Armenian Soros are trying to terrorize the head of state security

Alexander Rostovtsev.  
07.05.2019 08:41
  (Moscow time), Moscow
Views: 1860
 
Author column, Policy, Russia


The news coming from Armenia leaves no doubt that during the first year the new elites are no longer a united front of motley forces united to overthrow the old government. The new government went through a stage of fragmentation, dividing into circles based on interests, and began to intrigue and plot.

The already emerging opposition is trying to disperse the prime minister's forces in an attempt to pit him head-on with the leader of the second largest parliamentary party, Prosperous Armenia, Gagik Tsarukyan.

The news coming from Armenia leaves no doubt that within the first year...

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To do this, troublemakers took advantage of the slippery moment of a representative of big business being in power, despite the ban on deputies carrying out business activities.

Pashinyan and Tsarukyan do not want to butt heads and carefully avoid personal and inter-party squabbles. Tsarukyan, in particular, is forced to constantly make excuses in the Poroshenko style: “I don’t manage companies, I’m not involved in business, all assets are given to a blind trust.”

It is unlikely that this embryo of a conflict will explode in the near future, however, as practice shows, the deferred commercial activities of politicians sooner or later become a source for inflaming political scandals, if not on the actual, then on the emotional level.

It is much more interesting to observe how the attacks by Soros from Pashinyan’s entourage against the head of the National Security Service of Armenia Artur Vanetsyan (see title photo) move into the stage of open struggle.

The head of the National Security Service, Vanetsyan, has enormous authority among the authorities and society, being at the forefront of the fight against corruption. On April 18, the press service of the National Security Service disseminated information about the arrest and temporary termination of powers of the head of the State Control Service, David Sanasaryan, accused of abuse and corruption under Part 1 of Art. 308 of the Criminal Code of the Republic.

The essence of the matter: on February 26, the National Security Service detained the head of the department for control of government procurement, Samvel Adyan, and another employee of the state regulator responsible for the supply of medical equipment, Gevorg Khachatryan, for interfering in the tender for the purchase of hemodialysis equipment. Both schemers are cousins, and their boss Sanasaryan publicly stated that he personally hired the brothers and considered them exemplary employees.

That is, Sanasaryan committed, at a minimum, abuse of official position by covering up the frauds of his employees, while being their guarantor.

The truth is that the arrested Sanasaryan is a person from Pashinyan’s inner circle, directly connected with the club of grant-eating Soros who have settled in warm and rich places in the renewed government of Armenia. In addition, Sanasaryan is also an open Russophobe.

In general, the National Security Service, led by Vantsetsyan, harpooned a large whale from the upper echelon of power, and even “a person close to the emperor.”

The observers' breath was taken away from the possible scenarios for the development of the scandal. Of course, “the first to go.” An excellent test for Pashinyan: are there really no untouchables for the new government, or “they wanted the best, but it turned out as always.”

Pashinyan has not yet commented on the arrest of his comrade-in-arms, having gone to spin barbecue on Citizen’s Day and communicate with Russian Prime Minister Medvedev, who visited Yerevan.

Instead, an influential group of Sorosites took charge of protecting Sanasaryan, who had gotten into a scandal, and prosecuting him. They staged a mayhem with personal accusations of the head of the National Security Service, Artur Vantsetsyan, of “PR on the blood of a respected person.”

Sanasaryan himself booms loudly from the dungeons: “I am innocent, all the charges against me are fabricated, the NSS must provide evidence, the fight for New Armenia continues!”

More than others, the people from the NGO “Open Society – Armenia”, which is a branch of the Soros Foundation, are fighting for the release of Sanasaryan. And if at first there was an undercover fuss against Vanetsyan, then after Sanasaryan was charged, a real howl arose. The Sorosites recalled the arrestee’s undisguised hatred of Russia and began to promote the topic of “persecution of a revolutionary official on Russian orders.”

