Tuesday, Greece Voices Solidarity With Armenia • Anush Mkrtchian Armenia - Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan (right) and his Greek counterpart Nikos Dendias hold a joint news briefing in Yerevan, September 27, 2022. Greek Foreign Minister Nikos Dendias condemned Azerbaijan’s recent military operations at the border with Armenia and also blamed Turkey for the dramatic escalation of the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict as he visited Yerevan on Tuesday. “We Greece have repeatedly underlined that we support the sovereignty and territorial integrity of all states,” Dendias said after talks with his Armenian counterpart Ararat Mirzoyan. “That goes also for our dear friends, the Armenians, Armenia.” “We believe in the inviolability of borders, and I am referring to the incidents that happened just a few days ago following the shelling of Armenian territory, including inhabited areas, by the Azeri military forces,” he told a joint news briefing. “And I would like to quote [French] President Macron who said yesterday: ‘I strongly condemn what happened in recent days and call for peace and resumption of negotiations.’ So I am here to express our solidarity with the Armenian government and the Armenian people.” Dendias went on to denounce attempts to “redraw maps,” pointing the finger at not only Azerbaijan but also its key ally, Turkey. “Turkey is trying to take advantage of the recent turmoil in order to undermine peace and stability, be it in the Caucasus or the Aegean,” he charged, pointing to Ankara’s “threat of war against Greece” voiced in an intensifying dispute over Greek islands in the Aegean Sea. Mirzoyan thanked Athens for its position on the border clashes of September 13-14 which Yerevan regards as Azerbaijani military aggression. Predictably, Ankara has voiced full support for Baku after what was the worst fighting in the conflict zone since the 2020 war in Nagorno-Karabakh. Dendias flew to Yerevan just over a week after he, Mirzoyan and Foreign Minister Ioannis Kasoulides of Cyprus held a trilateral meeting in New York on the sidelines of an annual session of the UN General Assembly. The three nations share historically strained relations with Turkey. “We are looking forward to enhancing our trilateral partnership with Cyprus to a new level,” said Dendias, who held separate meetings with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and Defense Minister Suren Papikian later on Tuesday. The Greek minister’s trip coincided with the second anniversary of the outbreak of the 2020 Armenian-Azerbaijani war. He had previously visited Armenia during the six-week hostilities. Armenian Leaders Cancel Key Ceremony On Karabakh War Anniversary • Robert Zargarian Armenia - Women visit one of the graves of Armenian soldiers killed in the 2020 war in Nagorno-Karabakh and buried in the Yerablur Military Pantheon in Yerevan, January 28, 2022. Avoiding another confrontation with angry parents of fallen soldiers, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and other senior officials did not visit Armenia’s main military cemetery on Tuesday to mark the second anniversary of the devastating war in Nagorno-Karabakh. The war broke out early on September 27, 2020 when Azerbaijan launched a large-scale military offensive along the Armenian-Azerbaijani “line of contact” around Karabakh. The Azerbaijani army captured four districts south of the Armenian-populated disputed territory as well as Karabakh’s southern Hadrut district and the town of Shushi (Shusha) before a Russian-brokered ceasefire stopped the hostilities on November 10. Baku also regained control in the following weeks over the three other districts occupied by Karabakh Armenian forces in the early 1990s. The truce accord negotiated by Russian President Vladimir Putin also led to the deployment of 2,000 Russian peacekeeping forces in Karabakh. According to the Armenian authorities, 3,825 Armenian soldiers and 80 civilians were killed during the six-week war. At least 203 other servicemen remain unaccounted for. Nagorno-Karabakh - An Armenian soldier fires an artillery piece on the frontline, October 5, 2020. Early in the morning, the parents of several dozen soldiers killed in action gathered at the Yerablur Military Pantheon in Yerevan to try to prevent Pashinian from laying flowers there as part of planned official ceremonies to mark the war anniversary. They hold him responsible for the deaths of their sons. The same protesters tried unsuccessfully to disrupt a wreath-laying ceremony led by Pashinian there on Armenia’s Independence Day marked on September 21. Riot police broke up the protest and detained dozens of its participants, causing uproar from opposition and civic groups. Pashinian, members of his government and political team as well as President Vahagn Khachaturian decided not to visit Yerablur this time around. According to pro-government media, they did not want to cause further tension at the cemetery where hundreds of Armenian victims of the 2020 war were laid to rest. Armenia - Police detain the mother of an Armenian soldier killed in the 2020 war in Nagorno-Karabakh at the Yerablur Military Pantheon, Yerevan, September 21, 2022. “Today, we once again bow our heads and commemorate the fallen warriors of the 44-day war, who fought to stop the existential threat facing our compatriots,” the Armenian Foreign Ministry said in a statement released on the occasion. The ministry said the six-week war demonstrated “Azerbaijan's state policy of ethnic cleansing of Armenians of Artsakh.” “Even today, through the use of force and the threat of use of force, Azerbaijan attempts to realize its maximalist aspirations, rejecting the very fact of Nagorno-Karabakh’s existence as a territorial unit and the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict,” it said. The war anniversary was also marked in Azerbaijan whose government has acknowledged over 2,900 combat and civilian deaths. The country observed a minute of silence in memory of its war dead. Ter-Petrosian Wants Dialogue Between Armenian Government, Opposition • Ruzanna Stepanian Armenia - Former President Levon Ter-Petrosian at a press conference in Yerevan, June 10, 2021. Former President Levon Ter-Petrosian has called on Armenia’s government and leading opposition groups to reach a consensus on how to make peace with Azerbaijan and Turkey. In a televised interview aired late on Monday, Ter-Petrosian said the Armenian opposition should help Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian accept “painful solutions” backed by the