Return of Armenians to Karabakh is of fundamental importance for the reconciliation between Baku and Yerevan– Zakharova

 20:23,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 15, ARMENPRESS. Russia is committed to supporting the return process of Nagorno-Karabakh Armenians in every possible way, as it is of fundamental importance for the reconciliation process between Baku and Yerevan.

 The spokesperson for the Russian Foreign Ministry Maria Zakharova, said this during the weekly briefing while responding to a question about Russia's assessment of the prospects for the return of Nagorno-Karabakh Armenians.

"We welcome the recent statement of the high-ranking representative of the Azerbaijani president's office regarding the guarantees for the rights, security, and economic well-being of Armenians who want to return to Nagorno-Karabakh. This is a crucial point, and we will actively support this process, considering it of fundamental importance for the reconciliation between Yerevan and Baku, including through the Russian peacekeepers," said Zakharova.

Lemkin Institute: Statement on the Sentencing of Vagif Khachatryan in the Republic of Azerbaijan

              Nov 13 2023

The Lemkin Institute for Genocide Prevention energetically condemns the 15-year prison sentence handed down to Mr. Vagif Khachatryan on 7 November 2023 by the Republic of Azerbaijan. The Lemkin Institute exhorts the international community to persuade the regime of President Aliyev into promptly releasing all Armenian persons under its jurisdiction and to refrain from providing any kind of assistance that could worsen the suffering of the victims of the Artsakh genocide or embolden Azerbaijan to perpetrate any unlawful act of aggression. 

The Lemkin Institute for Genocide Prevention energetically condemns the 15-year prison sentence handed down to Mr. Vagif Khachatryan on 7 November 2023 by the Republic of Azerbaijan.

A resident of the Republic of Artsakh, Mr. Khachatryan was detained at the illegal Hakari Bridge checkpoint on 29 July 2023 while he was being evacuated from his homeland by the International Committee of the Red Cross for urgent medical treatment. This checkpoint was established by Azerbaijan in the Lachin Corridor in April 2023, four months after Azerbaijan’s illegal blockade of the same corridor on 12 December 2022. This blockade left the then 120,000 inhabitants of Artsakh without essential goods and services, constituting a textbook case of genocide-by-attrition, as accurately observed by the former prosecutor of the International Criminal Court, Mr. Luis Moreno Ocampo.

Mr. Khachatryan’s abduction took place before Azerbaijan’s military aggression against Artsakh on 19 September 2023, which resulted in massacre and atrocity and the consequent flight of almost 100 percent of its indigenous Armenian population to neighboring Armenia. The aggression, atrocity and forced displacement amount to a very thorough genocide of an ancient, continuous indigenous civilization.

Upon his abduction, Mr. Khachatryan was immediately accused by Azerbaijani authorities of committing war crimes during the First Nagorno-Karabakh War in the 1990s, charges he has repeatedly denied and for which Azerbaijan has offered no independent evidence.

In this context, the Lemkin Institute recalls its “Statement on the Ongoing Imprisonment of Armenian Officials of the Republic of Artsakh by the Republic of Azerbaijan,” issued on 27 October 2023. In that statement, the Lemkin Institute noted that: “At the present time, [Mr. Khachatryan] is on trial in Azerbaijan’s infamous judicial system, where violations of the fundamental guarantee of due process have become alarmingly common. In fact, according to one observer, Mr. Khachatryan’s statements are intentionally being mistranslated for Azerbaijani and Turkish audiences. Additionally, photos of Mr. Khachatryan have raised concerns about his potential mistreatment and deteriorating health.”

According to the news outlet News.am, the prosecution explained that Azerbaijani law does not allow Mr. Khachatryan to be sentenced to life imprisonment, as he is over 65 years old. According to another news agency, Mr. Khachatryan is scheduled to spend the initial five years of his 15-year sentence in prison, followed by 10 years in a high-security correctional facility. This seemingly innocuous, legalist discourse, however, is nothing but the gilded cloak that hides the ordinary dagger: a miscarriage of justice of the highest order.

The law often serves to legitimize those in power, particularly within dictatorial regimes like the one led by Azerbaijani President Mr. Ilham Aliyev. Given Mr. Khachatryan’s advanced age and heart condition, the latter being the cause of his emergency evacuation from Artsakh on 29 July 2023, his 15-year prison sentence amounts to a death penalty, concealed beneath the superficially benign façade of an unmistakably oppressive and genocidal regime.

Once again, the Lemkin Institute recalls the ongoing and unlawful imprisonment of the eight high-ranking Armenian officials, as well as the abandonment of dozens and perhaps hundreds of Armenian civilian captives and POWs, as outlined in its aforementioned statement, who might soon share the same fate as Mr. Khachatryan, if not worse. Time and time again, Azerbaijan has shown its repudiation of a law-based international order, including its obligations under international humanitarian and human rights law.

