RFE/RL Armenian Report – 06/27/2023

                                        Tuesday, 


Armenian, Azeri FMs Begin Fresh Talks In U.S.
Հունիս 27, 2023

U.S. - U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken hosts talks between the Armenian 
and Azerbaijani foreing ministers in Arlington, Virginia, .


The Armenian and Armenian foreign ministers began on Tuesday a new round of 
U.S.-mediated negotiations focusing on a peace treaty between the two South 
Caucasus states.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken attended the opening session of the talks 
in Arlington, Virginia after holding separate meetings with Armenia’s Ararat 
Mirzoyan and Azerbaijan’s Jeyhun Bayramov.

The talks continued in a bilateral format. The U.S. State Department spokesman, 
Matthew Miller, said on Monday that they will likely last for three days.

“We continue to believe that peace is within reach and direct dialogue is the 
key to resolving the remaining issues and reaching a durable and dignified 
peace,” Miller told a news briefing in Washington.

Mirzoyan and Bayramov reported major progress towards the peace treaty after 
meeting outside the U.S. capital for four consecutive days in early May. 
Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev 
held three face-to-face meetings in the following weeks.

The two sides say that despite Pashinian’s pledge to recognize Azerbaijani 
sovereignty over Nagorno-Karabakh through the peace treaty, they still disagree 
on other sticking points.

Tensions along the Armenian-Azerbaijani border and “the line of contact” around 
Karabakh have increased over the last few weeks, with the sides accusing each 
other of violating the ceasefire on a virtually daily basis. A June 15 skirmish 
on the Lachin corridor led Azerbaijan to completely block relief supplies to 
Karabakh through the sole road connecting the disputed region to Armenia. The 
move aggravated shortages of food, medicine and other essential items in 
Karabakh.

Mirzoyan brought up the “illegal” blockade and the resulting humanitarian crisis 
in Karabakh with Blinken during their separate conversation. For his part, 
Bayramov was reported to tell Blinken that Yerevan is attempting to “obstruct 
the peace process.”




Pashinian Defends Failure To Prevent 2020 War
Հունիս 27, 2023
        • Ruzanna Stepanian

Armenia - Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian prepares to testify before an Armenian 
parliamentary commission, Yerevan, ,


Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian on Tuesday sought to justify his failure to avert 
the 2020 war in Nagorno-Karabakh, saying that it might not have broken out had 
he made disproportionate concessions to Azerbaijan.

He testified before an ad hoc commission of the Armenian parliament for the 
second time in just over a week in what opposition groups see as continuing 
attempts to dodge responsibility for the disastrous war.

Pashinian defended his handling of the six-week hostilities in his first lengthy 
testimony given on June 20. He focused on events preceding them while answering 
on Tuesday questions from pro-government members of the commission tasked with 
examining the causes of Armenia’s defeat.

“I’m not saying that it was theoretically impossible to avoid the war,” he told 
the panel boycotted by opposition lawmakers. “But the necessary condition for 
that theoretical possibility was a renunciation of, let’s put it this way, the 
Armenian vision for settling the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.”

Asked what he thinks he had failed to do before the war, Pashinian said: “I feel 
guilty about absolutely everything, but I say, ‘OK, it’s just a declaration.’ 
When I start drawing up my own indictment … I enter a deadlock at some point.”

Armenian opposition leaders say that Pashinian made the war with Azerbaijan 
inevitable by mishandling peace talks mediated by the United States, Russia and 
France. They specifically accuse him of recklessly rejecting a peace deal put 
forward by the three co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group.

The plan was the last version of their so-called Madrid Principles of the 
conflict’s resolution originally drafted in 2007. It called for an eventual 
referendum of self-determination in Karabakh that would take place after the 
gradual liberation of virtually all seven districts occupied by Karabakh 
Armenian forces in the early 1990s.

In 2021, former President Serzh Sarkisian publicized the secretly recorded audio 
of a 2019 meeting during which Pashinian said he opposes the plan because it 
would not immediately formalize Karabakh’s secession from Azerbaijan. Pashinian 
said he is ready to “play the fool or look a bit insane” in order to avoid such 
a settlement.

Pashinian has repeatedly alleged that the Madrid Principles recognized Karabakh 
as a part of Azerbaijan. His political opponents and other critics shrug off 
those claims, arguing that the proposed settlement upheld the Karabakh 
Armenians’ right to self-determination.




Another Russian-Armenian Meeting On Lachin Corridor Crisis


RUSSIA - The Russian Foreign Ministry building is seen behind a social 
advertisement billboard showing Z letters - a tactical insignia of Russian 
troops in Ukraine - and reading "Victory is being Forged in Fire," Moscow, 
October 13, 2022.


Armenia’s ambassador to Russia has visited the Foreign Ministry in Moscow after 
Yerevan blamed Russian peacekeepers for a shooting incident that led to the 
tightening of Azerbaijan’s blockade of Nagorno-Karabakh.

