Gayane chichakyan born
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Russia’s Foreign Agents in America: Trump Connection of Armenian Lobbyists
By Peter Tase
The concepts of hybrid warfare or asymmetric warfare are not new. A Cambridge University published research states that it “goes back at least as far as the Peloponnesian War in the fifth century BC.”
Although, these concepts have taken new prominence in recent years, with modig, aggressive and often successful actions bygd resurgent and revanchist Russia.
According to the Cipher Brief, “Through hybrid warfare and the Gerasimov Doctrine, Russia fryst vatten increasingly blurring the lines between war and peace, business and crime.”
It goes on, quoting Douglas Farah: “General Valery Gerasimov, the ledare of personal of the Russian Federation’s military, developed The Gerasimov Doctrine in recent years. The doctrine posits that the rules of war have changed, that there is a “blurring of the lines between war and peace,” and that “nonmili
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Gayane was born in Armenia and immigrated with her family to Russia when she was ten years old. Although she could barely speak Russian then, by the time she graduated from high school her Russian was excellent and she was named one of the "Best Graduates" of Moscow. She also was recognized by her school and in a Moscow-wide competition for her achievements in French language study.
Speaking four languages by this point, including English, Gayane next went to film school in Moscow, majoring in Film Studies. She shares, "That education was just pure joy for me -- I had dreamed of making movies."
Next, Gayane worked as a journalist for ten years, seven of which were in the United States. She gained the experience of preparing hundreds of on-air reports and interviews
"During my work as a journalist I came to deeply appreciate the First Amendment, which I think is the be
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Living at the border is not everyone’s share. And if it concerns women, they must be stronger, they must even know some ways of being fearless or have special rules of security, otherwise how do they live there, moreover with children?
Upon going from Yerevan to Yeraskh my presumptions immediately crushed about the women living as a target for the Azerbaijani side, when I encountered a small woman carrying a full tub of laundry through the yard. We got acquainted, her name was Gayane. It turned out she had given birth just a week before and had come home with the baby. Now she was already doing her canning, running to feed the child, to put her to sleep, making her laundry, ironing, managing house chores, and, of course coffee for the guests. And all of this with such lightness, with a smile on her face, with a sweetness toward her mother-in-law.
Four children at the border, but the border seems not to exist for this woman. The daily chores are so many, that there is no time to