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  • Kocharian doublecrosses Russia

    Agency WPS
    What the Papers Say. Part B (Russia)
    August 19, 2005, Friday

    KOCHARIAN DOUBLECROSSES RUSSIA

    SOURCE: Nezavisimaya Gazeta, August 19, 2005, pp. 1, 4

    by Anatoly Gordienko, Nelli Orlova

    President Mikhail Saakashvili of Georgia is about to make a
    brief visit to Armenia. Armenia is awaiting the president of its
    neighbor-state. Presidential Press Secretary Viktor Sogomonjan says
    that a meeting between the two heads of state is being planned,
    but it will be "unofficial, a meeting of friends."

    There is nothing extraordinary in meetings between presidents of
    neighboring countries - but official Moscow is somewhat wary about
    Saakashvili's potential friendship with Armenian President Robert
    Kocharian. Russian experts widely comment on the "informal" nature of
    presidents of Georgia and Armenia that became noticeably more frequent
    after the Revolution of Roses in Tbilisi in 2003. There were at least
    two or three such meetings in Tbilisi and one in Yerevan.

    Sergei Markedonov, cirector of the Ethnic Relations Department at
    the Political and Military Analysis Institute, doesn't rule out
    the possibility that Yerevan is seeking new bearing points in its
    foreign policy, the bearing points that do not have anything to do
    with Russia. "The danger exists that Armenia may turn to the West,"
    Markedonov said. The political scientist even believes that Saakashvili
    may be playing the role of an intermediary between the West and leaders
    of Armenia. "Saakashvili himself said more than once that he wanted
    more than just being president of Georgia," Markedonov said. "That's
    why everything is possible... What concerns me is that Armenia has
    been viewed until now as Russia's mot reliable and actually only
    strategic ally in the southern part of the Caucasus. A great deal
    of Russian military hardware from the military bases in Georgia is
    shipped to this country, upping its own defense potential, by the
    way. Russia chalked off Armenia's debts not long ago and set out
    to reanimate Armenian energy sphere and other sectors of national
    economy. Essentially, Yarevan's rapprochement with the patently
    hostile Georgia is a blow at Russian interests in the region."

    Alexei Makarkin, deputy director of the Political Techniques Center,
    also mentioned the danger of Armenia's potential turn to Georgia.
    "Kocharian's steps in this direction will seriously jeopardize
    positions of Russia in the region," Makarkin said. "Still, this is
    not something we should really expect and fear. Kocharian is clearly
    pro-Russian, and so is his government. It is the opposition in Armenia
    that is pro-Western because official Moscow backed the president in the
    past presidential election in Armenia." Makarkin doesn't deny at the
    same time that Saakashvili's frequent visits to Armenia aim to instill
    and encourage pro-Western moods in this country. "The United States is
    actively forcing its own ideology on the post-Soviet territory Russia
    has always dominated. Saakashvili and President of Ukraine Viktor
    Yushchenko are essentially conduits of this ideology. I suspect that
    Saakashvili's frequent meetings with Kocharian are an indication of
    their mushrooming aspirations in the CIS. That their next meeting is
    scheduled for before the CIS summit in Kazan is but a demonstration of
    independence. That's a way of showing that they are going to meet with
    whoever they want and whenever they want regardless of the ineffective
    Commonwealth whose potential is clearly exhausted," Makarkin explained.

    Official Yerevan did not take to these conclusions at all. "There are
    no reasons to assume that the rapprochement with Tbilisi indicates
    any changes in the attitude toward Russia," Sogomonjan said. Press
    secretary recalled traditions of the Georgian-Armenian friendship
    and existence of a substantial Armenian diaspora in Georgia. "In
    short, we have more in common than geography and geopolitics alone,"
    Sogomonjan said.

    Tbilisi is also discussing Saakashvili's forthcoming visit to
    Armenia. Any anti-Russian conspiracy between Georgia and Armenia
    is vehemently denounced. "Rapprochement between Kocharian and
    Saakashvili should not worry Russia at least for several reasons,"
    says Ramaz Sakvarelidze, a prominent Georgian political scientist.
    "First, there is no proof that Saakashvili will actually try to convert
    Kocharian in Sevan, to tempt the president of Armenia into shifting
    his and his foreign policy's bearing points. A polar process cannot
    be ruled out, right? So, we cannot rule out the possibility that
    Russia's interests in this part of the Caucasus will only benefit
    from this meeting. After all, if countries of the Caucasus stop
    playing chaotically and begin pursuing a coordinated policy, it
    will ensure stability and protection of Russian interests on their
    territories. Moreover, agendas of Georgian-Armenian summits do not
    usually include any global matters. The president always concentrate
    on the problems that worry Georgia and Armenia. Besides, meeting
    like that may do something about the tangled Azerbaijani-Armenian
    relations... I'm talking about Saakashvili's services of a go-between."

    In the meantime, Yerevan is already taking steps that do conflict
    with Russian interests. Not long ago, the Armenian Commission for
    Public Services demanded from management of Armenian Power Lines
    explanations with regard to the deal in which its shares had ended up
    in the hands of RAO Unified Energy Systems. Shares of the Armenian
    company were turned over to Interenergo B.V., a subsidiary of RAO
    Unified Energy Systems, where RAO Unified Energy Systems itself had 60%
    and Rosenergoatom 40%. It occurred to Yerevan all of a sudden that the
    national legislation doesn't permit any deals with shares of Armenian
    Power Lines without the government's dispensation. Moreover, Russia's
    ratio in the Armenian foreign trade (all of it passing through the
    territory of Georgia) went down.

    Translated by A. Ignatkin
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