Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

The Value Of The Question

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • The Value Of The Question

    THE VALUE OF THE QUESTION
    by Gennadi Sysoyev, observer
    Translated by Elena Leonova

    Source: Kommersant, No. 79, May 2007, p. 5
    Agency WPS
    What the Papers Say Part A (Russia)
    May 14, 2007 Monday

    Political similarities between Armenia and Russia; The political
    bets for Armenia's parliamentary election can be placed in several
    categories at once, since a great deal does indeed depend on the
    outcome of Saturday's vote. The greatest point of suspense in
    Armenia's election stems from its function as a rehearsal of the
    Operation Successor model.

    The political bets for Armenia's parliamentary election can be placed
    in several categories at once, since a great deal does indeed depend
    on the outcome of Saturday's vote.

    Firstly, this election will decide which party will be Armenia's
    leading party; thus, it will decide who the presidential candidate
    will be. Secondly, Armenia's future orientation is becoming more
    apparent, and in simplified terms it comes down to one question:
    siding with Russia, or siding with the West? Thirdly, this election
    will clarify the geopolitical configuration in the Trans-Caucasus
    and Russia's place within it.

    Yet the greatest point of suspense in Armenia's election stems from
    its function as a rehearsal of the Operation Successor model - almost
    exactly the same as Russia's version of that model.

    Like President Vladimir Putin, Armenian President Robert Kocharian
    is barred by the two-term limit from seeking another term in office.

    Moreover, the presidential elections in Armenia and Russia will
    happen at around the same tim. Kocharian has already made it clear
    that even after he leaves office, he intends to remain a key actor in
    Armenian politics; Putin has also said that he won't withdraw from the
    decision-making process even after someone else moves into the Kremlin.

    Unlike his Russian counterpart, however, Kocharian seems to have picked
    a successor already. Ordinary citizens and the Armenian political elite
    are sure that the successor is Prime Minister Serzhe Sarkisian. Russia
    still has two potential successors: Dmitri Medvedev and Sergei Ivanov.

    Armenia's party politics configuration is also identical to that of
    Russia. United Russia's equivalent is the Armenian Republican Party,
    headed by Sarkisian the successor. Most ministers and regional leaders
    are members of this party, along with a vast number of federal and
    regional bureaucrats; the party has vast administrative, media,
    and financial resources. In short, it's a typical official party.

    All the same, Armenia has followed Russia's lead in establishing
    a second official party, which simultaneously manages to position
    itself as an opposition party, criticizing the authorities (except
    the president, of course). This party is called Prosperous Armenia -
    the equivalent of Just Russia. True, it's headed by Gagik Tsarukian,
    Armenia's most prominent oligarch; but all Russian oligarchs in the
    Putin era have also come to a correct understanding of "corporate
    social responsibility." Armenia's version of Just Russia is acting
    as a double, just in case the opposition manages to strike a palpable
    blow at the main official party.

    If the model with two official parties proves effective in Armenia (and
    subsequently in Russia), and Operation Successor goes ahead without
    a hitch, this will be something new for international experience with
    the two-party system theory. Something new that's only applicable in
    the former Soviet Union.
Working...
X