Aghajanyan: No final decision on Armenia’s participation in Antalya Diplomacy Forum yet

panorama.am
Armenia – Jan 27 2022

There is no final decision yet on Armenia’s participation in the Antalya Diplomacy Forum (ADF), ruling Civil Contract faction MP Eduard Aghajanyan, chair of the parliamentary committee on foreign relations, told a briefing on Thursday.

His comments came in response to the statement of Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu that Armenia's Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan and special envoy Ruben Rubinyan are expected to attend the Antalya Diplomacy Forum.

“At this point, there is no final decision on the participation,” Aghajanyan said, adding he had checked the report before the briefing.

Separately, he said the date and venue of the next meeting between the Armenian and Turkish special representatives are not yet known.

Answering a question whether there is an agreement that meetings of envoys should not be held in third countries, Aghajanyan noted: "During the discussions, both the Armenian and the Turkish side will express a clear view on the matter, I think, this is not an issue on which it is impossible to agree.”

Russia is active in addressing the problem of Armenian prisoners – Sergey Lavrov

panorama.am
Armenia – Jan 20 2022

"We are consistently making efforts to resolve the situation on the border between Azerbaijan and Armenia, but unfortunately, armed clashes occur from time to time, resulting in casualties," Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov has noted in response the media questions submitted for the news conference on Russia’s foreign policy performance in 2021. 

In Lavrov's words, a bilateral Commission on the delimitation of the Azerbaijani-Armenian border with its subsequent demarcation needs to be set up as soon as possible. 

"We are ready to provide Baku and Yerevan with any consultative assistance in this process," stressed the Russia's top diplomat. 

"As for the prisoners, Russia is active in addressing this problem. As a reminder, 146 detained persons have been returned since December 2, 2020 with the Russian peacekeepers’ mediation: 127 to Armenia and 19 to Azerbaijan," Lavrov said. 

French institute established in Armenia

panorama.am
Armenia – Jan 18 2022

A French instate has been established in Armenia, former Ambassador of France to Armenia Jonathan Lacote reported on Facebook. The initiative has been brought to life in cooperation with the Aznavour Foundation having been developed during the four years of the Ambassador's tenure in the country, Lacote said. 

"This Institute will combine all programmes which contribute to cultural relations between France and Armenia and offer projects related to the French culture and the language in Armenia. We owe all Armenians for creating this Institute, all those who love France, the teachers who teach the language in the country and the youth who are interested in the culture and share our values," Lacote wrote, sharing the French government decree on establishing the Institute.

Gagik Tsarukyan announces tender for construction of colossal Jesus Christ statue in Armenia

Save

Share

 17:10,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 14, ARMENPRESS. A tender is announced in Armenia for the construction of a statue of Jesus Christ. The tender is initiated by the family of the leader of the Prosperous Armenia party Gagik Tsarukyan.

“Let it show the path of rebirth and light to the Armenian people,” Tsarukyan said on social media.

Tsarukyan said the statue will be 33-meter high.  The total height, including the pedestal, could reach up to 100 meters based on a given authors’ project, he said.

Armenia: The Case for Realpolitik

The International Affairs Review
Jan 13 2022

On November 16, 2021, Azerbaijani Armed Forces initiated a military offensive along the eastern border of Armenia’s Syunik Province. While the latest provocation worsens the open-ended demarcation process in the South Caucasus, or lack thereof, it reflects a microcosm of a decades-long, elite-driven tendency towards political crisis and communal violence over conciliatory negotiations. The outcome of the Second Nagorno-Karabakh War shifted the regional balance of power by giving advantage to a stronger Azerbaijan and inflicting an existential threat to a weaker Armenia. The shortcomings of Armenia suggest the failures of a border policy predicated on emotive thinking, not materialistic aims, which now demands an application of realpolitik in decision-making. Forsaking normative expectations, the pragmatism of realpolitik embodies the pursuit of egoistic interests of the state in a world defined by structural restraints, a remedy for Armenia’s deterministic path.  

History of Nagorno-Karabakh Conflict 

The First Nagorno-Karabakh War, an outgrowth of the 1991 independence referendum, resulted in an Armenian consolidation of Karabakh and the surrounding Azerbaijani territories. Afterward, the Minsk Group—co-chaired by France, Russia, and the United States—mediated a temporary peace, upon which to discontinue inter-ethnic violence, with an intention to later formalize a long-term political settlement. An uneasy impasse kept the region intact until September 27, 2020. 

