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  • Yerevan Should Be More Forceful With Clinton

    YEREVAN SHOULD BE MORE FORCEFUL WITH CLINTON
    BY ARA KHACHATOURIAN

    asbarez
    Friday, June 1st, 2012

    Nalbandian and Clinton during a recent photo-op

    In assessing Armenia's foreign policy accomplishment of last year,
    Foreign Minister Eduard Nalabandian in January lauded Armenia's
    relations with the US as being the best in the 20-year history of the
    newly independent republic. His conclusion was based on the number
    of phone calls and meetings the Sarkisian administration had with
    high-ranking US officials, including a meeting with Obama and the
    2010 visit by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.

    However, the outcome of those high-level discussions does not reflect
    the posturing of either official Yerevan or the Obama Administration
    vis-a-vis U.S.-Armenia relations. The Sarkisian Administration has not
    forcefully engaged in all matters Armenian and has missed significant
    opportunities to push back on US policy.

    We have written ad nauseam about President Obama's and Secretary
    Clinton's broken promises regarding the Armenian Genocide and what
    the Armenian-American community has had to contend with during the
    Administration. That said, when Secretary Clinton opted to downgrade-or
    downplay-the Armenian Genocide by calling it a matter of historical
    debate, didn't Nalbandian have a responsibility to call her out? The
    international recognition of the Genocide is part of Armenia's
    Constitution, which he is sworn to uphold.

    The most recent breach of fundamental diplomacy by the State Department
    was the categorization of Nagorno-Karabakh as a region controlled
    by "ethnic Armenian separatists" in Azerbaijan in its annual human
    rights report. This element is key to the peace process as the OSCE
    Minsk Group, of which the US is a co-chair, is tasked to determine
    the final status of Karabakh. The State Department classification
    runs counter to the letter and spirit of the ongoing peace talks,
    because it signals that the US has already made up its mind, rendering
    the talks futile, at best.

    Nalbandian was in Chicago to attend the NATO Summit, which was
    boycotted by Sarkisian due to the language adopted by the gathering
    regarding the issue of Azerbaijan's territorial integrity within
    the context of the Karabakh peace process. That would have been an
    appropriate forum for Nalbandian to vociferously demand from the
    international community-especially the US-to not toy with Armenia's
    national security interests and object to random announcements that
    could have dire repercussions on the final Karabakh peace plan.

    The Obama Administration's financing of the AzerSpace satellite deal
    with Baku, and green-lighting a sale of advanced helicopter-based
    sensing equipment to Azerbaijan only provides Armenia's adversaries
    in Baku with more ammunition to advance its military rhetoric and
    stockpile more hardware that could potentially be used against Armenia.

    Once again, Nalbandian and the Sarkisian administration did not
    protest, or if they did, they did not publicize their opposition
    to this notion of a love affair with the US and the current
    administration.

    Here in the US, the Turkish and Azeri diplomatic corps has been
    intricately engaged in driving US policy in favor of their denialist
    agenda and advancing the unacceptable gag-rule they have successfully
    enforced on the US. Armenia's inaction and absence, especially during
    the Genocide resolution processes and efforts to downplay the Sumgait,
    Kirovabad, Baku and Shahumian pogroms of Armenians, was inexcusable.

    If Nalbandian and Sarkisian have chosen to distance themselves from
    these realities, then they must not also interfere with the efforts
    of the Armenian-American community that is working hard to advance
    the national aspirations of all Armenians.

    Recently, during a meeting in Yerevan, Nalbandian thanked Sen. Dick
    Durbin of Illinois for supporting Armenian Genocide recognition
    efforts, despite the fact that he has, in recent years, refused to
    support the Armenian Genocide Resolution or to call for the recognition
    of this crime by the Obama Administration.

    These missteps by the Sarkisian Administration, especially Nalbandian,
    are costing Armenia and Armenians significantly. When Clinton arrives
    in Armenia to praise the "unprecedented friendship" the two countries
    enjoy, while advancing an agenda that is fraught with concessions
    for Armenia, the Sarkisian administration should forcefully push back
    to preserve Armenia's national security interests and its dignity in
    the international community.

    A phone call or a photo op is neither a sign nor a substitute for a
    strong friendship!



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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