The Western puppet (and therefore, anti-Armenian) Levon Ter-Petrosyan, who has been widely supported by the United States of America and the Western world, has given a new interview to the Western biased news agency called BBC (the biasedness was easily noticeable especially during the Arab revolts).
In this he claims we should have given back some territories, in exchange for an interem-status, not even immediate independence! "Because there was no other solution". Can you believe this? So the Turks steal our lands, kill our people, we should just accept this and even during times of victory, give back the lands because they claim it as theirs, because there is no other solution?
Also notice how he divides the people of Karabakh, as if they are not Armenians. After all our lands got stolen, after dozens of genocide campaigns (which he does not mention) he says that the Armenians in Artsakh (which he refers to "Karabakhtsis), demonstrated a MAXIMALIST approach (he was the one who was constantly working AGAINST our soldiers during the war). This is un-believable. Publicly he aims for the destruction of the Armenian nation, and he is still allowed to lay FOOT on our sacred homeland?
What a sick xxxx. I didn't believe he had the balls to say such a thing. I can't imagine there are still some sick xxxxs who support him.
Dear Armenians, people like Levon Ter-Petrosyan and Raffi Hovanissian, these are the people supported by the West. Don't be too naive about their intentions, if it was up to America and the West, Armenia would have been vanished a long time ago. Yes, economic cooperation is good, but we should be on our watch for them not to put their puppets in power in our beloved Republic. That will be the beginning of the end.
Long live the freedom fighters who spilled their blood and gave their lives to our cause. It's a disgrace we have such an ex-president spitting on their graves. Long live the Russian Federation for helping Armenia and seeing Armenia as a strategic ally, for without them, and our freedom fighters, there would be no Armenia today.
In this he claims we should have given back some territories, in exchange for an interem-status, not even immediate independence! "Because there was no other solution". Can you believe this? So the Turks steal our lands, kill our people, we should just accept this and even during times of victory, give back the lands because they claim it as theirs, because there is no other solution?
Also notice how he divides the people of Karabakh, as if they are not Armenians. After all our lands got stolen, after dozens of genocide campaigns (which he does not mention) he says that the Armenians in Artsakh (which he refers to "Karabakhtsis), demonstrated a MAXIMALIST approach (he was the one who was constantly working AGAINST our soldiers during the war). This is un-believable. Publicly he aims for the destruction of the Armenian nation, and he is still allowed to lay FOOT on our sacred homeland?
What a sick xxxx. I didn't believe he had the balls to say such a thing. I can't imagine there are still some sick xxxxs who support him.
Dear Armenians, people like Levon Ter-Petrosyan and Raffi Hovanissian, these are the people supported by the West. Don't be too naive about their intentions, if it was up to America and the West, Armenia would have been vanished a long time ago. Yes, economic cooperation is good, but we should be on our watch for them not to put their puppets in power in our beloved Republic. That will be the beginning of the end.
Long live the freedom fighters who spilled their blood and gave their lives to our cause. It's a disgrace we have such an ex-president spitting on their graves. Long live the Russian Federation for helping Armenia and seeing Armenia as a strategic ally, for without them, and our freedom fighters, there would be no Armenia today.
Independent Armenia’s first president Levon Ter-Petrosyan has insisted that the closest Armenia and Azerbaijan were to finding a full solution to the conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh was in 1997, but a solution then failed because of the disagreement of Karabakh Armenians.
In an interview with the BBC Russian Service aired on Monday Ter-Petrosyan, who today leads Armenia’s opposition, said the Karabakh conflict could have been settled by means of ceding “certain territories” to Azerbaijan and establishing an intermediate status for Nagorno-Karabakh.
“But this did not happen, because the people of Karabakh demonstrated a maximalist approach and decided that this was too little, one could press more and get more... And not only people in Karabakh,” said the ex-president, who was forced to resign in February 1998, less than half a year after presenting his vision for ending the land dispute with Azerbaijan largely called “defeatist” in Armenia and Karabakh.
