Asbarez:Azerbaijan is Derailing Agreements, Yerevan Warns CSTO

Artsakh has been under a blockade since Dec. 12, 2022


Yerevan said Thursday that Azerbaijan is actively derailing agreements reached between the leaders of Armenia, Azerbaijan and Russia, among them the November 9, 2020 statement, which put an end to military actions after the Artsakh War.

Speaking at a summit of security council secretaries of the Collective Security Treaty Organization in Minsk, the capital of Belarus, Armenia’s National Security chief Armen Grigoryan emphasized that Azerbaijan continued to use force in an attempt to derail agreements.

Grigoryan also reported on Azerbaijan’s continued blockade of the Lachin Corridor in Artsakh.

According to his press service, Grigoryan called on his colleagues to give an unambiguous and targeted assessment of the current situation in Nagorno Karabakh and take effective measures in order prevent the ethnic cleansing of 120,000 Armenians living in Nagorno Karabakh. 

He said that in this context creating an international mechanism ensuring the rights and security of the population in Nagorno Karabakh remains a priority for Armenia.

Grigoryan stressed that not acknowledging Azerbaijan aggression against Armenia’s sovereign territory and attempting to correlate that with not implementing the border delimitation process was groundless.

During the summit in Minsk, the security council leaders of CSTO member-states also discussed security challenges and regional threats, and decided to increase the number of joint military drills.

“Directions of cooperation in the military and migration spheres, as well as in the information space, were outlined. The importance of increasing the number of CSTO military exercises at different levels,” Russia’s security council said in a press statement, according to the Tass news agency.

The representatives of the CSTO countries paid special attention to the joint fight against international terrorism and extremism, strengthening the anti-terrorist potential of the organization.

“Taking into account the increase in terrorism threat in the immediate vicinity of CSTO’s zones of responsibility, decisions were made regarding the implementation of a complex of operational and preventive measures,” the statement added.

How Azerbaijani lobbying influences American academia

Svante Cornell (center) visits Shushi on a tour organized by the government of Azerbaijan (Twitter)

In the summer of 2000, Svante Cornell drove a motorcycle from Azerbaijan to Turkey to deliver the first barrel of Caspian Sea oil along the newly inaugurated Baku-Ceyhan pipeline. His motorcycle was sponsored by Azercell, Azerbaijan’s chief telecommunications company. A photo from the trip features a smiling Cornell carrying a bright blue barrel of Azerbaijani crude in his sidecar through dry mountainous landscape. 

Pictures of the trip have since been deleted from the website of Cornell’s consulting firm. The photos, obtained through the Wayback Machine, also show Cornell standing at the center of a team of 12 in front of SOCAR, the State Oil Company of Azerbaijan Republic, and a shot of Azerbaijan’s former President Heydar Aliyev addressing the group as “great politicians.” 

Cornell is among the American scholars who has built a successful career writing about Azerbaijan’s politics while cultivating a relationship with its government. He is the chair and co-founder of the Central-Asia Caucasus Institute and Silk Road Studies Program (CACI), a joint research center that encourages “Americans and Europeans to enter into an active and multi-faceted engagement with this region,” as stated on its website. The CACI was affiliated with Johns Hopkins University until 2017, when it joined the American Foreign Policy Council (AFPC), a think tank based in Washington, DC. 

Sources show that over the years, Cornell has received consistent communication from lobbyists who represent Azerbaijan. A review of over 200 pages of FARA filings reveals that Cornell and other key figures from the CACI and the AFPC for years were in close contact with lobbyists from the Podesta Group and the DCI Group, LLC. Cornell also directs a research center partly funded by companies with financial interests in the oil-rich South Caucasus nation. He has worked as a consultant to companies involved with security, energy and defense in the region.

