Azerbaijan urges Armenia to be pragmatic at Karabakh talks

Interfax
Azerbaijan urges Armenia to be pragmatic at Karabakh talks

BAKU. April 19

Azerbaijan is urging Armenia to show pragmatism in the Karabakh settlement process and to support the activity of the OSCE Minsk Group co-chaired by Russia, France, and the United States, Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry press secretary Leila Abdullayeva said in a statement on Friday.

"We are inviting the Armenian Foreign Ministry to join the statements made in the 3+2 format (the Minsk Group co-chairs, as well as Azerbaijan and Armenia), to be pragmatic, and to have faith in and support the activity of the OSCE Minsk Group," the statement said.

Armenia and Azerbaijan should be working to build trust, it said.

"They [Armenia] should also participate in the effort toward peace, stability, and prosperity in the region," the statement said.

As regards the recent statement by the Armenian Foreign Ministry, Abdullayeva said that the commentary made by Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov on the coming discussion of the Karabakh settlement with Armenia "fully complies with the joint statements released in the 3+2 format."

"These statements clearly speak in favor of preparing people in both countries for peace. The Armenian administration has to realize that the status quo is unacceptable, unstable, and cannot last forever," she said.

It was reported on Thursday with reference to Mammadyarov that the United States had invited the foreign ministers of Azerbaijan and Armenia to hold another meeting on the Karabakh settlement process in Washington DC.

Meanwhile, Armenian Foreign Ministry press secretary Anna Nagdalyan told Interfax that the ministers might hold their next meeting in a country co-chairing the OSCE Minsk Group. "The possibility of a meeting in a co-chair country is actually being discussed. However, unilateral announcements and public discussions should be avoided as long as the process continues," Nagdalyan said.

Regarding the Azerbaijani foreign minister's report on the discussion of Russia's proposal of 2016 at the Moscow meeting on April 15, she said that the sides had posted a relevant statement at the end of their meeting.

"The document specified the subjects discussed. The purpose of joint statements is to summarize the wording coordinated between parties. Any statements exceeding or contradicting the coordinated wording do not help build mutual trust, especially if such statements are imaginary and unrealistic," Nagdalyan said.

There are no negotiations based on any program at the moment, she said.

Turkish Press: Turkish opposition leader Bahceli slams France’s Macron

Anadolu Agency, Turkey
 
 
Turkish opposition leader Bahceli slams France's Macron
 
Devlet Bahceli slams France over declaration on events of 1915, demands apology
 
Vakkas Dogantekin   | 13.04.2019
 
ANKARA
 
A Turkish opposition leader on Saturday slammed France for trying to pass judgement on the 1915 events between the Ottoman Empire and Armenians.
 
"French President Macron designating April 24 a day of commemoration through a presidential decree is a shameful disaster," said Devlet Bahceli, leader of the Nationalist Movement Party (MHP).
 
"If France is in the mood for commemoration, it might commemorate the victims in Africa it slaughtered or the blood it spilled here in Cukurova a century ago and then apologize to the Turkish nation," he added, referring to France's colonialist past and in the wake of World War II.
 
Turkey's position on the events of 1915 is that the deaths of Armenians in eastern Anatolia took place when some sided with invading Russians and revolted against Ottoman forces. A subsequent relocation of Armenians resulted in numerous casualties.
 
Turkey objects to the presentation of the incidents as "genocide" but describes the 1915 events as a tragedy in which both sides suffered casualties.
 
Ankara has repeatedly proposed the creation of a joint commission of historians from Turkey and Armenia plus international experts to tackle the issue.
 
Turkish, Israeli elections
 
Speaking at a party gathering in the capital Ankara, Bahceli addressed Turkey’s recent local elections — including the undecided election in the metropolis of Istanbul — and Tuesday’s elections in Israel, resulting in another term for controversial leader Benjamin Netanyahu.
 
"Organized irregularities" have been found in Istanbul’s Buyukcekmece and Maltepe districts, and they are "impossible to hide," said Bahceli.
 
