Why Nagorno-Karabakh shouldn’t be forgotten

Aug 18 2022
FOREIGN AND SECURITY POLICY 

The ripple effects of the Russia’s war on Ukraine continue reverberating in other conflict areas. After a brief interlude when the EU-facilitated diplomacy, if ever so hesitatingly, seemed to be gaining some traction, tensions between the old foes, Armenia and Azerbaijan, are again on the rise. The realities on the ground, however, particularly the power disparity between the two main antagonists and limited leverage international players have in the region, leave ample space for more escalations in the coming period.

The 44-day war in 2020 saw Azerbaijan recover the territories around Nagorno-Karabakh previously held by the Armenian forces and chunks of Nagorno-Karabakh itself. The ‘Nagorno-Karabakh Republic’ administered by local de-facto Armenian authorities fell under the protection of Russian peacekeepers which were deployed in the area in compliance with the Russian-brokered trilateral ceasefire deal.

In early August 2022, new deadly clashes erupted in the area of responsibility of the Russian peacekeepers around the Lachin corridor connecting Nagorno-Karabakh with Armenia. Russia blamed Azerbaijan for the breach of the ceasefire agreement, and so did the European Parliament’s delegation for relations with the South Caucasus – noteworthy given that Moscow and Brussels don’t agree on much these days.

Out of the two sides, Azerbaijan has both the incentives and the power to challenge the post-war status-quo. Although the war ended in Azerbaijan’s favour, Baku did not manage to assert its control over the entirety of Nagorno-Karabakh. The Russian peacekeepers and the de-facto Armenian authorities of the NKR, however diminished, stand in Baku’s way.

The ceasefire deal did not touch upon the status of Nagorno-Karabakh – the core issue that triggered the conflict three decades ago in the first place. The Armenian side, much weakened after the war, hinted that it might ‘lower the bar’ on its demands, implying that the status question won’t stand in the way of peace negotiations with Azerbaijan. Yerevan rather insists only on the general principle that the security and rights of the Karabakh Armenians should be safeguarded – a major political concession.

Following the 2020 war, bodies like the European Parliament condemned Baku’s policies of systematically erasing Armenian cultural heritage on the territories under its control.

Baku doesn’t seem to be interested in reciprocating this gesture. In a recent interview to Azerbaijani TV , President Ilham Aliyev once again completely ruled out a possibility of any special status for the region, or its Armenian inhabitants. He claimed instead that the Karabakh Armenians will enjoy equal rights as Azerbaijani citizens. Some Azerbaijanis noted sarcastically that such promises only meant that Armenians would be as deprived of their political and civil rights as Azerbaijanis already are under Aliyev’s rule.

Authoritarianism aside, hostile policies targeting specifically Armenians may be an even bigger problem. Following the 2020 war, bodies like the European Parliament condemned Baku’s policies of systematically erasing Armenian cultural heritage on the territories under its control. In March 2022, an Azerbaijan-operated gas pipeline supplying Nagorno-Karabakh was damaged and remained broken for a week, condemning the local inhabitants to suffer freezing temperatures. Meanwhile, in an apparent attempt to apply psychological pressure, Azerbaijani army’s loudspeakers were calling on them to leave the area. And Aliyev’s constant talk of capitulation and territorial claims against Armenia proper do not suggest a willingness to build a common future of peace and reconciliation.

It is in this context that the breaches of the ceasefire need to be evaluated. Azerbaijan fears that any significant Armenian presence within its borders would engender a rebirth of Armenian separatism down the road, if and when the geopolitical winds will shift again. Thus, Aliyev appears to be willing to maximize Azerbaijan’s current advantage in power to get as many Armenians as possible – including civilians – to withdraw from Karabakh.

