Renewed Armenian-Azerbaijani Fighting Threatens to Escalate Further

Jamestown Foundation
(Source: Reuters)

Armenian and Azerbaijani military forces are engaged in their most serious armed confrontation since the so-called Four-Day War of April 2016, when hundreds of soldiers on both sides were reportedly killed and wounded along the Line of Contact, which marks the frontier of Azerbaijan’s occupied territories in and around Karabakh (see , May 5, 2016). This time, the fighting began on July 12, 2020, on the internationally recognized Azerbaijani-Armenian border, well north of Karabakh. During the Nagorno-Karabakh War in the 1990s, Yerevan refused to acknowledge its direct involvement with the forces of the breakaway self-proclaimed “Nagorno-Karabakh Republic”—until then an autonomous region in Soviet Azerbaijan and mostly populated by Armenians. Large-scale fighting in Karabakh ended in 1994, with a ceasefire and a decisive Armenian victory. Armenian forces took over all of Karabakh as well as occupied a surrounding buffer zone that was previously populated by ethnic Azerbaijanis. All attempts to broker a political solution to the conflict by the so-called Minsk Group, co-chaired by the United States, Russia and France, or efforts by Moscow separately, have been deadlocked since. Skirmishes between Azerbaijani and Armenian forces have occurred regularly up and down the LoC; but as long as they remained low-key, the outside world paid little attention.

In the latest clashes (see , July 14), both sides have reportedly used mortars, missiles and heavy guns. The Azerbaijani military has employed Israeli-made drones over Armenia for reconnaissance missions and, reportedly, for aerial attack. Yerevan demonstrated footage of what appeared to be the destruction of at least one Israeli-made Erbit Hermes 900 drone. Both sides have reported casualties, including one Azerbaijani general. Each government has accused the other of “aggression and provocation.” To date, there have been no verified reports of civilian casualties, and neither side has tried to cross the border or occupy any enemy territory in recent days. Azerbaijan and Armenia have both reported a lull in the fighting on July 15; but on July 16, mutual artillery shelling resumed (Militarynews.ru, July 16).

The two South Caucasus rivals have been building up their respective armed forces for years, in anticipation of a possible full-scale showdown. Azerbaijan has the advantage of a constant stream of oil and natural gas export revenues, allowing for a much larger defense budget compared to its neighbor. Armenia was buying almost exclusively Russian hardware on credit, while Azerbaijan has purchased weapons from Russia and other countries, including modern Israeli-made drones and precision-guided, semi-ballistic long-range LORA missiles that can hit any target inside Armenia or occupied Karabakh. Azerbaijan wields drones and third-generation Israeli and South Korean anti-tank missiles that neither Armenia nor Russia have in their inventories. The Armenian military (together with the proxy Karabakh army) possesses a large number of mostly Soviet-era tanks and other heavy weapons; but its Azerbaijani opponent holds a serious qualitative edge. Armenia additionally has Soviet-made R-17 (Scud-B) ballistic missiles as well as some more modern and accurate Iskander semi-ballistic missiles that could hit sensitive targets deep inside Azerbaijan, including oil and gas installations. However, the Azerbaijani military command has announced that such attacks would result in retaliatory targeting of the Armenian nuclear power plant at Metsamor, 36 kilometers west of Yerevan, probably using precision-guided LORA missiles. A precision strike at Metsamor—the only nuclear plant in the South Caucasus—could possibly cause a 1986 Chernobyl-style radioactive contamination disaster (Interfax, July 16).

