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The Rise of the Russian Empire: Russo-Armenian Relations

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  • Re: The Rise of the Russian Empire: Russo-Armenian Relations

    The Moscow Connection



    ARMENIA-RUSSIA ANALYSIS: THE CHALLENGE OF ECONOMIC INDEPENDENCE AND THE RISK OF RELIANCE

    And even after they were disjoined in December 1991, their economies remained linked though politics separated them. While still learning what it meant to be an “independent” republic, Armenia was doing its best to preserve connections inside the “united economy space” of the former Soviet Union. Like a suckling untrained for self-survival, Armenia (as well as other suddenly-single republics) had little choice but to maintain the only lifeline it had known for 70 years.

    Armenia had reason to keep the ties tight: Russia was its major market (if not the only one) and an even more important supplier of strategic commodities. Evidence of the need to maintain the link became clear on August 14, 1992 when, because of the Georgian-Abkhazian war, the only railroad link connecting Armenia and Russia was blocked (the second link, which passed through Azerbaijan, was blocked even earlier, as the war over Nagorno Karabakh sparked).

    The terrible economic crisis and energy shortage which started that winter were caused by conditions that made it impossible to transfer crude oil and grain from or through Russia; gas supplies (then from Turkmenistan) were often interrupted due to numerous acts of sabotage by gorilla rebels on the pipeline in Georgia, as ethnic conflicts flared in the south Caucasus.

    The next event marking separation of the Armenian and Russian economies was the breakdown of the common ruble zone initiated by Moscow in 1993. And again, the Armenian government made every effort to remain inside the ruble zone, and became one of the last former Soviet Republics to introduce its own currency. The Armenian dram began circulation on November 23, 1993, nearly two full years after the unraveling of the Soviet Union.

    The Armenian government’s efforts to preserve integrated links with the Russian economy faltered finally in 1994, when Hrant Bagratian, then Prime Minister of Armenia, proposed to create a sort of single currency of the Commonwealth of the Independent States (CIS) to make their trade simpler (similar to the ECU of the European Union, which later grew into the Euro). Bagratian’s initiative was misunderstood and rejected by fellow diplomats in the CIS, whose countries were eager to establish independent identities far from the shadow of their communist pasts. Since then, the economies of Armenia and Russia have followed radically different paths. Sharing still a common foreign policy and defense strategy, the allies no longer shared an economic road map.

    Midway into the second decade of independent Armenia as no longer a USSR satellite, but spinning for better or worse in its own orbit, it is difficult to believe that once the economies of Armenia and Russia were a single entity. Of course, both turned to free market principles and privatization. But there are striking differences which are best reflected in several so-called unofficial ratings.

    One, the Index of Economic Freedom, calculated by the Wall Street Journal and Heritage Foundation has, since 2001, ranked Armenia 42-46th, among some 155 countries. But last year, Armenia jumped to 27th place, well ahead of not only most other former Soviet countries, but also many EU states. As for Russia, it never ranked higher than 110th. This suggests not only more freedom for investors in Armenia, but implies that the two economies have become less compatible. In particular, Russia has a heavier tax burden and a more cumbersome custom system.

    Not surprisingly, Armenia rejected invitations to join any economic union initiated by Russia, such as the CIS Custom Union, Eurasian Economic Union, not to mention the Russia-Belarus Union, which some politicians and a large part of the population of Armenia strongly supported in the late 1990s. Instead, Armenia joined the World Trade Organization to have as much free trade as possible with all its partners. Time has proved the soundness of that decision, as none of the Russian-initiated unions has been as successful as WTO.

    A consequence of these factors was Russia’s decline in the share of the foreign trade of Armenia; from more than 50 percent in early 1990s to 13-15 percent in recent years. Thus Russia has become merely one of Armenia’s numerous trade partners, although still the largest one. Russia exports to Armenia machinery and equipment, cars and trucks, metals, agricultural products and food. Of vital importance are Russian natural gas and nuclear fuel. Armenia exports to Russia food, chemicals, metals, precious stones, alcoholic beverages and numerous other goods.

    Politics, Economy and Friendship

    Separating economics from politics was a double-edged sword for Armenia-Russia relations. On the upside, Armenia became less reliant on the superpower. Armenia has not, however, profited economically as a consequence of its shared political point of view.

    While hosting Russian troops contributes to Armenia’s sense of national security, having Russia’s only military base in the Caucasus is of little monetary value. Russia has never, for example, awarded grants or low-interest loans to Armenia, unlike the millions given to the republic by the US and other developed nations. Still, traditionally pro-Russian Armenian public opinion has largely ignored these differences.

    In 2002, Armenia had to transfer several enterprises to Russian ownership to redeem a commercial loan provided by Russia in the mid-1990s. Again, it remained largely unnoticed that the loan, $93 million, was equivalent to the amount (at least) of the assistance the United States had provided to Armenia every year since 1992. On the contrary, much of the population was happy to know that these assets were transferred to the “friendly nation”.

    Moreover, joint efforts of the parties to stimulate bi-lateral cooperation often failed. Among these failures, those related to the transfer routes are the most important. Although due to re-orientation of trade, Armenia has become less dependent on Russia, it is still seen as the best market for Armenian goods. The blocked Abkhazian part of the railroad connecting Georgia with Russia is a bottleneck, forcing Armenian traders to use alternative and much more expensive routes. Bilateral Armenian-Russian economic commissions exist both at the intergovernmental and the inter-parliamentary levels. And, at every session of these commissions, re-opening this stretch was on the agenda. The Russian part gives promises to take measures to re-open the railroad (Russia is an influential player in the Georgian-Abkhazian conflict), but no results have been achieved so far.

