. That is really so. It is very important for us so that Armenia is stable. The domestic instability of any country can be exploited by a third force. That is why we have to observe so that the Armenian armed forces are capable of functioning. We must also watch so that the Russian military base corresponds to the level of those dangers which are present in the Transcaucasus today. The sum of the potential of the Russian military base and of our military and political and military and technical cooperation, as well as the stable development of Armenia, will give us an opportunity to maintain peace and stability on Armenian territory.
Source: http://www.eurasianet.org/resource/a...0005/0040.html
1998
Russia secretly has shipped more than $1 billion worth of arms to Armenia, apparently to be used against - pro-Western Azerbaijan and - to force the Azeris -and their strategic oil reserves into Russia's orbit. Aman Tuleyev, minister for relations with the Commonwealth of Independent States, has acknowledged that Moscow supplied Armenia with 84 T-72 main battle tanks, 72 heavy howitzers, 24 Scud missiles with eight launchers, 50 armored personnel carriers and millions of rounds of ammunition. Lev Rokhlin, the chairman of the Defense Committee of the Duma, the lower House of the Russian parliament, told a closed Duma session April 2 that Moscow had -shipped $1 billion worth of weapons to the tough, nationalist government of President Levon Ter-Petrosian in Yerevan. His report was similar to Mr. Tuleyev's acknowledgment. Between 1992 and early 1994, when the conflict was at its height, Russian heavy transport aircraft were said to have ferried 1,300 tons of ammunition across the Caucasus to the Armenian capital. Most of the tanks were flown in aboard giant Antonov planes from the city of Akhtubinsk.
Responding to the revelations, Russian President Boris Yeltsin ordered a major government probe Saturday that could implicate his longtime defense minister, Marshal Pavel Grachev who was fired last spring. Russian military prosecutors are considering calling Marshal Grachev in for questioning over the scandal, which has been compared to The Iran-Contra affair. The- chairman of the Azeri parliament, Murtuz Alesketov, said Saturday the arms shipments could destabilize the Caucasus. "If these arms are not returned, this could lead to a new large-scale war in the region" he said at parliamentary hearings in Baku. Since the collapse of the Soviet Union at the end of 1991, Shi'ite Muslim Azerbaijan has eagerly courted American oil companies to help it develop the immense oil and gas reserves of the Caspian Sea, estimated as second in size and value only to those in the Persian Gulf. Russia has responded by backing Orthodox Christian Armenia, its historic ally.
On March 29, shortly after Mr. Yeltsin's Helsinki summit with President Clinton, the Russian leader finalized a treaty of friendship and strategic partnership with Mr. Ter-Petrosian. The move came after Mr. - Ter-Petrosian alarmed Azerbaijan by appointing The hard-line leader of ethnic Armenian Nagorno-Karabakh, a region of Azerbajjan, as prime minister of Armenia, a move widely regarded as paving the way for a renewed attack on Azerbaijan. There are at least 20,000 Russian 4th Army troops in Armenia concentrated around three major bases. Ivan Rybkin, head of Russia's Security Council, said after a meeting in Moscow with Mr. Ter-Petrosian on March 27 that the new bilateral treaty would have a "military component", the Moscow newspaper Nezavisimaya Gazeta reported March 28. Some Moscow analysts believe that Defense Minister Igor Rodionov and his supporters leaked details of the arms deals now to prevent Mr. Yeltsin from bringing back Marshal Grachev as chief military inspector at the Defense Ministry, the independent Moscow newspaper Segodnya said.
Source: http://www.geocities.com/baguirov/arms1.htm
CSTO Troops at the Armenian Genocide Memorial Complex
Thank you for providing time to read and response to my previous comment.
ReplyDeleteAllow me to disagree with you about the triviality of the fifth column. Daily I drive more than 1 hour listening to various FM Yerevan bands, most of them even the ones owned by (regime oriented tycoons) broadcast news from (azatoutioun radio) and political discussions more toxic than polonium alas more slow acting. I don’t know how this has to be remedied.
Regarding DIASPORA its composition has changed in the past decades, more than two thirds of Diaspora is in Russian Federation, when the population of a community exceeds 10000 living within driving distance from each other , furnishing it with a school becomes feasible, school brings other social activities which makes the community cohesive . So if the ministry of Diaspora involves itself more in the RF Diaspora its already meager resources will be utilized more effectively. And eventually this will pay back.
Greetings Sebouh,
ReplyDeleteThank you for reading this blog and thank you for your lucid remarks. I wish to see you participate more in the discussions here. I am looking forward to your ideas and suggestions.
I don't want you to be under the impression that I am underestimating the Western-led "fifth column" in Armenia. I see it as a dangerous cancer than needs to be surgically removed before it metastasizes. One of the main purposes of this blog has been to raise awareness about this topic. Having said that, I think the most serious danger it posed to the nation was during the past five years. I personally think that the danger has been contained more recently. All that needs to be done now is to counter the influences the Western infection has left within Armenian society.
I also see the CIA sponsored "Azatutyan Radio" as a serious concern, for most people in the country as you pointed out gets their "news" from it. As you already know, this bad habit in the country goes far back to the Soviet era. The fundamental problem here is that the Prague-based, CIA run radio station is very well funded. Putting aside the propaganda aspects of its broadcasts, quality wise, their programing is much better than any other Armenian or Russian language radio programming in existence today.
In the field of Psychological Operations (social engineering and propaganda), it will be very difficult, let alone surpass, the West. As I said, there is also the habit factor that needs to be broken in the people. I personally think Armenian authorities (perhaps with Russian prodding) should label the radio programing in question as a threat to state security and revoke their operating license in the country.
More importantly, there needs to be a well funded, professionally presented news outlet free of Western influences for the people to rely on similar to "Russia Today" but in Armenian. In my opinion, this has to be a joint-Russian-Armenian project.
Finally, I fully agree that our MOST important Diaspora is the Russian-Armenian Diaspora and all our resources - I would even go as far as saying even the resources of all other Diaspora - should go towards better organizing and better collaborating with the Russian-Armenian Diaspora.
Please know that I'm an Diasporan myself. I was born in the Middle East. I grew up in the US.
Once again, thank you for reading. Looking forward to your participation here.
Moscow consolidating its power by building trade partnerships and routes for the coming decades and I believe Armenia is in their plans as well. Finally free from the crippling blockade, Armenia will provide a natural barrier to the Pan Turkish/western drive into Russia's Caucasus region. As we get closer to this happening, I expect Turkey to be making positive gestures towards Armenia(initially disingenuous but increasingly desperate) as they realize their plan of blockading Armenia into oblivion is failing. At that time I hope to see our chess grand master president remove his offer of protocols from the table as a final kick up the Turkish ass.
ReplyDeleteGreat post Arevordi, and a rather optimistic one too! Overall 2013 has been a good year for Armenia, Russia, China, Syria, Iran and the rest of the world struggling against the declining anglo-american-zionist alliance. I cannot wait to see the positive developments during President Putin's visit, as well as all of the benefits and immediately tangible "joining bonuses" Armenia will reap from Customs Union ascension. I very, very sincerely hope that Armenia's government has the courage and foresight to smash the skulls of a few foreign-funded troublemakers ahead of Putin's arrival, and then present a plausible legal reason for why they had to act. Especially after the embarrassment Armenia's security and intelligence agencies suffered when they allowed the terrorist Shant Harutiunian to casually announce his plans on tv and then Waltz right up and start setting off bombs in Yerevan. The west's limp-wristed responses will be limited to ranking Armenia lower than Zimbabwe on some bullshit chart, and perhaps Swedish jackass Carl Bindt will unleash another twitter tantrum in a manner befitting a fifteen-year-old girl.
