Armenia ranked third in countries where Russia is most loved, poll shows

TASS, Russia
Dec 24 2020
Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Moldova, Syria, Ukraine, Bulgaria and China are among the other top countries
Yerevan, Armenia

© Alexander Ryumin/TASS

YEREVAN, December 24. /TASS/. Rossotrudnichestvo, Russia’s state agency responsible for overseeing promotion of cultural ties and exchanges, has published the results of a poll entitled ‘Which countries love Russia the most?’, Armenia was placed third, the Russian cultural center in Yerevan told TASS Thursday.

"We thank everyone who took part in the competition. Tajikistan won the first place in the competition, followed by Serbia and Armenia was placed third in the list of countries that love Russia the most," the agency was told. Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Moldova, Syria, Ukraine, Bulgaria and China are among the other top countries.


Armenians Haven’t Had a Competent Leader Since Catholicos Khrimian Hyrig

December 22,  2020



Harut Sassounian

BY HARUT SASSOUNIAN

Khrimian Hyrig is a highly revered clergyman. But, he is also a great leader who has given wonderful political advice to the Armenian nation.

His Holiness was born in Van, Western Armenia, in 1820 and became the Patriarch of Constantinople in 1869. Due to his nationalistic views, he was forced to resign by the Ottoman government in 1873. He was then installed as Catholicos of All Armenians in Etchmiadzin in 1893 and died in 1907.

Khrimian Hyrig is well-known for his participation in the Berlin Congress in 1878, hoping to receive from the great powers a decision to force the Ottoman Empire to establish substantial reforms in the Armenian provinces. He did not accomplish his objective because Armenians were powerless. He likened the failed Armenian efforts in the Berlin Congress to his attempt to eat from a bowl with a “paper ladle,” while other nations had an “iron ladle.”

The highly nationalistic Khrimian Hyrig exhorted his fellow Armenians to arm themselves: “People of Armenia, of course you understand well what the gun could have done and can do. And so, dear and blessed Armenians, when you return to the Fatherland, to your relatives and friends, take weapons, take weapons and again weapons. People, above all, place the hope of your liberation on yourself. Use your brain and your fist! Man must work for himself in order to be saved.”

Khrimian Hyrig’s wise words are just as valid today, particularly after the latest disastrous defeat Armenians suffered at the hands of better armed Azerbaijan and Turkey.
A recently surfaced letter by Khrimian Hyrig, written over a century ago, is as applicable today as it was back then. It is headlined: “If You Have an Independent State in the Future, Do Everything You Can to Never, Ever Lose Your Independence.”

Khrimian Hayrig

Here is Khrimian Hyrig’s meaningful counsel which I have translated into English:

In the future, I hope you already have an independent state and you have realized our centuries-old dream. If so, you are now living in someone’s dream come true; in the dream of millions. I hope you realize the power of luck that has befallen you.

I would like to know what that dream is like in reality, but since I cannot see it with my own eyes, let me express my remarks with this letter. If you read these lines, I will become a part of your present and my future.

When I went to the Berlin Congress to raise the rights of our people around the world, only then did I realize that we must first have the right to have a right. That right is acquired with weapons.

You’ve probably heard of the “iron ladle”. The civilized nations of Europe, which seemed to us to be law-abiding and fair, gave us nothing but pity. Russia, which seemed to be a great friend of our people, other than sympathy, sees and hears nothing but its own interests.

The Armenian people seemed to be like a hungry child outdoors in the frosty winter, before whom everyone closed the doors of their homes. The Armenian people were without a care-taker, but the most important thing I understood was that we should not look for care-takers from abroad. There, in the future, I am sure, you will not look for foreign care-takers and you will not pin your hopes on Europeans, Russians or other states.

If you have an independent state, your only care-taker must be your own government. I hope the government will not leave you abandoned, but if it abandons you, what is the point of your independence?

The greatest misfortune of the people is that its own leaders treat them in the same way as the foreigners. We lived under the yoke of foreigners for centuries. They treated us cruelly and unfairly. We sought justice and did not find it. If you have an independent state, I hope there is justice there.

The Turks treated Armenians very unfairly. Can an Armenian treat another Armenian the same way? Here, in the past, one of the greatest tragedies of our people is its ignorance. How can an uneducated people find their place in this cunning world? The Turkish authorities will not allow this, as they see their danger in the education of our people. The greater the education of the people, the more restrained the government will be.

I devoted my whole life to spreading enlightenment in the Armenian provinces, but alone I could not do much. If you have a state, educate our people, spread enlightenment in the provinces. The uneducated people choose uneducated masters who oppress them and one day the uneducated people are obliged to choose foreign masters.

At a time when ordinary people are living in the provinces under the heavy burden of the situation, wealthy Armenians in Istanbul are living in sheer luxury. They are indifferent to the situation of the people, as if they were foreigners. The Turkish authorities even ally with them to keep the people obedient. I hope that the rich in your country are not so arrogant and are not allied with the bad government against the people.

In 1876, when the Ottoman Constitution was adopted, the hope for salvation awoke in us. We thought that the five-hundred-year-old, infertile and old mother Turkey brought forth to the old world a new, young constitution, but our hopes were dashed and time showed that they were beautiful letters written on paper, while the people continued to suffer. There, in the future, perhaps you also have a beautiful constitution and laws. I want your laws not to remain on paper like the Ottoman constitution.

And finally, I want to give you a message. Have ambassadors who properly voice the demands of the people to the world, and the clergy will not engage in diplomacy, leaving aside their flock. Have leaders who love the people, because the Armenian people have suffered a lot from the hatred of foreign leaders. And never seek foreign care-takers. And if you have in the future an independent state, do everything you can to never, ever lose your independence again.

