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Armenia: New Hopes And New Fears

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  • Armenia: New Hopes And New Fears

    ARMENIA: NEW HOPES AND NEW FEARS

    Osservatorio Balcani e Caucaso, Italy
    May 16 2014

    Mikayel Zolyan | Yerevan

    The 99th Anniversary Commemoration of the Armenian Genocide and the
    20th anniversary of the Nagorno Karabakh ceasefire have recently
    interweaved marking the two main external challenges for today's
    Armenia

    Two dates of symbolic importance for Armenia passed recently. One
    is well-known all over the world: April 24 marked 99 years since
    the Armenian genocide in Ottoman Turkey. Another date is less known
    outside of the region: on May 12, exactly 20 years ago, the ceasefire
    that put an end to the war in Nagorno-Karabakh was signed. These
    two dates symbolize what can be considered the two main external
    challenges for Armenia today: Armenia-Turkey relations and the
    Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. During the latest weeks there have been
    certain developments in both issues that may be signs that status quo
    is changing. However it is still hard to say whether these changes
    are for better or for worse.

    Nagorno-Karabakh: New Initiatives and New Obstacles

    Against the background of the crisis in Ukraine, where Kiev, Moscow,
    Brussels and Washington are unable to stop the escalation, the
    ceasefire in Nagorno-Karabakh suddenly seems almost a success story.

    Of course, today's imperfect peace is fragile: Azerbaijan and Armenia
    are effectively divided by a frontline and engaged in an arms race.

    Time after time border incidents take place, sometimes with tragic
    consequences, as soldiers are killed or wounded, mostly by sniper
    fire. However, in spite of all this, the ceasefire has largely held
    for 20 years, remarkably, in the absence of a peacekeeping force in
    the region.

    Sergey Minasyan, vice-director of Caucasus Institute, a Yerevan-based
    think tank, says that two major factors have contributed to the
    continuing relative peace. One is the balance of power: though
    Azerbaijan has been heavily arming itself, Armenia has so far managed
    to keep up, partly through its alliance with Russia and membership in
    the CSTO (Collective Security Treaty Organization). The other factor
    is the presence of international institutions, first of all the OSCE,
    or more precisely, the so called OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs, i.e.

    Russia, the U.S. and France.

    Recently, the newly appointed US representative James Warlick
    has been the most active among the mediators. Thus, he initiated a
    series of meetings with stakeholders, including, for the first time,
    representatives of Armenian and Azerbaijani Diasporas in the U.S.

    Later, he issued a statement, in which he voiced the main principles
    that have been on the table of negotiations for several years.

    Warlick's activity has made him a target for angry reactions from
    both sides: Azerbaijani government was unhappy about his meetings with
    US Armenians, and both Armenian and Azerbaijani media criticized his
    statement. However, if Warlick's aim was to lift the veil of secrecy
    surrounding Nagorno-Karabakh talks and to revive the debate around
    the peace plan, he definitely succeeded.

    In his statement Warlick also stressed the importance of 2nd
    track diplomacy, i.e. contacts between civil society. However, the
    future of citizen diplomacy when it comes to Nagorno-Karabakh is
    today uncertain. On April 30, Azerbaijani well-known journalist Rauf
    Mirkadyrov, who had participated in numerous citizen diplomacy programs
    with Armenian colleagues, was detained by Azerbaijani authorities
    on charges of spying for Armenia. Several days later, two prominent
    representatives of Azerbaijani civil society, who also participated
    in such programs, Arif and Leyla Yunus (they are husband and wife),
    were detained with similar charges.

    This is the first case when such charges are leveled at participants of
    citizen diplomacy efforts. The authorities, whether in Yerevan, Baku or
    Stepanakert, have traditionally tolerated 2nd track diplomacy efforts,
    mostly sponsored by the West, even though these programs were often
    viewed with suspicion. Participants of such initiatives were sometimes
    harassed by nationalist activists, police or security services, but
    they were not jailed. It is hard to say whether the recent arrests are
    a conscious attempt to stifle citizen diplomacy programs or an attempt
    to silence government critics. Since Ilham Aliev came to power, Baku
    has been more suspicious of such efforts than Yerevan and Stepanakert,
    since it saw them as legitimizing the status quo.

    Whatever the case, recent arrests have had a chilling effect on
    Armenian-Azerbaijani peace-building initiatives, like the EU sponsored
    ambitious EPNK program and increased the level of overall tension in
    the region. Marina Nagai, from the London-based International Alert
    NGO, which has worked in the field for years and is today part of
    the EPNK, says that "The concept and purpose of peacebuilding is
    often not fully understood and fraught with wrong expectations and
    misconceptions... this partly explains the reason why the societies
    and authorities might treat peacebuilding initiatives, particularly
    dialogue and joint activities, with suspicion and mistrust."

