Pashinyan addresses high court developments in BBC HARDtalk

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 13:10,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 14, ARMENPRESS. The Armenian authorities are seeking to do everything possible to have a high court fully compliant with the constitution, PM Nikol Pashinyan said in an interview with BBC HARDtalk.

“We tried to have a constitutional court fully compliant with our constitution, because we had description of the constitutional court in our constitution but we had a totally different constitutional court in reality so we are going [ahead] and we are doing that to have a constitutional court fully compliant with our constitution,” he said, referring to the ruling bloc’s parliamentary decision on suspending several justices.

Editing by Stepan Kocharyan

Armenia anticorruption court judge’s monthly salary to be about 1mn drams

News.am, Armenia
Aug 14 2020

15:07, 14.08.2020

YEREVAN. – The monthly salary of a judge of the anticorruption court being established in Armenia will make about one million drams. Deputy minister of justice Srbuhi Galyan on Friday said this in an interview with journalists.

According to her, from the point of view of international experience, a higher level of social guarantees is an acceptable system for such specialized courts. "I believe there are no obstacles for such a path," the deputy minister added.

And when asked what the establishment of such a court will give to the Armenian society, Galyan noted that it will increase the level of trust, reduce the time for considering the cases, develop a single methodology for monitoring corruption cases, clarify the parameters, and increase the quality of justice.

She added that in parallel with this anticorruption court, a commission and a committee will be set up, as well as a department at the prosecutor's office—and with their own oversight functions.

The deputy minister noted that in the first phase, two and a half dozen judges are planned to work at this court, but if necessary, the law provides for an increase in the composition of this court.

Vendetta not ruled out in densely-Armenian populated town in Georgia?

News.am, Armenia
Aug 10 2020

16:31, 10.08.2020
                  

Azerbaijani Press: US Company To Supply Azerbaijan With 15 Cutting-Edge Naval Crafts

Caspian News, Azerbaijan
Aug 9 2020

By Mushvig Mehdiyev August 9, 2020

  •                                 
  •                                                                  

  • 9-meter Explosive Ordnance Disposal (EOD) Multi-Use EOD Response Craft / United States Marine Inc.

    Azerbaijan will beef up its marine fleet after purchasing ultra-modern Explosive Ordnance Disposal (EOD) response crafts from a leading US-based marine company, worth more than $7 million.

    The United States Marine Inc., a company that designs, builds and tests boats for military, patrol and special warfare, among other uses, announced this week that it will supply 15 EOD response craft boats to Azerbaijan, in a deal worth $7,572,364.

    “Work will be performed in Gulfport, Mississippi and is expected to be completed by April 2022,” according to Navy Recognition. “Foreign Military Sales funding in the amount of $7,572,364 will be obligated at time of award and will expire at the end of the current fiscal year. The Naval Sea Systems Command, Washington, DC, is the contracting activity.”

    The nine-meter-long cutting-edge crafts are made out of composite materials through a process called resin infusion lamination. The United States Marine Inc. offers the boats in Open Center Console and Cabin variants, both equipped with Twin Mercury Verado 250 horsepower 4 Stroke Outboard Gasoline engines. The EOD response crafts can reach sprint speeds of up to 39+ knots, with cruising speeds of up to 30+ knots. They can be used for harbor patrol, passenger transport, diving operations, evacuations and unmanned system operations. The boats are equipped with a 50-caliber machine gun forward and aft.

    Alexander Tikhanski, a military expert based in Belarus, says military-technical cooperation with the world's leading arms companies allows Azerbaijan to actively modernize its Armed Forces.

    “Azerbaijan has spent $3.7 billion on its army at the peak of equipment purchases. At present, the Azerbaijani army is the strongest in the region after Russia and Turkey,” Tikhanski said.

    The government of Azerbaijan allocated $2.27 billion for military and national security purposes in the 2020 state budget. The amount is six times higher than military spending in Georgia and three times higher than Armenia. It is ranked 64th among the 138 countries of the world and is the strongest in the South Caucasus region, according to data compiled by independent military data tracker Global Firepower. Azerbaijan's naval force includes one frigate, four submarines, seven mine warfare and 13 patrol boats, among other assets.