ReplyDeleteIt would also be nice too if some of the many Syrian-Armenian refugees in Armenia handed Putin a letting thanking him for saving their community, family, friends and property in Syria from utter destruction from the west and its islamist allies, but I guess that is asking too much.
I agree with your calling out the ARF, and I agree with your reasoning on why they deserve to be called out. Below is a comment I wrote regarding the situation:
ReplyDeleteI feel your righteous and justified anger towards the ARF.
I see a lot of other people have hate for the ARF that is misguided hate, namely because their parents and grandparents were born and raised Hnchak or Ramgavar or Chezok or even Communist. I do not respect that "politically illiterate sheeple" type of hate, it is almost like religious indoctrination. Nor do I respect the hate based on turkish lies such as "the Armenian Genocide happened because the ARF and Hnchaks and Armenian Freedom Fighters wanted control so they could exploit the wealthy Armenian community of the Ottoman Empire, and so they started to murder innocent turkish civilians and brainwash Armenians (with Russian help) and pitted peaceful communities against each other and brought a massacre down upon the Armenians." I hear such turkish-inspired lies from a large part of the self-hating Armenians, the ultraliberal Armenians who frequent turkish businesses and tourists spots and festivals and whatnot, and of course from the useless, turkified Bolsahays (even when they have left "turkiye" and are US citizens).
But we have to face facts that today, in an era where Armenia faces a pro-western or pro-Russian ultimatum, which if the west wins will see the final pages of Armenian history, the ARF has demonstrated time and again that it is an organ of the west. It's just that simple. I cannot think of any pro-Russian ARF politician, whether in the Diaspora or in Armenia, and if they do exist then the current ARF top brass (Giro Manoyan, Ara Papyan, Vahan Hovannisyan and others) will drown them out and ultimately seize any contributions and good-will which has been built around the party and use them to effect pro-western policies.
The ARF's history with raffi hovannisian is a very clear example of this. They have been kissing raffi's ass for years and years. As far back as 2006-2007 I can recall the ARF calling for an alliance with raffi hovannisian during the Parliamentary elections in Armenia. Same during the period of LTP's "revolution" attempt. And the same today. The only silver lining is that raffi has publicly given them a cold shoulder each and every time, and left the ARF looking like desperate idiots. I suspect this is a strong reason on why the ARF has low support in Armenia. In fact I quesion whether they will cross the 5% threshold during the next Parliamentary elections.
As for Vahan's nonsense, he is an idiot and a washed-up has-been politician. Maybe he is trying to draw attention to himself to win brownie points with Ambassador Heffern. BTW where was the ARF's "concern" when Heffern called Armenia "a road to nowhere?"
I have zero faith in the ARF, it is past its tipping point and will not be turning itself around.
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeletethere is not a moment to waste. The Russian diaspora needs to be organized along political lines . The western diasporan has had its moment, but ideologically they are indoctrinated with liberal , democratic, egalitarian internationalist dogmatic virus. These people are the carriers of their own seed of degeneration. mphoratian
ReplyDeleteAnonymous (November 25, 2013 at 12:06 AM)
ReplyDeleteI think there have been a lot of misplaced anger, hysteria and paranoia with regards to the so-called Protocols. What Yerevan did back in October 2009 was a well calculated move and a diplomatic victory for Armenia. What happened back then actually heralded Armenia's rise as a regional power - for those who were not deaf, dumb or blind - politically speaking.
What you have 'just' begun seeing Russia do in the region today was in fact started in earnest in the immediate aftermath of the Russo-Georgian war. Please go back to the time just before the war in this blog and read the posted materials going chronologically forward. The Protocols was fundamentally connected to a long term geostrategic agenda by Moscow. In fact, the journey to the Protocols started in Moscow in the spring of 2008, several months before the war, when President Sargsyan officially stretched a hand out to Ankara during his trip to Moscow.
The following is my blog commentary about the Protocols written about the same time -
Looking at Armenian-Turkish Relations - Without the Paranoia, Obsessions or the Hysteria: http://theriseofrussia.blogspot.com/2010/08/looking-at-armenian-turkish-relations.html
Moscow's support for the Protocols came as a result of its resurgence in the south Caucasus in the aftermath of the Russo-Georgian war. Moscow has been making its full presence felt in the south Caucasus since the mid 2000s. Armenia, Moscow's only reliable partner in the south Caucasus, has become the epicenter of Russian activity in the region, a platform to project Russian power. Armenia today stands on the verge of becoming a major Russian-backed trade hub. By entering the Moscow-led Customs Union, the importance of the Turkish border to Armenia diminishes greatly by default.
Russian-backed Armenia today stands poised to be a strategic gateway between the Eurasian Customs Union and Turkey, Iran, the Middle East and Europe. This in essence was the intent of having Yerevan engage Ankara in direct talks in 2008-2009.
Precisely due to the strong Russian presence in Armenia, Ankara is afraid of opening up to Yerevan - knowing that Moscow has designs for the region and that it is closely looking over Yerevan's shoulders. See George Friedman's comments about this topic.
The Protocols should have been looked at from this perspective. But I guess that would have been too much to ask for from Armenians.
PS: Had the opening of the Turkish border with Armenia been so devastating for Armenia, Ankara would have opened it right away. In fact, it would have opened it many-many years ago.
Dear Arevordi,
ReplyDeleteThank for for another excellent entry. I think readers here should take your important messege to Armenian activists and send it to as many people as they can. I have. I also see light at the end of the tunnel.
Arto1
So in other words the Turks are afraid of the protocols ?.
ReplyDeleteI do not buy this at all. The protocols, if they are implemented will end up turning Armenia in a Turk economic colony, just as it is happening with the hapless Greeks. It is just as well turkey reneged on its course of action. I never fancied Sarkissian and his football diplomacy, going to Bursa o that damned Turk town and celebrating Turks goals with the Turk Gul. I suppose that is also crafty, deft, adroit Armenian style diplomacy ? I expect to be stunned with more surprises like this then in future. Berdj
Can anyone give me some insight to this article?
ReplyDeletehttp://ca.news.yahoo.com/azerbaijani-court-convicts-29-people-charges-planning-series-194413561.html
I'm just wondering as to why would Islamic terrorists from the North Caucasus (the same guys the West backed in the Chechen Wars) target a nation that is pro-US? Or is this one of those false flag attacks?
Anonymous (November 25, 2013 at 4:41 PM)
ReplyDeleteI don't want to get off topic with this but just to be brief: There is 'very' little we know about the story. Therefore, it could be any one of the following: A bunch of non-affiliated Islamists taking action against a leader they consider not Islamic enough or too weak against Armenians or Russians; It could be false flag by Baku to make Azeri authorities look important and/or competent in the eyes of the West; It could be pressure from an Islamic group controlled by the West or Saudi Arabia or both. It could be some form of infighting between rouge elements from region's many Islamic movements. Please note that not all Islamic movements are under Western control. There are groups under direct Saudi control. There are groups under direct Turkish control. There are groups under direct Pakistani control. There may even be groups under indirect Israeli and Russian control. The Islam is a very primitive and fragmented world; there are fragments within fragments and anyone with a briefcase full of dollars can create an Islamic terror cell practically overnight. There are some blog posts such as the one about the Tsarnaev brothers that covers this topic.
Here is in fact breaking news about the topic. You however have to read between the lines -
Penny Lane, Gitmo's other secret CIA facility: http://news.yahoo.com/penny-lane-gitmos-other-secret-cia-facility-050929062--politics.html
Considering Turkey's increasing isolation and infestation with foreign Jihadist elements, I rather see the Western borders sealed very tight.
ReplyDeleteI hope the Russian border guards are showing zero tolerance to any form of infiltration into Armenian territories.
And I am glad that last year the CSTO performed military drills in Armenia that included counter-terrorism capacities
Turkey wants to embrace its beloved Azergotjani brothers, but Russia sticks out just between them through Armenia must drive them really crazy.
