CivilNet: 27 Years Later, the UN Security Council Discusses the Karabakh Conflict yet Again

CIVILNET.AM

1 October, 2020 10:27

The United Nations Security Council addressed the Nagorno Karabakh conflict on September 29 in an emergency closed-door session in New York. Following the meeting, the members called for “Karabakh clashes to end immediately.”

The Security Council has 15 members, five of which – the US, Russia, China, France, and the UK – are permanent members and have veto power.

The discussion was initiated by Estonia, which is one of the non-permanent member states of the Security Council. It is unclear whether the UN Security Council will adopt a resolution as a result of the session. 

The last time the UN Security Council addressed Nagorno Karabakh was 27 years ago, in November of 1993, when it adopted its fourth and final resolution regarding the conflict. This occurred after the Armenian forces arrived at the shores of the Arax River. It was the only resolution out of the four that mentioned the engagement of Armenian armed forces in the Karabakh conflict.

As a result of Baku's diplomatic efforts, the Security Council first adopted a resolution regarding the conflict in April 1993, when Armenian forces went into Karvachar. All four resolutions – 822, 853, 874, and 884, were adopted during the most active phases of hostilities, from April to Nov. 1993.

During this six-month period, the territory of Karabakh more than doubled. It is worth noting that in May 1992, when Armenia and Karabakh became physically connected through the Lachin Humanitarian Corridor, the UN Security Council did not adopt a resolution. Presumably, the international community had understood the reasons for the conflict, the issue of people’s security, and humanitarian measures that needed to be taken. They understood that the safety of the people of Nagorno Karabakh would be under threat if there was no land connecting the region to its only security guarantor, Armenia.

In all four resolutions adopted by the UN Security Council, there were two main points and demands — to put an end to fighting and hostile military operations, and to have the willingness to negotiate. In all four resolutions, the council urged the Karabakh armed forces to withdraw their units from the "occupied territories of Azerbaijan" and for Armenia to use its influence to ensure that the Nagorno Karabakh authorities complied with the provisions of the resolutions.

It’s a paradox that all four resolutions were being undermined by Azerbaijan despite being the party that initiated their adoption. It became apparent that for Baku the only acceptable point in all four resolutions was the one which called on Armenian forces to withdraw from the territories. Moreover, despite urging the adoption of all four resolutions, Azerbaijan used military force to attempt to gain an advantage. Their reasoning was to have a stronger position at the negotiation table. In all instances, Azerbaijan failed to gain an advantage. 

Following Resolution 822, which was adopted following the events that transpired in Karvachar, the UN Security Council adopted Resolution 853. This time the focus was Aghdam. It is worth noting that after leaving Aghdam, for the first time Baku – with both written text and orally – expressed a desire to enter into direct negotiations with the military and political leadership of Karabakh. The first talks took place in late July 1993 in the Martakert region. In September of the same year, a secret meeting took place in Moscow between the then-Karabakh leader Robert Kocharyan, and then-Azerbaijani President Heydar Aliyev. In his archives, Russian mediator Vladimir Kazimirov saved a document that Baku authorities sent to Stepanakert. In the document, the Azerbaijanis used the wording Mountainous Nagorno Karabakh Republic to describe the region. Kazimirov humorously recalls advising the Azerbaijanis to remove the word republic and resend a new text.

UN Security Council Resolutions 874 and 884 called on the Armenian forces to withdraw their troops from Füzuli, Ghubatlu, and the territories on Arax River. Only Resolution 884 refers to Armenia's direct participation in the conflict.

Armenian forces expanded their security zone again after November 1993, but the UN Security Council did not adopt another resolution. On Dec. 17, 1993,  Azerbaijan launched a large-scale offensive along the entire front. This was the deadliest phase of the war, in which more than 5,000 people were killed over the span of five months. Azerbaijan was able to achieve some success in the Horadis region, as well as in Karvachar. While Azerbaijan managed to hold the land it captured in Horadis, it suffered a huge defeat in Karvachar, leaving behind hundreds of corpses in the snow-covered ranges of Mrav Mountain.

Today, Azerbaijan continuously refers to the UN Security Council resolutions, selectively emphasizing only those points that are in its interests. Baku has been making diplomatic efforts to transfer the negotiating platform from OSCE Minsk Group into other international spaces, including the UN, where it believes it can find a more favorable solution.

According to the latest official reports, as a result of the operations launched by Azerbaijan on Sept. 27, 2020, the Azerbaijani side has suffered more than 400 casualties. The Azeri Armed Forces lost a total of four helicopters, 36 ATS, 36 tanks, and an infantry combat vehicle, as well as two military engineering vehicles, 47 armored vehicles, and one aircraft.

The Armenian side has suffered more than 100 casualties.

Information war cranks up as Azerbaijan & Armenia show more footage of alleged military victories in violent border flare-up

RT – Russia Today
Sept 28 2020

As Azerbaijan and Armenia lock horns on the battlefield over the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region, their media machines are rolling out videos, each purportedly showing the losses the opposing side suffered in Sunday’s clashes.