The Lemkin Institute exhorts the international community, which seems to have forgotten the commission of atrocity crimes in the Nagorno-Karabakh region, as well as the looming threat of an invasion of the Republic of Armenia by Azerbaijan, to persuade the regime of President Aliyev into promptly releasing all Armenian persons under its jurisdiction and to refrain from providing any kind of assistance that could worsen the suffering of the victims of the Artsakh genocide or embolden Azerbaijan to perpetrate any unlawful act of aggression.


https://www.lemkininstitute.com/statements-new-page/statement-on-the-sentencing-of-vagif-khachatryan-in-the-republic-of-azerbaijan

Lukashenka urges Armenia to ‘seriously consider’ not leaving the CSTO

Nov 15 2023
 

Belarusian President Alyaksandr Lukashenka has urged Armenia to ‘seriously consider’ its options before taking steps which may see Armenia leave the Collective Security Treaty Organisation (CSTO).

On Tuesday, Armenia’s Prime Minister, Nikol Pashinyan, announced that he would not be taking part in the CSTO summit scheduled to be held in Minsk on 23 November.

This came in a telephone call with Belarus’s President Lukashenka, in which Pashinyan reportedly expressed his hope that the CSTO ‘would understand the decision’.

Lukashenka then reportedly urged Pashinyan not to make ‘hasty decisions’ about Armenia’s status in the Russia-led security bloc.

‘The president suggested that the PM of Armenia should not hurry, should not make hasty decisions, but should seriously think about the next steps, which may be aimed at disintegration’, stated Lukashenka’s press secretary, Natalya Eismont.

Following Pashinyan’s announcement, Moscow expressed its ‘regret’, with Kremlin Spokesperson Dmitry Peskov telling reporters that Russia understands that ‘each head of government or head of state may have his own events in his work schedule, their own circumstances’.

‘But we can only express regret because such meetings are a very good reason for exchanging opinions; to clarify positions’.

On Wednesday, Pashinyan suggested that he was not taking part in the CSTO summit, because the bloc did not recognise Armenia’s borders.

He was referring to a statement by Kazakh Foreign Minister Mukhtar Tileuberdi, who stated that since the borders between Azerbaijan and Armenia were not demarcated, it would be difficult to determine where there were ‘any violation’ on the Armenia–Azerbaijan border.

‘Simply participating silently under those conditions’, he said, could bring into question Armenia’s ‘territorial integrity and sovereignty’.

‘We also make such decisions in order to give ourselves and CSTO time to think.’

Pashinyan also explained that Armenia was purchasing weapons from the West and elsewhere ‘because our partners in the security sector, including for objective reasons, are unable to sell us weapons and ammunition’. Since Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022, the country has struggled to procure the weapons needed to maintain its war.

‘We tell them very well, please don’t be upset, but we have to look for other security partners. We are looking for and finding these partners, we are trying to sign contracts, get some weapons, military equipment. That is our policy’.

On Tuesday, Armenia Security Council Secretary, Armen Grigoryan, stated that Armenia has declined to attend CSTO meetings because of the security bloc’s inaction in the face of Azerbaijani attacks on Armenian territory.

Article 4 of the CSTO charter stipulates that members of the bloc are obliged to mutually defend each other against external threats or attacks.

Grigoryan said that Armenia had ‘many questions’ to the CSTO, hinging its participation in future meetings on whether it will receive answers.

’Until now, we do not have the answer to these questions, and this is also the reason why we are not participating in the session of the CSTO Collective Security Council’, said Grigoryan.

Earlier on Tuesday, Arman Yeghoyan, an MP from the ruling Civil Contract party and the chair of the European Integration Commission, noted in a briefing that while Armenia is not currently considering leaving the bloc, the government has repeatedly expressed its ‘dissatisfaction’ with the CSTO.

‘And here you are surprised that we do not participate?’ said Yeghoyan. 

Armenia’s relations with Russia have been deteriorating since the Second Nagorno-Karabakh War in 2020, with Yerevan seemingly pushing itself away from the Moscow-led CSTO and Commonwealth of Independent State in favour of closer security ties with the West.

[Read more: Armenia steps up military ties with West as Russia relations tumble]

Pashinyan and other high-ranking officials have repeatedly declined to participate in CSTO and CIS sessions. Armenia refused to host joint CSTO peacekeeping exercises and sat out two CSTO drills in autumn. Yerevan also refused to send a representative to serve as the CSTO’s deputy secretary general in March.

https://oc-media.org/lukashenka-urges-armenia-to-seriously-consider-not-leaving-the-csto/

French journalists win Varenne award for Nagorno-Karabakh article

 15:20, 9 November 2023

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 9, ARMENPRESS. French journalists Pierre Sautreuil and Thomas Guichard have won the Varenne Young Journalist Award for their Les dessins perdus du Haut-Karabakh (The lost drawings of Nagorno-Karabakh) article published in La Croix Hebdo.