These idiots want a "direct road to Nakhicheevan from Azerbaijan" in other words, from Turkey to Azerbaijan. We should give them a direct road to hell.
http://www.panarmenian.net/eng/news/172824/
Let's make sure to keep that border closed, at least until the Al-Qaeda issue is solved.
The truth is that Turkey cannot control the flow of terrorists funded by the Saudis.
This is in Hatay
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MRaDvMcEgbQ
To control a border you need co-operation from both sides, and as long as from Syria this cooperation is lacking, the border with Kandahar remains porous.
http://www.rferl.org/media/video/vox-pop-eu/25181157.html
ReplyDeleteThe last guy in the interview makes the best case. That Armenia's values are not compatible with the post-modernist 'value' system promoted by Brussels.
LG
(Part 1 of )
ReplyDeleteBerj, what you described is exactly how diplomacy is conducted: go to your adversary's country, put on a fake smile and pretend you are honored to be there and enjoying yourself, flatter them and their "amazingly developed" cities and "all-star" football team, act like you are genuinely interested in your adversary and working with them and a party that they feel more comfortable working with (and maybe taking advantage of).
If you've noticed that is more or less the way US politicians treat everyone, including the Armenian Diaspora regarding genocide recognition when they need votes and money during election season.
The important thing to keep in mind is that President Sargsyan gave to the turks absolutely nothing of substance on his trip to turkey, he merely clapped when they scored goals. On the contrary, President Sargsyan came away an absolute winner in diplomatic terms because the Armenian side looked like it was doing everything it possibly could to establish relations with turkey, the stated goals of the USA, Europe and Russia.
More importantly, by conducting himself like a true statesman in turkey, President Sargsyan set the turks up in a trap the turks, the so-called "master diplomats" never even saw coming: Either the turks open the border and force azerbaijan's bungling oaf aliyev to go apeshit and destroy the turkish and azeri relationship, or do not open the border and take all international pressure off of Armenia and focus it on turkey. And on top of all that President Sargsyan had Armenia's highest court hold that the protocols cannot call into question the Armenian Genocide or the Armenian governments pursuit its international recognition, remembrance, and restitutions for tutkey's crimes. The turks were so fucked diplomatically that not even turcophiles like former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton raised any complaints over Armenia's court decision when it came out.
In retrospect football diplomacy was diplomatic brilliance, so well played that the totality of the Armenian victory and the utter turkish defeat became clear only in the aftermath.
Compare Armenia’s diplomatic acumen to a bumbling oaf like aliyev, who issues threats and blacklists of free citizens of the world who visit free Artsakh, who praised axe murders openly so that even his oil-industry backers in the west are embarrassed, and who since 2004 has been making belligerent threats of an imminent war against Armenia. Armenia came out completely dominant and victorious. Similarly against turkey, Armenia played its hands masterfully and demonstrated to the world that while Yerevan courageously tried to extend a hand to turkey, turkish leaders proved that they have no interest in peace with Armenia. These were historic power-plays by Armenia that gave Yerevan very precious, valuable diplomatic breathing room so that it could focus on strengthening its position in Artsakh and its standing in the international community.
Rather than downplaying our diplomatic success or even failing to recognize them, we Armenians need to understand and support Yerevan’s successful diplomatic and geopolitical maneuvering. This is how the game is played, how all of the nations with international clout do it.
(Part 2 of 2):
ReplyDeleteNow regarding the main gripe most politically-illiterate diasporans had over the protocols: that it allegedly hampered the diaspora's campaign of genocide recognition (as per ANCA claims). That is just a deceitful excuse meant to justify the failures of attaining genocide recognition by the US. The American Congress refused to pass any genocide recognition bills in 2000 and 2005, and all presidents since Reagan reneged on campaign promises of Genocide recognition. The reason is not the protocols, but rather the fact that America is not a democracy where politicians make decisions reflecting the will of the citizenry, rather it is a tightly controlled, autocratic empire when all important decisions come down from the very highest offices in the country (governmental or private offices). It is no surprise that internationally turkey's main allies are the ones which refuse to recognize the Genocide: the USA, the UK, israel and of course its muslim friends... On a final note, which I will keep relatively brief as this topic warrants several pages, recognition of the Armenian Genocide is not only worthless in practical terms as absolutely nothing in material terms will change for Armenia, but it is actually an insult to the victims of the Armenian Genocide to allow their suffering to be turned into a political bargaining chip to be used by the corrupt politicians of the empire which has single-handedly been responsible for the largest (except maybe the jewish bolsheviks who were more prolific killers) number of mass killings across the globe over the past 75 years, stretching from the firebombings of civilians in Dresden and Hamburg to the rapes of Iraq, Libya and Syria. I fail to understand the logic of anyone who attaches any value of recognition of the Armenian Genocide from the same Congress which just recently gave a genocidal war criminal benjamin netanyahu a record 29 standing ovations, without a peep of protest over the ongoing genocide of Palestinians.
Let me just add that at this point in time Armenia has a legitimate right to remove its signature from the protocols given turkish intransigence. I suspect the reason Armenia does not do so is because it does not want to let the protocols victory die. If Armenia kills the protocols, the international community will drop it and turkey gets to cut its losses and move on. However, as long as Armenia keeps the protocols on life support, the protocols will remain a festering wound on turkey, one which Armenia can jab at any time the turks overstep their boundaries. I strongly suspect that one of the main benefits of the protocols situation as it exists today is that Armenia can bring up the protocols if azerbaijan or their American and European backers even hint at increasing turkey's role in the Artsakh settlement process. Much like the prospect of officially recognizing Artsakh's independence is a sledgehammer Armenia holds over azeri heads in case the azeris try escalating the situation, the turkey's failures during football diplomacy are a sledgehammer Armenia can bring down on turkish heads if the turks try to involve themselves in negotiations. This of course leaves azerbaijan isolated in its negotiations with Russian-armed and Russian-backed Armenia.
ReplyDeleteWithdrawing from the protocols would cost Armenia this advantage without providing any benefits. Therefore, Armenia should keep the protocols alive and as a tool against the turks. A best case scenario would be if turkey withdrew from the protocols themselves, but as mentioned before they have already been checkmated.
I wish that there was at least one mainstream voice in the Diaspora who did not spread hysteria over the protocols. I remember reading asbarez and others during that time, you would have thought Armenia had agreed to cede Gyumri and Syunik to the turks. Even Harut Sassounian wrote some rather bitter commentaries back them about how he never thought an Armenian government could take such an "anti-Armenian move". So I understand where the diasporan attitude is coming from, but we need to look at these issues rationally and without emotion.
We all need to face the reality that Armenia needs to have economic/trade relations with ALL neighbors. But we also need to be happy that Armenia has been wise enough to turn to Russia for its primary political, military and economic relations. Let's also realize that Armenia's sensitive national infrastructure and its most important economic sectors are under tight Armenian-Russian control. There is nothing Turks, or anybody else for that matter, can do in Armenia. Therefore, Armenia can now (even more so now than in 2009) deal with Ankara as an equal. Armenians sitting at the table with them - as equals - is something Turks were not counting on and something they fear. Nevertheless, even if the document signed in 2009 is torn-up for one reason or another, its spirit - economic relations with all regional nations - should remain on the table.
ReplyDeletePS: We cannot allow our political illiteracy or psychological problems brought up by our emotional scars to get in the way of Armenia's development.
Getting back to the main topic: I've noticed a lot of talk about Gyumri, even talk that the name of the city may change back to Alexandropol. Moscow seems to be placing a lot of emphasis on this strategic frontier city. This may have something to do with the expansion of the 102 base and/or preparations to open the Armenian-Turkish border. All in all, a very good sign for the much neglected and beleaguered city.
