Wednesday, September 6, 2023 Armenian FM Wants Stronger EU Action On Karabakh Germany - German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock and her Armenian counterpart Ararat Mirzoyan hold a joint press conferencen in Berlin, February 7, 2023. The European Union and other foreign powers should do more to get Azerbaijan to unblock the Lachin corridor, Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan told his German counterpart Annalena Baerbock late on Tuesday. The worsening humanitarian situation in Nagorno-Karabakh was high on the agenda of their phone call reported by the Armenian Foreign Ministry on Wednesday. According to the ministry’s readout of the call, Mirzoyan “stressed the need for international actors, including the EU, to take concrete steps” towards the lifting of the nine-month Azerbaijani blockade. “While highly appreciating targeted messages sent by partners to date, Minister Mirzoyan pointed out that unfortunately they are not enough to achieve positive change on the ground, end the blockade of Nagorno-Karabakh and bring Azerbaijan back to the constructive path,” added the statement. Like the United States and Russia, the EU has repeatedly urged Azerbaijan to lift the blockade. The EU foreign policy chief, Josep Borrell, warned on Wednesday that Baku’s failure to heed these appeals could damage its relations with the 27-nation bloc. Still, Borrell made clear that the EU is not considering suspending a July 2022 memorandum of understanding on doubling Europe’s imports of Azerbaijani natural gas by 2027. The document was signed in Baku in the presence of European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen. She described Azerbaijan as a “key partner in our efforts to move away from Russian fossil fuels.” The head of the EU’s top decision-making body, Charles Michel, called late last week for “courageous compromise solutions” to the crisis in Karabakh that would include a new supply route controlled by Azerbaijan. U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken appeared to back such a solution in a September 1 phone call with Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev which was revealed by the U.S. State Department five days later. “He reiterated our call to reopen the Lachin Corridor to humanitarian, commercial, and passenger traffic, while recognizing the importance of additional routes from Azerbaijan,” the department said in a statement. Despite struggling with severe shortages of food, medicine and other basic necessities, most residents of Karabakh remain strongly opposed to the alternative supply line which Baku has set as a precondition for allowing renewed relief supplies through Karabakh’s land link with Armenia. They believe that it is aimed at legitimizing the blockade and helping Azerbaijan regain full control over Karabakh. Yerevan Worried About ‘Azeri Military Buildup’ • Susan Badalian Armenia - European Union monitors patrol the border with Azerbaijan, September 5, 2023. Azerbaijan is massing troops along its border with Armenia and the Nagorno-Karabakh “line of contact” in possible preparation for fresh military action, Armenian officials said on Wednesday. Armen Grigorian, the secretary of Armenia’s Security Council, raised his government’s concerns with the ambassadors of foreign states during a meeting in Yerevan. According to his office, Grigorian gave them “details of the Azerbaijani military buildup along the Karabakh line of contact and the Armenia-Azerbaijan border“ and “stressed the importance of international partners’ efforts to prevent possible Azerbaijani aggression.” A senior Armenian Defense Ministry official, Levon Ayvazian, met with Yerevan-based foreign military attaches to brief them on the situation on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border. A ministry statement cited Ayvazian as telling them that the Armenian army is taking “all necessary steps to prevent a further escalation of the situation.” No other details were reported. Karabakh’s army claimed late on Tuesday that “large numbers” of Azerbaijani soldiers and military hardware are massing at various sections of the line of contact. It released purported videos of the troop movements. The Azerbaijani Defense Ministry said afterwards that its troops are simply engaging in routine training. Similar videos were circulated in recent days by Azerbaijani social media users. Azerbaijan’s state security service on Wednesday warned them to stop doing that or face prosecution. Tigran Abrahamian, an Armenian opposition parliamentarian, also alleged Azerbaijani troop movements in Karabakh and the Armenian-Azerbaijani border. “It’s still hard to tell whether this is blackmail, a threat or muscle-flexing or a preparation for hostilities,” said Abrahamian. He suggested that Baku is heightening the tensions in a bid to force Yerevan to accept all Azerbaijani terms of a bilateral peace treaty discussed by the two sides. A European Union mission monitoring the ceasefire regime along Armenia’s border with Azerbaijan said on Tuesday that it witnessed “increased tensions and crossfire” there for the last few days. “We reported on the situation to Brussels,” added the mission. Three Armenian soldiers were killed and two others wounded when fighting broke out at one of the border sections on September 1. Karabakh Factions Agree On New President • Astghik Bedevian Nagorno-Karabakh - A session of parliament in Stepanakert, October 18, 2022. Nagorno-Karabakh’s ruling party and three opposition groups have reached a consensus on who should replace Arayik Harutiunian, who resigned as