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One-State Solution: Unite Armenia And Artsakh

ONE-STATE SOLUTION: UNITE ARMENIA AND ARTSAKH

By Aram Hovasapyan on Feb 19, 2015 Opinion

Every seasoned mountaineer, in his quest to conquer a chosen summit,
stops from time to time to get his bearings, to reflect on how
far he has come, to assess the trail ahead, and to map out any
necessary changes in his path. This process is vital to the success
of the mountaineer – the quality of execution distinguishing those
who ultimately reach a challenging summit from those who do not. In
Armenia’s own attempt to conquer the tall, formidable summit – that is,
to resolve the issue of the mountainous enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh –
we, as Armenians, are long overdue for a stop to reflect on where we
have come, and where we are headed.

“The historic choice of the people of Artsakh is an irreversible
reality now,” read a line of Armenia’s President Serzh Sargsyan’s
message last year to the “dear people of Artsakh.” The laudatory
address was delivered in commemoration of the 23rd anniversary of the
declaration of independence of the Artsakh Republic, alternatively
referred to as the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic. However, with the
conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan over the region unresolved,
and the recent escalation of war rhetoric and skirmishes testing
the fragile ceasefire agreement, one must ask: Was independence of
the mountainous enclave the objective – and so-called “irreversible
reality” – many of our parents fought to achieve?

The reality is that, 27 years after the start of the Karabakh movement,
whose goal was the reunification of Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh,
we have strayed significantly off trail. What we have today is an
Artsakh, for all intents and purposes an extension of the Republic
of Armenia, an 11th province, that is entirely reliant on Armenia’s
defense and funding. In the same respect, we also have an Artsakh
that, since its original calls for reunion, has adopted multiple
measures that, instead, push for independence. And finally, we have an
Armenia that is caught in a state of limbo regarding its position on
Nagorno-Karabakh. Armenia takes all measures to assure the survival
and well-being of Artsakh’s residents, treating them as its own, but
has, to this day, deferred from officially stating the relationship
as it truly is.

The current state of affairs is not in the best interest of Armenians.

Artsakh is – and must be – an integral part of Armenia and all actions
undertaken must be toward cementing this irreversible reality.

A quick history refresher to better gauge the gravity of the dilemma
at hand: The region consisting of the present-day Artsakh Republic has,
for millennia, been under Armenian rule. For much of this history, the
mountainous enclave was a province of Armenian kingdoms, and during
foreign invasions, the Armenian princes of the region were able to
maintain some autonomy. With the Soviet conquest of the Caucusus,
the region seemed set to be placed under Armenian jurisdiction. In
fact, on November 30, 1920, the Soviet government in Azerbaijan SSR
recognized the region of Nagorno-Karabakh (as well as the regions of
Nakhichevan and Zangezur) as a part of the newly proclaimed Armenian
SSR. However, in a classic application of “divide and rule,” Soviet
authorities in Moscow reversed previous decisions and allocated the
94-percent-Armenian-populated region to the Azerbaijani SSR.

For the next 60 some years, the irredentist feelings of the slighted
Armenians were suppressed. However, with “glasnost” and “perestroika”
taking hold during the final years of the Soviet Union, the call for
righting a blatant wrong was rekindled. In February of 1988, exactly
27 years ago, Armenians in Yerevan and Stepanakert, the capitals of
the Armenian SSR and the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast (NKAO)
respectively, began marching under the slogan of “union” and clamors of
“Karabakh is ours.” In the following months, the Supreme Soviets of
the NKAO and the Armenian SSR voted and demanded for the unification
of Nagorno-Karabakh with Soviet Armenia. With demands being rejected
by the Azerbaijanis, and more importantly by the powers in Moscow,
increased tensions in the region resulted in a full-scale war.

It’s important to note here that at no point in the initial stages
of the Karabakh movement was independence for Nagorno-Karabakh even
discussed. The region was viewed as an inseparable part of Armenia;
union of historical Artsakh with Armenia was the natural call. Yet
today, the Armenian government and most members of the Armenian
Diaspora praise the independence of Artsakh as an historic feat.