“Also in Yerevan, in my surroundings there were people who thought like that. I said then: if you think there is a better solution, please, [go ahead], I can’t have this solution stymied, you try it, maybe you’ll be successful,” added Ter-Petrosyan, reflecting on his differences, leading up to his resignation, with then Prime Minister Robert Kocharyan, a native of Karabakh and its former leader and other senior government representatives in Yerevan.
In his wide-ranging interview with the BBC Ter-Petrosyan also spoke about some little-known details of the establishment of the Commonwealth of Independent States, a loose alliance of former Soviet republics set up in the wake of the USSR’s demise, about his conversations with then Russian leader Boris Yeltsin and how Armenia gained its independence.
Speaking about the positive and negative aspects of the post-Soviet period for Armenia, Ter-Petrosyan noted that almost all former Soviet republics had seen a socio-economic decline after the disintegration of the Union.
“But it is not only food that keeps people alive. There is an aspiration for independence, an aspiration for democracy, freedom of speech and freedom of conscience. We gained all that,” said Ter-Petrosyan.
According to Armenia’s first post-communist leader, in general gaining independence was a great advance for the countries of the former Soviet Union, as well as for the whole world “because there is no empire, no communism, no Cold War.”
Ter-Petrosyan also expressed confidence that 20 years from now Armenia will be in a much better position and stressed that “distortion of power” remains a key problem for the country for the time being.
“If this problem is solved, everything will fall into place,” said Armenia’s current opposition leader. “There will be a normal, free country. Problems with both Azerbaijan and Turkey will be solved, that is, if Armenia faces a catastrophic situation, the fault will be entirely ours.”
To view Levon Ter-Petrosyan’s full interview in Russian click here: http://www.bbc.co.uk/russian/multime...syan_int.shtml
In an interview with the BBC Russian Service aired on Monday Ter-Petrosyan, who today leads Armenia’s opposition, said the Karabakh conflict could have been settled by means of ceding “certain territories” to Azerbaijan and establishing an intermediate status for Nagorno-Karabakh.
“But this did not happen, because the people of Karabakh demonstrated a maximalist approach and decided that this was too little, one could press more and get more... And not only people in Karabakh,” said the ex-president, who was forced to resign in February 1998, less than half a year after presenting his vision for ending the land dispute with Azerbaijan largely called “defeatist” in Armenia and Karabakh.
“Also in Yerevan, in my surroundings there were people who thought like that. I said then: if you think there is a better solution, please, [go ahead], I can’t have this solution stymied, you try it, maybe you’ll be successful,” added Ter-Petrosyan, reflecting on his differences, leading up to his resignation, with then Prime Minister Robert Kocharyan, a native of Karabakh and its former leader and other senior government representatives in Yerevan.
In his wide-ranging interview with the BBC Ter-Petrosyan also spoke about some little-known details of the establishment of the Commonwealth of Independent States, a loose alliance of former Soviet republics set up in the wake of the USSR’s demise, about his conversations with then Russian leader Boris Yeltsin and how Armenia gained its independence.
Speaking about the positive and negative aspects of the post-Soviet period for Armenia, Ter-Petrosyan noted that almost all former Soviet republics had seen a socio-economic decline after the disintegration of the Union.
“But it is not only food that keeps people alive. There is an aspiration for independence, an aspiration for democracy, freedom of speech and freedom of conscience. We gained all that,” said Ter-Petrosyan.
According to Armenia’s first post-communist leader, in general gaining independence was a great advance for the countries of the former Soviet Union, as well as for the whole world “because there is no empire, no communism, no Cold War.”
Ter-Petrosyan also expressed confidence that 20 years from now Armenia will be in a much better position and stressed that “distortion of power” remains a key problem for the country for the time being.
“If this problem is solved, everything will fall into place,” said Armenia’s current opposition leader. “There will be a normal, free country. Problems with both Azerbaijan and Turkey will be solved, that is, if Armenia faces a catastrophic situation, the fault will be entirely ours.”
To view Levon Ter-Petrosyan’s full interview in Russian click here: http://www.bbc.co.uk/russian/multime...syan_int.shtml
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