president last week amid a deepening humanitarian crisis caused by Azerbaijan’s blockade of the Lachin corridor. Announcing his resignation on August 31, Harutiunian said Karabakh needs new leadership in order to better cope with grave challenges facing it almost three years after the disastrous war with Azerbaijan. He appointed the secretary of his security council, Samvel Shahramanian, as Karabakh premier before formally stepping down the following day. The Karabakh parliament is due to elect his successor on Saturday. Officials in Stepanakert said on Wednesday that four of the five parties represented in the legislature, including Harutiunian’s Free Fatherland, agreed late on Tuesday to nominate Shahramanian for the vacant post. They control enough seats to elect him. “We held many meetings [with Karabakh residents] in the last few days, and there was not a single person who did not want the current state minister to be president,” Metakse Hakobian, a leader of the opposition Justice party, told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service. Shahramanian is reputed to be a figure close to Harutiunian’s predecessor Bako Sahakian. He headed Karabakh’s main security service during Sahakian’s rule that ended several months before the outbreak of the 2020 war. The only party opposed to Shahramanian’s election is led by Samvel Babayan, a controversial retired general who led Karabakh’s armed forces in the 1990s. In a weekend interview with RFE/RL’s Armenian Service, Babayan said that the United Fatherland party will boycott the election. It is also planning to stage a demonstration in Stepanakert on election day. Unlike the other Karabakh factions, Babayan’s party does not oppose the opening of a new, Azerbaijani-controlled supply route for Karabakh which Baku says is a precondition for allowing renewed humanitarian supplies through the Lachin corridor. Its leader also appears to favor other concessions to Azerbaijan. Babayan revealed on Sunday that he has presented the Azerbaijani government with alternative proposals on how to end the humanitarian crisis. The once powerful general, who is accused by his detractors of secretly collaborating with Armenia’s government, refused to disclose them. Baku has repeatedly said that its dialogue with the Karabakh Armenians should only focus on the Armenian-populated region’s “reintegration into Azerbaijan.” “There is simply no other way, all other options are illegal,” Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov said on Wednesday. U.S., Armenian Troops To Hold Joint Drills U.S. and Armenian soldiers take part in a multinational exercise in Europe. The Armenian and U.S. militaries will start a joint exercise in Armenia on September 11, the Defense Ministry in Yerevan announced on Wednesday, prompting concern from Russia. The Pentagon confirmed the information, with a U.S. military spokesperson telling Reuters that 85 U.S. soldiers and 175 Armenians will take part in the ten-day exercise codenamed Eagle Partner 2023. He said the Americans -- including members of the Kansas National Guard which has a 20-year-old training partnership with Armenia -- will be armed with rifles and will not be using heavy weaponry. According to the Armenian Defense Ministry, the participating troops will practice taking “stabilization actions” during a joint peacekeeping operation in an imaginary conflict zone. “The purpose of the exercise is to increase the level of interoperability of units participating in international peacekeeping missions … to exchange best practices in command-and-control and tactical communication as well as to increase the readiness of the Armenian [peacekeeping] unit for the planned Operational Capabilities Concept evaluation by NATO,” the ministry added in a statement. The United States and Armenia are not known to have held a bilateral military exercise in the past. Their upcoming drills were announced amid the South Caucasus nation’s unprecedented tensions with Russia, its traditional ally. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian stoked the tensions in a weekend newspaper interview in which he declared that his government is trying to “diversify our security policy” because Armenia’s reliance on Russia for defense and security has proved a “strategic mistake.” Pashinian also suggested that Russia will eventually “leave” Armenia and the South Caucasus in general. Moscow denounced his statements. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said later on Wednesday that news of the U.S.-Armenian war games is “causes apprehension, especially in the current situation.” “Therefore, we will deeply analyze this news and monitor the situation,” Peskov told journalists. In April this year, Moscow demanded official explanations from Yerevan after the U.S. Department of Defense initially listed Armenia among 26 nations that will participate in U.S.-led drills in Europe. The Pentagon removed Armenia from the list the following day. The Russian Foreign Ministry claimed at the time that the U.S.-led alliance is seeking stronger influence on Russia’s ex-Soviet allies as part of its ongoing “geopolitical confrontation” with Moscow. Armenia’s relations with Russia and the Russian-led Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) have significantly deteriorated since the 2020 war in Nagorno-Karabakh due to what Yerevan sees as a lack of support from its allies in the conflict with Azerbaijan. Earlier this year, the Armenian government cancelled a CSTO military exercise which it was due to host this fall. 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.