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  • "2013 Elections: Armenia's Geopolitical Future And Prospects For Dem

    2013 ELECTIONS: ARMENIA'S GEOPOLITICAL FUTURE AND PROSPECTS FOR DEMOCRACY, ," HARVARD INTERNATIONAL REVIEW

    http://hir.harvard.edu/2013-elections-armenias-geopolitical-future-and-prospects-for-democracy
    By Armen Ayvazyan | April 15, 2013 | 12:00 AM

    2013 (Re)Election Results in Armenia

    Since regaining independence in 1991, Armenia's presidential elections
    have been marred by fraud, while the incumbent political authorities
    have consistently been able to reestablish themselves.

    Massive post-election protests took place after the presidential
    elections in 1996, 2003, and 2008. In 2013, the country found
    itself in a similar situation. With over 58 percent of the votes,
    the incumbent, President Serzh Sargsyan, was declared the winner,
    while Raffi Hovannisian, the leader of the Heritage Party, received
    about 37 percent of the vote.

    Unique to the 2013 elections was that they were likely manipulated
    before the formal start of the campaign, as all major opposition
    political parties ultimately sat out of the elections. Not only did the
    Prosperous Armenia Party (PAP), the Armenian Revolutionary Federation
    (ARF), and the opposition bloc Armenian National Congress (ANC) refuse
    to nominate or support any candidate, but they also relinquished
    their organizational capabilities for monitoring the electoral
    process. Moreover, these parties did not call for elections boycott
    per se, even though they expressed distrust in the existing democratic
    mechanisms for regime change. Since 1991, behind-the-scenes bargaining
    between the government and the oppositional political forces has given
    rise to a loss of public trust in Armenia's political institutions.

    During President Sargsyan's first term in office, he did not encourage
    the independence of the judiciary or the legislature, both of which
    continue to act as mere appendages of the executive. He reinvented
    the Soviet methods of direct party control over higher educational
    institutions and secondary schools: the President, the Prime Minister,
    and the Speaker of the Parliament (all members of the ruling Republican
    Party) have been "elected" heads of the governing councils of major
    state universities. The pseudo student councils are also run by the
    Republican youth, and approximately 90 percent of the secondary school
    principals are Republicans.

    Sargsyan also pointedly blurred the distinction between the organs
    of state and the current political administration. He consolidated
    monopolistic control and actual censorship over Armenian main
    broadcast media, including the state-funded public television H1 and
    other popular Armenian TV channels (for instance, massive protest
    demonstrations in Yerevan on the President's inauguration day,
    April 9, which resulted in tense standoff and clashes with police,
    never received live broadcast on any channel, while the main news
    program on H1 gave them only two minutes out of 46). Therefore,
    the deactivation of the major political parties just prior to the
    presidential elections threatened to severely damage the ostensibly
    democratic political system of the Republic.

    However, this political desolation had a boomerang effect against the
    incumbent authorities, producing a new protest movement with Raffi
    Hovannissian, until then a non-heavyweight politician, as its leader.

    His emphasis on poverty, emigration, and other long-standing social
    grievances - coupled with the fact that he was a candidate considered
    to be without a history of corruption - was sufficient to mobilize
    the existing anti-government sentiment. Irrespective of where further
    developments could take Armenia, Hovannissian's success already proved
    to be an important democratic achievement that shook the foundations
    of Sargsyan's nascent authoritarianism. This societal awakening has
    prompted mass defiance against the government's pressure to vote for
    the incumbent as well as post-election protests throughout provinces
    in Armenia.

    Large segments of the Armenian population have rejected the
    conduct of both the poll and vote counting as fraudulent, also
    dismissing the ratification of the elections in the initial reports
    of international monitoring missions. Citizen activist Lena Nazaryan
    and her supporters disrupted a press conference conducted by observers
    from the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE),
    branding them as "political tourists" who were "legitimizing the
    fraudulent election." Arthur Sakunts, a leading Western-backed activist
    and recipient of the Freedom Defender Award, challenged US President
    Barack Obama's congratulations for Sargsyan's reelection. He claimed
    that Obama "has clearly got himself among those restricting freedom
    and encouraging the restriction of freedom" and even questioned the
    value of the award received from the US government. This wide spread
    disappointment in Western attitude toward democracy in Armenia is
    echoed by various Armenian-American civic groups and activists who have
    closely followed the elections and held a series of protest gatherings.

    On the whole, Armenia emerged from the 2013 Armenian elections with
    the masses feeling more alienated and disenfranchised. This leaves
    the President with less internal legitimacy and thus exposed to more
    external pressures than ever. The hasty recognitions of the election
    results by Russia, the United States, NATO, France, Iran, Turkey,
    and other international actors signaled that the incumbent President
    is the preferred candidate for the world and regional centers of power.

