The Survival of Armenia: Dangers and Opportunities
By MassisPost
Updated: December 19, 2014
[image: cmap]
[image: OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA]
This article is an edited version of a presentation given by the author
before Massachusetts Armenian Americans in December 2014.
*By David Boyajian*
Before considering the dangers and opportunities in and around Armenia and
Artsakh/Karabagh, let's think about just how far they've come.
Take Artsakh's war against Azerbaijan. Armenians defeated a country three
times larger with twice the population.
Armenians took nearly all of pre-independence Artsakh plus historically
Armenian land from the Iranian border to just 25 miles east of Lake Sevan.
That's about 4000 square miles and includes water resources vital to
Artsakh and Armenia. The two are now geographically reattached.
Their borders with Azerbaijan are actually shorter and, therefore, more
easily defended than before the war.
A critical highway from northern Artsakh to Lake Sevan is under
construction.
Imagine, instead, if Armenians had lost not only Artsakh but also part of
Armenia itself. Indeed, in 1993, Turkey planned to invade Armenia during an
attempted coup against Russian President Boris Yeltsin by Ruslan
Khasbulatov, a Chechen who was Speaker of the Russian Parliament.
True, the war's cost in life, limb, and dislocation has been terrible.
Armenians in those years did not have enough heat for their homes and food
for their families. Many still don't. But they have endured, with
astonishing courage.
For over 20 years, Azerbaijan and Turkey have blockaded Armenia, hoping it
would cave in. But Armenians haven't.
Turkey's blockade has actually kept destructive Turkish economic, criminal,
cultural, and even demographic penetration largely out of a developing
Armenia - a real threat since the Turkish economy and population are,
respectively, over 50 and 30 times larger than Armenia's.
Despite having the region's smallest populations and GNPs, Armenia and
Artsakh have the strongest, best trained military in the Caucasus. This is
despite Azerbaijan's huge weapon purchases from Russia and Israel.
All this and more demonstrate the physical and spiritual resilience of the
people of Armenia, Artsakh, and even the Diaspora. This gives us
inspiration and hope for the future. Yet, Armenians do live in an
inhospitable region.
*Western Objectives*
Armenia and Artsakh are landlocked, blockaded, and in a state of war.
Azerbaijan has sizeable deposits of oil and gas in the Caspian Sea. It
exports these through large, U.S.-backed pipelines that cross Georgia and
Turkey. Fortunately, these pipelines pass close to northern Artsakh and are
vulnerable to attack. Nearly 40% of Israel's oil imports come from Baku.
Across the Caspian lie four Turkic-speaking Central Asian countries:
Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, and Kyrgyzstan. The first two have
large oil and gas deposits.
The U.S., Europe, NATO, and Turkey -- "the West" for short -- have two key
objectives in Russia's traditional sphere of influence - the Caucasus,
Caspian, and Central Asia.
First, export the region's oil and gas to Europe, and wean it off Russian
fuel so that Russia cannot hold Europe hostage. The U.S. and Europe also
aim to build energy pipelines from Central Asia, particularly Turkmenistan,
under the Caspian Sea, to Azerbaijan and eventually Europe.
Objective two: Absorb Georgia, Azerbaijan, and even Armenia into NATO,
reign over the Caspian, and eventually assimilate Central Asian nations now
dominated by Russia and China.
The West has partially achieved its objectives. Major pipelines from Baku
have been built, more are planned, Georgia and Azerbaijan have NATO
aspirations, and a decade ago the U.S. created a small naval fleet in Baku
called the Caspian Guard Initiative.
In effect, the West's plans are now the same as Turkey's: Pan-Turkism, a
coalition of Turkic-speaking countries from Turkey through Azerbaijan and
into Central Asia.
Moscow's objectives are, of course, directly opposite to Washington's.
*Russian Objectives*
First, Russia wants oil and gas pipelines to pass through its own territory
so it can control who buys those fuels and at what price.
Second, Russia wants to keep Georgia, Azerbaijan, Armenia, and Central Asia
out of NATO. Russia fears that NATO will encircle and ultimately destroy it.
Distrustful of genocidal Turkey, in conflict with Azerbaijan over Artsakh,
and a Russian ally, only Armenia stands in the way of the West's objectives.
With Armenia as an ally, Russia has a toehold in the Caucasus, something it
lacks with Georgia and Azerbaijan. If Russia loses Armenia, however, the
West will dominate the Caucasus up to the Caspian Sea and perhaps beyond.
