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Viktor Yakubyan: US-Armenia: Kosovo Precedent VS Precedent Of Nagorn

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  • Viktor Yakubyan: US-Armenia: Kosovo Precedent VS Precedent Of Nagorn

    VIKTOR YAKUBYAN: US-ARMENIA: KOSOVO PRECEDENT VS PRECEDENT OF NAGORNO KARABAKH

    Regnum
    March 21 2008
    Russia

    REGNUM publishes article of Viktor Yakubyan on the current situation
    in Armenia and implications of the Kosovo precedent for the Nagorno
    Karabakh conflict settlement.

    "New president - new reality" Speaking of the outcomes of the
    presidential election of 2008 in Armenia and post-election turmoil,
    Yakubyan states that president-elect of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan whose
    inauguration is due March 9, will enter the office in the situation
    of rough internal and external pressures.

    "The subject performing internal pressure is a huge, in Armenian
    terms, strata of population that has lost any hope to solve its
    social problems."

    "The external pressure will be performed by a western group of
    players, led by the USA and personally chairman of the OSCE Minsk
    Group on the Nagorno Karabakh conflict settlement Matthew Bryza,
    who indulges himself in serenely and systematically commenting on
    internal political processes in Armenia."

    "Unlike Russia and France, who are US' partners in the business of
    conflict resolution around Nagorno Karabakh, the USA, with their
    inherent practicality, have combined in Bryza a role of mediator and
    bureaucrat responsible for relations with the region's countries
    in general, which allows him to influence the situation without
    restraint."

    "Russian co-chair Yuri Merzlyakov, for instance, has not yet once
    mentioned internal political processes in Armenia and Azerbaijan that
    would not relate to the Karabakh problem. This point is extremely
    important, it allows the USA to, essentially, blackmail the conflict
    parties, in case Washington is interested."

    "By the way, the latest statements of Mr Bryza worth a study, in
    order to realize that a self-respecting state has to long ago have
    said to this vagarious young man whatever it thinks about him, and
    demand that the USA send another mediator. Unfortunately, however,
    today's Armenia is not such a state, which, undoubtedly, cannot be
    regarded as an accomplishment of the ruling regime."

    Speaking of the current opposition leader, first president of Armenia
    Levon Ter-Petrosyan, Yakubyan notes that, in case Ter-Petrosyan
    continues following his tough line, he is going to join ranks of
    riots participants who are currently under arrest. This, however,
    is not a solution for the official Armenian authorities.

    "Ter-Petrosyan's arrest would not a bit alleviate problems of
    authorities personified by Robert Kocharyan and Serzh Sargsyan.

    Although the former did everything he could to maximally isolate
    his successor from being part of the rough action against opposition
    masses, Serzh Sargsyan is fully responsible for the events."

    "For already a decade, he has been perceived in a popular conscience
    as a closest assiciate of the acting president. What about the outer
    players, they will not go into details of all the intricacies of the
    Armenian elite, and will bluntly hold responsible exactly the figure
    that will enter the fairway of their interests."

    "External circumstances" "Even an unsophisticated observer interested
    in Armenia could notice that Georgian commentators were most active
    among those speaking of the Armenian events. The day after the tragic
    crackdown on a demonstration in Yerevan, a whole number of Georgian
    politicians and experts dashed to actively argue about the morality
    of the Armenian elite, appealing to it to refrain from ill-usage of
    their own people."

    "In no time, even special non-governmental organizations emerged that
    were commenting on the events 'in the friendly Armenia' in a real-time
    mode. As if it had not been in Tbilisi, shortly before the Armenian
    events, that authorities cracked down on a 100,000-people opposition
    rally, using clubs, sonic guns, rubber bullets, and other special
    means. We then forecast that the Georgian events would influence
    situation in Armenia."

    "In both cases, the situation developed by a similar scenario:
    tiring several-thousand-strong opposition rallies, transforming into
    a direct confrontation with the authorities, and, as a result - the
    use of force, a tough crackdown on demonstrators, and declaration of
    the state of emergency. With the only difference that there were,
    luckily, no victims in Tbilisi. How did the people in Yerevan get
    killed, is still a question."

    "Nevertheless, what happened after the suppression of the rallies -
    is unparalleled. Having at hand a bitter but successful Saakashvili's
    experience of coping with internal political crisis, Kocharyan chose
    not to follow it, having essentially decided to push his own plan to
    its logical end."

