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The Year 2014: Hope For Change Or Same Old, Same Old?

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  • The Year 2014: Hope For Change Or Same Old, Same Old?

    THE YEAR 2014: HOPE FOR CHANGE OR SAME OLD, SAME OLD?

    By Michael Mensoian // December 18, 2013 in Featured, Headline, Opinion

    Welcoming a new year is a joyous occasion. It offers the opportunity
    for a fresh start. Unfortunately, there are times when the "baggage"
    of the old year has to be dragged along, condemning us to the same old,
    same old for another year.

    Christmas tree on Renaissance Square in Stepanakert (Photo by Arevik
    Danielian, The Armenian Weekly)

    The unilateral decision by President Sarkisian to have Armenia forsake
    the West and align its- self with Russia is unwanted baggage to carry
    into the new year. No doubt intense pressure was put on Yerevan to
    weigh the consequences if it spurned this Russian overture. Although
    Armenia is not as favorably situated geographically as Ukraine,
    dependence on Moscow should not encourage subservience by our leaders.

    It was important that our people demonstrated against this abdication
    to Russian interests when President Vladimir Putin visited Armenia
    recently. However, it paled in comparison to the anti-government
    demonstrations in Ukraine concerning a similar shift away from the
    European Union toward Russia by President Viktor Yanukovych, and in
    Turkey in the June Gezi Park confrontation over Prime Minister Recep
    Tayyip Erdogan's grandiose redevelopment plans to sacrifice a small
    remaining bit of nature to more concrete, brick, and steel.

    What effect the ongoing demonstrations in Ukraine will have is
    too early to say. When opposition views are stifled or ignored,
    it is important for citizens to express their dissatisfaction. In
    Turkey, Gezi Park served as a catalyst for a more general concern
    with the administration's policies. President Sarkisian's decision
    to tie Armenia's future to Russian interests lessens the influence,
    opportunities, and investments from the European Union that would
    have been important to Armenia's development. Now we are aligned with
    a government in Moscow that is the antithesis of a democracy.

    There are some benefits. As one would expect, Russia is the single
    largest source of investment funds for Armenia and the destination
    of most Armenians in search of work. It is estimated that some 2.5
    million Armenians live in Russia and some $1.5 billion is remitted
    annually. However, it is the long-term effect of being dominated by
    Russia that will limit Armenia's ability to chart its own course into
    the future. Some may view this as an acceptable trade-off considering
    we are located in a region with some difficult neighbors. Having
    spurned a national dialogue, Sarkisian decided that a reduction in
    the price of imported gas and the ability to buy armaments on the
    cheap was worth the cost of embracing Russia.

    No one can question our need for Russian military support. However,
    Putin knows that Russia needs Armenia as well. It is a symbiotic
    relationship. Armenia is the only dependable anchor that Russia
    has in the south Caucasus. The Bolsheviks made the mistake nearly
    a century earlier when they believed they could buy Ataturk with
    territorial concessions to sign on to their new order. Even Ataturk
    at that early stage preferred looking toward the West. Today Moscow
    faces a stronger competitor in Ankara with its little cousin from
    Baku in tow. Turkey has no intention of allowing Russian hegemony
    in the south Caucasus or Central Asia. Without Armenia and Artsakh,
    how does Russia plan to project its presence in the south Caucasus?

    Putin has adopted the same divide and rule strategy of the old
    Bolsheviks by maintaining a military base in Armenia to protect the
    country while it keeps the "conflict" alive by sweet-talking Aliyev
    and supplying military equipment to both sides. Russia profits from
    its sales to Baku, and Armenia becomes further beholden to Russia as
    it seeks to maintain parity with Azerbaijan.

    The new year does not lessen concerns about Artsakh's future. Shudders
    abound whenever news of a Sarkisian-Aliyev meeting will take place.

    The principles proposed by the Minsk Group that sets the agenda for
    negotiations continually stress territorial integrity and the right of
    self-determination. The only way these two opposing principles can be
    accommodated at the same time is by granting local autonomy to Artsakh,
    not independence, and placing the region under the jurisdiction of
    Azerbaijan. Isn't this why it all began?

    The principles suggested by the Minsk Group are so biased against
    the Artsakh Armenians that a favorable resolution is impossible. It
    is time for Moscow to provide meaningful support for Artsakh's
    independence. That may be expecting too much considering that the
    Olympics scheduled for Sochi in February 2014 are close to Chechnya
    and Dagestan, where secessionist sentiment runs high with Doku Umarov
    lurking in the shadows threatening to disrupt the games.