Artsakh also stands in the way. The U.S. desires a solution to the Artsakh
issue because it would bring about the opening of Azerbaijan's and,
probably, Turkey's borders with Armenia. Open Armenian borders would
greatly facilitate NATO's penetrating the Caucasus since the only entry
point now is beleaguered Georgia.
For the same reason, Russia is inclined against an Artsakh solution at this
time.
What does all this mean for Armenia?
*Armenian Centrality*
·The West wants Diasporans to think that Armenia is unimportant. We know,
however, that Armenia is pivotal to Washington's and Moscow's objectives.
Armenia and Artsakh's location give them bargaining power. Using that power
requires great skill and an incorruptible dedication to the nation.
·The U.S., Europe, and NATO are implicitly throwing their considerable
weight behind Pan-Turkism. This means that Turkey is more dangerous than
ever. Even if Turkey were to open the border, acknowledge the Armenian
genocide, and pay reparations, Pan-Turkism will remain a danger.
·Armenia is walking a tightrope. On the one hand, Armenia has excellent
relations with the West and NATO. However, Armenia certainly cannot look to
pro-Turkish Washington and NATO for security. On the other hand, Armenia
does not fully trust Russian security guarantees. But at least Russia knows
that Armenians block NATO-backed Pan-Turkism. Thus, Armenia continues to
balance between the West and Russia, while maintaining positive relations
with Georgia and Iran (the latter, though Shia Muslim like Azerbaijan,
opposes Azeri designs on Iran).
·Armenia also faces several interrelated internal challenges: the economy,
emigration, corruption, the oligarchs, absence of the rule of law, a
discredited judiciary, and the lack of fair elections. But there are
possibilities and encouraging signs internally and externally.
*Possibilities and Encouraging Signs*
1. Though Russia will vehemently fight it, Armenia must wean itself off
near-total dependence on Russian natural gas and import much more Iranian
gas. Armenia must avoid becoming a Russian puppet lest Russia take it for
granted, which has actually been happening for years. Witness massive
Russian weapons sales to Azerbaijan as well as the alarming growth of
Russian - Turkish relations.
2. It is encouraging that opposition Armenian political organizations are
now in a loose coalition engaging in mass protests. This is but one of
several healthy signs that the populace is working for positive change.
3. Armenia must grow its power internally, particularly its economy, and
particularly given the current economic downturn. Without a robust economy,
no country can be truly independent and afford a potent military.
Oligarchical power must be broken and the rule of law enforced so that
Armenians can establish businesses without unreasonable interference.
Otherwise, Armenia will also not attract enough outside investment,
including from Diasporans. With a stronger economy, the outflow of people
from Armenia will slow or stop.
4. A country without a sufficiently high birthrate will not have a
population capable of sustaining a healthy economy or a capable military.
Diasporans have already established Armenian maternity and family clinics.
Perhaps they can create other incentives for families in Armenia and
Artsakh to have more children.
5. Diasporan organizations must push the Armenian government for closer
relations and more consultation. Though Diasporans have directed billions
of dollars and other aid to Armenia, the latter's leaders often keep them
at arm's length. That must change. Most countries would love to have such
an active Diaspora. The Armenian Diaspora is undervalued and underutilized.
It must speak more forcefully, more often, and with a united voice.
Armenia's Minister of Diasporan Affairs should be a Diasporan.
6. The Diaspora must insist that Armenian ambassadors, embassies, and
consulates maintain closer contact with Diasporans and actually perform
work, rather than act like they are on vacation. Diasporan organizations
should reject officials, such as the current ambassador to the U.S.,
suspected of corruption back home.
7. Despite Azeri threats to shoot down planes, Artsakh's spectacular new
airport must open to tourist and commercial traffic. The overland route of
several hours is too long and inconvenient. Artsakh needs hundreds of
thousands more visitors and business persons to arrive by air.
8. Artsakh and the Diaspora must together create a more robust campaign
that makes the case in media and government for Artsakh's rights and
independence.
9. More Diasporans should be encouraged to vacation in Armenia and Artsakh,
establish second homes, and even consider permanent relocation. This would
pump money into their economies, slow down depopulation, and save
Diasporans who may otherwise assimilate abroad.
Let us be sure to pass on to future generations an Armenia, Artsakh, and
Diaspora that are stronger than what we have inherited.
