Republic of Armenia 1918

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THE REPUBLIC OF ARMENIA, 1918-1921: DOMESTIC POLITICS

By GARABET K. MOUMDJIAN

To provide the reader (even the general one) with a short essay that simplifies the ‎intricate web of domestic politics characterizing inter-party relations in the Republic of ‎Armenia between 1918 and 1921 is not an easy task. The limits of a short essay, is, very ‎simply put, inadequate, if one wants to make an in-depth analysis of the topic under ‎discussion. ‎

Therefore, I will try to approach the issue from another perspective. I will first ‎present brief sketches of the major participant political organizations. Then, I will identify ‎and explain some of the important issues relating to inter-party relations during the period ‎under discussion. Finally, I will try to draw some conclusions, which might bare ‎educational value for current Armenian endeavors towards democracy and national unity.‎

During its two and one half years of existence, The Republic of Armenia was a ‎fledgling country proudly taking great strides towards building permanent democratic ‎institutions. The Western orientation of the government had its profound effect on the ‎internal political atmosphere.‎

It was in an effort to emulate the West and be considered its worthy ally that ‎the ruling Armenian political organization, the ARF (Hay Heghapokhagan ‎Tashnagtsutiun, Armenian Revolutionary Federation, ARF hereafter), committed itself ‎to moderate, republican principles, which, had it not been for the abrupt Sovietization ‎of the Republic, would have undoubtedly paved the way for the realization of ‎democratic governmental institutions.‎

On the other hand, the short lived experience of some two and a half years was ‎not enough to quite the bickering between the various political organizations with ‎their contradicting ideologies and political agendas.‎ ‎ ‎ At the core of the disagreements were some fundamental socio- political beliefs ‎related to the shaping of the future democratic state. Add to this the strong atmosphere of ‎mistrust and uncertainty that existed between the various political parties that had not yet ‎worked within a single governmental entity and you would have a perfect example of a ‎political quagmire in the making.‎

The political-ideological spectrum in the Republic extended from the far right to ‎the extreme left. The Bourgeoisie, represented by the Eastern Armenian Populists, or ‎Popular Democrats) Zhoghovrtagan, and the Western Armenian Constitutional ‎Democrats (Ramgavar) occupied the right spectrum, while the socialists, ranging from ‎the Social Revolutionaries (SR's) to Marxist Social Democrat (SD's) and splinter groups ‎dotted the left spectrum. The ruling party, The ARF, still adhering to a socialist ideology, ‎pragmatically assumed a centrist position.‎


‎1. - THE RIGHT SPECTRUM‎


a- THE CONSTITUTINAL DEMOCRATS‎

The Armenian Genocide, perpetrated by the government of Ittihadist Turkey, ‎incapacitated the mainly urban, Western Armenian Constitutional Democrats). The ‎party was formed in the wake of the Ittihadist (Young Turks) coup d'etat of 1908. The ‎restoration of the Ottoman Constitution gave impetus to the party's platform of free ‎enterprise, and the pursuing of Armenian reforms through non-violent, legal means. It ‎should be noted, however, that the absorption of the more militant Armenakans and a ‎faction of the Reformed Henchakian (Veragazmial) into its ranks made the party ‎more susceptible to notions of defensive armed struggle.‎

With its strength in the Republic diminished by its Eastern Populist ‎counterpart, the Ramkavars tried to overshadow the ruling party, the Hay ‎Heghapokhagan Tashnagtsutiun, by extending their activities among diasporan ‎Armenian communities. Leaders such as poet Vahan Tekeyan, and academician Arshag ‎Chobanian, worked closely with Boghos Nubar Pasha and his National Delegation in ‎Paris, in an effort to strengthen the position of the latter within Allied circles vis-à-‎vis the government of the Republic of Armenia.‎