Les dessins perdus du Haut-Karabakh is a story of how drawings found in an abandoned village in Nagorno-Karabakh helped retrace the story of an Armenian family in exile.

Team Telecom IPO brings in US$19.8 million as Armenian govt courts Starlink

Developing Telecoms
Nov 6 2023

Armenia’s Team Telecom has completed its initial public offering (IPO), listing around 40 million shares worth AMD8.24 billion (US$19.8 million) on the Armenian Securities Exchange.

The listing means that approximately 1,000 investors, whether individuals or businesses, now hold shares in the operator. Team Telecom has stated that it intends to use the funds generated through the IPO in order to extend its NGN fibre-optic network across Armenia. It also aims to deploy a 5G mobile network and switch on new international communication links.

“The development of the telecommunications sector in Armenia is our priority, and I am glad that from now on our new shareholders will also participate in the implementation of all our strategic plans,” said Hayk Yesayan, CEO of Team Telecom Armenia.

Team Telecom is not the only service provider on the rise in Armenia – Arka News reports that the country’s Minister of High Technologies Industry Robert Khachatryan is in talks with SpaceX over a potential launch of Starlink satellite broadband.

Khachatryan was quoted by Arka News as saying that satellite broadband “can become an alternative means of communication for our country, which it is in many places. We have already started a dialogue on this issue, but I would not like to elaborate.”

RFE/RL Armenian Service – 11/06/2023

                                        Monday, November 6, 2023


Armenian Government Vows To Pay Karabakh Pensions

        • Robert Zargarian
        • Susan Badalian

Armenia - A refugee from Karabakh shows his Armenian passport during a protest 
outside the Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs, Yerevan, November 6, 2023.


In an apparent about-face, the Armenian government has assured refugees from 
Nagorno-Karabakh that it will pay pensions and other benefits received by them 
until their exodus to Armenia.

The government was reluctant to do so until now, saying that all refugees will 
only receive 50,000 drams ($125) each in November and December in addition to 
100,000 drams given to them in October.

Some senior officials indicated that Karabakh pensioners, retired military and 
security personnel as well as other relevant categories will be eligible for 
monthly benefits only if they apply for and receive Armenian citizenship. 
Armenian opposition figures and other critics condemned that stance.

The government sparked another controversy last month when it decided to grant 
the Karabakh Armenians “temporary protection” formalizing their status of 
refugees. It thus made clear that it does not consider them citizens of Armenia 
despite the fact that virtually all of them hold Armenian passports. Government 
officials described their passports as mere “travel documents,” a claim disputed 
by some legal experts.

Over a hundred refugees, many of them retired soldiers and officers, protested 
outside the Armenian Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs on Monday. Deputy 
Labor Minister Davit Khachatrian received their representatives.

“He assured us that everyone will get their pensions,” one of them, Armen 
Petrosian, said after the meeting. “Civilian pensioners will get them [for the 
period starting] from October 26, while the military personnel after changes are 
made to the law.”

“He also said that an [official] announcement will be made on Thursday,” added 
Petrosian.

Khachatrian made this clear when he spoke to RFE/RL’s Armenian Service over the 
weekend.

“We are doing everything to make sure that [the refugees] start getting their 
pensions along with everybody else at the beginning of December,” said the 
official.




Kocharian’s Son Freed After Taking Up Parliament Seat

        • Anush Mkrtchian

Armenia - Former President Robert Kocharian's son Levon, February 18, 2020.


Former President Robert Kocharian’s younger son arrested during recent 
anti-government protests in Yerevan was released from custody on Monday after 
taking up a vacant parliament seat reserved for the main opposition Hayastan 
alliance.

Levon Kocharian was dragged away by riot police on September 22 as thousands of 
protesters demanded Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s resignation following the 
Azerbaijani military offensive that restored Baku’s control over 
Nagorno-Karabakh and forced its ethnic Armenian residents to flee to Armenia.

He is among the more than four dozen Armenians accused of assaulting police 
officers or throwing various objects at them during the largely peaceful 
demonstrations. Most of them remain in custody, facing what they and the 
Armenian opposition call politically motivated charges.

Kocharian Jr. also strongly denies the accusations leveled against him. He 
maintains that he himself was beaten up by several officers inside a police car. 
Although their violent actions were caught on camera, Armenian courts have 
refused to free him pending investigation.

Hayastan, which is headed by Robert Kocharian, appears to have decided to secure 
Levon’s release by bringing him to the parliament and giving him immunity from 
prosecution. Like his father, he was on its list of candidates in the 2021 
general elections.

Armen Charchian, a parliament deputy representing the opposition bloc, resigned 
from the National Assembly late last month. Three other Hayastan members who 
were next in line to succeed Charchian refused to take up his seat, giving 
different reasons. They thus cleared the way for the ex-president’s son.

