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Armenia Concentrates On Balancing Act Between Russia And Georgia

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  • Armenia Concentrates On Balancing Act Between Russia And Georgia

    ARMENIA CONCENTRATES ON BALANCING ACT BETWEEN RUSSIA AND GEORGIA
    Haroutiun Khachatrian

    EurasiaNet, NY
    Nov 8 2006

    Worsening relations between Georgia and Russia continue to pose a
    difficult problem for Armenia, as it tries to maintain some form of
    balance in its relations with the two sides.

    The effect of these tensions for the Armenian economy remains a
    paramount concern. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive.]
    Armenian President Robert Kocharian's October 30-November 1 state
    visit to Russia, which included meetings with Russian President
    Vladimir Putin and Prime Minister Mikhail Fradkov, was a case in
    point. In remarks to reporters, Kocharian noted that while Russia's
    transportation blockade with Georgia could pose difficulties for
    bilateral trade between Russia and Armenia, "serious [Russian]
    investment projects" would help compensate Yerevan for any economic
    damage done by the Georgian embargo, the ITAR-TASS quoted Kocharian as
    saying. [For additional information see the Eurasia Insight archive.]

    Those investments appear to be growing. Russian energy giant Gazprom's
    acquisition of a controlling stake in the country's gas distribution
    network and, through this, potential control over an Armenian
    section of an Iranian gas pipeline, its recent takeover of the fifth
    unit of the Hrazdan electricity plant, and Russian company Rusal's
    modernization of aluminum manufacturer Armenal are among the most
    prominent of these "serious" investment projects. Unlike neighboring
    Georgia, Armenia will see its current $110 per 1,000 cubic meters
    price for Gazprom gas frozen until 2009 in return for transferring
    ownership of the Hrazdan unit to the Russian company, the government
    has announced. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive.]

    On November 3, announcement was also made that the Russian firm
    VimpelCom has purchased a 90 percent stake in ArmenTel, the country's
    main mobile telecommunications carrier. The government will retain
    the remaining 10 percent stake in the company.

    Despite these signs of robust business ties, concerns about Russia's
    position toward Armenia have been growing since mid-October, when
    nationalist Russian parliamentarian Konstantin Zatulin, a member
    of the pro-Kremlin party United Russia, protested at an October
    17 meeting of the Russian-Armenian inter-parliamentary commission
    in Yerevan that Armenia "does not support its strategic partner
    [Russia]" in its conflict with Georgia. Zatulin, who has previously
    cast himself as pro-Armenian on the issue of the disputed territory
    of Nagorno-Karabakh, called on Yerevan to choose between "normal
    relations" with Russia or Georgia, the daily newspaper Haykakan
    Zhamanak reported.

    Zatunin's statements met with almost unanimous protest by the Armenian
    political elite, although some, like Armen Ashotian, a member of the
    governing Republican Party, have stressed that the remark is the view
    of one politician, not the official position of the Russian Federation.

    Nonetheless, Armenian officials have continued to address the
    Russian-Georgian dispute cautiously. "Current Russian-Georgian
    relations are these countries' internal problem," Prime Minister
    Andranik Margarian said at a joint press conference on October 24
    with Belarusian Prime Minister Sergei Sidorski. "Armenia... should
    not interfere with the resolution of this problem."

    Margarian, however, has stated that Armenia is ready to "help with
    the... solution" for the impasse between President Putin and Georgian
    President Mikheil Saakashvili if asked by Russia or Georgia.

    So far, neither Moscow nor Tbilisi has shown interest in mediation.

    At a November 1 meeting on the sidelines of a Moscow gathering
    of the Organization of Black Sea Economic Cooperation, Armenian
    Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanian and Georgian Foreign Minister Gela
    Bezhuashvili met, but details on the conversation were scarce. In a
    succinct statement, the Armenian Foreign Ministry stated that the
    two men discussed "issues of bilateral relations, the influence
    of Russian-Georgian relations on the region and possibilities for
    softening the current tension," the news service Mediamax reported.

    Before the talks, Georgian Ambassador to Armenia Revaz Gachechiladze,
    in an October 30 meeting with National Assembly Chairman Tigran
    Torosian, thanked Armenia for its "balanced approach."

    Greater speculation about Armenia's relations with Georgia and Russia
    has surfaced in media coverage of the October 10 arrest of Vahagn
    Chakhalian, one of the leaders of the Miasnakan Javakhk, or United
    Javakhk, non-governmental organization in Georgia's predominantly
    ethnic Armenian region of Samtskhe-Javakheti. Chakhalian was jailed
    for two months pending trial for having allegedly "illegally" crossed
    Georgia's border with Armenia. On October 30, he was released. Some
    local publications have argued that the release was at Russia's
    request.

    Chakhalian's arrest surprised most Armenians since no visa regime
    exists between the two states; the arrest of an ethnic Armenian
    for entering Armenia struck many as strange. Some members of the
    opposition, including the Dashink Party of former Nagorno-Karabakh
    warlord Samvel Babayan, said the arrest had been made at the request
    of Tbilisi officials who wanted to curtail United Javakhk's support
    for ethnic Armenians in Samtskhe-Javakheti. (The leader of a rival
    non-governmental organization to Miasnakan Javakhk has gone even
    further, charging that Chakhalian was working with Georgian special
    services to destabilize the region and push ethnic Armenians out
    of the area.) The movement's opposition to the construction of the
    Kars-Tbilisi-Akhalkalaki railroad, which will connect the region with
    Turkey, was seen as the reason for such action.

    Both pro-government and opposition publications share strong opposition
    to this project. Yerevan fears the line would further isolate Armenia,
    currently hemmed in by blockades on its borders with Turkey and
    Azerbaijan. On October 19, the pro-government daily newspaper Hayots
    Ashkharh published an analysis that argued that the railroad would
    damage ties between Armenia and Georgia, and urged the Saakashvili
    government not to harm its relations with Armenia for "a $200 million
    bribe by Turks and Azeris."

    The opposition newspaper Haykakan Zhamanak, a pro-Western publication
    close to former President Levon Ter-Petrossian's Armenian National
    Movement, has taken a different approach. In its October 19 issue, the
    paper argued that Russia could use Miasnakan Javakhk to put pressure
    on Georgia. The newspaper Iravunk followed that line on November 3,
    saying that Miasnakan Javakhk's "strongly pro-Russian" position and
    activities are "certain to worry Armenian Prime Minister... Margarian
    and [Defense Minister] Serzh Sarkisian" as they pursue dialogue with
    the West.

    The government, to date, has not responded to the allegations.

    Editor's Note: Haroutiun Khachatrian is a Yerevan-based writer
    specializing in economic and political affairs.
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