 

These wise words are an excellent advice to every leader of Armenia and to the Armenian people worldwide. They are as appropriate today as they were back then when Armenia was not an independent country. Not a single person should aspire to lead Armenia without heeding Khrimian Hyrig’s prudent counsel. Armenia has numerous problems. But the two most important problems are:

  1. Armenia needs to develop a powerful military to fend for itself without relying on other countries. A weak nation is always subject to the dictates of more powerful ones, as we witnessed in the recent Artsakh War. If you are weak, you have no rights and no one cares to come to your rescue. Unless Armenia becomes more powerful militarily and economically, it will always be subjugated, particularly since we are surrounded by vicious enemies who constantly plot our destruction.
  2. The next important requirement for our nation is to have a competent leader, something we rarely had throughout our long history, and we do not have it today!





Sports: Eduardo Baez Upsets Undefeated Armenian Olympian Narek Abgaryan

Boxing Scene
Dec 18 2020

Russian combat engineers defuse 6,000 explosive objects in Nagorno-Karabakh – peacekeepers

TASS, Russia
Dec 17 2020
The deputy head of the Russian peacekeeping contingent’s reconciliation center said that military doctors provided assistance to 558 local residents

MOSCOW, December 17. /TASS/. Russian combat engineers have defused over 6,000 explosive objects and cleared about 200 hectares of territory in Nagorno-Karabakh, Dmitry Perepelkin, a deputy chief of the Russian peacekeeping contingent’s reconciliation center, told reporters on Thursday.

"Russian combat engineers of the Center for Humanitarian Demining have cleared 195 hectares of territory and 60 kilometers of roads from unexploded mines and shells. <…> More than 6,000 explosive objects have been detected and destroyed," Perepelkin said.

According to him, 405 buildings were also checked for unexploded ordnance. The deputy head of the center also said that military doctors provided assistance to 558 local residents, including 67 children.

"Together with employees of the International Committee of the Red Cross, we continue the exchange of the bodies of those killed between the Armenian and Azerbaijani sides, as well as the search for missing persons. To make this work more effective, the number of search groups has been increased from three to five," Perepelkin stressed. He said that the hotline for collecting data about the missing persons had received over 490 telephone calls.

Renewed clashes between Azerbaijan and Armenia erupted on September 27, with intense battles raging in the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh. The area experienced flare-ups of violence in the summer of 2014, in April 2016 and this past July.

On November 9, Russian President Vladimir Putin, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan signed a joint statement on a complete ceasefire in Nagorno-Karabakh starting from November 10. Under the document, the Azerbaijani and Armenian sides stopped at the positions that they had held and Russian peacekeepers were deployed to the region. The Russian peacekeepers have set up observation posts along the engagement line in Nagorno-Karabakh and along the Lachinsky corridor that connects Armenia with the enclave to exercise control of the ceasefire observance. The peacekeeping mission’s command is stationed in Stepanakert in Nagorno-Karabakh. The situation in the area is monitored round-the-clock.



TURKISH press: Intellectual blindness clouds both sides of the Aegean, hampers dialogue

Turkish and Greek flags seen on a ferry from Greek island of Kos to Turkish coastal town of Bodrum, on October 21, 2015. (Photo: Getty Images)

On Thursday, Dec. 10, a private Turkish news agency provided its subscribers with an article titled “Turkey confessions from Greece’s national security adviser.” The article, in an effort to sum up views penned by Alexandros Diakopoulos for the Greek daily Kathimerini earlier Wednesday, argued on his behalf that Turkey was geopolitically redefining itself in the region and that it would control maritime routes from the Black Sea and Suez Canal to the central Mediterranean Sea if it succeeds. According to the article, Diakopoulos also argued that Ankara has been spending “astronomically” on its navy and defense industry, increasing its role in Africa with new embassies, gaining a foothold in northern Africa through Libya and in the Red Sea through Somalia, and even making overtures to the Pacific over defense deals signed with Pakistan and Malaysia.

In the end, various Turkish news outlets were quick to republish these views coming from a Greek national security adviser; they praised Turkish moves and gave Turkey its due in the areas of the Eastern Mediterranean and defense. One post was an exception in two ways: First, it failed to properly cite the source of the article, and second, it recalled that Diakopoulos had resigned from his post in August, despite leaving his title as national security adviser inside the main body of the article. Diakopoulos, who was appointed by Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis as the national security adviser in August 2019, had indeed resigned from his post one year later over his remarks suggesting that Turkish hydrocarbon exploration vessel Oruç Reis was able to conduct its activities off the Greek island of Kastellorizo (Megisti-Meis) – an area he described as Greek territorial waters – despite the presence of the Greek navy in the region. The former Greek navy vice admiral tried to clarify his comments by saying that the activities of the Oruç Reis were merely a provocation and an effort by Ankara to assert its dominance, but the damage was done to Athens’ rhetoric that the Turkish navy and exploration vessels had been staved off, and he offered his resignation. Hailing from a politically active family with ties to Mitsotakis’ ruling New Democracy party, Diakopoulos held various significant posts in the Greek navy, including having been posted as a naval attache to Ankara for three years, and completed courses both at home and abroad. All in all, he had a remarkable career with important roles in shaping Greece’s policies.

To be honest, my initial reaction to Diakopoulos’ alleged commentary on Turkish control of maritime routes was in the form of “so what?” Is it really that surprising or groundbreaking that a country with the largest exclusive economic zone (EEZ) in the Black Sea, or with the longest coastline in the Eastern Mediterranean, is seeking to protect its interests and assert its influence right on its doorstep? You can add other titles to the mix: Turkey is the 18th or 19th most populous country in the world with a similar ranking in terms of economy and so forth. I wanted to dig deeper, and it took me only a few seconds to see how the public opinion on both sides of the Aegean is being gravely misled on what the other thinks.