Armenia is largely regionally isolated and semi-surrounded by hostile Azerbaijan and Turkey. The country does have a relatively close and friendly relationship with Iran, its main trading partner and home to a large and influential Armenian community (as well as a sizeable ethnic-Azerbaijani minority). But Iran’s international pariah status puts a stigma on Armenia in Israel and in the United States. At the same time, Armenia is a long-time Russian ally, a member of the Russia-dominated Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) and the Eurasian Economic Union (EEU). Yet, the sitting Armenian leader, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, who came to power two years ago, in a popular protest revolt that overthrow a Moscow-friendly regime, is seen in Russia with serious suspicion as a pro-Western revolutionary. Moscow has good relations with the autocratic regime of Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and wants to dominate the entire region up to the former Soviet border with Turkey and Iran—a strategy requiring alliances not exclusively with Yerevan, but also with Baku and Tbilisi. Its presumed CSTO obligations notwithstanding, Russia resists being pulled into a conflict with Azerbaijan. Since the fighting is on Armenia’s state border, Yerevan requested an emergency CSTO council meeting, which was planned for July 13, but then called off without explanation. The Armenian embassy in Moscow called for CSTO support and solidarity “in deterring Azerbaijani attacks and possible hostile Turkish intervention” (TASS, July 14). On July 14, in Moscow, the CSTO council gathered for a regular meeting and announced, “The member nations were informed by the Armenian representative about the armed clashes and acknowledged the fact of being briefed” (RIA Novosti, July 14). Yerevan was only able to encourage its treaty allies to make a call for a ceasefire.

It seems neither Aliyev nor Pashinyan wants further escalation, but public opinion in both countries appears to be more belligerent. Angry demonstrations have broken out in Baku, with participants calling for war and the “liberation of Nagorno-Karabakh.” Azerbaijani police used water cannons to disperse the crowds (RBC, July 15). Under heightened public pressure, an uncontrolled escalation of tit-for-tat strikes may begin expanding the fighting along the border to Karabakh, and attacks against strategic targets could commence. Turkish Defense Minister Hulusi Akar announced that Turkey’s military will support Azerbaijan against “Armenian aggression” (Lenta.ru, July 14). Russia has a military base in Armenia, which hosts several thousand ground troops, plus armor, fighter jets and anti-aircraft missiles. These forces are not there to fight Azerbaijan but to deter Turkey (North Atlantic Treaty Organization). But if push comes to shove, the massive Turkish military would have the upper hand in the South Caucasus, while sending Russian military reinforcements to Armenia through Georgia would be a problem. If the present Azerbaijani-Armenian conflict is not stopped soon by a serious ceasefire, a nightmare scenario could suddenly emerge out of the recently published Russian nuclear doctrine: A devastating attack against Russia (or its allies) that warrants the practical use of nuclear deterrence to deescalate (see , June 4).

https://jamestown.org/program/renewed-armenian-azerbaijani-fighting-threatens-to-escalate-further/

Russia and China veto draft resolution on Syria at UN Security Council

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 11:21, 8 July, 2020

YEREVAN, JULY 8, ARMENPRESS. Russia considers it necessary to gradually curtail the cross-border assistance mechanism for Syria and suggests adopting a resolution providing for the extension of supplies through only one checkpoint on the border with Turkey, said Permanent Representative of the Russian Federation to the UN, Vasily Nebenzya, in a statement published on Tuesday, following the vote to extend the cross-border humanitarian assistance to Syria, reports TASS news agency.

Russia and China vetoed the draft resolution by Germany and Belgium, which proposed leaving two checkpoints open for the UN.

“The time has come to phase out this mechanism in order to replace it with humanitarian supplies that will be implemented in accordance with the principles outlined in UN General Assembly resolution 46/182”, the statement said. “However, we are aware of the need to meet the humanitarian needs of all Syrians”, Nebenzya added. “We will present our draft resolution, which implies a six-month extension of the mechanism, while limiting the number of existing checkpoints to one at the Bab al-Hawa checkpoint on the Turkish border”.

Due to the UN remote mode of operation, voting took place in written form to the head of the Security Council, a source in the organization told TASS.

“Russia and China voted against the document. 13 members of the council voted in favor. The draft resolution was not adopted because of a vote against it by the permanent members of the Security Council”, the source said.

The UN Security Council made the decision to start cross-border humanitarian operations in Syria in July 2014. In January of 2020, it extended the relevant resolution for six months, but the number of checkpoints was reduced from four to two on the border with Turkey.

President of Artsakh receives former defense minister of Armenia

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 17:30,

STEPANAKERT, JULY 10, ARMENPRESS. President of Artsakh Arayik Harutyunyan received today former defense minister of Armenia and Artsakh Seyran Ohanyan, the Presidential Office told Armenpress.

