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  • TOL: Speaker Blindsides President on NATO

    Transitions Online, Czech Republic
    May 9 2006

    Speaker Blindsides President on NATO

    by Emil Danielyan
    9 May 2006

    A potential presidential challenger may be signaling a shift in the
    geopolitical mood in Armenia. From EurasiaNet.

    The ambitious speaker of Armenia's parliament, Artur Baghdasarian,
    has stoked geopolitical controversy in Yerevan by calling for the
    country's eventual withdrawal from the Russian-dominated Collective
    Security Treaty Organization and, ultimately, its accession to NATO.

    The extraordinary statements, which run counter to one of the main
    tenets of Armenian foreign policy, prompted a stern rebuke from
    President Robert Kocharian and his close political allies.
    Baghdasarian responded by threatening to pull his Orinats Yerkir
    (Country of Law) party out of Kocharian's governing coalition.

    The row is widely linked to the parliamentary and presidential
    elections scheduled for 2007 and 2008. Some local observers believe
    Baghdasarian is courting Western support to bolster his reputed
    presidential ambitions. The controversy also provides additional
    evidence that the geopolitical mood in Armenia - a country
    traditionally oriented toward Russia - is slowly shifting.

    The controversy began on 19 April, when Baghdasarian's comments were
    published by one of Germany's most prominent daily newspapers, the
    Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung. `Armenia's future is the European
    Union and NATO," Baghdasarian said, adding that Russia "must not
    stand in our way to Europe." Kocharian distanced himself from these
    remarks, saying they do not reflect his administration's policy.
    "Armenia is not planning to join NATO," the Golos Armenii newspaper
    quoted him as saying in late April. He also reportedly demanded an
    `explanation' from Baghdasarian. The criticism was echoed by the
    leaders of the two other parties represented in Kocharian's cabinet.
    Baghdasarian's comments appear to have also raised eyebrows in
    Moscow. Senior Russian lawmakers reportedly raised the matter with
    Baghdasarian during a meeting of a Russian-Armenian commission on
    inter-parliamentary cooperation that took place in St. Petersburg in
    late April.

    However, the 37-year-old speaker struck a defiant note during a
    parliament session in Yerevan on 2 May, asserting that NATO
    membership was essential for Armenia's `European integration.' "I see
    Armenia's future in the European Union, rather than the
    Russia-Belarus union,' he said. Baghdasarian downplayed his
    differences with the Armenian government's position, but warned that
    if they are deemed `serious' by Kocharian, Orinats Yerkir will not
    hesitate to quit the governing coalition.

    The pro-presidential coalition - comprising Orinats Yerkir, the
    Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF), and Prime Minister Andranik
    Markarian's Republican Party of Armenia - has been beset by
    infighting ever since the signing nearly three years ago of a
    power-sharing agreement. The squabbles have, until now, centered
    solely on domestic issues. But the Yerevan daily Aravot on 3 May
    quoted ARF leader Vahan Hovannisian as suggesting that the latest row
    has exposed `disagreements of a strategic character' within the
    pro-Kocharian camp.

    Those disagreements may well deepen in advance of next year's
    Armenian parliamentary election. Baghdasarian effectively kicked off
    his party's election campaign in April when he publicly criticized
    the government's controversial privatization policies, scoring points
    with the disgruntled electorate. Such opposition-style tactics
    already helped Orinats Yerkir form the second largest faction in
    parliament on the basis of the results of the May 2003 election. The
    party, which now claims to be the largest in Armenia, was not
    implicated in reports of serious irregularities that marred that
    vote.

    The Orinats Yerkir leader, who is often criticized for employing
    populist tactics, is also seen as one of Kocharian's potential
    successors. The incumbent's second and final term in office expires
    in 2008. Observers say Western support would only increase
    Baghdasarian's chances of making a strong run in the next
    presidential ballot.

    Western policymakers and analysts seem to be showing growing interest
    in Baghdasarian, underscored by the decision by a major European
    newspaper to run an extensive interview with him. Baghdasarian's
    comparative youth and stated commitment to democratic reforms have
    already earned him comparisons to the revolutionary leaders of
    Georgia and Ukraine, Mikheil Saakashvili and Viktor Yushchenko.
    Baghdasarian helped foster such an image by traveling to Kyiv last
    December to deliver a passionate pro-democracy speech during the
    first-anniversary celebrations of Ukraine's Orange Revolution. His
    calls for Armenian membership in NATO may thus further boost his
    stock in the United States and Europe.

    Those calls also reflect an ongoing broader change in the
    foreign-policy orientation of Armenia's political elite, a process
    that seems to have accelerated amid Yerevan's recent gas dispute with
    Moscow, and its controversial settlement. The idea of joining NATO,
    unthinkable in the past, is increasingly embraced by the country's
    mainstream opposition groups. Some opposition leaders defended the
    speaker against the recent political attacks stemming from his NATO
    remarks.

    Even as Kocharian insists that Armenia's military alliance with
    Moscow remains the bedrock of Yerevan's national-security doctrine,
    Armenian authorities are enhancing security cooperation with NATO and
    the U.S. in particular. Armenia's participation in the U.S.-led
    alliance's Partnership for Peace program is currently being
    significantly upgraded in accordance with an `individual partnership
    action plan,' or IPAP, launched last December. The IPAP calls for
    sweeping political and military reforms in order to boost civilian
    control over the military, as well as to promote the armed forces'
    `interoperability' with the armies of NATO member states. The
    Armenian military is already involved in the NATO-led peacekeeping
    operation in Kosovo, and has a small contingent of non-combat troops
    in Iraq.

    As part of the IPAP, Yerevan also undertook to draft and publicize
    its `defense doctrine' as well as a broader `national security
    strategy.' An ad-hoc government commission headed by Defense Minister
    Serge Sarkisian is working on the two documents. `We are working hard
    together to help Armenia to realize its desire to have stronger
    relations with the Euro-Atlantic family,' U.S. Deputy Assistant
    Secretary of State for European and Eurasian Affairs Matthew Bryza
    said during a March visit to Yerevan. `We are pleased with the
    considerable progress made in this regard over the past year.'

    According to a senior NATO official who visited the Armenian capital
    recently, the IPAP is `not incompatible' with Armenia's membership in
    the Collective Security Treaty Organization, as it falls one step
    short of accession talks with the alliance. `It is up to Armenia to
    decide whether it wants to go further,' the official said.


    Emil Danielyan is a Yerevan-based journalist and political analyst.
    This is a partner post from EurasiaNet.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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