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Regional Developments And Armenian National Security

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  • Regional Developments And Armenian National Security

    REGIONAL DEVELOPMENTS AND ARMENIAN NATIONAL SECURITY
    Richard Giragosyan

    "Noravank" Foundation
    12 January 2009

    The region of the South Caucasus has long served as an arena for
    competing regional powers and, for much of the past two centuries,
    has been hostage to the competing interests of much larger regional
    powers, as neighboring Russia, Turkey and Iran which have jockeyed
    for power and influence. And those very historic powers -- Russia,
    Turkey and Iran - continue to exert influence today as the dominant
    actors in the region.

    This competition has not only continued in the wake of the collapse
    of the Soviet Union, but has only intensified with the onset of new
    opportunities for engagement and energy-based interests. For the
    three infant states of the region, Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia,
    the combination of a lack of political legitimacy, fragile economies
    and several unresolved or "frozen" conflicts, have prevented them
    from resisting the powerful sway of their larger neighboring regional
    powers.

    But most significantly, this combination of historical legacies
    and current realities has constituted a rapid shift in regional
    security. This shift in security incorporates not only several
    general elements, ranging from the challenges of energy security to
    the constraints from unresolved or "frozen" conflicts, but also more
    specific trends, including a recent resurgence in tension20between
    Russia and the West.

    Against the backdrop of a dynamic shift in security, the three
    states of the South Caucasus region each face a difficult course
    of economic and political reform, systemic transition and nation
    building. The region also continues to struggle in overcoming the
    legacy of constraints and challenges stemming from seven decades of
    the Soviet rule.

    In the light of this regional reality, each state has pursued a
    different course, with Armenia backed by its sizable diaspora,
    yet remaining firmly rooted in the Russian orbit, and Azerbaijan
    leveraging both its Caspian energy resources and its historic ties to
    Turkey. For Georgia, the legacy of instability from a destructive civil
    war in the 1990s and the loss of the separatist regions of Abkhazia
    and South Ossetia have prompted Georgia's strategic reorientation,
    based on exploiting its role as a key "transit state," offering its
    territory and Black Sea ports as crucial links in the regional energy
    chain, providing Azerbaijan with a strategic link to both the Black
    Sea and to Turkey, and as a frontline Western ally.

    But it is the more recent intersection of interests among greater
    powers that tends to place this region, more than many others, in
    danger of devolving into an arena for confrontation. This was further
    evident in the August 2008 conflict between Georgia and Russia that
    triggered a new period of confrontation well beyon d the confines of
    the South Caucasus.

    Conflict in Georgia Although initially centered on a conflict in
    Georgia's breakaway region of South Ossetia, the Georgian crisis
    expanded rapidly, sparking fresh tension between Moscow and Washington
    and seriously derailing Georgia's long-held aspirations to join the
    NATO alliance. The fallout from the Georgian conflict has been equally
    serious, with new doubts over the U.S.

    commitment to the fledgling pro-Western Georgian democratic
    government. But even more troubling, the crisis further revealed the
    inherent fragility of security and stability in the strategically
    significant South Caucasus region.

    Although Georgia's strategic significance was substantially enhanced
    after the so-called "Rose Revolution" that ushered in a new staunchly
    pro-Western and democratically reformist government, Georgian
    President Mikheil Saakashvili has suffered a severe setback after his
    miscalculation in seeking to fulfill his pledge to re-impose central
    Georgian control over the country's breakaway region of South Ossetia.

    The aftermath of the August conflict has not only weakened his personal
    rule, but has also eroded his position as a key NATO aspirant.

    For Armenia, the immediate effects of the August conflict in Georgia
    was serious, imposing some $70 million in economic damage and losses
    and sparking a five-day nationwide shortage of gasoline after Georgian
    transport routes were closed. For Armen ian national security, the
    conflict reaffirmed both the vulnerability of Armenia's dependence
    on Georgia as a key trade and transport route and the need for a new
    policy of strategic energy security. In terms of energy security, the
    most obvious and immediate impact of a nationwide gasoline shortage
    only highlighted Armenia's dangerous and short-sighted lack of an
    adequate energy reserve.

    Searching for a New Regional "Center of Gravity" In a broader context,
    the Georgian conflict with Russia raised new doubts over Georgia's
    previous role as the regional "center of gravity" for the West. Prior
    to the conflict, Georgia enjoyed a unique advantage as the focal
    point for Western security policy. For the Saakashvili government,
    Georgia's future was clearly with the West, reflecting a strategic
    vision that saw membership in NATO and the European Union as the
    ultimate guarantee to external security as a front-line state bordering
    a resurgent Russia.

    Moreover, such an avowed Western orientation was seen as the most
    effective way to overcome and reverse the legacy of a serious erosion
    of state sovereignty and territorial integrity. This new orientation
    forged important immediate benefits, ranging from a deepening of
    U.S. and Western military ties to an influx of capital and investment
    as the Georgian government liberalized the economy and initiated a
    new anti-corruption campaign.

    This ambitious shift to the West enabled Georgia to graduate from the
    role of a key regional transit state to assume even greater prominence
    as the West's new "center of gravity" in the South Caucasus. This
    role as a center of gravity was most evident in the U.S.-run $64
    million "Georgia Train and Equip Program" (GTEP) and the subsequent
    "Sustainment and Stability Operations Program" (SSOP), each of which
    elevated Georgia as a "flagship" for U.S. military activities and
    ambitions in the region, surpassing even U.S. training of Azerbaijani
    forces in the Caspian Sea. But this prominence also served to
    bolster Georgian over-confidence, despite the reality that neither
    the U.S. military program was ever aimed at providing the Georgian
    armed forces with any real combat readiness or offensive capability.