ReplyDeleteOn a side note: There have been some polling studies done regarding how populations of potential member states view Customs Union membership. Accordingly, Armenians who view CU membership positively are said to be at around mid-6o%, whereas Georgians that view CU membership positively are around 50%.
Assuming that these are more-or-less accurate numbers, what are some of the conclusions that can be drawn from these studies?
Here we have an Armenia that desperately needs Russia for survival (and a Russia has been more than generous towards Armenia in terms of investments, trade, finance, military and energy) and yet Armenians are polling at around 60-65%. And we have Georgians - who have recently gone to war against Russia, who lost significant territories to Russia, who have been under economic sanctions by Russia, who have anti-Russian Western government and a Western controlled press - polling around 50%.
What does this tell us?
Well, this tells us Georgians are much-much more politically mature than our people. About half of Georgia's population seems to be extremely rational and pragmatic, whereas nearly 40% of Armenians are absolute imbeciles.
What else does this tell us?
God save Armenia from democracy!
Arevordi
ReplyDeleteIt's official VOR just released this: http://voiceofrussia.com/news/2013_11_27/Putin-to-pay-state-visit-to-Armenia-on-December-2-0375/
Putin will be visiting Gyumri first. This is very interesting.
Arto1
Two states, one nation, that is what turkey and azerbaijan are. Dream on about opening the turk armeno border. It will not happen, it cannot happen until the Artsakh anschluss with Armenia is accepted and recognized by the azeri turkish state. Either Azerbaijan fragments and fractures geographically and along demographic lines and western turkey accepts reality of it, or else prepare yourselves for a long, long status quo , until Azerbaijanmn feels strong enough to play its hand and await the consequences. Opening the border with turkey will not bring prosperity to Armenia, unless one accepts that turkish economic penetration into Armenia is a preferable alternative . There are historically pending and unresolved land conflicts and issues, The ararat valley, Nachichevan. The protocols will not happen because the turks will reject it. The turks know quite well that the genocide case can not be ultimately skirted. Turkey will delay and delay its discussion. The other view is that Armenia accepts the final turkish borders as they are and acknowldges a lame apology from the turkish state.In any of the potential scenarios to resolve an unresolved puzzle will be Russias shadow. What would Russias interests demand in the geopolitical configuration of the caucvasus and its environs. Two states ,one nation is what we now have with turkey and azerbaijan. Gagik Torcom
ReplyDeleteThank you for commenting Gagik.
ReplyDeleteI agree with you that normalization of relations with Turkey cannot and will not happen at the expense of Artsakh or genocide recognition or relations with Russia or relations with Iran. Normalizing relations with Turkey will prove very conditional and elusive. However, open borders with Turkey does not mean good relations with Ankara nor does it mean economic subservience to Turkey. What are they going to do, flood the Armenian market with their goods? They are already doing that through their Georgian middleman. Why not cut out the middleman? And opening borders with Turkey does not mean recognition of their borders. Who said documents or treaties or economic relations are an obstacle to taking back what belongs to you when the time to do so comes? Many wars have erupted between nations that have had "normal relations" prior.
Don't panic, I do not foresee normalization of relations between Turks/Azeris and Armenians anytime soon. Now, with Yerevan tying the knot with the Bear, the importance of the Turkish border will diminish. With a closer Russian-Armenian alliance, Ankara may be even more cautious of normalizing relations with Armenians. But once again, ultimately, sooner or later, Armenia needs to have 'normal' relations with 'all' neighbors if we want a truly 'normal' nation. But like I said, this normalization cannot come at the expense of national interests.
I am very glad about Putins visit to Armenia. I read there was mention of a second Russian army base ? , to which our defense minister does not see the need ? The more growth of the Russian army bases, the stronger and more efficient the Armenian armed forces will become. At one time or another the showdown with Azerbaijan will take center stage, that will be Armenia's ultimate opportunity.
ReplyDeletehttp://carnegie.ru/eurasiaoutlook/?fa=53733
ReplyDeleteA rather telling op-ed by a senior Georgian official. The slavish prose coupled with the sycophantic message makes one truly appreciate the diplomatic acumen of Armenian officials who have not led Armenia down the path to perdition that is known as EU association and membership.
LG
Jesse Jackson in Sweden'
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LmT88RmppuU
The fruits of "democracy" in Sweden. These Nordic freaks have lost their balls, cheering the invasion of their country. God forbid Armenians ever lose their minds like this.
Aroverdi,
ReplyDeleteI forget where, but you made mention of setting up a distinct security/intelligence service by the government to begin cleaning up the oligarch chobans or at the very least establish a precedence of said chobans respecting the government.
I agree with most of what you write, I think you have great geopolitical foresight and I find myself stimulated to think in new terms after reading your posts. I do agree that in the West, we have thugs in suits that commit corporate oligarchy on the level that dwarfs what is going on in Armenia, and if those in Armenia were not present, the ones in the West would fill their shoes and usurp our much beloved nation not to mention "pop cultured" our 6000+ year old culture/way of life.
At this point in our fatherland's development though, I am beginning to feel more and more the need to clean up the "lfik Samo's", "Dodi Gago's", "Burnash", etc. They may have served a purpose as placeholders in the past, but now, especially after ascension into the CU, I see them more and more as dead weight to be made an example of.
You discussed how we must look and learn from the geopolitical stratagem of the Jews (in my opinion, our number of enemy on the world stage for the past 100 years). If we are to do so, the example I would cite is the formation of the MOSSAD in 1948 to answer only to the office of the PM and it's subsequent sub branch the Shin Bet for taking care of "internal matter".
There may already be some loosely formed intelligence circle in Armenia today, but nothing definite outside of the affiliation with the FSB. You are absolutely prudent in stating that it may be time for the President to speak with Putin to establish a formal Armenian intelligence organization which answers only to the office of Armenia's President with agents trained in close affiliation with the FSB, which now more than ever makes sense to have such an affiliation due to the CU ascension.
Once this formal fledgling organization has been formed with professionally trained intelligence officers in place, then and only then can these so called Oligarch chobans be reigned in with regards to their behavior and responsibilities to the Armenian state.
I see Armenia today at the crux of where Russia was in the beginning of Putin's ascension to power. You had a bunch of extremely powerful Russian billionaires, some Jews and some non Jew ethnic Russians acting like it was the wild west with national resources, industry, environment, and infrastructure. Bribery and lack of respect for the government was at its highest thanks to that drunkard Yeltzin.
Putin came in, established a strong and loyal FSB intelligence service, then he used these levers to reign everyone in. Even the Russian Jews like Abramovich knew the good times were over and they better start behaving. He also took one and made and example of him (Khodorvsky), the Russian traitor Jew that tried to sell off Russia's state oil.
It's high time a formal intelligence service was formed in Armenia by President Sarkissian just like what Ben-Guirion put together with the MOSSAD. Then he needs to take the biggest fish Oligarch, make a severe example of him for not respecting government levers, the rest will quickly fall in line and actually become an asset to Armenia by contributing to the country's treasury as they should with their vast monopolies.
This seems to me as this President's or next President's high priority goal, or at least it should be his goal. Otherwise, I think soon at some point, subsequent administrations may find themselves hard pressed to control these animals in Armani suits.
Your thoughts?
Sasounci Davit
ReplyDeleteI fully agree with the spirit of your comments.
Had there not been a serious Western agenda in Armenia, I would be using this blog to speak up against our nation's bloodsucking monopolists (our nation's typical capitalists who are called "oligarchs" by capitalists in the West). The only difference between our oligarchs and Western oligarchs is this: Our oligarchs are backward, unrefined, aggressive, their money is new and they are confined to a small, remote, landlocked, impoverished and blockaded territory. Western oligarchs are highly educated, highly refined, very cruel, their money is very old and the world has been their footstool for well over one hundred years.
