Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Armenian Defense Minister joins ruling party

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

  • Armenian Defense Minister joins ruling party

    ARMENIAN DEFENSE MINISTER JOINS RULING PARTY

    EurasiaNet, NY
    July 24, 2006

    In a widely expected move, Armenia's Defense Minister Serge Sarkisian
    has taken a senior leadership position with the ruling Republican
    Party amidst an apparent push by the party to retain its political
    weight in upcoming parliamentary and presidential elections.

    Sarkisian, often depicted as a favorite to succeed President Robert
    Kocharian, was elected as board chairman of the Republican Party of
    Armenia (RPA) at a July 22 congress in Yerevan called to amend the
    party's policy platform and regulations. The post of chairman of
    the board was reinstated for the elections, and 28 new members were
    appointed to the party's 42-member board. Prime Minister Andranik
    Markarian was elected as the party's president.

    Sarkisian's decision to join the Republican Party has been scrutinized
    as an indicator of political strategies to come among Armenia's ruling
    elite in the run-up to the country's parliamentary elections in 2007
    and presidential elections in 2008. But party members have taken pains
    to emphasize that the inclusion of Defense Minister Sarkisian and Prime
    Minister Markarian only testifies to the government's political unity.

    "No one has a doubt that Serge Sarkisian would be able to create his
    own party, as many other politicians did or intended to," commented
    parliamentarian Hranush Hakobian, another Republican Party member, in
    an interview with Armnews TV. "But he preferred to join the existing
    party instead, thus showing his commitment to avoiding conflicts."

    Sarkisian told journalists at the congress that he has no rival in
    Armenia, and denied reports of an ongoing conflict with President
    Kocharian, adding that he has no plans to resign from his post as
    defense minister.

    In a 90-second speech to congress participants, Sarkisian, speaking
    as if already a party veteran, criticized those who had predicted a
    split in the RPA in the past and added that the party was determined
    to strengthen the spirit of national unity as Armenia takes on new
    challenges. At a briefing following the congress, Sarkisian told
    reporters that his election as chairman of the Republican Party board
    was not an extraordinary event. "I have cooperated with this party
    for a long time now," he said, mentioning that he had run in the 2003
    parliamentary elections on the RPA's candidate list, although not as
    a party member. "So we have just made a document correspond to the
    reality of the situation," he said.

    Parliamentary Speaker Tigran Torosian, vice-president of the RPA,
    earlier also advanced that view, describing Sarkisian's decision to
    join the party as "nothing strange."

    "Of course, Mr Sarksian is an influential person and the RPA is
    an influential political party, if not the most influential one,"
    Aravot newspaper quoted Torosian as saying on July 20. "His joining
    the RPA is natural."

    Outside observers have focused on Sarkisian's own ambitions for the
    presidential elections in 2008, but the defense minister and other
    senior party officials at the congress kept mum on that score. In
    a July 20 interview with Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, Sarkisian
    claimed that President Kocharian approved his decision to join the
    Republican Party, but stressed that he himself has not decided whether
    or not to run for president when Kocharian steps down in 2008. Prime
    Minister Markarian told reporters after the congress that a decision
    about an RPA presidential candidate will be taken only after next
    year's parliamentary elections.

    The May 2007 parliamentary elections, however, also did not feature
    on the congress' agenda, but party leaders did not deny that steps
    taken at the gathering were in preparation for next year's vote.
    Sarkisian stated that the RPA would work with other parties in the
    elections, adding that the ballot "will be the best elections in
    Armenia so far. It is because I want them to be."

    The congress demonstrated the Republican Party's growing political
    potential. The party now claims more than 30,000 members, twice its
    official number in 2004. In recent weeks, scores of new members have
    joined the ranks, not least due to rumors about Sarkisian's expected
    decision to register as a member. At least seven government ministers,
    many influential regional governors and community heads, as well as
    prominent businessmen took part in the party congress.

    Torosian told congress participants that the influx of new members
    emphasizes the growing importance of Armenian political parties and
    the tendency for consolidation to capitalize on those gains. Torosian
    argued that this is a consequence of the constitutional amendments
    adopted last November, which enhance the role of the parliament
    vis-a-vis the president.

    According to Suren Zolian, an independent political analyst, the RPA
    stands to take as many as half of the next parliament's 131 seats.
    (Serge Sarkisian himself has said that he would be glad if the
    party could win 21 percent of the vote.) However, another political
    scientist, Manvel Sarkisian of the Kavkaz Analytical Center, believes
    the situation is not that simple. Kocharian and his entourage will more
    likely support Bargavach Hayastan, or Prosperous Armenia, a new party
    that has been cast as part of the campaign for a "liberal, democratic
    Armenia" backed by the West, commented Sarkisian, who is no relation
    to the defense minister. While terming the congress an "unprecedented
    event in Armenian history" since the ruling party has no explicit
    support from the president or "a foreign country," Sarkisian predicted
    that conflicts with Prosperous Armenia are likely since the party has
    "recruited those who were not allowed to join Bargavach Hayastan."

    For now, though, the RPA is taking pains to emphasize its
    alignment with the Armenian and Western mainstream. Founded in
    1990 as a nationalist party, the group now describes itself as a
    "national-conservative party."

    "We are a classical conservative party, for which the basic values
    are: God, nation, motherland, traditional family, a stable system of
    moral values, a liberal economy," Prime Minister Andranik Markarian
    said in a speech addressing the congress.

    Editor's Note: Haroutiun Khachatrian is a Yerevan-based writer
    specializing in economic and political affairs.
Working...
X