“Turkey’s disproportionate ambitions” is the title of the article penned by Diakopoulos and published by Kathimerini, a long-running and reputable Greek newspaper. The former national security adviser begins his words by launching an all-out attack on the Turkish “Blue Homeland.” He argues that the doctrine is maximalist, violates the law of the sea and disregards the continental shelf of Greek islands and the island of Cyprus. Diakopoulos then ups the ante and gets caught up in the crude comparison of the Turkish doctrine to “Lebensraum,” or living space, a term coined by Nazis referring to Eastern Europe based on racial superiority, the centurieslong Germanic colonization of Slavic peoples and the expansion drive toward the East, termed “Drang nach Osten.” He then comes to the part nitpickingly and sugar-coatedly quoted by Turkish news outlets and argues Turkey will dominate sea routes if it succeeds in its plans, which, according to Diakopoulos, are merely expansionist. He then launches a scathing attack on his colleagues Cem Gürdeniz and Cihat Yaycı, two former Turkish naval officers known as the main conceivers of the doctrine, labeling them radicals and fanatics. From that point on, he takes the argument even further to claim ever-familiar notions that you can come across in a Western-based publication about Turkey that is becoming more authoritarian and nationalistic, that it is active all around the region and seeking dominance, and so forth.

Where to begin? Maybe it is better to say what could be a concluding remark: I cannot help but feel sorry that such a paranoid, hysterical and ill-conceived set of ideas worked its way so high up in the decision-making processes of the Greek state. I am not going to argue that everything is running well and smoothly in Turkey; in contrast, we’ve experienced serious problems in almost every policy area in recent years. They all can be attributed to the policies of President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s government or his former and current political allies, Turkey’s systemic problems or external factors, but is painting such a dark picture justified, and from Athens?

One needs to point out here that since 2008, when Greece went bankrupt after a decadeslong series of irresponsible fiscal policies based on European Union grants and loans taken for granted, the country witnessed nine different Cabinets as the political pendulum swung between extreme left and far-right, delving into the prosperity and future of the Greek working class each time. It seems that exaggerating problems in Turkey or portraying Ankara’s policies in the most extreme ways possible has turned into the only choice for Athens to prop up support from abroad and compete with its eastern neighbor. But the real questions should be, does Turkey actually threaten Greece, and does it pursue an expansionist, irredentist or hostile attitude toward its western neighbor? Is it really necessary for Athens to spend billions and strain its resources to compete with Ankara and try to hamper its development in any way it could, even by practicing an open arms policy toward terrorist groups attacking Turkey? Given the arrogant and uninformative discourse hovering over the Aegean, we should first answer these questions if we are ever to follow a constructive bid between the two neighbors.

'Disproportionate ambitions'

Despite Diakopoulos’ paranoid view of the world, which is unfortunately shared by many Greek policymakers, the Blue Homeland basically implies Turkey should pay more attention to the maritime theater, focus on marine delimitation agreements, tap into potential resources as a heavily energy-dependent country and be aware of its interests, in line with long-running Turkish foreign policy principles. Again to Diakopoulos’ dismay, the doctrine is actually one of the few foreign policy areas in which more or less all Turkish political parties voice their support, unlike contested issues such as Syria or Libya or relations with the EU. Far from being an assertive set of policies, in reality, the Blue Homeland is a reactional doctrine. It is reactional in the sense that Greece interprets the Law of the Sea to its benefit and completely ignores the Turkish continental shelf to the advantage of small islands, despite a lack of agreement between contesting parties. It is reactional for a group of countries, namely Greece, Israel and Egypt, to force the hand of Libya, Syria and Lebanon, all dealing with their own internal problems. While United Nations troops still patrol the Green Line and efforts toward a solution are blocked by the Greek Cypriot administration, Nicosia is offered an equal seat at the table that partitions the entire Eastern Mediterranean, while no mention of Turkish Cypriots and their rights is made. While huge chunks of the Mediterranean seabed go to the Greek Cypriot administration, with a population of less than 1 million, no one seems to care about the maritime rights of 2 million Palestinians cramped inside the Gaza Strip, 3 million more in the occupied West Bank and hundreds of thousands more scattered throughout the Middle East. The region is divided up for international energy giants to exploit while all these conflicts persist. The Blue Homeland is reactional toward Greece’s unneighborly efforts to seize the moment as Ankara is having a series of disagreements with Cairo and Tel Aviv and tiptoe past Turkey in projects to carry the Eastern Mediterranean oil and gas into Europe despite unfeasible projects and inflated costs. It is reactional for Greece to call for help from Europe over alleged Turkish aggression and breach of rights while Athens is courting all the repressive figures in the region, be they Israel’s Benjamin Netanyahu, Egypt’s Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi or even Libya's putchist Gen. Khalifa Haftar. However, while displaying an exemplary realpolitik drive toward such figures, Athens consistently avoids the negotiating table with Ankara over a wide range of issues, as recently displayed by the Greek delegation at NATO repeatedly skipping deconfliction mechanism talks with their Turkish counterparts, probably over fantasies that the EU would actually impose serious sanctions on its major trade and security partner. It is, in fact, not Turkey but Greece that systematically creeps toward the Eastern Mediterranean in issues way beyond its size, its rights and its power.

Take the Aegean, where Athens is pursuing a decadeslong campaign to increase its territorial waters to 12 nautical miles, citing international law. While this claim – which Turkey declared in a casus belli in 1995 – is obviously impracticable throughout the eastern Aegean in overlapping areas with those of the Turkish mainland, it hands off the control of maritime routes leading to all five other Black Sea riparian states (Georgia, Russia, Ukraine, Romania and Bulgaria) and those with access to the Black Sea (Serbia, Hungary, Slovakia and Austria through the Danube, Moldova, Armenia and even Belarus, and all riparian states of the Caspian Sea – Azerbaijan, Iran, Turkmenistan and Kazakhstan) to Greece. Does anyone in their right mind think such an aspiration is achievable by forcing Turkey’s hand on the table without firing a single bullet? Such an enlargement practically leaves the access of the entire western and northern Turkey to international waters under Greek control, and if you add Greek plans in the Mediterranean, it basically means Turkey will be surrounded by Greek territorial waters and EEZ. Is this an ambition proportionate to Greece? Have you ever heard the warmongering, Lebensraum-seeking Turkey harassing a commercial airliner or a passenger ferry in the Aegean? Wasn’t it Greece that deployed soldiers in the first place in a show of force for two uninhabited islets just 7.5 kilometers (4.7 miles) off the Turkish mainland back in 1996?

