Council of Paris calls on Government to recognize Republic of Artsakh

 

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 21:05,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 18, ARMENPRESS. The Council of Paris has adopted a resolution, calling on the French Minister of Europe and Foreign Affairs to urge France to recognize the Republic of Artsakh, ARMENPRESS was informed from the Facebook page of the Foreign Ministry of Armenia.

The resolution cities numerous factors for this initiative, including the military aggression of Azerbaijan against Artsakh sponsored by Turkey and involvement of jihadist militants from Syria, the humanitarian situation in Artsakh resulted by the air strikes of Azerbaijani armed forces as a result of which 80% of the infrastructures of Stepanakert have been destroyed.

The resolution also notes that France, which is an OSCE Minsk Group Co-chair, did not participate in the signing of the ceasefire on November 9 under the mediation of Russia, where the victory of power predominated over the victory of a dialogue.

It also notes that despite the deployment of the Russian peacekeepers in Nagorno Karabakh (Artsakh), the existence of Nagorno Karabakh is under existential threat.

Catholicos Aram I of Great House of Cilicia addresses Armenians, calls for unity.

Catholicos Aram I of Great House of Cilicia addresses Armenians, calls for unity

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 16:21,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 15, ARMENPRESS. Catholicos Aram I of the Great House of Cilicia has addressed Armenians calling for unity.

In a video message His Holiness Aram I stated that now it’s time to resist the current crisis facing the Armenian people and the homeland with unity and wisdom.

“Now it’s a crucial moment in the contemporary history of our homeland and people. Our courageous army heroically resisted the Turkish-Azerbaijani-terrorist army. Respect and honor to all our fallen heroes. The war is not over, we need to be vigilant and realistic. Armenia and Artsakh are under danger with their peoples and statehood, present and especially future”, His Holiness Aram I said.

Aram I stated that the people’s will should remain priority in all cases.

[see video]
Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 11/15/2020

                                        Sunday, 


Armenian Opposition Leader Freed Despite Coup Charges

        • Naira Bulghadarian

Armenia -- Former National Security Service Director Artur Vanetsian addresses 
opposition protesters in Yerevan, November 11, 2020.

Artur Vanetsian, a former National Security Service (NSS) director leading an 
opposition party, was released from custody late on Sunday despite being charged 
with plotting to assassinate Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and overthrow 
Armenia’s government.

The NSS arrested Vanetsian and three other opposition members on Saturday. It 
formally brought the same coup and murder charges against three of the suspects 
on Sunday just hours after Yerevan courts opened hearings on appeals against 
their preliminary detention filed by their lawyers. The latter rejected the 
accusation as politically motivated.

One of the court judges agreed to declare Vanetsian’s detention unjustified and 
order his release. Another judge is expected to rule on Monday on the former NSS 
chief’s pre-trial arrest sought by investigators.

Vanetsian’s Hayrenik (Fatherland) party is one of 17 Armenian opposition groups 
that launched on November 10 street protests against the terms of a 
Russian-mediated ceasefire agreement that stopped the Armenian-Azerbaijani war 
in Nagorno-Karabakh. They accuse Pashinian of capitulating to Azerbaijan and 
demand his resignation. The prime minister has dismissed the accusations.

The Armenian authorities say that the opposition protests are illegal, citing 
martial law declared by them following the outbreak of the war on September 27. 
The opposition forces have pledged to continue their demonstrations in Yerevan, 
however.

One of the arrested and indicted suspects, Ashot Minasian, is the commander of a 
volunteer militia from the southeastern town of Sisian that took part in the 
six-week war. The NSS claimed on Saturday to have found large quantities of 
weapons in a property belonging to him.

On Sunday the security service publicized what it described as audio of 
Minasian’s wiretapped phone conversations with two other suspects, Vahram 
Baghdasarian and Ashot Avagian, during which they blamed Pashinian for the 
unsuccessful war and seemingly discussed ways of assassinating him and seizing 
power.

Baghdasarian is a senior member of former President Serzh Sarkisian’s Republican 
Party while Avagian is affiliated with the Armenian Revolutionary Federation 
(Dashnaktsutyun).

One of Vanetsian’s lawyers, Lusine Sahakian, insisted that the recordings do not 
prove her client’s involvement in the alleged conspiracy. Speaking before his 
release, Sahakian said the NSS has failed to substantiate its accusations 
against Vanetsian with any other evidence.

Vanetsian, 40, was appointed as head of the NSS immediately after the 2018 
“Velvet Revolution” that brought Pashinian to power. He resigned in September 
2019 after falling out with Pashinian. He has since repeatedly accused Pashinian 
of incompetence and misrule, prompting angry responses from the premier and his 
political allies.



