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UK Foreign Office Report: Armenia's Diaspora - its role and influenc

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  • UK Foreign Office Report: Armenia's Diaspora - its role and influenc

    UK Government Publication
    Dec 9 2014


    Armenia's Diaspora ` its role and influence

    From: Foreign & Commonwealth Office
    First published: 9 December 2014
    Part of: Foreign Office Research Analyst papers

    A Foreign Office research analyst paper.



    KEY POINTS

    ï?· Armenia has, in proportional terms, the largest Diaspora of any former Soviet

    state, much of it concentrated in Russia, the US and France. This has
    been a huge source of support for the Armenian state. But it's also
    periodically acted as a brake on Yerevan's scope for manoeuvre,
    particularly over the Nagorny Karabakh dispute and relations with
    Turkey. This is likely to remain the case in future.

    ï?· The most politically active Armenian Diaspora community is the US
    one, whose focus on achieving official US recognition of the 1915
    `genocide' is likely to intensify over the coming two years. By
    contrast, the Armenian community in Russia remains largely disengaged
    from political lobbying ` but might we see this change over time?

    DETAIL

    "We live different lives, Armenia and the Diaspora. Here it is real
    politics, while the Diaspora lives with the ideas of unreal politics,
    and they cannot change their ideas so quickly." (Levon Ter-Petrosyan,
    then-President of Armenia, 1993)

    Of all the former Soviet states, Armenia has the largest global
    Diaspora community, in proportion to the size of its national
    population, by some margin. Whilst precise figures are open to debate
    (given in particular the tendency of some Diaspora activists to
    inflate the numbers), it is generally reckoned that there are around
    8-10 million people of Armenian descent currently living outside
    Armenia (whose own population is currently estimated at around 2.9
    million). The largest Armenian communities are based in Russia (2.3
    million), the US (1.5 million), France (400,000) and the Lebanon
    (230,000), with sizeable populations (80,000 or more) also residing in
    Ukraine, Syria, Argentina, Poland, Turkey1, Iran and Canada.

    1 Estimates of the true size of the Armenian population of Turkey are
    particularly problematic, given the reluctance of some ethnic
    Armenians there to identify themselves as such, and also in view of
    the seasonal fluctuations in the size of the Armenian migrant workers'
    community in Turkey (often based there illegally).

    The `gap' between the size of the Diaspora and Armenia's own
    population is growing. It's estimated that Armenia's population has
    shrunk by almost 1 million since 1992 as a result of an exodus of
    Armenians to join these Diaspora communities. Most (70%) of these are
    believed to have gone to Russia and other CIS countries, with only 10%
    joining the Armenian community in the US. The latter remains largely
    comprised of descendants of former residents of the Ottoman Empire who
    fled the territory of modern-day Turkey during and after the
    inter-communal violence of 1915 ` this was supplemented by a `second
    wave' of Armenian immigration into the US from the Middle East (Syria,
    Lebanon, Iran) in the 1970s-80s.

    Britain's Armenian Diaspora remains fairly small (around 18,000), and
    drawn from a wide number of other Diaspora communities (Cyprus, Iraq,
    Syria, Iran, Lebanon).

    What role does the Diaspora play in Armenian society?

    Diaspora support has played a crucial role in Armenia's economic
    survival and development. Since 1991 Armenia has received several
    billion dollars' worth of financial support from US-based Diaspora
    Armenians alone. Among the most prominent donors has been the Lincy
    Foundation run by California-based magnate Kerk Kirkorian, which on
    its own has invested nearly $300 million in Armenia since
    independence. More recently, however, it has been the Diaspora
    community in Russia that has provided the most significant financial
    flows into the Armenian economy ` as of 2008, remittances from
    Armenians working in Russia accounted for 15% of Armenia's official
    GDP (some believe the real figure, taking into account `shadow'
    payments outside the official banking system, may in fact be twice as
    high).

    But the Diaspora's contribution cannot be measured purely in terms of
    investment and aid levels. It has arguably played an even greater,
    although less easily quantifiable, role in terms of developing
    Armenia's `human capital stock', providing generations of young
    Armenians with training & study opportunities in the West, and
    exposing them to a world outside the confines of the former USSR.
    Diaspora Armenians have also made significant `in-kind' contributions
    to improving the Armenian economy, health and education systems
    through technical advice and support. This also extends to the
    unrecognised `Nagorny Karabakh Republic', which has received
    proportionally very high levels of Diaspora support since 1992 in the
    form of both funding and technical assistance (e.g. Armenian Diaspora
    doctors, teachers, engineers, etc. undertaking voluntary secondments
    to institutions in NK).

    The Diaspora plays a key role in leveraging support for Armenia from
    foreign governments ` nowhere more so than in the US, which has
    provided $2 billion in aid to Armenia since 1992, making it one of the
    largest recipients of US aid per capita in the world. Lobbying of the
    US government and Congress by Armenian Diaspora groups has been
    crucial to securing this outcome. The most active of these are the
    Armenian Association of America (AAA) and the larger Armenian National
    Committee of America (ANCA), the latter being affiliated to the
    Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaks), a nationalist Armenian
    political party currently in opposition to the ruling regime.