    More specifically, the Train and Equip program was actually designed as
    a flexible, phased training initiative, and merely provided training
    and equipment for less then three thousand troops with the intended
    goal of acquiring limited counter-terrorism capabilities. Similarly,
    the goal of the U.S.-run Sustainment and Stability Operations Program
    merely sought to prepare select Georgian units for deployment to Iraq
    in support of the U.S.

    Operation Iraqi Freedom (OIF).

    But these new doubts over such a reliance on Georgia have also
    sparked a search for a new regional "center of gravity" in the S
    outh Caucasus. Western dissatisfaction with the Georgian leadership,
    although something that started well before the August conflict,
    reached a turning point after Georgian leaders ignored Western caution
    and concern and proceeded to confront Russian power.

    Although Georgia's Westward shift was heralded as a Western success,
    there were inherent limits to exactly how far and how fast Georgia
    could go, however. These limits stemmed from the finite limits to
    Georgia's capacity to resist the steady reassertion of Russian power
    and influence, especially evident when Moscow resorted to imposing
    both energy and trade sanctions after reluctantly withdrawing from
    its Soviet-era military bases in Georgia.

    But a second inherent limit to Georgia's longer-term goal of NATO
    and EU membership was the scale and scope of the West's commitment
    to Georgia.

    Although strong on rhetorical support for the Georgian government,
    the West has long been reluctant to encourage any Georgian moves that
    would confront Russia too directly, and has been even more wary of
    the danger of a Georgian bid to retake its breakaway regions by force.

    Overplaying a Weak Hand Against the backdrop of these limits, it
    seems clear that the Georgian leadership seriously miscalculated
    at the onset of the August crisis. After a series of provocations
    through the summer, including sporadic artillery and mortar fire
    and the downing of Georgian unmanned arial =0 D vehicles (UAVs),
    the Georgian leadership ordered a military offensive against the
    break-away region of South Ossetia. Although the exact chronology
    of events during the opening of the conflict remain unclear, it is
    fair to conclude that Georgia's military strategy was significantly
    flawed by both an initial underestimation of the Russian response
    and a subsequent over-estimation of its own combat capabilities.

    And most importantly, while the Georgian offensive may have been
    effective within the small theater of South Ossetia, it was doomed
    from the start when confronted by the full might of Russian military
    resolve. Over the course of the conflict, as Russian forces launched
    a massive land, air and sea response, the Georgian leadership also
    greatly misread the West's capacity and commitment to intercede or
    intervene in support of Georgia.

    While politically the Georgian decision to move against South Ossetia
    reflected President Saakashvili's consistent threats to restore his
    country's territorial integrity, militarily, the offensive was the
    first-ever test of his U.S.-trained and -equipped Georgian troops,
    both of which were long-standing worst-case scenarios for the West. On
    a broader scale, however, what turned the Georgian miscalculation into
    a strategic blunder was the Russian ability to exploit the conflict as
    an opportunity to seriously challenge and check Georgia's fundamental
    Westward shift.

    In the first military deployment beyond Russia' borders since the
    Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, the Russian response to the Georgian
    conflict was both rapid and overwhelming. For Russia, Georgia's
    strategic blunder was an opportunity much larger than South Ossetia,
    as Russian forces moved quickly to reinforce the country's second
    break-away republic, Abkhazia.

    Surpassing the objectives of simply securing South Ossetia and
    Abkhazia, Russian forces then completely repulsed and overwhelmed
    Georgian forces, and established a perimeter security zone within
    Georgia.

    An essential secondary Russian goal was then to destroy fundamental
    Georgian military capabilities by targeting as much military equipment
    as possible and by bombing each and every Georgian military facility
    and base, even those not involved in the conflict. This successful
    destruction of the country's military infrastructure was, with the sole
    exception of the Georgian loss of Abkhazia and South Ossetia, the most
    significant set back for Georgia's strategic aspirations to join NATO.

    Moreover, the scope of devastation of the Georgian armed forces
    posed a new financial obstacle to the question of Georgia's bid
    for NATO membership, in addition to the already serious political
    considerations. On an even broader scale, the aftermath of the conflict
    also seriously questioned Georgia's role as both a secure energy
    transit state and as a regional "center of gra vity" for the West.

    The danger for Armenia from this search for a new Western outpost or
    "center of gravity" is the fact that there is a new degree of attention
    focused on Azerbaijan. This new assessment of using Azerbaijan as
    the regional center for Western security interests stems from three
    factors.

    First, Azerbaijan's border with Iran continues to attract Western
    interest, especially as the longer term challenge of dealing with
    Iran may include a military option at some point, making Azerbaijan
    a central theater for any such operations.

    Second, in the wake of renewed tension between the West and Russia,
    there is new interest in bolstering the Azerbaijani naval capability
    to address Russian and Iranian naval power in the Caspian Sea, under
    the guise of securing the offshore energy platforms in the Caspian.

    And third, there is also Western interest in utilizing Azerbaijan
    as a platform to Central Asia, as well as the continued reliance on
    Azerbaijani air space as a key air corridor to reach Western bases
    in Central Asia, an imperative for operations in Afghanistan that has
    only been magnified in the wake of the loss of Pakistan as a key ally
    in the West's global war on terrorism.

    Remaking the Map But even aside from the destruction from the
    Russian-Georgian hostilities, by far the most significant result
    from the August crisis was its impact on the region. The Georgia
    crisis20offered Russia an important opportunity to reassert its power
    and leverage throughout the region, an opportunity that was seized
    to virtually remake the map of the South Caucasus and to redraw
    the parameters of the region's strategic landscape. Although it was
    largely a Russian initiative that spurred the virtual redrawing of the
    region's landscape, the reactions and responses to the new regional
    reality by other states were equally as profound.