The government of Azerbaijan spends hundreds of thousands of dollars every year to influence scholars at preeminent universities in the United States and shape public opinion of its image. Lobbyists meet and communicate regularly with scholars from institutions including Harvard, Georgetown, Tufts and Boston University about US-Azerbaijan ties and Azerbaijani public relations. Between February and June of 2016 alone, the Podesta Group received $379,325.73 for its work on behalf of the Embassy of the Republic of Azerbaijan, according to a document filed with the Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA). FARA requires agents hired by foreign entities, including foreign governments, to disclose their activities. 

Among the funders of the CACI are oil, gas, mining and tobacco companies with economic interests in the South Caucasus. An archived brochure from the CACI website from 2006, which has since been deleted, states, “Over the years, many corporations active in the region have also provided open-ended support, including Exxon-Mobil, Chevron, Newmont Mining, Phillip Morris, and Unocal.” At the time, both Exxon-Mobil and Chevron were invested in Azerbaijani oil fields. 

In turn, Cornell’s academic writing shows a bias in favor of Azerbaijan. He has published articles celebrating Azerbaijan’s reforms and anti-corruption efforts, blaming Armenia for its war with Azerbaijan in Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh) in 2020, and encouraging cooperation between Azerbaijan and the United States.  

Azerbaijani Presidnet Ilham Aliyev leads conference with academics from around the world (President of Azerbaijan)

A long overdue generational change is taking place in Azerbaijan’s political system, accompanied by what appears to be a serious effort to wean the country off its dependence on oil and to make its state institutions more responsive to the population’s needs,” Cornell writes in a 2019 article published in The American Interest titled “Azerbaijan: Reform Behind a Static Façade.” The reform effort in Azerbaijan provides an opportunity for the U.S.-Azerbaijan political dialogue to be centered on positive cooperation.” Cornell’s favorable depiction is entirely at odds with any objective account of Azerbaijan.

Azerbaijan is an oil-wealthy dictatorship whose ongoing widespread corruption and systemic human rights violations are well-documented by Western journalists and human rights groups. The country has remained in the bottom third of Transparency International’s Corruption Perception Index since 2012, and received a score of 23 out of a 100 in 2022, 0 being highly corrupt. 

The Podesta Group represented the Embassy of the Republic of Azerbaijan in the United States from 2009-2017. The firm sends “informational materials” on behalf of the Azerbaijani Embassy to public officials and media outlets, according to its FARA filings. It also counsels the embassy on US policy, informs nonprofit organizations about global energy security and regional stability in the South Caucasus, and provides the embassy with public relations support.  

A former lobbyist with the Podesta Group who represented Azerbaijan during this time period did not return several phone calls.  

The reputation of the Podesta Group, formerly a lobbying powerhouse in Washington, was damaged when it was subpoenaed during special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 US presidential election. The investigation alleged that former President Donald Trump’s campaign chairman Paul Manafort hired the firm to influence American media and public officials on behalf of pro-Russian Ukrainian politicians. Charges brought against the firm were dropped in 2019. 

From 2014 to 2016, the year that the Podesta Group suspended its operations, the firm contacted Cornell 19 times by email, according to numerous FARA filings. The firm also emailed S. Frederick Starr, co-founder of the CACI, nine times and held several meetings with Ilan Berman, senior vice president at AFPC, and Stephen Blank, senior fellow for Russia at AFPC. The subjects of the emails and meetings were either Azerbaijani public relations or US-Azerbaijan relations.

Cornell initially denied that he had ever been approached by or had any interaction with lobbying firms like the Podesta Group. He said that in his opinion Azerbaijan does not work very actively with lobbying groups in the US.

What I know about them is mostly what I read in the media, but I personally think their role has been overhyped,” Cornell said in an email. “With some exceptions, it seems to me these public relations firms try to maximize the money they get and minimize the work they actually do.”

In a follow-up email, Cornell admitted that he had been approached by the Podesta Group before 2017, when there was a “more concerted effort by PR firms working with the Azerbaijani embassy or other Azerbaijani organizations reaching out to think tanks including ours” than there has been in the past five years, according to Cornell. 