Take defense budgets: NATO figures show the “astronomical” Turkish defense expenditure was a little lower than 1.52% of the country’s gross domestic product (GDP) in 2014, which has risen at 1.91%, just below the 2% threshold set by the alliance, according to 2020 estimates. Meanwhile, Greek defense expenditures stood at 2.21% to 2.58% in 2014 and 2020, respectively. Turkey’s real GDP fell from $980 billion in 2019 to $943 billion in 2020, while Greece also shed $17 billion and fell to $190 billion. With a five-times-larger economy, six-times-larger land area, more than 7.5-times-larger population, various conflicts on its doorstep and an alleged aggressive course, Turkey spent $13.30 billion compared with Greece’s $4.78 billion, only 2.8 times higher than its western neighbor. To further make the point, Turkish defense expenditures were short of Spain’s by $766 million, or more than those of Poland by $1.26 billion or the Netherlands by $1.23 billion. Without a single land threat, France, the newfound Greek ally, spends 2.4 times as much as Turkey given its overseas positions and sizable economy. It is clear that Greece maintains an abnormally large military, using an absurd 75.6% of its defense budget for personnel expenditures while forsaking new equipment or research and development. Athens is straining its resources just to keep up with a perceived enemy, a NATO member and EU candidate country, just like the rest of its neighbors. It is a shame that all this money is being poured into militarizing every island and islet in the region, in violation of bilateral agreements, and it is also a shame that this inflated and pointless military spending is not covered by Greek and Turkish publications lacking intellectual pursuit.

Turkish 'radicals'

For Gürdeniz and Yaycı, please, keep in mind that both former rear admirals, dubbed radicals by Diakopoulos, had distinguished careers in NATO’s second-largest military force. Described as a “Eurasianist” by his Greek peer, Gürdeniz completed his first postgraduate studies in the U.S. and served in NATO’s SHAPE headquarters in Brussels, in addition to serving in various posts throughout his naval career; Yaycı also holds a postgraduate diploma from the U.S. and has an equally successful naval career. So what lies behind Diakopoulos’ labeling? With territories both in Europe and Asia, and through cultural and religious ties with both the East and West, Turkey is one of the countries where the “Eurasia” concept fits the best; however, the Eurasianist emphasis here points to something else. It is not a secret that, broadly, there have been two major camps in the Turkish military since the end of the Cold War: the one promotes closer cooperation with NATO and the Western alliance, while the other is not necessarily against pro-Atlantic ties but maintains a skeptical view of the West’s policies regarding Turkey and its surrounding region in general, thus calling for diversification of foreign policy and defense. It is also not a secret that the Gülenist Terror Group (FETÖ), which has been on the radar of U.S.-led Cold War-era security apparatuses since its foundation, maintained closer ties with the pro-Atlantic camp throughout its long-running bid to infiltrate the Turkish military. When FETÖ – a shadowy Messianic cult – also grabbed enough power in other branches of the government and the judiciary, it launched a series of sham trials based on illegal and fake evidence targeting the “other” camp in the military, using coup plots as a pretext. The navy was the worst-hit armed forces branch; “radical” Gürdeniz, who coined the term “Blue Homeland,” was among the hundreds of targeted names and spent more than four years in jail between February 2010 and June 2014, only to be released when the Constitutional Court ruled for a retrial and wait another year to be acquitted. Here, we should note that this “other” camp, seriously battered by FETÖ, was instrumental in fending off the July 15, 2016, coup attempt, along with the determination of the Turkish people and political figures. I don’t think that anyone in Athens understands the gravity of the attempt or the importance of its rather quick suppression and its possible repercussions if it had succeeded, such as turning Turkey into a military-theocratic dictatorship open for all kinds of foreign involvement or prompting a civil war.

As the other “fanatic” that now allegedly rules over Turkish policies, Yaycı was among the few lucky naval officers who were spared in this onslaught. Although not as politically vocal as Gürdeniz, who is openly critical of Erdoğan at times, Yaycı holds an invaluable role in naval measurements and was instrumental in signing the key naval delimitation deal with the U.N.-backed Government of National Accord (GNA), the legitimate authority in Libya. However, Yaycı himself resigned from the military in May 2020 citing disagreements and currently pursues a career as an academic. He has been on record numerous times saying that the Blue Homeland is not a set of concrete demands and positions but rather a guideline for those who hold power in Turkey in matters related to maritime policies. However, if we were to act on Diakopoulos’ twisted narrative, every single Turkish official seeking to promote national interests or follow a course of policies independent of the pro-Atlantic camp can be labeled as a “fanatic” or “radical,” and such officials can even be persecuted by shadowy groups or may be executed. Greece’s position in even refusing to extradite FETÖ-linked officers that fled the country after the coup attempt with a stolen helicopter is enough proof for Turkish public opinion that such a mindset is prevalent in Athens, and such commentary offers more insight into the intertwined relations between FETÖ and the pro-Atlantic security structure.

Turkish track record

All in all, the Blue Homeland is a product of Turkish security circles that often face criticism at home for always being on the defensive and too cautious when it comes to projecting military force in international or regional affairs. This may come as a surprise for many due to Turkey’s warmongering image projected all over the world over the recent military operations or defense initiatives launched by Ankara; however, history proves otherwise. The only large-scale military operation Turkey has conducted abroad since 1923 happens to be in Cyprus, and let me remind you of the atmosphere prior to 1974: The Turkish Cypriot community was stripped of their rights enshrined in the Republic of Cyprus constitution agreed upon by both communities on the island and the guarantor states of the U.K., Greece and Turkey, forced to live in enclaves starting from the early 1960s and subjected to incessant attacks by an ultranationalist Greek Cypriot militia, and a far-right military junta that had been in power in Athens since 1967. In normal circumstances, all of these atrocities above would have provided enough of an excuse for concrete military action; however, it took more than a decade for the mainland to come to the rescue of its ethnic kin, mainly due to U.S. threats amid Cold War-era politics and Ankara’s limited military capabilities. The final straw was the Athens-backed far-right coup that deposed President Makarios III and sought to unite the island with Greece, and Turkey launched its operation that captured the northern 40% of the island. Even this patient, limited, calculated military move was more than enough for the country to be labeled as the aggressor, resulting in embargoes that forced Ankara’s hand to establish a defense industry independent of the Western alliance and creation of the Aegean Army outside NATO’s scope, as previously all military establishments were designed according to the Soviet threat. Both concepts that are feared by Greece are in fact direct outcomes of Greek aggression in the region. One should also note that Greece had severed ties with NATO’s military command in 1964 and altogether withdrew in 1974, only to return in 1980 with the approval of another junta, this time in Ankara. This decision was mainly over the perceived threat of the communist bloc and pressure from the U.S. that facilitated and supported their power-grabbing in a bid to “stabilize” its only remaining ally in the region after the 1979 revolution in Iran, where a theocratic and authoritarian regime has been in charge ever since.

