Monday, Armenia-Azerbaijan Peace Deal No Panacea, Insists Baku Azerbaijan - Azerbaijan's Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov attends a joint news conference with French Foreign Minister Catherine Colonna in Baku, April 27, 2023. An Armenian-Azerbaijani peace treaty would not end all disputes between the two South Caucasus states, Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov said over the weekend. “It cannot be said that the peace treaty will ensure a 100 percent solution to all issues but it can lay the groundwork for the development of relations between Azerbaijan and Armenia,” Bayramov told Azerbaijani state television. He did not say which issues will remain unresolved if Baku and Yerevan succeed in negotiating such a treaty. One of the remaining sticking points in their discussions is how to delimit and demarcate the long Armenian-Azerbaijani border. Yerevan has insisted until now on including in the peace accord a clear delimitation mechanism that would commit Baku to recognizing Armenia’s international borders. The Azerbaijani side has been reluctant to do that. It is also against using late Soviet-era maps for the delimitation process, an idea advanced by Armenia and backed by the European Union. Hikmet Hajiyev, a top foreign policy adviser to Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, said last week that Baku believes "the border delimitation issue should be kept separate from peace treaty discussions." Alen Simonian, the Armenian parliament speaker and a leading member of the ruling Civil Contract party, said that Yerevan does not object to this in principle. Armenian opposition leaders expressed serious concern over such an arrangement, saying that Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s government is ready to make more concessions to Azerbaijan without securing anything in return. Pashinian and other Armenian officials themselves suggested this summer that Aliyev wants to leave the door open for future territorial claims to Armenia. Some Armenian analysts believe this is the reason why Aliyev keeps delaying further negotiations mediated by the United States and the European Union. The Azerbaijani leader said earlier this month that the peace treaty would not be enough to preclude another Armenian-Azerbaijani war. He demanded concrete safeguards against Armenian “revanchism.” Pashinian Allies Lash Out At Karabakh Leader • Ruzanna Stepanian Armenia - Samvel Shahramanian addresses protesters outside the Karabakh mission in Yerevan, October 20, 2023. Armenia’s ruling party lashed out at Nagorno-Karabakh’s exiled president at the weekend after it emerged that he declared null and void his September 28 decree liquidating the self-proclaimed Nagorno-Karabakh Republic. Samvel Shahramanian’s decree came just over a week after Azerbaijan’s military offensive that forced Karabakh’s small army to lay down weapons and restored Azerbaijani control over the region. Shahramanian said afterwards that he had to sign the decree in order to stop the hostilities and enable the Karabakh Armenians to safely flee to Armenia. Shahramanian’s adviser Vladimir Grigorian told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service Friday that the Karabakh leader invalidated the controversial decree on October 19 and that that all senior Karabakh officials will keep performing their duties after January 1 without getting paid. Shahramanian met with those officials later on Friday. He was reported to tell them that “there is no document in the legal framework of the Republic of Artsakh that mandates the dissolution of state institutions.” Armenia’s political leadership reacted furiously to the development through senior lawmakers representing Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s Civil Contract party. “Who is Samvel Shahramanian to sign a decree in Yerevan?” one of them, Artur Hovannisian, wrote on Facebook. “There is only one government in Armenia. Any attempt to challenge this will be seen as anti-state activity, outlawed and prompt the toughest measures from the state.” Armenia - Deputies from the ruling Civil Contract party talk on the parliament floor, Yerevan, March 1, 2023. Hovannisian went on to accuse Karabakh’s Yerevan-based leadership of “trying to involve Armenia in a new military provocation.” “Those who signed Karabakh’s capitulation must be aware that any document signed in Yerevan regarding Karabakh has no legal force,” warned another pro-government lawmaker, Lilit Minasian. Gevorg Papoyan, a deputy chairman of Pashinian’s party, labeled Shahramanian as a “forcibly displaced person” who is no different from the more than 100,000 other Karabakh Armenians who took refuge in Armenia following Azerbaijan’s recapture of the region. Armenian opposition representatives as well as some Karabakh figures rejected the harsh criticism and warnings voiced by Pashinian’s political team. Artak Beglarian, Karabakh’s former human rights ombudsman, dismissed the Armenian authorities’ implicit claims that Azerbaijan could use continued activities of Karabakh bodies as a pretext to attack Armenia as well. “If you do not allow Artsakh’s state institutions and officials to represent the rights and interests of their people on various issues while you yourselves are not going to do it in terms of collective rights, then who should deal with those issues?” he wrote. Armenia - Samvel Shahramanian meets other Karabakh officials in Yerevan, December 22, 2023. Beglarian also clarified that contrary to what Grigorian said, Shahramanian did not specifically sign the October 19 decree to scrap his September 28 decision. He suggested that the Karabakh leader simply made clear that he had no legal authority to disband the unrecognized republic and its government bodies. The Shahramanian aide resigned shortly after his interview with RFE/RL’s Armenian Service. He gave no clear reason for the decision, saying only that his comments “do not reflect any official position at this point.” Even before those comments, Pashinian’s allies said that Karabakh government bodies should be dissolved. Parliament speaker Alen Simonian claimed on November 16 that they would pose a “direct threat to Armenia’s security.” In its December 10 statement, the Karabakh legislature balked at attempts to “finally close the Artsakh issue” while signaling its desire to discuss them with Pashinian’s government. Pashinian Ends Boycott Of Ex-Soviet Summits • Shoghik Galstian Russia - Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian arrives in St. Petersburg, . Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian flew to Saint Petersburg on Monday to meet with the leaders of Russia and other ex-Soviet states after boycotting their previous summits amid Yerevan’s rising tensions with Moscow. Russian President Vladimir Putin hosted later in the day a meeting of the leaders of the Eurasian Economic Union (EEU) member states. He is due to chair on Tuesday a separate summit of the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS), a larger and looser grouping of ex-Soviet republics. Pashinian skipped EEU and CIS gatherings held in Kyrgyzstan in early October. He went on to boycott a Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) summit held in Belarus’s capital Minsk in late November. Other Armenian officials have also boycotted high-level CSTO meetings held in recent months. One of them, parliament speaker Alen Simonian, has not ruled out the possibility of Armenia’s exit from Russian-led military alliance accused by Yerevan of not honoring its security commitments. Pashinian’s government has said, though, that it is not yet considering such an option. Kyrgyzstan - The leaders of Russia and other Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) countries pose for a group photo at a summit in Bishkek, October 13, 2023. Speaking during a December 14 news conference, Putin suggested that Armenia is not planning to quit the CSTO and attributed Yerevan’s boycott of the organization to internal “processes” taking place in the South Caucasus country. And he again blamed Pashinian’s government for the recent Azerbaijani takeover of Nagorno-Karabakh and the exodus of its ethnic Armenian population. Pashinian hit back at Putin a few days later. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov indicated on Monday that the two leaders will meet on the sidelines of the Saint Petersburg summits. The Armenian government did not comment on Pashinian’s decision to attend them. Simonian said on December 15 that Armenia should not leave the EEU or the CIS. He pointed to its economic dependence on Russia and described the CIS as a “platform for cooperation that benefits our country.” Armen Baghdasarian, a veteran political analyst, believes that Yerevan’s current foreign policy is contradictory and not realistic even if Pashinian has reason to be unhappy with Russia and other ex-Soviet allies. “You can’t be part of one bloc for economic reasons but see solutions to your security problems in another security system,” Baghdasarian told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service. “That’s not possible. You can’t simultaneously sit on two chairs.” “Armenia has previously made such attempts and their results were disastrous,” he said. Yerevan Decries ‘Attempts To Politicize’ Russian-Led Trade Bloc Russia - President Vladimir Putin greets Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian during an EEU summit, St. Petersburg, . Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian spoke out against what he called attempts to use the Eurasian Economic Union (EEU) for “geopolitical” purposes when he addressed a summit of the leaders of the Russian-led trade bloc in Saint Petersburg on Monday. Citing its founding treaty signed by Russia, Armenia and three other ex-Soviet states in 2013, Pashinian said that the EEU must not have a “political and especially geopolitical agenda.” “We continue to regard [the EEU] as such and to develop partnership within the framework of our economic cooperation in this context, seeking to thwart all attempts to politicize Eurasian integration,” he said. “The EEU and its economic principles must not correlate with political ambitions.” “The basic freedoms of trade and integration cannot and must not be limited due to political considerations. This would definitely lead to an erosion of the fundamental principles of the union,” he added during the summit hosted by Russian President Vladimir Putin. Pashinian did not elaborate on his trade-related concerns voiced amid unprecedented tensions between his government and Moscow that have deepened further since beginning of September. The two sides have repeated traded accusations, raising questions about the future of Armenia’s traditionally close relationship with Russia. In the meantime, Yerevan has sought closer ties with the United States and the European Union. Citing food safety concerns, a Russian government agency blocked last month the import of many food products from Armenia for more than a week. The Rosselkhoznadzor agricultural watchdog alleged a sharp increase in the presence of “harmful quarantined organisms” in them. Observers believe that Moscow thus underlined its strong economic leverage against Armenia to warn Pashinian against further reorienting the country towards the West. Russia has long been the main export market for Armenian agricultural products, prepared foodstuffs and alcoholic drinks. Their exports totaled roughly $960 million in January-October 2023. Armenia’s overall trade with Russia has skyrocketed since the Russian invasion of Ukraine and the resulting barrage of Western sanctions against Moscow. Armenian entrepreneurs have taken advantage of those sanctions, re-exporting various goods manufactured in Western countries to Russia. This is the main reason why Armenian exports to Russia tripled in 2022 and nearly doubled to $2.6 billion in January-September 2023 Reposted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL Copyright (c) 2023 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc. 1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.