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Armenian Leader Accused Of Caving In To Moscow

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  • Armenian Leader Accused Of Caving In To Moscow

    ARMENIAN LEADER ACCUSED OF CAVING IN TO MOSCOW

    Institute for War and Peace Reporting, UK
    IWPR Caucasus Reporting #708
    Nov 5 2013

    Strong reactions to moves to bind Yerevan's economic future to Moscow.

    By Vahe Harutyunyan - Caucasus

    As President Serzh Sargsyan insists Armenia's entry into the Customs
    Union will strengthen the country, his opponents are accusing him of
    surrendering the nation's independence.

    On October 24, Sargsyan signed an agreement paving the way for
    accession to the Customs Union, whose current members are Russia,
    Belarus and Kazakstan. The terms include setting up a commission
    to draw up a road map for the accession process, and banning any
    "statements or actions that run contrary to the interests of the
    Customs Union".

    Sargsyan announced plans to join the trade bloc after talks in Moscow
    in early September, stunning both Armenians and European diplomats who
    were awaiting the signing of an association agreement and trade deal
    with the European Union. The two are seen as mutually exclusive. (See
    Armenia's Receding European Ambitions)

    Moscow, which has been trying to prevent its former Soviet satellites
    from moving closer to the EU scheme, had been putting pressure on
    Yerevan to change course.

    Sargsyan's decision takes Armenia out of a group of four republics
    - the others being Georgia, Ukraine and Moldova - which will sign
    similar agreements with the EU in November.

    The president said Armenia, which is already part of the Collective
    Security Treaty Organisation (CSTO), a Russian-led defence pact,
    had to take national security into account given its tense relations
    with neighbours Turkey and Azerbaijan.

    "Our colleagues in the CSTO are creating a new platform for economic
    cooperation," he said, in televised comments. "I have often said
    that when you are part of a system that provides you with defence
    security, it is impossible and ineffective to isolate yourself from
    that geopolitical area."

    Russia guards much of Armenia's border with Turkey, maintains a troop
    presence in the country and supplies it with weapons on preferential
    terms. Economically, Russia is a major trading partner and also hosts
    hundreds of thousands of Armenian migrant workers.

    These factors give it significant leverage, as Prime Minister
    Tigran Sargsyan admitted in an interview with western journalists
    in mid-October.

    "If we don't join the Customs Union, that will create new barriers
    between businesses in Armenia and Russia. A political decision was
    therefore taken that our country's economic development must be
    within the framework of the Customs Union," Tigran Sargsyan said,
    according to an account published on the government website.

    Gagik Minasyan, head of the Armenian parliament's finance committee and
    a member of Sargsyan's Republican Party, confirmed that the decision
    had not been taken because of the potential economic benefits.

    "Only when the documents are finally drawn up for Armenia to join
    the Customs Union will it be possible to predict whether the impact
    on the economy will be positive or negative," he told IWPR.

    Opposition politicians were in no doubt that the decision was
    catastrophic.

    Levon Ter-Petrosyan, Armenia's first post-Soviet president and now
    head of the opposition Armenian National Congress, said Sargsyan had
    effectively surrendered control of foreign policy to Moscow.

    Raffi Hovhannisian, a former foreign minister who heads the Heritage
    Party, called in the president to step down, saying that the decision
    showed he had no judgement.

    "Sargsyan has turned himself into a [Russian] provincial governor, and
    he must go," the opposition politician said. "Following the notorious
    anti-state protocols [failed attempt to improve ties with Turkey],
    elections that are staged illegally and then stolen, his continuously
    harmful policies, and now this unilateral decision announced in the
    Kremlin... there is no other possible option."

    Ruben Mehrabyan, a political analyst with the Armenian Centre for
    Political and International Studies, said that Sargsyan's decision
    looked unconstitutional. He even compared it to the Soviet Union's
    forcible annexation of Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia in 1940.

    "It resembles what happened to the Baltic states, only without
    the army being involved. The process that began in September 3
    and continued on October 24 looks like an occupation," Mehrabyan
    told IWPR. "The constitution explicitly prohibits Armenia from
    undertaking any obligations that, in whole or in part, transfer
    national sovereignty to any supranational structure. There are no
    mechanisms in the constitution that allow us to change this. And if
    it happens, it is nothing other than occupation."

    David Shahnazaryan, former head of Armenia's National Security Service,
    said he was certain Moscow was seeking to exert the control it once
    had over Armenia.

    "It's clear that what we're talking about is restoring the Soviet
    Union, and that this is a deadly threat to the Republic of Armenia,"
    he told IWPR.

    The Armenian government is still insisting it will sign a document
    of some kind in at the EU meeting Vilnius.

    "I think we will sign a document with the European Union in Vilnius,"
    Levon Sargsyan, the president's brother who serves as a special envoy,
    said at a press conference in mid-October. "It will become clear at
    the summit what kind of document that will be."

    Vahe Harutyunyan is a freelance journalist in Armenia.

    http://iwpr.net/report-news/armenian-leader-accused-caving-moscow

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