With Armenian law stipulating that a parliamentarian cannot be charged and 
arrested without the parliament’s consent, investigators had no choice but to 
free him for now. The Office of the Prosecutor-General declined to clarify 
whether it will request such permission.

Levon Kocharian insisted that the criminal case against him is “nonsense” when 
he spoke to journalists outside Yerevan’s Nubarashen prison. He called for the 
immediate release of the other protesters regarded by Hayastan and some human 
rights activists as political prisoners.

“I am one of them and hope that they too will be free soon,” he said.

Four of them, including a 16-year-old boy, were arrested just over a week ago. 
They all are natives of Karabakh who took refuge in Armenia following the 2020 
war.




Pro-Western Group Denies Role In Armenian ‘Coup Plot’

        • Naira Bulghadarian

Armenia - Zhirayr Sefilian speaks during a rally in Yerevan, February 26, 2021


A political group increasingly critical of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian on 
Monday strongly denied any involvement in what Armenian authorities call a 
botched conspiracy to seize government buildings and “disrupt the work of 
government bodies.”

Armenia’s National Security Service (NSS) announced last week the arrests of 
five persons accused of hatching the alleged plot. It said that they planned to 
set off an explosion and assassinate an unnamed “civilian” but gave no other 
details.

The NSS claimed to have found and confiscated not only weapons and ammunition 
but also handwritten texts detailing the planned “terrorist attacks.” A 
purported screenshot of one such document released by it calls for attracting 
members of the National Democratic Alliance (NDA), a pro-Western fringe group 
led by Zhirayr Sefilian, a prominent nationalist figure. He was questioned as a 
“witness” in the case on Monday.

“The investigator’s questions were mainly about whether the NDA can be connected 
with such a thing,” Sefilian told a news conference later in the day. He said 
any he denied any involvement.

Sefilian said that he knows personally two of the arrested men. But he refused 
to identify them, saying only that they are not affiliated with the NDU despite 
having had recent “contacts” with the group over its declared attempts to oust 
Pashinian. Sefilian also questioned the credibility of the accusations brought 
against them.

“The National Democratic Alliance declares that it has nothing to do with the 
‘newly discovered terrorists,’” read a separate statement released by the group.

The statement claimed that Pashinian’s government is deliberately “casting a 
shadow of suspicion on the NDA” in a bid to prevent it from challenging another 
“capitulation treaty with Azerbaijan” planned by him. It also said that despite 
getting Armenia “out of Russian control” Pashinian is not bringing the country 
closer to the West.

“The NDA will continue its public political struggle against Nikol’s defeatism, 
including but not limited to all legal forms of civil disobedience, direct 
democracy and peaceful insurrection,” concluded the statement.

Sefilian and other NDA figures have close ties to the jailed leaders of an armed 
group that stormed an Armenian police base in 2016 to demand that then President 
Serzh Sarkisian release Sefilian from jail and step down.

The three dozen gunmen, who took police officers and medical personnel hostage, 
laid down their weapons after a two-week standoff with security forces which 
left three police officers dead. All but two of them were released from custody 
shortly after Sarkisian was toppled in the 2018 “velvet revolution” led by 
Pashinian. The seven key members of the group called Sasna Tsrer were sent back 
to jail in May 2022.




Armenian Army Chief Tours U.S. Military Facilities In Europe


Germany - Steven Basham (R), deputy head of U.S. European Command (EUCOM), meets 
Armenian army chief Eduard Asrian in Stuttgart, November 3, 2023. (Photo by 
EUCOM)


Armenia’s top general has visited the U.S. military headquarters and two 
training centers in Europe, underscoring Yerevan’s efforts to deepen defense 
ties with the United States resented by Russia.

Lieutenant-General Eduard Asrian, the chief of the Armenian army’s General 
Staff, met with Lieutenant General Steven Basham, the deputy head of U.S. 
European Command (EUCOM), at the EUCOM headquarters in the German city of 
Stuttgart on Friday. They discussed “Armenia’s security environment, defense 
reforms and the defense cooperation with the United States,” read an EUCOM 
statement released afterwards.

“This was a milestone event as we deliberately and incrementally develop our 
defense relationship,” it quoted Basham as saying.

“The Armenian armed forces are currently undergoing significant reforms and 
transformation and we are interested in receiving support and learning about the 
best practices from our partners, and especially the United States.” Asrian said 
for his part.

According to the Armenian Defense Ministry, Basham expressed the U.S.’s 
readiness to help the South Caucasus nation “professionalize” its armed forces, 
modernize their command-and-control structures and train military personnel on a 
larger scale. There was no word on potential U.S. arms supplies.

Asrian visited the U.S. military’s Joint Multinational Readiness Center and 
Non-Commissioned Officer Academy in Germany before his talks with Basham.