"If the results evolve in a way that hurts the public conscience, a repeat election in Istanbul will be considered as a solution," Bahceli said.
 
Gains in 11 big cities by the main opposition People's Republican Party's (CHP) may be a Pyrrhic victory, he added.
 
"In places where the CHP took over the administration, the city council members are predominantly from the People's Alliance," he said, referring to the election partnership of the MHP and the ruling Justice and Development (AK) Party.
 
On the Israeli elections, Bahceli drew a gloomy picture for the Mideast.
 
"The elections in Israel and the position of Netanyahu is a sign that the dark scenarios for our region will grow even darker," he said.

Vazgen Manukyan re-appointed Chairman of Public Council

Vazgen Manukyan re-appointed Chairman of Public Council

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13:59, 4 April, 2019

YEREVAN, APRIL 4, ARMENPRESS. According to the decision of the Armenian government, Vazgen Manukyan has been re-appointed Chairman of the Public Council, reports Armenpress.

On December 26 the session of final stage of forming the Public Council took place during which the final 15 members of the Council were elected.

Edited and translated by Aneta Harutyunyan




Արցախը մեր միջնաբերդն է, որի անառիկությունը կանխորոշելու է մեր ապագան. Գարեգին Բ

  • 02.04.2019
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  • Հայաստան
  •  

     

1
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Մոսկվայում գտնվող Ամենայն Հայոց Կաթողիկոս Գարեգին Բ միասնականության կոչ է արել ապրիլյան պատերազմի տարելիցին:


Ուղերձում մասնավորապես ասված է.


«Այսօր ոգեկոչում ենք երեք տարի առաջ մեր հայրենիքի՝ Արցախ աշխարհի դեմ սանձազերծված պատերազմում հերոսացած հայորդիների հիշատակը։ Պանծացնում ենք մեր քաջարի ռազմիկների հայրենանվիրումն ու սխրանքները։ Նրանց անձնդիր արարքը ոգեշնչման աղբյուր է լինելու սերունդների համար։

Արցախը մեր միջնաբերդն է, որի անառիկությունը կանխորոշելու է մեր ապագան ու բարօր կյանքը։ Հայրապետական մեր պատգամն է, որ մեր ժողովուրդը թե՛ Հայրենիքում և թե՛ սփյուռքի համայնքներում լինի համերաշխ ու միասնական արդի աշխարհի մարտահրավերների դեմ։

Մեր աղոթքն ենք բարձրացնում առ Աստված, որպեսզի պատերազմները ողջ աշխարհում դադարեն լինել ազգերի և պետությունների միջև խնդիրները կարգավորելու ճանապարհ։ 

Մեր ժողովուրդը սպասում է միջազգային հանրությունից, որ հարգվեն Արցախի մեր զավակների արդար իրավունքները և Արցախն ապրի ազատ ու անկախ, ապահով և առաջընթաց կյանքով։

Խունկ և օրհնություն մեր հերոս զավակների անմահ հիշատակին»։

Constantine Orbelian Dismissed From Yerevan Opera

Opera Wire


Grammy nominee maestro Constantine Orbelian was dismissed from the post of the National Opera theatre director by the acting Armenian Culture Minister Nazeni Gharibyan.

Gharibyan supported her decision by noting that the director cannot be engaged in other paid activities except scientific, pedagogical, and creative work; Orbelian served as the general director in addition to the position of the artistic director.

The Actors and staff of Armenian National Opera have openly opposed this decision and protests  against the Ministry of Culture’s actions are scheduled for April 1, 2019.

There’s also a petition to the Prime Minister of Republic Armenia Nicol Pashinian, which was signed by more than 2,500 people as of this writing.

Lithuanian/Armenian soprano Asmik Grigorian gave a comment to OperaWire,
“I can’t believe it could happen. I know how much Constantine (Orbelian) did for the theatre, and it finally started to work and live the way it should. They never gave a chance to my father (Gegham Grigoryan) to bring his ideas to life there, but Constantine has got the ball rolling. And the biggest fear is that there’s literally no one to replace him.”