President Harutyunyan said he is happy to meet with his old friend and discuss issues relating to the strengthening of the country’s security and defense.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Intel: Senators berate Pentagon failure to sever F-35 cooperation with Turkey

AL-Monitor



by Bryant Harris
Jul 6, 2020

The Pentagon is still allowing Turkey to produce components for US
F-35 fighter jets, violating a defense law that President Donald Trump
signed in December.

“Unfortunately, Turkish manufacturers are still producing and
delivering key components of the aircraft despite the statutory
prohibition on such participation in manufacturing line of the
program,” Sen. James Lankford, R-Okla., and three other senators wrote
in a bipartisan letter to Defense Secretary Mark Esper. “We believe
more urgency is needed and hope you will accelerate the process to
ensure a more prompt removal.”

Sens. Jeanne Shaheen, D-N.H., Thom Tillis, R-N.C., and Chris Van
Hollen, D-Md., also signed onto the letter.

Why it matters:  The United States officially kicked Turkey out of the
F-35 co-production program last year over Ankara’s purchase of the
Russian S-400 missile defense system. Congress included a provision to
defund the transfer of F-35s to Turkey and the transfer of Turkish
components to the United States as part of last year’s defense bill.
The Pentagon initially said it would wind down Turkish participation
in the F-35 supply chain “in early 2020,” only to extend that deadline
through 2022.

The four senators accused the Defense Department of “impeding our
nation’s diplomatic and geopolitical efforts to pressure Turkey to
reverse course.”

“It is clear from these statutes that Congress intended for this
transition to take place in a period of months, not a period of
years,” they wrote. The senators added, “Based on recent revelations,
it is clear that the Pentagon is not allowing its own timeline or the
intent of Congress in this matter. We encourage you to reexamine the
present approach and take action to ensure an expedited removal of
Turkey from the manufacturing line as required by law.”

What’s next:  Turkey tested the powerful S-400 radar on US-made
fighter aircraft last year, but it has delayed fully activating the
missile system, citing the coronavirus pandemic. Most recently, Ankara
has said it would restrict Russian access to the S-400 batteries upon
activation — with several notable exceptions, including training.

Know more:  The Trump administration also appear to have backed off
public sanctions threats after Turkey sentenced a US consular employee
to three decades in prison, Amberin Zaman reports.


 

Sports: Mkhitaryan to remain at Roma until end of season

Panorama, Armenia
July 1 2020

Roma announced on Tuesday that they have agreed a deal with Arsenal to extend midfielder Henrikh Mkhitaryan's loan with the Serie A club until the end of the season.

There is also a "preliminary agreement" for the Armenian international to stay at the Stadio Olimpico for next season, AFP reports.

"I'm happy to stay here because I still have things that I haven't achieved yet that I want to achieve," said Mkhitaryan.

"I'm looking forward to it, I'm looking forward to finishing this restart of the season on a high note and then to be focused on what's next."

The 31-year-old former Manchester United player has scored six goals in 15 league appearances for Roma this term.

The capital club sit fifth in Serie A with 10 games remaining, but nine points adrift of Atalanta who occupy the fourth and final Champions League qualifying spot.

Asbarez: Merdinian School Holds Commencement Despite COVID-19 Pandemic


Medinian School’s 8th grade graduation

Due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic and current public safety measures, the C. & E. Merdinian Armenian Evangelical School in Sherman Oaks, Calif. held its graduation ceremonies in the School’s parking lot, on Sunday, June 14. Beginning at 9:30 am, the School had three separate ceremonies.

At the Kindergarten Graduation, Principal Lina Arslanian pointed out in her remarks that due to the situation created by COVID-19, the School faced an urgent and unprecedented situation. In a matter of a few days, the School administration, and the teaching staff, in cooperation with the parents, managed to switch to distance learning and complete the school year. Following her speech, Mrs. Arslanian invited the Kindergarten graduates and their parents to approach the stage while staying in their cars to receive their diplomas and gifts.