In the day to day affairs of the Republic, however, The Ramkavars managed to ‎keep only a bare semblance of party organization. Their presence was due mainly to ‎some Western Armenian refugees from Van (former Armenakans). Although they ‎published the semi-weekly Tsayn Hayastani (Voice of Armenia) in Yerevan, and in mid ‎‎1919 reached as far as negotiating with the ruling party for participation in the ‎government (about which more is to be said later), their active political role in the ‎Republic was negligible.‎


b- THE POPULIST DEMOCRATS‎

It was with the Eastern Armenian populist democrat party that the Ruling party in ‎Armenia, the ARF entered into a coalition government from November 1918 to June ‎‎1919. It was the dictates of its Western orientation and the set aim of attracting ‎Armenian and other capitalist circles towards the newly established Republic, rather ‎than its social ideology, that persuaded the A.R.F. into willingly entering this uneasy ‎partnership with the Eastern Armenian antirevolutionary bourgeoisie.‎

The Populist Party was a newcomer into Armenian political life. Tsarist imperial-‎colonial policies didn't provide fertile grounds for the creation of liberal democratic ‎parties. Only after the demise of the Russian imperial regime in 1917, did Armenian ‎commercial and professional circles in Tiflis, Baku and Elisavetbol provide the grass-‎root support for such a party to materialize. The main catalyst in this formation was ‎members of the Russian Constitutional Democrat (Cadet) party, who were advocates of ‎Armenian cultural autonomy within a Russian democratic, liberal federation.‎

The geographical distribution of its grass roots support suggests that the party was ‎more influential in all parts of Trans-Caucasia except in the predominantly agrarian ‎Armenian Republic.‎

It was during the second Populist party congress-- held in Yerevan on the wake of ‎the collapse of the coalition government, and the party's boycotting of parliamentary ‎elections during the preceding months—that the representatives of the Eastern Armenian ‎Bourgeoisie displayed, for the first time, "an emphatic western orientation by ‎expressing deep admiration for the Allied Powers." It was during this congress too, that party delegates put aside their previous advocacy of cultural autonomy, and endorsed ‎national independence. It was in this euphoric mood that the populists called upon all ‎anti-socialist elements to coalesce to oust the ARF from the government and form a new ‎one based on the principles of free, capitalistic enterprise.‎


‎2. - THE LEFT SPECTRUM‎

a- The Social Revolutionaries

The adherents of the Russian Social Revolutionary Movement also had a nominal ‎presence in the Republic. Like the populists, their grass root support was based on student ‎and intellectual circles in Tiflis and Baku. Many of its members were former Tashnakists ‎who had abandoned the party in 1907 because of its absorption of and adherence to the ‎movement to liberate “Turkish-Armenia,” which led the party to assume a somewhat ‎shallow position within the Russian opposition movement of the day.‎

A decade later, in 1917, Armenian SR’s joined the Georgian Mensheviks and ‎fought hard to exclude the ARF from the revolutionary councils, which were shaped as a ‎result of the political vacuum created by the toppling of the Tsarist regime.‎

Contrary to their lack of a strong support group within the republic, and in spite ‎of their feeble membership, Armenian SR's campaigned vigorously in parliamentary ‎elections. Although they attained meager results, they continued to advocate a single ‎Caucasian entity within an all-Russian federative democracy.‎

Their failure was a direct result of their disbelief in the concept of national ‎independence. Even when the majority of its delegates, perhaps out of expediency, voted ‎in favor of working within separate Caucasian republics during the party's conference ‎held in Tiflis in August of 1919, the party could not formulate a working strategy out of ‎their demand. The party organ, Sotsial Heghapokhagan (The Socialist Revolutionary), ‎continued to publish contradicting views about issues relating to self determination ‎and national independence, thus furthering the gap between the party and the general ‎populace.‎


b- The Social Democrats

The collapse of empire, partition of Trans-Caucasus, end of Baku Commune, ‎disagreement over tactics, and the final schism between Bolshevik and Menshevik ‎factions had weakened the Social Democrats and scattered them into five rival groups.-‎

‎1) The Armenian Section of the Georgian SD (Menshevik) Party that had a‎ ‎ negligible role in the Republic,‎