Azerbaijan has launched a military operation against the forces of the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh Republic, an ethnic Armenian enclave that broke away from Azerbaijan three decades ago. The so-called “counter offensive” was allegedly launched in response to shelling of Azeri troops by Armenian forces. However, Yerevan has denied this and said it was Azerbaijan who broke the ceasefire.

Both parties reported military successes over the course of the day, while denying taking any casualties of their own in the process.

A video released by the Azeris, on Sunday evening, showed an apparent airstrike on a military vehicle. It also shows what appears to be a column of military vehicles on a dirt road, including one visibly damaged tank. The footage was filmed by a reconnaissance drone.

Meanwhile, the Armenian Defense Ministry published a video of an attack on a pair of infantry fighting vehicles, followed by what appears to be the aftermath of an ambush of a military convoy.
Both sides previously released similar footage of other episodes to demonstrate the cost of the conflict presumably paid by the rival side. The authenticity of the materials could not be independently verified.

Armenian Defense Minister participates in joint CIS, SCO and CSTO meeting in Moscow

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 18:03, 4 September, 2020

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 4, ARMENPRESS. Minister of Defense Davit Tonoyan participated in a defense ministerial joint session of the CIS, Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) and the CSTO countries.

Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoygu said in opening remarks that this is the first meeting in such a format and that international military cooperation will be boosted after the session. A number of documents within the frameworks of CIS and CSTO were signed, defense ministry spokesperson Shushan Stepanyan said. 

The Russian military also presented details from the development and trials of the "Sputnik V" – the COVID-19 vaccine developed by Russia.

Participants of the meeting then visited the Main Cathedral of the Russian Armed Forces and the Road of Memory Museum in Moscow.

Using the museum’s interactive search system, the Armenian Minister of Defense found facts about his grandfather Hovhannes Poghos Hakobov, a veteran of WW2.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 08/31/2020

                                        Monday, 

Serzh Sarkisian’s Former Bodyguard Again Under Investigation

        • Gayane Saribekian

Armenia - President Serzh Sarkisian (R) and his chief bodyguard Vachagan 
Ghazarian (L), Yerevan, April 14, 2012.

Law-enforcement authorities confirmed on Monday that they have launched a fresh 
criminal investigation into the former chief bodyguard of ex-President Serzh 
Sarkisian almost one year after he transferred 2.9 billion drams ($6 million) to 
the state.

A spokeswoman for the Special Investigative Service (SIS) told RFE/RL’s Armenian 
service that Vachagan Ghazarian is suspected of having misused large amounts of 
public funds in his past capacity as deputy chief of a security agency providing 
bodyguards to Armenia’s leaders. She did not give any other details, saying only 
that Ghazarian has not been formally charged with any crime so far.

In a report not refuted by the authorities, 1in.am said Ghazarian could be 
prosecuted for illegally ordering an employee of the State Protection Service 
(SPS) to work as a driver for his wife and forcing six other SPS officers to 
work as security guards at a Yerevan music club owned by him and his wife.

The officers allegedly guarded the club at taxpayers’ expense from 2013-2017. 
They have already been interrogated by investigators, according to the media 
outlet.


Armenia - Vachagan Ghazarian empties his bag filled with cash after being 
arrested by the National Security Service in Yerevan, 25 June 2018.

Ghazarian headed Sarkisian’s security detail for over two decades. He was 
arrested in June 2018 on charges of “illegal enrichment” and false asset 
disclosure shortly after the “Velvet Revolution” that toppled Armenia’s former 
leader. He was subsequently also charged with tax evasion.

A Yerevan court freed Ghazarian on bail a few months later, after he and his 
wife, Ruzanna Beglarian, agreed to “compensate” the state for taxes evaded by 
them. The SIS announced in October 2019 that the couple has completed the $6 
million payment. In return, the law-enforcement agency dropped the criminal 
charges.

Officers of Armenia’s police and National Security Service (NSS) found $1.1 
million and 230,000 euros in cash when they raided Ghazarian’s Yerevan apartment 
in June 2018. The NSS said he carried a further $120,000 and 436 million drams 
($900,000) in a bag when he was caught outside a commercial bank in Yerevan a 
few days later.

In early 2019, the NSS secured an even heftier payout, worth $30 million, from 
Serzh Sarkisian’s indicted brother Aleksandr. The money was held in Aleksandr 
Sarkisian’s Armenian bank account frozen by the security service following the 
2018 revolution.



Putin Again Congratulates Kocharian


Russia – Russian President Vladimir Putin (L) and Armenian President Robert 
Kocharian meet in Sochi, August 20, 2004

Russian President Vladimir Putin telephoned Robert Kocharian on Monday to 
congratulate his indicted former Armenian counterpart on his 66th birthday 
anniversary.
Putin also sent Kocharian a separate congratulatory message on the occasion.