Russia ‘Satisfied’ With Karabakh Truce Observance


Armenia - Russian peacekeeping troops heading to Nagorno-Karabakh are seen on a 
highway in Armenia, November 13, 2020.

In fresh phone calls with the leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan, Russia’s 
President Vladimir Putin has praised the implementation of a Russian-mediated 
ceasefire agreement that stopped the war in Nagorno-Karabakh.

The Kremlin said Putin phoned Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and 
Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev late on Saturday to discuss “practical 
aspects of implementing the agreement” announced by them on November 10.

“The parties expressed satisfaction over the observance of ceasefire and a 
fairly calm situation along the contact line,” it added in a statement.

The agreement came six weeks after the outbreak of large-scale hostilities in 
and around Karabakh that left thousands of soldiers from both sides dead and 
displaced tens of thousands of civilians.

Azerbaijan agreed to halt offensive military operations in return for an 
Armenian pledge to withdraw by the end of this month from three districts around 
Karabakh. Baku regained control over four other districts, which had been 
occupied by Karabakh Armenian forces in the early 1990s, during the latest war.

The truce accord also calls for the deployment in the conflict zone of around 
2,000 Russian peacekeepers and the return of refugees and internally displaced 
persons.


NAGORNO-KARABAKH -- A man loads possessions on his truck after setting his home 
on fire in Kelbajar (Karvachar), November 13, 2020.

Putin announced on Friday that the Russian government will set up an Interagency 
Center for Humanitarian Reaction to assist in the return of the refugees and 
reconstruction of civilian infrastructure damaged during the war. He said the 
center will also provide “humanitarian aid to residents of districts that have 
suffered from the hostilities.”

The Kelbajar district sandwiched between Armenia and Karabakh is due to be 
handed back to Azerbaijan by Monday. Virtually all of its 3,500 or so ethnic 
Armenian residents have left their homes in recent days. Many of them have 
burned down their houses and other properties.

Kelbajar is also home to the 12th century Armenian monastery of Dadivank. RFE/RL 
Armenian Service correspondent Susan Badalian reported from there on Saturday 
that scores of grief-stricken worshippers held farewell ceremonies as clergymen 
removed bells and traditional Armenian cross stones in advance of the area’s 
handover to Azerbaijan.

The monastery abbot, Father Hovannes, insisted at the same time he has no 
intention to leave Dadivank. “I’m going to stay in my church,” he told reporters.


Nagorno-Karabakh - The medieval Armenian monastery of Dadivank, September 8, 
2018.

Later on Saturday, a spokeswoman for the Armenian Apostolic Church said that the 
Dadivank clergymen will stay put and continue to hold religious services there. 
“Dadivank is now under the control of Russian peacekeepers and not at risk,” 
Father Vahram Melikian wrote on Facebook.

Russian soldiers set up a post just outside the monastery on Friday as they 
continued to enter Karabakh as part of their peacekeeping mission.

According to the Kremlin statement, Putin also discussed with Aliyev the fate of 
the Christian churches in areas handed over to Muslim Azerbaijan.

“In this context he stressed the importance of ensuring the preservation and 
normal operation of those holy sites,” the statement said. “The President of 
Azerbaijan expressed understanding in this respect and said that Azerbaijan will 
certainly act in this spirit.”


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.

 


Greece Must Learn Military Lessons From The Armenian Defeat

Greek City Times
Nov 14 2020
by Guest Blogger

If the defeat of the Armenians is due to many factors, which should be considered at multiple levels by Greece, some initial (albeit precarious) conclusions can be drawn regarding developments in war methodologies and the capabilities and inefficiency of weapons systems. The form of operations there, in fact, bears great resemblance to the battles against by ISIS in Iraq and the war in eastern Ukraine a few years ago, which Greece must observe.

Although public attention has turned to unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), especially the Turkish-assembled Bayrarktar drone, it would be wrong to be trapped in a “fetishism” about the operational value of aircraft. It was not in itself what caused serious blows to the Armenian forces.

Their value lay in the fact that they were integrated into systems forming recognition-impact grids, with massive power projection capabilities and at the same time with a large tolerance for losses. We also point out that the aircraft used are not very high technology.

In fact, the Artsakh conflict has been marked by the limited, non-existent role of high-tech, high-cost platforms such as modern fighter jets. This limited the role of air defense systems, such as the S-300, which are precisely aimed at dealing with fighter jets.

The Azeris did not rely on high-tech systems, but on their ability to inflict heavy losses on the opponent, combined with their ability to take heavy losses.

