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Emigration Threatens Armenia: Libaridian's Appeal

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  • Emigration Threatens Armenia: Libaridian's Appeal

    EMIGRATION THREATENS ARMENIA: LIBARIDIAN'S APPEAL
    Ann Arbor

    ianyan Magazine
    http://www.ianyanmag.com/2011/08/03/emigration-threatens-armenia-libaridians-appeal/
    Aug 3, 2011

    Armenia, Caucasus, Commentary, Diaspora - By Guest Author on August 3,
    2011 4:03 am

    The following unabridged essay was written by Dr. Jirair Libaridian,
    who holds the Alex Manoogian Chair in Modern Armenian History at the
    University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. Libaridian previously served as
    an adviser to former President of Armenia, Levon Ter-Petrossian and
    First Deputry Minister of Foreign Affairs. See a previous interview
    with Libaridian about the work of his friend and late journalist
    Hrant Dink here.

    Armenia is currently experiencing a threat to its already small
    population through emigration. According to the 2009 UNDP report
    "National Human Development Report: Migration and Human Development:
    Opportunities and Challenges," 700,000 to 1.3 million (22-40 percent
    of Armenia's 2008 population) left Armenia and settled abroad during
    the years of 1990 to 2005 alone.

    There are moments in a nation's history when sustaining hope presents
    a serious challenge, when optimism can be maintained only if reduced
    to self-delusion, when indifference carries significant responsibility
    and when silence should inspire guilt.

    The current moment in Armenia is just such a moment if, that is,
    one cares about Armenia as a state.

    Emigration from the two decade old independent state has reached
    extremely dangerous proportions: Dangerous to the national security
    of Armenia, dangerous to the structure of statehood, and threatening
    to the concept of nationhood with any sense of worth that carries
    meaning beyond the awareness of a common past.

    It is time to realize, as many are doing in Armenia, that the pace
    of current emigration brings us face to face with a calamity of
    historic proportions, a calamity larger than the very difficult
    problems cited routinely.

    We pride ourselves for our knowledge of history and yet we display
    total ignorance of what that history may mean, what lessons it
    may teach us, if we are interested in learning any. So many of our
    leaders-political, intellectual, scholarly and religious-lace their
    speeches, articles, books and sermons-with references to the tragedies
    that fill that history. They also point to the necessity to learn
    from that history. And yet, they seem to be oblivious to the simple
    fact that Armenia is being emptied and that hard and cruel fact has
    its irreversible consequences.

    It is quite well known that emigration from Armenia has a history that
    is at least one thousand years old. Our historians have marked many
    moments when massive numbers of Armenians left their homeland. Yet
    historians and others have not always appreciated the consequences
    of such exoduses. We know that the Ardsrunis of Vaspurakan built
    the Church of Akhtamar but we do not seem to care that they did so
    in order to celebrate their becoming kings at the expense of the
    central authorities of the Armenian kingdom, thus creating a very
    vulnerable mini-state while weakening the overarching Bagratuni
    kingdom; we also do not seem to care that, having become a prime
    target for Byzantine expansion, at the end of their "royal existence"
    the Ardsrunis exchanged their kingdom for property outside Armenia
    and left their land with tens of thousands of their subjects. This is
    the same Akhtamar Church regarding which major Armenian institutions,
    in Armenia and in the Diaspora, raised uproar recently. It seems, at
    times, that to feel like a nation requires no more than to appreciate
    the art of the past

    That and similar instances of mass migration explain, in part, as to
    why historic Armenia was lost.