The 44-day Second Nagorno-Karabakh War, sparked by an Azerbaijani ground offensive, uprooted the post-1994 status quo. Militarily, Azerbaijan gained all seven districts lost during the first war, in addition to some delineated areas of Nagorno-Karabakh. An amalgam of advanced weapon systems and primitive practices characterized the warfare; the exemplified methods include unmanned combat drones and extrajudicial decapitation of POWs. On November 10, 2020, Russia brokered a tripartite armistice ending this war that resulted in approximately 6,000 combat deaths. The Nagorno-Karabakh ceasefire underwrites a reciprocal exchange of prisoners and corpses, the establishment of transport links between Azerbaijan and the landlocked Nakhichevan enclave, and a withdrawal of Armenian forces from territories controlled since the 1990s. Before the deadline for territorial transfers, thousands of Armenians fled, often burning their property to prevent Azerbaijan from inheriting their possessions. A force of nearly 2,000 Russian peacekeepers operates under a mandate to enforce the ceasefire.      

External Actors: A Tool for Asymmetric Warfare 

During the Minsk Group mediation attempts, Armenia instrumentalized its control over the internationally recognized Azerbaijani districts to negotiate a pathway to independence for Nagorno-Karabakh. Due to lasting resentment from territorial losses, Baku insisted on re-establishing pre-war boundaries and the right of return for natives. To accomplish this, Azerbaijan relied upon a destabilization strategy by attrition, forcing Armenia to slowly disperse and exhaust state resources as low-intensity fighting permeated the region’s shared borders. However, Russia managed to balance power by distributing armaments somewhat equitably to prevent military asymmetry. 

Notwithstanding these limitations, Azerbaijan’s oil wealth allowed national defense expenditures to exceed Armenia’s spending by threefold in 2020. Leading up to the offensive, Azerbaijan purchased an estimated $120 million worth of Turkish military equipment. Both Turkey and Israel supplied Azerbaijan with a fleet of aerial reconnaissance vehicles that decimated Armenian air defenses and ground units. Complimenting the air campaign, the lesser-known tactic Azerbaijan weaponized during the war includes the importation of Turkish-backed insurgents from the Syrian National Army, whose function was to absorb corporal costs on the battlefront. Non-Russian partners continue to capture a larger share of the Azerbaijani defense market, whereas Armenia maintains an unshakable arms dependency on Russia. 

Since the ceasefire, Azerbaijan ratified a far-reaching partnership, the Shusha Declaration, with Turkey pledging security assurances and greater economic integration. A strengthening of Azerbaijani-Turkish relations signifies Turkey’s geostrategic aspirations to integrate into the emerging Eurasian infrastructure. By doing so, it would reshape the regional balance of power and put Russia (and Armenia) at a disadvantage.  

Armenia in Crisis Mode

One day after the terms of capitulation were agreed upon, thousands of Armenian civilians besieged and vandalized government buildings to demand the resignation of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan. Footage soon circulated online of Ararat Mirzoyan, the Speaker of the National Assembly, being forced from his car and beaten. Political unrest in Yerevan contrasted with victory celebrations in Baku. With Armenia’s ruling class paralyzed, Azerbaijan’s areal pursuits expanded westward, establishing customs and military checkpoints along Armenia’s main transit route with Iran, the Goris-Kapan highway. Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev looks to actualize ‘ancestral claims’ over the provinces of Syunik and Gegharkunik, where Azeri troops have secured access to former Armenian mineral deposits of gold, silver, and various metal ores. Simultaneously, Azerbaijani forces initiated cross-border shootouts along the Yeraskh-Sadarak borderline between Armenia and Nakhichevan.

Azerbaijan’s multi-pronged incursions on Armenia Proper represent the latest rendition of a war of attrition, created to extract more concessions from a debilitated opponent. The coup-de-grâce stems from the proposed Zangezur overland corridor through Armenia that would reduce travel time and transportation costs for goods and persons moving between Azerbaijan and Turkey in comparison to the Baku-Tbilisi-Kars railway. For Armenia’s isolated economy, regional integration presents a tradeoff of economic amelioration for ceding sovereignty. As President Aliyev clarifies his intention to (forcefully) incorporate Syunik into ‘Greater Azerbaijan,’ Armenia’s domestic crisis worsens. 

A Realpolitik Approach   

From 1994 to 2020, the political strategy among elites in Yerevan rested on a process of acclimation, not demarcation, which culminated in historic losses and a re-traumatization of the national consciousness. Armenian complacency diverged from an unresolved enmity in Azerbaijan over the first war’s outcome. Since then, Armenia has found itself a casualty of internal jealousies, while neighboring states have applied tactical principles to amass asymmetric capabilities. Azerbaijan’s growing discontent illustrates a new security concern—simply put, revanchism drives foreign policy in Baku. The presence of Russian peacekeepers in Nagorno-Karabakh forms the sole deterrent to a renewal in large-scale fighting, yet small-scale assaults percolate under Russian oversight. Given Armenia’s material constraints and international passivity to ongoing abuses, Azerbaijan’s offensive movements remain undeterred. A widening imbalance forestalls the maturation of final peace.  