“People in Russia know you as a remarkable statesman who has done a great deal 
for the development of modern Armenia,” read the telegram publicized by the 
Kremlin. “We highly value your personal contribution to strengthening the 
friendship and alliance between our countries.”

Putin has made a pointing of congratulating Kocharian since the latter was first 
arrested in July 2018 on charges stemming from the 2008 post-election violence 
in Yerevan. He was also subsequently charged with bribery. The Russian Foreign 
Ministry criticized the arrest as politically motivated.

Kocharian, who strongly denies all charges leveled against him, was released 
from custody in August 2018, only to be arrested again three months later.

The ex-president, who ruled Armenia from 1998-2008, was again set free days 
after going on trial in May 2019. He was arrested for a third time nearly two 
months later.

The Russian ambassador to Armenia, Sergei Kopyrkin, was criticized by Prime 
Minister Nikol Pashinian’s political allies and summoned to the Armenian Foreign 
Ministry after meeting with Kocharian shortly before his third arrest. Putin 
continued to signal support for Kocharian even after that. He met with 
Kocharian’s wife Bella during an October 2019 visit to Yerevan.

Kocharian, who is very critical of Pashinian’s administration, was freed again 
in June this year after paying a record $4.1 million bail set by Armenia’s Court 
of Appeals. The bulk of the hefty sum was reportedly provided by four wealthy 
Russian businessmen.

Armenian officials maintain that Moscow’s gestures of support for Kocharian have 
not damaged Armenia’s close political, economic and military ties with Russia. 
The ex-president’s loyalists claim the opposite.



Mayor Accused Of Broken Promises Over Yerevan’s Transport Woes

        • Artak Khulian

Armenia - An overcrowded public transport minibus in Yerevan, October 16, 2018.

An opposition member of Yerevan’s municipal council on Monday accused Mayor Hayk 
Marutian of failing to deliver on his promises to completely revamp and 
modernize the city’s collapsing system of public transport.

Ever since the mid-1990s, the system has been dominated by minibuses belonging 
to private companies. Few of them have invested in their fleet of aging vehicles 
in the past decade. The minibuses as well as a smaller number of buses provided 
by the municipal authorities have become even more overcrowded as a result.

A British transport consultancy, WYG, was contracted by Yerevan’s former 
municipal administration in 2016 to propose a detailed plan to change the 
transport network. Then Mayor Taron Markarian essentially accepted the proposals 
in 2017, pledging to replace the battered minibuses with new and larger buses by 
the end of 2018.

Markarian was forced to resign in July 2018 two months after the “Velvet 
Revolution” that brought down Armenia’s former government. Marutian, his 
successor allied to Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian, pledged to address the 
problem after taking office in October 2018.

Marutian’s office asked Pashinian’s government last year to raise more than $100 
million to buy 820 modern buses which it said would end the Armenian capital’s 
transport woes. In a related development, it called in April this year an 
international tender for the purchase of 100 new and large buses. The tender was 
not completed for still unclear reasons.

The municipal administration announced in July it will buy instead 100 small 
buses and hold another tender for that purpose. The international tender was 
formally launched on Monday.

Davit Khazhakian, an opposition member of the city council, claimed that 
municipality is planning to buy more minibuses, rather than regular size buses 
repeatedly promised by Marutian. He said the bidding specifications are such 
that the tender will inevitably be won by the Russian company GAZ whose GAZelle 
minibuses form the backbone of Yerevan’s public transport network.

“The authorities have told the public for the last couple of years that they 
will buy new buses and create a new network,” Khazhakian told a news conference. 
“But they are going to commission more GAZelles.”

Deputy Mayor Hrachya Sargsian did not deny that the municipality wants to 
continue to at least partly rely on minibuses. He insisted, however, that the 
outcome of the tender is not a forgone conclusion and that Western carmakers 
could also win it.

Sargsian also told RFE/RL’s Armenian service that the municipality has not 
abandoned its plans to purchases hundreds of new buses. But he could not say 
when the Armenian capital will have a new and modern transport system.

Marutian said last year that nearly half of some 900 minibuses catering to 
commuters in Yerevan are too old and must be decommissioned.



Armenia In Talks With Russia Over Another Fighter Jet Deal

        • Harry Tamrazian

Armenia -- Su-30SM fighter jets of the Armenian Air Force fly over Yerevan, May 
5, 2020.

Armenia is holding talks with Russia to buy more Sukhoi Su-30SM fighter jets for 
its armed forces, Defense Minister Davit Tonoyan said over the weekend.
“The acquisition of a new batch [of Su-30SM jets] is planned,” he told RFE/RL’s 
Armenian service. “Negotiations are underway at the moment.”

Tonoyan, who most recently visited Moscow last week, gave no details of the 
negotiations.

In a significant boost to its small Air Force, Armenia has already purchased 
four such multirole jets at an undisclosed price. They were delivered to an 
airbase in Gyumri in December. Tonoyan said earlier in 2019 that Yerevan plans 
to acquire eight more Su-30SMs in the coming years.