    Another similar example is the Mars enterprise—one of five enterprises passed to Russia under the mentioned 2002 debt-for-equity deal—an up-to-date British-made factory for manufacturing a wide range of the modern electronic and robotic equipment installed in Yerevan shortly before the breakdown of the USSR. The Armenian government, which had failed to find either an investor or a manager for Mars, hoped that Russia would be able to activate the factory by integrating it into its military industry (it was for that very purpose that the Soviet government built it in the 1980s). However, so far Mars works below 10 percent of its capacity, and its proper use remains the subject of complaints by the Armenian side, which hoped to have hundreds of highly paid jobs at the high-tech enterprise.

    Any failed expectations of Russia being Armenia’s cash cow aside, the friendly empire has, however, been the land of opportunity for thousands of Armenians who without so much as a visa migrate there for work.

    Currently, some 800,000 Armenian citizens work abroad, (most emigrated during the hard days of 1993-95), and the total bank transfers of monies to Armenia is estimated at as much as $700 million per year (an amount more than with the state budget of Armenia). Seventy percent of that money comes from Russia. Thus, Russia remains a country of hope for many Armenians even now, after several years of good economic performance at home.

    Gas pains

    Unexpectedly enough, in recent months public opinion in Armenia toward Russia has apparently changed to what can be termed as somewhat more pragmatic. This was due to the issue of raising the price of the Russian gas supplied to Armenia. Last August, it was announced that Gazprom, the Russian gas giant, was to apply “market prices” to former Soviet republics. The media report quoted an unnamed Kremlin official, leading to speculation that the decision was politically motivated—and aimed at clients who had contentious relations with Russia—especially given that Gazprom is a state-owned company.

    Ukraine and Georgia were the apparent targets of increases (imposing at least twofold price increases). As for Armenia, no change in prices was mentioned for several months. It was only in late November that Gazprom declared its decision that the market prices would be applied to its “strategic ally” Armenia as well. The news was met by shock in Armenia, where the 2006 budget had been set assuming previous gas tariffs.

    After a special summit in the Russian resort city of Sochi on December 16, Armenia was given a three-month delay in enacting the new price, whereas Georgia, Azerbaijan and Ukraine had to pay the increased prices starting January 1. It was perhaps the first ever case when the “strategic partner” was given an economic benefit from Russia. (Russian President Vladimir Putin told reporters in Sochi that politics had nothing to do with the gas issue as it was merely “a dispute of economic entities”.)

    A new development followed, however, which propelled the discussion already rising in Armenia, about the boundaries of the “strategic partnership.” A spokesman with Gazprom was quoted as saying in mid-January that Russia would have kept its gas price low for Armenia if the latter agreed to some preconditions. Primarily, the Russians wanted ownership of the fifth (unfinished) bloc of the Hrazdan Thermal Power Plant (HTPP), or a large stake of the Iran-Armenia gas pipeline (now under construction).

    The Russians already own the four blocs of HTPP, six hydropower stations of the Sevan-Hrazdan cascade, 55 percent of the ArmRosGazprom, Armenia’s only gas operator, and, since last fall, energy distribution networks. In addition, a 5-year deal was signed in 2003, under which RAO Interworld UES, the Russian power producing giant, manages the Armenian nuclear power station in Metsamor. This makes up an estimated 70 percent of the energy sector of the country. Their bargaining for further control caused a wave of critical comments from public and political figures in Armenia.

    “Russia hits below the belt,” said former Prime Minister Vazgen Manukian.

    “With this unfriendly action, Russia pushes Armenia to the West,” said Parliament Member Hmayak Hovhannisian.

    Even the state-owned Public TV aired opinions criticizing Russia. Of course, the government was quick to declare that it did not share these opinions.

    “There is no need to change our relations due to gas prices, especially in areas that concern security and physical safety,” Minister of Foreign Affairs Vartan Oskanian said. Nevertheless, a modification of Armenian-Russian relations may be inevitable.

    “Strategic distance”

    In the view of some, the gas controversy points to an Armenia-Russia shift of relations. If in the early ‘90s Armenia struggled to keep its ties to the former “Union Center” to avoid economic collapse, today the challenge is to find ways to do business with Russia, without risking unilateral dependence on the “strategic ally”.

    According to Armenia’s Minister of Trade and Economic Development Karen Chshmaritian, Russian investment in Armenia totalled $407 million at the close of 2005, making Russia the largest country of origin for investments (followed by Greece and Germany). The main spheres for recent Russian investment are metal processing, banking, insurance, the computer industry, construction, mining, trade and services. In fact, hopes were high in Armenia that Russian investments might be greater, to include more spheres ranging from chemical industry to construction of small aircraft.

    Except for the energy sector, Russia has no other dominating position in the Armenian economy. It is simply one of many investor countries which have to compete for entering the Armenian market. There are many cases when Russian companies lost investment tenders in Armenia, the latest being those for construction of the Iran-Armenian gas pipeline and the fifth block of the Hrazdan power plant in 2005 (both were won by Iranian participants).