Why the sharp turn in policy? Nagorno-Karabakh declared
its independence in September of 1991 – a time when other Soviet
republics, including Armenia and Azerbaijan, were declaring their own
independence from the Soviet Union. A referendum for independence
was conducted in December of 1991, when the Soviet Union was still
internationally recognized, and the referendum was fully in accordance
with the relevant Soviet law concerning exit from the USSR. The
logic behind this policy and course of events is understandable;
Nagorno-Karabakh was declaring independence from a failing Soviet
Union in the same fashion as its neighboring countries were striving
to create new democracies of their own. At the time, the decision to
declare independence was viewed as a temporary, strategic solution,
and reunification with Armenia would be the next step. The leaders
of the Karabakh movement believed that a declaration of independence
would resonate well on the international stage and dispel the false,
but alarming, claims that the war in the Caucasus amounted to an
attempted annexation of Nagorno-Karabakh by Armenia. What is less
understandable is why, after the official fall of the Soviet Union,
Nagorno-Karabakh didn’t reaffirm its original intention to create
a union with Armenia. Instead, in 2006, a referendum was held that
established a constitution and defined Nagorno-Karabakh as a sovereign
state. However, to this day, no U.N. member state, including Armenia,
recognizes Nagorno-Karabakh’s sovereign status.

How do we need to perceive the multiple declarations of Artsakh’s
independence? Armenians sacrificed their lives, lost their sons and
daughters, and endured a harsh blockade, all in the pursuit of a dream
to restore, at least in part, a united, historical Armenia. Liberating
our brethren in Nagorno-Karabakh and recovering the lands that
were unjustifiably seized from us were the driving forces, the
inspiration of all Armenians, in their sincere and unconditional
support of Artsakh.

One can only hope there is a mutual understanding among the
high-ranking officials of Armenia and Artsakh that the undeniable
intention of both is to form a union. But there is room to speculate
that the declarations of independence serve as a temporary disguise
of true intentions, which will be revealed at a more opportune time.

Serzh Sargsyan’s rebuttal of presidential candidate Raffi Hovannisian’s
campaign promise that, as president, he will recognize the independence
of Artsakh, supports this theory. Sargsyan questioned what improvement
recognition of Nagorno-Karabakh’s independence will bring to Armenian
citizens or to the population of Nagorno-Karabakh.

He conceded, however, that if Azerbaijan launched military operations,
“we will have nothing to lose at that time, and we will state that we
are either a united state, or Karabakh is an independent state, and
that we are the guarantor of the safety of the population of Karabakh.”

But the longer Armenia takes to declare its bona fide position,
the more challenging it will be to elucidate and expound the
quarter-of-a-century delay.

If it is fear that a declaration of union between Armenia and
Artsakh will trigger a second war with Azerbaijan that prevents
us from assuming an assertive stance, then we need not worry. The
Azerbaijani government could have easily misrepresented any of the
recent skirmishes as an act of aggression from Armenia – which is,
in fact, what it did – and utilized its casualties as a pretext
for war. The fact is that Azerbaijan is regularly testing Armenia’s
military strength. The day that Azerbaijan assesses that it can attack
and overpower Armenia’s defense is the day a war will begin.

If, on the other hand, Nagorno-Karabakh has the audacity to declare
itself a tiny, less than 150,000-strong sovereign state with the
intention to pursue independence yet rely on Armenia for all its
needs, then Armenia must redress the situation. I won’t consider this
alternative as a viable possibility, since Nagorno-Karabakh stands
no chance of survival on its own in the demanding Caucasus Mountains.

Serzh Sargsyan’s congratulatory message quoted at the beginning
sheds light at Armenia’s uncertain position regarding the status of
Nagorno-Karabakh and this policy of indecision is producing detrimental
repercussions. The president of Armenia commemorated the declaration
of independence of Nagorno-Karabakh, but he addressed the “people of
Artsakh,” not its citizens. It appears from this message that Armenia
implicitly recognizes Nagorno-Karabakh’s independence from Azerbaijan
but is not willing to recognize Nagorno-Karabakh as a sovereign nation,
one capable of lawfully having citizens.

This ambiguity is also present in Armenia’s Ministry of Foreign
Affairs website, where Armenia’s official position on the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict is laid out. There is no mention of a
union with Nagorno-Karabakh nor is there any discussion of NKR’s
self-declared independence. Instead, the only proclamation that
exhibits conviction states that “Nagorno-Karabakh has no future as
a part of Azerbaijan and whatever is the solution, it must emanate
from the will of the Karabakh people.”

Conversely, on the official website of the president of the NKR,
a section titled “The History of Formation” begins the narrative
with Nagorno-Karabakh’s declaration of independence in September
1991. The page describes the NKR as a full-fledged parliamentary
republic and there’s absolutely no reference to the critical Armenian
involvement that allowed for the liberation of Nagorno-Karabakh from
the Azerbaijani yoke.

Such vagueness and inconsistency in position has led to a hazardous
situation, placing Armenia’s developments and investment in Artsakh
over the last 27 years at risk.