    These unfortunate events unfold as Armenia finds itself in an
    all-encompassing crisis.

    A Country in Crisis

    Between 2009 and 2011, some 250,000 Armenians became poor and currently
    one-third of the population lives below the poverty line.

    According to the Armenian government, the average monthly real
    consumption of Armenia's population decreased by 6.1 percent in 2011
    as compared to 2008. The economy's slow recovery from a contraction
    of over 14 percent in 2009 (mainly due to the global economic crisis)
    will be severely hampered by the continuing outflow of both human
    and monetary capital, as well as by the sharp surge in current and
    future external debt servicing: about US$418 million in 2013, over 1.5
    times more than in 2012. Armenia's balance of payments is more and
    more reliant on foreign credits. It is expected that the government
    will acquire new international loans this year, most of which will
    be unproductively spent on managing foreign debt, thus squandering
    precious funds. In addition, the economic and transport blockade by
    Turkey and Azerbaijan continues to suffocate the Armenian economy. The
    net result is Armenia's ever growing economic and political dependence
    on foreign powers.

    On the geostrategic level, the attainment of reliable security
    guarantees and, above all, defensible borders are central issues for
    Armenia. The Ottoman Turkish purpose in perpetrating the Genocide of
    1915-1923 was not so much to physically exterminate the Armenians, as
    it was to destroyArmenia as a potentially autonomous or independent
    nation. From 1918 to 1920, this potential evolved into a reality,
    as Armenia was invaded, partitioned, and annexed by the then allied
    Kemalist Turkey and Bolshevik Russia. Since 1991, neither Turkey nor
    Azerbaijan reconciled itself to the emergence of Armenian statehood
    even on the much smaller territory of 42,000 square kilometers,
    where it is realized as the Republic of Armenia (RoA) and the
    Nagorno-Karabakh Republic (NKR). The Armenian-Azerbaijani war over
    the Armenian-populated Nagorno-Karabakh in 1991-1994 was an organic
    extension of Armenian-Turkish conflict of the beginning of the 20th
    century.

    Therefore, the conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh is not only about
    the realization of the self-determination rights of its population,
    but about the long-term security and minimally sufficient strategic
    depth for Armenia. Recently, however, Azerbaijan's newly found
    military conceit, boosted by huge oil revenues and large acquisition
    of offensive armaments as well as unequivocal Turkish backing,
    have practically rendered the international negotiations over the
    Nagorno-Karabakh conflict redundant. Now the threat of a resumption
    of war with Azerbaijan seems more real than ever.

    In this unenviably difficult situation, it will be of utmost importance
    for Armenia to somehow adjust to the opposing geopolitical agendas
    of the dominant powers in the region - the Russian Federation and
    the US-NATO-EU bloc.

    Russia's Neo-Byzantine Agenda: Weakening an Ally into Incorporation

    Allied to Russia by the bilateral Treaty of Friendship, Cooperation,
    and Mutual Aid (1997) and as a member of both the Russian-led
    Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) and the Collective Security
    Treaty Organization (CSTO), Armenia is the fulcrum for Russian efforts
    to rebuild its clout in the post-Soviet Transcaucasia, recently
    rechristened the South Caucasus (incidentally, both designations are
    politically and geographically inaccurate, inasmuch as Armenia and
    much of modern Georgia and Azerbaijan are not part of the Caucasus).

    However, while Washington has gone out of its way to strengthen its
    own ally in the region with Sahakashvili's Georgia, Russian policies
    toward Armenia have taken a different turn.

    Russia did not strive to improve Armenia's economy by direct investment
    into its industrial sectors or infrastructure which were shattered
    by the effects of the 1988 earthquake, the collapse of the Soviet
    Union, 1991-1994 war with Azerbaijan over Nagorno-Karabakh, and the
    economic blockade of Armenia by Turkey and Azerbaijan. In a seemingly
    paradoxical move, between 2007 and December 2012, its "Compatriots"
    state program lured some 26,000 Armenians to apply to migrate into
    sparsely inhabited regions of Russia with contracts guaranteeing
    work and a naturalization process of six months rather than five
    years. The Armenian government, cornered by domestic critics and a
    severe demographic crisis - the post-Soviet exodus of about a third of
    its population and the resultant low birthrate - belatedly expressed
    its disapproval to this Russian project. Due to Armenia's economic
    crisis, large numbers are emigrating to Russia and other countries
    without state-organized promotion.

    This Russian position is manifestly unreasonable. The question is
    whether this attitude toward Armenia represents an erratic and
    inconsistent policy on the part of post-Soviet governments (who
    have often been blamed by the Russian analysts for ignoring their
    own geopolitical interests) or whether it is a calculated program
    to incorporate Armenia into the newly-created trade and economic
    organizations under the Russian umbrella, namely the Eurasian Union
    and Customs Union. Two indicators in particular strongly suggest that
    the latter assumption is nearer the mark.