Russian peacekeepers remain a hurdle on his path. However, Baku has mastered pressure tactics that allows it to progressively slice away the territory theoretically under their responsibility in its favour. The recent clashes around Lachin corridor have led to a deal between Baku and Moscow (from which Yerevan was pointedly excluded) that will see the area handed back to Azerbaijan as soon as 25 August. Although it is part of Azerbaijan’s internationally-recognised territory, the absence of security guarantees for local Armenians left the de-facto NKR authorities with no other choice than to instruct them to evacuate the area, thus contributing to fulfilling Baku’s objectives.

It’s not only about stretching Russia’s armed forces, but also its new dependence on Turkey, Azerbaijan’s main ally, to break its diplomatic and economic isolation from the West.

At the same time, Baku appeals to the provision of the trilateral ceasefire statement that obliges Armenian forces to withdraw from Nagorno-Karabakh. Russia, as a guarantor of the deal, prevents any Armenian reinforcements to be deployed to protect the local Armenians. But its own peacekeeping force has neither a clear mandate nor rules of engagement, which mostly reduces it to registering the ceasefire violations without any real power to prevent them or reverse the facts on the ground that those violations create.

Moreover, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine created a massive distraction for Moscow that Baku is keen to exploit to advance its agenda. It’s not only about stretching Russia’s armed forces, but also its new dependence on Turkey, Azerbaijan’s main ally, to break its diplomatic and economic isolation from the West. As Turkey aggressively seeks its own power projection in the Caucasus, via Azerbaijan, Russia could easily trade away few remaining Armenian outposts in Karabakh as bargaining chips in exchange for what it sees much bigger gains in its bilateral relationship with Turkey. It is, thus, no surprise that the Putin-Erdogan meeting in Sochi failed to make any reference to the need to stabilise the situation in the Caucasus.

The West, meanwhile, is consumed with the Russian war of aggression in Ukraine. One of its consequences is the need to secure alternative energy supplies to replace the Russian gas. This has led the European Commission’s president Ursula von der Leyen to sign a ‘memorandum of understanding’ on increasing Azerbaijani supplies. Although the signed document doesn’t commit Azerbaijan to deliver even the small amount of gas it could offer, it was a diplomatic gain for Aliyev as the EU elevated him to the position of a key partner in the emerging energy geopolitics, with no strings attached on human rights or Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

Other than that, the EU is mostly reduced to issuing periodic exhortations on ‘both sides’ to show restraint. Some member states, like France, would like to play a more prominent role in the Caucasus, but without a hard power presence on the ground it is exceedingly difficult. A possible way forward could be an OSCE-mandated force in Karabakh, but that would require the Western states and Russia to cooperate, and Europeans to be willing to send their peacekeepers to the region – currently there is no evidence whatsoever that any of these could be on the cards.

There are signs of emerging war fatigue within the society, with the euphoria from the 2020 victory subsiding and giving way to prevalence of socio-economic concerns.

That leaves reducing the power disparity between Armenia and Azerbaijan as the only realistic way to achieving sustainable peace. For that, Armenia would need to dramatically upgrade its deterrence capabilities – a prospect that needs time and investment, as well as a less fractious polity united around the national purpose.

It will also take a compromising attitude from Azerbaijan. There are signs of emerging war fatigue within the society, with the euphoria from the 2020 victory subsiding and giving way to prevalence of socio-economic concerns. A spate of suicides among the war veterans punctures the official Baku’s triumphalist narratives. In the short term, however, the prospects for peace are bleak as Aliyev, with geopolitical winds in his sails, will continue leveraging his power at the expense of any real diplomacy.

This article reflects the personal views of the author and not necessarily the opinions of the S&D Group or the European Parliament.   


Child thieves: illegal adoptions in Armenia

Aug 18 2022

18/08/2022 -  Armine Avetisyan

Gayane (the name is not the real one) lives in one of the main cities of Armenia. She has been in great pain for 8 years, ever since she gave up her baby.

"I got married young, so young that I had no idea what a family was, what a marriage was… I was catapulted into family life when I found out I was pregnant. I had a pretty difficult pregnancy, I have been under medical supervision for a long time. I was subjected to various tests, during which I was told that the fetus was not in danger. Then, when my baby was born, the doctor came to tell me that the initial tests had yielded wrong results and that my baby had serious health problems", says the woman.