# # #
The author is an Armenian American freelance journalist. Many of his
articles are archived at http://armeniapedia.org/wiki/David_B._Boyajian
http://massispost.com/2014/12/the-survival-of-armenia-dangers-and-opportunities/
By MassisPost
Updated: December 19, 2014
[image: cmap]
[image: OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA]
This article is an edited version of a presentation given by the author
before Massachusetts Armenian Americans in December 2014.
*By David Boyajian*
Before considering the dangers and opportunities in and around Armenia and
Artsakh/Karabagh, let's think about just how far they've come.
Take Artsakh's war against Azerbaijan. Armenians defeated a country three
times larger with twice the population.
Armenians took nearly all of pre-independence Artsakh plus historically
Armenian land from the Iranian border to just 25 miles east of Lake Sevan.
That's about 4000 square miles and includes water resources vital to
Artsakh and Armenia. The two are now geographically reattached.
Their borders with Azerbaijan are actually shorter and, therefore, more
easily defended than before the war.
A critical highway from northern Artsakh to Lake Sevan is under
construction.
Imagine, instead, if Armenians had lost not only Artsakh but also part of
Armenia itself. Indeed, in 1993, Turkey planned to invade Armenia during an
attempted coup against Russian President Boris Yeltsin by Ruslan
Khasbulatov, a Chechen who was Speaker of the Russian Parliament.
True, the war's cost in life, limb, and dislocation has been terrible.
Armenians in those years did not have enough heat for their homes and food
for their families. Many still don't. But they have endured, with
astonishing courage.
For over 20 years, Azerbaijan and Turkey have blockaded Armenia, hoping it
would cave in. But Armenians haven't.
Turkey's blockade has actually kept destructive Turkish economic, criminal,
cultural, and even demographic penetration largely out of a developing
Armenia - a real threat since the Turkish economy and population are,
respectively, over 50 and 30 times larger than Armenia's.
Despite having the region's smallest populations and GNPs, Armenia and
Artsakh have the strongest, best trained military in the Caucasus. This is
despite Azerbaijan's huge weapon purchases from Russia and Israel.
All this and more demonstrate the physical and spiritual resilience of the
people of Armenia, Artsakh, and even the Diaspora. This gives us
inspiration and hope for the future. Yet, Armenians do live in an
inhospitable region.
*Western Objectives*
Armenia and Artsakh are landlocked, blockaded, and in a state of war.
Azerbaijan has sizeable deposits of oil and gas in the Caspian Sea. It
exports these through large, U.S.-backed pipelines that cross Georgia and
Turkey. Fortunately, these pipelines pass close to northern Artsakh and are
vulnerable to attack. Nearly 40% of Israel's oil imports come from Baku.
Across the Caspian lie four Turkic-speaking Central Asian countries:
Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, and Kyrgyzstan. The first two have
large oil and gas deposits.
The U.S., Europe, NATO, and Turkey -- "the West" for short -- have two key
objectives in Russia's traditional sphere of influence - the Caucasus,
Caspian, and Central Asia.
First, export the region's oil and gas to Europe, and wean it off Russian
fuel so that Russia cannot hold Europe hostage. The U.S. and Europe also
aim to build energy pipelines from Central Asia, particularly Turkmenistan,
under the Caspian Sea, to Azerbaijan and eventually Europe.
Objective two: Absorb Georgia, Azerbaijan, and even Armenia into NATO,
reign over the Caspian, and eventually assimilate Central Asian nations now
dominated by Russia and China.
The West has partially achieved its objectives. Major pipelines from Baku
have been built, more are planned, Georgia and Azerbaijan have NATO
aspirations, and a decade ago the U.S. created a small naval fleet in Baku
called the Caspian Guard Initiative.
In effect, the West's plans are now the same as Turkey's: Pan-Turkism, a
coalition of Turkic-speaking countries from Turkey through Azerbaijan and
into Central Asia.
Moscow's objectives are, of course, directly opposite to Washington's.
*Russian Objectives*
First, Russia wants oil and gas pipelines to pass through its own territory
so it can control who buys those fuels and at what price.
Second, Russia wants to keep Georgia, Azerbaijan, Armenia, and Central Asia
out of NATO. Russia fears that NATO will encircle and ultimately destroy it.
Distrustful of genocidal Turkey, in conflict with Azerbaijan over Artsakh,
and a Russian ally, only Armenia stands in the way of the West's objectives.
With Armenia as an ally, Russia has a toehold in the Caucasus, something it
lacks with Georgia and Azerbaijan. If Russia loses Armenia, however, the
West will dominate the Caucasus up to the Caspian Sea and perhaps beyond.