    First, Moscow vigorously pursues the Russian-language education in
    Armenia at the expense of the Armenian language. In 2010, in clear
    violation of the constitutional status of Armenian as the country's
    sole official language, the Law on Language (1993) was loosened to
    allow foreign language instruction in public schools and universities.

    Because of the existing teaching cadres and traditions, this
    "amendment" promoted mostly Russian-language instruction. At the
    time it was widely believed that this legal allowance was made to
    meet Russian demands.

    Moscow also sold advanced weaponry to Armenia's rival, Azerbaijan,
    including two surface-to-air missile systems of S-300 PMU2 Favorite
    type, which is a more advanced version of the S-300 PS that was
    delivered to Armenia. This move, besides generating a crisis of
    confidence in Armenia about the credibility of Russian security
    commitments, speaks volumes about Moscow's stance vis-a-vis its
    traditional Armenian ally. The Kremlin strategists suspect that
    Armenia's oligarchic elite, concerned with its own financial fortune,
    could easily switch camps and embrace the West's patronage. Draining
    Armenia's human resources to the point where the nation would not be
    capable of resisting Azerbaijani aggression alone and could survive
    only as a de facto Russian province seems to be the most realistic, if
    seemingly conspiratorial, explanation for Russia's strategy regarding
    Armenia. Nagorno-Karabakh then could, again, become a bargaining chip
    between Moscow and Baku. Meanwhile, the Armenian migrants in Russia
    could be used as an additional means by which to attach Armenia to
    its former imperial master. Evidently, Moscow does not believe that
    under current geopolitical conditions it would be far more beneficial
    for Russia to help Armenia become a strong ally than for it to remain
    a weak client state.

    It is of considerable interest to observe that these Russian strategies
    strikingly remind one of the millennium-old Byzantine policies toward
    Armenia. Precisely a thousand years ago, the Byzantine Empire, first
    undermined Armenia politically, militarily, and demographically,
    both compelling and attracting hundreds of thousands of Armenians,
    especially their military elite, to migrate to its remote western
    regions. Subsequently, a debilitated Armenia was devoured by the
    Empire. However, as a consequence, the Byzantines shouldered the
    burden of defending Armenia's southern and eastern frontiers, hitherto
    effectively held by the established Armenian military, which was by
    now significantly demoralized and partly removed from the operational
    zone. Yet, this soft destruction of an ally as a successful buffer
    state proved to be a strategic mistake of disastrous proportions:
    soon after, the Empire was forced to surrender Armenia to the Seljuk
    Turks, forever forsaking its former political and military clout in
    the region.

    One can presume that the Russians think big: they are planning an
    effective incorporation of Armenia, as a step to widen their sphere
    of influence in the whole region. But their miscalculation could
    bring a depleted and drained Armenia to a complete demographic and
    political collapse, precipitating a huge strategic loss for Russia,
    Georgia, and Europe(and by extension the West), all of which would
    lose a steadfast civilizational ally with a capable military force
    of its own and face grave new challenges in their periphery.

    The West's Neo-Ottoman Agenda: Pushing Turkey's Victim into
    Capitulation

    In a far cry from its declared commitment to promote democratic
    principles and the rule of law, the US-NATO-EU alliance is first
    and foremost aiming to achieve - through strategic submission of
    Armenia's foreign policy to its geopolitical agenda in the ring of
    former southern Soviet republics - the following specific objectives:
    the containment of Russia, the political isolation of Iran,
    and an unrestricted access through Georgia, Armenia, Azerbaijan,
    and then across the Caspian Sea for the transport of hydrocarbon
    reserves of Central Asia. This agenda, however, is subtly attuned
    to the projections of a hegemonic-minded Turkey - an increasingly
    unpredictable NATO ally. Turkey's visions of gaining regional
    preeminence, combined with its firm denial of the Ottoman-perpetrated
    Genocide, are a direct threat to Armenia.

    The West's unwillingness to confront the fundamentally destructive
    strategic objectives of the Turkish-Azerbaijani bloc regarding
    Armenia has been exemplified by inaction in a number of remarkable
    cases. The reluctance to acknowledge the rights of the Armenian nation
    to restitution, compensation, and rehabilitation has sent wrong
    signals to both Turkey and Azerbaijan, encouraging their unending
    hostility to Armenia and undermining chances for a sustainable
    reconciliation. The West's acquiescence to Turkey's twenty year-old
    economic blockade of Armenia, a development contrary to international
    law, has cost Armenia billions of dollars. Azerbaijan's publicly
    threatening military aggression is notably promoted by the West's
    refusal to recognize the legitimacy of self-proclaimed independence
    of the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic, even though the NKR possesses all
    historical, political, demographic, legal, and moral credentials
    for seceding from Azerbaijan. This degrading scenario stemming from
    the West has emboldened Azerbaijan's well-documented destruction
    of thousands of irreplaceable medieval monuments of Armenian and
    European cultural heritage in the province of Nakhijevan during the
    2000s and the racially motivated murder of an Armenian officer at the
    NATO-organized courses in Budapest in 2004 by an Azerbaijani colleague,
    as well as his subsequent premature release by a NATO-member Hungary
    to Azerbaijan, where the murderer was immediately pardoned, promoted
    in military rank, and glorified by Ilham Aliyev's regime in 2012.