Orbelian was appointed the artistic director of Armenian National Academic Theatre of Opera and Ballet in 2016. He’s also a Principal conductor of the Kaunas City Symphony Orchestra in Lithuania.

Artsakh Ombudsmen in European Parliament will talk about Armenophobia in Azerbaijan

Arminfo, Armenia
March 1 2019
Naira Badalian

ArmInfo. The Ombudsmen of the  Artsakh Republic, both the former and the incumbent one – on March 6  from the rostrum of the European Parliament will talk about boosting  the atmosphere of Armenophobia in Azerbaijan within the framework of  the ''Armenophobia: Historical and Present-day Resurgence'' Forum.  The forum was initiated by the European Armenian Federation for  Justice and Democracy (EAFJD)and the Tufenkian Foundation.

Harut Shirinyan,  Public Relations and Communications Officer at  EAFJD, informed that the main speakers will be Turkish Human Rights  Ombudsman Ragip Zarakolu, Artsakh's incumbent Ombudsman Arak  Belgkaryan, former Ombudsman  Ruben Melikyan, , a well-known blogger  Alexander Lapshin, who suffered from Azerbaijani dictatorship and  Polish Armenian researcher Jakub Osiecki. The event will be attended  by lawmakers of the European Parliament, public figures,  representatives of the Armenian community.

According to Shirinyan, during the speeches, a comprehensive  presentation will be given on Armenophobia, which Armenians continue  to face in Turkey and Azerbaijan. "The forum will become an important  platform where issues related to Armenian hatred will be voiced, and  ways to overcome it will be discussed," he said.  In particular,  Artak Beglaryan and Ruben Melikyan will make a report on hatred  against Armenians, which is fully based on facts, namely, actual  examples of total propaganda of hatred against Armenians in  Azerbaijani kindergartens and schools. Those present will be able to  familiarize themselves with the report on this topic prepared by the  Ombudsman in September 2018. In addition, examples of the  manifestation of Armenophobia recorded during the April war, as well  as the potential threat posed by a similar state policy of the  dynastic regime in Azerbaijan will be presented.

Chess: Hayk Martirosyan chases the leader at Aeroflot Open 2019

Panorama, Armenia
Feb 25 2019
20:21 25/02/2019

Armenian chess player Hayk Martirosyan has scored 4.5 points out of 6 after six rounds played at Aeroflot Open A tournament. The Armenian shares the second position with a group of players one point behind the leader.

Krishnan Sasikiran of India tops the table with 5.5 points. Among other Armenian players Tigran Petrosyan has scored 4 points, Manuel Petrosyan and Shant Sargsyan – 3.5 point each, while Aram Hakobyan – 4 points.

The Aeroflot Open in Moscow is one of the strongest open tournaments of the world. In the A-Group 101 players take part, and almost all of them are International Masters or Grandmasters. 76 participants have a rating of 2500+.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 02/20/2019

                                        Wednesday, 

Armenian Growth Rate In 2018 Reported By Government

        • Sargis Harutyunyan

Armenia - A supermarket in Yerevan.

The Armenian economy grew by 5.2 percent last year on the back of major gains 
in manufacturing, trade and other services, according to official statistics 
released on Wednesday.

The figure is virtually identical with a growth estimate made by the World Bank 
last month. The bank also forecast that economic growth in Armenia slow down 
this year before accelerating in 2020 and 2021.

Armenian growth reached 7.5 percent in 2017. It hit 9.7 percent in the first 
quarter of 2018, just before the start of weeks of mass protests that led to 
the resignation of the country’s longtime leader, Serzh Sarkisian.

The Armenian Statistical Committee recorded a nearly 9 percent rise in the 2018 
volume of retail and wholesale trade. It said that financial and other services 
were up by as much as 19 percent.