Su-30SM is a modernized version of a heavy fighter jet developed by Russia’s 
Sukhoi company in the late 1980s. The Russian military first commissioned it in 
2012.

Before receiving the first four Su-30SMs the Armenian Air Force largely 
consisted of 15 or so Su-25 aircraft designed for close air support and ground 
attack missions. The Armenian Defense Ministry contracted on August 24 a Russian 
defense company, United Aircraft Corporation (UAC), to modernize some of these 
aging jets.

Tonoyan revealed on Saturday that UAC will repair and upgrade four of them in 
Russia. He stressed the importance of that deal, saying that the Armenian 
military had sought it “for years.”

The deal was signed in Moscow in Tonoyan’s presence. While in the Russian 
capital, the latter also attended the opening ceremony of the International Army 
Games and met with Russia’s Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu.

Tonoyan praised the current state of Russian-Armenian military cooperation and, 
in particular, defense contracts signed by Moscow and Yerevan in the last 
several years.

He also said: “In the area of defense industry there have been quite interesting 
developments. I don’t want to go into details now, but I am buoyed by the 
involvement of private companies in the creation of [Russian-Armenian] joint 
ventures in Armenia.”

One such development is the production of advanced models of Kalashnikov assault 
rifles which was launched by the Armenian company Neitron in July. Russia’s 
Kalashnikov Concern has granted Neitron a 10-year license to assemble up to 
50,000 AK-103 rifles annually.

Russia has long been the principal source of military hardware supplied to the 
Armenian army. Membership in Russian-led Collective Security Treaty Organization 
(CSTO) allows Armenia to acquire Russian weapons at knockdown prices and even 
for free.


Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2020 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

 


11 die of alcohol poisoning in Armenian town

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 12:09, 1 September, 2020

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 1, ARMENPRESS. 11 deaths have been reported from alcohol poisoning of unknown origin in the Armenian town of Armavir, Armenian healthcare minister’s spokesperson Alina Nikoghosyan said on Faebook.

Currently, 4 people with the suspected alcohol poisoning are in intensive care units.

1 person has applied to hospital with the same symptoms, but refused from medical care and has been discharged.

The Investigative Committee launched a criminal case over the incident.

Investigation is underway to clarify all the details of the incident.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Neither Peace Nor War: Why Clashes on the Armenia-Azerbaijan Border Didn’t Change the Status Quo

VALDAI, Russia
Aug 21 2020
 
 
 
21.08.2020
Sergey Markedonov
 
 
Has the July escalation brought about any significant changes? It may be too soon to tell. At the same time, it is clear that the transition from military escalation to a new diplomatic round and vice versa, known as the Nagorno-Karabakh pendulum, has been delayed this time. After the four-day war, the negotiating process resumed almost at the same time as the ceasefire agreement was reached. This time, however, there could be other factors at play, writes Sergey Markedonov, Leading Researcher of the Euro-Atlantic Security Centre at MGIMO University
 
The new round of military escalation along the border between Armenia and Azerbaijan in July 2020 projected the South Caucasus region into the spotlight. Although sidelined in the media by the developments in southeastern Ukraine and in the Middle East over the past six years, this is still one of the most explosive regions in Eurasia. Moreover, conflicts along ethnic and political lines in the Caucasus that emerged with the collapse of the Soviet Union have to be placed in the context of intense international competition and rivalries between countries.
 
As such, the Turkish and Iranian factors are essential for understanding the prospects of the Nagorno-Karabakh settlement, just like the developments around Abkhazia and South Ossetia are inseparable from the confrontation between Russia and the West, especially considering NATO’s possible expansion into former Soviet republics. Some researchers have argued that the post-Soviet space is about to shift from “ethno-politics to geopolitics,”   with disputes over ethnicity-related matters supplemented over time with the competing interests of external actors.
 
There has been no shortage of analysis on the July escalation in the confrontation between Armenia and Azerbaijan today. All the commentators seem to agree that this was the largest escalation since the April 2016 four-day war in Nagorno-Karabakh. It was even more dangerous in many aspects, since this time the confrontation focused on the state border, not the line of contact. Armenia is a member of the Collective Security Treaty Organisation (CSTO). Azerbaijan, while traditionally seeking to distance itself from integration projects, has a military and political alliance with Turkey, which has the second-largest army among NATO countries. Sifting through all these statements and comments, we need to find an answer to an essential question: was the July escalation yet another military incident (even if larger than the preceding ones), or did it upend the existing status quo? If we assume that the status quo has fallen apart, what future pathways might there be? What is the probability of Armenia and Azerbaijan sliding into a new war? Or could a diplomatic deal be possible, paving the way to a peaceful settlement? If both of these scenarios fail to materialise, would it be possible for the two countries to continue teetering on the brink between peace and war, as they have been doing for several decades?
 