    The convergence of irrational sets of strategic interests of the West
    and Turkey was best demonstrated by the imposition of the now ill-fated
    Turkish-Armenian "reconciliation process" and the highly unpopular and
    still unratified, Protocols between Turkey and Armenia, shortly after
    President Sargsyan came to power in 2008. The Protocols recognized the
    borders between Armenia and Turkey "without any preconditions," which
    simply meant a dishonest and dangerous endorsing of the consequences
    of the Genocide on Armenia permanently. In full accordance with
    Turkey's long-standing position, the two governments have agreed to
    sidestep all "historical issues" (including Genocide) by appointing a
    "historical commission" to discuss them. No Turkish acknowledgment
    of the Genocide preceded the possible diplomatic opening between the
    two countries. This was like allowing an unrepentant Nazi Germany
    to call for a "historical commission" to debate the Holocaust - an
    outrageous prospect that President Sargsyan actually agreed upon to
    possibly alleviate his low legitimacy, but simultaneously undermining
    the country externally.

    The West consistently refuses to provide effective security guarantees
    to Armenia. What is offered to Armenia is only advancement in political
    and economic relations with the European Union through the so-called
    Eastern Partnership (EaP), which is seen as a provisional stage to
    the final accession to the EU. The West's enduring unresponsiveness
    to the dire security needs of beleagueredArmenia, not to mention the
    highly insufficient economic assistance, pushes it toward integration
    with Russia.

    Russian-Western Geopolitical Game: A Lose-Lose Situation

    The former US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton vowed "to figure
    out effective ways to slow down or prevent" Russian efforts to
    create a Customs Union and Eurasian Union, describing them as
    "a move to re-Sovietize the region." At the same time, Russia has
    voiced opposition to the Eastern Partnership, particularly Armenia's
    participation. Clearly, the West and Russia have specific and largely
    opposing expectations from Armenia, thus severely limiting President
    Sargsyan's maneuvering capacity.

    In a rapidly changing world, this rivalry between the West and
    Russia could render them both as losers: without a strong and viable
    Armenia, an Islamic Turkey can emerge as the sole and unruly winner
    of this short-sighted brinkmanship. Ominously, such a prospect evokes
    another historical parallel, when in the seventh century the Arab
    Islamic armies brought catastrophe upon both the Byzantine Empire and
    Sassanid Persia, after these two regional super-powers had worn each
    other down in the never-ending military conflicts which were fought,
    incidentally, in and around Armenia.

    This tense regional atmosphere between Russia and the West as well as
    the intransigence of Azerbaijan are unfavorable factors for reaching
    any sustainable agreement on the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, mediated
    jointly by Russia, America, and France as Co-Chairs of the OSCE
    Minsk Group. Undoubtedly, the low internal legitimacy of President
    Sargsyan is an additional factor that may affect crucial issues on
    the negotiating table. Nagorno-Karabakh remains the most sensitive
    issue of Armenian politics.

    The geopolitical frictions in the region are generally not conducive
    to the democratic process in Armenia, since neither of the mentioned
    foreign powers intends to see a genuinely democratic regime which
    could act independently, on the basis of national interests, rather
    than according to their zero-sum regional agendas. Nevertheless,
    the majority of Armenians want change, while Sargsyan, through his
    two-decade-long career of heading the highest state posts (as chief
    of defense and national security establishments, Prime Minister,
    and a one-term president) has amply demonstrated that he is inflicted
    with substantial limitations in providing much needed socio-economic
    and political reforms. Therefore, social change can hardly ensue
    during Sargsyan's presidency. Moreover, no great power appears to be
    interested in such progress. On the other hand, thanks to the newly
    emerged Armenian protest movement, Sargsyan's authoritarian leanings
    may be checked effectively.

    ________________________________

    DR. ARMEN AYVAZYAN (Aivazian) is the founding director of the
    ARARAT Center for Strategic Research. From 1992 to 1994, he worked
    as Assistant to the President of Armenia, Adviser to the Foreign
    Minister of Armenia, and Acting Head of the Armenian Delegation to
    the Conference (now Organization) on Security and Cooperation in
    Europe in Vienna, Austria.

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