Take Nagorno-Karabakh, where Turkey only closed its borders and issued protests as Armenian forces occupied 20% of Azerbaijani territories, killing thousands and displacing hundreds of thousands in the process. Take the first and second Gulf wars, when Turkey rejected direct involvement twice with the Turkish Armed Forces’ (TSK) objections playing a key role, much to the dismay of ruling governments at the time, including Washington. Turkey maintains a military presence in northern Iraq to a degree, mainly due to the power vacuum created in the aftermath of the Gulf War as Saddam Hussein’s forces were pushed out of the region after a series of massacres and atrocities that even involved the use of chemical weapons, driving half a million Iraqi Kurds into the Turkish territory in the process. Take Libya, where Turkey is now an active player, and remember how Ankara wanted to spare the country from destruction back in 2011 through a series of objections against a NATO-led intervention targeting Moammar Gadhafi championed by France.

Further west in Syria, a brutal civil war has been ongoing since 2011, driving up to 8 million Syrians into Turkish territory, stripping Turkey of a major economic partner, paving the way for all kinds of terrorist groups to carve up self-ruled areas with spillover effects constantly impacting the country, be they in the form of cross-border attacks, suicide bombings or an all-out rebellion attempt, just like the one the PKK terrorist group tried to launch in 2015. The timing and the background of the latter are very important, as it took place after the terrorist group and its Syrian wing, the YPG, were catapulted to the forefront in the fight against Daesh, despite objections from regional actors led by Ankara, gaining international support and legitimacy, access to funds and weapons and control of swathes of territory in northern Syria. While the war on Daesh was still far from over, the PKK abandoned a crucial reconciliation process and simply tried to seize the moment to put these gains into action in its 40-year-long campaign against the Turkish state, which, of course, did not welcome this venture with open arms and responded with strict measures. Despite this quagmire, Turkey has only conducted surgical operations in Syrian territory and refrained from getting caught up in the larger conflict.

Here, I must stress that this is simply an evaluation of the events from recent history and by no means aims to suggest that Ankara should have acted otherwise. I think in all these crises mentioned above, Turkish officials took somewhat rational steps in accordance with the political, economic and military options at hand, and while some played out positively, others did not. The modern-day Turkish population is a refugee mix that had witnessed countless atrocities before migrating to Anatolia as the Ottoman Empire was disintegrating. From its foundation, the ruling elite in Turkey kept that fact in mind and refrained from ventures abroad, while focusing on bolstering the country’s security through a string of alliances, no matter how limiting they might be compared with their country’s potential. The public opinion also generally reflects this cautious approach and refrains from adventurism. Some may choose to believe otherwise with car analogies, quoting the “pro-Turkish” American Ambassador James Jeffrey, who, in a recent interview, unashamedly spoke of Russians chopping “the shit out of a Turkish battalion.” I think many in Athens should indeed note this disrespect toward an allied nation’s soldiers, who came under attack while trying to protect 4 million people crammed into Idlib from getting massacred and fend off another refugee influx that would not only hit Turkey but indeed Greece and the rest of Europe.

Despite this historical record, however, it is clear every step taken by Ankara is perceived or being portrayed in Athens as a direct move against Greece. On this side of the Aegean, when a defense project is undertaken, many often remember how Turkey had to deploy passenger ferries operating in the Marmara Sea when thousands of Turkish nationals, along with many from other nations, were caught up when the conflict began in Libya. We often remember how Crimea was invaded and annexed overnight or how Russian forces showed up on Tbilisi’s outskirts a decade earlier. I can say with confidence that most Turks lament how they have drifted away from their Greek neighbors in the chaos of the early 20th century, as much as they are proud of defeating the imperialist Greek campaign in Anatolia that paved the way for their independence. It is clear that instead of a bragging tone about Turkish achievements, a reconciliatory tone is necessary to convince our western neighbor that Turkey is simply seeking to protect its rights and does not pursue an aggressive agenda, certainly not toward Greece. Whether in tourism, fisheries, the environment, trade, reduced defense budgets or cultural exchange, there is certainly a lot to gain for both sides from ending this deaf dialogue.

*News Manager at Daily Sabah




China, Turkey to deepen cooperation, strengthen relations

Xinhua


Dec. 15, 2020

BEIJING, Dec. 15 (Xinhua) -- Chinese State Councilor and Foreign
Minister Wang Yi said on Monday that China and Turkey should solemnly
commemorate their 50 years of diplomatic ties, deepen political mutual
trust and cooperation, and push their relations to a higher level.

Wang made the remarks in a telephone conversation with his Turkish
counterpart Mevlut Cavusoglu.

During the call, Chavushoglu congratulated China on successfully
containing the COVID-19 epidemic, and praised the country's
achievements in vaccine research and development.

Turkey, which has announced an urgent procurement of Chinese COVID-19
vaccines, believes that China's vaccines are safe and effective, and
is willing to strengthen cooperation with China in this regard,
Chavushoglu said.

The Turkish side hopes to take the 50th anniversary of the
establishment of diplomatic relations between Turkey and China next
year as an opportunity to further deepen cooperation with China and
improve bilateral relations, said the Turkish foreign minister.

