Armenpress: Armenian FM delivers remarks at 4th Ministerial Meeting of the Ancient Civilizations Forum

Armenian FM delivers remarks at 4th Ministerial Meeting of the Ancient Civilizations Forum

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 20:58,

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 15, ARMENPRESS. It is critical today to promote a culture of peace to face the escalating aggression and violence that we have been witnessing around the world. The culture of peace can only be founded on strong international cooperation and the Ancient Civilizations Forum is an important platform in this regard as it brings together countries with thousand-year-old ancestral cultures and vast tangible and intangible heritage, Foreign Minister of Armenia Ara Ayvazian said at the online 4th Ministerial Meeting of the Ancient Civilizations Forum. As ARMENPRESS was informed from the press service of the MFA Armenia, FM Ayvazian particularly said,

‘’Excellences,

Ladies and Gentlemen,

Dear friends,

I would like to convey my gratitude to the Government of Peru for convening this 4th Ministerial meeting. 

I would also like to welcome the participation of the United Mexican States as a new member of the Ancient Civilizations Forum.

What brings us together today is the vast history and rich cultural heritage of every nation here. This Forum has become a unique platform to cherish the histories and values that our civilizations have accumulated throughout the past millennia.

Armenia, as a cradle of centuries-old traditions and civilizational heritage, appreciates the important role of the Ancient Civilizations Forum as a platform for cultural dialogue and cooperation among member states and beyond. The turbulent and challenging year that we have faced has proven that now constructive dialogue and joint efforts matter more than ever. It has also reminded us that the heritage and wisdom of our ancient civilizations remain alive and relevant in today’s globalized world. Thus, today we have the opportunity to draw lessons and inspiration from our heritage and move forward together.

This Ancient Civilizations Forum allows us to prioritize the promotion of cultural diversity and peace. It enables us to reiterate our commitment to the goals of tolerance and diversity as prerequisites for fostering a culture of peace. 

Distinguished colleagues,
In an important platform like this, we cannot turn a blind eye to the alarming events unfolding in our region.

While the international community focused on the response and recovery from the crisis caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, on September 27 Azerbaijan launched pre-planned large-scale aggression against the Republic of Artsakh, also known as Nagorno-Karabakh. In this war, Azerbaijan was directly supported by Turkey which transported mercenaries and foreign terrorist fighters to Azerbaijan and deployed them against the people of Artsakh.

As a result of this aggression thousands of objects of Armenian cultural heritage fell under the control of Azerbaijani armed forces. Nagorno-Karabakh has an extremely rich cultural and religious heritage with several thousands of monuments providing material evidence for the long history of Armenians in the region. Early-Christian churches from the 4th century and many archaeological sites are architectural wonders with ancient inscriptions, murals, and sculptures integral to the Armenian history and its contribution to global cultural heritage.

Armenia has ample reasons to believe that Azerbaijan will target the evidence for our millennia-old indigenous connection to this land by intentionally destroying the Armenian monuments and cultural sites. This threat is well justified, given the multiple precedents of Azerbaijan’s intentional destruction of the Armenian cultural heritage. During the course of this war, the Azerbaijani Armed Forces within a few hours struck twice the 19th century Holy Savior (Ghazanchetsots) Cathedral – a historic and religious symbol of the city of Shushi by precise striking drones attesting to the intentional nature of the attack. The same Cathedral and the St. John the Baptist church (Kanach zham) were vandalized and partially destroyed only a few days after the establishment of the ceasefire exemplifying the disrespect and threat towards the Armenian cultural heritage.

Azerbaijan has also been responsible for systematic cultural destruction for decades. Perhaps the most notorious act was the destruction of several thousand giant engraved cross-stones, called in Armenian khachkars, and tombstones of the medieval Armenian cemetery of Old Jugha in Nakhichevan, bulldozed by the Azerbaijani army during peacetime and far from the conflict zone. 15 years ago this month, the destruction of in total 89 medieval churches, 5,840 ornate cross-stones, and 22,000 historical tombstones was completed. There is sufficient evidence, including photos and videos, documenting this barbaric act.

 Targeting cultural heritage sites, especially in war situations, is strictly prohibited by several international conventions, including the UNESCO Hague Convention for the Protection of Cultural Property in the Event of Armed Conflict and its two Protocols. Armenia welcomes UNESCO’s decision to dispatch a technical assistance mission to Nagorno-Karabakh.

We acknowledge the value of cultural heritage and recognize that the loss of any item constitutes a harmful impoverishment of the heritage of all the nations of the world, and not only of the nation to which the cultural property belongs. This malicious intentional destruction of cultural heritage sites by Azerbaijan is a challenge not only to Armenia, but to the whole  civilized humanity, and it must be strongly condemned. 

Colleagues, 

It is critical today to promote a culture of peace to face the escalating aggression and violence that we have been witnessing around the world. The culture of peace can only be founded on strong international cooperation and the Ancient Civilizations Forum is an important platform in this regard as it brings together countries with thousand-year-old ancestral cultures and vast tangible and intangible heritage. 

A culture of peace is also indispensable for sustainable development. Culture has a transformative power as it is an essential component of human development, a source of identity, innovation, and creativity for all. A culture-based approach to development is key to fulfilling the 2030 Sustainable Development Agenda, and in particular, to overcome the effects of the current COVID-19 crisis.

Furthermore, on a more positive note, we are currently witnessing unprecedented international focus on the recognition of the importance of cultural heritage protection for the preservation of international peace and the promotion of economic growth. These attempts must be strengthened and complemented.

In this context, we suggest the establishment of a network of cultural institutions, consisting of museums, historical and cultural reserves, as well as tourism organizations, that will allow us to better highlight the tangible and intangible cultural heritage and thus contribute to the development of sustainable tourism and promotion of economic recovery. Close cooperation between the member states of the Forum within international organizations, particularly the UNESCO, regular consultations and possible joint initiatives by our Permanent Delegates to UNESCO on issues related to the protection of cultural heritage may serve this purpose as well.

Armenia is willing to contribute to these global efforts, prioritizing the protection of cultural heritage, the promotion of humanitarian behavior, and the formation of respect for cultural diversity. These efforts must be combined with measures aiming to foster the growth of cultural industries of member states, both bilaterally and in collaboration with multilateral institutions such as UNESCO.

Finally, we welcome the adoption of the Ministerial Outcome Declaration of this meeting, which will give new impetus to our future joint initiatives and enhance our fruitful cooperation within this format.

Armenia remains strongly committed to the ideals and principles of the Forum and will continue to be actively involved in all joint efforts in this regard. 

Thank you''.

​In Caucasus War, Russia Succeeded to Demonize Democracy

The National Interest
Dec 15 2020

The United States essentially forfeited its influence over the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and allowed Russias Vladimir Putin to wield power in the region.

by Michael Rubin

Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan joined his Azerbaijani counterpart Ilham Aliyev on  a podium in Baku on Dec. 10 to watch a parade celebrating “Victory in the Patriotic War.” The procession marked Aliyev’s latest celebration as he cements his legacy as the man who returned territories Azerbaijan lost to Armenia in the 1988–1994 Nagorno-Karabakh War.  

