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Is Nikol Pashinyan to Blame?

Some people say that it’s not fair to put the blame for the disgraceful agreement signed this week solely on Nikol Pashinyan. For one thing, they argue that Pashinyan inherited a bad situation. They say that war and/or compromise were inevitable. They are not wrong. War was inevitable and any possible solution would require compromise. The question is what would the outcome have been were he not in charge. How would we have performed in the war? Would a compromise have materialized or not? Could we maintain the status quo? In particular, if the 2018 coup hadn’t happened, where would we stand today?

In 2018, when Serzh Sargsyan stayed as Prime Minister after his second presidential term ended, many people said that he was clinging to power and hoped to lead the country indefinitely. In reality, he was ready to continue leading the country, to continue taking responsibility for the negotiations and the security of Armenia and Artsakh, to carry the burden of the nation for at least a few more years. If the concessions that Pashinyan just made were inevitable, that implies that Sargsyan’s administration was doing poorly with the negotiations and had failed to build up the military for a large scale war. In that case, the fact that Sargsyan had agreed to stay in power meant that he was ready for whatever was coming. Some or all of the following would have to be true:

  • He believed that he was the best person to continue negotiations to maintain the status quo and avoid war.
  • He believed that he was the best Commander in Chief for the impending war.
  • He was ready to take the responsibility for making unpopular compromises.

In a recent interview to The Independent, Sargsyan justified his decision for staying as Prime Minister by saying:

“I agreed to be elected Prime Minister of the Republic of Armenia after two terms in office, because I was convinced that the change of chief negotiators would have catastrophic consequences. Continuity was vital.”

Also, during his meeting at the Marriott Hotel on April 21, 2018, Sargsyan warned Pashinyan that “you do not realize the level of responsibility.” It’s clear now what he meant.

So why did Nikol Pashinyan usurp power? Why would he put himself in this precarious position unwillingly? Why did he take responsibility for a country at war with a complex negotiation process that would be hard to navigate for even seasoned diplomats? He must have realized what he was getting himself into, right? Why would he do these things unless he had a plan for Artsakh?

After taking power, Pashinyan claimed that he would discard the policies of his predecessors and start from a new point in the negotiations. Over the course of the next two years, he made at least the following contradictory statements:

  • “I do not have a mandate to negotiate on behalf of Artsakh.”
  • “Artsakh must return to the negotiating table.”
  • “Before signing any agreement, I will bring it to Republic Square and discuss with the people.”
  • “Artsakh is Armenia, period!”
  • “Armenia and Artsakh have the same vision for the resolution of the conflict.”
  • “The solution must be acceptable to the populations of Artsakh, Armenia, and Azerbaijan.”

So according to the Pashinyan propaganda machine, the negotiations were in a bad state, so he reset them. He then completely botched the negotiations, taking it down a dead end. And we know what happens when negotiations stop. The shooting starts.

On the military front, blaming Sargsyan or Kocharyan for that matter for not bringing the latest drones or anti-drone weapons to Armenia is absurd. Drones are a relatively new technology. The domestic drone industry was launched under the Sargsyan administration, but it would obviously take time to develop the technology to the point where it was competitive with other drone makers. This government could have stimulated development and scaled up manufacturing in the last two and a half years. Did they do that? If not, why not? They could have also purchased both drones and anti-drone weapons in the last two and a half years. Did they do that? If not, why not? Surely, Kocharyan is not to blame for this.

There were light skirmishes in July in Tavush. The Armenian military performed well, taking one or two posts and inflicting losses on the enemy. A disproportionate number of military servicemen were given awards for what was essentially a fight for a couple of posts. I am sure each serviceman did a wonderful job and was worthy of praise, but the impression that the government created was that this was a massive victory due to the improvements that had been made to the Armed Forces in the two years since Pashinyan took power. This is consistent with the PR machine that is Pashinyan’s government. He has run the country the same way he ran his newspapers for decades. Everyone was happy with Pashinyan. Everyone was happy with Tonoyan. People even started talking about a so-called Tonoyan doctrine. “New war for new territories”, they said.

Fast forward two months and full scale war breaks out in Artsakh. The PR machine starts operating again, telling us that we’re winning or that we will win, hiding losses of life, equipment, and territory. The enemy reaches Shushi and Pashinyan signs a humiliating agreement of total capitulation. Does he take responsibility? No. Pashinyan starts blaming everyone, from the lack of volunteers to Gagik Tsarukyan to the “old corrupt regime”. Everyone but himself or his team. Nobody resigns. Nobody is fired.

Pashinyan is the leader of the country. He and his administration claimed that due to their reforms, we were stronger than ever in July. Arayik Harutyunyan said that our skies were protected unlike in April 2016. Artsrun said that we have acquired more modern weapons in the past two years than in the previous ten years.

Nikol Pashinyan is a coward who will accept praise but will never take responsibility for his actions. You can’t have it both ways. So yes, he is the one who deserves the blame for giving a significant part of our homeland to the enemy. He usurped power in 2018 and he failed miserably in the two and a half years that followed, leading to thousands of deaths, loss of essentially all of Artsakh, no status for what remains, and instability in the country. All signs point to the fact that we would have been in a much better position on all of these fronts had Sargsyan stayed in power.

5 Comments

  1. Hasmik Hasmik Nov 21, 2020

    All fair points, but it was Dashnaks who lost Artsakh in addition to Kars, Sarikamish, and Igdir in the first place during their selfish adventure from 1918-1920. Bolshevik Armenians were the better patriots and Armenia was most prosperous when they were at the helm. All the other bourgeois nationalists have only led Armenians down treasonous paths, kissing the West’s ass and never getting anything in return.

  2. Patrick Bairamian Patrick Bairamian Nov 21, 2020

    Agreed. We don’t understand that Armenia isn’t as significant as we would like to think yet were given exclusive audiences with the Kremlin. It’s a fact that those in power understand and those like Pashinyan take for granted. Well… we lost because of Nikol not respecting that fact: like not respecting the wrath of fire.

  3. Ara Peltekian Ara Peltekian Nov 22, 2020

    Why are our choices limites to corrupt traitor and incompetent traitor. Why hasn’t Armenia produced a real visionary competent leader since it’s independence? Why hasn’t Armenia benifited from the political know how of the Armenian diaspora? Why haven’t we made Armenia a need for Russia and the west? Questions that need to be answered soon; otherwise Armenia, like Artsakh will also become a Russian military outpost in the Southern Caucasus.

    • alex piloian alex piloian Nov 25, 2020

      What exactly is the political know-how of the diaspora. Even if such a thing existed what would you be recommending Armenia be governed from California>

  4. Hovsep Avagyan Hovsep Avagyan Nov 22, 2020

    Why do you use “old corrupt regime” is this fact being questioned by you ? Other point.. you finish with “All signs point to the fact that we would have been in a much better position on all of these fronts had Sargsyan stayed in power” but the article is not about what would have happened, but about your view on what happened.

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