    >From the Russian perspective, the new regional reality was marked by
    three distinct achievements: first, an abrupt end to NATO expansion
    in the South Caucasus, at least for the near-term, second, the demise
    of Georgian capabilities to fulfill its ambitions as a fully fledged
    Western anchor in the region, and thirdly, a serious spike in broader
    tension and looming confrontation with the West as a whole.

    Notably, despite Russian recognition of the independence of separatist
    Abkhazia and South Ossetia can not be seen as an important achievement,
    especially given Russia's firm stance that the move will in no way
    infer similar recognition for the region's other "frozen" conflict,
    the Armenian-populated enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh. Nevertheless,
    Russian President Dmitry Medvedev has recently signed "friendship
    accords" with the leaders of Abkhazia and South Ossetia, formalizing
    military, diplomatic and economic cooperation and securing a new
    Russian bridgehe ad in Georgia proper.

    Russia was also able to reaffirm the inherent energy insecurity of
    the South Caucasus, demonstrating the vulnerability of the region's
    pipelines and ports and raising new doubts over the reliability of
    Georgia as a key transit state. Interestingly, this lesson was also
    one of the most important concerns for both Turkey and Azerbaijan. In
    terms of the Azerbaijan-Georgia-Turkey energy chain, both the Turks and
    the Azerbaijanis were angered at what they interpreted as a Georgian
    blunder that only portrayed them as weak and vulnerable.

    This energy insecurity factor also reignited questions over the
    viability of the long-standing U.S. regional energy strategy of
    seeking to bypass the existing Russian pipeline network while also
    isolating and excluding Iran.

    In fact, in order to manage the closure of the existing pipelines
    through Georgia during the crisis, Azerbaijan resorted to exporting
    its oil to Iran, utilizing so-called "swap" agreements whereby Iran
    re-exported the same quantity through its Persian Gulf facilities.

    Reinforcing Underlying Trends The impact from the Georgian crisis will
    also accelerate several trends already underway in the region. One such
    trend, concerning an improvement in Azerbaijani-Russian relations,
    was already evident during the July 2008 visit to Baku by Russian
    President Dmitry Medvedev and which was marked by new progress in
    negotiations over the planed Russian purchase of20a substantial amount
    of natural gas from Azerbaijan.

    While Azerbaijani energy has been driven by its primary role as
    an essential component in the U.S.-backed Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan and
    Baku-Tbilisi-Erzurum oil and gas pipelines, Russia is now seeking to
    promote its own Baku-Novorossiysk pipeline, playing on Azerbaijani
    apprehension of relying on the Georgian routes and promising to
    purchase Azerbaijan's growing gas output, which have almost doubled
    over the last two years, to an annual level of 10.3 billion cubic
    meters (bcm).

    An added bonus for Azerbaijan is that improved relations with Russia,
    which has traditionally followed policies in support of Azerbaijan's
    archrival Armenia, may weaken Armenia's position over the unresolved
    Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. With presidential elections set for October,
    Azerbaijan may also benefit from less international scrutiny over its
    poor record on democracy, with the aftermath of the Georgian crisis
    tending to downplay the past standards of electoral performance.

    Despite the obvious geopolitical context to the aftermath of the
    Georgian conflict, the most conclusive consideration has little to
    do with broad regional factors of security or even energy. Rather,
    the more pressing conclusion was that domestic politics and economics
    matter much more than weeping geopolitics. In many ways, the Georgian
    conflict was rooted as much in domestic politics as in regional
    geopolitics, as likewise the deci sion by the Georgian leadership to
    attempt a military solution to the South Ossetia issue, the Georgian
    miscalculation in over-estimating their own military capabilities,
    and the Georgian misreading of the West's capabilities and commitments
    were also domestic Georgian decisions.

    The Turkish-Armenian Engagement The second trend to be influenced
    by the Georgian crisis was the new process of Armenian-Turkish
    engagement, capped by the first-ever visit to Armenia by a Turkish
    head of state. After months of secret talks among Armenian and Turkish
    officials in Switzerland, both sides seemed ready to tentatively
    open a preliminary dialogue after years of Turkey's refusal to extend
    diplomatic relations or open its border with Armenia. But it was the
    Georgian conflict that spurred a new breakthrough in talks, with an
    added impetus for at least opening the closed Armenian-Turkish border
    and offering both countries a potentially important new economic and
    trade route alternative to Georgia. Aside from the Georgian factor,
    another key to this new diplomatic opening, however, was Russia's
    support for such a breakthrough between Armenia and Turkey.

    More specifically, Russian policy has long been opposed to any
    significant improvement in relations between Armenia and Turkey and
    the closed border was seen as a helpful way of maintaining Russian
    dominance over Armenia, as demonstrated by the continued presence of
    a Russian military base an d Russian border guards in Armenia. But
    Russian policy shifted dramatically in the wake of the August crisis,
    with a possible Armenian-Turkish rapprochement only serving to bolster
    the Russian strategy to more completely isolate, marginalize and
    surround Georgia. Nevertheless, Russia will only remain supportive
    as long as the future direction of Armenian-Turkish relations remains
    under its control.

    There are also added benefits for Russia from the issue, however,
    such as the possible sale of electricity to eastern Turkey from
    Russian-owned energy network in Armenia. There was also a diplomatic
    coup by Moscow seizing the issue from the Americans, as the Armenian
    president publicly invited his Turkish counterpart to Armenia while
    on an official visit to Moscow and coordinate the opening closely
    with Russian officials.