Aliyev is a short-term thinker. He does not yet understand the tremendous price of his victory: Azerbaijan’s sovereignty. Russia and Turkey have stationed forces inside Azerbaijani territory. Turkey also reportedly controls several thousand mercenaries transported into Azerbaijan from Syria, Libya, and other Arab countries. None of these forces are under Aliyev’s control and both Moscow and Ankara can easily leverage them against Aliyev and his family should he stray too far from Erdoğan or Russian president Vladimir Putin’s dictates. 

Aliyev may focus on Nagorno-Karabakh but for Putin, the game is much bigger and extends across the Caucasus, if not beyond. It involves not territory, but rather than nature of government. Alas, in the latest Caucasus war, Putin won again as he signals to the region that Russian authoritarianism offers security while liberal democracy brings only chaos and territorial loss.

Neither the Trump administration nor the Obama administration before it particularly cared about the Caucasus. Their strategic neglect was unfortunate, not only because of the region’s strategic value but also because of its cultural weight. In 301 AD, the Kingdom of Armenia declared Christianity to be its official religion and so became the oldest Christian country on earth. More importantly, the peoples of the South Caucasus have both early and repeatedly embraced democracy, a cultural attitude that Putin resents. Iranian democrats operating largely from Tabriz, the capital of Iranian Azerbaijan, modeled their 1905 Constitutional Revolution after the successful Russian effort to subordinate the Tsar to a legislative body earlier that year. In subsequent years, Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Georgia each achieved independence against the backdrop of the Russian Empire’s dissolution, before subsequently losing it to Soviet aggression.  


Each of the three independent countries in the Caucasus have now had experiences with popular revolution and democracy. When Azerbaijan seceded from the Soviet Union, Ayaz Mutallibov, the first secretary of the regional communist party, simply took over as president but he was ousted following a series of disastrous military and economic events. On June 7, 1992, Azeris went to the polls in their first democratic election. Abulfaz Elchibey won 60 percent of the vote in a field of five, and formerly assumed power nine days later as Azerbaijan’s first non-communist leader. Elchibey sought to pivot Azerbaijan’s foreign policy away from Russia, but his efforts at setting Azerbaijan down a democratic path floundered in the face of both Russian opposition and a disastrous military campaign in Nagorno-Karabakh. Elchibey fell within a year, fleeing into exile as former KGB operative and communist functionary Heydar Aliyev assumed power, consolidating a dictatorship and eventually handing power over to his son and current leader.

Georgia, too, followed a similar path. Former dissident Zviad Gamsakhurdia led protests and demonstrations which, against the backdrop of the Soviet Union’s collapse, culminated in the restoration of Georgian independence. Gamsakhurdia did not last long, however. Opposition grew to his dictatorial tendencies. He sought to repress South Ossetian nationalism which he accused the Kremlin of encouraging. Ultimately, a Russian-backed coup unseated Gamsakhurdia after less than a year in office, and he died under mysterious circumstances in exile less than two years later. Former Soviet foreign minister Eduard Shevardnadze became president. He understood the need to balance relations between Russia and the United States, although he encouraged NATO’s eastward expansion and sought to orient Georgia more in the Western camp. Ultimately, in 2003, after parliamentary elections which international observers deemed fraudulent, protestors in the so-called “Rose Revolution” forced Shevardnadze’s resignation. Mikheil Saakashvili, a leader of the revolution, dominated subsequent polls winning 96 percent in an election with more than 82 percent turnout. Saakashvili interpreted his landslide as a mandate to more firmly tie Georgia to the West. Putin despised Saakashvili and, in 2008, intervened directly in support of both Abkazian and South Ossetian secession efforts. The Russian occupation kneecapped Saakashvili’s ambitions and his popularity plummeted. In 2013, after losing a parliamentary election, Saakashvili fled Georgia and subsequently moved to Ukraine where he renounced his Georgian citizenship in order to avoid extradition on corruption and abuse-of-power charges. In the post-Saakashvili-era, Georgia returned to a more balanced foreign policy deferential to Kremlin sensitivities and red lines. 

Armenia, perhaps culturally the closest country in the Caucasus to Russia, has followed the same pattern. Former journalist turned politician Nikol Pashinyan shot to power against the backdrop in 2018 of mass protests against attempts by Serzh Sargsyan, Armenia’s long-time prime minister, to extend his term. Pashinyan sought greater foreign policy neutrality. While he did nothing either to challenge Russia’s influence in Armenia or the presence of the Russian base in Gyumri, both his willingness to cultivate the West and his rise in a people power revolution were deeply offensive to Putin for whom such uprisings are a nightmare scenario. 

Armenians may be disappointed that Russia did little to protect them against the Azerbaijani and Turkish onslaught in the most recent Nagorno-Karabakh War but, in hindsight, protecting Armenia—and especially the self-declared Artsakh Republic in Nagorno-Karabakh—was secondary to reinforcing a lesson the Kremlin had previously applied to Azerbaijan and Georgia: Democratic revolutions may bring short-term political freedom, but they also lead to territorial loss and an erosion of sovereignty.

In contrast, Putin has shown that dictatorships and counter-revolutionary regimes succeed where their democratic predecessors fail. Elchibey in Azerbaijan, Saakashvili in Georgia, and now Pashinyan in Armenia all assumed office amidst popular acclaim. All presided over significant territorial loss—Elchibey to Armenia, Saakashvili to Russian-backed forced, and Pashinyan to Azerbaijan. Both Elchibey and Saakashvili ended their political careers in exile and disgrace and, if opposition parties in Armenia have their way, Pashinyan may not be far behind.  

Such Russian success need not have been foreordained. The United States essentially forfeited its influence long before the first shots were fired in the most recent conflict, and neither the White House nor the State Department has done anything to regain leverage. Too often it seems that U.S. officials fail to see the forest through the trees and recognize the long game that Putin is playing.  

Michael Rubin is a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute and a frequent author for the National Interest.



Armenpress: People of Artsakh have the right to self-determination – Russian MP

People of Artsakh have the right to self-determination – Russian MP

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 19:41,

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 11, ARMENPRESS.  Head of the Institute of the CIS countries, First deputy chairman of the committee of the State Duma for the CIS and relations with Russian nationals abroad Konstantin Zatulin thinks the people of Artsakh have the right to self-determination, ARMENPRESS reports Zatulin said during a Yerevan-Moscow online discussion on December 11.

''I continue to think that the people of Nagorno Karabakh or Artsakh have the right to self-determination, particularly, given that at the moment of the collapse of the Soviet Union the Socialist Republic of Azerbaijan had already lost control of the territories Nagorno Karabakh Autonomous Oblast. The announcments of Azerbaijan that it's their territorory needs to be reconsidered'', Zatulin said.

Outgoing Syria envoy reflects on Turkey, the Kurds and what everyone got wrong

AL-Monitor


By Jared Szuba
Dec. 9, 2020

[In a long-ranging interview with Al-Monitor, James Jeffrey looks back
on his efforts to incorporate fragments of Obama-era initiatives into
a cohesive Middle East policy.]

In August 2016, former US Ambassador to Iraq and Turkey James Jeffrey
signed a public letter with more than 50 other veteran national
security officials warning against the election of then-candidate
Donald Trump.

“We are convinced that in the Oval Office, he would be the most
reckless President in American history,” read the letter.

Nonetheless, two years later the career diplomat had come out of
retirement to help the Trump administration incorporate the fragments
of Obama-era initiatives in Syria into a cohesive Middle East policy.