    The United States Marine Inc. is not the first American defense company to secure a procurement deal with Azerbaijan. In September 2019, the Virginia-based VSE Corporation was awarded a $10 million contract to supply the Caspian country’s military with counterterrorism and intelligence equipment.

    Azerbaijan is a strategically important US partner in the South Caucasus and the Caspian Sea region due to its strategic location in Eurasia and has proven to be a reliable energy exporter to Washington’s allies in Europe, as well as a loyal NATO partner. 

    Additionally, Azerbaijan was one of the first countries to provide assistance to the US in the immediate aftermath of the 9/11 terror attacks. Azerbaijani troops have been part of NATO peacekeeping forces in Afghanistan since 2002 and even opened its airspace to US-led coalition troops fighting there.

    When the NATO-led Resolute Support Mission was launched in January 2015, Baku increased its contribution from 94 soldiers to 120. Azerbaijan is the only country out of the five Caspian Sea nations to contribute to this mission and 40 percent of the non-military supplies to US and coalition forces in Afghanistan passes through Azerbaijani territory.

    Washington provides US security assistance and military contact programs in Azerbaijan, including the Foreign Military Sales (FMS), through the Office of Defense Cooperation Azerbaijan. Under the FMS program, Washington provides defense equipment, services and training to Azerbaijan.

    Between 2018 and 2019, Azerbaijan's State Border Service and State Customs Committee received security and defense assistance worth $101.5 million from the US through the Department of Defense’s Section 333 program, according to Security Assistance Monitor, a Washington DC watchdog.

    The assistance package included 59 high-speed boats and other maritime equipment, 60 ATV motorcycles and other vehicles, 401 surveillance radar and other electronic equipment and 450,516 tactical vests and other individual equipment.

    Strengthening its defense capabilities is a key priority for the Azerbaijani government, given its ongoing conflict with Armenia in Azerbaijan's internationally recognized Nagorno-Karabakh region. Following a full-scale war between the two countries from 1991-1994, Armenia occupied the Nagorno-Karabakh region and seven adjacent districts which comprise 20 percent of Azerbaijan's internationally recognized territory. The bloody war claimed the lives of 30,000 ethnic Azerbaijanis, while one million were displaced forcibly from their homes amidst occupation and mass ethnic cleansing campaigns by Armenia's forces.

    Since then, Armenia has repeatedly ignored international calls and UN Security Council Resolutions calling for the withdrawal of its occupying forces from Azerbaijani lands. Armenia's army also regularly targets Azerbaijani positions and civilian areas, in a direct violation of the 1994 ceasefire agreement between the two countries.

    Armenia to become homeland for Arabs and Assyrians?

    News.am, Armenia
    Aug 7 2020

    16:44, 07.08.2020
                      

    Armenia COVID-19: 196 new cases, 6 deaths in last 24 hours

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     11:12, 4 August, 2020

    YEREVAN, AUGUST 4, ARMENPRESS. 196 new COVID-19 cases have been recorded in Armenia in the last 24 hours, bringing the total cumulative number of confirmed infections to 39298.

    6 people have died from coronavirus complications over the past day, the health ministry said. So far, there have been a total of 768 fatal outcomes of COVID-19 cases in the country.

    511 people recovered, raising the total number of recoveries to 30372.

    The number of active cases stands at 7930.

    A total of 168164 tests have been carried out in the country since the outbreak began.

    Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan




    Breitbart News: Turkey Sends Fighter Jets to Azerbaijan After Threat to Bomb a Nuclear Power Plant

    Turkey Sends Fighter Jets to Azerbaijan After Threat to Bomb a Nuclear Power Plant

    Breitbart News
    31 July 2020

    By FRANCES MARTEL

    Turkey’s state-run Anadolu news agency confirmed the arrival Turkish F-16 fighter jets on Friday to Azerbaijan 
    for joint military drills, aiding a nation that threatened to bomb a nuclear power plant this month.