    For Turkey, whose decline in power and influence in both the South
    Caucasus and Central Asia has never been fully reconciled with its
    vision and aspirations, the Georgian conflict prompted a new diplomatic
    initiative. The so-called "Caucasus Stability and Cooperation
    Platform," is an initiative that seeks to forge a new cooperative
    attempt at conflict-prevention, multilateral security and regional
    stability, but also reflecting a goal for securing the now vulnerable
    energy export routes running from the Caspian basin to Europe.

    Aside from the reiteration of general principles of stability
    and security, which are neit her particularly new nor novel,
    the energy imperative is the key to the initiative, as the recent
    outbreak of hostilities in Georgia have raised new concerns over
    the viability of not only the BTC and Baku-Supsa pipelines, but also
    the Baku-Tbilisi-Erzurum natural-gas pipeline and the U.S.-EU backed
    Nabucco gas pipeline project, which proposes to carry an additional 31
    billion cubic meters of natural gas to Europe once operational by 2020.

    Scenarios & Recommendations for Armenian National Security I. Scenario
    One: An Armenian-Turkish Diplomatic Breakthrough?

    In terms of scenarios to be considered for Armenian national security,
    the first challenge is posed by the recent Turkish engagement of
    Armenia. The historic visit of the Turkish president to Armenia marked
    a significant turning point in Armenian-Turkish relations. Clearly,
    as the first-ever visit of a Turkish head of state to Armenia, Turkish
    President Gul's visit to Armenia was an important step success for
    Armenian diplomacy and foreign policy. Yet in the wake of the visit,
    the obvious question remains: why now?

    The timing of the visit and the apparent sudden breakthrough in
    Armenian-Turkish relations stems from two important factors. First,
    it reflects the fact that Turkey is now struggling with its deepest
    and potentially most disruptive degree of change, with a profound
    reexamination of the very tenets of its national identity, driven by
    a combination of internal reforms20and external challenges. And most
    recently, there has been an equally significant strategic reorientation
    involving Turkey's role within the region and its future position
    in a broader international context. The depth and degree of change
    and redefinition in Turkey is also matched by a battle with itself,
    redefining itself and the very core of its identity.

    The second key factor in the timing of the breakthrough in
    Armenian-Turkish relations is rooted in the new shifts in the regional
    landscape. More specifically, in the wake of several months of careful
    diplomacy and secret meetings between Armenian and Turkish officials
    in Switzerland, Gul's visit to Yerevan was revealed as an integral
    part of a broader Turkish diplomatic initiative that seeks a greater
    degree of stability in the region. Within this context, this Turkish
    initiative was only accelerated by the recent conflict in Georgia,
    which not only demonstrated the need for real security and stability
    in the South Caucasus, but also affirmed the limits of Turkish policy
    in the region.

    But it was the Georgian conflict that spurred a new breakthrough
    in talks, with an added impetus for at least opening the closed
    Armenian-Turkish border and offering both countries a potentially
    important new economic and trade route alternative to Georgia. Aside
    from the Georgian factor, another key to this new diplomatic opening,
    however, was Russia's support for such a bre akthrough between Armenia
    and Turkey.

    More specifically, Russian policy has long been opposed to any
    significant improvement in relations between Armenia and Turkey
    and the closed border was seen as a helpful way of maintaining
    Russian dominance over Armenia, as demonstrated by the continued
    presence of a Russian military base and Russian border guards policing
    Armenia's borders, as well as its economic dominance over the Armenian
    economy. But Russian policy shifted dramatically in the wake of the
    August crisis, with a possible Armenian-Turkish rapprochement only
    serving to bolster the Russian strategy to more completely isolate,
    marginalize and surround Georgia. Nevertheless, Russia will only
    remain supportive as long as the future direction of Armenian-Turkish
    relations remains under its control.

    There are also added benefits for Russia from the issue, however,
    such as the possible sale of electricity to eastern Turkey from
    Russian-owned energy network in Armenia. There was also a diplomatic
    coup by Moscow seizing the issue from the Americans, as the Armenian
    president publicly invited his Turkish counterpart to Armenia while on
    an official visit to Moscow and coordinate the opening closely with
    Russian officials. For Turkey, whose decline in power and influence
    in both the South Caucasus and Central Asia has never been fully
    reconciled with its vision and aspirations, the Georgian conflict
    prompted a new diplomatic initiative. The so-called Caucasus Stability
    and Cooperation Platform, is an initiative that seeks to forge a new
    cooperative attempt at conflict-prevention, multilateral security
    and regional stability, but also reflecting a goal of securing energy
    export routes.

    But while this Turkish regional initiative includes a new breakthrough
    with Armenia, including the opening of the border and an attempt
    to open a new chapter in relations, it also includes larger goals
    of engagement, with Turkey as a leader in the region. And from this
    larger perspective, Turkey now views the unresolved Nagorno-Karabakh
    conflict as a central factor to regional stability. But there
    is a very important difference in Turkey's strategic view of
    Karabakh. Specifically, Turkey no longer seeks to merely support
    Azerbaijan by pressuring Armenia.

    In fact, the new Turkish engagement of Armenia, ranging from the secret
    talks to the high-profile visit to Yerevan by the Turkish president,
    actually represents a significant shift in Turkish policy away from
    its traditional close support for Azerbaijan. This was most clearly
    demonstrated by the strong negative reaction by Azerbaijani officials
    to the Turkish opening toward Armenia, as Azerbaijani leaders are
    now gravely concerned and worried. The Azerbaijani leadership is
    worried that the potential for normal Turkish relations with Armenia
    and the opening of the long-closed Turkish border with Armenia will
    only weaken their position regard ing the Nagorno-Karabakh issue.