Under the authority of Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, administration
officials had devised a plan under which the US military’s
counter-Islamic State (IS, or ISIS) force would remain in Syria at
least until the government of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad went
through with UN-backed elections. On top of their
Congressionally-mandated mission of fighting IS, US forces would
continue to deny Assad access to Syrian oilfields, which were located
in areas controlled by Syrian Kurdish fighters backed by the United
States, and to obstruct the Iranian military’s access to the Levant.

Trump didn’t like it. “The president was very uncomfortable with our
presence in Syria,” Jeffrey told Al-Monitor in a two-hour interview at
his home in Washington last week. “He was very uncomfortable with what
he saw as endless wars.”


But in December 2018, the 45th president blew off his top advisers and
told Turkey’s leader, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, that he would withdraw
more than 2,000 US military forces from Syria.

The move would inevitably launch a mad dash across a precariously
balanced battlefield occupied by four major military players and lead
to mass displacement among Syria’s Kurdish population. It also
threatened to upend the international coalition’s sweeping gains
against IS and set back the US-led pressure campaign against Assad.

“We felt very vulnerable and may have been a little bit punch drunk on
fear,” Jeffrey told Al-Monitor last week. “I understand the
president’s concerns about Afghanistan,” he said. “But the Syria
mission is the gift that keeps on giving.”

Opposition from European allies eventually convinced the president to
reverse the order, Jeffrey said. But less than a year later, as
Turkish forces built up on the Syrian border in October of 2019,
Jeffrey and other officials arranged yet another call between Trump
and Erdogan.

When the dust settled, hundreds of people were dead and up to 300,000
others, mostly Syrian Kurds, had fled their homes. Turkey’s military
incursion has since been referred to by Kurdish leaders as an “ethnic
cleansing.”

Jeffrey was left to pick up the pieces. The methods the diplomat had
advocated to assuage Ankara’s aggression failed, drawing heated
controversy in marathon congressional hearings.

Jeffrey says the proposals he pushed — dismantling YPG border
defenses, allowing Turkey’s military into northeast Syria for joint
security patrols, putting Turkish aircraft back on the Air Tasking
Order out of Udeid Airbase — were rooted in his understanding of
domestic Turkish politics and colonial history. Critics say they paved
the way for Turkey’s assault.

Today, Jeffrey speaks of the crisis of Turkey and Syria’s Kurds as if
it has largely blown over, but he offers few specifics on prospects
for securing the future of the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) in
Syria. He insists the Obama administration’s decision to arm the
Syrian Kurdish-led militia fed into a decades-old existential threat
to Turkey, the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK).

For the career diplomat, Ankara’s hostility toward the SDF was just
one troublesome corner of a complex policy structure in which
Washington sought to harness the interests of both Turkey and Israel
to roll back Iran and deal the Assad regime and Russia an unwinnable
hand in Syria’s civil war.

The following interview has been edited for length.

Al-Monitor: Deputy OIR commander UK Maj. Gen. Kevin Copsey last week
said we are entering the “twilight” phase of the international
coalition’s mission against IS. In July 2018, you were brought in as
Special Envoy in part to help fold the D-ISIS mission back into US
regional strategy, particularly vis-a-vis Iran and NATO ally Turkey.
What progress has been made in that?

Jeffrey: The Syria strategy was a stepchild since the Obama administration.

The Trump administration saw one of the major flaws in the Obama
administration: that it treated Iran as a nuclear weapons problem a la
North Korea. They saw Iran as a threat to the regional order. So they
wanted a Syria policy building on the bits and pieces of the Obama
policy. So the Trump administration came up with that policy in 2017.

Secretary Pompeo and I convinced people in the administration of this:
If you don’t deal with the underlying problem of Iran in Syria, you’re
not going to deal in an enduring way with IS. We saw this all as one
thing.

We then also had the Israeli air campaign. The US only began
supporting that when I came on board. I went out there and we saw
Prime Minister Netanyahu and others, and they thought that they were
not being supported enough by the US military, and not by
intelligence. And there was a big battle within the US government, and
we won the battle.

The argument [against supporting Israel’s campaign] was, again, this
obsession with the counterterrorism mission. People didn’t want to
screw with it, either by worrying about Turkey or diverting resources
to allow the Israelis to muck around in Syria, as maybe that will lead
to some blowback to our forces. It hasn’t.

Basically, first and foremost is denial of the [Assad regime] getting
military victory. But because Turkey was so important and we couldn’t
do this strategy without Turkey, that brought up the problem of the
Turkish gripes in northeast Syria. So my job was to coordinate all of
that.

So you throw all those together — the anti-chemical weapons mission,
our military presence, the Turkish military presence, and the Israeli
dominance in the air — and you have a pretty effective military pillar
of your military, diplomatic and isolation three pillars.

So that was how we put together an integrated Syria policy that
nestled under the overall Iran policy. The result has been relative
success because we — with a lot of help from the Turks in particular —
have managed to stabilize the situation.

The only change on the ground to the benefit of Assad has been
southern Idlib in two and a half years of attacks. They are highly
unlikely to continue, given the strength of the Turkish army there and
the magnitude of the defeat of the Syrian army by the Turks back in
March.

And of course, we’ve ratcheted up the isolation and sanctions pressure
on Assad, we’ve held the line on no reconstruction assistance, and the
country’s desperate for it. You see what’s happened to the Syrian
pound, you see what’s happened to the entire economy. So, it’s been a
very effective strategy.

Al-Monitor: The US has been supporting the Israeli air campaign and
enacting sanctions on both the Assad regime and Iran. Are we any
closer to an Iranian withdrawal from Syria?

Jeffrey: Well the Iranians have withdrawn a lot of their people. One
reason is they’re financially under a great deal of pressure, and
Syria is very expensive for them. More and more the Iranians are
divesting that back to the Syrians. And they haven’t been able to bail
the Syrians out, other than some — under adventuresome conditions —
shipments of oil supplies, which sometimes make it, sometimes don’t.
I’ll just leave it at that.

Al-Monitor: Can you elaborate on those “adventurous conditions?”

Jeffrey: I’ve told you as much as I’m going to tell you on that. The
Iranian ability to truly establish a southern Lebanon-style threat to
Israel by long-range systems has also been blocked by the Israeli
strikes, which are enabled, to some degree, by US diplomatic and other
support, which I won’t go into in more detail, but it is significant.

We have basically blocked Iran’s longer-term goals and put its present
presence under pressure. Is that enough pressure to get Iran to leave?
I don’t know. Whether we can actually roll them back, I don’t know.
But I do know that it is absolutely an essential part of any larger
agreement. Whatever level of pain we are inflicting on the Iranians,
the Russians, and the Assad regime is not going to go away until Iran
leaves.

Al-Monitor: A major objective of the sanctions is to force the Assad
regime to change its behavior. Have you seen any signs of change in
the regime’s calculus as a result? Is there any prospect of US-Russia
accommodation on Syria’s political process, or is it fair to say the
Geneva process has been co-opted?

Jeffrey: Well, we saw the Rami Makhlouf thing, we saw other leaders.
We don’t know, because you really have to know what’s really going on
inside a police state, how much impact that’s having. But it’s having
some impact. The collapse of the Lebanese banking system is another
big blow. You see it in the spatting between the Russians and Assad in
the recent, underreported Damascus refugee fiasco. That was a Russian
idea.