He said the emails consisted of either “invitations to Embassy events and the like, some of which I responded to and attended, and mailings trying to promote the Azerbaijani position on events relating to the Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict, and possibly some domestic issues, which I largely ignored.” 

Svante Cornell (bottom left) joins an academic conference led by Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev (President of Azerbaijan)

Among the events Cornell has accepted invitations to include government-sponsored conferences in Azerbaijan and Artsakh, where Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev has also been in attendance. On April 28, 2022, he participated in a visit organized by the government of Azerbaijan to the city of Shushi, a strategic city in Artsakh with cultural significance to both Armenia and Azerbaijan that was captured by Azerbaijani forces during the 2020 war. American and French ambassadors have refused to visit Shushi in order to avoid the appearance of taking sides in the conflict. 

He also attended a conference on April 13, 2021 hosted by Azerbaijan’s government during which academics from around the world posted questions to President Aliyev. 

“Let me congratulate you and the people of Azerbaijan on the restoration of Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity,” Cornell said during the conference, in reference to Azerbaijan’s victory in the 2020 war with Armenia. Azerbaijan launched a full-scale attack on Artsakh and captured most of the disputed territory. 

“It is clear that this historic achievement has changed the politics of the Caucasus region and far beyond. Most importantly, I think it has shown to the world the capabilities of Azerbaijan and the resolve of Azerbaijani statehood,” Cornell said during the conference. 

Among the academics who attended the conference was Brenda Shaffer. Shaffer regularly publishes scholarly articles on the CACI website, including several she penned jointly with Cornell. 

A 2015 investigation by the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project uncovered that the Caspian Studies Program at Harvard led by Shaffer was set up with funding from the US Azerbaijan Chamber of Commerce, a pro-Azerbaijan pressure group whose Board of Directors includes a vice president of SOCAR. 

“Supported by an overseas regime and an assorted network of overt and undercover lobbyists, [Shaffer] used oil money to build her academic credentials, then in turn used those credentials to promote Azerbaijan’s agendas through Congressional testimony, dozens of newspaper op-eds and media appearances, countless think tank events, and even scholarly publications,” the article says. 

Shaffer and Cornell both also serve on the board of advisors of Caucasus International, a foreign policy journal based in Baku. 

Brenda Shaffer and Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov (Twitter)

Alex Galitsky, program director at the Armenian National Committee for America in Washington, says that attending government-sponsored academic conferences in Azerbaijan and having direct ties with think tanks and academic institutions in the country are two key indicators that scholars have a close connection to the government of Azerbaijan. Azerbaijan relies on these scholars to influence public perception around the world in favor of its political interests. 

“They are shaping the public opinion of an elite group of thought leaders, scholars, policymakers and academics in the way they engage on these issues,” Galitsky said in an interview. 

In turn, such scholars publish writings promoting cooperation between Azerbaijan and the United States.

“They say it’s in the interest of US stability and power projection that countries like Azerbaijan are propped up, and in the same breath dismiss the significance of Azerbaijani human rights abuses and autocratic conduct, saying these things are irrelevant in the calculation of how the United States should engage with a country like Azerbaijan,” Galitsky said. 

In addition to his contacts with the Podesta Group, Cornell also attended a meeting with representatives from the DCI Group, LLC. The DCI Group represented the Embassy of Azerbaijan in the United States from 2012-2013. On October 14, 2013, a representative from the DCI Group met with Cornell for breakfast, according to the organization’s FARA filings. A year earlier, on October 9, 2012, the DCI Group emailed Cornell “regarding his book Azerbaijan Since Independence, his relationship with the Ambassador and his insights and future collaboration on Azerbaijan issues.” The purpose of the email was to “influence US policies on behalf of the Embassy of the Republic of Azerbaijan.”

A review of Azerbaijan Since Independence by Joshua Kucera, the former Caucasus editor at EurasiaNet, calls Cornell “generally pretty pro-Azerbaijan.”

Several lobbyists at DCI Group either did not return several emails or declined to participate in an interview. 