    As mentioned, the Russian side was unhappy, and raising the gas price for Armenia was seen in some circles as a sort of punitive measure. However, most economists share the opinion that the Armenian economy is now strong enough to withstand such shocks easily. In fact, Armenia has good prospects of having a second gas supplier when the Iran-Armenia gas pipeline is completed later this year.

    Finally, the fact that Russia possesses significant assets in the Armenian energy sector can bring benefits as well, as they make Russia interested in their efficient and profitable work. In particular, the delay in the raising of the gas price for Armenia may be a consequence of this fact. After all, Russian companies are not only gas suppliers, but also gas consumers in Armenia, and ArmRosGazprom, Hrazdan TPP, Armenal and others would suffer losses due to a sudden increase in energy prices.

    Although no information is available about the ongoing negotiations, it may well be that the delay in introducing the elevated gas price for Armenia was partly due to this reason, and these talks may result in a somewhat lower price than for Georgia and Azerbaijan. So, it may turn out that President Putin had some reason to say that it was “a dispute of economic entities.” That, and other factors, may well be among those favorable for Armenia.

    The author is a political and economic analyst, and editor of “Noyan Tapan Highlights” in Yerevan.

    Editor’s note: As this edition was going to press, it was learned that Russian interests would indeed purchase Bloc 5 of the Hrazdan power plant for $250,000,000, $60,000,000 in cash and the remainder in gas delivery until 2008. There is also conjecture that Russia will participate in the Iran-Armenia gas pipeline.

    [...]

    Source: http://www.agbu.org/publications/news.asp?date_id=39
    Մեր ժողովուրդն արանց հայրենասիրութեան այն է, ինչ որ մի մարմին' առանց հոգու:

    Նժդեհ


    Please visit me at my Heralding the Rise of Russia blog: http://theriseofrussia.blogspot.com/

    Comment


    • Re: The Rise of the Russian Empire: Russo-Armenian Relations

      Russia To Look For Uranium In Armenia



      The Russian and Armenian governments agreed on Monday to jointly develop Armenia’s untapped uranium reserves which they said could make the country self-sufficient in production of nuclear energy. A relevant agreement was signed in Yerevan by Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian and Sergey Kirienko, the visiting head of Russia’s Federal Agency on Atomic Energy (Rosatom). “The main purpose of the agreement is to look for radioactive materials in Armenia and jointly develop those resources,” said Environment Minister Vartan Ayvazian.

      According to Kirienko, the two sides will set up a joint venture that will explore areas in the southeastern Syunik region which Armenian and Russian geologists believe are rich in uranium. He was confident that they will discover commercially viable reserves of the radioactive metal used in nuclear power generation.

      “Armenia will be able to meet its needs and sell [uranium] to others,” the Rosatom chief told journalists “It is turning from an energy resource dependent country to an energy resource exporting one.”

      A U.S. company, Global Gold, is already looking for uranium in another region of Armenia. The mountainous country was a major center of non-ferrous metallurgy in the former Soviet Union and still exports copper and gold in large quantities. But its uranium reserves, estimated at 30,000 metric tons by Soviet geologists, have not been developed so far. Officials said the real reserves may be twice bigger. In Kirienko’s words, Armenia could become one of the few countries of the world with a full uranium production cycle from extraction of the metal to its transformation into nuclear fuel. Some of that fuel would be supplied to the nuclear power station at Metsamor, he said.

      The Armenian government plans to decommission the Metsamor plant by 2016 in accordance with its commitments to the European Union and the United States. It announced plans last year to replace the Soviet-era facility with a new plant meeting modern safety standards. The government pushed through parliament a legal amendment allowing it to look for foreign investors that would be willing to provide an estimated $1 billion needed for its construction. Kirienko said Moscow is ready to participate in the ambitious project.

      News source: http://www.armenialiberty.org/armeni...17D2E269A6.ASP
      Մեր ժողովուրդն արանց հայրենասիրութեան այն է, ինչ որ մի մարմին' առանց հոգու:

      Նժդեհ


      Please visit me at my Heralding the Rise of Russia blog: http://theriseofrussia.blogspot.com/

      Comment


      • Re: The Rise of the Russian Empire: Russo-Armenian Relations

        Putin says foreigners meddling in Russia



        President Vladimir Putin charged in a combative speech Thursday that foreigners seeking to thwart Russia's resurgence are increasingly interfering in its affairs. Putin also called for imposing a moratorium on Moscow's participation in a key Soviet-era arms control deal, which regulates the deployment of non-nuclear heavy weapons around the continent, until the United States and other NATO members ratify it.

        In his annual state of the nation speech that was delayed two days by the death of his predecessor, Boris Yeltsin, Putin declared that he will not seek a third term, but refused to suggest a successor and said nothing to quell speculation that he seeks to remain in power behind the scenes. Putin's second term in office ends in 2008, and he is constitutionally barred from seeking a third. While many observers have suggested he would try to stay in office, Putin again dismissed the idea.

        "The next state of the nation address will be given by another head of state," he said. He acknowledged expectations that he would take advantage of his speech to reveal his choice for a successor, then drew a laugh by saying, "It is premature for me to declare a political will."

        Russia enters a high-stakes political season this year with parliamentary elections in December, followed by presidential elections in March. Russian officials in recent months have complained that Western countries are trying to meddle in the political process by funding pro-democracy organizations, and Putin echoed those allegations.

        "There is a growth in the flow of money from abroad for direct interference in our internal affairs," Putin said in his address, delivered to members of both houses or parliament.