    The above-mentioned incident of mass emigration and similar events
    are tied directly to the most tragic and consequential event in our
    history, the Genocide during World War I. To varying degrees, the
    Genocide and the campaign for its recognition have consumed politics
    and political discourse in the Diaspora and in Armenia. Coming to
    terms with that calamity has taken decades; it is not all that clear
    that we have managed it yet. First we needed to narrate the events to
    ourselves, and then to the world. Some went on to explore the reasons
    for the policies of the Ottoman Turkish government. Meanwhile we
    decided that international recognition of the Genocide is where our
    efforts should be concentrated. We expected other nations to support
    our campaign because they and the rest of the world could learn
    lessons from the Armenian Genocide, from history, our history. Yet
    we have failed to ask the equally important question: Once they had
    decided that killing a people was desirable, why did the then rulers
    of the Ottoman Empire think they could execute the deportations and
    massacres necessary to achieve it? Why did they think it was possible
    to achieve what we now call genocide on such a scale? Why was it even
    an option, technically speaking?

    The simple truth is that Armenians had been reduced to a minority in
    their own land and their numbers had fallen below such a threshold
    that any solution to their problems in their own hands had become
    impossible. A thousand years ago Armenians had constituted at least
    90% of the population of historic Armenia, estimated to be somewhere
    between one and four million. In 1914 there were 2.2 million Armenians
    in the whole of the Ottoman Empire, if we are to accept the statistics
    provided by our own Patriarchate. Massacres until then can account
    for only a small portion of the lack of increase in those numbers
    reflecting natural growth in the population. Emigration by individuals,
    families and groups-albeit for valid reasons-as well as conversions
    account for the rest.

    That depletion and the diminution of the population is responsible for
    genocide becoming a plausible solution of the "Armenian problem" the
    Young Turk government perceived and, once adopted, for the successful
    execution of that policy. And this, despite the heroic deeds of
    fedayees before the war and the heroism of many in the centers
    of Armenian resistance during the Genocide itself. The outcome of
    history, nonetheless, is not conditions by speeches and ideologies,
    not even by the heroics and courage demonstrated by so many; it is
    the objective realities that evolve around us, realities that are
    formed over time that we must account for.

    Our numbers had fallen below a certain threshold, to a level that
    had made an Armenian revolution against the state in the Ottoman
    Empire impossible and successful self-defense against Genocide by
    and large hopeless. In fact, the rare place where resistance assured
    the survival of significant number of Armenians during the massacres
    and deportations was where Armenians constituted a compact majority,
    such as in northern Van province. We are all humbled by the courage
    of individual heroes, the resolve of so many communities to act with
    dignity in the face of certain death and, at the end, the death of
    a people: but all of these do not necessarily compensate for the
    absence of strategic and realistic thinking or for the necessity
    today to assess the lessons of that calamity.

    Nearly a century later, we may now be reaching a similar threshold in
    the Republic of Armenia, where the decreasing level of the population
    closely linked to the unresolved conflicts with neighbors that is
    threatening the viability of the economy and national defense.

    This is not an accusation against our people or any of its members
    who find no other solution to have a dignified life but to weigh the
    option of leaving; individuals make decisions regarding their own
    present and future on the basis of their own needs and possibilities.

    These possibilities for a dignified future are created, ultimately,
    by those who lead and run the state and determine its policies. Many
    other nations have been invaded and massacred but not all peoples
    subject to such crimes have left their homelands. Leadership counts in
    Armenian as in any other history, as was the case of the Ardsrunis. In
    contemporary times democratic processes should place some controls over
    the actions of leaders; but when votes are tempered with systematically
    and on a massive scale individual citizens end up with limited or no
    input in state policies.

    Emigration and its accelerated tempo have not been a hidden process.

    After all, there are hardly any families in Armenia that do not have
    relatives abroad; and statistics regarding the number of arrivals
    into Armenia versus those who are leaving cannot lie. Certainly
    there have been those, especially in Armenia, who have discussed it
    in public forums; a few have sounded the alarm. It is possible that
    we are finally witnessing a discussion of the subject as a primary
    concern for many in the homeland.

