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MFA: Minister Oskanian participates in Brussels Forum 2008

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  • MFA: Minister Oskanian participates in Brussels Forum 2008

    Press and Information Department
    of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs
    of the Republic of Armenia
    Tel. + 37410 544041. ext. 202
    Fax. + 37410 565601
    e-mail: [email protected]
    web: www.armeniaforeignministry.am


    The German Marshall Fund Brussels Forum, held in Brussels in Spring every
    year, convened this year to discuss strategic issues of importance to
    Europe, the US and its partners around the world.

    The three-day conference included presentations by European Union Foreign
    and Security Policy Chief Javier Solana, Head of the World Bank Robert
    Zoellick, French Minister of Foreign Affairs Bernard Kouchner, US Homeland
    Security Secretary Michael Chertoff, Canadian Defense Minister Peter Mackay,
    as well as members of government from Afghanistan, Germany, France, Turkey,
    Canada, and other countries.

    In a round-table discussion, Minister Vartan Oskanian participated as a
    panelist to discuss "Does the Path to Europe Extend to the Caucasus?"

    Together with Georgian State Minister for Re-Integration, Minister Oskanian
    addressed issues having to do with Armenia's current domestic political
    dilemma, and its context. Portions of the Minister's contents can be found
    below.

    My response to the question would have been the same, even had we not had
    our post-election crisis of these last several weeks. In fact, the
    post-election situation simply reinforces my answer.

    On the one hand, you'd think this question has been asked and answered. We're
    here, right? We share history, values and civilization, we also share the
    goals of an integrated, interdependent, interrelated European political and
    economic community.

    On the other hand, since the Caucasus is still a place that clings to old
    frontier posts, old ways, old solutions, I guess it's fair to keep repeating
    the question, just so everyone asking and everyone answering are forced to
    look in the mirror.

    I've said this before - Europe used to have religious, geographic and
    cultural boundaries. Today, Europe by definition is political. Europe takes
    for granted that its national aspirations are fulfilled, that its
    institutions are functioning and responsive. The only time when Europe stops
    to ask whether their path goes there, is when there are questions about
    democracy and authoritarianism, rule of law, values and systems.

    Europe takes for granted that it voluntarily suspended some aspects of
    sovereign political and economic rights in order to build structures which
    would enhance and consolidate political and economic advantages, and
    diminish the damages of war and threat of war.

    We on the other hand, in our region, still live with the threat of war, with
    some damages of war, and with great vulnerabilities about giving up any
    aspects of our newly acquired rights, even within our own societies. In
    fact, doubts and fears are so great that the political and social
    institutions of our societies are still not working right.

    Georgia last fall, Armenia just last month - these are perfect examples of
    the absence of the institutions that work. Are they a departure from the
    path of democracy, from the path of Europe? No. They were a shock, a glitch,
    a blimp, an aberration in the process. And let me warn you. We will have
    more.

    In the post-soviet period, in post-soviet places, trusting in institutions -
    that would have been an aberration. The functioning of those institutions
    cannot be completely flushed out of certain old instincts and patterns. It
    takes time for that to happen by those who run the institutions and -
    because there's more of them - even more time by those who are affected by
    those institutions.

    In other words, as our post-electoral processes, as Georgia's pre-electoral
    processes, and as Azerbaijan's to come, I'm sure, demonstrated, society's
    lack of confidence in those institutions is so great that they believe
    change must come from the street.

    Is this the path to Europe?

    I still believe it is. The events surrounding our last elections are a
    perfect example. There was progress in those elections, everyone said so. No
    one expected ideal, they just expected better. We delivered better. But
    because the trust level is so low and because the stakes are so high, the
    needs are so dire, better wasn't good enough. They took to the streets
    thinking political change means endless political revolution.

    We know that's not the case. We've had our political and economic
    revolutions in our region. What we haven't had is social revolution.

    And for the next decade, on our path to Europe, we will come to Europe to
    ask you to work with us for that social revolution - to bring massive and
    meaningful change in two critical areas - the media, and the educational
    system.

    Just as Europe's path to Europe took more than a century, ours will take
    time too. But together, let's make sure it doesn't take a whole century.
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