Cornell said that the meeting was set up by a former student of his from Johns Hopkins who worked at DCI Group and wanted to learn more about Azerbaijan and the Caucasus. He said the student and her colleague from the firm “showed up with copies of my book with post-it notes sticking out of the book, points on which they wanted to ask questions.” 

“I remember being slightly miffed by this rather crass attempt by a well-paid for-profit company getting educated for free, but I obliged as a favor to a former student,” Cornell said in an email. 

While teaching at Johns Hopkins, Cornell also led a consulting group he co-founded called Cornell Caspian Consulting, LLC. The company “provides counsel to private or public contractors” on security issues, energy development, defense and military matters, and business matters, as well as “contacts with regional firms, organizations, or governments” in the Caucasus, Central and Southwest Asia, according to its website

Cornell Caspian Consulting “encourages its staff to keep a close relationship with institutions engaging in policy-relevant academic research.” “Most CCC staff keep a part-time position in universities, think tanks or research institutes,” its website reads. 

Cornell participated in the launch of the Baku-Ceyhan pipeline in 2000 as a representative of Cornell Caspian Consulting. 

Galitsky says it can be difficult to identify the financial ties between the government of Azerbaijan and its network of scholars promoting its interests around the world. 

“It’s so behind the scenes and non-transparent that it allows people with direct overt relationships with Azerbaijani officials to get off scot-free and not be seen as tainted by Azerbaijan’s oil money and bribery. It allows them to maintain legitimacy and continue to promote the Azerbaijani regime’s propaganda in these circles with full credibility,” Galitsky said.  

However, the covert nature of Azerbaijan’s lobbying to academia allows it to carry on without scrutiny.

“They don’t want the perception that their strongest advocates and allies in academia and scholarship are on their payroll, because that would invalidate a lot of the work they’re doing,” Galitsky said. “People would see it as what it is—a ploy by Azerbaijan to influence American public opinion.”

Lillian Avedian is a staff writer for the Armenian Weekly. Her writing has also been published in the Los Angeles Review of Books, Hetq and the Daily Californian. She is pursuing master’s degrees in journalism and Near Eastern Studies at New York University. A human rights journalist and feminist poet, Lillian's first poetry collection Journey to Tatev was released with Girls on Key Press in spring of 2021.


Azerbaijan’s Blockade Paralyses Nagorny Karabakh

UK – June 6 2023


Economy is in freefall, with inflation soaring and unemployment is on the rise.


Six months into the blockade that has isolated Nagorny Karabakh from the rest of the world, the large looms of the Artsakh Carpet workshop sit idle and silent.

“[It] has paralysed our business. The company's future is very unclear, and our 70 employees are left with no work to do,” said Sevak Khachatryan, director of the rug manufacturer which has operated in Stepanakert since 2013.

On December 12, 2022 a government-backed group of Azerbaijanis, who claimed to be co-activists protesting over Karabakh authorities’ illegal mining activities, blocked the Lachin corridor. This is the only road connecting Karabakh to Armenia and the rest of the world. 

Artsakh Carpet continued to operate in the first month of the blockade, explained Khachatryan, but production gradually faded as the supply of yarns and dyes stopped. No transport was allowed in or out of the region, so sales also ceased.


Khachatryan and his weavers, designers and dyers are not alone: about 20 per cent of the region’s businesses stopped operating within weeks

The blockade has crushed the region’s economy, which had not yet recovered from the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic. Official data reported that as of June 2, the economy suffered a loss of about 329 million US dollars, leading to cut the predicted annual gross domestic product (GDP) of 903 million dollars by 36 per cent.


“All branches of the economy have deviated from normal activities,” Norayr Avanesyan, Karabakh’s first deputy minister of economy and finance, told IWPR via email. He added that mining work has been completely suspended and large-scale agricultural activities stopped due to severe shortages or total lack of seeds, fertilizers, pesticides, fuel and spare parts. 