The government agency also registered a 4.3 percent increase in industrial 
output mainly driven by manufacturing sectors. By contrast, the Armenian mining 
industry, a key export-oriented sector, contracted by 14 percent. This seems to 
have primarily resulted from the closure in early 2018 of a large copper and 
molybdenum mine in the northern Lori province.

GDP growth was also dragged down by an 8.5 percent fall in agricultural 
production. Government officials blame it on unfavorable weather conditions.

In its comprehensive policy program approved by the parliament last week, Prime 
Minister Nikol Pashinian’s government pledged to ensure that the domestic 
economy expands by at least 5 percent annually for the next five years. It said 
rising exports will be the “main engine” of that growth.

The program reaffirms Pashinian’s repeated pledges to carry out an “economic 
revolution” that will significantly reduce poverty and unemployment in Armenia. 
It says the government will improve tax administration, ease business 
regulations, guarantee fair competition, and stimulate exports and innovation.




Mining Giant Becomes Armenia’s Top Taxpayer

        • Naira Nalbandian

Armenia - A copper ore-processing plant in Kajaran, February 6, 2016.

An Armenian mining enterprise replaced the national gas distribution network 
last year as the country’s largest corporate taxpayer, a senior government 
official revealed on Wednesday.

Rafik Mashadian, the deputy head of the State Revenue Committee (SRC), said 
that the Zangezur Copper-Molybdenum Combine (ZCMC) more than doubled its tax 
payments, to 51 billion drams ($105 million), in 2018.

“This company had the largest increase [in tax payments,]” Mashadian told 
RFE/RL’s Armenian service.

The sharp rise contrasted with a 10 percent drop in the combined 2018 output of 
Armenia’s mining and metallurgical companies. They still accounted for more 
than 40 percent of Armenian exports.

Located in Kajaran, a small down in the southeastern Syunik province, ZCMC 
reportedly employs more than 4,000 people. A German company, Cronimet, 
nominally owns 75 percent of it.

The rest of ZCMC is controlled by at least two obscure Armenian firms. 
Ownership of those firms has long been a subject of speculation, with some 
local commentators and opposition politicians linking them to former President 
Serzh Sarkisian or his predecessor Robert Kocharian.

According to the SRC, Armenia’s largest cigarette manufacturer, Grand Tobacco, 
also significantly increased its tax contributions and became the second 
largest taxpayer in 2018. It is followed by Gazprom Armenia, the national gas 
network owned by Russia’s Gazprom giant. Gazprom Armenia had paid more taxes 
than any other local firm in 2017.

The Armenian government’s overall tax revenue was up by more than 14 percent, 
at 1.3 trillion drams ($2.7 billion), last year. Large companies generated 
about three-quarters of it.

Mashadian attributed the increase to economic growth and a tough crackdown on 
tax evasion declared by the government.

Vahagn Khachatrian, an independent economist, said while the figure is 
encouraging he is puzzled by a surge in taxes collected by the SRC in December. 
He wondered if the SRC is continuing to force businesses to pay taxes in 
advance of their anticipated earnings.

“I’m worried that that vicious practice of advance payments [collected from 
companies] may have continued,” Khachatrian told RFE/RL’s Armenian service.

Mashadian ruled out that. “Media claims that the SRC is meeting its targets by 
pressuring businesses are not true,” insisted the SRC official.




Mediators Start Fresh Trip To Karabakh Conflict Zone


Armenia -- Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian (R) meets with the co-chairs of the 
OSCE Minsk Group in Yerevan, .

U.S., Russian and French mediators met with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian in 
Yerevan on Wednesday at the start of a fresh tour of the Nagorno-Karabakh 
conflict zone which follows a series of high-level Armenian-Azerbaijani 
negotiations.

A statement by Pashinian’s press office said they “outlined further steps” in 
the negotiation process and discussed ways of creating an “appropriate 
atmosphere” for that. “They stressed the importance of implementing 
understandings on maintaining the ceasefire regime,” it said.