We’re sure the Russians know there’s no military victory. So they have
gone to, how can we get a political victory? And the way to do that is
to hijack the UN-led political process, by using things like the Assad
election in 2021 as a substitute for the UN-mandated elections, [and]
using a Russian-led conference on refugees to take that portfolio away
from the UN and international community and put a Russia and Assad
stamp on it. So, we mobilized the international community to basically
boycott it, very successfully.

It goes up and down but the Russians have never embraced a true
implementation of 2254. We’ve made it clear that we would relieve the
sanctions and that Assad would eventually be invited back into the
Arab League, that the diplomatic isolation would all fall. We laid it
out to Putin at Sochi in 2019, by Secretary Pompeo. They know about
the offer. They don’t really make any changes to it.

Al-Monitor: Has the US explored alternative paths, such as potential
engagement with members of the Syrian regime’s support base in the
Alawi community?

Jeffrey: No, other than the few reported contacts on Austin Tice. And
I can’t talk any more about that. I see nothing promising. Not
everybody would agree with me.

Al-Monitor: Let’s move to the subject of Turkey. Secretary of State
Pompeo sharply criticized Ankara during the NATO Foreign Ministers’
Meeting. In recent Al-Monitor podcasts, Stephen Cook and Philip Gordon
said the US should probably not consider Turkey an ally or a “model
partner.” How would you recommend the Biden administration engage with
Erdogan out of the gate?

Jeffrey: First of all, you have to separate Erdogan from Turkey.

The biggest challenges for Biden will be China, Russia, North Korea,
Iranian JCPOA and climate. Those are the five big ones. Number six is
Turkey, because Turkey directly impacts two of the first five: Iran
and Russia. And it impacts number eight or nine, terrorism.

They’re a very important NATO state. The NATO radar that is the core
of the entire anti-ballistic missile system defending against Iran is
in Turkey. We have tremendous military assets there. We really can’t
“do” the Middle East, the Caucuses or the Black Sea without Turkey.
And Turkey is a natural opponent of Russia and Iran.

Erdogan is a great power thinker. Where he sees vacuums, he moves. The
other thing about Erdogan is he’s maddeningly arrogant, unpredictable
and simply will not accept a win-win solution. But when pressed — and
I’ve negotiated with him — he’s a rational actor.

So if Biden sees the world as many of us do now, near-peer
competition, Turkey becomes extremely important. Look what [Erdogan]
has just done in eight months in Idlib, Libya and Nagorno-Karabakh.
Russia or Russian allies have been the loser in all three.

If we return to Obama’s end-of-office mindset that we don’t have a
geopolitical problem, but we have sets of little problems — that
Erdogan’s buying S-400s, [IS] cells in the desert and refugees in
Lebanon, Iranian 3.25% enriched uranium, and the Khashoggi murder and
the never-ending starvation drama in Yemen — all these become sui
generis problems that we have to throw resources and policies and
mobilizing the bureaucracy at, without trying to figure out how do
they all fit together.

If the Biden administration goes back to that stupid thinking, then
they’re going to lose the Middle East. You can forget about Asia.

Al-Monitor: How should the Biden administration approach Erdogan?

Jeffrey: Erdogan will not back down until you show him teeth. That’s
what we did when we negotiated the cease-fire in October of 2019. We
were ready to crush the economy.

That’s what Putin did after the Russian plane was shot down. The
Russians have now twice sent strong signals to the Turks in Idlib.
They chopped the shit out of a Turkish battalion. It didn’t work out
the way the Russians wanted to.

You have to be willing, when Erdogan goes too far, to really clamp
down on him and to make sure he understands this in advance. The
Turkish position is never 100% correct. They have some logic and
arguments on their side. Given their role as an important ally and
bulwark against Iran and Russia, it behooves us to at least listen to
their arguments and try to find compromise solutions.

Al-Monitor: You came into the Special Envoy position as a proponent of
accelerating the Manbij roadmap model to ease Turkey’s concerns about
northeast Syria. Is it safe to say that approach backfired?

Jeffrey: The Turks considered Manbij a failure. There was tremendous
pushback from the SDF and from the local military council, and from
McGurk’s office. Every individual who had PKK connections, there had
to be intelligence adjudication both of the Turkish and American
sides. Very few people were pushed out.

I basically insisted, and we eventually got a group of about 10 to
leave. But that was after about a year, and the Turks thought we
weren’t serious. That was the model that we tried to apply to the
northeast.

The SDF, they’re clean kids. I’ve gotten to know them and their
leadership very, very well. They really are phenomenal, by Middle
Eastern standards. They’re a highly disciplined Marxist offshoot of
the PKK. They’re also not particularly interested in pursuing the PKK
agenda. They’re the squishees; they don’t have any mountains.

Meanwhile, nobody at the State Department side said hey, what about
Turkey? Frankly, our local military and the State Department’s
defeat-IS people were basically like, that’s somebody else’s problem.

The Turks along the border were provoked, primarily by us announcing
that we were going to create a new border defense force [in 2018] that
would be even larger, and the first place we’d deploy them is along
the Turkish border.

This was CENTCOM out of control. This was the classic, ‘We’re just
here to fight terrorists, let the f---heads in State Department take
care of Turkey, and we can say or do anything we want that pleases us
and pleases our little allies, and it doesn’t matter.’ And this was
the bane of our existence until we finally got it under our control,
and it didn’t come fully under control until — with a few outliers —
Pompeo asked me to take over the D-ISIS job.

Al-Monitor: Operation Peace Spring threw a major wrench into the US
mission there and has been called an “ethnic cleansing.” You’ve said
you have to show Erdogan teeth. But prior to the incursion, you led an
effort to have the YPG dismantle its defenses as part of the safe
zone. What was the logic behind that?

Jeffrey: It was an expansion of the Manbij roadmap: joint patrols and,
in Manbij, the withdrawal of PKK-associated leadership. In the safe
zone it was all SDF forces, and heavy weapons and defenses to be
withdrawn. We thought, given constant Turkish pressure on the
president to do something about this, that that made sense.

When Bolton and I went out [to Ankara] in January 2019, there was a
lot of talk about Jeffrey running in with this map. It wasn’t
Jeffrey’s map. The map had been drawn up by our military personnel
with the Kurds, and it had been agreed with them.

The Kurds were supposed to dismantle their fortifications but they
didn’t. That was one of Erdogan’s major complaints. Bolton didn’t want
to have any Turks in there; that was one of the arguments that I’d had
with him out in Ankara. We agreed that we wouldn’t show the map, but
that we would deploy to the Turks the concept of the map.

We finally got an agreement in July and August. It included Turkish
patrols down to the M4 highway, so the Turks got their 30 kilometers,
and somewhat vaguely, [a] Turkish permanent presence, but we couldn’t
determine where that would be.

It was a good compromise. It was kind of working, but the Turks were
still unhappy with it because they knew the SDF was still controlling
the area, and they didn’t believe the SDF was dismantling the
fortifications. And that’s true. We kept on pressing the SDF to do it
and we got a lot of excuses.

Al-Monitor: Why did it collapse?

Jeffrey: The president was uncomfortable with our presence in Syria.
He was very uncomfortable with what he saw as endless wars. This is
something he should not be criticized for. We took down the [IS]
caliphate, and then we stayed on. Trump kept asking, “Why do we have
troops there?” And we didn’t give him the right answer.