Wang, for his part, said that since the beginning of the year, China
and Turkey have worked closely in the provision of medical supplies,
sharing experiences in combatting the virus, and on the third phase of
clinical trial of COVID-19 vaccine.

Seeing that the second wave of the epidemic is now spreading globally,
China is willing to stand firmly with the Turkish people until Turkey
defeats the epidemic, he said.


Turkey's decision to purchase Chinese vaccine reflects its trust in
China, and China is willing to assist Turkey whenever necessary, Wang
said.

Political mutual trust is the foundation of the strategic cooperative
relationship between the two countries, Wang said.

Leaders of the two countries have exchanged views on this topic
multiple times and agreed on mutual understanding and mutual support
regarding each other's core interests and matters of major concern, he
added.

China and Turkey share common concern in fighting terrorism and
maintaining national security and stability, Wang said, adding that
the two sides should oppose blatant "double standards" when it comes
to fighting terrorism.

Noting that the East Turkestan Islamic Movement is a global terror
group designated by the UN Security Council, Wang said that it is the
obligation of all countries to combat the group, and China is willing
to carry out more in-depth anti-terror cooperation with Turkey.

Chavushoglu said that Turkey is also a victim of terrorism and it
opposes any form of terrorism and the politicization of
counter-terrorism issues, and will strictly abide by the UN Security
Council resolutions that identify relevant international terrorist
organizations, he said.

The Turkish side will not allow anyone to undermine China's
sovereignty and territorial integrity, said the Turkish foreign
minister.



 

Azerbaijan announces military deaths in Karabakh despite peace accord

Macau Business
Dec 13 2020

Azerbaijan announced on Sunday that four of its troops had been killed in the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region since a peace deal with Armenian separatists was agreed in early November.

The defence ministry said a group of Armenian fighters remained in the mountainous province — breaking the terms of the Russian-brokered truce — and had recently launched fatal attacks on Azerbaijan’s forces.

The ministry said three servicemen were killed in a separatist ambush on November 26 and another sustained fatal injuries during an attack near the village of Hadrut on Tuesday last week.

Both Armenia and Azerbaijan accused each other breaching the truce that ended six weeks of fighting between the longstanding foes for control of the breakaway region.

Armenia said on Sunday that six separatist fighters were injured in clashes with Azerbaijan troops after skirmishes broke out on Friday evening.

The Armenian defence ministry reported hours of fighting near Hadrut on Saturday, including with heavy artillery, claiming Azerbaijan had bolstered its military presence in the area.

“The Armenian side has six wounded,” the ministry said, describing the incident as an Azerbaijani “provocation”.

The defence ministry said the new fighting was discussed during a meeting in Moscow between Russian and Armenian defence ministers, while the foreign ministry said clashes continued into Sunday.

Azerbaijan said Sunday it had been forced to respond to recent fatal attacks on its servicemen by conducting anti-terror operations. 

The six-week conflict that erupted in September between the separatists backed by Armenia and Azerbaijan over the mountainous region ended November 10 with a Moscow-brokered peace deal that saw the Armenians cede swathes of territory.

More than 5,000 people including civilians were killed during the fighting between the ex-Soviet rivals, who fought a war in the 1990s over the mountainous region.

Russia has deployed nearly 2,000 peacekeeping troops to Nagorno-Karabakh as part of the peace deal and the Russian defence ministry Saturday reported that the truce had been violated.

It was Russia’s first report of a violation since the peace deal was introduced.

The French and US heads of the Minsk Group, which led talks on the conflict for decades but failed to achieve a lasting agreement, met Azerbaijan President Ilham Aliyev in Baku on Saturday.

Aliyev described reports of new fighting as “troubling” and vowed to use an “iron fist” to “crush” Armenian forces completely if fighting erupts again.

Minsk Group envoys Stephane Visconti and Andrew Schofer were expected in Armenia’s capital Yerevan on Sunday.

On a visit to Baku this week, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan hailed what he called his close ally’s “glorious victory” in the conflict.

The Turkish leader, who attended celebrations marking Azerbaijan’s success, has overtly supported Baku, helping to train and arm its military.

Armenians, Azerbaijan trade blame over breach of Nagorno-Karabakh peace deal

Arab News
Dec 12 2020
  • The new clashes mark the first significant breach of the peace deal brokered by Russia on Nov. 10
  • Deal was major shock for Armenians, triggering protests calling for resignation of PM

YEREVAN: Armenian officials and Azerbaijan on Saturday accused each other of breaching a peace deal that ended six weeks of fierce fighting over Nagorno-Karabakh, and Azerbaijan’s leader threatened to crush Armenian forces with an “iron fist.”


The new clashes mark the first significant breach of the peace deal brokered by Russia on Nov. 10 that saw Azerbaijan reclaim control over broad swathes of Nagorno-Karabakh and surrounding lands which were held by Armenian forces for more than a quarter-century.


 Separatist officials in Nagorno-Karabakh said the Azerbaijani military launched an attack late Friday that left three local ethnic Armenian servicemen wounded.


 Russian peacekeepers deployed to the region to monitor the peace deal reported a violation of the cease-fire in the Gadrut region on Friday. The report issued Saturday by the Russian Defense Ministry didn’t assign blame.


 Later in the day, the Armenian Defense Ministry also charged that the Azerbaijani army mounted an attack in the south of Nagorno-Karabakh on Saturday.


 Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev reacted on Saturday by blaming Armenia for the new clashes and threatened to “break its head with an iron fist.”


 “Armenia shouldn’t try to start it all over again,” Aliyev said during a meeting with top diplomats from the United States and France who have tried to mediate the decades-old conflict.” It must be very cautious and not plan any military action. This time, we will fully destroy them. It mustn’t be a secret to anyone.”


Azerbaijan’s Defense Ministry said in a statement late Saturday that its forces thwarted Armenian “provocations” and restored the cease-fire.


 Armenian officials said the fighting raged near the villages of Hin Tager and Khtsaberd, the only settlements in the Gadrut region that are still controlled by Armenian forces. They noted that the two villages have been fully encircled by the Azerbaijani army, which controls the only road leading to them.