Following the Kindergarten “drive through” graduation ceremony, the Elementary School graduates and their parents entered the School’s parking lot in their cars and parked. Hovhannes Benneian, the student with the highest average grade in the class, read his message in Armenian, and Adriana Arakelian, the student with the second highest average grade, read her message in English. Graduating students were then called to the stage one by one to receive their diplomas and gifts and be photographed in front of a special poster.

Finally, the eighth-grade students entered the School’s parking lot in their parents’ cars and parked near the stage area. Following the social distancing rules, each graduating student got out of their parents’ car and stood in front of the stage.

Julia Ayrapetyan, who had the second highest average grade in class, read her salutatorian message in English. She noted that she had only attended Merdinian this year, yet she was thankful to everyone for how well she was received. She added that she had gained so much knowledge in that short period of time, which will serve as a foundation for her future education, and for countless pleasant moments that will never be forgotten.

Nayiri Karadjian and Alexa Buchakian, who had scored the highest average grade in the class, read their valedictorian messages. Nairi in her Armenian message confirmed that Merdinian was not only a school but also a home that helped her grow and develop, sowing the seeds of success. In her English valedictorian message, Alexa mentioned the words of Winnie the Pooh, “How lucky I am to have something that makes saying goodbye so hard,” and added that, that something was Merdinian for her. She had spent eleven years in a place where she felt safe and secure. “My days at this wonderful school are unforgettable. Thank you for giving me this opportunity, and I am grateful to my teachers who inspired me and have always been by my side,” she said.

An excited Merdinian graduate

Hovsep Ayvazyan, who scored the third highest average grade in the class, on behalf of his classmates handed Mrs. Arslanian a beautiful framed collage of the graduating class pictures to be displayed next to the previous years’ class photo collage.

The ceremony ended with a prayer offered by Lena Ekmekjian, Head of Merdinian’s Religion Department.

Merdinian has completed an unusual school year and the Class of 2020 will always remember that they are the graduates of an extraordinary year. Congratulations and bon voyage to the graduates!

Established in 1982, the C & E Merdinian Armenian Evangelical School is the only Armenian Evangelical School in the United States. The School offers a broad-based curriculum that fosters academic excellence, high moral values, and spiritual enrichment in the Armenian Evangelical tradition. The School strives to create a safe and nurturing environment where every student receives personal attention to become a successful and responsible individual. For more information, you may contact Principal Arslanian at 818.907.8149.

(Adapted by Louisa Janbazian from an Armenian article)

Russia’s coronavirus cases surpass 606,000

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 15:36,

YEREVAN, JUNE 24, ARMENPRESS. Russia has documented 7,176 cases of COVID-19, a disease caused by the novel coronavirus, in the past 24 hours, with the total number of the infected reaching 606,881, TASS reports citing the anti-coronavirus crisis center.

According to the data provided, the daily increase rate has dropped to 1.2%. For the past few days, it has remained at 1.3%.

The Moscow Region has reported 507 new cases of the virus, the Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Region — 323, St. Petersburg —  218, the Nizhny Novgorod Region — 207 and the Voronezh Region — 198.

The number of active cases of COVID-19 has reached 229,546.

Maximum price of 2 face masks will soon become 150 drams in Armenia

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 12:51,

YEREVAN, JUNE 18, ARMENPRESS. The price of face masks produced in Armenia is 100 drams, whereas that of the imported masks is 150 drams in major pharmacy chains, Chairman of the State Commission for the Protection of Economic Competition Gegham Gevoryan said at today’s Cabinet meeting.

“The wholesale price has already decreased and become 60 drams. In addition, two local companies have also reduced the price. When we get the new batch of face masks, the maximum price of two masks will become 150 drams, in other words a face mask will be sold within 70-75 drams”, he said.