If somebody had said, “It’s all about the Iranians,” it might have
worked. But the people whose job it was to tell why the troops are
there was DOD. And they just gave the [Congressional] Authorization of
Use of Military Force: “We’re there to fight terrorists.”

The reason that Trump pulled the troops out was I think because he was
just tired of us having come up with all these explanations for why
we’re in there. There was an implicit promise to him, ‘Hey boss,
nothing’s going to go wrong, we’re working with the Turks, we’re
working with the Russians.’ And then he gets these disasters.

I didn’t brief the president on it. Pompeo did, and made arguments
along those lines, focused on Iran. But Trump was uncomfortable about
those forces, and he trusted Erdogan. Erdogan would keep making these
cases about the PKK, and the president would ask people, and they
would have to be honest and ‘fess up. Of course, it’s more complicated
than that. Wars are complicated.

The president was briefed, but he also listens to Erdogan. Erdogan is
pretty persuasive.

We at the State Department never provided any troop numbers to the
president. That’s not our job. We didn’t try to deceive him. He kept
on publicly saying numbers that were way below what the actual numbers
were, so in talking to the media and talking to Congress, we had to be
very careful and dodge around. Furthermore, the numbers were funny. Do
you count the allies that didn’t want to be identified in there? Do
you count the al-Tanf garrison? Do you count the Bradley unit that was
going in and out?

We were gun shy because the president had three times given the order
to withdraw. It was a constant pressuring and threatening to pull the
troops out of Syria. We felt very vulnerable and may have been a
little bit punch drunk on fear because it made so much sense to us. I
understand his concerns about Afghanistan. But the Syria mission is
the gift that keeps on giving. We and the SDF are still the dominant
force in [northeast] Syria.

The Kurds were always trying to get us to pretend that we would defend
them against the Turkish army. They pressed CJTF, over my objections,
to start putting outposts along the Turkish border. I hated the idea;
it just provoked the Turks.

I wasn’t able to get those stopped, but I was able to stop additional
ones [being built]. They made no sense. The US military had no
authorization to shoot at the Turks, who could simply drive around
them. It was simply a signal to the Turks that we couldn’t really be
trusted and that we had some plan of a permanent statelet in northeast
Syria run by the PKK as a pressure point, just like many Turks
erroneously think we have our Greece policy and our Cyprus policy and
our Armenia policy all to pressure the Turks. Because that’s how the
British and French dealt with the Ottoman Empire.

It was played up in Congress and the media as if we had this policy of
being a bulwark against the Turks, and then the president changed our
policy on the ground in his conversation with Erdogan.

Believe me, I was with the commander in December 2018 when the Turks
were about to come in, and we were trying to figure out what the US
Army should do. There was no plan. There was no plan to respond to the
Turks because they had no order to do that. That was not part of their
mission set.

Secretary Pompeo, I and others had consistently made that point to the
Turks: Even if we don’t stop you [militarily], and that’s not our
policy, we will act against you politically. But more importantly, the
Kurds will just invite in the Russians. The Turks just pooh-poohed
this. They pooh-poohed this after the 6th of October incursion.

The president sent a message to Erdogan that if he did not stop within
24 hours, Mazlum would reach out to the Russians and invite them in,
and the US would not stop them. I wound up passing that message on,
and our Turkish interlocutor was incredulous. They either thought the
Russians wouldn’t come in or we would stop them, just like we did to
Wagner [at the Conoco gas field in Deir ez-Zor].

And the Russians came in. Suddenly it’s checkmate. Can I claim the
Turkish problem has been resolved? No, I can’t. But the Turks now have
a presence in the northeast. They have less to fear from the SDF.

Al-Monitor: Did they ever have anything to fear from the SDF?

Jeffrey: Of course. Sure. Look, they almost went to war with Syria in
almost 1999 over the presence of [PKK leader Abdallah] Ocalan. The YPG
is the PKK. Remember when they went into Raqqa? Remember the poster?
That’s the problem. Erdogan does not want another statelet like Qandil
in Syria that is protected by the United States or protected by
Russia.

The Turks have lost 40,000 people to the PKK. It is an existential
threat to Turkey. The Kurdish population of Turkey is split. Half of
it is in Kurdish enclaves. The other half is integrated into Turkish
society. You’re looking at a Bosnia-Rwanda type situation if the PKK
could ever truly mobilize the Kurdish population to the degree that
the Turkish majority decided that “the only good Kurd is a dead Kurd.”
That is the existential threat of the PKK to Turkey.

What Erdogan didn’t have to fear was the idea that the United States
was deliberately doing this as part of some long-term plan to keep
Turkey weak.

Al-Monitor: But you never saw any evidence that the SDF funneling
weapons or fighters into Turkey?

Jeffrey: Certainly not from the northeast of Syria. That was part of
our agreement with them.

Al-Monitor: Do you think the US can still reach consensus with Erdogan
on northeast Syria, given his insistence that the PYD/YPG is
inextricable from the PKK terror group?

Jeffrey: I don’t know. Whenever you talk about northeast Syria, the
most important thing is Turkish domestic politics. Erdogan’s battle
buddy, [Devlet] Bahceli, can be summed up in one sentence: The only
thing that matters is the Turkish national agenda, and in that there’s
no place for Kurds.

That’s not the AKP’s agenda, of course. Erdogan, who has had much
better policies toward Kurds and the PKK than anybody before him, is
being hampered by the MHP.

If Erdogan feels that he needs a victory [to] churn up national
sentiment, he might do something more. The problem is, he would have
to do that in conjunction with the Russians because I don’t think he
will go south of the M4. He and his people had always maintained that
they were not interested in what happens south of the M4. So Kobane,
for example. But that would require agreement of the Russians.

The Russians have made it clear — I have it on the highest authority —
that the Russians do not want to see an expanded Turkish presence into
Syria.

The SDF people keep saying the Russians are telling them the Turks are
about to come in. That’s a Russian threat. It’s made out of
whole-cloth to the Russians to push us out and get access to the
oilfields. It’s a crude Russian pressure tactic. I don’t see it as
likely.

Al-Monitor: SDF commander Mazlum Abdi has expressed doubt that an
agreement with the Assad regime is likely in the near future. What is
the status of PYD-KNC talks? How might this end for the SDF?

Jeffrey: Here’s Jim Jeffrey’s cynical answer to that: The answer to
Dave Petraeus’ question, 'How does this all end?' — it’s an issue of
proportionality. We don’t have a perfect roadmap. If you want to put
limited resources, fine, but it’s OK because that’s the primary way
our competition moves forward.

The various Kurdish groups are going to be a factor in the eventual
outcome of the Syrian crisis. Politically and militarily. They hold
many of the reins.

Al-Monitor: Could they ever be included in Geneva?

Who knows? We live in a world of Kashmirs and Nagorno-Karabakhs.

The point is, this [preserving the SDF] is our plan B. We have a plan
A. Plan A doesn’t answer 'how does this all end?' Plan A’s whole
purpose [is] to ensure that the Russians and Assad and the Iranians
don’t have a happy answer to how this all ends, and maybe that will
someday get them to accept Plan B. Meanwhile, they’re tied up in
knots. They don’t see Syria as a victory.

Al-Monitor: Do you think Mazlum will be able to get the PKK cadres out
of northeast Syria?