    But what is most interesting is the fact that the Turkish engagement
    with Armenia has also weakened the Turkish position on Karabakh. For
    example, although it can be argued that a Turkish move to build
    relations with Armenia may grant them more power over the Karabakh
    issue, in reality Turkey's engagement with Armenia has already
    seriously weakened and undermined its relations with Azerbaijan.

    Implications for Armenia: What is to come Next?

    Despite the poor record of past initiatives, the potential benefits
    from even the most basic and rudimentary form of engagement are clear
    for each country, but we can ask: what is to come next? For Turkey,
    opening its closed border with Armenia would constitute a new strategic
    opportunity for galvanizing economic activity in the impoverished
    eastern regions of the country, which could play a key role in the
    economic stabilization of the already restive Kurdish-populated eastern
    regions and thus meet a significant national security imperative of
    countering the root causes of Kurdish terrorism and separatism with
    economic opportunity.

    Likewise, an open border with Turkey would offer Armenia not only
    a way to overcome its regional isolation and marginalization,
    but also a bridge to larger markets crucial for economic growth
    and development. In addition, the commercial and economic activity
    resulting from opening the Armenian-Turkish border would foster
    subsequent tr ade ties between the two countries that, in turn,
    would lead to more formal cooperation in the key areas of customs
    and border security. And with such a deepening of bilateral trade
    ties and cross-border cooperation, the establishment of diplomatic
    relations would undoubtedly follow.

    Thus, the opening of the closed Armenian-Turkish border could not
    only bring about a crucial breakthrough in fostering trade links
    and economic relations, but may also serve as an impetus to bolster
    broader stability and security throughout the conflict-prone South
    Caucasus. Since August, despite the obvious tension between Russia and
    the US, which came out in the open so strongly over the recent crisis
    in Georgia, both Washington and Moscow remain not only committed to
    working together within the OSCE's Minsk Group, but will step up
    efforts, together, to prevent the "frozen" Karabakh conflict from
    "heating up" into a new "hot" conflict, as both are equally concerned
    over the danger of Azerbaijan resuming hostilities and threatening
    war over Karabakh.

    There is no viable apparent alternative to the Minsk Group process. But
    the one most important factor missing from the peace process is the
    fact that Karabakh has no place at the table. The real key to success
    for the peace process does not involve Russia or the US, and certainly
    does not involve Turkey. The real key to progress in the peace process
    is to include the democratically-elected government of Karabakh as an
    equal party to the conflict and to grant Stepanakert an equal seat at
    the peace table. Karabakh has been prevented from holding equal status
    with Yerevan and Baku for too long. Now is the time, especially after
    lessons from Georgia, to include Karabakh in the peace process.

    A New Political Context: Future Prospects?

    Within a broader context, the opportunities from a breakthrough in
    Turkish-Armenia relations offer a new beginning to an old problem,
    defined by the promise from a foreign policy success and the pressure
    from a lack of legitimacy, as well as a new challenge to the existing
    order, which inherently poses challenges to Armenia's internal
    "vested interests." For Armenian politics, which is now marked by
    the emergence of clan-based elites and defined by an "arrogance of
    power," there is a fresh chance to use this transition point to more
    fully reform the closed political and economic systems. The closed
    economic system, in particular, will be under threat from a possible
    opening of the long-closed border. The threat will also be felt among
    the country's new clan-based oligarchic elite, which has attained
    significant political power in recent years.

    Although not as outwardly visible as the ruling elite, a new,
    wealthy political elite, so-called "oligarchs," have managed to
    secure significant political power. T heir election as deputies
    demonstrates a convergence of corporate, state, and in some case,
    even criminal interests. In addition to gaining serious influence over
    the formulation of public policy and garnering substantial leverage
    over the course of governmental policies, this new oligarchic elite
    has come to embody the difference between the power to rule and the
    responsibility to govern.

    In the case of the other former Soviet economies, this new class of
    oligarchs has tended to exploit the privatization process to gain
    economic power first, but has exhibited a subsequent appetite for
    political power. It is that political role that inherently threatens
    the course of democratization and political reform. In Armenia, these
    oligarchs have been able to extend their informal networks of political
    power through informal cartels and commodity-based semi-monopolies,
    and now wield significant economic and political power.

    The key to defeating the power of the oligarchs is to attack the
    economic monopolies and cartels that comprise the oligarchic system by
    introducing greater competition and law-based enforcement, regulation
    and supervision.

    Generally, such cartels and monopolies flourish within "closed"
    economies, averting the transparency and competition that dominate
    the more open marketplace. But in addition to the need for greater
    anti-trust legislation and stronger state regulatory bodies empowered
    to limit or breakup monopolies, it is the rule of law and political
    will that is needed to overcome this "cronyism."

    Thus, the closed nature of the Armenian political system, utilized by
    a new dual clan-based and oligarchic elite, has significantly eroded
    the state's most important asset - legitimacy. This has also been
    matched by a steady decline in "good governance," with a tendency for
    both public policy and national security formulated by self-interest
    over national interest. Thus, one can only hope that the combination
    of new opportunities and challenges will serve as "agents of change"
    to force open and reform the overly restrictive and rigid political
    and economic systems that have become so entrenched as to deny the
    legitimacy, political will and efficacy so necessary to move the
    country forward.

    II. Scenario Two: Armenian-Iranian Relations

    A second scenario for bolstering Armenian national security in the
    face of new threats and challenges stems from the issue of Armenia's
    relations with Iran. Among the countries of the former Soviet Union,
    Armenia has been largely recognized as a small state faced with an
    especially difficult set of challenges. Faced with a blockade imposed
    by its neighbors Azerbaijan and Turkey that has imposed a degree of
    relative isolation stemming from disrupted trade and energy links,
    landlocked Armenia has relied on a strategy of adaptation.