See the following blog commentary for a little insight into Western oligarchy -
The Economic Elite Vs. The People of the United States of America (April, 2010): http://americasfinancialmeltdown.blogspot.com/2010/10/who-says-oligarchs-dont-exist-in-united.html
Unfortunately, the danger that the West poses to Armenia today (politically, economically and culturally) is so great that nationalists like myself have come to see our oligarchs as the lesser of evils. Had we not had our oligarchs, Armenia would have been sold to Jews, Americans, Europeans and Turks. As bad as they are, our oligarchs are nothing compared to the kabal of international moneymen waiting to get their hands on Armenia. But as I have said, this does not excuse the actions of our oligarchs in our homeland.
Theoretically speaking, ideally speaking, a small hit squad, in tandem with Russia's GRU/FSB and one that is closely affiliated to Armenia's security services can put an end to the oligarch problem in Armenia in 'one' night. For an operation like this we need to have a very powerful, nationalistic leader that is not afraid to take drastic action.
Unfortunately, President Serj Sargsyan is not that leader.
President Sargsyan's rule has based on appeasement (i.e. getting along with everybody). President Sargsyan depends on the powerful clans in Armenia to keep him in power. Currently, an Armenian president cannot operate without the support of the Lfiks, Sashiks, Muks, Gagos, Rubos, etc. Mob culture took root throughout the country during the post-Soviet 1990s. This culture will be very difficult to eradicate. Also, we have to take into consideration our genetic makeup and our folk culture. We as a people are not nationalistic, we do not respect law, we are not organized and we are not disciplined. Therefore, don't compare Armenians to Russians or to Jews or to anyone else for that matter. Learn to better understand the Armenians and try to deal with the Armenian uniquely based on this understanding.
I sometimes point to Jews for examples and ideas on how to do things but I am not foolish enough to think Armenians can ever master their highly refined art of living as parasites. Moreover, we do not have a ultra-racist culture Jews have. Their religion, their racism, their upbringing is their number one weapon. Having said that, I will repeat what I wrote towards the end of my current blog commentary:
Once we are successful in keeping Armenia fully within the Russian orbit and stabilizing her politically and economically - we need to begin convincing Russia's security services of the importance of helping us eliminate some of Armenia's unsavory businessmen and impose the rule of law in the country. Armenians must be made to fear and respect law enforcement bodies and law enforcement bodies need to begin enforcing the law. What I am saying here is that after we cleanse Armenia of is Western operatives, we need to cleanse Armenia's government of its 1990's era chobans-in-Armani-suits.
I'd like to take SasounciDavit's ideas about the President making an example of the big-fish of the "oligarchy" and instead apply it to the western agents in Armenia. I'd love to see NSS agents drag jon hughes, richard giragosian, raffi hovannisian, vardan oskanoglu, paruyr hairikian or one of the publishers of aravot, hetq or lragir and drag them in handcuffs, shackles and hoodies to prison. Or I'd like to wake up one morning and hear that security services have raided the armenianow office, arrested all of the employees, confiscated everything from computers and file cabinets to telephones and pencil sharpeners and effectively destroyed one of the wests favorite tools in Armenia.
ReplyDeleteAs SasounciDavit pointed out, the rest will get in line or scatter like cock-roaches. I don't think the west is in any position to put together massive protests on short notice, specially after the way the "barevolution" fizzled out less than a month after the election.
If I had a choice between eliminating all of the "oligarchs", or just a handful of the west's top agents in Armenia, I'd choose the latter as they pose a much graver threat.
I think that as long as the guiragossian, raffis, paryuirs, anth whole band of dislocated expats, agents of the zionists Americas and EU, do not become a real threat to the governmen they will be allowed to roam freely in the political ring. Should they show signs of a threat to de stabilizing the political spectrum, the government will adopt the necessary prophylactic measures to marginalize them out of the political ring. In a democracy one has the freedom of expression, within circumscribed limits, once the limit is breached the full force of government will deal with them. What the government should start doing is telling these scoundrels to watch their steps within their democratic and constitutional rights. Besides where are the counters to the types like guiragossian .? He must be confronted by an avalanche of intellectual analysts exposing his treacherous political stunts. Let them air their views, but don't keep silent, expose aggressively their partisanship for the West , or for the politics close to the zionized Americas and EU have no place in Armenia. These people are thriving because they have managed to create an audience, a skeletal and anemic audience. Deprived of this audience the vile merchant and peddlers of the zionized west will be left starving. Again these charlatans and political goons are not aware of the consequences of their actions and policies. They are normal people , born , bred and groomed in the indoctrination centers of western universities. They have soaked, drank, and imbibed the zionized hemlock of western institutions, they nothing but atomized flesh and bone robots.
ReplyDeleteI agree with Sarkis in that the foreign funded media and think tanks are far more dangerous than the oligarchs. What the media is causing is an atmosphere of negativity which is absolutely destructive to the nation. Morale is the number one tool for building a strong nation and army. Destroy the morale and you destroy the nation from within. They have been left alone until now because of the delicate political situation and not wanting to cause more social unrest but after the customs union is cemented it will be time to get rid of them.
ReplyDeleteThe oligarchs on the other hand have served their function well until now. They have solidified Sarkisian's power and prevented foreign oligarchs from monopolizing Armenia's businesses. Look at the vital role Dodi Gogo (I can't remember his real name now) has played in splitting the opposition. Now it is just time to "Make" them a little more patriotic with some incentives. That is if they wish to keep their power they must repatriate their money from european banks to strengthen the Armenian banking industry, and then they must either be given the choice of switching to domestic manufacturing or risk having their monopolies crushed. The oligarchs can be the largest source of funding for Armenia's banking and industrial sector if the relationship is cultivated with them properly and not being afraid to use some balls in the process.
Also on a different note, does anyone know the breakdown for the Armenia Fund $22.6 million in terms of which nation gave how much? It's always amazing to see how Armenians from Russia and Armenia are dwarfing the useless, obese, materialistic western US Armenians in terms of their donations.
Arto2
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteHere you go Arto2 - Telethon 2013 Receives Largest Donations from Russia: http://armenpress.am/eng/news/741913/telethon-2013-receives-largest-donation-from-russia.html
ReplyDeleteThe Russian-Armenian community has contributed more than everybody else combined! I'd say this is very indicative of the national awakening taking place amongst Russian-Armenians. We have a historic opportunity in Russia. We will forever pay the price if we do not recognize this potential and not take advantage of this opportunity.
PS: Morale is the single most important tool a nation has to overcome any kind of hardship. The lose of hope and spirit is the most danger enemy Armenia faces today. This is exactly why Western powers have been relentlessly assaulting Armenian morale in recent years by exploiting the nation's natural growing pains. They have usurped our domestic problems and our flaws and turned it into a psychological warfare against the fledgling Armenian state. The saddest, most frustrating part for me here is that most of this Western assault against Armenia is coming via Armenians.
Suddenly there is a lot of chatter
ReplyDeleteTurkiye: Ankara planning to open border with Armenia -
http://www.panarmenian.net/eng/news/173308/
Azeri-media: Yerevan gives oral consent to withdraw from two occupied - http://www.news.az/articles/armenia/84713
Radio CIA is reporting that along side with Raffi Hovanissian's Heritage Party this psychologically disturbed activist will also be protesting Putin's visit come this monday - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=apDBFEUZJAQ
ReplyDeleteI think Putin will be scared to face a powerful opposition character like this Vardges Gaspari LOL Arevordi please tell me how would an asshole like this be handled by police in a place like LA or NY?
I would not pay much attention to the reports coming out of turkey that Armenia will cede a portion of the liberated territory to azerbaijan. This could very well be a turco-azerbaijani trial ballon to see what the reactions of their populace, Armenia's leadership and people, plus the Minsk co-chair states' leadership.
