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Strategic Indifference With Consequences

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  • Strategic Indifference With Consequences

    STRATEGIC INDIFFERENCE WITH CONSEQUENCES
    by Aram Karapetian
    Translated by Elena Leonova

    Source: Nezavisimaya Gazeta, No. 171, August 16, 2006, EV
    Agency WPS
    What the Papers Say Part A (Russia)
    August 16, 2006 Wednesday

    Political processes in Armenia could distance it from Russia; The
    impression is that having gained all it wanted from Yerevan, Moscow
    has now lost all interest in Armenia. And if there's no interest,
    there's also no understanding of what is happening in Armenia. The
    situation can be summed up as follows: strategic indifference instead
    of strategic partnership.

    The way things are going, Armenian-Russian relations may soon be
    ruptured so severely as to make any prospect of strategic alliance
    impossible. The impression is that having gained all it wanted from
    Yerevan, Moscow has now lost all interest in Armenia. Indeed, Yerevan
    is firmly tied into the CIS Collective Security Treaty Organization;
    Russian companies have bought and are still buying everything Armenia
    has to offer - factories, profitable construction contracts... And
    if there's no interest, there's also no understanding of what is
    happening in Armenia. The situation can be summed up as follows:
    strategic indifference instead of strategic partnership.

    Full-fledged, fully-engaged relations have now been reduced to
    infrequent contacts at the level of ruling elites. No one in Moscow
    seems to care that in Armenia - as in many other CIS countries - the
    ruling elite is seriously corrupt, at the very least, if not actually
    criminalized. With the approval of its current authorities, Armenia
    is gradually turning into a clan-corruption state, divided between
    the Karabakh clan and the Yerevan clan, who share spheres of influence.

    How is Russia reacting to this? Not at all, mostly; it's keeping
    silent. That amounts to tacit support for Armenian President Robert
    Kocharian and his team. Russia is turning a blind eye to the fact
    that for the sake of retaining power, those people are gradually
    steering Armenia away from Russia. Very soon, the Americans may gain a
    footing in Armania - not American investment, but the Pentagon's radar
    stations. The Kocharian administration preferred not to publicize
    the details of a recent visit to Yerevan by US State Department
    representative Matthew Bryza, the new American co-chairman of the
    OSCE's Minsk Group. While promoting a new conflict regulation plan
    for Nagorno-Karabakh, Bryza was also testing the waters for the
    possibility of basing two American radars in Armenia. These may not
    be very significant from the military standpoint, but Washington
    considers it important to establish a presence in Armenia, as it has
    in Georgia - with all the consequences this implies.

    Apart from lackluster contacts with the Armenian ruling elite, Moscow
    seems to have no other effective levers of influence in Yerevan. And
    this is all because at some point in the past, somebody in Moscow
    declared a principle: we won't work with opposition groups in CIS
    countries, we'll only work with the incumbent governments - whatever
    they may be like. This principle led Russia to make mistakes in
    relations with Georgia, followed by further mistakes in relations with
    Ukraine. Mistakes in relations with Armenia seem to be just around the
    corner. The Americans, in contrast, show no reluctance to make contact
    with opposition groups - and profit from doing so, as their experience
    in Georgia shows. Russia's priorities seem to lie elsewhere: outward
    stability, and the predictability of existing regimes in CIS countries.

    In the case of Armenia, however, there is no predictability. Here's an
    obvious example: in July, President Kocharian did not go to Moscow for
    the CIS summit - he said he had a cold. It could happen to anyone, at
    all. But while the summit was under way, Kocharian was seen swimming
    in the cold waters of Lake Sevan. His demarche worked - but Moscow
    chose not to "escalate" the incident.

    Escalation will happen anyway. Armenia's calm is all on the surface.

    Only outside observers can believe that last spring's unrest over the
    referendum on constitutional amendments has died down, and President
    Kocharian and his team have everything under control. Elections
    are coming up in Armenia: a parliamentary election in 2007 and a
    presidential election in 2008. The political processes starting
    in Armenia this autumn will shatter the illusion that all is
    well. One important detail should be noted: Armenia now has hardly
    any pro-Russian opposition parties. And the opposition is determined
    to win.
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