    But for most, especially in the Diaspora, so many citizens leaving
    their land has been seen just as another deplorable situation, one
    of many the Republic has faced since independence. The enormity
    of the problem has not been sensed, it seems. Intellectuals and
    scholars have hardly ever raised this issue with the proper alarm. We
    certainly have not seen a joint declaration of the three traditional
    parties-the Dashnaktsutiune, Ramgavar, and Hnchakian parties, or any
    joint declaration by Diasporan organizations--expressing concern for
    the depopulation of Armenia. Even if such a statement had been at the
    unfortunate level of the issued in October 1988 against the Karabakh
    Committee, at least it would have reflected a serious concern shared
    by all. The reader may remember that the Karabakh Committee had made
    the defense of Karabakh a priority and was moving toward Armenia's
    independence; a joint declaration that trusted Moscow for a resolution
    of the Karabakh problem and practically argued that these parties
    saw the future of Armenia only as a member of the Soviet Union. I
    know many would like to forget that declaration and the policies that
    generated it; after all, we have our own amnesia problem with regard
    to our past. The logic was that Turkey would annihilate the rest of us
    in Armenia, should that last remnant of a homeland become independent.

    Armenia has been independent for 20 years now and Turkey has not
    decimated its people.

    Most of Armenia's people are not being provided with the option to stay
    and make a decent and dignified living, while the option to emigrate is
    either coming as the only available option or as the most attractive
    one, sometimes made attractive by concerned relatives abroad or by
    Russian initiatives to populate Siberia. And that possibility is not
    bringing our parties and organizations together.

    Nation states can survive wars and pestilence, famine, bad governance,
    corruption and other hardships; they can even survive authoritarian,
    totalitarian and dictatorial governments. But they cannot survive
    the critical loss of what makes and justifies a state, its people.

    There have been dictatorships that have provided a solution to at
    least one problem by some objective standard, and redeemed themselves,
    even if partially. Armenia has had its share of such an experience
    during the Soviet period. The non-democratic and often brutal
    regime did bring industrialization and modernization to whatever was
    left of historic Armenia and developed a strong cultural and state
    infrastructure. Although economically and politically bankrupt at the
    end, it was possible to change the regime as well as the political and
    economic systems and still create the possibility of a viable country.

    How many believe that a viable Armenian state could be maintained
    once it has lost a critical segment of its population?

    In contemporary times emigration from Armenia started in the 1970s,
    as a side product of the USSR decision, under US pressure, to permit
    Soviet Jews to emigrate. The economic collapse of the Soviet Union that
    presaged independence was accentuated in Armenia due to the Karabakh
    war and the energy blockade. Emigration from Armenia accelerated and
    has continued in the 20 years since independence, overwhelmingly for
    social and economic reasons, most recently intensified by hopelessness.

    The first few years after independence constituted the most difficult
    period in the recent history of Armenia: collapse of the bankrupt
    Soviet economy, the obsolete state of its industrial basis, the energy
    crisis, the war with Azerbaijan, the earthquake that devastated one
    third in the north of the country, the influx and often immediate
    departure of some 300,000 refugees from Azerbaijan, and the tentative
    nature of many of the systemic changes characterized that period,
    just as emigration did.

    The difference between those first years and the recent decade or
    more is that by 1996 some important challenges facing the country,
    other than the successful management of the war, were resolved: the
    energy crisis was resolved, the systemic changes had been placed on
    a firmer footing, reconstruction of the earthquake zone had been
    placed on a more organized, even if slow footing, and the refuge
    situation had been stabilized. There remained the question of the
    resolution of the conflicts with Armenia's two neighbors, Azerbaijan
    and Turkey. These two unresolved conflicts had economic, security and
    strategic dimensions for both Armenia and Karabakh; these too could
    have been resolved.

    Further, there have been major differences in the thinking of the
    first administration, of which I was part, and those that followed it.

