Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Armenian-Russian relations face uncertain times

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Armenian-Russian relations face uncertain times

    EurasiaNet
    Feb 24 2005

    ARMENIAN-RUSSIAN RELATIONS FACE UNCERTAIN TIMES
    Samvel Martirosyan 2/24/05


    Despite Moscow's strong interest in Armenia's energy sector,
    officials in Yerevan worry that the Kremlin is considering a policy
    realignment that would enhance Azerbaijan's stature at the expense of
    the Russian-Armenian special strategic relationship.

    The main source of Yerevan's concern is a planned railway project
    that would connect Iran to Russia via Azerbaijan. Armenian officials
    fear that the railway, if built according to current plans, would
    deepen Armenia's regional economic isolation. The proposed Kazvin
    (Iran) - Astara (Azerbaijan) line would skirt Armenian territory,
    denying Armenia an opportunity to expand trade with Russia. Given the
    existing economic blockade maintained by Turkey and Azerbaijan,
    Armenia can ill afford to be left on the sidelines of such a project,
    officials in Yerevan say. [For background see the Eurasia Insight
    archive].

    Since the 1991 Soviet collapse, Armenia has maintained a close
    strategic relationship with Russia, in part to offset the
    geopolitical disadvantage of having hostile neighbors on its eastern
    and western flanks. In recent years, the special relationship has
    shown signs of fraying. Russia-Azerbaijani relations have thawed,
    while Yerevan has expanded contacts with both Iran and the United
    States. [For additional information see the Eurasia Insight archive].


    Armenian officials took note of Russian Foreign Minister Sergei
    Lavrov's February 2 trip to Azerbaijan. Lavrov's comment in Baku that
    "there are no unresolved problems" between the Russian and
    Azerbaijani governments heightened concerned in Yerevan about
    Moscow's potentially shifting loyalties in the South Caucasus.

    Lavrov's February 16-17 visit to Armenia did little to assuage
    Yerevan's concerns. During talks with Lavrov, Armenian Prime Minister
    Andranik Markarian voiced concern about the railway project,
    according to official sources. In response, Lavrov merely indicated
    he would relay the Armenian government's views to Russian Transport
    Minister Igor Levitin and Russian Railways President Gennady Fadeyev.


    Markarian and Lavrov also reportedly discussed the possibility of
    reopening the Abkhaz section of Georgia's railway system, a link that
    would reestablish Armenia's railway ties with Russia. Officials
    provided no details on the substance of those discussions.

    Problems between Yerevan and Moscow are not limited to rail-related
    topics. For the past two years, five Armenian companies, handed over
    to Russia as compensation for $100 million in unpaid Armenian debt to
    Moscow, have stood idle. In his meeting with Markarian, Lavrov
    assured the prime minister that Russia is doing everything possible
    to reopen the companies, but neither Moscow nor Yerevan has announced
    a concrete plan for getting the firms up and running again. Golos
    Armenii (Voice of Armenia), a Yerevan-based Russian-language
    newspaper, has described the fate of these companies as the most
    sensitive issue in relations between Russia and Armenia.

    Armenian media outlets also looked askance at Lavrov's actions on his
    recent visit to Azerbaijan, when the foreign minister visited Baku's
    Martyr's Avenue, a memorial to the 130 people killed during the
    Soviet Army's 1990 crackdown on anti-Armenian pogroms in the
    Azerbaijani capital. Meanwhile, as Armenia commemorates 2005 as a
    Year of Russia, Russia has declared 2005 a Year of Azerbaijan.

    Moscow's recent behavior has left some Armenian political leaders
    feeling confused. "Honestly speaking, Armenia sometimes does not
    understand some of Russia's steps, especially those concerning
    relations with Azerbaijan and Turkey," Giro Manoyan, international
    secretary of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation, a member of
    Armenia's ruling coalition, said in a recent interview with the
    Caucasus Journalists Network.

    Amid the uncertainty surrounding the Armenian-Russian special
    relationship, Armenia's energy sector is one strategic area in which
    Russia, sensitive to growing Western influence in the South Caucasus,
    maintains a strong interest. Accordingly, Lavrov probed economic
    cooperation possibilities with Markarian.

    The Russian energy company United Energy Systems (UES) is reportedly
    considering the purchase of Armenia's electricity distribution
    network, according to the Armenian news agency ARKA. UES already
    holds three power stations in Armenia - Sevan-Hrazdan hydropower
    plant, the Hrazdan thermal power station and the Armenian Nuclear
    Electric Plant - facilities that generate some 75-80 percent of the
    country's electricity. With the purchase of UK holding company
    Midland Resources' 80 percent stake in the distribution network, UES
    would hold control over almost the entire Armenian electrical power
    grid.

    Russian energy giant GazProm, has been similarly active. The
    Iranian-Armenian gas pipeline, scheduled to be operational before
    2007, could provide stiff competition for gas in European markets
    from GazProm's own Blue Stream gas pipeline project with Turkey,
    according to GazProm Deputy Chief Executive Officer Alexander
    Ryazanov. "If we do not take part in the construction of [the] Iran -
    Armenia gas pipeline, no one knows where that gas will go," the news
    site PanArmenian Network reported Ryazanov as saying at a recent
    session of the Federation Council, the Russian parliament's upper
    chamber.

    During his trip to Armenia, Lavrov confirmed Russia's interest in
    joining a pipeline construction consortium. "We received an offer,
    inviting our corresponding structures to take part in this project,"
    Lavrov said, repeating past assurances that the pipeline meets with
    Russia's approval. "This offer is presently under consideration and I
    am convinced we will be able to give an answer in the nearest
    future."


    Editor's Note: Samvel Martirosyan is a Yerevan-based journalist and
    political analyst.
Working...
X