international community. “All solutions will be bad for us,” he told Armenian Public Television. “I believe the challenge is to choose the least painful of those solutions.” “Pashinian is also afraid of signing such a document,” he went on. “Whatever document he signs they will brand him a traitor, a Turk or I don’t know what. In my view, we will give Pashinian a helping hand if we choose the least painful variant. We will thereby shoulder responsibility for that variant.” Ter-Petrosian claimed that Armenia will have to make even greater concessions if it rejects such a settlement now. He said at the same time that he does not know the exact terms of peace accords currently offered by Azerbaijan or major foreign powers. Only Pashinian and some members of his inner circle possess such information, he said. The remarks came almost a week after Ter-Petrosian and two other former presidents, Robert Kocharian and Serzh Sarkisian, met to discuss grave security challenges facing Armenia. The meeting was hosted by Catholicos Garegin II, the supreme head of the Armenian Apostolic Church, at his headquarters in Echmiadzin. No concrete agreements were apparently reached by them. Armenia - Opposition supporters demonstrate in Yerevan, June 14, 2022. Kocharian and Sarkisian lead the two opposition groups represented in the Armenian parliament. They staged virtually daily street protests in Yerevan in May and June after Pashinian signaled readiness to make major concessions to Azerbaijan. “No [national] unity can be formed with the participation of Nikol Pashinian,” Armen Ashotian, a senior member of Sarkisian’s Republican Party (HHK), said on Monday night, commenting on Ter-Petrosian’s remarks. Ashotian warned that because of his “tough personal position or unbridled ambition” Ter-Petrosian risks dashing hopes raised by the rare dialogue of the three ex-presidents. The latter have long had uneasy relations with each other. There was no immediate official reaction from Kocharian’s Hayastan alliance. Still, some of its parliamentarians rejected what they see as a defeatist agenda promoted by Ter-Petrosian. “What Levon Ter-Petrosian is saying is ‘forget about Karabakh’ and ‘we capitulated, so let’s accept everything that the enemy wants,’” one of those lawmakers, Gegham Manukian, told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service on Tuesday. “Ter-Petrosian voiced no calls for public consolidation, self-organization and resistance.” Manukian claimed that Ter-Petrosian’s chief preoccupation now is to “save Nikol” through the proposed dialogue. Meanwhile, a senior lawmaker representing Pashinian’s Civil Contract party, Artur Hovannisian, hit out at the parliamentary opposition forces, saying that they have “served the interests of other countries.” He did not name those countries. Hovannisian at the same time said: “I hope that the meetings of the former presidents and the Catholicos will be beneficial for our country.” Hayastan and the HHK demanded a parliamentary vote of no confidence in Pashinian after he sparked on September 14 a spontaneous antigovernment demonstration in Yerevan on the second day of deadly border clashes between Armenian and Azerbaijani forces. Speaking in the parliament, the prime minister expressed readiness to sign an unpopular peace treaty with Azerbaijan “as a result of which many people will criticize, curse and declare us traitors.” He said he is ready to recognize Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity through such a treaty if Baku withdraws its troops from Armenian border regions occupied by it. Pashinian’s statement fueled rumors that Yerevan will unconditionally accept Baku’s terms of the treaty, including recognition of Azerbaijani sovereignty over Nagorno-Karabakh. Thousands of angry people rallied outside the parliament building in Yerevan to demand Pashinian’s removal from power. U.S. Insists On Azerbaijani Troop Withdrawal U.S. -- U.S. State Department Spokesman Ned Price speaks during a press briefing at the State Department in Washington, February 8, 2021 The United States has publicly urged Azerbaijan to withdraw its troops from the territory seized by them during border clashes with Armenian forces earlier this month. “Our message has been consistent for some time,” Ned Price, the U.S. State Department spokesman, said on Monday. “We call on Azerbaijan to return troops to their initial positions. We urge disengagement of military forces and work to resolve all outstanding issues between Armenia and Azerbaijan through peaceful negotiations.” “The use of force is not an acceptable path,” Price told a daily news briefing in Washington. “We’ve made that clear privately. We’ve also made that clear publicly, and we’re glad that our continued engagement, including at high levels, including last week in New York, with both countries has helped to halt the hostilities.” Price referred to the meeting between the Armenian and Azerbaijani foreign ministers hosted by U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken in New York on September 19. No concrete agreements were announced after the talks held on the sidelines of an annual session of the UN General Assembly. Blinken reportedly urged the two ministers to meet again before the end of September. Price would not say whether such a meeting will take place in the coming days. He also declined to shed light on other Armenian and Azerbaijani officials’ ongoing visits to Washington. A senior aide to Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev met with U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Karen Donfried earlier on Monday. “We are in regular contact with both Armenian and Azeri officials,” said Price. “That will continue.” The conflicting sides blame each other for the September 13-14 fighting that left at least 280 soldiers dead. Azerbaijani troops reportedly attacked and seized some of the Armenian army positions along the long border between the two states. Blinken urged Aliyev to “cease hostilities” when they spoke by phone during what was the worst escalation of the conflict since the 2020 war in Nagorno-Karabakh. French President Emmanuel Macron on Monday likewise called for the Azerbaijani troop withdrawal. Meeting with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian in Paris, Macron said Baku should also stop using or threatening to use force to resolve the conflict with Armenia. Reposted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL Copyright (c) 2022 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc. 1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.