    One difference was that the first administration considered resolving
    the problems with our neighbors essential for Armenia's economic future
    as well as for its long-term security. The republic was created and
    independence pursued to provide a better and more secure life for its
    citizens. That sense of primary responsibility for the security of
    its territory and citizens was extended to Karabakh and its Armenians
    inhabitants. Calculated strategizing against all odds, the will of
    the people in Armenia, the endurance of the people of Karabakh and
    sacrifice of our young from Karabakh and Armenia, and a few from the
    Diaspora, as well as strategic and tactical mistakes committed by
    the leaderships in Azerbaijan secured the positive outcome of the
    war. The Karabakh war ended in 1994-at least its most recent phase
    -with a victory that was a real one, and not a moral one, however
    much the latter may matter more to some.

    Yet what we have seen following those early years has been phenomenally
    inept, at best, and tragically wasteful, at worst.

    It is unfortunate that the years under the second president can
    best be characterized as the "Wasted Decade," to be charitable as a
    historian. None of Armenia's remaining major problems were resolved
    during those crucial years; in fact, it appears that everything was
    done to make sure these problems were not resolved, statements to
    the contrary by those responsible notwithstanding. The construction
    of new buildings and opening of new cafes and expensive boutiques
    in the center of Yerevan, usually to launder monumental amounts of
    money accumulated illegally by a few, do not amount to what is known
    as economic development. They merely constituted a peculiar kind of
    economic activity. Otherwise, the artificial edifice heralded by over
    10% annual growth for so many years would not have dissipated at the
    first sign of financial malaise.

    Those ten years should have been used to resolve Armenia's conflicts
    with its neighbors by pressing for the maximum advantage Armenia
    had achieved but could not conceivably maintain forever. After
    all, it was obvious to all, except for those who had decided to
    ignore the larger picture that these advantages would dissipate over
    time. Instead of making decisions worthy of statesmen, those leaders
    engaged in duplicitous behavior-claiming one thing and making sure
    the opposite occurs-, a behavior which was applauded by most of the
    Diaspora organizations, including those with vested interests in the
    campaign for the recognition of the genocide as the most important item
    on the national agenda, as proof of the purest in patriotic behavior.

    These years were used, instead, to make unprecedented use of the
    power such leaders held to accumulate their own wealth and enjoy the
    execution of arbitrary power. In the meanwhile they turned Armenia's
    fledgling and admittedly imperfect democracy into a system that was
    certain to fail, for the benefit of the few. These were the same
    leaders who argued that the status quo in the conflict zone could
    be maintained while sustaining strong economic development and that
    Diasporan capital investments could be the equivalent for Armenia's
    economic development as oil and gas income would be for Azerbaijan.

    The occupied Azerbaijani lands outside of Karabakh remained under
    Armenian control, yes, but Armenia and Karabakh kept bleeding, losing
    dangerous numbers of their population, thus endangering the foundations
    of these states themselves. The status quo did not mean the freezing
    of everything; and the dynamic processes did not proceed in our favor.

    We had to understand, and we did, that if Armenia wanted to continue
    as a viable state and if Armenians wanted to be there and live there,
    we had to get along with the neighbors we had, we had to resolve the
    conflicts we had with them.

    Today Armenia has an antagonistic relationship with one neighbor;
    in the absence of a peace treaty, it is practically on a war footing
    with the second, Azerbaijan; and because of that state of affairs
    with the first two, it has unhealthy relations with the last two,
    Iran and Georgia and a fragile relationship with Russia. To imagine
    that today's Armenia can be a viable state-viable to its people-under
    these circumstances is to allow the imagination to reach the level
    of the fantastic.

    The chances that anytime in the near or even distant future Turkey
    and Azerbaijan would pack up their bags and leave and be replaced by,
    for example, Finland and Luxemburg, are not that high. In fact, we
    had to realize that the problems we faced were our own problems, that
    we were part of the problem because what we wanted was in conflict
    with what our neighbor thought was hers, that we had to resolve
    these conflicts rather than wait for others to do it for us; that,
    in summary, we were not guests visiting the region, but were there
    to stay. Finally, we believed that these remaining problems could be
    resolved while protecting the vital interests of Armenia and Karabakh.

