Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Armenia-Georgia. A New Situation Opens New Perspectives

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

  • Armenia-Georgia. A New Situation Opens New Perspectives

    ARMENIA-GEORGIA. A NEW SITUATION OPENS NEW PERSPECTIVES
    by Vardan Grigoryan

    Hayots Ashkharh
    Oct 1 2008
    Armenia

    President Serzh Sargsyan's visit to Georgia, which started yesterday
    [30 September], has been one of the noteworthy and important events in
    the two countries and the whole South Caucasus region over the past
    weeks. It is known that Armenia's interstate relations faced in a
    difficult ordeal during the Russian-Georgian war. On the one hand,
    being Russia's strategic ally, and on the other hand, Georgia's
    immediate neighbour, in the long run, Armenia, by preserving
    neutrality, managed not to harm the interests of the either of the
    conflicting sides.

    After Russia recognized Abkhazia's and South Ossetia's independence,
    although Armenia joined, being a member of the Collective Security
    Treaty Organization, a common statement which condemned the Georgian
    government's actions, however, it refused to recognize the independence
    of the two new states, which separated from Georgia. Of course such
    balanced and reserved behaviour of the Armenian government raised
    questions among all sides of the confrontation, however these are
    fully justified from the point of view of Armenia's own national
    interests. A country, which is blockaded by Azerbaijan and Turkey
    and which has communications routes passing through Georgia and an
    Armenian community there, could not have acted another way.

    New shifts, which occurred in one-and-a-half months after the
    Russian-Georgian war, proved that Armenia's balanced and reserved
    policy is both the only winning way out of the force majeure situation
    and a necessary precondition for freeing its hands during the later
    developments. This is proved by the following three truths.

    The first one: The Turkey-Georgia-Azerbaijan transpiration and
    communication axis, which was being shaped in the South Caucasus under
    Western protection and with the active participation of Turkey, started
    to gradually but consistently weaken in the post-war period. This
    is evidenced by the suspension of Azerbaijani oil import via the
    Baku-Ceyhan oil pipeline, as well as the Turkish government's current
    hesitations over the viability of the Kars-Akhalkalaki-Tbilisi-Baku
    railway. The second one: Georgia, which has lost South Ossetia
    and Abkhazia, is twisting its fortune with the perspective to
    integrate into Western entities, while Armenia's two, so to say
    "hostile enemies" - Turkey and Azerbaijan - are attempting to start a
    strategic dialogue with Russia, the only full-fledged strategic partner
    of our country. The third one: As a result of these two concurrent
    geopolitical processes, Russia and Georgia, which have become "hostile
    enemies", and Russia, which is expressing its intention of becoming
    a "hostile friend" on the one hand, and Turkey and Azerbaijan, on
    the other hand, have shaped such a "chess board" around Armenia,
    that in order to play on it without mistakes, Armenia feels the
    necessity to strengthen its former cooperation and mutual trust with
    Georgia. Georgia is a defeated and weakened neighbour for Armenia on
    the one hand, on the other hand, it is a country that has the role
    of the USA's and Europe's "regional outpost".

    The mechanical move of the "acute angles" of the West-Russia
    confrontation, which emerged as a result of the Russian-Georgian
    hostilities, to the South Caucasus is not at all in Armenia's national
    interests. The value and importance of Turkey and, consequently,
    of Azerbaijan in the region is growing in the eyes of the West,
    and especially of Russia, as a result of any confrontation like
    this. At the same time, Armenia's opportunities to pursue a policy
    of complementarity are diminishing. Therefore, preserving a "window"
    to the West that opens via Georgia is a guarantee of ensuring the
    continuity of its policy; and under these circumstances, the value
    and the weight of our country is increasing significantly in the eyes
    of all the players in the region. Under these circumstances, neither
    Turkey nor Azerbaijan can view Armenia as a small member in their
    "hostile friendship" with Russia, and Russian political experts will
    stop saying that "anyway Armenia has nowhere to escape". This means
    that in the new situation Armenia and Georgia can find options to solve
    key issues in bilateral relations more quickly and rationally. Those
    concern both transport and communication issues and the state of
    ethnic Armenians in [the Armenian-populated] Javakheti Region of
    Georgia and other Georgian regions.

    It is no secret that Javakheti has turned out to be in an ambiguous
    situation after the Russian-Georgian war. On the one hand, Javakheti
    is devalued as a Turkish-Georgian-Azerbaijani communication joint,
    on the other hand, serious forces interested in the region are
    increasingly tempted to make this Armenian-populated region one of
    the "subjects" of the Georgian federalization programmes. The state
    of ethnic Armenians living in other regions of Georgia has noticeably
    changed as well, because as a result of the Russian-Georgian war this
    country has hosted Georgian and Svan refugees which fled its former
    autonomies. At the same time, the state of Armenians of Georgia,
    who used to work in Russia, has become very complicated, as they have
    found themselves "between the hammer and the anvil".

    There still remain the issues of return of Armenian churches, which
    were expropriated in Tbilisi and other cities of Georgia, supplying
    books and teachers to Armenian schools and many other culture and
    education-related issues. In the new regional realities a thorough
    discussion of all these issues and mutual readiness to find appropriate
    solutions can undoubtedly create a positive atmosphere for the further
    development of Armenian-Georgian dialogue and cooperation.
Working...
X