Armenian border guards opened fire on June 15 to stop Azerbaijani servicemen 
from placing an Azerbaijani flag near a checkpoint controversially set up by 
them in the Lachin corridor in late April. Baku denied that they tried to cross 
into Armenian territory.

Videos of the incident suggest that the Azerbaijanis were escorted by Russian 
soldiers as they crossed a bridge over the Hakari river in order to hoist the 
flag. The Armenian Foreign Ministry summoned the Russian ambassador in Yerevan 
on June 16 to express “strong discontent” with the Russian peacekeepers’ actions.

The Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman, Maria Zakharova, defended the 
peacekeepers and rejected the Armenian criticism as “absolutely groundless.” She 
said the incident resulted from the “absence of a delimited Armenian-Azerbaijani 
border.”

The Armenian Foreign Ministry dismissed that argument on June 22, saying that 
Zakharova echoed Baku’s regular justifications of its “aggressive actions 
against Armenia’s borders.” It said that instead of “looking for excuses,” 
Moscow should help to ensure the conflicting parties’ full compliance with a 
Russian-brokered agreement that stopped the 2020 war Karabakh.

The Russian Foreign Ministry reported late on Monday that Deputy Foreign 
Minister Mikhail Galuzin “received” Armenian Ambassador Vagharshak Harutiunian. 
A short statement released by the ministry said they discussed in detail 
“developments in the Lachin corridor and around Nagorno-Karabakh in general.” 
Galuzin stressed the importance of unconditional implementation of all 
Armenian-Azerbaijani agreements brokered by Moscow during and after the 2020 
war, the statement added without elaborating.

It was not clear whether the Russian Foreign Ministry formally summoned 
Harutiunian to again hit back at the Armenian Foreign Ministry. The latter did 
not issue a statement on Harutiunian’s conversation with Galuzin.

The ceasefire agreement placed the only road connecting Karabakh to Armenia 
under the control of the Russian peacekeeping contingent and committed 
Azerbaijan to guaranteeing safe passage through it. Azerbaijan blocked 
commercial traffic there last December before setting up the checkpoint in what 
the Armenian side denounced as a further gross violation of the Russian-brokered 
ceasefire.




Dashnaktsutyun Demands Stronger International Pressure On Baku

        • Artak Khulian

Armenia - Members and supporters of the opposition Dashnaktsutyun party picket 
the Russian Embassy in Yerevan, .


Members and supporters of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun) 
picketed the Russian and key Western diplomatic missions in Yerevan on Tuesday 
to demand that the international community do more to end Azerbaijan’s 
seven-month blockade of Nagorno-Karabakh.

The opposition party organized a 24-hour sit-in outside the Russian, U.S. and 
French embassies as well as the European Union mission almost two weeks after 
Baku halted the movement of humanitarian convoys through the Lachin corridor.

“Azerbaijan’s impunity has led to the fact that Artsakh (Karabakh) is cut off 
from the outside world,” one of the protesters said through a megaphone.

Russia and the EU have expressed serious concern over the further tightening of 
the blockade, which has aggravated the shortages of food, medicine and other 
essential items in Karabakh.

Organizers of the sit-in complained that such statements alone cannot force Baku 
to unblock the sole road connecting Karabakh to Armenia. They demanded stronger 
action from the foreign powers and Russia in particular, which brokered a 
ceasefire agreement that stopped the 2020 Armenian-Azerbaijani war and has 
peacekeeping troops in Karabakh.

“Russia needs to take much more practical steps because Azerbaijan’s brazenness 
is transcending all limits,” Gegham Manukian, a Dashnaktsutyun leader, told 
reporters.

“After all, it’s Russia that has the strongest political, diplomatic and 
military instruments in our region and brokered the November 9 [2020] agreement. 
Therefore, it’s Russia that must first and foremost take concrete steps to end 
the blockade,” said Anna Grigorian, another lawmaker representing the main 
opposition Hayastan alliance comprising Dashnaktsutyun.

Hayastan and other major opposition groups also blame the Armenian government 
for the worsening of the humanitarian crisis in Karabakh. They say that Prime 
Minister Nikol Pashinian’s pledge to recognize Azerbaijani sovereignty over the 
Armenian-populated region only emboldened Baku to step up the pressure on the 
Karabakh Armenians.


Reposted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
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Emil Lazarian

“I should like to see any power of the world destroy this race, this small tribe of unimportant people, whose wars have all been fought and lost, whose structures have crumbled, literature is unread, music is unheard, and prayers are no more answered. Go ahead, destroy Armenia . See if you can do it. Send them into the desert without bread or water. Burn their homes and churches. Then see if they will not laugh, sing and pray again. For when two of them meet anywhere in the world, see if they will not create a New Armenia.” - WS