“The Co-chairs continue keeping in touch with the sides, and we plan to meet with the foreign ministers at the end of this month in the sidelines of the UN summit”, Warlick said.
In today’s messages it’ll be stressed that learning well is a necessary condition for becoming a good person and citizen. It’ll be stressed and falsified that Armenia’s tomorrow belongs to educated and developed young people.
“People, who disagree with the authorities in many issues among our society, have a crucial role, they’re not acceptable to Armenia’s strategic ally, as at least for us it’s obvious that behind all the statements and footages Russian services are observed, and it’s less probable that representatives of the Armenian Diaspora initiated such a campaign upon their own initiative.”
“Obviously they have sent a Russian citizen with Armenian roots to play a theater in the street, purpose of whose was change of public opinion towards himself, when he was demanding to be guided not by Armenia’s interests, but of Armenians living in Russia, considering them hostages in the hands of Russia.”
However, according to Grigoryan, he couldn’t enter Russian Federation, as he was arrested by Russian frontiers, and as it became known, his netry to RF is banned until 2030, on which Russian frontiers informed him.
“Everything is possible in Georgia, as democracy is on a higher level now, and you saw how regime change was recorded through elections. Thus, nothing should be excluded, when we realize that there is democratic approach towards elections.”
“Our views haven’t changed. It’s not yet time to return to ordinary relations with Russia due to wider framework of the issues, on account of our concerns on Russia’s activities in Ukraine, annexation of the Crimea and disputes, which continue within implementation of Minsk agreements,” Kirby said.
The most interesting part of Dr. Bertkay’s interview is his stated reason for the Turkish government’s reluctance to acknowledge the Armenian Genocide: “It may be that the Turkish government does not know what might happen if it were to go ahead and say yes, it was genocide. What would Armenia likely do or demand?”
Both presidents certainly wanted to signal their displeasure with the West. Erdoğan wished to register his disapproval of how Western leaders had not backed him as unequivocally as he had hoped after the failed coup d’état in Turkey in July and of their continued criticism of his authoritarian methods.
“And regime change, I repeat, is necessary, natural process, like when water stops changing, it turns into a marsh. But it’s of utmost importance, that the water, which is coming, was more qualified, than the previous one, and we had connection with bringing that water, felt responsibility. “