With the present conditions, Armenia’s leadership should forgo idealist dogma with a renewed focus on calculated decision-making. The means by which to fortify security depends on a delicate balancing act, whereby Yerevan diversifies its portfolio of military allies without drawing a rebuke from Moscow. In tandem with bilateral defense partnerships, the current humanitarian crisis requires a pragmatic courting of the European Union for financial assistance. Unlike Azerbaijan, Armenia can leverage its nascent democratic credentials to sustain foreign direct investment from Brussels. For Pashinyan, to counterbalance EU funds by upholding the Velvet Revolution’s reform agenda entails further reassurance for Russia concerning geopolitical alignment. Most importantly, operating within an international self-help system necessitates Armenia to acquire strategic autonomy through military modernization. Fending off border assaults, without reprisal attacks in the contested areas, serves the immediate goal of upholding Armenian sovereignty while allocating more time to shore up operational capabilities for future contingencies. If Armenia’s dark history holds one constant, moralizing accomplishes nothing. Instead, the desire for security guarantees materializes through the sole utility of military power.

Joshua Himelfarb is a first-year graduate student in International Affairs at the George Washington University. His academic interests are in energy security, economic development, and Europe and Eurasia. His past research explored material and ontological insecurities between post-Soviet republics. Contact can be made at [email protected].

Pashinyan, Putin discuss Nagorno Karabakh and Kazakhstan over phone

Save

Share

 13:38,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 12, ARMENPRESS. Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and Russian President Vladimir Putin held a phone conversation.

“Given Armenia’s chairmanship at the CSTO, views were exchanged regarding the course of the CSTO peacekeeping mission in Kazakhstan. The effective coordination of the peacekeeping contingent’s actions was underscored, which contributed to the normalization of the situation in Kazakhstan.

The situation around Nagorno Karabakh was also discussed, and certain issues over the implementation of the agreements enshrined in the 2020 November 9, 2021 January 11 and 2021 November 26 statements by the leaders of Armenia, Russia and Azerbaijan.

The leaders of the two countries agreed to continue contacts at various levels”, the Kremlin said in a readout.

Armenia deploys 70 soldiers to Kazakhstan as part of CSTO peacekeepers


Kazakhstan – Jan 6 2022

AKIPRESS.COM - The Armenian military are deployed to Kazakhstan as part of the CSTO peacekeeping forces, Sputnik Armenia reports.

Some 70 soldiers will be deployed as part of the CSTO to protect the strategic facilities amid mass protests in Kazakhstan.

The collective peacekeeping forces may include special military, police and civilian personnel and forces sent by the CSTO countries. Russia's contingent includes a unit of airborne troops.

Justice minister not commenting on arresting Armenian captives returned from Azerbaijan

 NEWS.am 
Armenia – Jan 5 2022

Minister of Justice Karen Andreasyan did not comment on the arrest of several Armenian captives who were returned from Azerbaijan.

At the press briefing after Wednesday’s Cabinet meeting of the Armenian government, reporters tried to find out from him what he thought in that regard, to which the minister answered: "There are nuances in your questions that it is better that you ask the question to the Prime Minister's staff."

At the same time, he stressed that the issue of Armenian captives in Azerbaijan is very important, and the PM Nikol Pashinyan-led government is working to resolve it.

"This is a painful issue that we do not forget about," Andreasyan added.

He did not respond also to the question about the arrest of the some of the aforesaid Armenian captives, saying that this can be considered as interference in the work of law enforcement agencies.

NAASR announces winners of 2021 Sona Aronian Armenian Studies Book Prizes

BELMONT, Mass. — The National Association for Armenian Studies and Research (NAASR) is pleased to announce the 2021 Dr. Sona Aronian Book Prizes for Excellence in Armenian Studies, jointly awarded to Dr. Stephen Badalyan Riegg for Russia’s Entangled Embrace: The Tsarist Empire and the Armenians, 1801-1914 (Cornell University Press, 2020) and Dr. Marc David Baer for Sultanic Saviors and Tolerant Turks: Writing Ottoman Jewish History, Denying the Armenian Genocide (Indiana University Press, 2020); and to Nareg Seferian for his translation of the novel Mayda (Մայտա) by Srpuhi Dussap (Սրբուհի Տիւսաբ) (Armenian International Women’s Association Press). The 2021 awards are for books with a 2020 publication date.