    Azerbaijan is currently embroiled in a heightened tension situation with its neighbor and longtime rival Armenia. 
    Both have disputed the Nagorno-Karabakh border territory, legally under Azerbaijani command but claimed by Armenia because the population there is ethnically Armenian, for years. The current tensions follow a military skirmish elsewhere on the border, in the Tavush region, that occurred in early April, leaving 16 dead soldiers on both sides.
    It remains unclear which side started the fighting that led to those deaths, but the government of Turkey immediately condemned Armenia for triggering the hostilities and stated it would offer any support Azerbaijan requested.

    On Friday, Anadolu reported that Ankara and Baku had organized joint military drills featuring air exercises.

    “Turkish F-16 fighter jets have arrived in Azerbaijan for joint military exercises, Azerbaijan’s Defense Ministry said on Friday. In a statement, the ministry said the jets will take part in the TurAz Qartali-2020 Joint Exercises, which began on Wednesday,” Anadolu reported. “The drill, involving jets and helicopters, will continue in the capital Baku as well as Nakhchivan, Ganja, Kurdamir, and Yevlakh until Aug. 10.”

    Anadolu noted the context of the Tavush attack and revealed that, of the 16 killed, 11 were Azerbaijani soldiers, including a major general in the Azerbaijani army.

    On Wednesday, Anadolu noted that the two states are also planning joint ground exercises next week, including “artillery, armored vehicles, and mortars striking simulated targets.”

    Turkey’s increased involvement in Azerbaijan follows a threat from that country to bomb a nuclear power plant in the region, potentially causing millions of casualties. Armenia is home to the Metsamor Nuclear Power Plant, a poorly maintained relic of the Soviet era built near an earthquake fault. Following the Tavush incident, a spokesman for Azerbaijan’s Defense Ministry threatened to destroy it.

    “The Armenian side must not forget that our army’s state-of-the-art missile systems allow us to strike the Metsamor nuclear plant with precision, which could lead to a great catastrophe for Armenia,” the spokesman, Vagif Dargahli, said. Turkey offered Azerbaijan air support shortly after this statement.

    The Armenian government accused Azerbaijan of seeking a renewed genocide against Armenians, the victims of the first modern genocide.

    “Such threats are an explicit demonstration of state terrorism and genocidal intent of Azerbaijan,” the Armenian Ministry of Foreign Affairs said. “The threats voiced by the Ministry of Defense of Azerbaijan to launch missile attacks at the Armenian Metsamor Nuclear Power Plant indicate the level of desperation and the crisis of mind of the political-military leadership of Azerbaijan.”

    The joint exercises with Turkey are occurring at a time in which there appears to be no active hostility on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border. On Friday, Armenia’s Ministry of Defense certified that the situation was “relatively calm,” according to the Armenian outlet Hetq, by which Yerevan meant that gunfire did target Armenia, but no reported injuries occurred.

    On Monday, however, Armenia accused Azerbaijan of breaking a temporary ceasefire between the two countries, killing an Armenian soldier.

    “It should be stressed that Azerbaijan resorted to this provocation few days after the statement issued by the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs, which particularly emphasized the importance of strictly adhering to the ceasefire and refraining from provocative actions in this period,” the Armenian Foreign Affairs Ministry asserted in a statement, referring to a group of European neighbors working to get both sides to dialogue.

    “At the same time, Azerbaijan announced joint large-scale military exercises to be held with Turkey. All these demonstrate that the leadership of Azerbaijan, through its provocative actions, is undermining the efforts of the international mediators aimed at de-escalating the situation and resuming the peace process, thus bearing the responsibility for the consequences of further destabilization,” the Foreign Ministry denounced.

    A week before that incident, a spokeswoman for the Armenian Defense Ministry accused Azerbaijan of attacking Tavush once more and suffering what Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (RFE/RL) called “heavy casualties. Azerbaijan denied that any such incident occurred.

    Turkey enjoys positive relations with Baku for both ideological and ethnic reasons, as Azeris speak a Turkic language and are generally considered a Turkic people. Armenians, on the other hand, are ethnically distinct and majority Christian; the Kingdom of Armenia was the first state in human history to adopt Christianity as its religion.

    The Ottoman Empire committed what is widely regarded as the first genocide of the modern era against the Armenian people — as well as other Christians such as Assyrians and Greeks — in the beginning of the 20th century, killing 1.5 of an estimated 2 million Armenians in the world. To this day, Turkey denies that its actions constituted genocide and alleges, contradicting most authoritative historical accounts, that the killing of Armenians and other Christians occurred in the context of war and that many Turks also died.