    "To remind, Saakashvili, after consultations in the US embassy,
    announced early presidential election, thereby cooling down the
    intensity of emotions and winning precious time to enhance his
    positions."

    "Armenian political elite, by contrast, contrary to the Georgian-US
    logic, is today not busy with pre-election business, but is rather
    tensely awaiting the end of emergency state, being subjected to all
    'the charms of information vacuum'."

    "Instead of positioning himself as a guarantor of protection of
    interests of all the population stratas, some kind of sweetening
    a pill and, at least, announcing an early parliamentary election,
    Kocharyan blamed a significant social strata of a lack of culture,
    as if nurturing this very culture by means of various civil
    institutions and public organizations had nothing to do with the
    acting authorities. <...>"

    "At the time when Armenia's authorities are persuading the country's
    people of their lack of refinement, symbolic events are unfolding
    on the international arena - events that are directly related to
    Armenia. Vice president of the International Crisis Group organization
    Alain Deletroz has recently published an article 'Independence of
    Kosovo: What is the Problem?' in which he quite coolly attempted
    to explain to a reader that all the alarming signals of the Russian
    analytical community about the perilousness of the Kosovo precedent
    are nothing else than groundless 'hysteria'."

    "In Deletroz's opinion, Kosovo's independence will lead to no negative
    consequences, neither in the Balkans, nor on the European continent in
    general, for the development was predetermined by criminal policy of
    Milosevic who oppressed the Albanian minority while he ruled. Moreover,
    the expert claims, the problem will be solved when Serbia and Kosovo
    join EU."

    "The only thing that is worrying Deletroz is the possibility of clumsy
    action on the part of Kosovars, who can accidentally set on fire some
    Christian Orthodox church that has to the moment escaped destruction."

    "The expert categorically advises them not to do it, since the
    consequences might influence historical fate of the second independent
    Albanian state and its European prospects. It is not clear, however,
    if Deletroz specially emphasizes that he sees no problem, why is he
    worrying so much?"

    "'So what are the problems?' To this question of Deletroz, we could
    pose a counter-question: 'And whose the problems are?' The Serbs'
    problems are quite obvious: they have a 'body' part 'amputated'
    - no doubt, a problem part, that was aching and troubled - and,
    nevertheless, an amputation was performed, and a rude and unceremonious
    at that."

    "Deletroz realizes that Serbia hurts, but he advises her to endure.

    The expert has nothing to advise to Serbs who continue to reside in
    the northern regions of the separated land, although they also suffer
    quite obvious problems and threats."

    "While Serbia is taking truly hurting pains to 'sew back' its former
    province, at least by railway 'threads', Serbs isolated from their
    motherland take more radical steps: they capture a regional court
    building, controlled by international inspectors, and become victims
    of timely Ukrainian peacekeepers."

    "So far not-so-critical but alarming trends are starting to reveal in
    Macedonia and Montenegro. Albanians have fully realized the potency
    of their supporting factor, and claim quite obvious pretensions."

    "Of course, one cannot but agree that all these problems can be
    solved as decisively by a controlling agency. Who could imagine
    that UN missionaries would be in rough manner demanding to disrupt
    (!) cargo and passenger railway connection between any subjects,
    in order to actually ascertain the split between them. Almost nobody
    is concerned at that, that a large regional hospital is being left
    without medical supplies."

    "What are the EU and UN problems? So far, they are only operational
    and image ones. So far, they are trying to 'inconspicuously' double
    each other. Another problem of the international organizations is
    how to distribute between themselves the functions of 'violators'
    of their own earlier adopted resolutions and proclaimed principles.'

    "The situation is an extremely unpleasant one, however, the solution
    has already been found: the EU mission will violate decisions of the
    UN Security Council, and UN mission will smoothly retreat, defying
    all possible European principles related to human rights protection.

    The parties will obviously abstain from criticizing each other."

    "Deletroz, too, will remain silent. By the logic of a professional
    conflict regulator, which he is, all these are the process'
    limitations. Whereas the general goal is to ultimately resolve a once
    bloody conflict that led to the impossibility of Albanian minority's
    further residing within a Serbian state, of which Serbs themselves
    are to blame."

    "And again, as the western experts explain to us, this a practically
    unique case that cannot be projected on other conflicts, ESPECIALLY
    (!) on the post-Soviet space - here, the principle of territorial
    integrity of states in inviolable, and the blood that was once spilled,
    obviously, is not so 'imprinted' in the peoples' memory and pride."