In the first three months of 2023, the volume of construction fell by nearly 84 per cent compared to last year: work on roads, water lines and the irrigation systems of thousands of hectares of land froze. Foreign trade turnover has been disrupted and inflation spiraled due to lack of supply.

As companies stopped operating, unemployment has ballooned: almost 11,000 people are now officially unemployed, more than half in the private sector.


"I am looking forward to going back to work again…it is difficult to make ends meet with the rising prices for essential goods,” Gita Hambardzumyan, one of the weavers Artsakh Carpets had to lay off, told IWPR.

CUT TO THE BONE

On April 23, Azerbaijan set up a checkpoint on the Lachin corridor, which the ceasefire agreement of November 9, 2020 stipulated would remain under the control of Russian peacekeepers. Azerbaijani police officers and soldiers have now replaced eco-activists.

The traffic on the road remains below the bare minimum; private vehicles cannot travel and only Russian peacekeepers and the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) are allowed to transit. Russians have been providing humanitarian assistance, including food supplies, and ICRC has secured vital medical aid and accompanied patients to specialised centres in Armenia. 

On June 2, the authorities’ regular update reported that in the 173 days of the blockade 5,199 tonnes of essential goods entered the region instead of the 69,200 tonnes of the pre-block period. 

Authorities have introduced a number of measures to curb inflation, contain the challenges of food shortages and mitigate the socio-economic consequences of the blockade.

It has initiated a voucher system for essential goods and introduced financial support to people who have lost their jobs as well as individuals and children from low-income groups. It also publishes regularly the permissible sales prices of essential goods; violators are fined. 

The dire shortage of some products has been feeding a black market: fresh potatoes for example can be sold between 1,500 and 2,200 drams per kilogramme (about three, 75 and 5.5 dollars) versus 300 – 500 drams (0.75 and 1.3 dollars) in Yerevan. The price of cheese imported from Goris, the Armenian city closest to Stepanakert, has increased by about 20 per cent.

The price of bread is one of the few that has remained stable because flour has thus far not been imported – but wheat supplies are running low.           

Authorities have removed limits on cash withdrawals but ATMs are often empty and frequent power outages disrupt their operations. Since January 9, gas supplies have been regularly interrupted.

Srbuhi Vanyan finds the long queues challenging, but not only for the struggle to access basic products. 

“We seem to find ourselves at the lowest level of human needs. My customers are mostly women, who need to be close to art, but today they have to think mainly about basic needs,’’ the 43-year-old radio host-turned-artist told IWPR.

Vanyan took up painting after the 2020 war crushed her dream of setting up a guesthouse: she and her husband started renovating their house in September 2020, a few days before the war broke out. Min Tagun Tegh, meaning “a hidden place” in Armenian, never opened.

“On the one hand, war hinders the opportunity to develop, but on the other, it inspires creativity and resourcefulness,”she said, displaying sketches that she turned into craftwork for sale featuring the local dialect and folklore motifs. 

That alternative has also disappeared as she now has neither the material nor the customers for her crafts.

“During your whole life, you set goals, work hard, create, and then there’s a war and now the blockade, which create monumental challenges that require doing the near-impossible to overcome them. It’s like trying to wring wood from a stone,” she said, referring to an old saying.

Vanyan has not seen her husband and her eldest daughter since December as they both happened to be in Yerevan when the blockade started. 

She is not alone: according to Karabakh’s authorities, around 3,900 people, including 550 children, have been separated from their homes as a result of the blockade, although some families managed to be reunited with the mediation of ICRC and the Russian peacekeepers.

“I just want to have the opportunity to live together with my family, to create and move freely, but also to preserve our identity in our homeland, in our hidden place,” Vanyan concluded.


Armenian, Austrian foreign ministers discuss regional stability and security issues

 15:13, 6 June 2023

YEREVAN, JUNE 6, ARMENPRESS. On June 6, Foreign Minister of Armenia Ararat Mirzoyan had a phone conversation with Alexander Schallenberg, the Federal Minister for European and International Affairs of Austria.