    Such a strategy of adaptation has been most evident20in its pursuit
    of a rather innovative foreign policy, known as "complementarity,"
    which effectively balances its inherently pro-Western position with
    its preference for a strong alliance with Russia. While the dual
    nature of this policy has brought a limited nature of benefits,
    Armenia holds a more significant advantage from a similar policy of
    balancing competing strategic interests.

    More specifically, this longer term strategic advantage is rooted
    in Armenia's unique balancing of its commitment to the West and its
    integration into the architecture of Euro-Atlantic security with its
    dynamically developing relationship with the Islamic Republic of Iran.

    The Imperative of Isolation Despite the long history of close ties
    between Armenia and its Persian neighbor to the south, the bilateral
    relationship between Armenia and the Islamic Republic of Iran has not
    been a natural alignment. Rather, the Armenian-Iranian relationship
    is rooted in a shared condition - an imperative to cooperate in the
    face of isolation. Moreover, even through the difficult course of the
    Nagorno-Karabakh conflict in the 1990s, Iran followed a consistently
    pragmatic course that prevented the conflict from taking on any
    religious connotations and sought to promote a negotiated resolution
    to the conflict.

    In a larger context, Iran was drawn to Armenia as a natural ally,
    bolstered by the shared challenges of isolation, blockade and external
    pressure. But th ere is also an element of opportunity in Iran's view
    of Armenia. This view is only compounded by the role of Armenia as a
    routine destination for Iranians on weekend visits and by the over
    1200 Iranian students currently studying in Armenian universities
    and educational institutions.

    The Armenian strategic approach toward Iran is also less about
    history but more of practical necessity or opportunity. Specifically,
    Armenia's relations with Iran are driven by the need for an outlet
    from the East-West blockade of Armenia and the desire for reducing its
    already serious over-reliance on Russia as the primary, or even sole,
    external partner for trade and energy. Thus, Armenia's Iran policy
    is shaped largely by blockade and isolation, most apparent in the
    exclusion of Armenia from all regional energy plans, most notably
    apparent in the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline project.

    But it is the geopolitical context that is most significant for Iran,
    especially as the South Caucasus has reemerged as a regional arena
    for competing interests among larger powers. From this perspective,
    Iran values its engagement with Armenia as a tactical counterweight
    to the projection of both Western and Russian power and influence in
    the region.

    Such a geopolitical agenda is rooted in the historical record, as
    Iran has been vulnerable to Russian, British and, for a more limited
    time, American pressure and interference. Although this historical=2 0
    vulnerability to pressure from both East and West reached its zenith
    during the rule of the Shah, even current Iranian leaders recognize
    their vulnerability. For this reason, Iran has more recently steadily
    sought to counter first Turkey, as a U.S.-backed regional proxy,
    and then the United States more directly, driven by the American
    military presence in both neighboring Iraq and Afghanistan. It is
    this expanding U.S. military network and presence in the region and in
    Central Asia that fuels an Iranian desire to solidify ties to Armenia,
    stabilize relations with Azerbaijan, and deepen ties with Georgia.

    Armenia as a Bridge to Iran But from the broader perspective of Iranian
    interests in the region as a whole, Iranian policies are also driven
    by a strategic drive to consolidate a North-South transport network,
    with the South Caucasus as an integral link in that plan. And it is
    Armenia, more than any other state that offers a unique role as a
    potential platform or bridge to Iran.

    In practical terms, such as trade and commerce, Armenia's relationship
    with Iran has been marginal, however. Despite the limited nature of
    bilateral trade, the true significance of Armenian-Iranian relations
    rests with the unique Armenian potential as an outlet for Iran and as
    a bridge to Iran. The clearest demonstration of this significance is
    in the energy sector, as seen by launch of a project in 2004 to build
    a 141-kilometer na tural gas pipeline between Iran and Armenia. After
    years of delay and prolonged negotiations, the pipeline was completed
    in 2007.

    The gas pipeline project is to supply Armenia with roughly 1.1 billion
    cubic meters (bcm) of gas, expected to rise to 2.3 bcm over the next
    twenty years.

    The pipeline will also allow Armenia to import Turkmen gas as an
    alternative to its sole reliance on Russia as a gas supplier. In turn,
    Armenia is to pay for Iranian gas with electricity supplies. But
    even this pipeline was a limited success for both countries, as
    Russian pressure succeeded in reducing the size of pipeline, thereby
    preventing the pipeline for use to transport gas beyond the Armneian
    market. The Russian interest in reducing the diameter of the pipeline
    was mainly due to its desire to prevent Armenia from emerging as a
    gas transit rival.

    Thus, Armenia sees and presents itself as bridge to Iran to the
    current regime and as bridge to new Iran. But as demonstrated by the
    now reduced parameters and potential of the Iran-Armenia gas pipeline,
    for the immediate future, Russia is the key impediment or incentive
    for a deepening of Armenian-Iranian relations. In fact, the final
    details of the Iran-Armenia gas pipeline reveal an accommodation of
    the Russian reassertion of influence and power in the region.

    Yet in one of the rare instances of an Armenian advantage of geography,
    Iran is likely to emerge as a key partner=2 0over the course of
    transition in both countries. And perhaps most significant is the
    potential for linking the two regions of the South Caucasus and the
    Middle East, each of which face even more profound geopolitical change
    in the near- to medium-term.