ReplyDeleteLG
The western US donated $1 million, while Russia donated $12 million? Damn, that is a stark and telling number. The western US region includes Los Angeles, which is supposed to have at least half of the number of Armenians as the whole of Russia, alone in just one city. And this is supposed to be the "richest, most affluent" Armenian community in the world? What an embarrassment.
ReplyDeleteI guess the doom and gloom campaign has accomplished its goal. I wonder what the breakdown of donations from the western US were like. How much came from recent Hayastantsi immigrants, how much from the older Armenian-Americans? I suspect the Armenian attorneys here in LA, like garo ghazarian, seto boyadjian and the other scum who are never too busy to meddle in internal Armenian affairs with calls from revolutions, did not donate a cent. And where are all of our Armenian-American "success" stories like Governor Deukmajian, Ambassador Djerdjerian, that race-mixing whore Kim Kardashian, those thoroughly assimilated farmers in Central California? Did the UCLA Dream Fund donate any of Kirk Kerkorian's money, or have they squabbled his money on programs to spread "democracy" to Armenia?
Armeniafund was created mostly by the Armenian government. They should really consider reassigning the Telethon to the Russian Armenian community instead of the LA community. Perhaps Ara Abrahamyan's organizations can be involved in its management, or the Armenians working in RT and RIA Novosti.
ps In past years Asbarez posted the Telethon results immediately after the Telethon. I see they didn't bother to post these embarrassing results this year.
Nice article.
ReplyDeleteJust a small correction in the list of influential Armenians in Russia: The correct name is Mikhail Pogosian (not Petrosian). By the way, he is no longer the director of Sukhoi, but the director of the whole United Aircraft Industry (UAC) of Russia (which also includes Sukhoi)...A much higher position. He frequently meets with Putin.
Zoravar,
ReplyDeleteThank you for pointing out my error.
Since we have your attention, I'd like take this opportunity to ask you to please make a few comments about recent military developments with regards to Russia, Armenia and Azerbaijan.
Hi everyone
ReplyDeleteTo update all about Putin's visit, he is coming to Gyumri than driving to Yerevan. My initial plans to stand by USA embassy won't happen. The only sure info i found is that he will be attending an opening of a statue in the center of Yerevan, the streets (Nalbandian, Abovian, Sayat Nova will be closed. No certain time, but it would probably happen about 2-3pm. I will go to cheer for him. I am sure there will be a lot of people. Anyone who is around should buy armenian/russian flags and appear. thanks
T.K.
Another update
ReplyDeleteI was wrong about the monument opening, it was done in the morning by ministers. Putin will be visiting the presidential palace on Bagramyan street after Gyumri visit. No idea about exact time of arrival, could be after 5-6pm. I am sure the street will be closed and heavy police presence.
T.K.
Doesn't it say a lot about a people, Armenian or not, who go to cheer a clown like Sarkozy, but would boo a real statesmen like Putin?
ReplyDeleteAnyway, looks like the self destructive peasants are out and about ready to protest. Check out Armenianow's website, and of course notice the slant of the articles. Using weasel words in abundance.
LG
It does not say much to me if a majority of Armenians (64% according to a recent poll) support integration with Russia. What says much more to me is that significant numbers of Armenians in Armenia - and I would dare say a vast majority of Armenians in Europe and north America - would much rather Armenia pursue a suicidal, Western path. For something as obvious as Russian-Armenian relations, even a single anti-Putin or anti-Russia Armenian does not make any sense. Yet, we have an abundance of psychologically disturbed assholes with an overabundance of hatred for a man and a country that actually makes their existence in this world possible. LG is right. Our assholes kissed Sakozy's ass when the filthy clown was in Armenia and I am pretty sure they would have done the same if not more to Obama if he had ever gone. And where were these assholes masquerading as Armenian patriots when Abdulah Gul visited Armenia? Where were these assholes when an anti-Armenian and a criminal of global proportions like Hillary Clinton visited Armenia? Armenians will never cease to amaze me with their political illiteracy and self-destructive behavior. God save Armenia from democracy. For Armenia's sake, Armenians do not deserve independence. Seeing these people I hope my readers can now begin to understand why we Armenians have not had an independent nation to be proud of in well over one thousand years. I hope my readers are now beginning to understand why I say democracy is one of the most serious threats facing Armenia today. I hope my readers are now beginning to understand why I say Armenians can only be ruled by an authoritarian strongman. I hope my readers are now beginning to understand why I always say disregard 'the Armenian' when it comes to doing something for Armenia. I hope my readers are now beginning to understand why I say if need be, I rather Russians rule Armenia once again. I hope my readers are now beginning to understand why I say one must search the deepest African jungle or the remotest Arabian desert village to find a tribe of people more politically ignorant and self-destructive as Armenians.
ReplyDeleteBesides ArmeniaNow, Hetq has also been having an orgasmic day today - http://hetq.am/eng/news/31092/protesters-to-putin-“go-home”.html
Arevordi, I don't think things are as bad as you make it sound. Look at what's happening in Ukraine now or what happened after Putin's re-election as President. Armenia pales in comparison. And 64% support is very strong considering the poverty and apathy in the country. Anyway here's a reminder that there are a lot of politically illiterate people in other countries. We're not that bad. The following lovely Ukranian ladies are upset at their president for not letting them become more "European"
ReplyDeletehttp://www.liveleak.com/view?i=526_1385897370
Arto2
Arto2,
ReplyDeleteI will respectfully disagree with you my friend and here is why:
Look at it this way: Ukraine is a country that is half Catholic and half Orthodox by heritage. The Catholic half of the country identifies more with Poland than with Russia. Ukraine is a nation that has had terrible troubles with Bolsheviks. Millions dead during the famine. Ukraine is a European country that is physically connected to the European Union. Ukraine is actually a country deeply divided and can easily split into two: Catholic west, Orthodox east. Therefore, as much as I don't agree with them, Ukraine's anti-Russian sentiments are natural and understandable.
Now, let's look at Armenia/Armenians.
Armenia is a tiny, impoverished, desolate, remote, landlocked and blockaded nation surrounded by enemies in one of the nastiest geographic locations on earth.
As an ally, Russia has kept Turks and Azeris out of Armenia for the past twenty years; for the past ninety years; and for the past two hundred years. Russia has allowed a tiny, impoverished, landlocked and blockaded Armenia to militarily compete against and even enjoy an advantage over a large spending petro-state like Azerbaijan. Russia has provided Armenia with very affordable gas and oil. Russia has helped Armenia operate its atomic power plant. Russia has allowed hundreds-of-thousands of Armenians who would otherwise be unemployed to work inside Russia without any problems. Russia has allowed the transfers of billions-of-dollars worth of remittances from Russia to Armenia without any problems. Russia is by-far Armenia's largest trading partner. Russia is by-far Armenia's largest investor. Russia's is Armenia one and only ally. And Russia is a Christian society and a nation that does not impose its "values" on Armenian society.
Armenia can exist without the Armenian Diaspora. Armenia cannot exist without Russia. Anyone with a normally functioning brain realizes that no Russia in the south Caucasus = no Armenia in the south Caucasus. It's that simple. Therefore, even a SINGLE anti-Russia or anti-Putin Armenian makes no rational sense. My anger here is that we are not talking about a few people, we are talking about the remaining 36% percent of the country that is not viewing the Customs Union positively. My anger is that we have self-destructive assholes in the thousands that are protesting the visit of the greatest leader of our times, a leader that even visited the Armenian Genocide memorial and the earthquake memorial, a leader that is making Armenia's existence as a nation-state possible against all odds.
If for some reason Russia ever pulled its hands off of Armenia, all those motherfuckers you saw protesting Putin today will be running for their lives when Turks come knocking on the door.
