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ACNIS Faces Armenia's National Security Challenges

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  • ACNIS Faces Armenia's National Security Challenges

    PRESS RELEASE
    Armenian Center for National and International Studies
    75 Yerznkian Street
    Yerevan 375033, Armenia
    Tel: (+374 - 10) 52.87.80 or 27.48.18
    Fax: (+374 - 10) 52.48.46
    E-mail: [email protected] or [email protected]
    Website: www.acnis.am


    July 27, 2005


    ACNIS Faces Armenia's National Security Challenges

    Yerevan--The Armenian Center for National and International Studies (ACNIS)
    today convened a policy roundtable on ways to meet the contemporary
    challenges to Armenia's national security under the light of new
    geopolitical realities. The meeting brought together those formerly and
    currently in charge of the sector, experts, social and political observers,
    and media representatives.

    ACNIS's director of administration Karapet Kalenchian greeted the audience
    with opening remarks. "Since they are considered as one inseparable entity,
    and are dependent on one another, we therefore have joined the factors for
    domestic and external security. If domestic security factors become
    unstable, then external security weakens twice as much, and incomparably
    greater efforts would be required in order to balance those threats out,"
    Kalenchian noted.

    A policy intervention by Ashot Manucharian, political secretary of the Union
    of Socialist Forces and Intellectuals, encompassed the probable consequences
    of domestic and external challenges which pose a threat to Armenia's
    national security. According to him, this topic is very urgent, because "our
    country is again in the wake of serious changes," and the key pressing issue
    is to withstand the threats that today exist in the domains of economy,
    security, external policy, and state-building. The value system which in the
    last 15-16 years has been presented to society in a disfigured manner has
    added particular acuteness to those challenges. "If in 1988 the
    characteristic values of our people were prudence, patriotism, creative
    pathos, and a sense of unity, today the main parameters are wealth,
    mastering the mechanism of power, ostentation and bullying, all of which
    portend catastrophic results," Manucharian underlined.

    In his address, ACNIS analyst Alen Ghevondian touched upon the role and
    significance of the political derivative of Armenia's national security.
    "The importance of the political component of security lies in the fact that
    when democratic processes are implemented in Armenia, and the country faces
    the task of cultivating effective mechanisms for internal political
    management, then from the vantage point of ensuring state security the
    nature of those processes' political structural element takes on landmark
    significance," Ghevondian pointed out. He also put the jeopardies to
    political security into three distinct categories: dangers which threaten
    the political order and which could stem from a variety of public activity
    realms; dangers which flow from the political system toward the economy as
    well as social and spiritual-ethical processes; and finally, threats to the
    political order which originate from the very same political order.
    According to the specialist, in practical politics these categories
    frequently become combined.

    Within the framework of the modern challenges of regional security directed
    at Armenia, Yerevan State University lecturer Aram Harutiunian underscored
    the external threats, because in his view the adverse internal stimulants of
    security--emigration, corruption, perilous alienation of strategic
    institutions, political killings, and social explosion--are much more
    evident and renowned. Harutiunian expressed confidence that a change in the
    current security system is extremely dangerous for the country. "As long as
    the unlikely declarations being made from Baku in regard to its unconcealed
    revanchism have not yet ceased, a major change in the developmental
    directions of armaments, army-building, appropriated military technology,
    and all related systems would result at this time in indices of
    vulnerability which would bear destructive consequences for us," Harutiunian
    said, also attaching importance to consolidating Armenia's place and role
    within the Collective Security Treaty Organization.

    The formal interventions were followed by contributions by Edward Antinian
    of the National Progressive Party; Ruzan Khachatrian of the People's Party;
    Karlen Alexanian of the Democratic Fatherland Party; ACNIS analysts Alvard
    Barkhudarian and Hovsep Khurshudian; former minister of state Vahan
    Shirkhanian; Slavonic University professor Rozalina Gabrielian; National
    Assembly staff member Mara Sahakian; National Press Club chairperson Narine
    Mkrtchian; and several others.

    Founded in 1994 by Armenia's first Minister of Foreign Affairs Raffi K.
    Hovannisian and supported by a global network of contributors, ACNIS serves
    as a link between innovative scholarship and the public policy challenges
    facing Armenia and the Armenian people in the post-Soviet world. It also
    aspires to be a catalyst for creative, strategic thinking and a wider
    understanding of the new global environment. In 2005, the Center focuses
    primarily on civic education, conflict resolution, and applied research on
    critical domestic and foreign policy issues for the state and the nation.

    For further information on the Center call (37410) 52-87-80 or 27-48-18; fax
    (37410) 52-48-46; e-mail [email protected] or [email protected]; or visit
    www.acnis.am
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