    Some did think that preserving the status quo on the ground was the
    most important achievement the Armenian state could attain, for itself
    and for Karabakh. Such major players included the second president
    of Armenia and his accolades. Idolized by some for his promotion
    of the historically important Genocide recognition issue to the
    level of state policy, the second president despised history and any
    lessons it might humbly offer; the Genocide issue for him was just
    a weapon that could be used tactically to humble Turkey so it would
    no longer make progress in a Karabakh settlement a precondition for
    the normalization of bilateral relations; the Genocide recognition
    issue was also critical in his thinking that such promotion of the
    Genocide recognition issue to the level of state policy would secure
    the geometric increase in Diaspora investments in Armenia.

    For many of the supporters of the second president Genocide recognition
    was only the first step toward reparations, although the second
    president himself rejected such claims on behalf of the Republic of
    Armenia. I know many would like to expand Armenia and Karabakh to
    include more territories. I will be happy to support such thoughts
    if a plausible strategy is attached to such a goal. When I was very
    young I too entertained such goals; I found them justified.

    In response to my questions, when I was slightly older, as to how we
    are supposed to achieve those goals, I was told that there is secrets
    only the leaders know and we have to trust and follow these leaders.

    Time passed, it became clear that no one had the magic formula.

    Relying on Russia-Soviet or otherwise-, it appears, was the non-magical
    part of that non-existing strategy. Russia has had both positive
    and negative impact on our history, including on the history state
    formation, the extent of that state and the size of its population. It
    would be a mistake to underestimate either.

    One cannot forget, however, that Russia acts according to its own
    interests, and not ours; and we have to learn to accept and work with
    that fact. Russia has not accepted and will not accept Armenian control
    of districts in Azerbaijan outside of Nagorno Karabakh as delineated
    during the Soviet period. While Armenia itself appears to be safe at
    this point, from the Russian point of view Karabakh is a negotiable
    entity; after all Moscow has many more issues to resolve with Baku
    than with Yerevan. Real politics cannot rely on wishes or wishful
    thinking; real positions by political parties must rely on proposed
    strategies to resolve issues, not just to proclaim and "demand"
    them. Demanding the maximum may make one feel good. Who does not
    want to feel good? But since when feeling good is the basic measure
    of wise decisions and policies regarding the future of a nation or
    a state? Are we walking into history or into a bar?

    These "feel good" issues-we want more land, we want all, we won so we
    can want what we want- above have been obscuring the real problems
    for some time. And they have led us to this point where change has
    occurred despite our desire for the status quo-"Don't give anything
    back"-and that change has occurred at the foundation of our whole
    system, the people that are supposed to populate the state and justify
    its existence.

    Such leaders will have to answer to history for the damage they have
    done to the future of the last remnants of Armenian statehood.

    With respect to emigration, at least one resounding difference
    separates the first and subsequent administrations: while we thought
    of emigration as a problem that had to be resolved, subsequent
    administrations seem to think of it as a solution to one or more
    problems.

    No less than the Prime Minister of Armenia made a statement recently
    which let it be know that he considers emigration as a positive process
    because such emigration will deplete the ranks of discontented citizens
    who would be potential participants in a "revolution."

    Somehow, one is not surprised by the logic and, more importantly,
    by the naïvete, or as some have characterized it, the cynicism the
    statement reveals. After all, it highlights the political culture
    that has been fostered for a decade or more, the kind that tolerates
    such absurdity, not to say "national treason," and the character of
    a dauntingly crude administration built on the corpses of peacefully
    demonstrating citizens killed by some unit of the armed forces with
    the prior knowledge, if not command, of the second president.