Armenia - U.S. and Armenian troops start a joint exercise at the Zar training 
ground near Yerevan, September 11, 2023.

His trip came less than two months after Armenia hosted a U.S.-Armenian military 
exercise criticized by Russia as well as neighboring Iran. Asrian and Armenian 
Defense Minister Suren Papikian watched the exercise together with two U.S. 
generals.

The drills added to the Armenian government’s unprecedented tensions with 
Moscow, its longtime ally. The Russian Foreign Ministry listed them Yerevan’s 
“unfriendly” actions in a note of protest handed to the Armenian ambassador in 
Moscow on September 8.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian insisted late last month that his government is 
determined to “diversify” Armenia’s foreign and security policies because the 
Russians have failed to honor their security commitments to his country. But he 
again made clear that it is not considering demanding the withdrawal of Russian 
troops from Armenia even if it sees no “advantages” in their presence.



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.

 

Beyond Nagorno-Karabakh conflict: How India can help Armenia with military training

First Post
Nov 2 2023
Maj Gen Ashok Kumar

The geopolitical landscape of the world is changing quite rapidly. It was the Russia-Ukraine war first, while it is now the Hamas-Israel war. US-China relations are also heating up on the issues of the Indo-Pacific, South China Sea, and Taiwan which may explode at any time. While adequate world attention is drawn to all these issues, a major conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan, affecting 100,000 Armenians, has almost eroded from the memories of all world powers, despite the fact that almost the entire Armenian population was forced to move out of their native place to relocate themselves in Armenia.

The September 23 operations were launched by Azerbaijan to capture this Armenian enclave, which it succeeded in. It succeeded as it had four times the superior forces as compared to Armenia. The relative ‘Nos’ alone don’t matter. The force structure, force organisation, command and control structure, equipment, warfighting doctrine and tactics, and the morale of the forces matter much more. It was probably because of these reasons that Armenia won the first Nagorno-Karabakh war, which concluded in 1994.

It is therefore essential that the Armenian defence forces carry out a re-appraisal of their strengths and weaknesses. This will assist them in identifying the areas that need improvement. It will be a good idea if Armenia takes the assistance of some trusted country to help shape its defence forces, including imparting the training to make it more battle-ready. India could be the obvious choice to establish an ‘Indian Army Training Team (IATT)’ in Armenia, which can be co-located with the Force Headquarters of Armenia. IATT is more suitable due to the following reasons:

  • Armenia faces two front threats. From Nakhichevan enclave of Azerbaijan on its West which can be activated by the forces ab-initio placed in the Nakhichevan enclave besides Azerbaijan reinforcing the location through Iran / Turkey. It can also establish a forced corridor through the Southern end of Armenia for a much wanted connectivity. In addition, Armenia’s Nagorno-Karabakh enclave in the East is surrounded by Azerbaijan from almost all the four sides. Armenia needs to be prepared and capable of fighting ‘two front war’. There could be no better country in the world as compared to India which can assist Armenia in its current geo-graphic conflict context as India has fought and won a two front war in 1971 and is handling the similar threat now on two fronts due to collusivity of China and Pakistan.
  • India has a large and robust defence force structure. It has also the experience of establishing IATTs in other foreign countries successfully. It is therefore most suited to undertake this task.
  • India has been exporting defence equipment to include surveillance equipment to Armenia . In addition, it has also exported the Pinaka rocket weapon system while Armenia has been fighting against its adversary, Azerbaijan. India has done so when Armenia has been at war with Azerbaijan. Armenia is probably the first country in the world to get this support while being at war. It clearly indicates the importance attached to Armenia by India in the latter’s international security calculus.
  • Armenia has recently posted a Defence Attaché to its embassy in India who can interact with concerned stakeholders in Government of India at Delhi to work out a suitable structure and its early operationalisation.

Given the importance attached to Armenia and the mutual national interests of both countries converging, India could be willing to respond positively to any such proposal from the Armenian side. The Armenian embassy in India and the Indian embassy in Armenia could play an important role in making this happen. While the exact structure, role, and tasks of IATT will emerge based on mutual consultation between both countries, some ingredients could be as follows:

  • The structure should be adequate to provide the comprehensive support as requested by Armenia.
  • If Armenia desires, this team can also suggest the force structure and equipment for arming the Armenian Defence Forces. The structures could be aligned to the threat perception Armenia faces so that it can respond to threats comprehensively and decisively.
  • Armenia is importing the defence equipment primarily from Russia and erstwhile Soviet nations besides some new entrants. The sources of these imports are drying up due to the Russia-Ukraine war. In such a situation, India has been emerging as one of the main suppliers of defence equipment for the Armenian defence forces besides having the potential to maintain Russian supplied equipment . Indigenisation of defence equipment in India, export orientation and private sector participation is giving India new opportunities to equip the Armenian defence forces.
  • IATT can train officers as well as other ranks in all possible domains as desired by Armenia. It will collaborate with training infrastructure and instructors from the Armenian Defence Forces for the optimum results. The syllabi can also be re-structured as per training needs of Armenia.
  • Since Armenian defence forces have only two services to include Army and Air force and therefore the composition of IATT must factor the need to train both the Services .It should also train on equipment like drones and other such advancements.
  • Though Armenia does not have its Navy being a landlocked country, capacity creation in this field is still essential. IATT can factor this requirement as well.
  • Maintenance of the equipment in an operationally acceptable timeframe is also critical for winning the wars / battles. IATT will need to structure itself suitably to impart quality training to this facet as well.
  • IATT will need to assist in setting the wargames and field exercises for the Armenian army in a near-conflict simulation environment and will have to assist in objective evaluation.