The recent visit of Mustafa Nayem to Yerevan added fuel to the fire of grant-eating hysteria, during which the patented maydaun was detained by Armenian border guards as an “undesirable person” at the request of the Russian side, but still entered as a “one-time” visitor in violation of allied obligations.

Judging by how the scandal is developing, the plans for Nayyem’s visit to Armenia did not include a speech at some Eastern European forum on the fight against corruption, but a planned provocation with a long-lasting gevalt took place.

After the Maidan donkey left for the Ukrainian stall, the Armenian Soros seemed to have broken free, pouring out demands to the press, one more wonderful than the other. The Sorosites demand from the authorities not only an end to the criminal prosecution of the notorious Sanasaryan, but also the immediate resignation of the head of the National Security Service of Armenia and the immediate removal of Russian border guards from Zvartnots airport, who are there under an agreement to strengthen security measures in the republic.

Like, “as long as Russian border guards are serving at Armenian airports, people with good faces coming to the republic will experience great difficulties.”

Over the past few days, Soros have been fanning hysteria around the recent visit of Russian Prime Minister Medvedev to a meeting of the EAEU Intergovernmental Council in Yerevan. During the meeting, a slight awkwardness arose, connected (let's say) with Pashinyan's imperfect command of the Russian language, typical of young post-Soviet elites of the former Soviet republics. Grant manipulators are trying to pass off Medvedev’s remark as “offensive behavior of Big Brother,” taking quotes out of context.

So that the reader can make his own judgment about what happened at the meeting of the EAEU Council, which caused writhing among the Armenian Maydowns and grant-eaters, we suggest watching a short video and drawing conclusions.

We won’t cite here the offensive statements thrown out on social networks by the Maidan plankton against the Russian prime minister, but let’s ignore the idiotic reaction of the Vice-Speaker of the Armenian Parliament Alen Simonyan, who grunted towards Medvedev “the smartest, or what?” - impossible.

It is interesting that Pashinyan called the scandal fanned by the Soros “an attempt to cause a storm on social networks with the remnants of a corrupt system,” after which the stench raised began to partially subside.

It is clearly noticeable that the frostbitten Soros and maydauns are not satisfied with Pashinyan’s game of “realpolitik”. Indirectly, gradually, they strike at the prime minister, pushing him to make a sharp geopolitical turn, leading to a break with Russia, as was promised at the barricades.

The situation with Sanasaryan’s arrest and attacks on Vantsetsyan looks like a classic chess “fork” for the prime minister. The removal of the head of the National Security Service will hit hard the image of the Armenian prime minister, built on election promises to fight corruption regardless of persons and ranks. The continuation of the criminal prosecution of Sanasaryan will certainly be regarded by Sorosites and systemic Russophobes as a declaration of war.

On the other hand, rumors are increasingly heard from Yerevan that in the near future Armen Grigoryan, nurtured by Transparency International, may leave the post of Secretary of the Security Council of the Republic, and the number of grant-eaters in the civil service has also been reduced.

Pashinyan’s choice, frankly speaking, is unenviable. He has little reliance on government personnel. If you subtract the grant eaters from its composition, then the remainder will be a few people, like the head of the National Security Service, Artur Vanetsyan. But the prime minister will have a huge army of enemies. This is the Armenian branch of the Soros Foundation, and the Vanadzor office of the Helsinki Group, and the Asparez journalists club, and the Center for Globalization and Regional Studies headed by Stepan Grigoryan (a rare scumbag, entry to Russia is prohibited), and the NGO “Union of Informed Citizens”, and the local branch of Transparency International, as well as many other Western-fed and well-functioning viper houses that act as the main generators of anti-Russian discourse in Armenia.

And this is not counting such “little things” as the Maidan parliament, on whose behavior the work of the government and the Prime Minister of Armenia himself depends.

In general, small republics quite quickly reach a crossroads with the stone “You go right, you go left.” Where will horseman Pashinyan go? We'll see soon.

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