‎2) Adherents of the International Russian SD (Menshevik) Party,‎ ‎ ‎ ‎3)‎ Adherents to Russian SD (Bolshevik) Party, who were advocates of Trans-Caucasian ‎Soviet Republics, and National Communist Parties as affiliates of the Russian ‎Communist Party. There was some resistance from Armenian and Georgian ‎Bolshevik circles to this separatist agenda, but it was finally agreed upon by all ‎Bolsheviks in the region, especially when Lenin and the Central Committee in ‎Moscow advocated it.‎

‎ ‎ The Bolsheviks had lots of disagreement over tactics. Some, like Arshavir ‎Melikian advocated educating the public through legal means rather than revolutionary ‎agitation, because the Republic was in shambles. Young extremists opposed this view. ‎The Bolshevik boycotting of parliamentary elections in summer of 1919 suggests that ‎extremists were in control of the party.‎

In the summer of 1919 there were not more than 500 Bolsheviks in Armenia.‎ ‎ Yet they were on the rise because of their agitation and because of other factors such ‎as.-‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ - Unresolved condition of the Armenian Question.‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ - Radical Bolshevik “proletar”s from Baku and other parts of the Caucasus ‎ Were purring into Armenia.‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ - Bolsheviks expelled from Georgia coming to Armenia.‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ - Moscow sending agitators and propagandists into Armenia.‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ - Armenian government inactive at first (Bolsheviks on government ‎ payroll in ministries, they were permitted to deliver lectures,‎ ‎ engage in political debates, address public rallies, and even criticize‎ ‎ government and ruling party. Therefore, Bolsheviks found a haven in‎ ‎ Armenia. ‎

‎ ‎ The Government started taking severe measures only after Bolshevik led ‎uprisings in May 1920.‎

‎ September 1919 saw the first underground party conference in Yerevan. Only ‎ twelve delegates were present. There was a conflict between Melikian’s mild views ‎and KRIAKOM members Azkanaz Mravian and Sarkis Gasian. Decision taken to start subversive actions against the existing government.‎

‎ ‎ Thus ARMENKOM was created. However, the party remained underground.‎


c- The Social Democratic Specifists ‎

Those were intellectuals who adhered to the principle that Armenians had the ‎right to choose their own unique approach to SOCIALISM. They advocated distinct ‎national Marxist parties.‎

After the formation of the Republic Armenian SD specifists such as Tavit Ananun, ‎Bashki Ishkhanian, and Sdepan Zorian moved to Yerevan to work within ‎governmental institutions and legal structures. in January 1920 they founded The Social ‎Democratic Labor Party of Armenia as a legal organization. They hailed the restoration ‎of national independence and proclaimed that they will participate in the process of state building. They ridiculed the Ramkavars assertion that Western ‎Armenia should be the nucleus around which the Armenian state is to be formed. They‎ also criticized other SD factions for their subversive and intrusive agitation and thus ‎attracted the animosity of the Marxists and bourgeoisie alike.‎


d- The Social Democratic Henchakian Party‎

Last but not least Social Democratic Henchakian Party. This was the oldest established ‎Armenian SD group and the only one which had Eastern and Western Armenian ‎members. The party reached its peak in 1894-96 during the emancipatory movement ‎in Western Armenia. Then came a period of fragmentation. In 1919 many Henchakists ‎left the party to join Mensheviks or Bolsheviks. Traditional strongholds in Cilicia and ‎Balkans. Publication The Proletar in Tiflis, through which they.-‎

‎ - Criticized A.R.F. for pseudo socialism, honeymoon with bourgeoisie, ‎ ‎ pretension of leadership.‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ - Criticized all parties that boycotted parliamentary elections.‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ - Criticized Populists for opportunism (first working with ARF ‎ (then coming out of coalition)‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ - Criticize intellectuals (SD's specially) because they could not ‎ differentiate between state and government, while the first is‎ ‎ permanent and the other transitory. So, if government is now held y ‎ ‎ incompetents that should not mean abandoning the state or ‎ undermining it, but rather aid it by providing new leadership.‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ - opposed the presence of two delegations in Paris because that was ‎ contrary to the notion of one nation-one struggle.‎