The tenets of the Armenia-Azerbaijan status quo
 
The new round of military escalation along the border between Armenia and Azerbaijan in July 2020 projected the South Caucasus region into the spotlight. Although sidelined in the media by the developments in southeastern Ukraine and in the Middle East over the past six years, this is still one of the most explosive regions in Eurasia. Moreover, conflicts along ethnic and political lines in the Caucasus that emerged with the collapse of the Soviet Union have to be placed in the context of intense international competition and rivalries between countries.
 
The answer to these questions starts with a definition of the status quo in the South Caucasus and in terms of the relations between Armenia and Azerbaijan. What are its main elements and have they been violated or broken?
 
The dissolution of the Soviet Union made the South Caucasus republics independent, resulting in the collapse of the old order. The new status quo could not be achieved peacefully, and required four armed conflicts and the creation of three unrecognised entities, not to mention tens and hundreds of thousands of refugees and multiple casualties. Between 1992 and 1994, the ethnic and political conflicts in the Caucasus were frozen, but not resolved, with Russia taking on the exclusive role of a mediator, and recognised as such by the United States and its allies.
 
Not everyone was happy with the frozen state of regional conflicts in the 1990s, for example Georgia and Azerbaijan, who wanted to disrupt the balance of power that did not benefit them. They sought to find an alternative to Moscow’s privileged status, which eventually transformed conflicts raging in the South Caucasus into international issues. This quest would later unfreeze conflicts in South Ossetia and Abkhazia in 2004-2008, giving rise to a second status quo based on two parallel political and legal frameworks: the same territories that used to be autonomies within the Georgian Soviet Socialist Republic exist as independent states and Russian-occupied territories of an independent Georgia.
 
However, the conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan did not reach a similar turning point. Unlike the standoff in Abkhazia and South Ossetia, the status quo has changed little between the 1990s and 2000s. Active hostilities stopped on May 12, 1994 with the coming into force of a permanent ceasefire agreement,    followed by talks mediated by an ad-hoc OSCE Minsk Group. That said, these negotiations have so far failed to produce any substantial breakthrough. To an extent, this was due to the fact that the conflict between Yerevan and Baku was not regarded as a proxy-conflict between Russia and the West, unlike the incidents between Georgia and South Ossetia and between Georgia and Abkhazia. Even when Moscow decided to recognise the independence of South Ossetia and Abkhazia, and later annexed Crimea, the United States did not refuse to work with Russia on the Nagorno-Karabakh issue. This explains why the Minsk Group has survived for so long, and the convergence of approaches guiding efforts by the West and Russia to resolve the conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan. Unlike Abkhazia, South Ossetia or Transnistria, there were no Russian or international peacekeeping forces in Nagorno-Karabakh. The balance of power between Azerbaijan and Armenia has been and is likely to remain one of the core elements of the existing status quo.   As such, the question of deploying peacekeepers is part of the negotiating process.
 
Nevertheless, the conflicting sides have not been ready to make concessions on all points, including the future status of Nagorno-Karabakh, the de-occupation of the former Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Region, and returning refugees. It is unlikely that any breakthrough ideas for settling the conflict will emerge any time soon. In fact, all the initiatives that are of any relevance have already been proposed, including package agreements, stage-by-stage approaches, the idea of a shared state and exchange of territories. In November 2020, it will be the 13th anniversary of the Madrid Principles that set out the framework for a peace settlement. Eleven years ago, in July 2009, Russia, the US and France as the co-chairs of the Minsk Group presented an updated version of the “basic principles” with a recommendation that the conflicting sides “reach an agreement.” In all these years, Baku and Yerevan have not made even the slightest step towards implementing the principles proposed by the mediators.
 
Without the will or desire to reach a negotiated compromise, the two sides have alternated between diplomatic rounds and military pressure. Any resurgence in the negotiating process is interspersed with ceasefire violations, even if no one has so far questioned the effectiveness of the permanent ceasefire agreement or the status of the OSCE Minsk Group, although its critics were never in short supply in both states of the South Caucasus.
 
There was one equally important sphere not covered by the “basic principles:” the border between Armenia and Azerbaijan outside of Nagorno-Karabakh. In fact, the July escalation took place 300 kilometres from the Nagorno-Karabakh line of contact. Except for the former Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Region, there are no territories along this border seeking to change their status. The problem, however, is that this border has not been demarcated or clearly defined, which means that there are grey areas, claimed by both Yerevan and Baku. This also makes military incidents inescapable, and detached from the negotiating process. These skirmishes can be best described as an appendix to the Nagorno-Karabakh peace process.
 
Therefore, “neither peace nor war” is the best way the status quo in Armenia-Azerbaijan relations can be described. While not officially at war, Yerevan and Baku have been unwilling to promote diplomatic relations. What is left is an unsettled conflict and talks that have been going on for many years, with occasional ups and downs, alternating with armed incidents.
 