    These lobbying organisations are highly instrumental in maintaining
    international political support for the `Armenian cause', particularly
    in the US, where their goal remains to secure official US government
    recognition of the 1915 `Genocide' against ethnic Armenians in the
    Ottoman empire.

    Relatively small numbers of Diaspora Armenians have returned to
    Armenia to live permanently, and of these few have risen to prominence
    in politics. The most notable exceptions are Raffi Hovannisian
    (Californian-born leader of the opposition Heritage party) and Vartan
    Oskanyan (Syrian-born Harvard graduate, Armenia's Foreign Minister
    from 1998-2008, now Head of the Civilitas think-tank in Yerevan).

    Is the Diaspora's influence welcome within Armenia?

    Yes ` and no. Successive Armenian governments have been fully
    conscious of the vital asset that the global Armenian Diaspora
    represents for a country lacking in mineral resources. Under President
    Sargsyan, a separate Ministry for Diaspora Issues has been created,
    charged with promoting even greater interaction between the Republic
    of Armenia and the global Armenian Diaspora. Significantly Armenian
    Diaspora organisations have shown relatively little interest to date
    in internal governance/democracy-building issues within Armenia.
    However, a view among some members of the global Diaspora is that the
    Armenian government over the last ten years has signally failed to
    harness the Diaspora's potential to rebuild the economy or promote
    democratisation. Economic policy in particular has remained parochial
    and oligarch-bound, and some significant Diaspora investors have
    retreated with fingers burned. The political elite have also been
    dominated by a narrow group of largely Karabakh veterans, whose main
    international links are mostly focused on Russia (through previous
    service in the Soviet military, for example).

    In the area of foreign policy, there have periodically been pronounced
    tensions between ruling administrations in Armenia and the global
    Diaspora, most notably over policy towards Turkey and the NK conflict.
    This was most visible under the leadership of Armenia's first
    President, Levon Ter-Petrosyan (1991-1998), whose relationship with
    the more nationalist elements in the Diaspora was always an
    uncomfortable one, given the latter's distrust of his perceived
    readiness to make excessive concessions on these issues (in particular
    his refusal to prioritise `genocide' recognition by Turkey as a
    pre-condition for the normalisation of bilateral relations). Under Ter
    Petrosyan, the Dashnak party was banned in Armenia, and his eventual
    downfall in 1998 was at least in part triggered by furious Diaspora
    criticism of his support for an `unacceptable' compromise solution on
    NK. For his part, Ter Petrosyan criticised the Diaspora's
    `unrealistic' view of Armenia's policy priorities, and more recently,
    in his reincarnation as an opposition leader, has bemoaned the
    Diaspora's lack of focus on Armenia's retreat from democracy under his
    successors. President Sargsyan has, by contrast, attracted less ire
    from the Diaspora (in part in recognition of his Karabakhi roots and
    his direct role in securing NK's `liberation'): whilst the ANCA
    strongly opposed his signing of the abortive Protocols with Turkey in
    2009 on the normalisation of relations, the main focus of their
    criticism was the US (for allegedly `pressurising' Yerevan into
    signing), rather than Sargsyan himself.

    Another important impact of Armenia's Diaspora, of particular
    relevance at present, is on its stance towards regimes such as Iran
    and Syria, where sizeable Armenian minorities remain. The
    vulnerability of these minorities is felt keenly by the Armenian
    government. In addition to Armenia's need, as a small, blockaded
    country to remain on good terms with other neighbours, this explains
    why it has been found voting against, abstaining or absenting itself
    during voting for UNGA or Human Rights Council Resolutions on Iran and
    Syria.

    Outlook & Conclusions

    The positives in Armenia's relationship with its global Diaspora will
    continue to outweigh the negatives from Yerevan's standpoint. The
    support the Diaspora provides will remain crucial to Armenia's
    economic survival in a hostile neighbourhood. On foreign policy,
    however, sentiment within elements of the Diaspora will remain a
    significant obstacle to achieving compromise-based solutions over the
    NK dispute and Armenia's relations with Turkey.

    An interesting issue to track will be the position of the Armenian
    Diaspora in Russia, by some margin the largest Armenian community
    outside the country itself. In contrast to the longer-established
    Diaspora communities in the US and Europe, Russia's Armenians have
    hitherto shown little interest in lobbying their host country's
    authorities to take a stronger line on e.g. `Genocide' recognition.
    Given the nature of the Russian regime, its relationships with Turkey
    and Azerbaijan, and the generally `apolitical' nature of many Armenian
    labour migrants working in Russia, it is unlikely that this picture
    will change soon. Over time, the possibility that this community could
    also be mobilised as a political lobbying force in support of the
    Armenian `cause' should not be entirely discounted, However, for the
    time being the public stance of organised Armenian groups in Russia is
    focused on proving its loyalty to the Russian state ` a similar
    dynamic for a vulnerable minority as in Iran and Syria.


    https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/armenias-diaspora-its-role-and-influence

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