‎3. - THE CENTER‎


a. - The ARF


Although crippled by the Armenian Genocide which shattered its network in the Ottoman Empire, and the Russian Civil war, which battered its organizational ‎machine in the Tsarist Empire, The Armenian Revolutionary Federation was, in 1918, ‎still considered to be the dominant Armenian political organization upon whose ‎shoulders the task of ruling the fledgling Republic rested.‎

For three decades since its formation, the ARF had acted as a catharsis through ‎which conservative Western and progressive Eastern Armenian ideological ‎fermentations and political aspirations could be funneled into a cohesive working ‎agenda for the realization of the ultimate goal of Free and independent Armenia. Now ‎that the nucleus of that state was accomplished, the old party program with its‎ revolutionary zeal was inadequate to meet the challenges of a governmental apparatus. ‎Add to this the almost inevitable popular discontent towards the ruling party of a ‎newly established state, and the internal differences within the rank-and-file, and it ‎was obvious that the A.R.F. had to undergo some radical changes in order to meet the ‎challenges of the new situation.‎

There were three distinct groupings within the party. The largest was that of ‎Western Armenian members who advocated an evolutionary social reform program. On ‎the other extreme stood Internationalist socialist intellectuals, mostly Eastern Armenian, ‎who pushed for radical social and political change. In the middle stood the old leadership, ‎the members of the party's highest executive body, the A.R.F. Bureau which,‎ out of pragmatic considerations, put aside its revolutionary character, and tilted towards ‎moderation, thus weakening the position of the party's Left. The adoption of a ‎moderate stance by the party's leadership was also evident in the Bureau's organ ‎‎"Heartache", which stressed gradualism instead of radical social and political reform.‎

The clash between the first two groups was inevitable during the sessions of ‎the party's 9th congress in September 1919 (the only one held in Armenia's capital ‎Yerevan). Issues ranging from the ideological framework of the party to the relationship ‎between party and government were hotly debated under the watchful eyes of Allied ‎intelligence services which followed the sessions with keen interest. After several weeks ‎of deliberations, the Congress formulated its decisions. It was evident that the moderates had been successful. The Congress upheld the principles of ‎moderate, democratic government and also instructed the newly elected Bureau that it ‎should have an indirect control of government, that it should not interfere in the ‎affairs of the government, but would rather stay in its shadow and extend a supportive hand to it.‎

Later events, however, such as the Bolshevik agitated uprisings in May ‎1920 terminated the principle of indirect control of government, when the ARF Bureau ‎came out of the shadows and assumed the government itself. These were, it seems, tiring ‎and critical days where raison d'etat became the raison d'etre of the ruling party's ‎leadership. ‎


‎4. - PARTISAN POLITICS‎

After reviewing the participants, let us now ponder on some of the processes of ‎inter-party politics. Because of time limitations, I will present each very briefly.‎

Perhaps one of the most important processes of partisan politics in the Republic ‎was that of the coalition government between the ruling party and the populist ‎Democrats, the Populist Party which lasted from November 1918 to June 1919. Headed ‎first by Hovannes Kachaznuni and then by Alexander Khatisian, The coalition was ‎not a complete semblance of national unity, since the left wing parties (i.e. SR's,‎ SD's) were against participation in a government where right wing parties were ‎represented. The coalition government provided the opportunity for the Eastern ‎Armenian Bourgeoisie to participate in the state-building process, Many of their Tiflis ‎based cadres relocated themselves to Yerevan or alternated between the two cities, in an ‎effort to plan and implement projects in the spheres of economy, social welfare, ‎education, the judiciary, etc... The coalition government came to an abrupt end because of ‎the act of United Armenia in May 1919. Even though all populist ministers in the ‎government had signed the act and participated in its official declaration, the Populist ‎Central Committee in Tiflis, at the time, it seems, in cohort with Boghos Nubar's camp in Paris, which insisted that such an act was the prerogative of a constitutional ‎congress where all segments of Armenians must be represented, protested the act ‎and called upon its ministers to withdraw from the government and boycotted the ‎parliamentary elections to be held in the coming weeks. The Populist Center's ‎unexplainable position spread confusion within the party's rank and file. many ‎cadres questioned the validity of the center's decision. Although the populist center's ‎erroneous decisions were rectified during the party conference held several months later, ‎the collapse of the coalition government just before the general parliamentary elections ‎did damage the efforts of a unity between the two most influential political ‎segments. The experiment was never repeated.‎