An explosive permanence
 
Has the July escalation brought about any significant changes? It may be too soon to tell. At the same time, it is clear that the transition from military escalation to a new diplomatic round and vice versa, known as the Nagorno-Karabakh pendulum, has been delayed this time. After the four-day war, the negotiating process resumed almost at the same time as the ceasefire agreement was reached. This time, however, there could be other factors at play. After all, both Armenia and Azerbaijan are facing public health emergencies due to the coronavirus pandemic, which makes reviving the negotiating process problematic, to say the least.
 
However, Yerevan and Baku refused to raise the stakes too high. Armenia has always a trump card up its sleeve, the possible recognition of the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic. This topic keeps resurfacing in the Armenian media and on social networks whenever the conflict escalates, and this time was not an exception. So far, Yerevan has chosen another path, for obvious reasons: should Armenia recognise Nagorno-Karabakh as an independent state, it would be viewed as a revisionist state by international mediators, who are otherwise quite neutral regarding the conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan. This move would have serious ramifications, which explains Yerevan’s caution and why it treats its Nagorno-Karabakh trump card as a last resort. In 2016 and in 2020 the escalation did not produce any significant territorial changes. In 2016, the unrecognised Nagorno-Karabakh Republic’s infrastructure remained intact, and in 2020 neither side made any foray into the other’s territory, enough to refer to the incident as “occupation” or “liberation.” Furthermore, it has to be noted that escalation along the border did not cause any increase in firing incidents or sabotage in Nagorno-Karabakh, the epicentre of the conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan.
 
The escalation did not prompt any of the parties involved to raise concerns regarding the effectiveness of the Minsk Group, although it remains quite controversial. Nevertheless, neither Baku nor Yerevan called for it to be dissolved, or for new mediators to be brought in. Outside actors remained entrenched in their positions. Moscow continued playing the role of a special or even privileged mediator, appreciated by both Armenia and Azerbaijan. Turkey, on the contrary, remained Baku’s staunch supporter, while Iran continued advocating a political settlement owned and led by the countries within the region. The confrontation between Armenia and Azerbaijan remains at the periphery of the interests of the US and the EU, at least until the failure of the current status quo becomes obvious. Washington, Brussels and Paris are ready to tolerate Moscow’s special mediating role in this part of Eurasia. If the events take a turn similar to what happened in Abkhazia and South Ossetia, the reaction will be different. But nothing suggests that this will happen.
 
Therefore, the existing status quo remains in place. The recent escalation came as a major shock, and incidents of this kind are dangerous, considering the fragility of the mechanisms that prevent Baku and Yerevan from sliding into war. Armenia and Azerbaijan have so far preserved the military and political balance in Nagorno-Karabakh, as well as along their border. There will be a chance of avoiding the worst case scenario as long as they are unable to take advantage of the differences between the great powers. At the same time, the two sides are not ready to achieve a breakthrough in negotiations. Against this backdrop, it is essential to return to the negotiating table in order to push the Nagorno-Karabakh pendulum from escalation towards negotiation. This, however, would not mean that the pendulum would not swing back towards confrontation. The sides constantly test the fragile balance of power between them, but after a military escalation they are likely to resume talks, at the very least in order to manage escalations and prevent the conflict from unfreezing. As of today, the conflict will likely remain in neutral territory, teetering between peace and war. There is one caveat, though: on a scale between war and peace, at this point in time all actors, including those involved both directly and indirectly, are much closer to war than to peace.
Views expressed are of individual Members and Contributors, rather than the Club's, unless explicitly stated otherwise.
  
 

Sports: Omonia edge past Ararat in Armenia to advance

Cyprus Mail
Aug 19 2020
By Iacovos Constantinou

Omonia scraped through to the second qualifying round of the Champions League after defeating Armenian Ararat in Yerevan thanks to a goal by Tiago in the fourth minute of extra time in a poor and dull game.

It took either side almost half an hour to create a worthwhile chance and this fell to Ararat’s Gouffran but his goal-bound effort was cleared off the line by a defender with Omonia keeper Fabiano well beaten.

This lifted the Armenian side and a minute later Fabiano had to be alert to block Lopes’ dangerous strike.
Two minutes before the break Ararat had another excellent chance to take the lead but Oubanjo’s clever backheel went the wrong side of the post.

Omonia’s only chance of the opening half came in the 43rd minute and this after Ararat goalkeeper Čupić took too long to clear the ball and was charged down by rookie striker Kakoulis, but the rebound went behind for a goal-kick to spare the goalkeepers blushes.

Whatever Omonia coach Henning Berg told his players at half time it worked, as it was the Nicosia team who took control of the game and had the lion’s share of possession in the second half.

But despite their domination they had just one chance to show for it and this came early in the period but their recent signing from Anorthosis Michal Duris fluffed his shot from close range allowing Čupić to parry it away.

Omonia did have a scare at the other end in a rare Ararat attack but Odubanjos’ shot was deflected wide for a corner.

