Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Military Planners Confront Conscript Shortfall, Mull An End To Colle

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

  • Military Planners Confront Conscript Shortfall, Mull An End To Colle

    MILITARY PLANNERS CONFRONT CONSCRIPT SHORTFALL, MULL AN END TO COLLEGE EXEMPTION
    Gayane Abrahamyan

    Eurasia Insight
    http://www.eurasianet.org/departments/insightb/ar ticles/eav073009a.shtml
    7/30/09

    A looming shortfall in conscripts for the Armenian army is forcing
    the country to mull tough choices. A fierce debate has erupted over
    a plan to remove university enrollment as grounds for an exemption
    from military service. The proposal reflects both concern over the
    country's shrinking male population and worries about the growing
    military strength of the country's long-time archrival, Azerbaijan.

    Proposed amendments that are expected to be submitted to parliament
    this fall would require young men to enroll in the army either
    immediately after finishing high school or after finishing
    university. Under current legislation covering the draft, male
    university students receive a temporary waiver from military service;
    that waiver becomes a permanent exemption if they are enrolled in a
    doctorate program.

    Teachers and other education specialists worry that the changes
    could cause serious damage to Armenia's higher education system. The
    Defense Ministry counters that the army needs the manpower. The recent
    expansion of Azerbaijan's military capabilities is injecting a sense
    of urgency into the Armenian debate. [For background see the Eurasia
    Insight archive].

    Armenia's demographic situation lies at the heart of the
    discussion. Birth rates plummeted during the early 1990s, a period
    when the conflict with Azerbaijan over Nagorno-Karabakh was in its
    hot phase, and the Armenian economy experienced turmoil and severe
    energy shortages during the jarring transition from central planning
    to a market system. Only 39,000 males were born in 1991 -- men who
    would be eligible to serve in the army as of 2009. That number dropped
    to 25,697 by 1995, according to the State Statistical Service. More
    than 10 years later, the birth rate has still not improved; roughly
    24,000 males were born in 2008, said Karine Kuyumjian, head of the
    service's Demography Department.

    Those low numbers will be reflected in the number of Armenian
    conscripts starting military service for at least the next decade,
    forecasted Kuyumjian.

    Although the army's size is a state secret, the problem is such
    that even Deputy Education Minister Ara Avetisian agrees that the
    university exemption for military service has to go. "This amendment
    is unavoidable because military service is one of the most important
    issues for the state," Avetisian commented.

    Avetisian favors males entering the army after high school, at the
    age of 18, rather than after university. He argues that it would cause
    the least disruption to their education. Some experts, however, worry
    that young men inducted into the army immediately after either high
    school or university would lose interest in ever returning to school.

    "Expecting a student who leaves for two years of military service to
    return after university to study science or to become a good specialist
    after having forgotten everything [he learned] is senseless," said
    opposition Heritage Party parliamentarian Anahit Bakhshian, a member
    of the parliament's Committee for Science, Education, Culture, Youth
    and Sport. "Neither will boys taken into the army after [high] school
    want to study after they get out."

    Between the two options, however, Bakhshian, who worked for 30
    years as a Yerevan school principal and teacher, also believes
    that military service after high school is preferable. "Pupils take
    additional classes with private teachers to apply to universities,
    so proper conditions need to be created in the army for them to take
    the classes there and apply to university after they return and then
    study without interruption," Bakhshian said.

    Others support the post-high-school option because they believe
    that it will help fight corruption in higher education. A 2007
    survey carried out by the advocacy group Protection of Students'
    Rights found that 30 percent of about 1,000 male students surveyed at
    universities nationwide reported that they had only enrolled to avoid
    military service. Some 65 percent of that number had paid bribes to
    be enrolled in the universities, the survey found.

    "Abolishing the waiver will help beat corruption, clean up universities
    and have only students who really want to study," commented group
    member Anahit Simonian, a sociologist who worked on the survey.

    But parliamentarians do not unanimously support the idea of
    post-high-school military service. "The army's effectiveness for combat
    can't be provided by 18-year-old boys," objected Artur Aghabekian,
    a member of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation-Dashnaktsutiun who
    served as a deputy defense minister from 2000 to 2007. "Our country
    really has a demographic problem, but a general draft won't solve it."

    Opposition politicians also object to the proposed law; the time
    has come, these critics argue, for Armenia to have a professional
    army. "Was it news for them that we have had demographic problems
    beginning the '90s?" fumed Vahan Shirkhanian a member of ex-President
    Levon Ter-Petrosian's Armenian National Congress who served as a
    deputy defense minister under Ter-Petrosian from 1995 to 1998. "They
    should have thought about creating a professional army long ago."

    For the army, going professional raises cost concerns. Maj.-Gen. Kamo
    Kuchunts, who oversees the draft, recruitment and the training of
    conscripts, termed the idea "important, but . . . highly expensive." He
    did not elaborate about projected costs. But he noted that only
    "about 8,000 contracts" have been signed since Armenia began in 2005
    to enlist army sergeants on contract. Removing the need for military
    conscription by building a professional army "needs both serious
    resources and a certain amount of time," Kuchunts concluded.

    Whether by establishing a professional army or scrapping the university
    exemption for military service, time is of the essence, noted political
    analyst Igor Muradian. "Especially now, when Azerbaijan has more money
    and more resources, we need to find some ways to enlarge the army,"
    he said.

    Editor's Note: Gayane Abrahamyan is a reporter for ArmeniaNow.com
    in Yerevan.
Working...
X