 Nagorno-Karabakh lies within Azerbaijan but was under the control of ethnic Armenian forces backed by Armenia since a separatist war there ended in 1994. That war left Nagorno-Karabakh itself and substantial surrounding territory in Armenian hands.


 In 44 days of fighting that began in late September and left more than 5,600 people killed on both sides, the Azerbaijani army pushed deep into Nagorno-Karabakh, forcing Armenia to accept last month’s peace deal that saw Azerbaijan reclaim much of the separatist region along with surrounding areas. Russia deployed nearly 2,000 peacekeepers for at least five years to monitor the peace deal and to facilitate the return of refugees.


 Azerbaijan marked its victory with a military parade on Thursday that was attended by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and involved more than 3,000 troops, dozens of military vehicles, and a flyby of combat aircraft.


 The peace deal was a major shock for Armenians, triggering protests calling for the resignation of Prime Minister Nikola Pashinyan, who has refused to step down. He described the peace agreement as a bitter but necessary move that prevented Azerbaijan from taking over all of Nagorno-Karabakh.



https://www.arabnews.com/node/1776356/world



Opposition MP predicts snap elections in Armenia in no later than 6 months

Panorama, Armenia
Dec 11 2020

MP Edmon Marukyan from the opposition Bright Armenia Party predicts snap elections in Armenia in no later than 6 months, but says his prediction may fall short.

“In June or July we will discuss why it failed to happen. Politicians predict one thing, and then, if it does not happen, they explain why it didn’t happen,” Marukyan told a briefing at the parliament.

He stressed the political history of Armenia saw only one case when the opposition demand was fulfilled – the resignation Serzh Sargsyan in 2018.

The opposition MP said that he has no information on any discussions with the authorities regarding the conduct of new elections.

“If we are talking about the adoption of a new Electoral Code, and then about the conduct of elections, naturally, there should be discussions, because the rules of the game should be clear to all players,” Marukyan said.

According to the MP, if the new Electoral Code is adopted, the elections must be held in 6 months, as required by the Venice Commission, but if the law is not amended, elections may take place even tomorrow.

According to Marukyan, the pre-election rules include equal distribution of free airtime among all the parties and candidates and exclusion of attempts to silence one party by another in return for several million dollars.

Edmon Marukyan believes that only Bright Armenian can hold fair elections, because they do not trust anyone but ourselves.

He called for guarantees to ensure fair elections and rule out possible vote buying cases regardless of which political force organizes them.

In response to a question about the recognition of Artsakh’s independence, the deputy said that there are circumstances containing state secrets in the process, therefore he will refrain from making further comments, only adding that it has been a month since they began to work on the matter with the relevant bodies.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 12/09/2020

                                        Wednesday, 

Pashinian Again Rejects Resignation Calls

        • Sargis Harutyunyan
        • Karlen Aslanian

Armenia -- Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian speaks during his 
government's question-and-answer session in parliament, Yerevan, December 9, 
2020.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian continued to reject calls for his resignation and 
accused his political opponents of trying to create “anarchy” in Armenia as he 
faced more street protests on Wednesday.
Pashinian said opposition forces staging the protests and blaming him for the 
Armenian side’s defeat in the Nagorno-Karabakh war to try to install a “puppet 
government” not backed by most voters. He was also dismissive of resignation 
calls made by President Armen Sarkissian, prominent public figures, the Armenian 
Apostolic Church and the heads of dozens of local communities.

“Why do those political forces and representatives of the elite keep proposing 
scenarios which pursue only one goal: to leave the people out of the [political] 
process and do so irreversibly?” he said during his government’s 
question-and-answer session in the parliament.

He claimed that the Armenian opposition is not actually demanding snap 
parliamentary elections.

Opposition parties have repeatedly said that such elections must be held within 
a year by an interim government to be formed after Pashinian’s resignation. 
Sixteen of them joined forces to launch anti-government demonstrations following 
the announcement of the ceasefire that stopped the Karabakh war on November 10.

The opposition coalition rallied supporters outside the National Assembly 
compound in Yerevan as Pashinian and members of his cabinet answered questions 
from lawmakers. The rally came one day after the prime minister ignored their 
ultimatum to step down or face a nationwide campaign of “civil disobedience.”


Armenia -- Opposition supporters demonstrate outside the parliament building in 
Yerevan, December 9, 2020.

Ishkhan Saghatelian, a leader of the opposition Armenian Revolutionary 
Federation (Dashnaktsutyun), insisted that Pashinian has lost popular support 
and legitimacy. “There is a pan-Armenian discontent and a popular demand for 
Nikol’s ouster,” he told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service earlier in the day.

Still, Saghatelian, whose party is a key member of the opposition alliance, did 
not deny that attendance at the ongoing opposition demonstrations is a far cry 
from the 2018 mass protests that brought Pashinian to power.

“There are many citizens who believe that Nikol Pashinian must go but lack trust 
in political forces standing on the podium and our common candidate [for interim 
prime minister,]” he said. “That is why we are telling our citizens that this is 
not a struggle for bringing us to power. This is a struggle for saving our 
homeland.”

Only one of the 16 opposition parties, Prosperous Armenia (BHK), is represented 
in the current parliament. The second parliamentary opposition party, Bright 
Armenia (LHK), has so far declined to join their campaign or endorse the interim 
premier nominated by them. But the LHK too insists on Pashinian’s resignation.



Yerevan Rules Out Release Of ‘Syrian Mercenaries’

        • Susan Badalian

Armenia- A man who claims to be a Syrian mercenary who fought for Azerbaijan in 
Nagorno-Karabakh is shown on Armenian television, November 3, 2020.

The two Syrians captured during the recent war in Nagorno-Karabakh cannot be 
swapped with Armenian prisoners of war or civilians held by Azerbaijan, an 
Armenian law-enforcement agency said on Wednesday.
Karabakh’s Armenian-backed army claimed to have captured the two men during 
fierce fighting with Azerbaijani forces halted by a Russian-mediated ceasefire 
November 10. They both were handed over to Armenia to face a string of criminal 
charges, including terrorism.

