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Armenia Needs Real, Not Symbolic, Help

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  • Armenia Needs Real, Not Symbolic, Help

    ARMENIA NEEDS REAL, NOT SYMBOLIC, HELP
    By Jason Epstein

    San Gabriel Valley Tribune, CA
    http://www.sgvtribune.com/opinions/ci_9045163
    P asadena Star-News, CA
    April 25 2008

    ARMENIA is a troubled nation.

    Despite years of generous American financial assistance, Armenia's
    economy remains in a shambles. Corruption is endemic - the public
    believes that most wealth created in recent years has only benefited
    the oligarchs - unemployment is high, and the prices of basic
    necessities continue to rise. It is no wonder that the country's
    population keeps declining - the most recent Central Intelligence
    Agency estimate was just under three million.

    While Armenia has never been a model republic, the Feb. 19 presidential
    election and aftermath were particularly disturbing moments. Principal
    opposition parties questioned the legitimacy of both the process and
    results, which gave the ruling Republican Party of Armenia's candidate,
    Serge Sarkisian, a majority of the votes cast. Subsequent acts included
    the beating and killing of protestors, arrests of opposition leaders,
    a three-week-long state of emergency which included blocking access
    to the Interet and closing of opposition newspapers - and a continuing
    ban on opposition rallies in the capital of Yerevan. These repressive
    measures earned a rebuke from Human Rights Watch, as well as the
    White House and the European Union presidency. Former president and
    opposition candidate Levon Ter-Petrossian described the vote and
    subsequent mayhem as "the rape of our democracy."

    Regrettably, the reaction to the ongoing political crisis in Armenia
    from its Diaspora has been tepid, at best. The

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    Armenian Assembly of America released a few unremarkable statements,
    including one expressing the need for the violence to end and rule
    of law to be followed - but not assigning any blame. The typically
    more outspoken Armenian National Committee of America posted even
    less - a single neutral statement about the crisis could be located
    deep in the bowels of its Web site. (On the other hand, references to
    genocide and need to further increase American foreign aid to Armenia
    were tattooed all over the group's homepage.) There were a few days
    of scattered protests at the Armenian Consulate in Beverly Hills but
    little else was organized.

    In contrast, powerful organizational resources remain mostly focused
    on emotional issues that have no impact on the lives of ordinary men,
    women, and children in Armenia.

    Armenian-American groups spend an inordinate amount of time and
    resources pushing supporters in Congress to pass a resolution calling
    on the White House to recognize the Ottoman attacks on Armenians
    during World War I as "genocide," a charge vehemently challenged by
    most Turks and Turkish-Americans. This effort has been pushed for
    years while not even recognizing the close strategic relationship of
    the United States and Turkey. This latest, however, was particularly
    damaging to the United States at a time when the Pentagon relies
    heavily on Turkish support for ongoing operations in Afghanistan and
    Iraq. (Little wonder then that Roll Call political analyst Stuart
    Rothenberg called the now-dormant resolution one of his five nominees
    for "The Worst Political Idea of 2007.")

    In the weeks following the bloodshed in the streets of Yeravan,
    the Assembly and ANCA repeatedly attempted to varyingly justify or
    explain away the Armenian military's attack on the armed forces of
    Azerbaijan on the border of the internationally recognized occupied
    Azerbaijani territory of Karabakh. Such an action typically befits
    a regime trying to deflect attention from its domestic troubles.

    The organizations also banded with sympathetic senators to torpedo
    the nomination of Dick Hoagland to be ambassador to Armenia, all
    because the career diplomat did not cave in and deviate from White
    House policy by proclaiming the tragic events in the Ottman Empire
    as "genocide." President Bush recently nominated Marie Yanukovitch,
    another longtime foreign service officer, for the position. When she
    refuses to deviate from U.S. policy, will her candidacy be derailed
    too? And how exactly do Assembly and ANCA arrive at the conclusion
    that not having an American ambassador in Yerevan since 2006 helps
    the Armenian people?

    The time for these passionate supporters of Armenia in Los Angeles
    and elsewhere to grow up and play a leadership role on behalf
    of their ancestral homeland is long overdue. They must pressure
    President Sarkisian, and others who are brought into the new
    government, to expeditiously enact meaningful economic reforms,
    promote democratization, undertake tangible steps to resolve the
    Karabakh dispute, and find common ground with Turkey on the tragic
    events from nearly a century ago.

    Jason Epstein is the President of Washington, DC-based Southfive
    Strategies, LLC. He was an advisor to the Turkish Embassy from 2002
    to 2007. (First published on pajamasmedia.com)

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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