Jeffrey: We’ll see. I think he’s doing everything in his power to
balance PKK, Turkish, Russian and American interests to maintain first
of all the protection of his own people, the Kurdish population of the
northeast, [and] secondly, of the areas that he controls, which
includes a large number of Arabs. He’s doing exactly what I would be
doing under these circumstances.

How much pressure on PKK cadre that policy requires or will allow may
vary from time to time. It’s certainly something that we and the Turks
keep raising.


 

Putin, Merkel discuss situation in Karabakh

Panorama, Armenia
Dec 7 2020

Russian President Vladimir Putin on Monday held a telephone conversation with German Chancellor Angela Merkel, the Kremlin said.

The leaders discussed in detail the Nagorno-Karabakh developments. Vladimir Putin told Angela Merkel about Russia’s mediation efforts with a view towards a cessation of hostilities and the activities of the Russian peacekeepers deployed along the contact line and the Lachin corridor at the requests of Baku and Yerevan. It was emphasised that the consistent implementation of the agreements recorded in the November 9 statement by the presidents of Russia and Azerbaijan and the prime minister of Armenia facilitated the general stabilisation of the situation in the region.

The two leaders underscored the importance of resolving the urgent problems of the population that was affected by the armed clashes. In this context, they noted the need to involve specialised international structures in the work conducted by the Russia-established Humanitarian Response Centre.

Both leaders expressed their willingness to further cooperate within the framework of the OSCE Minsk Group.

Statement on Artsakh war can open Turkey’s ports and Azerbaijan’s market for Armenia

ArmBanks.am, Armenia
Nov  30 2020
Statement on Artsakh war can open Turkey's ports and Azerbaijan's market for Armenia

30.11.2020 16:06

YEREVAN, November 30. /ARKA/. Vahan Kerobyan, newly appointed minister of economy of Armenia, who is founder of Menu Group food delivery service, outlined the opportunities that the domestic economy will receive as a result of unblocking transport communications in the region, according to a statement on Artsakh dated November 9.

In an interview with the Public Television of Armenia, Kerobyan pointed out in the long term the possibilities to use the ports of Turkey and, possibly, the Azerbaijani market.

"Of course, open borders are very good for the economy, because as a result of competition, better products are created, that is, our economy can reach the world level in quality. If cheap and high-quality products are imported into the country, then our local producer is forced to become better," the minister said in his televised interview.

He spoke about the decision taken during the war that from January 1, 2020 the import of Turkish products will be banned – we are talking about 2,200 items of goods. As a result, a niche of about $ 200 million will be vacated on the Armenian market.

"I urge businessmen to take this list, see what opportunities it provides and make sure that similar Armenian-made goods appear on store shelves from January 1," Kerobyan said.

According to him, this is a good opportunity in the short term, and in the long term, the opening of the borders will provide ample opportunities.

"For example, our exporters will be able to deliver their products to Russia and other countries in more convenient ways than now. Turkish ports will be opened, many more opportunities will appear. Perhaps, the Azerbaijani market for our goods and our market for Azerbaijan will open," he said.

Therefore, in his words, Armenia will need many people with good knowledge, who will be able to take advantage of these opportunities.

"We are going to develop a program that will allow us to use all the opportunities that will be provided by unblocking communications in the region," Kerobyan said.

Among the promising sectors of Armenia, the minister singled out agriculture (consolidation of small farms, the placement of factories and hotels in villages), IT, tourism, industry and construction.

He added that he plans to achieve double-digit growth of the Armenian economy in 2021, however refraining from naming specific figures.

About Artsakh War

From September 27 to November 9, the Azerbaijani Armed Forces, with the participation of Turkey and foreign mercenaries and terrorists recruited by it, carried out aggression against Artsakh at the frontline and in the rear using rocket and artillery weapons, heavy armored vehicles, military aircraft and prohibited types of weapons (cluster bombs, phosphorus weapons). The strikes were delivered also at civil and military targets on the territory of Armenia.

On November 9, the leaders of the Russia, Azerbaijan and Armenia signed a statement on the cessation of all hostilities in Artsakh. According to the document, the parties stop at their positions. The city of Shushi, Agdam, Kelbajar and Lachin regions pass over to Azerbaijan, with the exception of a 5-kilometer corridor connecting Karabakh with Armenia. A Russian peacekeeping contingent will be deployed along the contact line in Karabakh and along the Lachin corridor. Internally displaced persons and refugees are returning to Karabakh and adjacent regions, prisoners of war, hostages and other detained persons and bodies of the dead are exchanged. -0-

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 11/29/2020

                                        Sunday, November 29, 2020

France Tells Turkey To Remove ‘Mercenaries’ From Karabakh
November 29, 2020
        • Sargis Harutyunyan

Armenia -- French Secretary of State Jean-Baptiste Lemoyne (L) and 
French-Armenian footballer Youri Djorkaeff at a meeting with Armenian Prime 
Minister Nikol Pashinian, Yerevan, November 28, 2020.

France expects Turkey to withdraw Syrian mercenaries recruited for Azerbaijan 
during the recent war in Nagorno-Karabakh, a senior French official visiting 
Armenia said late on Saturday.

“French President Emmanuel Macron was the first to call things what they are and 
state that Turkey transported Syrian mercenaries from the Turkish city of 
Gaziantep to Nagorno-Karabakh,” Jean-Baptiste Lemoyne, a secretary of state at 
the French Foreign Ministry, told a news conference in Yerevan held at the end 
of his two-day visit.

“France expects concrete actions from Turkey so that Turkey removes the 
mercenaries from the region,” he said. “Paris is going to discuss with its 
European partners sanctions against Turkey.”

France has been pressing the European Union to impose the sanctions because of 
Turkish actions in the eastern Mediterranean where Turkey and EU members Greece 
and Cyprus are locked in a dispute over natural gas rights. Relations between 
Ankara and Paris have been increasingly tense in recent months.

Macron accused Turkey of recruiting jihadist fighters from Syria for the 
Azerbaijani army shortly after the outbreak of large-scale hostilities in and 
around Karabakh on September 27.

Russia also expressed serious concern in the following weeks about the 
deployment of “terrorists and mercenaries” from Syria and Libya in the Karabakh 
conflict zone. Russian President Vladimir Putin and his foreign and defense 
ministers repeatedly raised the matter with their Turkish counterparts.

Ankara has denied sending members of Turkish-backed groups to fight in Karabakh 
on Azerbaijan’s side. Azerbaijan also denies the presence of such mercenaries in 
the Azerbaijani army ranks.

Multiple reports by Western media quoted members of Islamist rebel groups in 
areas of northern Syria under Turkish control as saying in late September and 
October that they are deploying to Azerbaijan in coordination with the Turkish 
government. Armenia has portrayed those reports as further proof of Turkey’s 
direct involvement in the war stopped by a Russian-brokered ceasefire on 
November 10.

Karabakh’s Armenian-backed army claimed to have captured two Syrian fighters 
during the fighting. Both men are now prosecuted in Armenia on relevant charges.

Lemoyne discussed the issue at a meeting with Armenian Foreign Minister Ara 
Ayvazian held earlier on Saturday. According to the Armenian Foreign Ministry, 
they stressed “the importance of removing foreign armed terrorists brought to 
the region by Turkey.”