A spokeswoman for Armenia’s Investigative Committee, Rima Yeganian, told 
RFE/RL’s Armenian Service that they are not prisoners of war and cannot be 
covered by the ceasefire agreement calling for the exchange of all POWs and 
civilian captives held by the conflicting parties.

“They have been indicted, remain under arrest and cannot be exchanged under the 
all-for-all formula,” said Yeganian.

In their testimonies shown on Armenian television, the arrested Syrians admitted 
being recruited and paid by Turkey. Armenian officials have portrayed that as 
further proof that scores of Syrian mercenaries fought in Karabakh on 
Azerbaijan’s side.

The Armenian claims have also been backed by France and, implicitly, Russia.

French President Emmanuel 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 about the deployment of “terrorists and mercenaries” from Syria 
and Libya in the Karabakh conflict zone.

Azerbaijan has denied the presence of any foreign mercenaries in its army ranks. 
It has dismissed the televised confessions of the two detained Syrians as a 
fraud.

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.



Constitutional Court Refuses To Strip Tsarukian Of Parliament Seat

        • Astghik Bedevian

ARMENIA -- Gagik Tsarukian, the leader of the Prosperous Armenia Party, arrives 
at the parliament ahead of a vote that stripped him of immunity from 
prosecution, Yerevan, June 16, 2020.

The Constitutional Court has thrown out an appeal by the leadership of the 
Armenian parliament to strip Gagik Tsarukian, the leader of the opposition 
Prosperous Armenia Party (BHK), of his parliament seat.
The senior lawmakers representing Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s My Step bloc 
appealed to the court late last month, citing the findings of a state 
anti-corruption body.

The Commission on the Prevention of Corruption claimed that Tsarukian has 
violated a constitutional clause that bans parliament deputies from engaging in 
entrepreneurial activity. The commission said that he has continued to run at 
least some of the several dozen companies owned by him.

Tsarukian’s political allies rejected the claims and said the appeal to the 
Constitutional Court is part of a continuing government crackdown on the BHK, 
which is Armenia’s largest parliamentary opposition force.

A spokeswoman for the court announced on Tuesday night that it has refused to 
even hold hearings and rule on the appeal. She said the court will publicize the 
legal grounds for the decision by Friday.

One of the court’s nine judges, Edgar Shatirian, told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service 
on Wednesday that the appeal was rejected on a technicality.

Shatirian said most of his colleagues believe that the parliament leadership 
failed to meet a legal deadline for reacting to the anti-corruption commission’s 
recommendation. He said he disagreed with them.

Tsarukian, who is one of the country’s richest men, was arrested in late 
September on vote buying charges strongly denied by him. A Yerevan court freed 
him on bail on October 22.

Tsarukian’s BHK is one of 17 opposition parties that launched on November 10 
street protests against Pashinian’s handling of the recent war with Azerbaijan. 
They accuse Pashinian of a sellout and demand his resignation.



France Insists On Removal Of ‘Syrian Mercenaries’ From Karabakh


France -- French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian (R) and his Armenian 
counterpart Ara Ayvazian hold a jont news conference after talks in Paris, 
December 8, 2020.

French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian reiterated his country’s calls for 
the withdrawal of all “Syrian mercenaries” from the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict 
zone after meeting with his Armenian counterpart Ara Ayvazian in Paris late on 
Tuesday.
Le Drian also said that France will remain actively engaged in international 
efforts to kick-start Armenian-Azerbaijani peace talks following the 
Russian-brokered ceasefire that stopped the recent war in Karabakh.

“A ceasefire is not an accord, it’s the end of a war,” he told a joint news 
conference with Ayvazian. “We think that we need a lasting solution to this 
conflict, notably on the questions relating to the future status of 
Nagorno-Karabakh, its administrative [border] delimitations, mode of governance. 
Under the auspices of the co-presidency of the OSCE Minsk Group, France will 
assume all its responsibilities to achieve that.”

“France will stand with Armenia in order to accompany it on this trajectory,” he 
said.

Le Drian cited a joint statement to that effect which he, Russian Foreign 
Minister Sergei Lavrov and U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Stephen Biegun issued 
on December 3.

The top diplomats of the three world powers co-heading the Minsk Group urged the 
conflicting parties to “commit to substantive negotiations to resolve all 
outstanding issues.” They also called for the parties’ full compliance with all 
provisions of the ceasefire agreement.

In that regard, Le Drian singled out the return of all refugees and internally 
displaced persons, protection of religious and cultural sites and “the departure 
of the Syrian mercenaries deployed with one of the conflicting parties.”

French President Emmanuel 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. Karabakh’s Armenian-backed 
army claimed last month to have captured two such Syrian fighters during the 
fighting.

Turkey has denied sending members of Turkish-backed Syrian rebel groups to fight 
in Karabakh on Azerbaijan’s side. Azerbaijan also denies the presence of such 
mercenaries in the Azerbaijani army ranks. Both Ankara and Baku accuse Paris of 
pro-Armenian bias.

Speaking after the talks with Le Drian, Ayvazian thanked France for its 
“courageous and at the same time impartial position adopted since the beginning 
of the war.” The Armenian foreign minister also praised Macron for speaking out 
against “Turkey’s extremely damaging and dangerous involvement in the war.”

Jean-Baptiste Lemoyne, a secretary of state at the French Foreign Ministry, 
visited Yerevan late last month. He said after talks with Armenian leaders that 
Paris expects Ankara to “remove the mercenaries from the region.”

Lemoyne arrived in the Armenian capital 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.

Le Drian announced on Tuesday that two more planeloads of French humanitarian 
aid will be delivered to Armenia in the coming days. “In the medical field, we 
are going to reinforce cooperation between Armenian and French hospitals,” he 
added.

France is home to a sizable and influential Armenian community. The latter was 
instrumental in the recent passage by both houses of the French parliament of 
resolutions calling on Macron’s government to recognize Karabakh as an 
independent republic. The government has ruled out such recognition, saying that 
it would be counterproductive for France and the Karabakh negotiating process.


Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
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