    In addition, it is instructive to examine Armenia from an Iranian
    perspective. Iran also exhibits a broader geopolitical consideration,
    as Iran's engagement with Armenia is seen as a tactical counterweight
    to the projection of Western, or U.S. power and influence. Through much
    of the period of independent states in the Caucasus, Iran had sought
    to counter Turkey, as the U.S. regional proxy or agent state. More
    recently, however, given the deterioration of U.S.-Turkish relations
    and the replacement of proxy states by direct U.S. engagement, Iranian
    strategy has shifted to counter the U.S. more directly. The expansion
    of the U.S. military presence has surrounded Iran in each direction:
    from Iraq to the west, Azerbaijan to the north, Central Asia, Pakistan
    and Afghanistan to the east and northeast, and in the Gulf to the
    south. Thus, Iran feels compelled to pursue external ties to Russia
    with Armenia and by improving relations with Azerbaijan.

    Thus, from the Iranian perspective, the significance of Armenia
    stems from three considerations: (1) strategic, by a shared sense of
    blockade and isolation; (2) geographic, with Armenia as a neighbor
    seeking cooperation over confronta tion, and, (3) geopolitical, as
    Armenia offers an avenue to check the surrounding of Iran by a web
    of expanding the US military bases. And, finally, from the broadest
    perspective, Iran's national interests in the region are driven by
    the pursuit of the only remaining outlet: through the North-South
    transport network, with the South Caucasus as an integral link in
    that plan. This too is rooted in the isolation of the Iranian regime.

    III. Scenario Three: The Rise of Azerbaijan as a Military Power

    A third and crucial scenario for Armenian national security is the
    threat of renewed war as Azerbaijan seems determined to build a modern
    and strong military, hoping to become the most powerful armed forces
    in the region. And with the long record of aggressive and threatening
    statements from Azerbaijani leaders, there is a growing danger, at
    least over the medium- to long-term, that war over Nagorno-Karabakh
    may return to the region.

    Although much of the recent Russia tension over NATO expansion has
    centered on the Georgian and Ukrainian bids for NATO membership, the
    more fundamental challenge for NATO enlargement stems from neither
    political or even geopolitical considerations, but is rooted in the
    test of military reform.

    And most significantly, one of the most militarily ambitious of the
    former Soviet states is Azerbaijan, a country which has repeatedly
    asserted a commitment to building modern and self-sufficient armed
    fo rces on its own terms, rejecting the patronage of both NATO
    and Russia. Yet the course of military reform in Azerbaijan has
    been particularly difficult in recent years and, despite a sharp
    increase in its annual defense budget financed by its energy wealth,
    the outlook for Azerbaijan's rise as a regional power by the year
    2020 is far from certain.

    Obstacles to Azerbaijani Military Reform Despite the benefits of
    three consecutive years of defense budgets of more than $1 billion,
    Azerbaijan accomplished little in terms of procuring advanced weapons
    systems or investing in modern equipment. Of its three branches of
    service, both the army and air forces have continued to suffer from
    neglect, with continued shortages of spare parts and poor maintenance
    of existing stocks. The one exception has been the Azerbaijani navy,
    which has significantly increased its capabilities. Yet even the
    development of its naval forces has resulted from the training and
    equipping from the U.S.

    "Caspian Guard" program, which has bolstered the naval capabilities of
    both Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan in an effort to match a naval buildup
    by both Iran and Russia in the Caspian.

    The development of the Azerbaijani navy, including the standing
    up of an impressive new maritime Special Forces unit, has provided
    Azerbaijan with important new counter-proliferation capabilities to
    combat the trafficking of both weapons and most crucially, of drugs
    throu gh the Caspian Sea. But it has not endowed Azerbaijani with
    any offensive capabilities beyond an enhanced command and control and
    radar-based surface monitoring system, thereby depriving Azerbaijan
    of its most valued prize - the ability for real power projection.

    But there are real limits to such a future of Azerbaijani military
    dominance, as its Air Force continues to suffer from shortfalls in
    munitions, ordnance and even aviation fuel, making the service the
    least combat-ready force in the Azerbaijani armed forces. In addition,
    the Azerbaijani army, traditionally the core service of the armed
    forces, also lacks power projection capabilities and is far from
    attaining even a minimum level of combat-readiness.

    Nevertheless, over the longer term, the rise of Azerbaijan as a
    military power seems assured. Its rise is based on an influx of oil
    (and gas) wealth used to finance a new, modern armed forces, enhanced
    with both training and equipment, and a political will in Baku that
    seems set to exercise a new-found self-sufficiency based not on Turkish
    or even American patronage, but relying on its own national power. For
    both Karabakh and Armenia, such a strategy is obviously a threat not
    only to its own security but will also result in a dramatic shift in
    the already delicate regional "balance of power" in the South Caucasus.

    As the recent developments have confirmed, the Azerbaijani government
    has resolved to im plement an assertive and ambitious effort aimed
    at forging a new and robust military.

    First, Azerbaijan sought to develop its own defense
    industry. Established as early as 2005, Azerbaijan's Defense Industries
    Ministry, headed by Yavar Jamalov, took over the State Departments for
    Military Industry and for Armaments and the Military Science Center,
    each of which was formerly a separate agency within the Azerbaijani
    Defense Ministry. This new ministry has an annual budget of between
    $60-70 million and has already started to create an indigenous defense
    production capability, bolstered by assistance from both Ukraine and
    Pakistan, with some Russian technical expertise as well.

    A second development has been the return of a role for the Turkish
    military.

    This Turkish role in developing Azerbaijan's military capabilities
    is no longer simply about providing Turkish arms or training, but
    comprises a much more strategically significant role by senior,
    high-level Turkish military advisers. News of this enhanced Turkish
    role first surfaced in January 2007, and included reports that
    a senior Turkish military officer would be appointed to a post
    within the Azerbaijani Defense Ministry. Those early press reports
    claimed that senior Turkish military leaders selected an unnamed
    Turkish Army general to assume the position of a deputy minister
    within the Azerbaijani Defense Ministry, endowed with sweeping power
    and authority, including direct and sole=2 0control over a team of
    lower-ranking Turkish military officers serving as military instructors
    and advisers.