Artsakh also stands in the way. The U.S. desires a solution to the Artsakh
issue because it would bring about the opening of Azerbaijan's and,
probably, Turkey's borders with Armenia. Open Armenian borders would
greatly facilitate NATO's penetrating the Caucasus since the only entry
point now is beleaguered Georgia.
For the same reason, Russia is inclined against an Artsakh solution at this
time.
What does all this mean for Armenia?
*Armenian Centrality*
·The West wants Diasporans to think that Armenia is unimportant. We know,
however, that Armenia is pivotal to Washington's and Moscow's objectives.
Armenia and Artsakh's location give them bargaining power. Using that power
requires great skill and an incorruptible dedication to the nation.
·The U.S., Europe, and NATO are implicitly throwing their considerable
weight behind Pan-Turkism. This means that Turkey is more dangerous than
ever. Even if Turkey were to open the border, acknowledge the Armenian
genocide, and pay reparations, Pan-Turkism will remain a danger.
·Armenia is walking a tightrope. On the one hand, Armenia has excellent
relations with the West and NATO. However, Armenia certainly cannot look to
pro-Turkish Washington and NATO for security. On the other hand, Armenia
does not fully trust Russian security guarantees. But at least Russia knows
that Armenians block NATO-backed Pan-Turkism. Thus, Armenia continues to
balance between the West and Russia, while maintaining positive relations
with Georgia and Iran (the latter, though Shia Muslim like Azerbaijan,
opposes Azeri designs on Iran).
·Armenia also faces several interrelated internal challenges: the economy,
emigration, corruption, the oligarchs, absence of the rule of law, a
discredited judiciary, and the lack of fair elections. But there are
possibilities and encouraging signs internally and externally.
*Possibilities and Encouraging Signs*
1. Though Russia will vehemently fight it, Armenia must wean itself off
near-total dependence on Russian natural gas and import much more Iranian
gas. Armenia must avoid becoming a Russian puppet lest Russia take it for
granted, which has actually been happening for years. Witness massive
Russian weapons sales to Azerbaijan as well as the alarming growth of
Russian - Turkish relations.
2. It is encouraging that opposition Armenian political organizations are
now in a loose coalition engaging in mass protests. This is but one of
several healthy signs that the populace is working for positive change.
3. Armenia must grow its power internally, particularly its economy, and
particularly given the current economic downturn. Without a robust economy,
no country can be truly independent and afford a potent military.
Oligarchical power must be broken and the rule of law enforced so that
Armenians can establish businesses without unreasonable interference.
Otherwise, Armenia will also not attract enough outside investment,
including from Diasporans. With a stronger economy, the outflow of people
from Armenia will slow or stop.
4. A country without a sufficiently high birthrate will not have a
population capable of sustaining a healthy economy or a capable military.
Diasporans have already established Armenian maternity and family clinics.
Perhaps they can create other incentives for families in Armenia and
Artsakh to have more children.
5. Diasporan organizations must push the Armenian government for closer
relations and more consultation. Though Diasporans have directed billions
of dollars and other aid to Armenia, the latter's leaders often keep them
at arm's length. That must change. Most countries would love to have such
an active Diaspora. The Armenian Diaspora is undervalued and underutilized.
It must speak more forcefully, more often, and with a united voice.
Armenia's Minister of Diasporan Affairs should be a Diasporan.
6. The Diaspora must insist that Armenian ambassadors, embassies, and
consulates maintain closer contact with Diasporans and actually perform
work, rather than act like they are on vacation. Diasporan organizations
should reject officials, such as the current ambassador to the U.S.,
suspected of corruption back home.
7. Despite Azeri threats to shoot down planes, Artsakh's spectacular new
airport must open to tourist and commercial traffic. The overland route of
several hours is too long and inconvenient. Artsakh needs hundreds of
thousands more visitors and business persons to arrive by air.
8. Artsakh and the Diaspora must together create a more robust campaign
that makes the case in media and government for Artsakh's rights and
independence.
9. More Diasporans should be encouraged to vacation in Armenia and Artsakh,
establish second homes, and even consider permanent relocation. This would
pump money into their economies, slow down depopulation, and save
Diasporans who may otherwise assimilate abroad.
Let us be sure to pass on to future generations an Armenia, Artsakh, and
Diaspora that are stronger than what we have inherited.
# # #
The author is an Armenian American freelance journalist. Many of his
articles are archived at http://armeniapedia.org/wiki/David_B._Boyajian
http://massispost.com/2014/12/the-survival-of-armenia-dangers-and-opportunities/