    Although Washington continually expresses friendship with the
    Armenian people, its pro-Turkish/anti-Russian agenda is to have
    Artsakh returned to Azerbaijan and see the signing of the protocols
    without preconditions. Should this happen, it would mean goodbye to
    our Artsakh, where 7,000 azatamartiks sacrificed their lives. Goodbye
    to any meaningful recognition of the genocide by Turkey. And goodbye
    to Hai Tahd. In return for Yerevan's total capitulation, Washington
    will gladly offer a few hundred million dollars in aid, maybe a
    billion dollars, but much of which will line the pockets of those
    who continue to bleed our country dry. This is a small price to pay
    considering the untold billions of dollars that have been lavished
    on Ankara by Washington for its "cooperation."

    Will 2014 see the beginnings of a well thought-out plan not only to
    challenge the administration's policy, but to prepare for the important
    parliamentary and presidential elections? The change required is not
    structural, but in the mind-set, the philosophy if you will, of those
    who hold the reins of power. Those who govern have the responsibility
    to provide an environment in which order, equality, opportunity, and
    justice prevail for all citizens, not a favored or well-connected few.

    For a time, it seemed that change might be had when Raffi Hovannisian,
    leader of the Heritage Party, appeared on the scene. Unfortunately,
    it was short lived. Raffi reappeared a few months later in August
    2013, but disappeared again. It raises a serious question: Has the
    primary burden been left to Raffi Hovannisian and his Heritage Party,
    by gun-shy opposition leaders, to challenge the policies and confront
    the corruption and favoritism that have permeated the economic,
    political, and judicial systems of our country?

    After welcoming in the new year, voters and opposition political
    leaders should take time to consider where Armenia may be at the
    end of Sarkisian's term in 2018 if his present course is maintained
    (and there is no reason to believe that it will change). Given that
    certainty, does anyone really believe that the 2017 parliamentary
    elections will reduce the Republican Party's majority? And does anyone
    really believe that the handpicked successor to President Sarkisian
    in the 2018 presidential election will lose? Given the likelihood of
    this scenario, can Armenia afford to continue on the same path for
    another five years?

    Opposition leaders cannot allow voter fraud and voter intimidation or
    the existence of system-wide corruption and favoritism to circumscribe
    their efforts to vigorously challenge the existing power structure.

    Their unforgivable failure to act is a disservice to those who are
    unemployed; to the elderly pensioners or those living in poverty;
    to the young, energetic men and women who lack opportunity; to the
    would-be entrepreneurs who are prevented from entering the marketplace;
    and to those who are forced to leave the homeland to earn a living.

    If there is cause for change (how could that be denied?), those
    affected must be galvanized into action by believing that change
    is possible. If they believe that change cannot be had, mobilizing
    support will be impossible and mediocrity will become the acceptable
    standard. It is sad to say, but people can become accustomed to
    hardship. This cannot be where our people are at. For any movement to
    succeed, a genuine effort must be made by the leadership to interface
    with representative sectors of the electorate, however they may be
    defined strategically. Any serious movement for change is a full-time
    day-in, day-out effort. Relying primarily on an election platform
    containing a laundry list of objectives to garner voter support
    completely misses the mark. Most voters will view this effort with
    skepticism, if not cynicism. The voter must accept the party (or a
    coalition) and its candidate as committed to their concerns by what
    has been and is being done to support their concerns. The electorate
    must have faith in their candidate and his ability to bring about
    change that will improve their quality of life.

    Armenia cannot afford to continue along its present path. The
    achievements that may be attributed to the administration cannot
    compensate for the debilitating conditions that the present unholy
    alliance of politicians and oligarchs has created. The existence of
    high rates of unemployment and poverty; of young people frustrated
    by a lack of opportunity; individuals and families leaving either
    permanently or temporarily to achieve a better life; and the inability
    of an energetic and creative entrepreneurial class to develop are
    sufficient to indict those holding the reins of power.

    Change in Armenia will not come overnight. Neither will it come by way
    of any "Armenian Spring." Violent upheavals are counterproductive and
    invariably result in system-wide instability and a fractured society
    that is neither easily nor quickly, if ever, healed. The euphemistic
    term "Arab Spring" is anything but that. It is a textbook example
    of how change should not be pursued. It is time for the opposition
    parties to put aside their philosophical differences, petty interests,
    and concerns as to who gets the glory and come to the aid of Armenia
    and its citizens. Ignoring the hardships faced by our people can
    never be an acceptable response. Let's not abandon the majority of
    our people by accepting the same old, same old for 2014.

    http://www.armenianweekly.com/2013/12/18/the-year-2014-hope-for-change-or-same-old-same-old/

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