        "There are those who, skillfully using pseudo-democratic rhetoric, would like to return to the recent past — some to loot the country's national riches, to rob the people and the state; others to strip us of economic and political independence," Putin said. Putin did not cite specific countries as sources of the funding. The Foreign Ministry this month complained extensively about U.S. funding of democracy-promoting organizations in Russia.

        Officials contend that such funding aims to provoke mass opposition protests such as those that helped propel pro-Western leaders into power in neighboring Georgia and Ukraine in recent years. Police have cracked down on a series of opposition protests this year, beating some demonstrators and detaining hundreds. Opposition forces charge that Putin is strangling democracy through an array of measures to centralize power and increase the influence of large political parties such as his allied United Russia party, which dominates the Russian parliament.

        This year's parliamentary elections will see seats distributed entirely on a party-list basis, eliminating the opportunity for small parties to win seats through strong local support in particular districts — a change that critics say is among the measures to smother opposition. But Putin, in his speech, said it was part of "a revolutionary step modernizing the elections system ... (it will) help the opposition widen its representation."

        Putin launched another attack on the West over the Conventional Forces in Europe Treaty, whose amended version was signed in 1999 to reflect changes since the Soviet breakup. Russia has ratified the amended version, but the United States and other NATO members have refused to do so until Moscow abides by its commitment to withdraw troops from the former Soviet republics of Moldova and Georgia.

        "Our partners are behaving incorrectly, to say the least," Putin said. "I consider it worthwhile to declare a moratorium until all NATO countries ratify it ... and begin to strictly abide by it," Putin said. The death Monday of Yeltsin has drawn new attention to complaints that Putin is heading the country away from democracy. Yeltsin, as Russia's first post-Soviet leader, worked changes that encouraged pluralism and nudged the country toward democracy. But Putin clearly aimed to portray himself as the curator of Yeltsin's legacy. He began the speech by calling for deputies to stand in silence in memory of Yeltsin and later called for a national library to be established in his name.

        Putin also praised the development of Russia's economy, which has soared during his presidency, driven largely by high world oil prices. But he called for more revenues to be applied to improving the lives of its citizens, many of whom have been left behind in the boom and find themselves with insufficient pensions and unable to afford to move out of deteriorating Soviet housing. He proposed a $10 billion fund to repair housing and resettle residents, saying "It is inadmissible for a country with such reserves accumulated from its oil and gas revenues to be at peace with the fact that millions of its citizens live in slums."

        Putin also called for initiating a program under which the government would match every $40 that citizens put into private pension plans.

        News source: http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070426/...u/russia_putin
        Մեր ժողովուրդն արանց հայրենասիրութեան այն է, ինչ որ մի մարմին' առանց հոգու:

        Նժդեհ


        Please visit me at my Heralding the Rise of Russia blog: http://theriseofrussia.blogspot.com/

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        • Re: The Rise of the Russian Empire: Russo-Armenian Relations

          Rice calls Russia Soviet. Russia threatens to abandon military treaty. Putin warns of "mutual destruction."

          Cold War II is well under way...





          Putin steps up missiles warning

          Russian President Vladimir Putin has warned that US plans to build a missile defence system in eastern Europe would raise the risk of "mutual destruction". Poland and the Czech Republic are keen to allow the US to site missile bases and radars on their territory. Mr Putin spoke a day after threatening to halt involvement with a treaty limiting conventional arms in Europe.

          "The threat of causing mutual damage and even destruction increases many times," he told Russian media.

          "This is not just a defence system, this is part of the US nuclear weapons system," the Itar-Tass news agency quoted him as saying. Mr Putin was speaking after meeting Czech President Vaclav Klaus.

          Tough line

          Mr Putin has taken a tough line in recent months over the US plans for missile defence. His suggestion on Thursday that Russia could suspend membership of the 1990 Conventional Forces in Europe (CFE) treaty was met with "grave concern" by Nato. Nato Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer said the agreement was one of the cornerstones of European security. Mr Putin has accused the US of overstepping its "natural borders" and of his concern at the apparent increase in military bases and systems close to Russia's borders.

          As part of the its new missile defence programme, the US now wants to station 10 interceptor missiles in Poland, with radar operations in the Czech Republic. Mr Putin's use of the term "mutual destruction" harks back to the rhetoric of the Cold War, when strategists in Russia and the US relied at least partly on the theory of Mutually Assured Destruction (MAD) to prevent nuclear war. The theory underpinned the Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM) treaty of 1972, which limited the development of anti-missile systems. But the US withdrew from the ABM treaty in 2002, calling it a "relic" from a previous age.

          News source:
          BBC, News, BBC News, news online, world, uk, international, foreign, british, online, service


          In related news...

          Russia raises temperature in east-west military row

          Relations between Russia and the West have suffered another blow after Russian leader Vladimir Putin announced he was ready to pull out of a key arms control treaty, linking his decision to US plans to build a missile defence system in eastern Europe.

          "Our partners are conducting themselves incorrectly to say the least, gaining one-sided advances," the Russian president said in his annual state of the nation address on Thursday (26 April). Mr Putin went on to accuse the United States of "using the complicated situation to expand military bases near our [Russia's] borders. Moreover they plan to locate elements of a missile defence system in the Czech Republic and Poland."