    "Today, a half of the world that has recognized independence of Kosovo
    and is living in an uncomfortable proximity to the 'Kosovo precedent'
    is craving that the subject be dropped. It is only possible by giving
    birth to a new precedent - a contrary and a balancing one."

    "We hereby return to Armenia that is, as we described above, is
    suffering under crossfire of US functionary Matthew Bryza, who alters
    statements on Armenia's internal policy and comments on prospects of
    the Nagorno Karabakh conflict resolution."

    "It is important to comprehend that if Serbs continue to compactly
    reside in the North Kosovo, there is no single Azerbaijani in Nagorno
    Karabakh, which is an argument in favor of the validity of more
    expedient establishment of Karabakh's sovereignty, compared to that
    of the separation of Kosovo from Serbia."

    "Nevertheless, this is what the US mediator diplomat broadcasts:
    'The complex of principal suggestions of the OSCE Minsk Group should
    lead to the return of territories to Azerbaijan, return of refugees,
    including also the corridor connecting Karabakh and Armenia, and
    presence of international peacekeepers.'"

    "As we can see, not a single word is said herein on the future status
    of Nagorno Karabakh. If one could suppose that the plan envisions
    participation of Ukrainian peacekeepers in the Nagorno Karabakh
    conflict zone (luckily, they have already passed a test for quite
    concrete fitness for Karabakh), we can only guess about the methods
    that would allow to populate Shushi, Stepanakert, Lachin, and other
    settlements with Azerbaijanis who will promptly start erecting there
    mosques and tea-houses."

    "The Azerbaijani side, too, did not make anyone wait. In an extremely
    shrewd and sudden fashion, it got through at the UN GA a resolution
    prepared several years ago on the situation in the conflict zone,
    containing maximally profitable for Azerbaijan theses. Remarkably,
    the document that had been several times turned down in the General
    Assembly, this time was adopted."

    "One can only smile at the optimistic utterings of Armenian
    bureaucrats, including foreign minister Vardan Oskanyan, about this
    resolution's having only a recommendation character, whereas the
    conflict is being decided by the OSCE MG, whose co-chairs have not
    supported the Azerbaijani initiative in the UN GA. For the OSCE MG
    co-chairs, essentially, broadcast the same theses that are proclaimed
    in the UN resolution: giving up territories, return of refugees,
    peacekeepers, and so on! Well, the phrasing is different, the language
    is diplomatic, but the decisions are the same."

    "Moreover, Oskanyan and other responsible Armenian politicians remain
    silent about the most important issue: why is the status of Nagorno
    Karabakh not addressed in the same package with the demand of surrender
    of occupied territories? For Serzh Sargsyan himself at a certain point
    said that Armenia was occupying the territories exactly in order to
    have an exchange object."

    "Hence, the question, for what the Armenian authorities are exchanging
    the territories, also becomes a central one. During all the negotiation
    process between Yerevan and Baku, the parties have been speaking of
    the necessity of mutual compromises. Meanwhile, it has been clear
    from the start that Azerbaijan and personally president Ilham Aliyev
    have nothing to surrender - he could only publicly abandon Karabakh
    and face an instant cruel punishment from his own circle."

    "This 'uncomfortable' situation was specially and very foresightedly
    created by Aliyev himself who would daily repeat that he would not
    surrender Karabakh, although his father, Geydar Aliyev, was very
    close to doing it, and in one of interviews was himself explaining
    to journalists that Karabakh was lost irrevocably."

    "This was not allowed by Armenian politicians who were cultivating
    in the society ideas of tolerance and necessity of concessions. The
    decision ripened naturally: you have spoken of concessions - concede."

    "Whole delegations from Azerbaijan would visit Yerevan without trouble,
    carrying back to Baku pleasant reminiscences of Armenian hospitality,
    but just in a day, outbursting in their press with torrents of lies
    and rage. "

    "By contrast, Armenians were not allowed to approach Baku even
    at a distance, and as for strayed wrestlers and chess players of
    Armenian nationality but not of Armenian citizenship who would not
    even suspect, to what extent emotions were heated, were just deported
    from the country."

    "Thus the Armenian authorities were systematically preparing public
    conscience of their country to the inevitability of surrendering their
    positions, in which they were wholeheartedly and most ardently aided by
    western specialists, the likes of Alain Deletroz. The latter has the
    equal pleasure in discoursing upon the greatness of political genius
    of Serzh Sargsyan, who is speaking of the possibility of Armenia's
    recognition of Kosovo's independence but excluding the chance that
    Yerevan might recognize Nagorno Karabakh."