    Without even reaching as far back as the Second World War to take
    note of atrocities by so many sides against their own citizens-Jews
    and Gypsies in Europe, Chechens and others in the USSR, to name but a
    few-one cannot but remember the killing of a half million Indonesians
    who were considered threats to the military in that state because of
    their "Communist sympathies," or the two million Cambodians killed
    by their own Khmer Rouge government because their social standing as
    urbanites was inimical to the ideology of the government.

    But why not speak, in this context, of the one million or so Armenians
    killed by the Ottoman Turkish government because they were perceived
    to be immediate or potential threats to the regime and to the vision
    these rulers had of future Turkey?

    Of course I am not accusing the current leadership of Armenia
    of genocide. The commonality between these processes is obvious,
    nonetheless: if you can make your opposition disappear, you can hope
    to extend your rule. It appears that at least some recent leaders
    of Armenia are ensuring that actual or potential opponents of the
    regime "self-deport" as one way of neutralizing them, one by one,
    slowly but steadily. Besides, emigrants will likely contribute to
    the remittances a good portion of the population lives by: exporting
    labor is also a solution it seems.

    And yet quantitative change translates into a qualitative change and
    history is transformed accordingly, as one wise philosopher noted.

    Critical change that can transform history does not have to be
    the result of a cataclysmic event; more often it is the result of
    accumulating forces that end in a calamity or two; more importantly
    such changes end up placing severe limits on the options available to
    resolve problems. Or, one can refer to the popular straw that broke
    the camel's back. And what will then remain of "Armenia" in Armenia?

    What will Armenia mean, and to whom?

    I do not wish, at this point, to carry this logic to its logical
    conclusion. It is too painful. I also hope we are not there yet. I do
    hope there is still time before, once again, we reduce the problem
    of Armenia and that of being its citizen into another existential
    battle where the only thing that matters is being alive, where the
    quality of life, the quality of collective existence do not matter,
    where culture and science are forgotten, where, above all, there are
    no real options worthy of a citizen and where the only choice to have
    a dignified life is to stay as a peon or pack up and leave. In other
    words, can we imagine an Armenia that is not just a theme park for
    diasporan tourists, a Disneyland style territory, run as a corporation?

    My concern is not the perception of any particular president or
    administration. Each has had its common failings and failures. I am
    concerned with the more basic logic that motivates each leader and
    each administration and with the long-term impact of policies that
    might otherwise look innocuous.

    It is time for the leaders of Armenia to recognize that they are facing
    a problem of historic proportions, may be the last challenge to the
    history of Armenian statehood, and that is as serious a responsibility
    as any Armenian has faced. Western Armenia was lost.

    For its existence Karabakh depends on Armenia, notwithstanding the
    insistence by some that Karabakh is more essential to Armenia than
    Armenia is to Karabakh. Armenia is reaching, if it is not there
    already, a critical point. I know that it is hard to make the right
    decision when the regime depends so much on the interlocking interests
    of so many different groups; and for most of these groups-as in so many
    other countries-the larger interests of society and long term needs
    of the state do not matter. It is time for the current President of
    Armenia to decide whether he is the leader of a clan of the superrich
    or the leader of a proud people that is also wise and understands its
    history better than some of its ideologues, oligarchs, and some very
    intelligent but spineless officials who also lack wisdom supporting
    him. It is time for the leaders of the regime in Armenia to realize
    that they bear primary responsibility for what is at stake.

    It is time for these leaders to realize that the social and economic
    policies of the last decade or so have failed, that the increasing
    monopolization of power and capital has led to an impasse, and that the
    critical and difficult decisions that must be made to offer Armenia
    a new course cannot be made without making possible the election
    of legitimate authorities through open and fair elections. At this
    time it is difficult to imagine that the problem we are facing can
    be resolved without freely elected authorities that can take the
    difficult decisions on hand and still maintain the support of the
    people. It is time to give hope again to those who remain in Armenia
    and who would rather stay there.

    Armenia is not the first and it will not be the last to face these
    problems, including that of emigration. The difference here is that,
    while others can afford delaying solutions and suffering sustained
    losses, Armenia and Armenians cannot afford such luxuries.