The role, tasks, and areas to be covered for the training can be discussed by both countries to give it a practical shape. Though reports are emerging towards a peace settlement between Armenia and Azerbaijan, even then, a strong Armenian defence force is a must in the national interest of Armenia. India can fill this gap in the most effective manner by establishing a training team in Armenia early.

The writer is a retired army veteran. Views expressed in the above piece are personal and solely that of the author. They do not necessarily reflect Firstpost’s views.


Challenge to the Global Rules-Based Order

 FP – Foreign Policy
Nov 2 2023

Azerbaijan’s Armenian ‘Corridor’ Is a

Revisionist autocracies are coordinating greater control of the Eurasian continent.

By Anna Ohanyan, the Richard B. Finnegan distinguished professor of political science and international relations at Stonehill College in Massachusetts, and a nonresident senior scholar in the Russia/Eurasia program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

NOVEMBER 2, 2023 On Oct. 13, Politico reported that U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken had informed a group of lawmakers that the State Department was on the watch for an Azerbaijani invasion of Armenia in the “coming weeks.” A spokesman later tempered the report, describing it as inaccurate while insisting that the United States “strongly supports” Armenia’s territorial integrity and sovereignty.

Nonetheless, the Politico report surprised few in Armenia. Azerbaijan’s use of deadly force and coercive diplomacy against Armenia is hardly breaking news, at least since Baku’s 2020 military successes in the disputed territory of Nagorno-Karabakh. From December 2022, Azerbaijan imposed a nearly yearlong humanitarian siege of the Armenian minority in the enclave—a blockade deemed illegal by U.N. courts. Facing no accountability or international pushback, an emboldened Baku broke the 2020 armistice and militarily conquered the region this September, choosing to expel its 120,000 indigenous Armenian inhabitants rather than pursue a European Union-backed deal guaranteeing that group’s civil rights within Azerbaijan.

The next stage of this conflict is imminent. Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev may now have his sights set on seizing an extraterritorial corridor through Armenia’s southernmost Syunik province, which he has branded as the so-called Zangezur corridor. This extraterritorial corridor would link mainland Azerbaijan with the small Azerbaijani exclave of Nakhchivan, to Armenia’s west, which borders Turkey and Iran.

An extraterritorial corridor cutting through Armenian territory would, by definition, be militarized: The Armenian government continues to object to the plan as breaching its territorial sovereignty. It also fears the corridor becoming a haven for illicit activity and trade.

The Armenian government has instead offered a vision of broader regional connectivity: opening de jure borders and rebuilding Soviet-era cross-border roads and railways, all operating within the framework of established international law and respecting the full sovereignty of the countries through which they pass. Indeed, opening borders would yield immediate economic dividends to all countries in the South Caucasus.

Such a vision could, of course, only be realized with a peace treaty, which Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan reaffirmed his government’s commitment to signing during his address to the European Parliament in Strasbourg on Oct. 17. This would require acknowledgment of the sovereignty and territorial integrity of both states. Speaking at the fourth Silk Road Forum few days later, held in Tbilisi, Georgia, Pashinyan unveiled the so-called Crossroads for Peace initiative, which detailed Armenia’s advocacy for rules-based regional connectivity.

The problem for Armenia is thus not the corridor itself, but the coercion surrounding its implementation.

“We will implement the Zangezur corridor, whether Armenia wants it or not,” Aliyev threatened as early as 2021. Increasingly irredentist and expansionist, Baku has already created the physical infrastructure inside Armenia to pull this off. Since 2021, Azerbaijani troops have advanced across Armenia’s eastern sovereign border, a strategy that researchers describe as “creeping annexation.”

In September 2022, when Azerbaijan attacked Armenia’s southeast and targeted civilians inside the country, it was testing the limits of what the world would countenance. In response, the EU deployed unarmed civilian monitors to the Armenian side of the border with Azerbaijan in order to document, if not deter, further attacks.

