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Armenia: Customs Union Commitment Risks EU Cooperation Chances

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  • Armenia: Customs Union Commitment Risks EU Cooperation Chances

    ARMENIA: CUSTOMS UNION COMMITMENT RISKS EU COOPERATION CHANCES

    EurasiaNet,.org
    Sept 10 2013

    September 10, 2013 - 11:59am, by Marianna Grigoryan

    President Serzh Sargsyan's early September announcement that Armenia
    is ready to join the Moscow-led Customs Union is stirring uneasiness
    in Yerevan. Some analysts contend the move would do more to bolster the
    incumbent government's authority than benefit the country as a whole.

    Sargsyan dropped the Customs Union bombshell announcement on September
    3 during a visit to Moscow. On September 10, he held talks in Astana
    with Kazakhstani officials on technical aspects of the Customs Union
    accession process, Armenian news outlets reported.

    "I confirmed Armenia's decision to join the Customs Union and
    participate in the processes of formation of the Eurasian economic
    union," Sargsyan said in his September 3 statement, relating to his
    Moscow visit. "It's a rational decision and it is in the interests
    of Armenia.

    That statement generated an immediate backlash at home: several hundred
    people gathered outside the presidential residence on September 4
    to protest the possibility, chanting slogans including "No return to
    the Soviet Union," and "Russia, Go Away."

    "Did Serzh Sargsyan ask my opinion [on this]? Did he ask whether I
    or other people agree to this, did he ask about the decision of the
    Armenian citizens?" one protester told EurasiaNet.org. "Such issues
    must be settled through a referendum and debates; the decision should
    not be taken unilaterally."

    A close Sargsyan ally, on the other hand, disputed the notion that
    such a weighty issue as Customs Union membership -- an action that
    would greatly complicate Armenia's ability to foster closer relations
    with the European Union, and thus likely cement Armenia's geopolitical
    orientation toward Russia -- required public debate.

    "Serzh Sargsyan did not need to ask anybody about this issue,"
    Galust Sahakian, the deputy chair of the parliamentary faction of
    the governing Republican Party of Armenia.

    Some observers in Yerevan believe that Moscow coerced Sargsyan
    into making a commitment to the Customs Union. "Serzh Sargsyan's
    West-oriented policy made Russia nervous; the Russians pressed and
    blackmailed him, forcing to make an opposite decision," independent
    political analyst Yervand Bozoyan told EurasiaNet.org.

    The Armenian president has repeatedly denied doing the Kremlin's
    bidding. At a news conference back in March, for example, Sargsyan
    declared: "Do not believe those who claim that the Russians are
    imposing membership in the Customs Union on us. This is not true. How
    many times should I repeat this?"

    Sargsyan in his September 3 statement insisted that Customs Union
    membership would not necessarily "preclude our dialogue with the
    European structures." He also claimed that his administration was
    "determined" to press ahead with economic reforms.

    EU representatives wasted little time in bursting Sargsyan's bubble
    world, stating bluntly that Customs Union membership and close
    cooperation with the EU were generally incompatible. In an interview
    with the RFE/RL Armenian Service on September 6, Peter Stano, the
    spokesperson for Stefan Fuele, the European Union Commissioner for
    Enlargement and European Neighborhood Policy, stated that the EU would
    not initial either an Association Agreement or an Agreement on Deep
    and Comprehensive Free Trade Area with Armenia, if Yerevan's Customs
    Union plans proceeded.

    Various political analysts, meanwhile, have cast doubts on Sargsyan's
    reform dedication. Richard Giragosian, a political scientist
    and director of the Regional Studies Center in Yerevan, described
    Sargsyan's Customs Union policy as perhaps the gravest geopolitical
    error in Armenia's post-Soviet history, and, if implemented, one that
    would have lasting consequences for Armenia.

    "This recent decision demonstrated that Armenia has made a strategic
    blunder and has lost another opportunity," Richard Giragosian tells
    Eurasianet. "This poses a very serious threat to our future. This is
    not only a loss for Europe; this is a far greater loss for Armenia.

    The price required for this wrong decision will be paid by the
    population, and it only strengthens the oligarchic system in the
    country."

    Giragosian also predicted that Customs Union membership would cause
    a massive drop in public confidence in the government's ability to
    foster a better life for the majority of Armenians at home, and thus
    spur a new and vast wave of emigration.

    http://www.eurasianet.org/node/67385

    Raffi Hovannisian, the leader of the opposition Heritage Party,
    and the man who led a fleetingly successful protest movement
    http://www.eurasianet.org/node/66805 following his disputed defeat in
    the presidential election earlier this year, asserted that Sargsyan
    was putting personal political considerations ahead of the country's
    best interests.

    "Serzh Sargsyan who assumed the status of a self-willed governor
    should resign. All possible resources of patience and a worthy life
    for the country and its people are exhausted," Hovannisian said.

    "Sargsyan should resign for the sake of Armenia and our future,
    our independence, justice and national security."

    Though concern about Armenia's prospects in the Kremlin's economic
    embrace is fueling worries in many political circles, Sargyan does have
    an ample cohort of defenders. Political analyst Alexander Margarov,
    for one, suggested that fears that Armenia would be cut off from
    the EU were overblown. He added that a major factor that persuaded
    Sargsyan to opt for the Customs Union was a Russian guarantee to
    ensure the security of Nagorno-Karabakh.

    Editor's note: Marianna Grigoryan is a freelance reporter based in
    Yerevan and editor of MediaLab.am.

    http://www.eurasianet.org/node/67482



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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