    Follow Frances Martel on Facebook and Twitter.

    Music: INTERVIEW: Armenian-Ukrainian rappers Samuum shed a light on bride kidnapping

    Louder Than War
    Aug 1 2020


    Armenian-Ukrainian rappers Samuum shed a light on bride kidnapping.

    There are not many music videos that feature a woman tied to the roof of a car as four men kidnap her for a forced wedding, but Samuum’s new single Maria is shining a light on a centuries old crime that is now becoming rarer in the Middle East.

    Lead singer Lusine Kocharian and video director Andranik Berberian met in Kiev’s thriving underground music scene,  and coming together as Samuum wanted to use the metaphor of bride kidnapping to explore what life is like for some women in Armenia.

    “For me it’s my experience of Armenia as we always got to choose,” says Lusine. “You have to choose you want to have a family or a career, you want to work or have a child.

    “I don’t understand why that is the case. I had the experience to choose to have family in Armenia, or just have my career.  I chose my career, and I want us to have that choice to have a family and a career.”

    Maria is sang in Armenian with a pulsing bassline and a hook that echoes the haunting calls of a praying muezzin’s yell. Samuum set out to challenge the norms of Middle Eastern culture and the tough choices many women in the region still face.

    “In our culture it is hard as most of the time you gotta choose. and it’s how we can talk about our development, and we don’t need borders. So it’s how you can’t move if you have those walls in this century about how you want to work or have a family. I wanted to talk about that through my song and explore that question.”

    Berberian’s ironic video, inspired by 70s psychedelic directors Sergei Parajanov and Alejandro Jodorowky contrasts the passivity of the victim with the camp high spirits of the four men who have kidnapped her.  To many people the idea that bride kidnapping happens in civilized countries for centuries, let alone still goes in some places, seems almost unbelievable, especially as it means some ‘brides’ won’t be welcomed back to the families.

    “There are a lot of villages where it happens but back then it was a normal thing,” notes Kocharian.  “In Armenia now it is much better, but I know that even in America it happens. It is a strange thing, wild and a bad thing. I can’t even imagine that mentality that you couldn’t go back after your kidnapping.

    “Not every girl can decide ‘Ok, I can go back to my family’, and not every family can say, ok you can come back. Most of the families say sorry you can’t come back as you are now his wife so you got to be with him., It is rare in Armenia right now, but it happens in other places like Russia, so it not only our national problem.”

    “I want girls, even if it happens, I want them to feel they don’t have to marry that guy, or deal with that problem, but you can move on.”

    Kockarian is quick to point out that this is a global issue, but the feedback on YouTube for the single from Armenia, and elsewhere, has been very positive, particularly from a new generation pushing to smash down damaging social stereotypes.

    “It has been good as I have had a lot of messages saying ‘Thank you girl, you did it’. It is kind of inspirational that they can talk as this whole thing is not exactly about kidnapping as that is just one of the forms to explain what’s going on

    “It’s about talking about this wildness, and even if it happens the girls aren’t talking about that so it’s about respect. The comments and views are an inspiration for them and I’m so happy as that is exactly what I wanted.”

    “You can study if you want to or talk if you want to. I understand you respect your elders, but you have to talk. We will try to change things, and if we can help somebody I will be very happy.”

    Turkey will not join Azerbaijan in unleashing large-scale aggression against Armenia – Armenian MP

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     13:49,

    YEREVAN, JULY 27, ARMENPRESS. Head of the ruling My Step faction of the Armenian Parliament Lilit Makunts thinks that Turkey will not join Azerbaijan in unleashing a large-scale aggression against Armenia.

    “By clearly assessing the incapability of their armed forces, the Azerbaijani authorities do the utmost for Turkey to be engaged in this conflict. I think Turkey will not do that and will not act as a side in any way. When the talk is about Azerbaijan’s aggression on Armenia, Turkey’s becoming a side will be viewed by the world in the context of the Genocide. In case when many countries of the world have recognized the Armenian Genocide, and Turkey is engaged in different conflicts in various regions, its actions will not be perceived by many states”, Makunts said.