Outside of Armenian sovereign control, a Zangezur corridor would comprise a much-sought final missing link in a sanctions-proof, extraterritorial nexus connecting Iran and Turkey to Russia via Azerbaijan. Unsurprisingly, Armenia’s rules-based proposal for broad regional connectivity is supported by the EU and the United States, while Azerbaijan’s demands are backed by Russia and Turkey. Iran, for its part, has been looking to leverage all available transport routes that would help it in deepening its commercial and military ties with Russia. Ground has been broken for both rail and road projects that would directly connect Tehran to Moscow through Azerbaijan—while avoiding Western sanctions monitors.

The Zangezur corridor, if realized, would entail a shift in strategic geography in the Eurasian continent, cementing the revanchist policies between two neo-imperial actors, Turkey and Russia. The stakes are high for the region and beyond—this corridor may be as incendiary for Western interests as Russian President Vladimir Putin’s proposed Zaporizhzhia corridor project to link mainland Russia with its illegally annexed positions in Crimea through Ukraine.

Economic sanctions imposed on Russia in response to its invasion of Ukraine are reshaping the geopolitics of connectivity, trade, and transit between China and Europe. Russian transcontinental rail has largely been replaced by seaborne alternatives, but a so-called Middle Corridor concept has been promoted by some, including Russia’s allies and partners to its south. This multimodal patchwork of routes would ostensibly form an overland connection between China and Europe via Central Asia, the Caspian Sea, Azerbaijan, and Turkey, with spurs to Russia and Iran, bypassing Armenia.

To Chinese audiences, Aliyev touts the purported importance of the Zangezur corridor as a component of the Middle Corridor. This is belied by the existence of parallel railways in neighboring Georgia, which are owned by Azerbaijan. The more pressing imperatives for Aliyev, as a dynastic post-Soviet ruler of an undiversified petrostate—and one that is entering its 15th consecutive year of declining oil exports—are domestic. The World Bank and others forecast a coming socioeconomic decline that will test the limits of Azerbaijan’s autocracy, making nationalist and militarized projects, such as the Zangezur corridor and additional threats of conquest against alleged “historic Azerbaijani territory” in Armenia, into important levers for regime legitimacy and survival.

Turkey lends extensive political, military, and operational support to Azerbaijan’s preferences in the region, including the Zangezur corridor plan. Already a beneficiary of the current incarnation of the Middle Corridor that uses Georgia to access Russian markets, extralegal and sanctions-proof transit through territory in Armenia’s south would enhance Ankara’s strategic autonomy and provide long-coveted unhindered access to Turkic Central Asia via Azerbaijan.

Turkey’s desire for this connection was cemented in its 2021 Shusha Declaration with Azerbaijan. The declaration elevated the already deep alliance between the two, which now covers wide-ranging issues, including a defense pact and coordination in their state-controlled media platforms, with a specific mention of the Zangezur corridor.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan regularly calls for an “uninterrupted” rail and road corridor “as soon as possible,” through Armenia. He has done it from the highest global podium, that of the United Nations General Assembly this fall, as well as in the Azerbaijani Parliament in 2021 and in his cabinet meetings.

The desire for an uninterrupted corridor also stems from Turkey’s aspirations to become a regional energy hub, thereby increasing its bargaining position relative to the West. Gas coming from Azerbaijan, Iran, and Russia would turn Turkey into a central node of regional geopolitical patronage in the South Caucasus and Central Asia.

Indeed, neo-imperial logic behind the push for the Zangezur corridor was articulated plainly by Erdogan himself when he stated that the post-Ottoman periphery, the South Caucasus in this case, “is not a romantic neo-Ottomanism. It is a real policy based on a new vision of global order.”

For Russia, the dividends of such a corridor extend beyond evading Western sanctions. The diplomatic fig leaf on which Azerbaijan’s Aliyev has relied in demanding the extraterritorial corridor is the 2020 trilateral Nagorno-Karabakh cease-fire agreement, brokered by Russia, between Azerbaijan and Armenia. That agreement envisioned opening transport links and enshrined the security of Nagorno-Karabakh’s Armenian population and the return of Armenian refugees through a Russian peacekeeping mission; it also guaranteed unhindered access between Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh. Armenia, in turn, committed to reopening and guaranteeing the security of vehicles and cargo traveling through sovereign Armenian territory between Azerbaijan and Nakhchivan, with an oversight role for Russian border services. After failing to prevent the 2023 military assault and the ethnic cleansing in Nagorno-Karabakh, that agreement is now functionally and legally inoperative.

By claiming a lack of border delimitation, Russia tacitly endorses Baku’s attacks on Armenia’s internationally recognized borders. Baku’s forceful conquest of an extraterritorial corridor would create a sustained security risk for the Armenian state. This would provide the Kremlin with significant leverage to continue its pressure on Armenia’s nascent democracy. Russia-Azerbaijan’s strategic alliance was formalized in the Declaration of Allied Interaction between the two countries, signed on Feb. 22, 2022, two days before the start of the full-scale Russian invasion in Ukraine.