    It is time for Diasporans-leaders of organizations and the rest of
    us-to reevaluate our strategies with regard to what and how to do in
    Armenia. I know that many organizations are dedicated to improving
    life in Armenia and Karabakh and that their efforts, at the end,
    should make a difference and stem the tide of emigration. And yet,
    all the aid from the Diaspora has not been able to counteract the
    policies and practices in place that result in the encouragement of
    citizens to leave.

    It is time for those in the Diaspora who have the ear of the Armenian
    authorities-from president to ministers to judges-to argue the "case"
    for a sustainable Armenia with a population whose dignity remains
    intact, to use a terminology that has been applied to another cause.

    It is particularly time for those who in the Diaspora and Armenia have
    made the recognition of the Genocide a primary issue above all else
    to decide whether it is more important at this time for a president of
    the US or some other country to use the term Genocide or for a village
    in Armenia to acquire sufficient infrastructure for the villagers to
    create a sustainable economy that will make it possible for them to
    remain in their own country rather than emigrate to Siberia.

    It is as simple as that.

    It may not be appropriate for a historian to ask this question, but
    it may permitted to a concerned Armenian: If it were possible to ask
    a victim of the Genocide what would constitute the more enduring and
    redeeming tribute to her martyrdom, a recognition by a state or the
    life of a village in what remains of Armenia, what would the answer
    be? After all, the victim knew what happened to her, to her family,
    how her village or town, and her people, were forced to leave and her
    first priority would not be expect a confirmation of these facts. I
    would suspect she would prefer that we focus on ensuring that a
    village nearing death in independent Armenia be given life support
    to thrive once again.

    Is there any reason not to know that the Armenian emigration from
    Western Armenia by Armenians between the 1860s and 1914 was related to
    the dramatic worsening of the socio-economic conditions under which
    these subjects of the Ottoman Empire were living? It would so useful
    if the leaders of our traditional parties look at the origins of their
    organizations and draw the necessary conclusions. Historians have done
    the research in Armenia, Soviet and independent, and in the Diaspora.

    The questions raised here are not related only to the priorities
    and necessities that we might be wise to reconsider but also to
    the relationships between our current priorities and the ability to
    resolve our conflicts with our neighbors and, finally, to the strategy
    used to bring about recognition of the Genocide by the Turkish state
    itself. These questions are hardly raised, our strategies are not
    looked at critically; they are taken for granted.

    This is an appeal to the leaders of Armenia and Diasporan organizations
    and parties to rethink, fundamentally, their priorities and strategies
    in view of the possibility that the analysis presented above- the
    looming danger of the depopulation of Armenia and Karabakh; this is
    also an invitation to my colleagues, intellectuals and scholars to
    bring their own contribution to this debate and raise the level of
    public discourse.

    Historians often claim to have achieved superior knowledge because
    theirs is the art of understanding the character and consequences of
    the evolution of events over long periods of time. Politicians claim
    to manage that evolution.

    Is there a student of Armenian history or a political leader who
    considers some other issue more important for the survival of the
    Armenian state than the problem of the depopulation of Armenia and
    Karabakh? And is it possible to separate that problem from the way
    Armenia's foreign and domestic affairs have been managed?

    We have missed opportunities to resolve our problems with our neighbors
    and to become part of regional developments that would have anchored
    economic and social development in Armenia to the wider dynamics of
    the region and increased the level of independence of these states.

    Is there an economist worth his salt who believes that an isolated and
    blockaded Armenia can have sustainable development that will unleash
    the energies and talents developing in Armenia? Despite the conditions
    and despite the brain and talent drain, Armenia is capable of offering
    its people the opportunity to live a secure and decent life; to provide
    for their children's education and health; to create art, culture
    and science; and provide a dignified life to its senior citizens.