According to the statement, Pashinian also briefed the three diplomats 
co-heading the OSCE Minsk Group on his meeting with Azerbaijani President Ilham 
Aliyev held in Davos, Switzerland January 22. It was their third face-to-face 
encounter since September.

The Davos meeting came a week after the Armenian and Azerbaijani foreign 
ministers met in Paris in the presence of the Minsk Group co-chairs. According 
to the mediators, the ministers acknowledged the need for “taking concrete 
measures to prepare the populations for peace.”

Those developments fuelled Armenian media and opposition speculation about 
far-reaching agreements reached by Pashinian and Aliyev. Some critics claimed 
that Pashinian may have agreed to make significant territorial concessions to 
Azerbaijan.

The prime minister brushed aside these “conspiracy theories” on January 23. He 
stated a week later that Armenia and Karabakh will not agree to such 
concessions to Azerbaijan in return for mere peace in the region. Baku 
criticized that statement, saying that it could undermine the peace process.

On Tuesday, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov cautioned against excessive 
expectations of decisive progress towards a Karabakh settlement. “Given that 
the new government of Armenia was formed only recently, additional time is 
needed to understand just how intensively and far it is possible to advance the 
settlement process at this stage,” he told a news conference in Moscow.

“The co-chairs and the OSCE can only help to create conditions for dialogue,” 
said Lavrov. “Decisions will have to be made in direct negotiations between the 
parties.”

Lavrov met with his Armenian counterpart Zohrab Mnatsakanian on February 16 on 
the sidelines of an international security forum in Munich, Germany.




Tsarukian’s Bodyguard To Stand Trial For Assault

        • Naira Bulghadarian

Armenian - Eduard Babayan (L) attends a parliament session in Yerevan, January 
15, 2019.

A parliament deputy who was until recently Prosperous Armenia Party (BHK) 
leader Gagik Tsarukian’s chief bodyguard will go on trial soon on charges of 
violent assault.

Eduard Babayan was arrested in July hours after a 50-year-old man in Yerevan 
was hospitalized with serious injuries. The latter claimed to have been beaten 
up at a compound of Armenia’s National Olympic Committee headed by Tsarukian. 
He said he was hit by Tsarukian before being repeatedly kicked and punched by 
Babayan and another person.

Both Tsarukian and Babayan strongly denied the allegation. The burly bodyguard 
was charged even though his alleged victim later retracted his incriminating 
testimony.

Babayan was freed on bail in August. He was elected to the Armenian parliament 
on the BHK ticket in December.

The Office of the Prosecutor-General told RFE/RL’s Armenian service on 
Wednesday that the criminal investigation into the incident has been completed 
and its findings have been sent to a court in Yerevan.

This means that Babayan will stand trial after all. The accusation brought 
against him carries a prison term of between three and seven years.


Armenia - Businessman Gagik Tsarukian and his chief bodyguard Eduard Babayan 
(R) at an election campaign rally in Hrazdan, 11 April 2012.

The BHK, which is in opposition to the Armenian government and boasts the 
second largest group in the parliament, did not immediately react to the 
development. Tsarukian’s party had defended its decision to nominate Babayan as 
a candidate in the December parliamentary elections.

Armenian media have repeatedly implicated Tsarukian’s bodyguards -- and Babayan 
in particular -- in violence, including against opponents of former 
governments, in the past. The BHK leader, who is also one of the country’s 
richest men, always denied those claims.

In a police video released in July, Babayan’s alleged victim said that he was 
attacked after imploring Tsarukian to help ensure that Armenian law-enforcement 
authorities withdraw an international arrest warrant issued for his son accused 
of draft evasion.

The young man is a boxer and Russian national who was told to serve in 
Armenia’s armed forces after receiving Armenian citizenship in order to compete 
for the South Caucasus country in international tournaments.