“The interlocutors touched upon the agenda of bilateral cooperation as well as issues of mutually beneficial collaboration in multilateral platforms,” the Armenian foreign ministry said in a readout.

Views were also exchanged on the Armenia-EU partnership, it added.

Issues on regional stability and security were also discussed.

The Foreign Minister of Armenia briefed his Austrian counterpart on the latest developments in the normalization process of Armenia-Azerbaijan relations. Minister Mirzoyan emphasized the position of the Armenian side on the resolution of key issues in the negotiation process, in particular, the border delimitation on the basis of a clearly expressed commitment to mutual recognition of territorial integrity as well as addressing of issues of rights and security of the people of Nagorno-Karabakh. The need to solve the existing problems, including humanitarian issues, the blockade of the Lachin corridor as well as finding a comprehensive settlement to the Nagorno-Karabakh issue was stressed.




Armenia top security official meets with U.S. co-chair of OSCE Minsk Group

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 13:59,

YEREVAN, MAY 26, ARMENPRESS. Secretary of the Security Council Armen Grigoryan held a meeting on May 26 with United States Senior Advisor for Caucasus Negotiations, U.S. Co-Chair of the OSCE Minsk Group Louis Bono.

Grigoryan and Bono discussed issues related to the normalization of Armenian-Azerbaijani relations, delimitation and border security, as well as the Nagorno Karabakh conflict, Grigoryan’s office said in a readout.

Secretary Grigoryan presented the Armenian side’s stance in the normalization of relations with Azerbaijan.

The two also discussed a number of issues on the Armenia-United States bilateral relations agenda.

Armenia, Azerbaijan could sign peace treaty in foreseeable future, says Moscow

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 14:19,

YEREVAN, MAY 26, ARMENPRESS. Moscow believes that the current circumstances allow expecting that Armenia and Azerbaijan could sign a peace treaty in the foreseeable future, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov has said.

Peskov stressed that the final solution of all issues is what matters, and not the time.

The Kremlin spokesperson said that representatives of Armenia, Russia and Azerbaijan will hold a meeting next week in Moscow to discuss existing issues.

“There is no objective to finalize everything because what matters is the final result, no one is in a hurry,” TASS quoted Peskov as saying. No one can predict an exact timeframe for the signing of the peace treaty, he noted.

“Although, as it was noted at yesterday’s meeting, the circumstances have now changed in many ways, and basically these changed circumstances allow achieving the signing of the peace treaty in the foreseeable future,” he added.

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan held trilateral talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev in Moscow on May 25. A deputy prime ministerial meeting between the three sides is expected next week.

Armenpress: PM Pashinyan attends the foundation stone laying ceremony of the technological center to be constructed in Yerevan

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 20:35,

YEREVAN, MAY 23, ARMENPRESS.  Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan attended the groundbreaking ceremony of the "Dalan" technology center in Yerevan. The investment program is implemented with the support of the Armenian government and Enterprise Armenia Investment Support Fund, ARMENPRESS was informed from the Office of the Prime Minister.

Those in charge for the project noted that the technology center will have 158,000 square meters. total area, will offer 3,000 jobs, will consist of 22 floors and will include 34,000 square meters of office space. The center will also include a scientific and educational center, an exhibition hall, a conference hall, an event hall, a hotel, etc. The investment program is estimated at 125 million USD.

TechnoPark is being built in accordance with BOMA International (Building Owners and Managers Association) standards, and the design and construction works are carried out in compliance with LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) requirements. The complex is a technologically well-equipped multifunctional center.

The representatives of the project thanked the Prime Minister for the support of the Government and the Enterprise Armenia Investment Support Fund and for the smooth implementation of the project.




1975 map should serve as basis for delimitation with Azerbaijan, says Armenian PM

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 12:45,

YEREVAN, MAY 22, ARMENPRESS. The 1975 map of the USSR military’s General Staff could and should serve as the basis for delimitation with Azerbaijan, Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan said at a May 22 press conference when asked on the process.