Armenia - A French delegation headed by Secretary of State Jean-Baptiste 
Lemoyne, delivers medical supplies to a hospital in Yerevan, November 28, 2020.

Lemoyne arrived in Yerevan with a delegation of French officials, aid workers 
and French-Armenian community activists on a board a plane that brought a second 
batch of French humanitarian assistance to Armenian victims of the Karabakh 
conflict. It mainly consisted of medical supplies for Armenian soldiers and 
civilians wounded during the war. The delegation headed by Lemoyne visited two 
Yerevan hospitals treating them.

Lemoyne said the French government plans to send more such aid to Armenia when 
he met with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian on Saturday.

“We are grateful to friendly France for providing humanitarian assistance and 
correctly presenting the situation in Nagorno-Karabakh to the international 
community,” Pashinian told the French official.

France is home to a sizable and influential ethnic Armenian community. It was 
instrumental in the passage by France’s Senate on November 18 of a resolution 
calling on the French government to recognize Karabakh as an independent 
republic.

Lemoyne expressed the Macron administration’s opposition to the resolution when 
he addressed the Senate during a debate. The French Foreign Ministry reiterated 
on November 19 that “France does not recognize the self-proclaimed 
Nagorno-Karabakh Republic.”


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.

 


Peace deal between Armenia and Azerbaijan is a disaster for Iran

Arab News
Nov 27 2020

The latest conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh has been a disaster for Iran. The terms of the cease-fire agreed on by Armenia and Azerbaijan represent a grave threat to Tehran’s long-term strategic interests.
The effects of this are likely to affect the perception of the regime among the Iranian people, and alter its policies on Azerbaijan and Syria.
Azerbaijan now has control over the entirety of its border with Iran along the Aras river. While this is cause for celebration in Baku, it is viewed with alarm in Tehran because an extension of Azerbaijan’s border gives Israel access to more territory from which it can keep tabs on Iran.
Despite denials from Baku, it is no secret that Israel and Azerbaijan enjoy substantive cooperation in intelligence, energy and military matters.
Azerbaijan is one of the largest buyers of Israeli weaponry. Its use of Israeli “kamikaze” drones during the war played an important role in tilting the battlefield to its advantage — although Turkish-made Bayraktar TB2 drones have been credited as the true game-changer in the conflict.
In addition, Azerbaijan and Israel maintain deep intelligence ties. Were Tel Aviv to launch airstrikes against Iranian nuclear installations, Azerbaijan would likely play a vital role, either as a refueling stop or launchpad.
The other consequence of the war is the proposed creation of a transit corridor through Armenian territory, connecting Azerbaijan to its Nakhchivan exclave. It is likely that this corridor, which will be patrolled by Russian troops, will run parallel to Armenia’s border with Iran. This has already raised concerns in Tehran, as it could effectively cut off Iranian access to Armenia, and from there to Europe via Georgia. For a country already reeling from international sanctions, it is of great importance to Iran that it maintains access to friendly neighbors.
Such is the panic that has set in, Iran’s Deputy Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi was compelled to explicitly issue an assurance that access to Armenia will not be threatened. It is noteworthy that Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif will soon travel to Moscow and Baku to discuss the issue in more detail.
However, it is even more important to take note of a capital city he will not be visiting: Ankara. Turkey is another important winner in the conflict. Not only will its troops maintain a presence in Azerbaijan, it also will have direct access to the Caspian Sea through the proposed Nakhchivan-Azerbaijan corridor. Ankara can now directly project influence in Central Asia, which has been one of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s most cherished ambitions.
Tehran will have taken note of Russia’s reluctance to offer full-throated support to its ally, Armenia. The takeaway from Moscow’s role in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict is that it is happy to sacrifice an ally if it becomes too bothersome. Nikol Pashinyan, Armenia’s prime minister, came to power through the sort of “color revolution” detested by Russian President Vladimir Putin. Pashinyan further annoyed him by jailing Robert Kocharyan, Armenia’s former president and erstwhile Putin ally.
In this conflict, then, Moscow stuck to the letter, rather than the spirit, of its alliance with Yerevan, stating that its security commitments only extend to Armenian territory. The Russians allowed Azerbaijan to reclaim all its lost territories, while Armenia retained rump areas around Nagorno-Karabakh’s capital.
Moscow will maintain its influence in the region by providing a peacekeeping force in Karabakh and along the proposed Nakhchivan-Azerbaijan corridor. It also will be happy to see the back of Pashinyan, whose political career seems to be over. Russia also appears to be guided by its broader goal of ensuring that Turkey remains out of the orbit of the West.
Astute policymakers in Tehran will likely draw the right conclusions from this, particularly in terms of what it might augur for Iran’s ally in Syria, Bashar Assad. Having seen the eagerness with which Russia and Turkey were willing to hash out a deal between themselves, Tehran is likely to push the Assad regime in the direction of concluding the Syrian civil war.

The main effect the outcome of the conflict will have on domestic politics within Iran is likely to be psychological. It is yet another blow to Tehran’s self-image as a regional hegemon.

Dnyanesh Kamat

The main effect the outcome of the conflict will have on domestic politics within Iran is likely to be psychological. It is yet another blow to Tehran’s self-image as a regional hegemon. Indeed the fact that the regime was a bystander to the conflict, unable to influence its outcome, will revive memories of the two Russo-Persian Wars of the 19th century, which resulted in Persia having to cede control over the entire South Caucasus.
It reveals to the Iranian people that Tehran no longer has the economic might, the technological sophistication or an alluring political model to influence a region that was under Persian influence for hundreds of years — one is tempted to say thousands, since the time of the Achaemenid empire.
Taken together, all of this represents yet another slight to the legitimacy of the regime that has ruled Iran since 1979.

  • Dnyanesh Kamat is a political analyst specializing in the Middle East and South Asia. He also advises governments on policies and strategic initiatives to foster growth in the creative industries, such as media, entertainment and culture. Copyright: Syndication Bureau
Disclaimer: Views expressed by writers in this section are their own and do not necessarily reflect Arab News' point-of-view

Henrikh Mkhitaryan shares tribute to fallen soldiers

Public Radio of Armenia

Nov 22 2020

In social media posts, Armenia captain Henrikh Mkhitaryan paid tribute the soldiers fallen in the Artsakh war.

Henrikh Mkhitaryan wrote:

“Our braves never die.

Our grief is so deep that it can’t be spoken…today all over the world a Commemorating Service will honor our fallen heroes,” Mkhitaryan wrote.

44 days along in Artsakh, you have shown indescribable courage sacrificing your lives for the Holy mission of defending our Homeland, our People and our several millennia old historical lands.

You will live forever amongst us…

We pray also for our wounded brothers. Our absolute gratitude to all our soldiers. Thank you.

I wish my Nation strength and solidarity to overcome the sorrow of its beloved sons.

We must remain focused and aware, we must leverage our full potential and create a better world for our youth, a world of Peace where they can fulfill their dreams.”

Today all Armenian churches worldwide hold commemorative services in memory of the soldiers fallen in the war unleashed by Azerbaijan on September 27 backed by Turkey.



NYT: Layers of Tragedy, in a Cemetery and in the Mountains

New York Times
Nov 18 2020

Armenians flee what they consider their historical home, after the end of a six-week war with Azerbaijan over the region of Nagorno-Karabakh.

