Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Neutrality, Russian-Style

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

  • Neutrality, Russian-Style

    NEUTRALITY, RUSSIAN-STYLE
    by Vadim Dubnov

    Gazeta
    March 7 2008
    Russia

    The wall of silence that Russian television has erected around events
    in Yerevan may once again have evoked memories of Soviet agitprop,
    thanks to which our people remained the only ones on the planet
    to learn about events of headlinesignificance from hostile radio
    broadcasts.

    Yerevan has been the scene of constant demonstrations, of
    demonstrations dispersed, and of street disorder on aParisian scale -
    in effect, of the kind of attempted revolution that was always the
    top news story when it related toGeorgia or even Kyrgyzstan - and
    yet suddenly this boycott.

    The explanation is known, of course, and is at first sight
    unexpected. A few days before the Armenian election Levon Ter-Petrosyan
    paid a secret visit to Moscow. Malicious tongues in Yerevan insist
    that the only people who would granthim an audience were the staff in
    the airport restaurant where he whiled away the time as he waited for
    the flight back.At the same time there are major signs to suggest much
    greater interest on Moscow's part in meeting withTer-Petrosyan. In any
    event, a bearded television commentator renowned for his impassioned
    manner [possibly MikhailLeontyev] was surprisingly indulgent towards
    him and even recorded an interview with him for showing in prime time
    onChannel One, and he, as we know, does not waste his breath.

    Ter-Petrosyan himself, meanwhile, cited an agreement not to reveal
    details and made only one thing clear: that,whatever happens in
    Yerevan, Moscow will remain neutral.

    Some tightening up is evidently being done in the old Kremlin "us and
    them" system, if only to insure it tosome degree against reactions
    in the "Yanukovych congratulations" genre. The actual criteria for
    separating usfrom them are changing, especially in the light of recent
    measures in Ukraine and Georgia.

    Both as premier and in opposition Yanukovych has left the Kremlin
    with no illusions as to whether a particularpolitical figure can
    be employed as its agent. So now the Kremlin is checking off its
    sympathies in agonized fashionalong the Yushchenko-Tymoshenko axis.

    The elections in Georgia showed that the alternative was scarcely any
    better than Saakashvili and so, from being an enemy, Georgian President
    Saakashvili is gradually shifting into the much moretolerated category
    of the ordinary.

    Armenia, on the other hand, has a special look about it. On the one
    hand it is a strategic partner, our last ally in the Caucasus, and the
    subject of other bravura mythology about eternal brotherhood. On the
    other, it is quite obviouswhat skill Yerevan applies in using these
    slogans to keep a proper distance from Moscow, and that logic will
    not change,whoever is president.

    Strictly speaking, Armenia can already be seen as more independent
    of Russia than even its Caucasus neighbours -Azerbaijan and Georgia.

    What is more, fears over the possibility that the Karabakh conflict
    will be resolved, theborders will open up, and Armenia will
    finally disappear over the western horizon are also to some degree
    mythologized. The conflict is not going to be resolved, and Armenia's
    ties with Turkey are already just as close as economically essential.

    The Armenian foreign policy dynamic is stable and predictable, and
    its domestic political situation is of no interestto anyone - and
    Moscow is uniquely at one with the West in understanding that. Just
    as the West is in no way inclined tosupport Ter-Petrosyan with the
    recklessness applied to Georgia, so Moscow is restricting itself to
    congratulatingSargsyan in the most formal manner.

    But that is the theory. The practical implementation has been
    customarily fanciful. Neutrality has boiled down in theend to the
    pretence that there was no opposition, no demonstration, and no
    dispersal of a demonstration. The Kremlin hasdevised only one method
    of not showing the Armenian opposition as the enemy - by not showing
    it at all.

    The congratulations to Serzh Sargsyan looked to be charged with the
    happy realization that the Yanukovych syndromehas been overcome,
    but that did not shelter the Russian embassy from opposition catcalls
    (that also had to be ignored,of course).

    Being neutral, it turns out, is a real art. Rather like the art of
    wearing a tuxedo. People who are accustomed tomilitary uniform find
    it very hard.
Working...
X