PM Pashinyan said that Armenia reiterates Russia’s stance that the delimitation process should be conducted based on the 1975 maps of the USSR General Staff, and, according to PM Pashinyan, a reciprocal withdrawal of forces from the border recorded by these maps would ensure stability on the border.

“I must gladly note that we are already seeing this issue recorded by the international community, which is rather important and commendable. I can’t note a movement of stance by  Azerbaijan in this regard, but at the same time I will emphasize that ensuring border security is an important part of the negotiations process. It is no secret that Azerbaijan continues to engage in a policy of military pressure in an attempt to gain more beneficial conditions in the talks through military pressure, but at the same time I have to note that this constitutes a violation of an internationally assumed obligation, because under the statement adopted during the 31 October 2022 Sochi meeting the parties agreed and assumed obligation to avoid from the use of force or threat of force. We must continue our work,” PM Pashinyan said.

The reciprocal withdrawal of forces doesn’t predetermine the delimitation work, Pashinyan said, adding that the process would simply ensure stability.

“I believe that the 1975 map could and should be the basis for future delimitation works as well, because this is what the 6 October 2022 agreements in Prague imply regarding delimitation based on the Almaty Declaration,” the Armenian Prime Minister said.

Armenia ready to recognize Azerbaijan’s 86,600 km2 territorial integrity which includes Nagorno Karabakh – Pashinyan

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 14:00,

YEREVAN, MAY 22, ARMENPRESS. Armenia is ready to recognize Azerbaijan’s 86,600 km2 territorial integrity which includes Nagorno Karabakh, but the rights and security of the Armenians of Nagorno Karabakh must be discussed through Baku-Stepanakert dialogue, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said on May 22.

“The 86,600 km2 includes Nagorno Karabakh. But we must note that we are saying that the issue of the rights and security of the Armenians of Nagorno Karabakh must be discussed in the Baku-Stepanakert format,” Pashinyan said.

Pashinyan noted that all administrations before him have recognized the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan.

“Armenia is ready to recognize the 86,600 km2 territorial integrity of Azerbaijan. And it is our understanding that Azerbaijan is ready to recognize the 29,800 km2 territorial integrity of Armenia. If we understand each other correctly with Azerbaijan in this matter, Armenia, indeed, recognizes Azerbaijan’s 86,600 km2 territorial integrity, with the understanding that Azerbaijan recognizes Armenia’s 29,800 km2 territorial integrity,” PM Pashinyan said.

Pashinyan said it is highly important to create international guarantees for the direct talks between Stepanakert and Baku over the rights and security of Armenians in Nagorno Karabakh. “We mean, for example, that the issue of the rights and security of Armenians of Nagorno Karabakh could get forgotten and Azerbaijan could continue its policy of ethnic cleansing and genocide against Armenians of Nagorno Karabakh through force,” Pashinyan said, highlighting the need for guarantees to prevent this policy.

During Brussels-hosted talks earlier in May, Armenian PM Nikol Pashinyan and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev confirmed their unequivocal commitment to the 1991 Almaty Declaration and the respective territorial integrity of Armenia (29,800 km2) and Azerbaijan (86,600 km2). 

The 29,800 km2 territorial integrity of Armenia includes enclaves, including Artsvashen.

86,600 km2 territorial integrity of Azerbaijan also includes enclaves. “This is a political stance, but the legal part of the issue must still be looked into,” the PM said.

Armenian Embassy in India will have a military attaché

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 18:45,

YEREVAN, MAY 18, ARMENPRESS. A position of military attaché attached to the Embassy of the Republic of Armenia in the Republic of India will be created, ARMENPRESS reports, the relevant decision included in the list of non-reportable issues was approved at the Cabinet meeting.

It is noted that the military attaché of the Republic of Armenia in the Republic of India will be located in the building of the Embassy of the Republic of Armenia in New Delhi.