In terms of the depth and scope of issues covered, that declaration is similar to the Shushi Declaration that Azerbaijan signed with Turkey in 2021. The alliance formed with Russia, like the one with Turkey, also covers deep cooperation and coordination, impacting military, mass media, and the energy sector. The latter agreement, and subsequent gas deals with Russia, translated into laundering Russian gas, via Azerbaijan, for European markets.

By contrast, the rules-based path toward regional connectivity in the South Caucasus that is advocated by Armenia, with support from the EU and the United States, would further loosen Russian control over the region.

Importantly, a regionally integrated South Caucasus would complement the newly unveiled India-Middle East-Europe Economic Corridor (IMEC), Washington’s answer to China’s Belt and Road Initiative.

The Hamas-Israel war has been a tragic reminder that unresolved conflicts can derail the best-laid infrastructure plans. A stable and rules-based regional connectivity in the South Caucasus offers an important path for India-Europe connection. Armenia’s southern Syunik region, and the potential for broad-based regional connectivity that it holds, is especially important for Washington, Brussels, and New Delhi as geopolitical rivalries of the Eurasian continent continue to grow unabated.

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A military attack to carve out the Zangezur corridor in Armenia would spark a war between Armenia and Azerbaijan and could produce a partial or full occupation by Baku of Armenia’s southern Syunik region. It would also create a legal black hole, as the Western world would largely not recognize the conquest.

But it would be seen as a strategic win for Russia, Iran, China, and Turkey. An invasion of Armenia would embolden and bind together—through a web of opaque, sanctions-proof territorial corridors and entities—what many analysts have warned is a rising bloc of militaristic and revisionist Eurasian autocracies.

Indeed, some observers have recognized the interlocking authoritarian networks and their coordination on the Eurasian continent as a so-called Fortress Eurasia, referring to the emergence of interdependent strategic partnerships across the Eurasian landmass. Azerbaijan’s comprehensive strategic partnerships both with Russia and Turkey have made Baku the intermediary and conduit of the expansion of the Fortress Eurasia. The durability of Armenia’s southern Syunik region is thus a litmus test for the global rules-based order.

Extraterritorial corridors—whether they are Aliyev’s Zangezur corridor or Putin’s Zaporizhzhia corridor—weaken a century-long global norm against conquest and erode territorial sovereignty. Limited military operations and partial annexations are on the rise worldwide, creating conditions for escalation into full-blown wars.

Such conditions are present today in the nexus of interests knotted in Armenia’s south, and the outcome will have global implications for the shape of Eurasia for decades to come. But the opportunity for regional, rules-based integration in the South Caucasus is also real, and it, too, can be realized, if Armenia’s Syunik region is protected. Connectivity on Western terms in Eurasia is now contingent on Armenia’s territorial integrity.

Apple warns multiple Armenians of notorious Pegasus spyware attacks, expert points finger at Azerbaijan

 15:27, 1 November 2023

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 1, ARMENPRESS. Apple has warned multiple iPhone users in Armenia that they’ve been targeted in attempted state-sponsored espionage attacks, including through Pegasus, the infamous spyware developed by the Israeli cyber-arms company NSO Group designed to be covertly and remotely installed on mobile phones.

Information security expert Samvel Martirosyan said on November 1 that this recent wave of warnings from Apple is the continuation of other cases. There’ve been several waves of similar hacking attacks since the 2020 war unleashed by Azerbaijan, Martirosyan said at a press conference.

“These days, numerous citizens in Armenia are receiving such notifications. The warnings don’t mention who was behind the attack. I can say that most of the studied cases pertain to Pegasus spyware attacks targeting mobile phones. It is a spyware developed by a private Israeli company, which is sold to state agencies of several countries. Reality shows that dictatorships use it against the civil society. The most active user is Azerbaijan. And this case related to Armenia is highly unusual in terms of Azerbaijan factually using this program as a cyberweapon against Armenia with permission from the Israeli government,” Martirosyan said.

CyberHUB-AM co-founder Artur Papyan warned Android users that if they haven’t received any warnings, it doesn’t mean that they haven’t been targeted.

Once the phone is infected with Pegasus, those behind the attack can get access to the entire information on the device.

Apple users are advised to install the latest updates for security reasons and use the Lockdown Mode if they suspect they are targeted.

Several hundreds of people have been targeted in Armenia, according to Martirosyan.

“These waves appeared during the war. This process has been taking place for over two years. Those targeted include both current and former government officials, oppositionists, journalists, staffers of various state bodies, and employees of foreign organizations working in Armenia. 30% of the cases that have applied to us were unsuccessful attacks, but the rest were successful. Some people have received such notifications several times. The phones of these people and their family members are infected,” he said.

The use of Pegasus is rather expensive, and targeting only one phone through the spyware costs the hackers somewhere between 20,000 to 60,000 dollars.