It was to be expected that extra time would take its toll on the players and Omonia managed to break the deadlock in the 94th minute after Tiago raced through unchallenged following Bauteac’s pass to put his side ahead.

A few minutes later Ararat were left with 10 men after Humanes received his marching orders after picking up his second yellow card, but this seemed to galvanise the Armenian team, who could have equalised in the 110th minute but Fabiano was again saved by an outstretched boot of Hubočan.

In the second half of extra time though Omonia controlled play and were rarely troubled by the tired 10-man Armenian side.

Omonia will now face Legia Warsaw in Poland next Wednesday in the second qualifying round and if they are to stand any chance of progressing, Berg’s side will need to improve considerably.

Israeli political scientist: Armenia faces watershed considering immigration of Lebanese Armenians and the outflow of its own citizens

Arminfo, Armenia
Aug 13 2020

ArmInfo. Considering the situation faced by the Lebanese Armenians today, one can expect their mass migration to their historical homeland or to other countries.   About a hundred refugees from Lebanon have already arrived in Armenia  yesterday. A similar opinion was expressed to ArmInfo by Israeli  public figure, political scientist Avigdor Eskin.

"The Armenian community was severely affected by the explosion: 15  Armenians were killed, about 300 were injured, the scale of material  damage is colossal. Today, about 150 thousand Armenians still live in  Lebanon. In times of peace, they were considered a thriving community  of a prosperous Middle East country. However, for almost a year the  country has experienced the hardest economic and political crisis.   Armenians found themselves between Sunni Muslims, Shiite Muslims,  Maronite Christians and Druze.  After the explosion in the port of  Beirut, Lebanon turned out to be a single disaster zone – 80% of  goods were delivered to Lebanon through a port that does not exist  now. People are in danger of hunger, " Eskin outlined the situation.

Armenia, according to his estimates, is a vivid example of a national  state. One of the initial tasks of which was to gather all the  Armenians of the Diaspora in their newly independent country.  However, in the first 30 years of independence, the flow from the  Diaspora to their historical homeland was small. Meanwhile, the  number of those who left Armenia is from one third to half of its  citizens. In this context, the political scientist considers it  appropriate to recall Israel, which for 72 years of independence, has  multiplied the Jewish population twelve-fold.

The secret of Israel's success in repatriating Eskin is determined by  the far from idealistic aspirations of most of the Israeli  repatriates. The latter, as a rule, came to Israel in search of  refuge from adversity or simply a better life. And hardly a large  part of the same million repatriates who arrived over the past 30  years only from the former USSR countries did so at the 2000-year-old  call of Zion. The massive immigration to Israel from Europe and Arab  countries has also become a forced displacement rather than an act of  idealism.

Eskin explains the secret of Israel's success in repatriating by the  fact that aspirations of most of the Israeli repatriates were far  from being idealistic. The latter, as a rule, came to Israel in  search of refuge from adversity or simply a better life. And it is  unlikely that the large part of those million repatriates who arrived  over the past 30 years from the former USSR countries did that at  call of Zion. The massive immigration to Israel from Europe and Arab  countries has also become a forced displacement rather than an act of  idealism.

"What useful conclusions can Armenia draw from this? The most  important role in such cases is played by the country's readiness to  receive refugees from the Diaspora and the ability to use the crisis  situation for mass immigration. This should include an absorption  program for new arrivals. In Israel, repatriates were assisted in  purchasing housing, language learning, employment. Direct work with  compatriots who are in distress or crisis is also an important  factor. They should be provided with direct assistance on the spot  and their transfer to their historical homeland should be ensured,  "he said.

All this, according to Eskin, is extremely important, but secondary.  Since everything is decided not by numbers, but by a qualitative,  idealistic aspiration. And its consequence is an atmosphere of  encouragement to return to the Motherland. In this light, he noted  that 10 or 20 percent of the returnees were ardent Zionists. And they  were ready to live in tents for years, drain swamps and irrigate the  desert. And it was these people who created the atmosphere and  brought others along with them. The policy of all Israeli governments  to encourage Aliyah (return to the Land), according to the political  scientist, was the result of this very powerful ideological wave.

"In any crisis in the Diaspora, the leaders of Israel urged their  compatriots to return home. And their words were supported by the  deeds of our special international agency" Sokhnut. "It is this  ideological and idealistic surge and strengthening of national  consciousness that Armenia lacks today. As soon as the government  becomes the spokesman for the idea of return, any crisis will be its  catalyst. But the lack of idealism, coupled with a crisis of  governance, give rise to an outflow of the population from the  country to the Diaspora. Now Armenia is facing a difficult test. It  can facilitate the immigration of tens of thousands of Armenians from  Lebanon or remain a passive witness to the immigration of tens of  thousands of its own citizens due to economic crisis casued by  quarantine. This is a harsh reality with which only true ideals can  compete, "Eskin summed up.