          The Russian president suggested Moscow should freeze its commitments under the 1990 Conventional Forces in Europe treaty - signed at the sunset of the Cold War – which places limits on the number of conventional weapons and military deployments across the continent.

          "I consider it expedient to announce a moratorium on Russian fulfilment of this treaty until all countries of NATO, without exception, ratify this treaty," Mr Putin said.

          He was referring to the fact that NATO states had not ratified the 1999 updated version of the arms treaty, demanding that Russia first withdraws its troops from breakaway territories in Georgia and Moldova. NATO secretary general Jaap de Hoop Scheffer said he will seek further clarification of Russia's intentions during a meeting of NATO foreign ministers and Russian diplomats in Oslo this week. But Mr Putin's words have sent ripples of anxiety through the trans-Atlantic club. "[Russia's] message was met by concern, grave concern, disappointment and regret," Mr de Hoop Scheffer said.

          The US' plans to place 10 interceptor missiles in Poland and a radar system in the Czech Republic have put relations between the two world powers under the biggest strain since the Cold War ended, with Europe caught in the middle. Moscow does not accept Washington's argument that the system is to counter threats from Iran and has refused a US offer to allow Russian inspectors to visit the Polish missile silos to verify the story. Reacting to the Putin speech, US secretary of state Condoleezza Rice said it was "ludicrous" to believe that the US missile shield could be aimed against Russia.

          "The Russians have thousands of warheads. The idea that you can somehow stop the Russian strategic nuclear deterrent with a few interceptors just doesn't make sense," Mrs Rice said in Oslo, ahead of the NATO-Russia meeting.

          Wider problems

          While potentially the most worrying, the new east-west military dispute is not the only problem on the table: the EU, US and Russia also disagree strongly on the future of Kosovo. The EU and Russia are unable to start talks on a new bilateral treaty, with new EU states like Poland and Lithuania complaining that Russia is using trade and energy as political weapons against its old vassals. But even on a day-to-day level, EU-Russia talks seem to lack goodwill, with the German EU presidency refusing Moscow's request to discuss Polish lustration as part of a human rights dialogue at a working group meeting with Russia on 2 May.

          "Our discussions look like a Turkish bazaar - if we present a list of discussion points they don't like, they barter, by putting forward their own list," an EU official told Polish daily Gazeta Wyborcza.

          News source: http://euobserver.com/9/23953
          Slip of the tongue as Rice speaks of Soviet missiles

          CONDOLEEZZA Rice, the United States' Secretary of State, spoke yesterday of the "Soviet" nuclear arsenal in a slip of the tongue as she urged Russia to abandon Cold War thinking.

          Ms Rice was seeking to counter the belief that a proposed US missile shield in Europe might threaten Russia's nuclear deterrent, a view she has suggested reflects a "hangover" from the long US-Soviet standoff. Washington has angered Russia and unsettled some European allies with a plan to deploy 10 missile interceptors in Poland, and radar in the Czech Republic to help shield Europe from possible missile attack by nations such as Iran and North Korea.

          "The idea that somehow 10 interceptors and a few radars in eastern Europe are going to threaten the Soviet strategic deterrent is purely ludicrous and everybody knows it," she told reporters in Oslo, where she is attending a NATO meeting. Ms Rice said Washington wanted to keep discussing the issue with Moscow based on a "realistic" assessment rather than "one that is grounded somehow in the 1980s".

          A Soviet specialist, Ms Rice served on the White House National Security Council from 1989 to March 1991, during the fall of the Berlin Wall, the collapse of communism in Europe and the waning days of the Soviet Union.

          News source: http://thescotsman.scotsman.com/inte...7&format=print
          NATO tests Putin with talks on expansion

          OSLO, Norway - After tempestuous talks with their Russian counterpart on missile defenses, NATO foreign ministers on Friday turned to other issues that risk upsetting Moscow — Kosovo , the further expansion of the Western alliance and a drive to build closer relations with Ukraine. On Thursday, the NATO allies expressed concern over Russian President Vladimir Putin ‘s declared intention to freeze compliance with a European arms control treaty. The Conventional Forces in Europe Treaty limits the number and locations of military aircraft, tanks and other non-nuclear heavy weapons around Europe. Withdrawal would allow Moscow to build up forces near its borders.

          "Our partners are behaving incorrectly, to say the least," Putin said in his state-of-the-nation address on Thursday. "In case no progress is made during negotiations, I propose to discuss the possibility to end our obligations."

          Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice fired back by insisting Moscow should live up to its obligations under the treaty. She called Russia‘s concerns "purely ludicrous" in a news conference at a meeting of NATO foreign ministers in Oslo, Norway.

          "We cannot be unconcerned by the fact that NATO military infrastructure is creeping up to our borders," Lavrov said at a news conference after a NATO-Russia meeting in Oslo. "They are still looking for an enemy."

          However, a Kremlin spokesman said later that Russia would not pull out if it could reach accommodation with the West. And Russian military experts suggested the threat was a symbolic raising of the ante in the missile shield showdown more than a sign of impeding military escalation. Russia has no actual interest in a buildup of forces because it faces no real military threat and has no plans to launch any attack, they said.

          Moscow has opposed successive enlargements of NATO into Eastern Europe. NATO‘s likely expansion into the Balkans does not please Russia, but the Kremlin has been much more concerned about the prospect that its neighbors Ukraine and Georgia also may be brought into the Western alliance. Ukraine‘s pro-Russian Prime Minister Viktor Yanukovych has put the country‘s NATO membership on hold, but Foreign Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk will join the NATO talks to discuss closer cooperation with the alliance. However, the talks are overshadowed by the political standoff in Ukraine between supporters of Yanukovych and pro-Western President Viktor Yushchenko.