64% favorable rate for a country that literally lives as a result of its alliance with Russia is terribly too low and speaks volumes about our people's political maturity.
Dear arevordi,
ReplyDeleteOne of the reasons of the 64 vs 36 poll results is the insufficient media effort by the non-western side, I agree that democracy is catastrophic for most states, but manipulation of the herd is mandatory, media is the main tool of manipulation which the west perfects way better than the east, media is also the only tool to detoxify the herd. Excuse me to use (herd) as I didn’t find a better word for NAKHIR (sheep dogs and a donkey) this is what the protest resembled.
Sebouh jan,
ReplyDeleteI agree with you 100%. One must not under estimate the power of propaganda. Perception, in other words how one perceives the world around him, is often more important and more powerful than reality itself. For example: Many if not most countries on earth are actually worst off than Armenia, yet many Armenians in Armenia think Armenia is the worst place to live on earth. Another example: Is the Western lure. Western powers have convinced people that the Western world is wealthy and powerful because of "democracy", when the truth of the matter is that Western powers became wealthy and powerful as a result of hundreds of years of slavery, genocide, empire, wars and the terrible exploitation of the world's natural wealth. The persuasive abilities of the Western powers (via financial aid, grants, humanitarian activists, television, news, cinema, music, internet, magazines, etc) have been fine tuned for decades. The war against Germany and the Cold War against the Soviet Union allowed the Anglo-American-Zionist alliance to present itself as the "moral authority" and the "policeman of the world". Consequently, they hold the high ground in the information war. I don't think they can be defeated in this sector. However, I believe they will eventually defeat themselves. As the world's natural resources dwindle and as nations like Russia, China, India, Brazil and Iran rise to compete against them, Western power will become more-and-more desperate and will thus more frequently resort to the kind of aggression we are seeing in places like Iraq, Libya and Syria. With each passing year, more-and-more people are waking up to the dangers of the Anglo-American-Zionist world.
In the photos in the hetq article I see some dullard waiving a black "Anarchist" flag, some spoiled college-looking punks waiving their middle finger like you'd see drunk British soccer assholes doing, a massive Ukrainian flag with a tiny Armenian flag over it being propped up by people who claim they are worried about Armenia's "sovereignty and dignity", and of course the "rainbow" flag the faggots waive in west hollywood and san francisco. Plus many English-language signs. I wish the Armenian government would pack these idiots up on an airplane and dumped them in a toilet like France where they belong.
ReplyDeleteIf I was Putin, I'd only be convinced that Armenians truly are "blackass" scum as the Russian Nationalists call us, watching those people protesting. Even his trip to baku, the capital of the country whose enemy Russia openly arms for free did not feature such jackasses protesting. It becomes fully evident that Russia will (and should) limit Armenia's power and ability to rise as a major regional power if Armenians are too immature to conduct themselves properly. From a Russian perspective, keeping Armenia just strong enough to resist turkish and azeri invasion, but otherwise bankrupt and desperate, and thus dependent and friable, is the best option.
But to be fair I have not found any coverage of President Putin's visit from any non-biased sources. So I don't know how good or bad the overall visit is going. Still disturbing to see so many of our self-destructive peasantry making Armenia look bad again. It's like a mini-reunion of the LTP "revolution" scum.
ReplyDeleteI hope if anything these sheeple reinforced in the Russians the dire need for their intelligence servicemen in Armenia to start removing key western agents from the scene, lest this cancer grow and cause problems for the Russian or Armenian governments at this key juncture in world history... Remove their հովիւներ and they will cease being a problem.
Arevordi
ReplyDeleteI followed all the protests yesterday on life feeds from cameras. I can tell you that the opposition namely Zaruhi and Co, has lost all the credibility. they had about 200 youngsters running around, confused students and LGBT activists. their actions were condemned by many and even a tv show host directly told them to admit that they have no followers and are a minority. So i wouldn't worry about them much. by their stupid actions they are becoming weaker and weaker.
T.K.
It was very refreshing to watch this video
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F75vGFAkGE0#t=27
Arevordi, I now agree with you, may God save Armenia from democracy.
TK,
ReplyDeleteThank you. I was actually going to ask you to tell us your impressions of yesterday. Please don't hesitate to give us an extended version of what you saw and heard.
AJ,
Too bad blood was not spilled, as far as I could tell. If so, that was a bit impolite for a place like the south Caucasus where animals are slaughters for honorable guests...
Arevordi
ReplyDeleteThey started at Hyusisayan poxota and planned their route to go down to Republic square then take Nalbandian to Sayat Nova and finish on Bagramyan where Putin was going to come. Their aim was to gather more people as they were shouting people come out and join. they had few nasty signs mentioning Putin (don't even want to state what was on them). Police blocked them initially at Republic square, they somehow managed to run out. Zaruhi was very vocal, also that martirosyan guy (basically all was organized by Heritage). Few LGBT activists joined them with rainbow signs, LOL. that made things worst because some young guys started to harass them and take their flags away. Eventually police blocked them at Sakharov square, took some hardcore paid protesters away to ruff them up. the crowd was no more than 200-300 people, some western born judging from teeshirts. they have no support, people may not be happy with current government due to social problems but the opposition is weak. when you ask an average unhappy armenian who would you rather have as president they pause and have no answer. Zaruhi is more of a liability than an asset for opposition. I also think that most armenians i talk to realize that we can't do without Russia. this don't mean we need to relax, we need to get our point of view to more and more armenians, many need to learn facts about eu and usa. that it is no dreamland and they are not friends of Armenia.
T.K.
P.S. I saw your comment on yahoo, i am always there commenting under my initials.
Forgot to mention the protest was unsanctioned. the police went out of their way to warn them this gathering is illegal and need to stop. they acted very professional and did their job without causing serious injuries. BTW here are some links
ReplyDeletehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tn-huoKp3J4&feature=youtube_gdata
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xgiUhdhWJqQ&feature=youtube_gdata
T.K.
I am of the opinion that these black guards should have had their democratic prerogatives curtailed and be prevented from staging any hostile demonstration or protest against a visiting dignitary. Their protests are like a fart in a basket, but nevertheless out of place and incongruous. What do these misguided dumb asses hoped to achieve ?. It is just an opinion, just as I am asking where were those true nationalist with their pro Putin demonstrations and pillars of the Russo Armeno strategic partnership ?
ReplyDeletehere is a link to the evening program where those a-holes appeared after the protest, watch to the end and listen how Petros puts them in the corner.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.kentron.tv/index.php/am/programs/informational-political/urvagic/item/2512-urvagic-02-12-13
Can't say Petros always has the right ideas but he seems objective in questioning.
T.K.
TK,
ReplyDeleteThese people being interviewed are paid employees of Western powers. Western grants, coupled with Armenian arrogance and political illiteracy, makes these people do what they do. These people will justify their actions, regardless of how dangerous or how stupid, simply because they are making a living by serving a Western agenda in Armenia and because they - at least subconsciously - hate their homeland. I have a lot of experience dealing with their kind in Armenia and in the diaspora. You just can't reason with them. Trying to reason with them or explain things to them will make you want to pull your hair out. You can only put them up against a wall and shoot them dead and then continue doing what you have to do.
Incidentally, Levon Barseghyan was in Washington almost two years ago, supporting agent Richard Giragosian's call for chaos and revolution in Armenia. See the following link -
Lessons Learned From 20 Years of Independence and Statebuilding: Armenia: http://www.carnegieendowment.org/2011/11/28/lessons-learned-from-20-years-of-independence-and-statebuilding-armenia/7w0z
For those interested, I discussed this matter at some length within the following blog entry -
Panel Discussions Calling for Chaos in Armenia (February, 2012): http://theriseofrussia.blogspot.com/2012/01/washington-sponsored-panel-discussions.html
PS: I'm not a fan of the interviewer, Petros. I know he means well, but he always comes off as an obnoxious idiot during serious political conversations. He could have done much-much more to put these assholes in their places.