At its Core Sèvres Treaty Advances Self-Determination, Says Pashinyan

August 10,  2020


Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan

To mark the 100th anniversary of the Treaty of Sèvres, Armenia’s National Academy of Sciences hosted a conference on Monday entitled “The Treaty of Sèvres and the Armenian Question.”

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan sent remarks to the conference, which were presented by Vice-President of the academy, Yury Shukryan.

In his statement, Pashinyan drew a direct parallel with some of the issues that Armenia and Artsakh are contending with, saying that at the core of the Sèvres Treaty lies the principle of self-determination and equality of nations.

“The Treaty of Sèvres has a significant place in the modern history of the Armenian people,” said Pashinyan. “It is not a coincidence that it remains the subject to academic studies and research. I consider it extremely important that our scholars’ unbiased analysis of the document signed a century ago and the events that preceded it become available to our people and to the wider international community, as well. Today’s conference serves that very purpose,” said Pashinyan.

Speaking about the importance of the treaty, Pashinyan said that that “it was signaling the end of cursed years. Like the Treaty of Versailles in Europe, the Treaty of Sèvres was forming a new system of inter-state relations in the region. [The treaty] was introducing new principles and values, it was establishing not only peace but also justice in [Asia Minor].”

Pashinyan said at the core of the treaty lies the principle of self-determination and equality of nations. The treaty was ending the centuries-old subjugation of people imposed by empires and was giving independence and freedom to peoples of the region.

“Moreover, by providing the right to establish national states in historic territories, it was creating favorable conditions for the peaceful coexistence of Muslim and Christian people in the region, the preservation of civilized diversity of the region and their further development,” said Pashinyan.

“The Treaty of Sèvres is the international document that recognized and affirmed Armenia’s independence. The Republic of Armenia was acting as a legally equal party to this treaty. Centuries after losing independence, the Armenian government was for the first time signing an international treaty with the Great Powers. The Republic of Armenia was being recognized in the defined borders of the treaty as a full member of the international community and a legally equal subject to international law,” added Pashinyan.

The prime minister emphasized that by being a signatory to the treaty, Armenia’s and the Armenian people’s contribution to the allied victory in World War I and the establishment of peace was also being recognized. The treaty was emphasizing and duly appreciating the Armenian people’s role in international relations and the post-war governing of the world.

“Article 89 of the Treaty of Sèvres was stating and affirming the Armenian people’s historic and undisputed relation with the Armenian Highlands, where the Armenian people were born, lived and shaped their statehood and culture for millennia,” said Pashinyan.

“The Treaty of Sèvres was signed in the wake of the Armenian Genocide as the Ottoman Empire was trying to resolve the ‘Armenian Question’ by exterminating the Armenians. Our people were subjected to the most brutal and inhuman suffering. Enormous losses were inflicted on our nation. Meanwhile, the Treaty of Sèvres paved the way for overcoming the consequences of the Genocide. The establishment of the independent Armenian statehood in its ancestral homeland was the fair solution of the “Armenian Question.” Historical justice was being restored. Favorable conditions were created for reinstating our people’s economic and demographic potential and ensuring its natural development,” explained Pashinyan.

“Although the Treaty of Sèvres was never implemented, it continues to be a historical fact, which reflects our long journey to restore our independent statehood. We are bound by duty to remember it, realize its importance and follow its message,” concluded Pashinyan.

Asbarez: Armenia’s Troops Placed on ‘High Alert’ (Video)

July 31,  2020

An Armenia soldier during testing of Made in Armenia military equipment

Made in Armenia Military Equipment Tested and Demonstrated

Armenia’s Defense Ministry on Friday announced that Armenia’s Armed Forces troops in the frontline and other areas have been placed on high alerts as part of a “spot check” of their combat readiness.

This inspection was ordered by the Army’s Chief of Staff Lieutenant-General Onik Gasparyan who will assess the troops’ ability to act quickly in certain situations, clarify the issues of cooperation between the various levels of military staff and conduct drill enacting operative-tactical scenarios.

This inspection comes as joint Turkey-Azerbaijan military exercises are taking place for a third day in various parts of Azerbaijan.

Earlier this week, Defense Minister Davit Tonoyan said that Yerevan will be closely monitoring the exercises and warned of escalation of military aggression on the Armenia-Azerbaijan border.

In a related matter, Armenia’s High-Tech Industry Minister Hakob Arsahakyan said on Friday that the production of military hardware by the country’s military industrial complex has been showing good results.

Arshakyan shared photos of Armenian-made mortars and shells, some of them being tested, and said that the results of trials have been satisfactory.

Arshakyan’s ministry also release footage of combat unmanned aerial vehicles—drones— produced and manufactured in Armenia. The said drones were put into operation during fighting with Azerbaijan on July 13.

“July 13 will be remembered in history as the day, when the combat UAVs produced in Armenia were put into operation,” Defense Ministry official Artsrun Hovhannisyan said at the time. “For the first time, Armenian combat UAVs were used in combat and demonstrated excellent results.”