          The Conventional Forces in Europe Treaty was signed in 1990 and amended in 1999 to reflect changes since the breakup of the Soviet Union, adding the requirement that Moscow withdraw troops from the former Soviet republics of Moldova and Georgia. In his speech to parliament and government officials, Putin accused NATO members of taking advantage of the situation to build military bases near Russia‘s borders, and said the missile defense plans for the Czech Republic and Poland were undermining the balance of military power in Europe.

          "It is high time that our partners proved their commitment to arms reductions not by words but by deeds," Putin said. "I consider it worthwhile to declare a moratorium until all NATO countries ratify (the treaty) ... and begin to strictly abide by it."

          Rice repeated U.S. assertions that any defense system in Europe would be useless against Russia‘s enormous missile arsenal and urged Russia to accept U.S. offers to cooperate in combatting new threats, notably from Iran and North Korea . She insisted that Russia, Europe and the United States were all at risk from Iran developing long-range missiles. She said the U.S. would continue efforts to "demystify" the plan for the Russians by pushing an offer to share data and technology with Moscow.

          News source: http://www.localnewswatch.com/benton...news&id=102927
          Russia repositioning for cold war

          Russian president Vladimir Putin has warned that if the US follows through on its plan to install a network of missile defense systems in Europe, it will respond by repositioning its own arms to counteract the move. The Guardian and Zinhua reported the story. Russian officials are already planning for the next cold war, and most of their decisions are being made behind closed doors. Experts speculate that Russia could may install more of their missiles on mobile launchers and move them closer to the border in order to compensate for the military advantage the US would have with a missile system in Europe. Russia may also deploy its nuclear submarines to the North Pole where they are close to the US and nearly impossible to locate. Russia also just announced that it has developed a new nuclear submarine that can launch up to 10 nuclear warheads from a distance of almost 5,000 miles from its target.

          News source:
          http://www.bbj.hu/news/news_25680.html
          Մեր ժողովուրդն արանց հայրենասիրութեան այն է, ինչ որ մի մարմին' առանց հոգու:

          Նժդեհ


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          • Re: The Rise of the Russian Empire: Russo-Armenian Relations

            Geghamian Reverts To Pro-Russian Rhetoric



            Artashes Geghamian, a top opposition leader, signaled a radical re-orientation of his economic and foreign policy agendas towards Russia as he visited eastern Armenia on an election trip on Wednesday. “Unfortunately, some of my colleagues keep saying, ‘Let’s go to Europe, let’s go to America,’ whereas I say ‘Russia,’” Geghamian said, meeting with opposition supporters in Martuni, a small near the eastern coast of Lake Sevan.

            The outspoken leader of the National Unity Party (AMK) did not elaborate on the remark. Visiting the northwestern city of Gyumri on a similar campaign trip late last month, he said Armenia should integrate its economy into Russia’s in order to achieve sustainable development. The statement harked back to Geghamian’s past reputation of a staunchly pro-Russian politician. As recently as during the 2003 presidential election campaign, he called for Armenia’s accession to the Russia-Belarus union and replacement of the Armenian dram with the Russian ruble.

            Geghamian radically revised his pro-Russian discourse following the success of Western-backed revolutions in neighboring Georgia and other former Soviet republics, which raised hopes for similar regime change in Armenia among local opposition leaders. Addressing an AMK congress in February 2005, he described the United States as the “main pillar of the democratization and strengthening of the Republic of Armenia.” The dramatic U-turn did not earn him much support in the West, though.

            Source: http://www.armenialiberty.org/armeni...2B201897E2.ASP
            Last edited by Armenian; 05-02-2007, 02:03 PM.
            Մեր ժողովուրդն արանց հայրենասիրութեան այն է, ինչ որ մի մարմին' առանց հոգու:

            Նժդեհ


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            • Re: The Rise of the Russian Empire: Russo-Armenian Relations

              Russia going to finance construction of new NPP in Armenia?



              Russia is ready to fully finance construction of a new Nuclear Power Plant in Armenia, IA Regnum reports with a reference to a source in the Armenian government. Some agreements were achieved during the recent visit of Sergey Kiriyenko, the head of the Russia’s Federal Atomic Energy Agency (Rosatom) to Yerevan. Russia will be a joint owner of the new Armenian NPP, according to the source. Russia’s share in abuilding NPPs in foreign states may make from 5% to 20-30%.

              Kiriyenko said Russia is ready to send specialists for the works to be carried out. The Armenian authorities are planning to build a new NPP, since the republic has no other alternative after the closing of the Metsamor Nuclear Power Plant. At a meeting with the students of the Yerevan State University RA President Robert Kocharian said Armenia should have atomic energy and works are carried out in this direction. Some $240 million is essential to close the ANPP whose operation term expires in 2016. However, with joining the European Neighborhood Policy, Armenia undertook to close the NPP in the shortest terms.