Press Review



“Zhoghovurd” says that parliamentary opposition criticism of the Armenian 
government’s policy program approved by the parliament was not backed up by a 
“comprehensive analysis” of the document’s content. The paper says the program 
has instead been thoroughly examined by two parties not represented in the 
National Assembly: the Armenian National Congress (HAK) and Dashnaktsutyun. “It 
does not matter whether or not points made by these two parties are 
acceptable,” it says. “The important thing here is the very fact [of their 
detailed analysis.]” This is further proof that there are few genuine parties 
in Armenia, concludes the paper.

“Zhamanak” reports that parliament speaker Ararat Mirzoyan has voiced his 
opposition to the idea of restoring the presidential system of government in 
Armenia which has been put forward by former President Levon Ter-Petrosian’s 
Armenian National Congress (HAK). The paper welcomes the statement and says any 
major constitutional reform must be based on consensus.

Lragir.am writes on reports that former President Serzh Sarkisian’s embattled 
brother Aleksandr has donated $18.5 million to the state in the face of 
criminal proceedings launched against him. It quotes a human rights activist, 
Artur Sakunts, as saying that the donation was “voluntary.” “We don’t know what 
criminal case has been opened and what accusations have been brought against 
Sashik Sarkisian,” he says. “Nor do we know the estimated value of his 
properties and financial assets. All we know is the publicized information 
about his $30 million bank account.” Sakunts wonders why Sarkisian has not 
transferred the entire sum to the state treasury.

(Lilit Harutiunian)


Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2019 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
www.rferl.org


Armenian-Azerbaijani Talks on Karabakh Appear Positive Even as Conflict Continues to Simmer Underneath

The Jamestown Foundation
Feb 13 2019


Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev (L) and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan (Source: Contact.az)

The foreign ministers of Armenia and Azerbaijan held four-hour-long consultations in Paris, on January 16, under the auspices of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe’s (OSCE) Minsk Group. The joint statement to come out of the meeting included telling language. In particular, the two sides acknowledged the need for “concrete measures to prepare the populations for peace” (Osce.org, January 16).

The Paris consultations were the second meeting of Ministers Elmar Mammadyarov and Zohrab Mnatsakanyan within a month. Amidst overall accelerated dynamics of bilateral contacts and relatively softened rhetoric, there is now reinvigorated optimism that a tangible breakthrough may soon be possible in the over-two-decades-old internationally mediated negotiations over Azerbaijan’s breakaway region of Karabakh. Nevertheless, an apparent discrepancy continues to persist between the words and deeds of Armenian and Azerbaijani political elites.

The evolving positive sentiment surrounding the Karabakh peace process was underpinned by an informal meeting between Armenia’s Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, on the margins of this year’s Davos World Economic Forum (Azatutyun.am, January 22). Pashinyan subsequently disclosed the details of the talks, noting that he told the Azerbaijanis that Artsakh (formerly known as the “Nagorno-Karabakh Republic” or NKR) should be allowed to represent itself in the negotiations. Armenians in Karabakh did not participate in Armenia’s snap parliamentary elections, and thus he has no confidence vote to represent them, Pashinyan argued. In response to Aliyev’s assertion to also involve the Azerbaijani minority that had to flee Karabakh, Pashinyan claimed he opposed the idea, saying that those individuals had voted for Aliyev in last year’s presidential elections, thus empowering him to speak on their behalf (Galatv.am, February 1).

It is unclear what has motivated Pashinyan to seek to “sovereignize” Artsakh within the context of the OSCE Minsk Group, particularly since accepting the region as a separate negotiating entity would imply its separation from Armenia as well. Does this signal a qualitatively new plan or is the Armenian leader seeking to shirk responsibility ahead of an inevitable reescalation of tensions. Perhaps, it is linked to Pashinyan’s overwhelming opposition to former president Robert Kocharyan. The latter, upon taking office in 1998, agreed to exclude Karabakh from any negotiations with Azerbaijan. He had insisted that since he had previously served as elected president of the NKR, this legitimated him to speak on behalf of Karabakh as Armenian head of state. In contrast, Pashinyan may be rejecting the Kocharayan negotiations formula in an effort to distance himself further from his predecessor.

