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Killings In Armenia Point To Flaws In Russian Army

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  • Killings In Armenia Point To Flaws In Russian Army

    KILLINGS IN ARMENIA POINT TO FLAWS IN RUSSIAN ARMY

    The Moscow Times
    Jan 15 2015

    By Simon Saradzhyan

    Like many others in the Armenian diaspora, I have been shaken by
    the news out of the Armenian city of Gyumri where six members of
    the Avetisyan family were killed. A conscript from a nearby Russian
    military base had confessed to the killings and his gun and belongings
    were found in the Avetisyans' house.

    I can only hope and pray that little Seryozha Avetisyan -- who suffered
    a wound in the course of this homicide and remains in grave condition
    -- overcomes the odds and lives on to fulfill the dream that I am
    sure his parents nurtured for him when he was born six months ago.

    At this stage, the information available in the public domain
    doesn't allow us to ascertain what might have caused the suspect --
    who reportedly had been "on the radar" of Russian law-enforcement and
    his brother had been convicted of murder -- to commit such an atrocity.

    When apprehended, the suspect could give no coherent explanation as
    to what prompted him to shoot and hack seven people, ranging in age
    from six months to 53 years.

    We do not know whether the suspect -- who had reportedly tried to
    desert once before -- had some underlying condition before being
    conscripted or that appeared during the course of his service that may
    have caused him to commit such a heinous crime. One way or another,
    no sane person would have stabbed a small child with a bayonet,
    which is what the suspect allegedly did.

    Unfortunately, this is not the first case of a soldier going on a
    killing spree when absent without leave within or outside the former
    Soviet Union.

    While a defense journalist at The Moscow Times, I wrote more than once
    about uniformed killers, including one mentally unstable sailor who
    had locked himself up in a nuclear submarine after shooting fellow
    comrades-in-arms.

    Some of these killings would have never been committed if the Russian
    enlistment offices and the medical commissions assigned to these
    offices did a thorough job of screening all conscripts. Others
    would have not happened if violent hazing of conscripts had been
    not tolerated.

    Russian media have reported on how individuals with health issues or
    with expunged criminal records would be served call-up notices just
    because enlistment officers needed to fulfill conscription plans
    assigned by the General Staff.

    The Russian military and border guards should be commended for
    quickly tracking down the suspect before he could cross into Turkey
    and placing him into custody. However, it took the Defense Ministry
    team only a few days to conduct an investigation and announce that
    all those guilty have been identified. As disappointing are some of
    the proposals on how to deal with the bigger problem, as they see it.

    For instance, one ministry representative has stated the armed forces
    might stop sending conscripts to Russia's military bases abroad
    because of the incident.

    Should not the goal be to prevent soldiers from murdering people
    in general rather than just people living in countries which host
    Russian troops? If someone is prone to go on a killing spree, then
    he should not be conscripted at all.

    Russian laws bar Russian authorities from handing Russian citizens to
    foreign governments for prosecution, but they also provide for life
    in prison for those found guilty of committing murders of this scale
    and cruelty. In my opinion, justice will be served, only, if found
    guilty, the suspect is sentenced to life in prison without parole.

    Armenians' sympathies with Russia are well-known. In fact, the name of
    the surviving boy -- Seryozha -- attests to it. One legend -- that I
    have read in Armenian literature -- it that grateful Armenians would
    name their children after Russian soldiers who fought on behalf of
    the Russian empire to wrest control of parts of historic Armenia from
    Persia and the Ottoman empire -- that had oppressed their Armenian
    subjects.

    The soldiers would give their diminutive names when asked by Armenians,
    and, hence there appeared numerous Seryozhas, Vanyas and Kolyas
    in Armenia.

    It is my strong hope that this horrible tragedy will not affect the
    relations between Armenia and Russia, but it is my even stronger
    hope that the Russian response will not be limited to prosecution of
    the alleged murderer. Killing sprees by soldiers across the world
    demonstrate that even fully professional armies sometimes fail to
    weed out potentially dangerous individuals from their ranks.

    But I still think there are steps that generals can take to reduce
    occurrences of uniformed violence even if fully eliminating such
    violence might prove to be a mission impossible.

    These steps include rigorous screening of conscripts and monitoring
    of active-duty servicemen to detect dangerous disorders as well as
    zero tolerance for violent hazing.

    Simon Saradzhyan is a researcher at Harvard University's Belfer Center
    for Science and International Affairs.

    http://www.themoscowtimes.com/opinion/article/armenian-tragedy-points-to-flaws-in-russian-army/514445.html

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