In explaining the populist center’s stance one should take into consideration the negotiations conducted at the time between the Zhoghovrtagan ‎‎(populist democrats) and the Ramkavars (Constitutional Democrats) regarding the ‎merger of the two. It might be deduced that the Zhoghovertagan’s center's position ‎regarding the Act of United Armenia was a result of Ramgavar influences on its ‎leadership.‎

The Act of United Armenia also created confusion within circles adhering to the newly established Hay Azkayin Azadagan Miyutiun (Armenian National ‎Liberal Union) whose aim was the creation of a joint Constitutional Democrats- Populist ‎Democrats-Reformed Henchakian coalition as a counterforce against the Armenian ‎Revolutionary Federation. Stressed by the prospect that the Act of united Armenia ‎would rally Armenians worldwide around the Ararat Republic -- the term with which ‎Ramkavars and other Western Armenian circles used to undermine and ridicule the ‎Armenian Republic and its ruling party -- and also worried about The recognition that ‎ the said republic was gaining in Allied circles, architects of the above mentioned ‎Union poet Vahan Tekeyan and Dr. Nshan Der Sdepanian traveled first to Tiflis, where ‎they were joined by Populist Central Committee chairman Samson Harutiunian, and ‎from there to Yerevan to negotiate the Union's participation in the government. The plenary sessions of the negotiations coincided with the convening of the 9th ARF ‎Congress. Simon Vratsian represented the ruling party. Proposals and counter proposals ‎led to compromises on both sides, but the end result was that the negotiations created ‎more confusion and distrust.‎

On the other hand, the single event which solicited unanimous Armenian unity was the Armeno-Georgian border conflict during the period of coalition ‎government. Armenian parties represented in the Azkayin Khorhurt (National Council; ‎Parliament), unconditionally protested the Georgian militant stance and backed the government in its efforts to resist the aggressor. Due to time limitations I am unable ‎to speak about the 1919 parliamentary elections and their results. What is to be ‎underlined here, however, is the fact that the election process was yet another indication of the democratic character of the fledgling republic.‎


‎5. - CONCLUSION


Burdened with numerous external and internal hardships, The Armenian Republic in between 1918-1920 was a country in shambles. War, famine, and thousands ‎upon thousands of bewildered refugees threatened the very fabric of Armenian existence ‎and, in the words of Armenia's first prime minister, Hovannes Kachaznuni, rendered the ‎country into a “Chaos without Form" (Antsev Kaos). Yet despite these painful birth ‎bangs, the Armenian quest for freedom and independence was on the march. In this ‎chaotic situation internal partisan divisions were inevitable. Yet the high politicization ‎level of the parties and the populace at large was a promising factor for the future ‎democracy. It was on the principles and the broader issues -- and not secondary or ‎tertiary details -- that Armenian political organizations had differences of opinion. The ‎Republic was not the monopoly of a single party. Even though the ruling party ‎influenced the shaping of government, an outspoken opposition did materialize and ‎a multi-party pluralistic system was working.‎

If one thing should be stressed here, it would be the fact that the national interest ‎was clearly defined and all of the major participant political organizations were in ‎agreement regarding the elements of the national interest. Governmental decisions were ‎tailored according to national interest, rather than predicated by external influences and ‎pressures.‎

It is said that History repeats itself. We are bound to repeat the mistakes of the ‎past if we do not learn from our experiences. The period of the Republic did not lack ‎those mistakes. On the contrary, mistakes were numerous and lots of efforts were made to ‎rectify them. It is precisely because of this that the 1918-1920 experience must be of ‎importance to us today.‎