15 July 1997 NOBODY COULD HAVE PREDICTED THAT in 1996, President Levon Ter-Petrossyan and his Armenian Pan-National Movement (HHSh) would face the strongest challenge yet to their more than six-year rule. Having virtually unlimited power given him by the new constitution as well as the overwhelming support of a weak parliament, Ter-Petrossyan seemed to have little reason to worry about […]

You have reached a premium content area of Transitions. To read this entire article please login if you are already a Transitions subscriber.

Not a subscriber?

Subscribe today for access to:
Full access to the website and archive of over 26,000 articles

Exclusive monthly, members-only newsletter offering behind-the-scenes views from our contributing writers

A guest, two-month subscription to share with a friend

You can subscribe here to gain access to the entire website.