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Armenians Protest Putin -- But Not His Military Aid

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  • Armenians Protest Putin -- But Not His Military Aid

    ARMENIANS PROTEST PUTIN -- BUT NOT HIS MILITARY AID

    EurasiaNet.org
    Dec 3 2013

    December 3, 2013 - 5:49am, by Joshua Kucera

    Russian President Vladimir Putin visited his country's military base
    in Gyumri, Armenia. (photos: kremlin.ru)

    Russian President Vladimir Putin visited his country's military base
    in Gyumri, Armenia, while unprecedented protests against Putin took
    place in the capital, Yerevan. Protesters objected to Armenia's plan to
    join the Russia-led Customs Union -- which they say Putin bullied their
    president, Serzh Sargsyan, into -- and Russian pressure generally. But
    one key element of the Russian-Armenian relationship remains relatively
    unquestioned in Armenia: Russia's military role in the country.

    After Russia scored some remarkable successes in getting ex-Soviet
    republics Armenia and Ukraine to suspend their work toward integrating
    with the European Union, it has faced a fierce backlash, most notably
    in Kiev. But even the much smaller protests in Yerevan were remarkable
    given Russia's role as Armenia's traditional protector against
    neighboring, hostile Turkey and Azerbaijan. So it was probably no
    coincidence that Putin chose as his entry point to Armenia the most
    potent symbol of Russia's protective role, the military base at Gyumri.

    "We believe that the presence of Russian troops on Armenian territory
    helps strengthen stability and security in the South Caucasus,
    and increases the level of practical cooperation between Russia and
    Armenia - both CSTO members - in military and technical spheres,"
    Putin said during his visit.

    Putin's visit took place against the backdrop of a notable expansion
    in Russia's military presence in Armenia. Just in the last couple of
    weeks, Putin announced that Armenia would be more tightly integrated
    into Russia's air defense system and news emerged that Russia plans
    to add a helicopter squadron to its air forces in Armenia. And the
    commander of the Gyumri base for the first time seemed to suggest that
    Russia would fight Azerbaijan in the case of a renewal of fighting in
    the disputed territory of Nagorno Karabakh. (Though Russian Defense
    Minister Sergey Shoigu later appeared to walk back those remarks.)
    During his visit Putin promised that Armenia would get weapons
    supplies at domestic Russian rates, though it's not clear how this
    differs from current practice.

    Armenia's halting attempts to move toward the EU this summer were
    an attempt to "divide the military-security dimension with Russia
    from political-economic integration with the EU and decrease the
    dependence on Russia," Sergey Minasyan, a Yerevan-based analyst, told
    The Bug Pit. That proved untenable when Russia started to press on its
    ex-satellites' EU ambitions, he said. The decision to join the Customs
    Union was based on a variety of factors, including the military ones
    listed above, as well as economic ones like natural gas supplies and
    dependence on Armenia diaspora remittances from Russia. So, Minasyan
    said, "if Armenia escalated with Moscow on EU/Custom Union issues it
    could damage or at least endanger all these issues."

    And thus, unlike Ukraine, Armenia really does depend on Russia for its
    security. Which explains (in part) why you have a million people on
    the streets in Kiev and 1,000 in Yerevan -- and why those 1,000 don't
    raise objections to Russia's military presence in their country. This
    is a sensitive issue for Armenians -- and their numbers seem to be
    increasing -- who want to reduce their country's dependence on Russia.

    "As for the Trans-Caucasus region, Russia will never leave this
    region. On the contrary, we will make our place here even stronger,"
    Putin said in Gyumri. "We will strengthen our position here." In the
    current context, it's not clear whether that was a threat or a promise.

    http://www.eurasianet.org/node/67826



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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