By

  • Nov. 18, 2020, 3:49 p.m. ET

KELBAJAR, Azerbaijan — It’s the little things that stick with you.

The men extracting the engine from a junked car on the side of the road. The passing truck filled with a living room’s worth of red upholstered furniture. The ruddy faces of the Russian peacekeeping troops, leaning forward out of the hatches of their armored personnel carriers, rumbling down into a desolate, hazy valley.

Perhaps focusing on the little things is the mind’s way of functioning when faced with tragedy.

This is Kelbajar, the scene this past week of the latest wrenching turn in the generations-long conflict between Armenians and Azerbaijanis.

The mountainous district is part of the breakaway enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh, which is legally part of Azerbaijan, but inhabited almost exclusively by ethnic Armenians. Armenian troops captured Kelbajar in 1993, driving out thousands of Azerbaijanis who were forced up a frigid mountain pass on foot to escape; last week, after thousands died in a six-week Azerbaijani offensive to regain Nagorno-Karabakh, it was the Armenians fleeing what they consider their historical lands, many of them burning their houses as they left.

Image

Evacuating a police station in Kelbajar, Azerbaijan.Credit…Mauricio Lima for The New York Times

Around you here is the specter of death: the whispers about the bodies of Armenians still scattered on roadsides to the south and the vacant eyes of the soldiers when they speak of Azerbaijan’s armed drones. There is also the wreckage of a Soviet-era Azerbaijani cemetery, a piece of a gravestone, engraved with minarets, abandoned in the tan grass.

I returned last week to Nagorno-Karabakh, with the photographer Mauricio Lima, to document the immediate aftermath of this century’s most vicious war in the long-volatile Caucasus Mountains. With Russia to the north, Turkey and Iran to the south, the energy-rich Caspian Sea to the east and the strategically pivotal Black Sea to the west, the Caucasus seems destined to suffer as regional powers compete for influence.

And it feels as if the violence is unending. The killings of Armenians by Azerbaijanis in the early 20th century; the tit-for-tat violence of the late 1980s, which escalated into riots, pogroms, war and Armenia’s violent expulsion of more than half a million Azerbaijanis from what became the Nagorno-Karabakh enclave. And now, a six-week war that ended last week after the deaths of more than 2,000 Armenians and an unknown number of Azerbaijanis.

As we headed toward Nagorno-Karabakh last Friday, we passed a column of Russian forces in what seemed an absurd scene. Our bus squeezed between some cows on the roadside along Armenia’s graceful, blue, mountain-framed Lake Sevan to the left, and Russian armored personnel carriers, with backpacks, cases and cardboard boxes marked fragile piled haphazardly on top of these mechanized killing machines, held in place by green netting.

It turned out we were all heading to the same place — the Dadivank Monastery, a centuries-old Armenian holy site whose fate now concerns Armenians and historians around the world. It is part of the Kelbajar District, which was supposed to be transferred to Azerbaijani control on Sunday under the peace deal brokered by President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia last week, a handover later delayed to Nov. 25.

The Russians set up an observation post next to the monastery, where Armenians had flocked to bid farewell and baptize their babies. As I spoke with the monastery’s abbot, Hovhannes Hovhannisyan, the monastery’s guard’s house down below went up in flames. The monastery’s longtime guard had set it on fire, even though the abbot had asked him not to.

To explain the man’s mind-set, Abbot Hovhannisyan evoked the Armenian Genocide of 1915.

“The people always thought this way,” the abbot said, referring to Armenians, as tall licks of flame tore through the house roof below and thick yellowish smoke enveloped the monastery. “It is better to burn the house that he built, so as not to leave it to be defiled.”

We drove on deeper into Nagorno-Karabakh. After passing more burning, smoldering and charred houses, we entered areas that will remain under Armenian control. The question is: How many Armenians will return?

In Stepanakert, the capital of the enclave, the streets were desolate. There were munitions craters in the pavement, shrapnel pockmarks on building walls, burned-out stores, broken glass, broken windows, shattered soft-drink-cooler doors. There was no hot water and no heating, and the only mobile internet service was Azerbaijani, coming from the land that the Armenians had just lost.

RUSSIA

GEORGIA

Caspian

Sea

Area self-declared as the

Nagorno-Karabakh Republic

ARMENIA

Baku

AZERBAIJAN

TURKEY

NAGORNO-KARABAKH

former Soviet region

NAKCHIVAN

Azerbaijan

IRAN

50 Miles

By The New York Times

One of the few people out on the streets was Mayor Danielyan, 58. He invited me to his house to look in the direction of the historic hilltop town of Shusha, six miles away — now controlled by Azerbaijan. It was now up to the Russian peacekeepers — almost 2,000 of them to be deployed along the line with imposing checkpoints and heavy armor — to keep the Armenians and Azerbaijanis apart.

“For now, unfortunately, we must live separately in order to exist,” Mr. Danielyan said. “One can only hope and dream of living together.”

We stopped at the military cemetery. I had been there a month earlier, during the third week of the war, and found a hillside scraped away for the recent dead. There were about 60 new graves now, with holes already dug out for more, across three stair-step rows bulldozed into the hill.

Standing down below, I was at eye level with the barren clay, tree roots poking out of it. I knew that within it were the remains of men who had just weeks ago been alive.

Looking up I saw the rows of fresh graves, bright artificial roses and chrysanthemums, framed pictures of soldiers, a nailed-together wooden cross scrawled with a last name, Beklaryan, in black marker. Looking higher I saw the jumble of gravestones from the 1990s war, the likenesses of stern Armenian fighters in uniforms and horizontal-stripe undershirts etched into them.

And looking higher still I saw an orange stela, memorializing the Nagorno-Karabakh residents who had died in World War II.

Layers of tragedy, I thought, form these sharp mountains and rolling hills.

And then it was time to go. It was 1 p.m. on Saturday, and at midnight, the only open road out of Nagorno-Karabakh was supposed to come under Azerbaijani control. Soldiers rerouted us onto a side road through the mountains, jammed with traffic for six miles, we were told. For hours, stuck in the town of Kelbajar, we barely moved, surrounded by fleeing Armenians. The truck behind us was carrying what seemed to be an entire house, intact.

As night fell, the scene became increasingly apocalyptic. Houses around us went up in flames, and columns of white smoke rose into the dark sky. At one point, a brawl broke out, and, with barely any cellphone service, no one knew where to go.

Eventually, we turned around and left by the main road, passing power lines that had been knocked down. But before we did, a man came out of the truck in front, lit a cigarette and unleashed a monumental tirade of profanity.

The man, Arsen Nalbanzyan, told me that in the district of Armenia where he lives, 31 of the 36 villages were Azerbaijani during Soviet times. “We lived normally,” he said of Azerbaijanis and Armenians, describing shared weddings and being godfathers to each others’ children. Even in recent years, he said, he would get drunk with Azerbaijani friends in Moscow and St. Petersburg.

It was the country’s elites, he said, who fomented hatred among people for their own ends.

“This was all done for money, for cash,” Mr. Nalbanzyan said, his face lit up by car headlights, the air around us thick with smoke from burning houses in the frigid night. “They didn’t think about the people — people like us.”

“And now” — expletive — “who knows what will happen?”

https://www.nytimes.com/2020/11/18/world/europe/layers-of-tragedy-in-a-cemetery-and-in-the-mountains.html