    There were those who believed it was possible for Armenia to
    institute and secure sustained development because they believed
    Armenia was unique, that it could survive blockades and isolation
    because the Diaspora could be counted on to invest the necessary
    capital for economic development; all that was needed, they argued,
    was to satisfy the Diaspora in its yearning for the adoption of the
    Genocide recognition agenda by the government of Armenia, particularly
    important for the Diaspora. And so it was that the first president
    was forced to resign in 1998. In came a new president and a new
    administration. They had 10 years to make their hypothesis work. And
    now we are in the third year of the tenure of the third president,
    installed by the second. Isn't it obvious that considering the long
    term we are in worse shape than we have been in the last twenty years?

    If the third president has a different analysis, we have not seen
    it, although he has made some unusual moves. But what is needed now
    is not some moves but a whole strategy that recognizes the extent
    and depth of the problem the state of Armenia and, by extension,
    Karabakh, is facing. And to act accordingly, in the interest of the
    state he heads and the people he wants to lead. Beyond his personal
    stake, it would be horrible for Armenia and Karabakh if the third
    president went down into history as the leader who completed the chain
    of irresponsible strategizing initiated by the second president. The
    third president could be the leader who reversed in time the policies
    of his predecessor, even if that reversal might, at the end, require
    the dismantling of a system of which he has been part and cost him
    his position.

    I know that there are those in the Diaspora who have given up on
    Armenia as a state and reverted to a sense of a diasporan Armenian
    identity that does not require an Armenian state for its sustenance.

    Such an option may be inevitable, considering our long history
    of diasporization; if some Armenians are satisfied with
    constituting solely an ethnic community in some other country,
    that is understandable; it is also a different story; that would
    be story built around a self-definition that is anchored in church,
    some cultural institutions, and an imagined shared past that can be
    manipulated to fit the needs of an ethnic community according to the
    country, and a wonderful cuisine.

    But that is the story of ethnic communities, not of a nation or
    of a state. If it had been possible to sustain identity through
    the strategy of ethnic identification, the size of the Armenian
    Diaspora today should have been possible a hundred times what it
    is today. May be nation and state do not matter to some; that,
    too, is an accumulation of choices by individuals. It is possible
    to understand that the underlying reluctance of some-conscious or
    otherwise- to see the problem of depopulation as a critical one is
    related top the process of diasporization; diasporans, by definition,
    are those who left the homeland at some point or their progenies, who
    are in a state of transition in their self-definition as Armenians,
    who are not likely ready to return. This is possible to understand;
    but that kind of attitude is not justifiable, if one is engaged in
    a discussion of issues on an Armenian national and state level.

    Can anyone forget how strong our "community" institutions were
    in Istanbul, at least for two centuries, in Aleppo and in Beirut,
    without forgetting Paris and Boston, and now Los Angeles? I would not
    even dare mention our Diaspora in medieval Eastern Europe and later
    southern Russia, where we even had our constitutions in some cities.

    For those who consider the state of Armenia an important dimension, if
    not an anchor, of their Armenian identity beyond an ethnic dimension,
    then there should not be a question as to the urgency of the problem
    of depopulation of that last remnants of Armenian statehood.

    At the end, when the history of Armenia and Armenians is written in
    another century, we will all be responsible for what we said when
    we had a chance not say it, not to and did not say, when we had a
    chance to say it; for what we did and we should not have done it,
    and did not do when we could have done it.

    At that time the next group of lauders of community institutions,
    the troubadours of diasporan institutions and historians who feel
    obligated to justify the results can twist and distort facts and
    figures, argue and counter argue. The result will remain the same,
    as stark as the result of the Genocide. The only task left for the
    future will be, then, to designate a new date representing the latest
    tragedy, the one to come, a date to be remembered annually; and then
    to play the blame game: who lost the last remnants of Armenia? But
    such anniversaries will not change the result: the result will depend
    on question: what WE inject into the situation TODAY.

    The rest then becomes irrelevant.

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