NAASR’s Aronian Book Prizes were established in 2014 by the late Dr. Aronian and Dr. Geoffrey Gibbs, to be awarded annually to outstanding scholarly works in the English language in the field of Armenian Studies and translations from Armenian into English.

NAASR’s Director of Academic Affairs Marc A. Mamigonian commented that “this year’s prize-winning books—in a year with a number of very valuable publications also worthy of attention—really reflect the diversity of Armenian studies and its inextricable relationship with other fields such as Russian studies, Ottoman & Turkish studies, and Feminist studies to name just three. I think that Dr. Aronian, with her own diverse interests, would be pleased.”

Dr. Riegg is assistant professor of history at Texas A&M University. Russia’s Entangled Embrace, his first book, examines the complex relationship between the Russian imperial state and the Armenians who lived in the empire and in areas that over the course of the long nineteenth century would come under Russian control. In doing so, Riegg explores, at the meeting point of territoriality and religion, the “dramatic vicissitudes of policy and perception [that] characterized Russo-Armenian ties” in this period. The author examines the Armenian case as a vehicle to explore Russia’s colonization of the South Caucasus and to disentangle the “complex processes by which imperial Russia mobilized certain groups into loyal minorities.”

Via email, Dr. Riegg wrote that “it is a true honor to learn that my book is a winner of the Dr. Sona Aronian Award. My sincere gratitude goes to the members of the selection committee and the esteemed NAASR organization, which is a model of how to bridge the gap between the public and academe.” Dr. Riegg commented that “the work of historians remains as important today as ever. We must resist the illusory search for ‘the truth’ in history; instead, we must embrace the fact that the past was no less complicated than our present.”

Dr. Baer is professor of international history at the London School of Economics and Political Science. Sultanic Saviors and Tolerant Turks provides both the history and analysis of the mythology and stereotypes of Ottoman and Turkish philo-Semitism, and how members of the Jewish community in Turkey and certain scholars leveraged this mythology in the service of denial of the Armenian Genocide. Dr. Baer adopts a long historical perspective as he sets out to answer the questions, “How can we understand that group’s identification and alliance with the perpetrators and their propagation of denial? What emotional world or affective disposition compels them to take this public stand?”

Dr. Baer responded to the news of the prize by email, commenting, “I am greatly honored to receive this prestigious award from your organization. It is much-appreciated acknowledgement of my effort integrating the histories of Jews and Armenians, genocide recognition and genocide denial.”

Seferian is a doctoral candidate at Virginia Tech’s School of Public and International Affairs in the Washington, D.C., area. His dissertation will focus on the province of Syunik and geographical imaginations in flux following the emergence of new borders after the Second Artsakh War. The translation prize awarded to Seferian for Dussap’s ground-breaking feminist novel Mayda, first published in Constantinople in 1883, recognizes not only the excellence of the English-language version but also the enormous historical significance of making available what is one of the earliest novels in Western Armenian, the first known novel by an Armenian woman, and a landmark in the formulation of an Armenian feminism. 

Also deserving acknowledgement is the effort of the Armenian International Women’s Association to make this and other important works by Armenian women writers available; and specifically, the role of the volume’s editor Dr. Lisa Gulesserian, with Dr. Barbara Merguerian (who wrote a short biography of Dussap for the book), Dr. Joy Renjilian-Burgy, Judith A. Saryan, and Danila Jebejian Terpanjian must be noted, as well as Dr. Valentina Calzolari who wrote the learned introduction. 

Seferian commented, “I felt very privileged indeed when I was invited to take on the translation. I owe Barbara Merguerian a special debt of gratitude in this regard. Now I feel doubly privileged to be in the company of past recipients of the award. This publication was in truth a team effort, so a great deal of credit is due to the hard-working committee at AIWA. The dedication of AIWA members and supporters is exemplary. I hope our work together reflects Dr. Aronian’s hopes and expectations in establishing this award. God bless her memory.”

Authors or publishers wishing to submit books for consideration for future Aronian Prizes may contact [email protected].

Founded in 1955, NAASR is one of the world’s leading resources for advancing Armenian Studies, supporting scholars, and building a global community to preserve and enrich Armenian culture, history, and identity for future generations.


More than 90% of health workers in Armenia vaccinated against COVID-19

Save

Share

 11:35,

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 25, ARMENPRESS. 90,5% of health workers in Armenia are vaccinated against COVID-19, according to the National Center for Disease Control and Prevention (NCDC).

NCDC Director of the Department of Epidemiology of Infectious and Non-Infectious Diseases Romella Abovyan told reporters that between 2020 March and December 2021 a total of 7481 health workers were infected with COVID-19 (2297 doctors, 3238 nurses, 893 midwives and 1053 other specialists).