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Polls show pro-western shift in Armenian public opinion

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  • Polls show pro-western shift in Armenian public opinion

    Eurasianet, NY
    Jan 11 2005

    POLLS SHOW PRO-WESTERN SHIFT IN ARMENIAN PUBLIC OPINION
    Emil Danielyan 1/11/05

    Armenians, traditionally oriented toward Russia, are increasingly
    losing faith in the benefits of a special relationship with Moscow
    and are becoming more pro-Western in their outlook, according to
    recent opinion polls.

    Analysts in Yerevan say the pro-American shift in public perceptions
    over the past year is connected with a host of factors, not the least
    of them being the resounding success of Western-backed popular
    revolts in Georgia and Ukraine. [For additional information see the
    Eurasia Insight archive]. Popular views have also been greatly
    affected by the discourse of large sections of the country's
    post-Soviet intellectual and political elites that regard the United
    States and the European Union as the ultimate guarantors of their
    country's independence and prosperity.

    The change is particularly visible among Armenia's opposition
    political activists, who are buoyed by the success of opposition
    movements in Georgia and Ukraine, while continuing to seethe over
    Russia's ongoing support for President Robert Kocharian's
    administration. Some of them are now openly calling for an end to
    Armenia's military alliance with Russia and its accession to NATO and
    the EU.

    "In the past, no political forces would openly call for Armenia's
    membership in NATO, safe in the knowledge that they would not only
    fail to get public support but also face harsh criticism. The
    situation is markedly different now," says Stepan Safarian, an
    analyst at the Armenian Center for National and International Studies
    (ACNIS), a private think-tank.

    "It is the opposition that enjoys the greatest popular support in
    Armenia. So naturally, its mood is being passed on to the general
    public," he adds.

    This assertion seems to have been born out by a nationwide opinion
    poll conducted by the ACNIS in December. Nearly two thirds of 2,000
    respondents said they want their country to eventually join the EU
    and only 12 percent were against. A similar survey conducted by the
    Vox Populi polling organization in October found that 72 percent of
    Yerevan residents preferred the expanding union to the
    Russian-dominated Commonwealth of Independent States.

    Support for Armenia's entry into the EU was practically unanimous
    among 100 political and public policy experts separately questioned
    by ACNIS. They were also overwhelmingly in favor of NATO membership.

    The figures are remarkable for a small Christian nation that has for
    centuries viewed Russia as its main protector against hostile Muslim
    neighbors, notably Turkey and Azerbaijan. This sense of insecurity
    has been key to Armenia's heavy reliance on Moscow for defense and
    security since the Soviet collapse. The conflict with Azerbaijan over
    Nagorno-Karabakh only reinforced it. [For additional information see
    the Eurasia Insight archive].

    "I think that over the past two or three years our society has become
    much more realistic and is beginning to understand the external
    challenges facing our state," said Suren Sureniants, a senior member
    of Armenia's most radical opposition party, Hanrapetutiun (Republic).


    Hanrapetutiun is currently in talks with two other opposition groups
    over the formation of a new alliance that would not only strive to
    force Kocharian from power, but also offer Armenians a pro-Western
    alternative to policies pursued by incumbent authorities. Failure to
    come up with such "ideological alternative," in Sureniants's words,
    was the main reason for the opposition's inability to topple
    Kocharian with a campaign of street protests last spring. [For
    background see the Eurasia Insight archive].

    Unlike its counterparts in Georgia and Ukraine, the Armenian
    opposition found little support from Western governments, which
    appeared to be wary of the Armenian opposition's vague agenda and
    past Russian connections. The oppositionists appear to have studied
    the lessons of the "Orange Revolution" in Kyiv, and are now changing
    tack. One of the most popular of them, Artashes Geghamian, was
    calling for Armenia's accession the Russia-Belarus economic union as
    recently as two years ago. Geghamian now is an opponent of the idea.
    His National Unity Party voted for the dispatch of Armenian
    non-combat troops to Iraq during parliamentary debates in late
    December.

    The opposition leaders' "vehement desire to demonstrate their
    pro-Western stance" was denounced by a leading pro-Kocharian daily,
    Hayots Ashkhar. The paper voiced confidence that the pending Armenian
    troop deployment in Iraq should boost Kocharian's pro-American
    credentials in Washington.

    US President George W. Bush recently signed a proclamation
    authorizing the immediate implementation of "normal trade relations"
    with Armenia. The presidential action is the reflection of a steady
    improvement in US-Armenian ties in recent months. The proclamation,
    signed January 7, said that normal trade ties were made possible by
    the fact that Armenia had "made considerable progress in enacting
    market reforms" and had "demonstrated a strong desire to build a
    friendly and cooperative relationship with the United States."

    Other Kocharian loyalists are less sanguine. Vahan Hovannisian, a
    leader of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation, a traditionally
    pro-Russian party represented in government, warned of a potential
    "dangerous" export of Western-backed revolutions to Armenia. "I don't
    think that Armenian voters are today prepared to trust extreme
    anti-Russian forces," Hovannisian said at a recent news conference.
    "Having said that, it is evident that anti-Russian sentiment in
    Armenian society is growing and there are objective reasons for
    that."

    According to Safarian, the analyst, Russia's hasty endorsement of a
    rigged presidential ballot in Ukraine and its ensuing humiliation is
    one of those reasons. "There is a growing number of events testifying
    to Russia's weakness, and the Armenian public does not fail to notice
    them," he says.

    Safarian believes that Moscow's unequivocal acceptance of Kocharian's
    disputed reelection nearly two years ago, its hard bargain on
    Armenia's debts and the closure last fall of Russia's borders with
    Georgia also alienated many Armenians. [For background see the
    Eurasia Insight archive]. Indeed, the two-month transport blockade,
    ostensibly aimed at preventing cross-border attacks by Chechen
    militants, hit landlocked Armenia hard by cutting off one of its main
    supply lines. [For additional information see the Eurasia Insight
    archive]. The Russians faced an unprecedented barrage of criticism
    from Armenian politicians and media at the time.

    "The Russian factor is now one of the key challenges that threaten
    the sovereignty, security and democratization of our country,"
    Sureniants charged. He claimed that a key element in the Kremlin's
    strategy of maintaining Russian foothold in the South Caucasus and
    elsewhere in the former Soviet Union is to prop up illegitimate
    regimes and thwart the resolution of ethnic disputes.

    The changing popular mood means that such views are not considered
    extreme and marginal in Armenia anymore.


    Editor's Note: Emil Danielyan is a Yerevan-based journalist and
    political analyst.
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