He said the proceedings launched in all large pharmacy chains will soon be completed. “If the abuses of a prevailing position are approved, they will be held accountable. But I to want repeat once again that no face mask, which was imported or produced at 20 AMD, has been sold at 200-220 AMD in Armenia. I rule out such a thing. Yes, in the past the price of face masks was 20-30 AMD, but the import cost was low. The prices of face masks increased due to the global deficit”, he said.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Armenia assuages Iran’s concerns over its embassy opening in Israel

Jerusalem Post
Armenia made moves to try and quiet Iran's concerns over its decision to open an embassy in Israel following two dozen rallies held outside of the Armenian embassy in Tehran, according to Armenian news outlet Massis Post.
The rallies were held to condemn Yerevan's plans and to urge it to avoid in any diplomatic presence in “the occupied Palestinian territories.” News reports from the Iranian capital said the protesters chanted “death to Israel” and burned an Israeli flag.
On Wednesday, Armenian Ambassador to Iran Artashes Tumanyan assured the Iranian Foreign Ministry that Armenia remains committed to its relationship with the Islamic Republic despite its desire to strengthen relations with Israel.
Furthermore, Tumanyan discussed the demonstrations with Iranian Foreign Ministry official, Mohsen Faghani. The envoy assured Faghani that Armenia will continue to avoid any involvement in any "anti-Iraninan political project," according to Massis Post.
"The ambassador emphasized that Armeninan-Iraninan friendly relations have been and remain one of Armenia's foreign policy priorities," the statement read. 
Additionally, while "some circles" in the Islamic Republic are worried about Israeli influence on Armenia, Faghani praised the current state of Armeninan-Iranian relations, and isn't worried that the relationship will be undermined by any discontent with the Armeninan diplomatic presence in Israel. 
In April, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and Iranian President Hassan Rouhani spoke, marking the most recent communications between the two leaders.
Two weeks later, Pashinyan sent Prime Minister Benjamin Netenyahu a message congratulating him on his re-election.
“I am hopeful that through joint efforts we will be able to replenish and overhaul the agenda of Armenian-Israeli cooperation and build strong ties of mutually beneficial partnership,” Pashinyan wrote.

Armenia, which is known to have cool ties with Israel, made the announcement that it was going to open an embassy in Tel Aviv in September 2019, a move that was expected to strengthen relations between two countries. The date of the opening has been pushed off likely due to the coronavirus pandemic. 
Then-Foreign Minister Israel Katz praised Armenia’s decision, saying that it is a “significant step in the development of bilateral relations” between the two states. While Armenina is the 90th country to open an embassy in the Jewish state, Israel gave no indication that it was considering opening an embassy in Yerevan.
In January, Armenian President Armen Sarkissian commented on Israel's decision to not recognize the Armenian Genocide, in a statement to the Jerusalem Post, while he was in Israel for the Fifth World Holocaust Forum, which marked the 75th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz-Birkenau.
“A lot of Armenians ask, ‘Why on earth would Israel, a country whose people have seen their own huge tragedy, not recognize the Armenian Genocide?’” Sarkissian said. 
 
Later in the year, despite the fact that the Armenian embassy was announced more than six months before, Iran waited until March to announce its disapproval of Yerevan's decision.

On March 15, Ali Larijani, a senior adviser to the Iranian parliament, forecast the opening of the Armeninan embassy in Tel Aviv would have a "negative impact on stability and security in the region," and urged the Armeninan government to "think twice" before making the move, reports the Massis Post.
That same day, Ambassador Tumanyan met with Alireza Haqiqian, the head of the Iranian Foreign Ministry’s Eurasia department to explain in greater depth the motive behind strengthening ties with Israel.
Herb Keinon and Maayan Jaffe-Hoffman contributed to this report. 

CIVILNET.Is COVID-19 A Global Equalizer? A Conversation With Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak

CIVILNET.AM

20:28

Dr. Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak speaks to CivilNet’s host interviewer, AUA Adjunct Lecturer, Ph.D Narek Mkrtchyan about the challenges the COVID-19 pandemic has posed to the world. 

Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak is an Indian literary theorist, feminist critic, postcolonial theorist. She is a Professor at Columbia University. Spivak is on the experts list of the World Economic Forum. Her work “Can the Subaltern Speak?” is one of the key theoretical texts in the field of postcolonial studies. Prof. Spivak was awarded the 2012 Kyoto Prize in Arts and Philosophy and in 2013, she received the Padma Bhushan, the third highest civilian award given by the Republic of India.

“Covid Talks” is CivilNet’s program where prominent international thinkers, scholars and policymakers present their views on the impact of COVID-19 on world politics and humanity.