    Armenia-Turkey: a Public Relation Stunt or Genuine Change?

    When it comes to Armenia-Turkey the situation is quite ambiguous too.

    On the one hand the Armenian-Turkish protocols signed in 2009 seem
    dead, and propaganda warfare is intensified in expectation of 2015,
    the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide. On the other hand,
    there are signs that Armenia-Turkey relations may be not as frozen
    as they seemed until recently.

    On April 23 Turkish prime-minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan made a
    statement, offering condolences to the "grandchildren of... Armenians
    who lost their lives in the context of the early twentieth century".

    The rest of the statement for most part reproduced the official
    Turkish version of events, i.e. Armenians in 1915 were subject to
    "relocation" rather than genocide, therefore Armenians' suffering
    was a consequence of war and "difficult times for Ottoman Empire",
    just like "the suffering for Turkish, Kurdish, Arab, Armenian and
    millions of other Ottoman citizens". Thus, Erdogan's statement
    by no way means recognition of genocide, or even of the fact that
    Armenians were deliberately targeted by the Ottoman state. However,
    in any case Erdogan's statement attracted a lot of attention since
    it is the first time a head of Turkish government has offered his
    condolences to Armenians in relation to the events of 1915.

    On May 2, Turkish foreign minister Davutoglu published an article,
    elaborating on Erdogan's message. Like Erdogan, Davutoglu, while
    remaining within the framework of the official Turkish position
    on 1915, tried to strike a conciliatory note: he acknowledged the
    prominent role of Armenians to the Ottoman Empire, and even mentioned
    some prominent Ottoman Armenians, including musician Komitas, who was
    one of the victims of 1915 (though he survived the exile to desert,
    he lost his sanity and never recovered).

    Too little, too late?

    For most Armenians, however, both in Armenia and in the Diaspora,
    these messages are "too little, too late". Aram Hamparian, head of
    the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) called Erdogan's
    statement "denial repackaged", and Serzh Sargsyan's chief of staff,
    Vigen Sargsyan, described it as "an advanced form of denial". Refusal
    to acknowledge that Armenians in 1915 were subjected to deliberate
    extermination continues to anger Armenians, and the conciliatory
    tone of Turkey's leaders is undermined by the continuing blockade of
    Armenia by Turkey. However, while rejecting Erdogan's view of history,
    the Armenian government also was careful to include a conciliatory
    message: Serzh Sargsyan's April 24 statement emphasized that "we do not
    consider Turkish society as our enemy", and devoted a whole paragraph
    to "Turks who lent a helping hand to their Armenian neighbors".

    Commentators note that changes in the Turkish leaders' tone may be a
    result of a changing Turkish strategy in expectation of 2015. While
    the Turkish government is not ready to recognize the events of
    1915 as genocide, today, after genocide recognitions by several
    countries, the advent of Internet and increasing openness of the
    Turkish society, simply dismissing the issue as "Armenian propaganda"
    is no longer an option. Another reason behind Erdogan's attempt to
    strike a conciliatory tone may be geopolitical. Some commentators
    are talking about an attempt on the part of mediators to revive the
    Armenia-Turkey normalization process. Conciliatory notes in both
    Erdogan's and Sargsyan's statements can be a sign that these efforts
    have not been completely futile.

    Civil society efforts

    In any case, in one respect the Armenia-Turkey relations are strikingly
    different from the situation around Nagorno-Karabakh. In spite of all
    the ups and downs of government diplomacy, civil society contacts
    have been steadily strengthening for several years. Armenian and
    Turkish NGOs have been engaged in citizen diplomacy efforts long
    before the Armenia-Turkey protocols, and these contacts are further
    expanding today. A group of Armenian journalists and NGO activists
    went to Turkey on April 24, where they took part in the Armenian
    genocide commemoration organized by liberal Turkish groups. Visits
    of Turkish civil society representatives to Armenia have also become
    routine. Marine Manucharyan, whose NGO Civic Forum is engaged in both
    Armenian-Turkish and Armenian-Azerbaijani reconciliation efforts,
    says that the two processes are very different. In the first case, in
    spite of some significant obstacles, there is also significant support
    for dialogue within the societies. But, in the second case, she says,
    things are more difficult: "With the recent events in Azerbaijan,
    we are afraid that there will be no people left who would be willing
    to cooperate with us".

    http://www.balcanicaucaso.org/eng/Regions-and-countries/Armenia/Armenia-New-Hopes-and-New-Fears-151970

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