              News source: http://www.panarmenian.net/news/eng/?nid=22103
              Մեր ժողովուրդն արանց հայրենասիրութեան այն է, ինչ որ մի մարմին' առանց հոգու:

              Նժդեհ


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              • Re: The Rise of the Russian Empire: Russo-Armenian Relations

                ANNUAL TRADE TURNOVER BETWEEN MOSCOW AND ARMENIA CONSIDERABLY GROWN FOR LAST TWO YEARS TO $100MLN



                YEREVAN, May 2. /ARKA/. Annual trade turnover between Moscow and Armenia has considerably grown for last two years to $100mln, Georgi Muradov, the head of Moscow government's international relationship department, said Monday at Moscow House Culture Center presentation in Yerevan. He finds this result very remarkable, especially taking into account the fact that Moscow has no natural resources such oil and gas. In his words, Russia has the greater number of investments projects with Yerevan than with other cities all over the world.

                Muradov said trade turnover with Moscow totaling $300mln makes one-third of trade turnover between Russia and Armenia. He also pointed out that Russia was the biggest direct investor in Armenia's economy in 2006 and put a special emphasis on the fact that the greatest part of these investments were made by Moscow. The Muscovite said considerable means were spent for the Moscow House construction from Moscow's city budget. Russia has invested $13mln in the construction.

                "Close ties have been established with Yerevan city authorities, and all the matters connected with space allocation here were settled very quickly thanks to that", the Moscow official said. National Statistical Service of Armenia says that Russian investments in Armenian economy grew 1.3 times in 2006, compared with 2005, and reached $87.5mln. The ceremony of Moscow House opening was held on March 23, 2007. Moscow Mayor Yuri Luzhkov and his Yerevan counterpart Yervand Zakharyan were present at the ceremony. M.V.-0--

                Source: http://www.arka.am/en/archive/n05/n0205/020502.html
                Մեր ժողովուրդն արանց հայրենասիրութեան այն է, ինչ որ մի մարմին' առանց հոգու:

                Նժդեհ


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                • Re: The Rise of the Russian Empire: Russo-Armenian Relations

                  This is Moscow's answer to the US State Department's relentless effort to ensure that Armenia will have a "free" and "democratic" election process next week. Well, in the eyes of policy makers in Washington DC, the elections will only "free" and "democratic" if a pro-American b-o-z gets elected into office. At the very forefront of America's meddling are the numerous CIA funded NGOs in Yerevan and their "freedom" minded supporters.

                  Russian government to assign 2.2 million rubles for observation mission in Armenia

                  /PanARMENIAN.Net/ The Russian government will assign 2.2 million rubles for financing expenses of Russian delegates who will participate in observation mission in Armenia’s parliamentary elections scheduled for May 12. The RF government will assign Russia’s MFA up to 2 203 million rubles in the second quarter of 2007. Those means are being assigned for financing expenses connected with sending representatives of the Russian Federation within the OSCE ODIHR (Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights) mission to Armenia to participate in the observation of the May 12 parliamentary elections. Premier Mikhail Fradkov signed the corresponding order.

                  The Russian MFA is ordered to realize the simultaneous payment to OSCE ODIHR budget, totally $ 7 400, which will cover of ODIHR monitoring mission’s expenses connected with the parliamentarian electrons in Armenia.
                  ! Reproduction in full or in part is prohibited without reference to «PanARMENIAN.Net».

                  Source: http://www.panarmenian.net/news/eng/?nid=22133
                  Մեր ժողովուրդն արանց հայրենասիրութեան այն է, ինչ որ մի մարմին' առանց հոգու:

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                  • Re: The Rise of the Russian Empire: Russo-Armenian Relations

                    U.S. concerned over Russia's intelligence ops - McConnell



                    WASHINGTON, May 2 (RIA Novosti) - Russia's foreign intelligence operations against the United States are currently at the same level as during the Cold War, the U.S. national intelligence chief said.

                    Michael McConnell said Tuesday that Russia and China are the most aggressive countries at gathering information about American sensitive technologies, including projects under development, and the scale of their intelligence activities is at Cold War levels. Last month McConnell, who assumed his current post in February, circulated a draft bill allowing the U.S. government to expand its powers under the 1978 Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), which could include planting listening devices and hidden cameras, as well as breaking into houses to make copies of computer hard drives.

                    Relations between Russia and the United States heated up after the U.S. announced plans to deploy elements of its missile defense system in the Czech Republic and Poland, to counter possible attacks from Iran or North Korea, as well as to finance nongovernmental organizations and opposition parties in Russia in a bid to improve the country's democratic record. Russian President Vladimir Putin compared last week, U.S. plans to deploy its missile defenses in Europe to the deployment of Pershing cruise missiles in the 1980s.

                    Russia, which has been anxious about NATO bases that have appeared in former Communist-bloc countries and ex-Soviet republics, considers the plans to deploy anti-missile systems in Central Europe a national security threat and a destabilizing factor for Europe. The current situation closely resembles the events of the 1980s, when NATO decided to deploy U.S. Pershing II and Tomahawk missiles in Western Europe. In the event of a military confrontation between the Soviet Union and the West, those missiles could have quickly destroyed the largest Russian cities, while the United States would have remained invulnerable.

                    The Kremlin launched at the time a worldwide protest campaign against the deployment of U.S. missiles in Europe. As a result, the former Soviet Union and the U.S. signed the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty (INF) December 8, 1987. The agreement came into force in June 1988 and does not have a specific duration. The INF treaty eliminated nuclear and conventional ground-launched ballistic and cruise missiles with ranges of 500 to 5,500 kilometers (300 to 3,400 miles). By the treaty's deadline of June 1, 1991, a total of 2,692 such weapons had been destroyed, 846 by the U.S. and 1,846 by the Soviet Union.