In the broader context of the Karabakh peace process, preparations for full-fledged combat operations by both sides continue. This is despite verbal agreements to defuse tensions along the frontline by setting up “hot line” military-to-military communications between the two sides. So even as the intensity of multi-format talks has increased, neither side believes a negotiated solution is possible and both have adopted an approach akin to “lulling mutual vigilance.” Indeed, talks of needing to establish mechanisms to investigate clashes along the frontline—an idea Yerevan and Baku both endorsed in 2016—have almost subsided.

Last year, Azerbaijan made a series of important strategic arms purchases, including two battalions of Belarusian Polonez multiple-launch rocket systems (MRLS), together with about 1,200 A200-type rockets; at least one battalion of Israeli-origin LORA high-precision ballistic missile systems; and substantial numbers of various models of sophisticated unmanned aerial vehicles (see EDM, January 21). In turn, Armenia obtained four Su-30SM multirole 4+ generation fighter aircraft, along with additional procurements yet to be implemented consistent with its previously approved $100 million loan from Russia (Kommersant, February 1). To stand up to the evolving military supremacy of Azerbaijan, Armenia is preparing to fundamentally reform its “active deterrence” strategy by overhauling and expanding its fleet of Su-25 close-air-support jets while eventually procuring a total of 12 Su-30SMs to carry out combat air-patrol and air-to-surface deep interdiction missions.

In late December 2018, Aliyev reiterated Azerbaijani’s tough red lines on Karabakh, making clear that neither independent status, nor Artsakh’s formal accession to Armenia would be at all acceptable for Baku. He also stressed that the maximum scope of concessions Baku would be willing to offer would be some level of autonomy for the breakaway region but within a unified Azerbaijan (Haqqin.az, January 1, 2019). Subsequently, Pashinyan strongly rebuffed the Azerbaijani leader’s words, stating, “[W]e cannot discuss the ‘territories for peace’ formula” (Armenpress, January 30). In response, Aliyev declared that the “ ‘might makes right’ principle prevails in the world at present,” and therefore, preserving a viable military solution to resolve the Karabakh dispute will continue to constitute a key agenda of Azerbaijan (Trend.az, February 12).

Considering these geopolitical realities, Armenia arguably has four options for how to deal with the Karabakh conundrum. First, it could completely withdraw its military from the breakaway region. But then it would also need to evacuate the 150,000 ethnic Armenians who live there since, after decades of conflict, the Armenian and Azerbaijani societies are highly antagonistic toward one another.

Second, it might seek to recognize the so-called independence of Artsakh, as Turkey did with Northern Cyprus. Of course, such an initiative would by no means prevent Azerbaijan from launching an assault on Karabakh in response.

Third, Armenia might choose to agree to the Russian plan, which would offer a transitory status for Karabakh coupled with the deployment of Russian “peacekeeping” troops throughout Artsakh (which in fact claims territories beyond the administrative borders of the Soviet-era Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast or NKAO). In this case both rivals—Yerevan and Baku—would end up losing control over the situation, while opening the door to more direct and overt manipulative actions by the Kremlin. This option would almost certainly have unpredictable repercussions in addition to likely putting an end to Armenia as a serious politico-military factor in the region.

Fourth, Armenia could seek to unilaterally incorporate the region into its territory as Israel did with the Golan Heights, and de jure declare Artsakh an inherent part of Armenia—thereby fulfilling the century-long wishes of the Armenian population of Karabakh. Such a scenario might delay the looming fighting, but in the meantime would trigger furious criticism around the world, including from Moscow.

None of the options are ideal for Pashinyan’s government as it seeks to dramatically reform the country’s economy, political system and military. Continued talks with Baku may thus be the only policy likely to offer Yerevan at least some period of breathing space.