Armenia Needs Real — Not Symbolic — Help
In focusing on the emotional blood feud between the Turks and the Armenians, Armenian-Americans neglect their homeland's deeper and more immediate problems.
Armenia is a troubled nation.
Despite years of generous American financial assistance, Armenia’s economy remains in a shambles. Corruption is endemic — the public believes that most wealth created in recent years has only benefited the oligarchs — unemployment is high, and the prices of basic necessities continue to rise. It is no wonder that the country’s population keeps declining — the most recent Central Intelligence Agency estimate was just under three million, a 15% drop since 1994.
While Armenia has never been a model republic, the February 19th presidential election and aftermath were particularly disturbing moments. Principal opposition parties questioned the legitimacy of both the process and results, which gave the ruling Republican Party of Armenia’s candidate, Serge Sarkisian, a majority of the votes cast. Subsequent acts included the beating and killing of protestors, arrests of opposition leaders, a three-week-long state of emergency — which included blocking access to the Internet and closing of opposition newspapers — and a continuing ban on opposition rallies in the capital of Yerevan. These repressive measures earned a rebuke from Human Rights Watch, as well as the White House and the European Union presidency. Former president and opposition candidate Levon Ter-Petrossian described the vote and subsequent mayhem in The Washington Post as “the rape of our democracy.”
Regrettably, the reaction to the ongoing political crisis in Armenia from its Diaspora has been tepid, at best. The Armenian Assembly of America released a few unremarkable statements, including one expressing the need for the violence to end and rule of law to be followed — but not assigning any blame. The typically more outspoken Armenian National Committee of America posted even less — a single neutral statement about the crisis could be located deep in the bowels of its web site. (On the other hand, references to genocide and need to further increase American foreign aid to Armenia were tattooed all over the group’s homepage.) There were a few days of scattered protests at the Armenian Consulate in Beverly Hills but little else was organized.
In contrast, powerful organizational resources remain mostly focused on emotional issues that have little impact on the lives of ordinary men, women, and children in Armenia.
Armenian-American groups spend an inordinate amount of time and resources pushing supporters in Congress to pass a resolution calling on the White House to recognize the Ottoman attacks on Armenians during the First World War as genocide, a charge vehemently challenged by most Turks and Turkish-Americans. This effort has been pushed for years while not even recognizing the close strategic relationship of the United States and Turkey. This latest, however, was particularly damaging to the United States at a time when the Pentagon relies heavily on Turkish support for ongoing operations in Afghanistan and Iraq. (Little wonder then that Roll Call political analyst Stuart Rothenberg called the now-dormant resolution one of his five nominees for “The Worst Political Idea of 2007.”)
In the weeks following the bloodshed in the streets of Yerevan, the Assembly and ANCA repeatedly attempted to varyingly justify or explain away the Armenian military’s attack on the armed forces of Azerbaijan on the border of the internationally recognized occupied Azerbaijani territory of Karabakh. Such an action typically befits a regime trying to deflect attention from its domestic troubles.
The organizations also banded with sympathetic Senators to torpedo the nomination of Dick Hoagland to be ambassador to Armenia, all because the career diplomat did not cave in and deviate from White House policy by proclaiming the tragic events in the Ottoman Empire as genocide. President Bush recently nominated Marie Yanukovitch, another longtime foreign service officer, for the long-vacant position. When she refuses to deviate from US policy, will her candidacy be derailed too? And how exactly do Assembly and ANCA arrive at the conclusion that not having an American ambassador in Yerevan since 2006 helps the Armenian people?
Every year, on April 24th, Armenians in Los Angeles and elsewhere remember the deaths of hundreds of thousands of Armenians during the final days of the Ottoman Empire. However, the time for Armenian-American institutions to grow up and play a leadership role on behalf of the ongoing crisis in their ancestral homeland is long overdue. They must pressure President Sarkisian, and others brought into the new government, to expeditiously enact meaningful economic reforms, promote democratization, undertake tangible steps to resolve the Karabakh dispute, and find common ground with the Turkish people on the tragic events from nearly a century ago.
Jason Epstein is the President of Washington, DC-based Southfive Strategies, LLC. He was an advisor to the Turkish Embassy from 2002-07.
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6 Comments
1. Mary Jackson:I agree, although this is not to minimise what happened.
Pressure on Turkey from the international community would help. Unless Turkey acknowledges the genocide, neither country can move on.
(I have visited Armenia. A beautiful country with kind people, but an air of tragedy, understandably hangs over the place. Many seem to hanker after the “security” of the Soviet era.)
Apr 25, 2008 - 3:23 am 2. PoliGazette » Armenia:[...] I think that Jason Epstein is right to point out at Pajamas Media that Armenians in the Diaspora should stop forcing governments to recognize [...]
Apr 25, 2008 - 8:37 am 3. Elliott:How sensitive of Jason Epstein to lecture Diaspora Armenians on April 24th – the day Armenians worldwide commemorate the start of the Armenian Genocide.
May 2, is Yom Hashoah, the Jewish holiday that commemorates the Holocaust. Perhaps on that day Mr. Epstein could call on American Jews to pressure Israel to constructively use the annual $3 billion U.S. taxpayers send it and settle its differences with the Palestinians.
In the meantime as an “advisor” to the Turkish Government he should advise his clients to open the border with the tiny country of Armenia, something which would go a long way toward lowering tensions.
Apr 25, 2008 - 9:52 am 4. P. Connolly:Yes, Jason on this April 24th let us recognize and acknowledge the fact that the Leaders of the Armenian Diaspora don’t really care about what has become of the descendants of those Turkish subjects who fell so long ago. So many of them today have become experts at political intrigue, deceit, and ethnic hatred; they are a disgrace to their heritage and ancestry ! This year -for once and for all- let the Diaspora Armenians drop this hate campaign against the Turkish Government and people and instead divert some of this energy not only toward bettering and improving their own lot but also toward ridding mankind of the dreadful specter of War. One of the surest ways to accomplish this is to avoid Ethnic hatred and prejudice in all their forms.
Apr 25, 2008 - 1:14 pm 5. Jan from Holland:Armenia really needs symbolic help, I understand that´s not very helpful for the rich clients (Turkish Government) of Mr. Jason Epstein. How much did you have earned for this anti-Armenian Propaganda?
Shame on you!
Apr 28, 2008 - 2:46 am 6. Mardukhai:Mr. Epstein, your clients should get over it. The Armenian Genocide happened, but it was over 90 years ago. Admit it, move on. The Ottomans the Slavs of Macedonia, and the Republican Turks slaughtered the Greeks of Ionia. And the Greeks burned Salonika, and the Serbs oppressed the Macedonians, and so on and so forth.
Regarding Karabakh, the Azeris started that war, using the same justification as the Palestinians used in 1948 — “It’s our country, we’re the majority, and if we want to kill off a minority down to the last man, woman, and child, that’s our right, damn it!”
All this was just after the Azeris slaughtered the Armenians of Baku. The Azeris have lots of oil, they don’t need Karabakh. They don’t live there. They should let it go.
Apr 29, 2008 - 1:19 am