                    On February 10, 2007, Putin declared that the INF Treaty no longer served Russia's interests. On February 14, Gen. Yury Baluyevsky, the chief of the Russian General Staff, said Russia could pull out of the INF unilaterally, which sounded a strong warning to the U.S. regarding its plans to deploy elements of its anti-missile defense system in Poland and the Czech Republic. While the U.S. claims that Russia has intensified its intelligence activities a major spying scandal clouded relations between Russia and the UK at the start of last year, when Moscow claimed four British agents in the Russian capital had been caught procuring information from a high-tech communication device hidden in a rock.

                    Source: http://en.rian.ru/world/20070502/64750046.html
                    Մեր ժողովուրդն արանց հայրենասիրութեան այն է, ինչ որ մի մարմին' առանց հոգու:

                    Նժդեհ


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                    • Re: The Rise of the Russian Empire: Russo-Armenian Relations

                      Friction Between Estonia and Russia Ignites Protests in Moscow



                      MOSCOW, May 2 — Diplomatic tensions between Russia and Estonia spilled into the streets on Wednesday as protesters disrupted a news conference by the Estonian ambassador, harassed diplomats at the embassy and briefly blocked trucks crossing the border near St. Petersburg. Russia escalated the dispute when a spokesman for the state rail company told news agencies that repairs would be scheduled on its links entering Estonia, halting shipments of oil to the country’s Baltic Sea ports. Russia has been criticized for cutting off energy to punish neighbors that fall from favor.

                      In Estonia, officials blamed Russian hackers for shutting down government Web sites, while the president, Toomas Hendrik Ilves, called on Russia “to remain civilized” after days of protests in each country over the removal of a Soviet-era monument in Tallinn, the Estonian capital, late last week. Estonia’s ambassador to Russia, Marina Kaljurand, said her bodyguards used pepper spray to protect her from protesters from a pro-Kremlin youth group, Nashi, who charged her at a news conference on Wednesday. The leaders of Nashi, a nationalistic group that organized the anti-Estonian protests and plans rallies and other events in support of President Vladimir V. Putin, told Russian news agencies that Ms. Kaljurand’s bodyguards had beaten protesters.

                      The embassy in Moscow has been under siege by protesters since the removal of the monument, which has been a source of tension for years. The Estonian government ordered the monument removed from a square near Tallinn’s Old Town last Friday after a night of rioting and looting that injured scores and left one protester dead, from a fight. Many Estonians view the monument, erected in 1947 and known as the Bronze Soldier, as a symbol of the Soviet occupation that began in 1940 and ended with independence in 1991. They have campaigned to move it to a less conspicuous spot. Others from Estonia’s Russian-speaking minority, who have had uneasy relations there since independence, have denounced the removal as an insult to Soviet soldiers and a glorification of Nazi Germany. Those sentiments have been amplified by Russian officials and the largely state-controlled media here.

                      Estonia had already formally complained of harassment of its diplomats in Moscow, but the protests on Wednesday were the most disruptive. The raucous protests forced the closure of Estonia’s consulate and the evacuation of diplomats’ families, about 20 people, said Franek Persidski, a spokesman for the consulate. Protesters attacked the Swedish ambassador’s car at the embassy, prompting a formal protest from Stockholm. They also attacked Ms. Kaljurand’s car as it left the offices of a magazine where she had held her news conference. Russia’s Foreign Ministry, questioned about the harassment of the diplomats, declined to comment. But a spokesman, Mikhail L. Kamynin, told Interfax, “We still believe that the tension and the reaction of civil society in Russia were provoked.”

                      The Russian police, who have responded forcefully to anti-Kremlin protests in recent weeks, have appeared reluctant to disperse the protesters. A police spokeswoman said that one protester was detained outside the Estonian Embassy after spraying some substance; four were reported arrested Tuesday after tearing down the embassy’s flag. The bronze statue that was at the center of the protests was moved Monday to a military cemetery in Tallinn, while government workers excavate the ground in the park where it once stood. They have uncovered the coffins of 12 people, believed to be Soviet soldiers who died during the campaign to drive the Nazis out of the Baltics. The remains will be reburied in the cemetery, which Estonian officials say is a more appropriate place to mourn the fallen than a bustling city square. Russia’s actions and inaction prompted pointed rebukes from leaders in Estonia and expressions of concern from the European Union, which Estonia joined in 2004.

                      “It is customary in Europe that differences, which do, now and then, occur between states, are solved by diplomats and politicians, not on the streets or by computer attacks,” Mr. Ilves, the Estonian president, said Wednesday, according to news reports from Tallinn. On Tuesday, the foreign minister, Urmas Paet, said Estonian Web sites were being attacked from Internet addresses registered to Russian government agencies, including Mr. Putin’s administration. The Kremlin did not immediately respond to a request for comment, saying a spokesman was traveling. Mr. Paet also accused Russian diplomats of meeting with protesters in the hours before the violence last Friday. A group of Russian Parliament members visited Estonia this week, ostensibly to calm the tensions, but stirred anger by calling for the resignation of the Estonian government.

                      Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/03/wo...03estonia.html
                      Մեր ժողովուրդն արանց հայրենասիրութեան այն է, ինչ որ մի մարմին' առանց հոգու:

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