    But this plan for a direct Turkish military role in Azerbaijan,
    marking a reversal of the deterioration in Azerbaijani-Turkish
    military ties over the past few years and a return of Turkish
    military advisers following their departure from Baku in 1995, was
    never carried out. In addition, to the surprise of many analysts,
    Turkey was unable to restore its traditional military alliance with
    Azerbaijan. And throughout 2007 Baku actually moved farther away,
    not closer to Western security structures and NATO.

    But in the light of its commitment to building a modern and powerful
    Azerbaijani armed forces and after several years of substantial defense
    budget, why has Azerbaijan failed to embark on serious military reform?

    Interestingly, the main obstacle preventing Azerbaijan from building
    a powerful new military is the very man who heads the Azerbaijani
    Ministry of Defense. The Azerbaijani Defense Minister, Colonel General
    Safar Abiyev, is today the longest-serving defense minister in the
    world. Yet his position stems not from military competence but rests on
    his personal loyalty to the Aliyev family. And his tenure as defense
    chief has been defined by a long period of neglect, underinvestment,
    and marginalization of the Azerbaijani armed forces, not to mention
    a record of miserable conditions for front-line soldiers and even an
    una cceptable high rate of death for conscripts.

    Specifically, the late President Geidar Aliyev was firmly convinced
    that the one true threat to his power came from a strong military
    and, in response, kept the Azerbaijani armed forces weak, corrupt
    and incompetent. Aliyev senior also ensured that the military was
    denied essential training and equipment, a policy maintained by his
    son and successor, current President Ilham Aliyev. Both leaders also
    utilized the Azerbaijani Ministry of Defense as an important vehicle
    for corruption. This ensured that the military would always be weak
    and divided, undermined by the cancer of corruption from within.

    Thus, the real potential for building a modern and powerful armed
    forces in Azerbaijan remains little more than a distant promise. And
    even with the enormous annual state budgets for defense, a relatively
    small proportion of defense spending has actually been spent on
    arms, training and essential equipment. Moreover, although the
    future trajectory of Azerbaijan as a regional military power seems
    assured, most experts believe that it will take between 5-10 years
    of sustained and serious military reform before Azerbaijan can meet
    this potential. In the shorter term, there are several important
    lessons revealed from recent clashes between Karabakh and Azerbaijani
    forces. First, it is clear that the Karabakh (and Armenia) forces
    still hold a significant military dominance over Azerbaijan, an
    advantage likely to20continue for at least the coming 5-10 years.

    Second, Azerbaijan faces a new deterrent against renewing war. This
    new deterrent against any Azerbaijani attempt to restart hostilities
    is posed from the very sources of their wealth - the international
    energy companies and the powerful Western energy consuming nations
    themselves. This is very important and offers a new "energy deterrence"
    that will do everything to keep the oil flowing.

    Lastly, and perhaps the most important is the fact that despite
    the wealth and power of Azerbaijan, both Karabakh and Armenia are
    substantially more stable and secure than Azerbaijan. This asset
    of stability is also an important positive consideration for world
    and regional powers that are now seeking ties with stable partners
    over riskier authoritarian regimes like Azerbaijan. Thus, while the
    outlook for security for Karabakh and Armenia is not without its own
    challenges, there is a comparative advantage of stability in a region
    already very much at risk.

    Conclusion: The Need to Strengthen the National Security Process
    Despite the focus on the pronounced shift in regional geopolitics,
    on a deeper level, the other consideration is that local politics,
    such as good governance and democratization, and local economics,
    in terms of market reforms and anti-corruption efforts, are the real
    keys to lasting security and stability in the South Caucasus. And with
    the South Caucasus more than eve r a "region at risk," the imperative
    should be more on focusing on bolstering local politics and economics
    and less on grand geopolitical designs in order to forge a degree
    of stability more durable than simply relying on individual leaders,
    no matter how pro-Western or accommodating.

    In this way, institutions matter more than individuals and evolutionary
    reform, not revolutionary change, offers more assurance for stability.

    And finally, there is an obvious need to strengthen the process of
    national security in Armenia. Although there are obvious limitations
    of resources, both human and financial, to the development of a more
    sophisticated and comprehensive Armenian strategy of national security,
    there are some key points for consideration. The core mission, however,
    is to establish a coherent process of national security. This entails
    both organizational and ideological reforms, including recognizing
    the fact that the most glaring deficiency in the current institutions
    of Armenian national security is their absence. Even in the wake
    of the recent appointment of a new head of the Armenian National
    Security Council, the body has met infrequently and has been largely
    marginalized from the formulation and considerations of the national
    security decision-making process as many of the most crucial decisions
    have been concentrated in the president's office.

    Although there has been a marked increase in the role of parliamentary
    comm ittees with jurisdiction over defense and security policy, the
    sheer dominance of the executive branch in general, and the president
    in particular, the dysfunctional nature of the national security
    process remains uncorrected. One basic recommendation to improve
    the process of Armenian national security would be to reform the
    organization of the National Security Council. Currently, the Armenian
    National Security Council is rarely convened as a full consultative
    body and, even when it meets, is usually focused on the implementation
    of a decision already adopted. This distorted process stems from the
    fact that the body is subordinate to the presidential administration,
    an act that limits the capability for longer term strategic planning
    and preparation, a potentially fatal flaw for Armenia in the wake of
    such recent threats and challenges to Armenian national security.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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