One pillar of Azeri power was impact-recognition grids, the core of which were low-tech aircraft. They had them in large numbers, so they could suffer heavy losses. The second pillar was a large army on the ground, which consisted largely of mercenaries, who could also suffer heavy losses.

Azerbaijani drone strike in Artsakh.

The aircraft were used both for impact and mainly in intelligence gathering, reconnaissance surveillance and target acquisition (ISTAR) roles, directing artillery fire and guiding infantry. An infantry with great tolerance for losses inflicted on it by ruthless, determined and resourceful Armenians.

Dominance with drones

The need for large numbers of consumable aircraft has been recognized in the West as well. As British Air Force chief Sir Stephen Hillier put it, during the conference on the future of air and space power, held in London (July 17, 2019), it is a crucial issue to create more targets in the air.

In particular, the British Royal Air Force is concerned about the small number of fighter jets currently available and is therefore seeking, inter alia, to acquire unmanned fighters that will accompany the manned aircraft. These aircraft will have many roles, but the goal is to create larger fleets of consumable aircraft that will saturate the enemy air defense. This is exactly what the Azeris did in Artsakh.

Similar is the approach of the US Air Force, which wants to frame its F-35 and F-15EX fighter jets with the unmanned XQ-58 Valkyrie of Kratos Defense Security Solutions, or something similar. Valkyrie began to develop in July 2016, when the US Air Force awarded Kratos a contract under the Low Cost Attritable Aircraft program. The mass use of aircraft for reconnaissance or impact is not a privilege of technologically advanced countries.

For example, during the SOFIC (Special Operations Forces Industry Conference) in Tampa, Florida (May 2017), General Tony Thomas, Commander of the US Armed Forces Interdepartmental Special Operations Command, stated that ISIS in Mosul had achieved regular air supremacy with the widespread use of modified trade drones. These carried out reconnaissance and strike missions, carrying 40mm bombs, or turning them into aerial improvised explosive devices.

The example of Eastern Ukraine

The value of strike-and-hit grids was also evident from operations in eastern Ukraine in 2014-2015, where the Russians used artillery units flexibly. They were supplied with information from aircraft, special operations teams and electronic warfare systems to quickly detect enemy forces and fire them at a rapidly changing battlefield.

For example, in July 2014, according to US intelligence sources, a single Russian artillery brigade destroyed two Ukrainian motorized battalions within minutes, in the “Battle of Zelenopillya”. In particular, a force of the Ukrainian 79th Airmobile Brigade appeared at an advanced outpost and just 30 minutes later came under heavy fire from multiple BM-21 Grad rocket launchers, resulting in its destruction.

It is estimated that the Russians used special forces to locate the Ukrainians and passed the targeting data to the rocket launchers. The Russians also seem to have used electronic warfare systems, such as the PB-301B Borisoglebsk-2. This could interfere with or intercept radio signals and cell phone broadcasts, as the Ukrainians used cell phones at the beginning of the conflict to direct artillery fire, leading the Russians to intercept them.

Another system used by the Russians is the Leer-3, which is estimated to detect the coordinates of active cell phones from their GPS. In this way, it seems that the Russians targeted and destroyed several artillery units of the Ukrainian airborne forces. To tackle the problem, the Ukrainians were equipped with Harris RF 7800V radios from the United States, which offer cryptographic communications.

According to Ukrainian Lieutenant General Andrii Koliennikov, deputy director of the Institute for Scientific Research of the Military Equipment Directorate of Ukraine, 90% of Ukrainian casualties in this war came from artillery and mortar fire.

Part of the Russian strategy was also to strike a crushing blow at the adversary’s command and control structure so that it could not respond to Russian blows. The doctrine of the use of Russian artillery seeks to minimize the time available to the enemy to return fire. It is noteworthy that the Russians used all the artillery systems at their disposal, old and new, even some that had been withdrawn.

Critical choice for the Greece’s Armed Forces

From the above it becomes clear that it is wrong, if not dangerous for Greece to focus on increasingly few markets, due to the high cost, high-tech battle platforms. These become unaffordable, precisely because of the high cost and the small numbers available, but also the long time required to replenish them in case of loss.

MPU RX-4 drone with the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki team in Greece. Photo: ANA-MPA

The situation becomes even more dysfunctional, if combined with the inability to suffer great losses in human resources. And it becomes extremely dangerous when the opponent invests in multi-platform reconnaissance-impact grids that have high tolerances in losses, while his tolerances in human losses are also greater.

In addition, the debate over which frigate or fighter jet is better than the other is dangerously misleading. In war reality, what counts is the development of multi-system battle “entities”, which unite differently within an indivisible unit to inflict destructive blows on the opponent and with great tolerances to the blows received by him. That is why the expensive and incomplete battle platforms are not the appropriate means to strengthen Greece’s combat capabilities. Instead, they offer an Achilles heel to the opponent!

