Tuesday, Russia ‘Closely Monitoring’ Armenian-Azeri Border Crisis • Aza Babayan • Naira Nalbandian Russia - A view of the the Russian Foreign Ministry building in Moscow, February 22, 2019. Russia said on Tuesday that it keeps trying to ease tensions between Armenia and Azerbaijan as troops from the two South Caucasus countries remained locked in a border standoff threatening to reignite the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. The Russian Foreign Ministry said Moscow is maintaining intensive contacts with both sides “at the highest and high levels” and pressing them to stick to a ceasefire accord that stopped last year’s war in Karabakh. “We are continuing to closely monitor the situation connected with the border incident between Armenia and Azerbaijan,” the ministry said in a statement. “We believe that all such incidents should be resolved in a solely peaceful and negotiated way,” it said. “We see the launch of a process of delimitation of the Armenian-Azerbaijani border and its subsequent demarcation as a long-term solution.” Russian military officials participated in a series of Armenian-Azerbaijani talks held after Azerbaijani forces reportedly advanced several kilometers at some sections of the border last week. The talks are due to resume on Wednesday. Armenia has condemned the Azerbaijani troop movements as a violation of its territorial integrity and asked Russia and the Russian-led Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) for military support. Moscow has still not publicly commented on the appeal or openly backed Yerevan in the dispute. The foreign ministers of Russia, Armenia and the four other CSTO member states are expected to discuss the issue when they meet in Tajikistan on Wednesday. Some Russian analysts on Tuesday blamed Yerevan for the Azerbaijani territorial gains made on the border and the resulting crisis. “The country is demonstrating utter helplessness,” one of them, Nikolay Silayev, told the Moscow daily Izvestia. “[Armenian] state bodies are not even trying to solve the problem on their own. One has the impression that Yerevan is looking for someone who would solve the border conflict for it.” Echoing statements by Armenian opposition politicians, Silayev said the Armenian authorities have failed to properly fortify vulnerable border portions since the Karabakh war was halted six months ago. Armenia says that Azerbaijani troops crossed into its Syunik and Gegharkunik provinces. The Armenian military responded by sending reinforcements to those areas. According to it, Baku has pulled back some of its troops in recent days. No shooting incidents have been reported so far. The Defense Ministry in Yerevan said on Tuesday morning that Armenian troops are “preventing” the Azerbaijani side from providing “logistical support” to its soldiers remaining within Armenia’s borders. A ministry source confirmed reports that Armenian and Azerbaijani servicemen deployed at a Gegharkunik section of the frontier scuffled at one point on Monday. The dispute was quickly resolved and no gunshots were fired by either side, the source told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service. In Gegharkunik, Azerbaijani forces advanced towards three Armenian villages, depriving some local residents of their traditional summer pastures. Sima Chitchian, who runs one of those villages, Kut, said they continue to occupy hills overlooking the community heavily dependent on animal husbandry. “We look through binoculars and can see their tents and troop movements,” said Chitchian. Redrawing Of Armenia’s Borders ‘Unacceptable’ To Iran • Heghine Buniatian Armenia - A cargo terminal at a border crossing with Iran, November 29, 2018. (Photo by the State Revenue Committee of Armenia) A senior Iranian official reportedly voiced strong support for Armenia’s territorial integrity when he commented on the continuing military standoff on its border with Azerbaijan. “The position of the Islamic Republic of Iran is very clear, unequivocal and resolute: the territorial integrity of the regional states must be preserved,” Mojtaba Zolnour, the chairman of the Iranian parliament’s committee on national security and foreign policy, told the Russian Sputnik news agency. “It would be unacceptable for us if they took away a part of Armenian territory and changed our borders. That is, if we had a new neighbor. The existing borders must be fully protected and Iran’s border with Armenia must be preserved,” said the conservative politician who previously served as Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei’s representative to Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps. Armenia’s southeastern Syunik province bordering Iran and Azerbaijan is the epicenter of the standoff that began after Azerbaijani troops reportedly advanced several kilometers into Armenian territory on May 12. Armenia has condemned the Azerbaijani troop movements as a violation of its territorial integrity and asked Russia and the Russian-led Collective Security Treaty Organization to for military support. Azerbaijan denies such a violation, saying that its forces simply took up new positions on the Azerbaijani side of the frontier. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian has suggested that Baku may be intent on “provoking an armed clash” with Armenia six months after a Russian-brokered agreement stopped the war in Nagorno-Karabakh. He has pointed to Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev’s recent threats to forcibly open a “corridor” connecting Azerbaijan to its Nakhichevan exclave via Syunik. Meeting with Iran’s Minister of Roads and Urban Development Mohammad Eslami on Monday, the Armenian ambassador in Tehran, Artashes Tumanian, said Yerevan also counts on the Islamic Republic’s support in the border standoff. According to the Armenian Embassy in Iran, Eslami reaffirmed his country’s support for Armenia’s territorial integrity. In that context, he assured Tumanian that Tehran remains committed to the idea of creating a “transport corridor” that would connect Iran’s Persian Gulf ports to the Black Sea through Armenia and Georgia. During a March visit to Yerevan, Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif described Armenia’s territorial integrity as a “red line” for Iran. Former Yerevan Mayor Arrested, Freed • Naira Bulghadarian Armenia -- Mayor Gagik Beglarian attends public celebrations in Yerevan, October 9, 2010. Gagik Beglarian, a former government minister and Yerevan mayor facing corruption charges, was arrested late on Monday but released on bail hours later after returning to Armenia from Russia. Beglarian ran the Armenian capital from 2009-2011 and served as the country’s transport minister from 2012-2016 during former President Serzh Sarkisian’s rule. Law-enforcement authorities issued an arrest warrant for him in March 2020 after accusing him of a large-scale “waste” of public property and abuse of power. The National Security Service (NSS) claimed that Beglarian had illegally privatized a kindergarten building in central Yerevan at a fraction of its market value. He denied the accusations. Beglarian flew to Yerevan from Moscow to take part in the funeral of his deceased brother. According to the Office of the Prosecutor-General, he turned himself in to the NSS and was arrested on his arrival. A statement by the law-enforcement agency said Beglarian also paid investigators a “deposit” equivalent to the “damage inflicted on the state.” It said a prosecutor overseeing the probe released him on Tuesday on a 50 million-dram ($96,000) bail. Beglarian’s lawyer, Hrant Ananian, said his client continues to deny the accusations. “I cannot comment further,” he told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service. The 57-year-old Beglarian, who is also known as “Black Gago,” is no stranger to controversy. He was forced to resign as Yerevan mayor in December 2010 after reportedly assaulting an official from the presidential administration’s protocol unit. The official, Aram Kandayan, incurred Beglarian’s ire after asking the latter’s wife not to sit next to President Sarkisian during an opera concert in Yerevan. Beglarian and his bodyguards reportedly kidnapped and beat up Kandayan afterwards. U.S. Official Phones Armenian, Azeri Leaders USA – National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan speaks with reporters in the James Brady Press Briefing Room at the White House. Washington, March 12, 2021 U.S. National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan said the leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan are committed to resolving an ongoing border dispute between their countries peacefully after speaking with them by phone late on Monday. Sullivan phoned Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev after Yerevan warned of “unpredictable consequences” of the military standoff at some sections of the Armenian-Azerbaijani border. A spokeswoman for the U.S. National Security Council, Emily Horne, said he told Aliyev and Pashinian that “military movements near un-demarcated borders are irresponsible and provocative.” “He welcomed the ongoing communication between the two sides and both leaders’ commitment to resolving this issue peacefully,” Horne added in a statement. Sullivan likewise tweeted that he hailed their “commitment to peaceful resolution of border tensions through dialogue.” He gave no other details of his phone conversations. The U.S. State Department on Friday urged Baku to immediately “pull back all forces” that reportedly advanced several kilometers into Armenian territory on May 12. According to the Armenian government’s readout of Pashinian’s call with Sullivan, President Joe Biden’s top adviser “considered unacceptable the movements carried out by Azerbaijani troops inside Armenia’s state borders” and said he will demand their withdrawal. “Adviser Sullivan praised the restraint shown by the Armenian side in the current situation and its steps aimed at settling issues through diplomatic means,” said the statement. For its part, Aliyev was reported to criticize Yerevan’s “disproportionate” reaction to the border incidents and “attempts to internationalize the issue.” He also welcomed Sullivan’s calls for Armenia and Azerbaijan to start talks on demarcating their border. Pashinian said on Monday that the border demarcation and delimitation must be carried out in a “trilateral format” involving Russia. He said this would be in line with Russian-brokered agreements that stopped last year’s war in Nagorno-Karabakh. Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL Copyright (c) 2021 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc. 1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.