    During the recent July military operations unleashed by Azerbaijan on the border with Armenia, Turkey’s foreign ministry issued a statement expressing its support to Azerbaijan.

    Reporting by Norayr Shoghikyan; Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan




    Flare-up between Armenia and Azerbaijan; as the fog of war lifts

    On July 12, 2020, fighting re-erupted between the ex-Soviet Republics of Armenia and Azerbaijan. However, this time an Azerbaijani major general was killed, its foreign minister was fired, followed by a threat by the Azerbaijani Ministry of Defense to blow up Armenia’s nuclear power station. As the fog of war lifts, we can fill some of the puzzle pieces with better-established facts.

    To understand this subject requires some background knowledge. The Soviet Union was assembled not to allow any constituent republic or local ethnic group to have enough critical mass to free itself either politically or economically. Stalin moved previous “republics” from one jurisdiction to another, and if that didn’t work, deported entire ethnic groups. This social manipulation took place before his 1930s reign of terror, where he rounded up people across the Soviet Union based on the slightest offense or none at all. Those lucky enough not to get shot ended up in Siberia or equivalent.

    The Caucasus region of the southern Soviet Union was a mixture of many ethnic groups. The politics of that region, Stalin’s bizarre ethnic policies, and external forces determined internal jurisdictional borders. For example, the previous “Republic” of Abkhazia was placed under Georgian jurisdiction in 1932. It stayed that way until the fall of the Soviet Union. Similarly, the region of Nagorno-Karabakh, which was well over ninety percent Armenian in the early 1920s, was placed under Azerbaijani jurisdiction. There were many reasons for this; most prominent was the Soviet Union’s need for recognition and international acceptance. Mustafa Kemal, who headed the Turkish republican movement, proclaimed himself an anti-imperialist, which was all Lenin and follow-on, Stalin, needed to hear. Both states had an interest in carving up the Caucasus for their ends. The majority of survivors of the Turkish genocide of the Armenians ended up in the Caucasus, and the politics of demanding justice by Armenians was considered by the Soviets, a grotesque _expression_ of nationalism. It was in the combined interest of both Turkey and Stalin to quell any appearance of Armenian national demands. If an Armenian was caught with a personal handwritten genocide memoir, the price was a one-way trip to Siberia. Further, the creation of a Soviet Azerbaijani republic both moderated Armenian national _expression_ and cemented Turkish efforts to create a second Turkish state, albeit under Soviet control.

    Azerbaijani jurisdiction over Nagorno-Karabakh has a role in the Bolshevik’s effort to enhance its credibility in the eyes of the then world superpower, the British. British backing for Azerbaijani control of Nagorno-Karabakh was somewhat complicated. Some of it was in reaction to the Ottoman Empire’s dismemberment and associated fear by its Muslim subjects, particularly those in British-administered India. Gandhi was already protesting British rule in India. British political support for any Muslims controlling non-Muslim peoples helped quell unrest already brewing in the post-Sykes-Picot dismemberment plan for the Middle East. With Baku floating in oil, Britain seeking concessions in oil-rich Iraq, London’s open support for demands of both Islamic and Turkish nationalist forces was in their interest, at the expense of the indigenous Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh.

    Since the early 1920s, Armenians would periodically petition Moscow to transfer Azerbaijani jurisdiction of the Autonomous Region of Nagorno-Karabakh to Armenia. This effort was unsuccessful. In parallel, Soviet Politburo member Heydar Aliyev, the father of today’s Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, as far back as the 1970s, actively encouraged Azerbaijanis to move into Nagorno-Karabakh and attract the best and brightest Armenians from Nagorno-Karabakh to Baku and other places. Haydar Aliyev’s ultimate goal was to have enough of an Azerbaijani demographic in Nagorno-Karabakh, and with their exclave of Nakhichevan, the small Armenian land separating the two regions, being compelled into an expanded Soviet Azerbaijani jurisdiction. The approaching disintegration of the Soviet Union ended Haydar Aliyev’s plans, but the issue remained unresolved.