    "All that the Armenian side has on the negotiation table today is
    the logical result of political pliability of Armenian negotiators
    who are caring mostly about the stability of their own situation,
    not of the principal position of their country."

    "Why does Armenia have to recognize Kosovo, if it openly defies the
    Kosovo precedent? What is it gaining? Based on this logic, nobody
    should be concerned with the very Yerevan's position on Kosovo,
    for it is nothing else than an act of support of Kosovo independence."

    "Wasn't it more correct to state that recognition of Kosovo by the
    USA gave Armenia a moral right to recognize Karabakh that is by no
    means worse, and even more valid than the Kosovo counterpart?"

    "It would be more correct, but also more dangerous. Armenian
    authorities today lack confidence in the firmness of their positions to
    present such an affront, and this is also an achievement of western
    partners."

    "Thus the USA is preparing a new precedent - the Karabakh one, that
    will allow them to coolly dismiss Russia's rhetorical assaults.

    Strategical partner of Russia, member of SCTO, Armenia has become handy
    at the most appropriate moment. It is not relying much on the help
    of Russia, since it itself at a certain point maximally distanced
    Nagorno Karabakh from Abkhazia, South Ossetia, and Transdnestr,
    hearings on which were recently held by the State Duma."

    "And what about Russia? It looks like they in Moscow have started
    to gradually retreat from lulling forecasts of some experts on the
    'Everything is quiet in Baghdad' theme. Nevertheless, time has been
    irrevocably lost, a one-sided line of conduct has been created,
    and all interests and guarantees put in one basket. Besides, Russian
    Bryza is missing..."

    "And what Mssrs. opposition leaders have achieved?"

    "Ex-president of Armenia Levon Ter-Petrosyan who directly stated that
    he had chosen a tactics of winning power through destruction of the
    republic's state institutes, could not expect a tender treatment of
    his person and his comrades-in-arms from the acting authorities. He
    chose the radical line of struggle and received a tough radical
    response. It is sad that Levon Ter-Petrosyan was realizing his
    strategy by means of wide popular masses, hence the authorities'
    strike hit their own people."

    "It is revealing that Ter-Petrosyan in his last speeches was appealing
    to the interference of the west; he also expressed surprise with their
    position. It makes sense to suppose that the surprise was absolutely
    sincere, for the ex-president relied a great deal on such support."

    "Besides, such support was, probably, promised. Today, when his
    actions led to a total forceful defeat of the opposition camp,
    to the imprisonment of his close associates and simply supporters,
    to the death of people and weakening of the international standing
    of his state, it would be appropriate to think, was the game worth
    the candle?"

    "For today, nobody of the western colleagues, to whom Ter-Petrosyan
    appeals, is not speaking of the necessity of rerunning election.

    Accounts of international observers became tougher after the crackdown,
    but the fact of the election's being accomplished is not questioned."

    "First foreign leader who congratulated Sargsyan was Nikolas Sarkozy,
    president of France, a country especially close to Ter-Petrosyan. The
    results of the second advent of this Armenian politician turned out to
    be lamentable. The opposition team, using a proven technology, managed
    in the shortest time possible to raise a powerful wave of pubic protest
    that broke against the wall of rigid and relentlessly tough power."

    "There should not be another wave, the public cannot allow anarchy
    in the streets of the Armenian capital. Nevertheless, Armenia's
    authorities will have to pray for forgiveness and build anew their
    international liberal reputation, which they will be allowed to do
    in the field of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict."

    "It is no coincidence that, while president-elect Serzh Sargsyan is
    assuring his country's population of his commitment to the ideals of
    democracy, Yerevan and Baku concurrently advertise his coming meeting
    with Ilham Aliyev at a NATO summit in Bucharest."

    "As for Ter-Petrosyan, 'the moor has done his duty;' the next entrance
    of this political heavyweight is possible under the pretext of either
    defending Karabakh, if the authorities ultimately sign a document
    on Armenia's one-sided concessions, or of defending democracy and
    fighting corruption in Armenia, if they do not do that."

    "And Russia will have to succumb to watching a new technology in which
    a pro-western opposition leader does not come to power, but the state
    authorities themselves start acting in a regime required by the west."
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