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U.S. Reluctant To Press Yerevan Despite Freedom Pledge

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  • U.S. Reluctant To Press Yerevan Despite Freedom Pledge

    U.S. RELUCTANT TO PRESS YEREVAN DESPITE FREEDOM PLEDGE

    By Emil Danielyan
    http://jamestown.org/edm/article.php?article_id=2369760

    Wednesday, May 18, 2005

    U.S. President George W. Bush's emphatic endorsement of Georgia's
    2003 "Rose Revolution" and its consequences was meant to demonstrate
    U.S. support for similar change elsewhere in the world. But it exposed
    a fundamental contradiction in his administration's stated pursuit
    of democratization across the South Caucasus and Central Asia.

    While holding up Georgia as a role model for other, less democratic
    ex-Soviet countries, the United States appears reluctant to go to
    great lengths in forcing their rulers to stop rigging elections and
    abusing human rights.

    Authorities in at least one of them, Armenia, have surely taken
    notice. Washington did not condemn them for unleashing unprecedented
    repression against their political opponents last year and are hardly
    facing U.S. pressure at the moment.

    John Hughes, editor of Armenianow.com, a Yerevan-based online
    publication, had reason to wonder: "In the U.S. President's roll call
    of heroes â... was there any thought that as near to Tbilisi as DC is
    to Delaware Armenian citizens were still recovering from senseless
    bludgeoning, when last year they tried to hop the democracy train
    encouraged by the smell of Georgia's roses but crushed by Armenia's
    smelly reality?"

    Bush's pronouncements during his visit to Georgia were rather ambiguous
    in that regard. "As you watch free people gathering in squares like
    this across the world, waving their nations' flags and demanding
    their God-given rights, you can take pride in this fact: They have
    been inspired by your example and they take hope in your success," he
    told tens of thousands of people in Tbilisi's Freedom Square on May 10.

    Indeed, thousands of disgruntled Armenians were inspired by the
    Georgian revolt when they took to the streets of Yerevan in April
    2004 to demand President Robert Kocharian's resignation. The most
    important of the opposition demonstrations at the time took place
    just meters away from the U.S. embassy in the Armenian capital and
    was brutally broken up by security forces on the night of April 12-13.

    The wholesale beatings and arrests of peaceful demonstrators were
    followed by the ransacking of the offices of Armenia's main opposition
    parties. They were part of the regime's broader crackdown on dissent
    that involved mass imprisonments of opposition activists across the
    country, a transport blockade of Yerevan and worst ever violence
    against journalists. Human Rights Watch condemned and provided a
    detailed account of the "cycle of repression."

    The U.S. State Department, however, stopped short of explicitly
    criticizing Kocharian's handling of the protests, calling instead for
    a "dialogue" between the two sides. As if to drive home Washington's
    point, the then-U.S. ambassador to Armenia, John Ordway, dined with
    Kocharian at a jazz club in Yerevan a few days later. It was the very
    nightspot where Kocharian's bodyguards beat to death in September 2001
    a man who greeted the Armenian leader in a way they found too familiar.

    Despite the glaring lack of U.S. support for their efforts to replicate
    the Rose Revolution, leaders of Armenia's increasingly pro-Western
    opposition have continued to pin their hopes on Washington. Especially
    after the Bush administration threw its weight behind last November's
    "Orange Revolution" in Ukraine.

    But as a senior U.S. administration official indicated in a conference
    call with Armenian and Azerbaijani journalists ahead of Bush's trip
    to Tbilisi, Washington does not consider regime change imperative for
    Armenia's or Azerbaijan's democratization. The United States will
    instead work with "reformers in and outside the two governments,"
    the official said.

    Observers were quick to note that virtually no Armenian oppositionist
    was invited to the official opening on May 6 of a new U.S. embassy
    building in Yerevan. Kocharian and most members of his government
    attended the ceremony. The current U.S. ambassador to Armenia, John
    Evans, subsequently denied snubbing the opposition, citing a lack of
    space for guests in the vast embassy compound.

    Evans has repeatedly said in recent months that Armenia is "headed in
    the right direction" both politically and economically. "Sometimes
    progress is not as swift as we'd like, but the basic direction is
    right," he told a group of Armenian-Americans last February.

    Evans did not specify what he means by "progress." The two disputed
    presidential elections held by Kocharian in 1998 and 2003 were
    criticized by the U.S in equally strong terms. The 2003 vote was the
    most violent in Armenia's post-Soviet history. Yerevan's human rights
    record, regularly slammed by the State Department, has also hardly
    improved under Kocharian.

    On the contrary, last year's crackdown on the Armenian opposition was
    the worst since the Soviet collapse. The Armenian law-enforcement
    agencies have since been exercising KGB-style functions of secret
    police monitoring and suppressing opposition activity. The situation
    with freedom of speech has likewise deteriorated since the scandalous
    closure three years ago of Armenia's sole television station critical
    of Kocharian.

    The ruling regime is thus inherently disinterested in genuine political
    reform as it would mean an almost certain loss of power and enormous
    wealth accumulated by its members. Whether the Americans fail to
    realize this, distrust Kocharian's foes, or have more overriding
    regional priorities such as a resolution of the long-running Karabakh
    conflict is not clear.

    Armenianow's Hughes suggested that the U.S. motives are not
    necessarily rational. "America loves a winner, especially if he
    speaks Ivy-League English,"the American editor explained, referring
    to Georgia's U.S.-educated President Mikheil Saakashvili. "Coming
    close (as in Armenia's failed opposition) doesn't count in war and
    democracy pimping."

    --Boundary_(ID_HjVt7jfI5Bqb+LepNGouSQ)--

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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