    Continuous Armenian protests broke out during the period of Glasnost and Perestroika demanding Nagorno-Karabakh unite with Armenia. The reaction in Azerbaijan was swift with the 1988 pogroms of Armenians in the Azerbaijani city of Sumgait. Armenians were subsequently violently expelled from across Azerbaijan. Azerbaijanis living in Armenia were expelled. Low-level fighting had already begun across Nagorno-Karabakh. Fighting neared full-scale in early 1990 with the expulsion of over a quarter-million Armenians from the Azerbaijani capital, Baku.

    In May of 1994, Armenia and Azerbaijan signed a truce, and the Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh gained full sovereignty over this region. Since then, border clashes continued between Azerbaijani and Armenian forces. See the accompanying map. The heaviest fighting since 1994 was in April of 2016 when hundreds of soldiers died, and Armenia lost something on the order of eight hundred hectares of land.

    Armenia and Azerbaijan have been in an arms race, with each side attempting to tip the balance. Azerbaijan is a hydrocarbon exporting and transporting state; it has more funds dedicated to arms purchases than Armenia. However, Armenians are known as better soldiers. This difference was borne out over the past two weeks. Azerbaijan claims it has purchased over five billion dollars of Israeli high tech weaponry, including some of the world’s most advanced Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs), commonly called drones. Russia still appears as the leading supplier of arms to both sides, although Armenia being a member of the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO), has an advantage with Russia.

    Azerbaijan also supplies half of Israel’s crude oil and some of Europe’s gas requirements. British Petroleum’s (BP) investment in Azerbaijan’s hydrocarbon infrastructure is seventy-five billion dollars. Azerbaijan engages in rather wide-spread political marketing of its claim that the region of Nagorno-Karabakh belongs to them based on internationally recognized borders. However, these borders were drawn by Stalin. Azerbaijan also points to UN resolutions alluding to the same. In contrast, the Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh exercise sovereignty over this region, rebuilt its capital, Stepanakert, that was ninety-percent destroyed by Azerbaijan shelling between 1988 and 1994. The overall death toll by the 1994 truce was 30,000.

    Negotiations have dragged on for a generation. Azerbaijan demands Armenians completely relinquish the sovereignty they have over Nagorno-Karabakh in exchange for the promise of the highest degree of autonomy. Unfortunately, Azerbaijan has socialized a full generation of Azerbaijanis to hate all things Armenian. The chance of any peaceful Azerbaijani takeover of Nagorno-Karabakh is virtually zero. Armenians would be violently expelled or killed outright.

    When Azerbaijan claims to offer Nagorno-Karabakh all the benefits of “broadest autonomy” under Azerbaijani jurisdiction, such offers are operationally impossible to enact. Not only was “broadest autonomy” noted during earlier negotiations multiple times, but specific references were made to Aland Islands, Tatarstan, Northern Ireland, South Tyrol, Trieste, and Catalonia by political historians in Baku. Taking Finland’s Aland Island as an example, if such status were a real offer, operationally it would mean:

    Azerbaijan’s constitution would have to change, as it is currently a unitary state. If Nagorno-Karabakh Armenians were to accept autonomy under Azerbaijani rule, surely other ethnic minorities who find themselves under Azerbaijani jurisdiction, such as the Lezgin and Talysh, will demand geo-ethnic freedom. None of this is in the interest of the Azerbaijani state.

    Armenian will become an official language within Azerbaijan, as will other non-Azerbaijani languages.

    Nagorno-Karabakh will have a direct say in Baku’s foreign policy direction and decisions. This is not in the interest of the Azerbaijani state.

    Also, if Azerbaijani demands for the return of all displaced peoples were enacted:

    Armenians would return to Baku, displacing Azerbaijanis living in their former homes. Azerbaijanis, who lived in Nagorno-Karabakh, would return to either destroyed, non-existent, or weather-ravaged homes. None of this is in the interest of the Azerbaijani state or its people.

    Armeno-phobia, having reached such a level in Azerbaijan, equates all evil with Armenians; inter-ethnic strife would run rampant across Azerbaijan, probably uncontrollable for years.

    The reality of Armenian sovereignty over themselves and the region of Nagorno-Karabakh is in stark contrast to Azerbaijani zero-sum land claims. Azerbaijan has forced itself into an aggressive militaristic position. Anything less would appear conciliatory to Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenia, the guarantor of Nagorno-Karabakh’s sovereignty.