To learn from the defeat of the Armenians

These conclusions are not necessarily negative for Greece. On the contrary, they offer huge opportunities if we want to invest in Greece’s ingenuity, in the rich scientific and technical potential and if of course we utilize commercially available technologies. Today, Greece is at the beginning of a series of major changes in the art, science and technology of war, which are shaping a revolution in this field.

This is exactly the revolution examined by the signatory’s latest study “The New Military Revolution and Greece’s Defense Strategy” (Livani Publications). From this comes much of the information presented here. This revolution offers huge opportunities in Greece, not only to strengthen the fighting capabilities of the army economically, but also to achieve a cooperative relationship of the national economy and defense, instead of being competitive as it is today.

However, if Greece insists on an outdated model of combat capability development based on the overseas market of expensive high-tech platforms, cut off from each other, we risk being trapped in an innovative gap with the adversary. This will cause very dangerous disharmony on the Greece-Turkey front in the years to come.

The views of the author do not necessarily reflect those of Greek City Times.

Konstantinos Grivas is an Associate Professor of Geopolitics at the Military School of Guards. He also teaches Geography of Security in the Wider Middle East at the Department of Turkish and Contemporary Asian Studies at the University of Athens in Greece. He is a regular contributor to SLPress.

Artur Vanetsyan invited to National Security Service

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 18:06,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 11, ARMENPRESS. President of ''Motherland'' Party, former Director of the National Security Service Artur Vanetsyan has been invited to the National Security Service on November 11, ARMENPRESS reports ARF member Gegham Manukyan said during the rally of the parliamentary and extra-parliamentary opposition forces.

''A while ago Artur Vanetsyan was invited to the National Security Service. He will head there now and will soon return'', Manukyan said.

17 opposition parties have organized a rally, saying they will present their option to overcome the situation resulted by the war.




Leading media outlets write about Joe Biden’s victory

Leading media outlets write about Joe Biden's victory

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 20:40, 7 November, 2020

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 7, ARMENPRESS. A number of leading media outlets inform that Democratic Joe Biden has been elected U.S. President.

ARMENPRESS reports CNN and BBC inform about Biden's victory.

According to CNN, Joe Biden has already received 273 votes. 270 votes are necessary for being elected.

BBC wrote that Joe Biden will become U.S. President, defeating Donald Trump.

Report: Abkhazia Armenians Go to War in Karabakh

Civil Georgia
Nov 6 2020

Akhra Avidzba, former Donbas militant turned aide to Abkhaz leader Aslan Bzhania, wrote on November 6 that ethnic Armenian volunteers from Russian-occupied Abkhazia are heading to fight in Nagorno-Karabakh.

Photos posted by Avidzba shows the volunteers departing from Russia’s Sochi International Airport, located some 10 kilometers away from Abkhazia section of Russo-Georgian border.

Fighting between Armenia and Azerbaijan over Nagorno-Karabakh, internationally recognized territory of Azerbaijan populated and controlled by ethnic Armenians, resumed on September 27. The ongoing war, deadliest since the end of original Karabakh war in 1994, claimed thousands of lives, including those of civilians on both sides.

One of UNSC permanent members thwarted statement for Artsakh – Deputy FM

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 18:24, 5 November, 2020

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 5, ARMENPRESS. The UN is the only organization that has a right to directly interfere in Artsakh war by the decision of the Security Council, but recently one of the Security Council permanent members thwarted an important statement that was expected to be made based on the behind-doors session, ARMENPRESS reports Deputy Foreign Minister of Armenia Shavarsh Kocharyan said at the National Assembly.

‘’No international organization, with the exception of the UN, is authorized to directly interfere. It’s only the UN that can do that, for which a decision of the UNSC is required. The interference can be in different forms, they can be economic sanctions or even use of force’’, Kocharyan said.

According to Kocharyan, it’s necessary that none of the Security Council permanent members use the right to veto and that the decision is passed at the UN Security Council, where there are another 9 none permanent members.

Shavarsh Kocharyan noted that Russia, France and the USA, which are UNSC permanent members and OSCE Minsk Group Co-chair countries, presented a very balanced approach. It was about cessation of hostilities, non-intervention of the 3rd parties in the conflict and that the presence of terrorists in this conflict is inadmissible. ‘’There was one UNSC permanent members that thwarted this statement’’, the Deputy FM said, adding that the result was that we heard a very strange formulation which just called for a ceasefire and nothing more.

Shavarsh Kocharyan did not clarify which of the UNSC permanent members thwarted the statement.