Greetings Arevordi and Co.,
ReplyDeleteI just looked through the links put up by TK, thank you TK for posting these up. I must first say that I was THOROUGHLY impressed with how law enforcement in Armenia handled themselves against a potentially large mob of people that could have easily gotten beyond their ability to control.
The imagery brought back recollections of the OCCUPY movement in the US where MUCH more docile crowds were pepper sprayed on the UC Berkeley campus and peaceful sit-ins were disrupted by late night batons with the LAPD dragging protesters out of their tents. These protesters in Armenia should feel incredibly lucky for being treated with such kid gloves by the local law enforcement, had this been Barrack Obama traveling through the streets of LA, protesters of this caliber would be bludgeoned with rubber bullets and tear gas to clear them out.
The Petros interview could have been better had he been more aggressive and astute in his line of question to reveal the stupidity of the panel. First and foremost let me say, at initial glance, the woman on the panel immediately struck me as EU whore. I am VERY well versed in quickly identifying the Eurowhores in our people, especially the females demographic. With her fire red hair, jeans, and T-shirt, she had "I'm ready to suck start European cocks after EU ascension" written all over her face. Women such as this are the quintessential opposite of our traditional Armenian mothers and wives and their primary motive on a personal level for getting involved with EU/US based NGOs is to one day establish an Armenia in which "men and women are equal" and they can strut on the streets of Yerevan freely on their next quest for a one night stand without being culturally ostracized. Believe it or not there is a lot of personal feministic angst tucked behind those cock socking lips.
The other two men clearly are way out of their league in what they say in their naiveté discussion and rationalization for not joining the CU and instead turning to the EU. The geek in glasses is stating that as soon as Iran's sanctions are lifted gas prices/fuel prices will fall drastically and the 30% price cut Russia is so graciously giving means nothing. The absurdity of this comment is mind boggling, if today you went to the commodities market and gave the price per barrel of crude a 30% discount for any buyer, they would offer their sister's cherry to you as a sign of gratitude. To claim that the fuel breaks Russia is offering us is "non-significant" by this imbecile panelist proves sadly what Arevordi is saying about the primitive state of our people's geopolitical acumen.
Essentially in the whole interview, any issue brought up that debunks the panelists' points of view they brush off as "no that's not true", while countering with "but we have 1500 people (more like 300) that are against the CU ascension, we are losing our independence, blah blah".
ReplyDeleteI'm grateful Mr. Putin was kind enough to pay his respects to our memorials and visit us. Our law enforcement certainly was professional in handling this, but there is definitely room for improvement for the future, also, during the next war with the Azeris, and make not mistake about it folks there is a war coming, a list of all of these jack-offs should be compiled and as soon as the war breaks out, these "patriots" of Armenia should be quickly drafted and be sent off to basic training to defend their country's independence.
I hate to stereotype our people, but in the early 90's when men and women in Arstakh were fighting and dying for both Armenia and Arstakh on the fields of Martuni, dick lickers like these were having their coffee in Yerevan claiming "those villagers will never win this war." Fast forward 20 years and these same cocksuckers are now left on the sidelines while the Karabaxcis put the smack down and run the country, and rightfully so, those that fight on the field of battle get to run things when the war is over.
Enker SasounciDavit
ReplyDeleteI thoroughly enjoyed reading what you wrote. It also gave me a good chuckle before bedtime. Thank you. And I really love your suggestion about gathering these animals and sending them off to war.
I'm a bit confused about zaruhi cuntstanjian. She truly seems like an incompetent whore. Not to give them too much credit, but it seemed LTP and his cronies at least managed to galvanize large numbers of naive but self-destructive peasants to rally for their cause. It seems, from what I can gather on sporadic reports and what I can filter through the biased reporting from the controlled English-language news outlets, that zaruhi and heritage are utter failures in convincing Armenian society of their antics.
ReplyDeleteThe rioters, which Armenian police so skillfully and professionally put down, really seemed like the bottom of the barrel, composed almost entirely of delusional college aged idiots who have been thoroughly brainwashed by the so-called "American University of Armenia" or at some ultraliberal euro-college. Also present were Armenia's faggots and trannies, the perverts of Armenia's society who largely belong in insane-asylums. And of course the handful of paid western agents.
Do you guys think it is better for the Armenian government to let zaruhi the whore continue making an ass out of herself and thoroughly discrediting the opposition, or at least the Hemorrhoid party which is the west's best tool in Armenia, in the process? As T.K. mentioned, she is nothing but a slut who tries to act and dress like an American, and we all know at the end of the day an overwhelming majority of Armenian society is not about to follow a woman, much less a buffoon like zaruhi, into riots against the police.
Ps T.K. I am very glad to hear that normal members of Armenian society, on their own, came down on those degenerates who were waving rainbow faggot flags in Yerevan. That kind of perversion cannot be tolerated in Armenia, it is the start down the road to societal collapse... In L.A. as many "straight" Americans go to "gay pride parades" as faggots because they have been brainwashed to think that faggotry is normal.
Ps2 Arevordi,"Too bad blood was not spilled, as far as I could tell. If so, that was a bit impolite for a place like the south Caucasus where animals are slaughters for honorable guests..." That was an incredible comment. Witty, and so true!
Larry Grathwohl on Ayers' plan for American re-education camps and the need to kill millions
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HWMIwziGrAQ
This is only topically related, but may help in understanding how Armenians who were indoctrinated in western universities can be so dumb and gullible. The FBI informant in the video is describing a 1960s plan by American marxist terrorists known as the Weathermen to bring America into the communist fold, much as today's protesting scum want to bring Armenia into the western/euro/US fold. Pay attention to what he says about degrees from top American universities 1:33 - 2:12.
At UCLA, there is a jewish jackass professor named paul von blum. He teaches a course titled "Agitational Communication" in the field of "Communication Studies" where he presented these terrorists as legitimate protestors and social activists, thanks to whom Americans today have their freedoms and rights, and that terrorists and true right-wingers are trying to take away... BTW von blum was popular among Armenian students because apart from "gay rights" and "immigration reform" he would also take time to march with (read: harvest) Armenian students on April 24. Thankfully I was already politically aware and jew-wise by the time I was in UCLA, but you can imagine other Armenian students looking at von Blum as a hero, and buying all of the bullshit he was selling about rioters and terrorists as political heroes. Those are the types of deluded Armenians who go out with bandanas draped across their faces and protest and riot against Presidents Putin and Sargsyan believing that they their actions will lead to "freedom," "democrazy"and even economic prosperity from Armenia once the Russians and "oligarchs" have been removed.
I agree that Armenia either needs to put these useless eaters in the Army, either on the front lines or chained cleaning latrines. That or deport them to western European countries or California as "refugees", much like Fidel Castro unloaded large numbers or criminals and mental handicaps to the US disguised as refugees in the 1980s. Armenia's protesting chobans are on the same level as most of today's immigrants to western Europe or the Estados Unidos de América anyway.
Anti-Russian and anti-CU propaganda mixed in with "military news" from azatutyun. This is how these scum operate, they twist the facts and omit information about free Russian arms deliveries to Armenia so that their idiot followers become convinced that Armenia is running to a nato country like Poland in a desperate struggle to keep up with the azeris who have been armed by Russia. Talk about living in an alternate reality... Again, hopefully the Russians start taking these things personally, and seriously, and start making foreign-agents-masquerading-as-journalists suffer car crashes and gas pipe explosions.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RO4E83xB6vs
Please refrain from posting any relevant new comments on this page. My new blog commentary will be ready this Friday. In the meanwhile, please go through and compile some of your comments on this page and repost them in the blog entry.
ReplyDelete