    On July 12, 2020, an Azerbaijani UAZ military jeep approached an Armenian military post in northeast Armenia. The jeep was warned off, with the soldiers running off abandoning the vehicle. A group of Azerbaijani soldiers returned, some say to retrieve the jeep, and a battle ensued. These series of events appeared to be the catalyst for the latest flare-up in the fighting. What caused Azerbaijani soldiers to approach an Armenian post? Usually, the least complicated answer becomes the leading hypotheses in such cases.

    A hypothesis would be incompetence on the part of the Azerbaijani soldiers and their local Azerbaijani commanders. A competing hypothesis is that Azerbaijanis were looking for a fight. I don’t think it’s the latter unless things are disintegrating in the Azerbaijani armed forces. The Azerbaijani losses were too high for this to be planned. Not only did Azerbaijan lose some highland real estate to Armenians in battles after re-securing the jeep, but also:

    Lost a major general and colonel. What these ranking officers were doing so close to the front is a mystery in itself.

    Lost a dozen more soldiers in battles with Armenians.

    Lost two attempts to re-take these highlands by an elite force of “highly-trained” Azerbaijani soldiers. Both attempts resulted in many Azerbaijani casualties. The second attempt, on July 22, resulted in Azerbaijani soldiers trapped and are probably POWs now.

    Lost a $30M Israeli-made Hermes 900 UAV, shot down by a missile.

    Lost another dozen or so UAVs, including two other Israeli models of UAVs.

    Lost a Foreign Minister whose Azerbaijani President Aliyev accused of pandering to Armenians.

    After these losses, the Azerbaijan Defense Ministry threatened to blow up Armenia’s nuclear plant. The Azerbaijani military placed artillery and tanks in Azerbaijani towns, so if Armenians retaliated, Baku would blame Armenians for attacking civilians. In the hours after July 12, 2020, Azerbaijani forces prevented their civilians from fleeing Azerbaijani border villages. In 1992 the same Azerbaijani “human shield” technique was used in Khojali, Nagorno-Karabakh, with many innocent Azerbaijani civilians succumbing to the crossfire.

    On July 15-16, 2020, tens of thousands of protesters in Baku, Azerbaijan’s capital, were chanting “Allahu Akbar”, “Death to Armenia,” and “Send us to fight” following Azerbaijan’s latest defeats on the battlefield. On the first night, protesters broke into the parliament building.

    On July 15, 2020, an ethnic minority in Azerbaijan, the Talysh, threatened rallies of 150 thousand participants. Azerbaijani security forces preempted their demands for local autonomy.

    Since Armenia proper was attacked, the Armenian government informed the CSTO of the events of July 12. Eventually, when it was apparent Armenia was able to protect itself, any emergency CSTO meeting was not necessary.

    Turkey pledged its support for Azerbaijan by offering military equipment, including its attack drone, the Bayraktar. There are unconfirmed reports of these already in Azerbaijan.

    Even before any smoke cleared, pundits claimed this latest flare-up is part of a larger Armenian plan to drag the CSTO into fighting Azerbaijan. Others claimed this latest fighting is a Turkish-Russian proxy battle, considering Russia and Turkey are becoming conflicting sides in Syria, Libya, the Gulf, the Balkans, etc. Azerbaijan claims Armenia was taking advantage of the COVID-19 pandemic, although it is not clear how. It is dangerous to cherry-pick conjecture to fit politically desirable conclusions.

    Social media participants strive to determine who started this latest fighting. It is almost irrelevant who did. The current situation does not bode well for Azerbaijan. It lost a Major general and colonel, well over a dozen soldiers, probably lost more as POWs, has an angry population out for blood, and ethnic minorities are protesting. Moreover, it has a big reset at its Foreign Ministry, which will severely hamper whatever has sufficed for negotiations.

    David Davidian is a lecturer at the American University of Armenia. He was a Nuclear Reactor Engineer at a major US nuclear facility and holds three US patents. His long high technology career included being IBM Federal’s Systems Architect for the US Air Force.  He has spent over a decade in technical intelligence analysis.