New poll shows Armenians equally supoprtive of Russia, West

NEW POLL SHOWS ARMENIANS EQUALLY SUPPORTIVE OF RUSSIA, WEST

Eurasia Daily Monitor, DC –
June 26 2006

By Emil Danielyan

A U.S.-funded opinion poll released this month paints an interesting,
if contradictory, picture of the geopolitical preferences of Armenia’s
population. It shows that the vast majority of Armenians continue to
support the close political and military ties with Russia maintained
by their government. At the same, they regard the European Union as
the most trustworthy international institution and would like their
country to eventually join the bloc. Public support for Armenia’s
eventual accession to NATO likewise seems to be considerably stronger
than it was in the past.

The voter survey, commissioned by the U.S. Agency for International
Development, was designed and conducted in early May by the Gallup
Organization, the U.S. International Republican Institute, as well
as the Armenian Sociological Association. Some 1,200 people randomly
interviewed across Armenia were asked to weigh in on a wide range of
issues mainly relating to domestic politics and economic development.
It emerged that most of them feel the tiny South Caucasus state is
on the wrong track, despite being optimistic about its future.

The poll suggests that ordinary Armenians also want two seemingly
irreconcilable things: continued alliance with Russia and integration
into European and Euro-Atlantic structures. Eighty-six percent of
respondents described Russia as Armenia’s most important international
partner, considering it, with varying degrees of conviction, to
be a "trustworthy ally." Not surprisingly, public support for the
presence of a Russian military base on Armenian soil is still strong,
with almost two-thirds of those polled saying that it has a positive
impact on their country’s independence and stability. Only 6% referred
to Russia as an external threat.

These figures reflect a traditionally strong pro-Russian sentiment
in Armenia, where many people have for centuries looked to Moscow
for protection against hostile Muslim neighbors. It has only been
reinforced by Armenia’s unresolved conflict with Azerbaijan over
Karabakh and extremely strained relations with Turkey. Still, there
are clear indications that this sentiment has been slowly but steadily
eroding not least because of Moscow’s hard bargaining in economic
dealings with Yerevan and the Russian authorities’ perceived reluctance
to tackle racially motivated attacks on Armenian immigrants. Russia’s
waning influence in the South Caucasus and Armenia’s increased contacts
with the Council of Europe, the European Union, NATO, and the United
States have also been a major factor.

The USAID-funded poll offers more proof of this trend. It shows in
particular that Armenians trust the EU more than their army and the
ancient Armenian Apostolic Church. Armenian state institutions and
political parties are trusted by barely one-third of the electorate.
By contrast, 87% and 51% think well of the EU and NATO, respectively.
Accordingly, 80% are in favor of Armenian membership in the EU.
(Curiously, roughly as many respondents want Armenia to remain in
the increasingly moribund Commonwealth of Independent States.)

Public support for NATO membership is much weaker: only 40%
said Armenia should "definitely" or "probably" join the U.S.-led
alliance in the future, with another 45% less than enthusiastic
about such a prospect. Yet the very fact of Armenian public opinion
being essentially split down the middle on the issue marks quite a
significant change from the not-so-distant past when the military
alliance with Russia was hardly even questioned by Armenian
policymakers and ordinary people alike. The change was exposed by
other surveys conducted in the country in recent years.

One such poll, conducted a year ago by the Armenian Center for
National and International Studies (ACNIS), a private think tank,
found that Armenians are evenly divided over NATO membership,
with approximately 34% of them backing or opposing the idea and
the remaining 32% undecided. According to another poll released by
the Yerevan-based polling organization Vox Populi in October 2004,
only 38% percent of the public thought that military cooperation with
Russia should remain the bedrock of Armenian security policy. Earlier
in 2004 ACNIS questioned 50 local political and public policy experts
and found that two-thirds of them stand for Armenia’s accession to
NATO within the next decade. Most of those experts also felt that
Moscow limits their country’s independence.

The apparent change in public mood has proceeded parallel to a
deepening of Yerevan’s cooperation with the EU, NATO, and the United
States as part of what the administration of President Robert Kocharian
calls a "complementary foreign policy." The Armenian government
launched an individual partnership action plan (IPAP) with NATO last
December and is currently negotiating with the EU on a plan of action
stemming from its inclusion in the bloc’s European Neighborhood Policy
(ENP) program. Kocharian signaled his intention to accelerate Armenia’s
integration into Western structures on July 13 as he presided over a
meeting of a high-level government commission tasked with coordinating
the process. He instructed its members to come up with a timetable of
"concrete activities" resulting from Yerevan’s commitments to the
Council of Europe, the EU, and NATO within the next two months.

How far the Kocharian administration can go in trying to maintain
equally close relations with Russia and the West has been a matter
of contention in Armenia. Pro-Western opposition leaders and other
government critics say Yerevan will sooner or later have to make a
clear strategic choice in favor of one of the parties to the ongoing
geopolitical game in the region. But as the latest poll suggests,
most Armenians share the "complementarity" of their rulers.

(Statement by the Armenian president’s office, July 13; Armenia
National Voter Study, USAID, IRI, Baltic Surveys/The Gallup
Organization, ASA, May 2006; Haykakan Zhamanak, July 2, 2005; RFE/RL
Armenia Report, May 27, 2004)

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Emil Lazarian

“I should like to see any power of the world destroy this race, this small tribe of unimportant people, whose wars have all been fought and lost, whose structures have crumbled, literature is unread, music is unheard, and prayers are no more answered. Go ahead, destroy Armenia . See if you can do it. Send them into the desert without bread or water. Burn their homes and churches. Then see if they will not laugh, sing and pray again. For when two of them meet anywhere in the world, see if they will not create a New Armenia.” - WS