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Armenia: In Search Of Alternatives; Armenia Is Through With Listenin

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  • Armenia: In Search Of Alternatives; Armenia Is Through With Listenin

    ARMENIA: IN SEARCH OF ALTERNATIVES; ARMENIA IS THROUGH WITH LISTENING TO MYTHS ABOUT RUSSIA
    by Gajane Movsesjan
    Translated by A. Ignatkin

    Source: Vremya Novostei, April 6, 2006, p. 5
    Agency WPS
    What the Papers Say Part B (Russia)
    April 6, 2006 Thursday

    Armenia may decide that it doesn't need Russia after all; Armenian
    Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanjan's two-day visit to Moscow begins
    today. Oskanjan will meet with his Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov
    and Security Council Secretary Igor Ivanov. He met with US Secretary
    of State Condoleezza Rice in Washington the other day.

    Armenian Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanjan's two-day visit to Moscow
    begins today. Oskanjan will meet with his Russian counterpart Sergei
    Lavrov and Security Council Secretary Igor Ivanov. Official reports
    on the agenda are brief. They indicate that it includes bilateral
    relations, the Nagorno-Karabakh problem, regional matters, and
    cooperation within the framework of international organizations.

    Sources from Armenian diplomatic circles say that this is just a
    routine visit, nothing more.

    What is interesting, however, is that Oskanjan discussed the same
    matters with US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice in Washington
    the other day. Oskanjan and Rice signed an accord on March 27 to the
    effect that Armenia will receive $236.5 million under the Millennium
    Challenges program over the next five years. The millions will be
    used to repair roads in rural areas, reconstruction of irrigation and
    drainage systems, and reduction of impoverishment in the agricultural
    sector.

    Rice herself undermined political undertones of this seemingly economic
    event at the signing ceremony when she began elaborating meaningfully
    on the necessity of advancement of democratic reforms in Armenia in
    the light of the parliamentary and presidential elections there in
    2007 and 2008. Armenian observers took her words as an admission
    of Washington's desire to bring political and economic processes
    in Armenia under its own control. Moreover, the program itself
    (Millennium Challenges) was taken as but an additional instrument of
    American influence with Yerevan.

    Shushan Khatlamadzhjan, an analyst with the Armenian Institute of Civil
    Society and Regional Development, believes that the Armenian-Russian
    strategic partnership is in a crisis. "The problem is rooted in the
    lack of transparency of the talks between the Armenian and Russian
    authorities," she said. "Armenian society feels disassociated from
    public politics and cannot help ascribing it to some clandestine
    accords between the governments of the two countries... Like a
    recompense to Armenia for high gas tariffs in the form of a discount on
    Russian military hardware as some Russian media outlets speculated. In
    short, even pro-Russian political forces in Armenia begin promoting
    the necessity to develop foreign policy on the basis of the actual
    national interests and not the old myths..."

    Now let's consider the problem of Nagorno-Karabakh. Chairmen of
    the OSCE Minsk Group, Russia and the United States have headed the
    mission of intermediaries for a decade now. With nothing to show
    for it in terms of the formula of a lasting peace. A meeting between
    the presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan in France was arranged this
    February but even it failed as a means of accomplishing anything.

    Foreign intermediaries are analyzing the situation again now. The
    United States is particularly impatient. American diplomacy put Yerevan
    and Baku under pressure in March. Daniel Fried, US Undersecretary of
    State for Europe and Eurasia, was dispatched to the region. Fried
    announced that the United States wanted a compromise between the
    warring sides reached this year.

    The United States is impatient and the European Union is certainly
    getting active. Armenian analysts and observers ascribe these
    trends to the desire on the part of the West to resolve conflicts
    in the post-Soviet zone in such a manner as to weaken Russia's
    positions. As far as Khatlamadzhjan is concerned, it is precisely
    from this standpoint that specialists should contemplate the renewed
    debates over the so-called "Marshall Plan for the Caucasus." The idea
    boils down to substantial economic aid to countries of the southern
    part of the Caucasus in return for political concessions. "Russia
    is in the situation where a new and effective policy with regard to
    Armenia becomes a must," Khatlamadzhjan concluded.

    Khatlamadzhjan also believes that "the myth in Armenia of there being
    no alternatives to strategic partnership with Russia is in its last
    throes." "Armenia may solve its regional problems and resolve conflicts
    without military and other cooperation with Russia, accepting instead
    the plan and investments from the West. There is the widespread opinion
    in analytical community here that there can be no war or peace without
    Russia, but we shouldn't make a fetish of this fact or demonize it,"
    she said.
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