Last October, Armenia finalized its accession into the Russian-led
Eurasian Economic Union, but Nagorno-Karabakh was not allowed
to enter. This raised grave security concerns and questioned the
trade relationship between Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh. When a
reporter asked Nikolai Ryzhkov, co-chair of the Armenian-Russian
Inter-Parliamentary Commission, why Russia was allowed to enter
the EEU together with Crimea, but Armenia could not enter with
Nagorno-Karabakh, Ryzhkov brazenly responded that Crimea had voted
through a referendum to join Russia: “What were we supposed to do?

Tell them, no, do not enter your native territory?”

The case for Artsakh being considered native Armenian territory is
actually stronger than the case of Russia and Crimea. However, because
we, as Armenians, cannot point to a referendum by Nagorno-Karabakh
residents that resulted in a vote to form a union with Armenia, other
nations can, and do, easily lever our handicap against us. We cannot
afford to play the chess game of world politics without developing all
our pieces; our opponents will take advantage of our weak strategy,
and we risk losing the game.

The policy of influential lobby groups in the Armenian Diaspora,
such as the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA), is
also distressing. Spurred and persuaded by Armenian lobbyists,
the state legislatures of California, Maine and three other states
have recognized the independence of Nagorno-Karabakh and have called
for the US federal government to do the same. I already discussed
the implausibility of independence for a region that has survived
solely due to Armenia’s continuous support. It’s also of paramount
importance to consider the international perception when the rest of
the world sees Armenia and its Diaspora pursuing two differing courses
on the same issue; namely, Armenia is plagued with indecision whether
to recognize Artsakh’s independence or to form a union, while the
Diaspora is actively pursuing recognition of Artsakh’s independence.

Armenia and the Diaspora must, instead, present a united front and
pursue world recognition of an Artsakh rightfully united with Armenia.

The current situation bears an eerie semblance to what transpired
when Avetis Aharonian, the official representative of the First
Republic of Armenia, and Boghos Nubar, the representative of the
Ottoman Armenians, arrived at the Paris Peace Conference with differing
petitions to the Council of Ten regarding the territories demanded from
the Ottoman Empire. While Boghos Nubar demanded in his speech that
Cilicia be included in the Ottoman lands allocated to the Armenians,
the instructions Aharonian had received before leaving Yerevan were
limited to demanding the six Armenian vilayets and an outlet to the
Black Sea. Wanting to present a unified Armenian voice and, at the same
time, adhere to his orders, Aharonian made only vague references to
the territories of the former Ottoman Empire that the Armenians were
demanding. “Both sections of Armenia represent a single geographic
and economic whole,” he ambiguously stated, not clarifying exactly
what lands the two sections consisted of. Consequently, Cilicia was
not allotted to Armenia in the following Treaty of Sevres.

Today, with Artsakh under Armenian control, Armenia and its Diaspora
must bilaterally push for recognition of a united Armenia and Artsakh
in order to avoid repeating a similar mistake.

In the wake of the centennial commemoration of the Armenian Genocide,
when we are desperate and determined to obtain recognition of
the tragedy, we are, at the same moment, disregarding, and even,
ignoring, the perils facing our current state. Armenia’s population
has dwindled. Young men abandon their motherland for fear of being
recruited to the army and killed defending Artsakh’s border with
Azerbaijan. Much of the remaining population is demoralized with the
status-quo and seek more promising opportunities outside of Armenia.

Risk-averse investors, who don’t like the current state of uncertainty
regarding Armenia’s and Artsakh’s status, are investing their capital
in more stable havens. Through all this, many Armenians focus their
attention and efforts to recovering from Turkey the lands encompassing
the six Armenian provinces of the former Ottoman Empire. Meanwhile,
Artsakh, an integral part of historical Armenia, is currently under
Armenian control, but we have not yet openly declared a union –
and one that would rectify history’s injustices at that.

Armenia and Artsakh, unite!

A union between these two regions will uplift the spirit of its people
and it will confirm that all progress and sacrifice was not made in
vain. Armenian soldiers will know with certainty that they are fighting
for a united Armenia and not for anything else. A union will pronounce
Armenia’s true position in confidence and lead to a more stable policy
going forward – one that is more conducive for growth and investment.

The elected officials and leaders of Armenia and Artsakh must come
together and openly, without gimmicks, form a united coalition and
create a document announcing their collective decision to unify
Armenia and Artsakh. We must proclaim to the world that “United we
stand!” The clock is ticking. We are in a state of urgency and we
must act accordingly.

The views expressed by the author are his own and do not necessarily
reflect the opinion of The Armenite.

http://thearmenite.com/opinion/one-state-solution-unite-armenia-artsakh-aram-hovasapyan/
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