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Nato Week: Armenia Discusses Closer Partnership With Western Allianc

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  • Nato Week: Armenia Discusses Closer Partnership With Western Allianc

    NATO WEEK: ARMENIA DISCUSSES CLOSER PARTNERSHIP WITH WESTERN ALLIANCE UNDER MOSCOW'S CLOSE WATCH
    By Suren Musayelyan

    ArmeniaNow
    06.11.12 | 10:27

    Armenia and NATO have again exchanged their "partnership" credentials
    this week as events dedicated to their deepening ties were launched
    in Yerevan on Monday.

    Speaking at a seminar held as part of the NATO Week events in the
    Armenian capital, the NATO Secretary General's Special Representative
    for the Caucasus and Central Asia James Appathurai described Armenia
    as an important partner for the military alliance. He especially
    noted Armenia's considerable contribution to the ISAF operation
    in Afghanistan.

    Appathurai, who was scheduled to meet with senior government officials
    in Yerevan, said NATO was seeking a deeper involvement in the South
    Caucasus and would like to step up its cooperation with Armenia. He
    said the alliance leadership was now considering ways of gaining a
    "stronger foothold" in the volatile region.

    "But, of course, we don't want to impose ourselves. We just want
    to offer more opportunities for cooperation. And if countries like
    Armenia but also Georgia and Azerbaijan wish to take this offer, we
    will have more to do, more on the menu in the coming months and years,"
    the official said in an interview with RFE/RL's Armenian service.

    NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen also spoke of
    potentialities for developing further partnership with Armenia
    as he visited Yerevan in September. He insisted that there is "no
    contradiction" between Armenia's military alliance with Russia and
    closer ties with NATO - a stance shared by the leadership of Armenia,
    a member of the Moscow-led Collective Security Treaty Organization
    that hosts the only Russian military base in the South Caucasus.

    Pro-establishment politicians and analysts in Armenia have also tried
    to present the nation's growing ties with NATO and generally with the
    West (including negotiations on deeper ties with the European Union)
    as part of a comprehensive foreign policy agenda that does not involve
    any reorientation or otherwise endangers Yerevan's traditionally
    close ties with Moscow.

    But some early signs of worsening relations between Yerevan and Moscow
    suggest that Russia is watching its ally's "flirting" with the West
    with a great deal of jealousy, to say the least.

    Last month Russia openly defied Armenia's request to stop the
    operations of its controversial immigration program that is said to
    encourage outward migration from the tiny South Caucasus country and
    this difference in the positions of the two former Soviet allies had
    to be reflected in the minutes of a recent intergovernmental committee
    meeting in Yerevan.

    In what could be viewed as further evidence of growing differences
    Russian President Vladimir Putin appears to have canceled/postponed
    his visit to Armenia in September even though diplomats in Yerevan
    and Moscow rushed to explain that no visit had been scheduled in
    the first place. Prior to that, on several occasions, Armenia spoke
    dismissively of the idea of joining a Eurasian Union, a Putin-advocated
    reintegration project for former Soviet countries.

    No wonder that such a position would draw an angry "analysis"
    from leading pro-Kremlin pundit Mikhail Leontyev, who published an
    article in October reminding Armenia about its heavy reliance on
    Russia for economy and security. The "privileged" price of Russian
    natural gas supplies to Armenia has repeatedly been mentioned as a
    major argument in this context. Negotiations over the price of this
    fuel essential to Armenia's economy may become a further indicator
    of where the Armenian-Russian relations go against the background of
    an approaching presidential election in Armenia.

    In a November 5 article published in Vestnikkavkaza.net, analysts
    Yekaterina Tesemnikova, from Moscow, and David Stepanyan, from
    Yerevan, described Armenia's vagueness on the Eurasian Union idea as
    "reasonable".

    "And the reason is not the pressure of the West and not even the hope
    of receiving 1.5 billion euros in Europe, allegedly promised in case
    of an irreversible movement of Armenia on the path of "strengthening
    democracy." In fact, the government of [Armenian President Serzh]
    Sargsyan expects from Moscow guarantees of substantial financial,
    economic and political support till the presidential elections,
    including gas prices acceptable for Armenia."

    The authors further concluded: "Persuading Armenia to participate in
    the Russian integration project is certainly possible, but only by
    applying the so-called "soft power", popularizing and economically
    justifying the benefits of carrying out the idea of the Eurasian
    Union."

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