At the hospital Gayane was not only informed of the child's congenital health defect. The doctor told her about the difficulties that awaited her and suggested that she give up the baby.

"The doctors explained to me that I was still young, that I could still become a mother. They also explained to me that giving up the baby would be especially beneficial for him, because he would live in a specialised centre. Every day he would need special care that could only be lent to him by the specialists who worked in the centre. First they talked to me, then to my husband. We thought about it for a long time, it was very difficult, in the end we gave up our first child… He was taken to a special assistance centre. I was too young, I didn't understand what I was doing…".

According to Gayane, the child stayed in the centre for a very short time, then was adopted and never heard of it again.

"Even though we had given up on our baby, I had an acquaintance through whom I got some information about my baby, after all, I am a mother. Then my acquaintance informed me that he had just been adopted, my baby is almost gone in the void․․․․ I was informed only later that he was taken out of the country. I don't know what happened after…".

The thought of what has become of her baby continues to trouble Gayane: although she has become a mother for the second time, she constantly thinks of her firstborn and prays for his survival.

"When I gave birth to my baby, I was told he had several problems, including heart disease, and that he might not live long. Then, when it turned out he had been adopted and taken out of the country, I started to think that my baby was completely healthy. That they had deceived me, taking advantage of my post-partum depression. My suspicions were aggravated when I learned on television that a criminal group that was involved in the sale of children was operating in Armenia".

In 2019, the National Security Services of Armenia announced that a system of illegal adoptions had been running in the country for years and that Armenian children were being taken abroad with the collaboration of various local officials. The case has been under investigation for about 3 years and today many things are clearer.

Investigators recently announced that preliminary investigations have been completed on 11 defendants, accused of abuse of office in the process of adopting minors, children of Armenian citizens, by people of foreign nationality; of buying and selling children and money laundering in the period 2015-2018.

It was discovered and proven that in order to sell children, entrusting them to foreign citizens, a resident of the city of Yerevan, who worked for many years in a number of Italian companies engaged in the field of adoption and was the Armenian representative of these companies, had created an organised criminal group, which included people working in various sectors and in various state structures.

Since November 2015, it has been documented that money from companies accredited in a foreign country and engaged in foreign adoptions, their employees, as well as people who had applied for adoption, has been transferred to this Yerevan resident.

Over the years, the organisations involved have expanded their activities in several countries in Europe and Asia and published information on their website, also indicating the so-called "costs" established for adoptions which varied from country to country: the highest rates concerned children citizens of the Republic of Armenia, for an amount of 15-25,000 Euros.

Italians wishing to adopt children of Armenian nationality contacted the aforementioned bodies, specified the child's preferred sex and other characteristics, then filled in and submitted the application and other necessary documents, paid the required fees. Then the aforementioned person, together with his accomplices, took care of the adoption process. In total, 1,200,000 Euros have been paid into the defendant's accounts in recent years.

All this was possible only thanks to the chain of accomplices who played an active role in criminal activities, who worked both in state bodies that perform certain functions in the field of adoptions, and by employees of a medical institution who carry out activities in the field of maternity – friendly and close relations that made the adoption process possible.

Now, having concluded the investigation, the prosecutor has asked for an indictment. The defendants who have held high government positions during the group's activities no longer hold their positions.

 

Sports: European Championship: Armenia wins 6th medal

NEWS.am
Armenia – Aug 17 2022

Armenia won its 6th medal at the European Youth Boxing Championships held in Turkey.

Alen Stepanyan (57 kg) also made it to the semifinals. In the duel with a Scottish athlete Oscar Steele, the Armenian won 5:0.

Hayk Ghahramanyan (75 kg), Tigran Hovsepyan (50 kg), Samvel Siramargyan (66 kg), Hamest Afrikyan (42 kg) and Vahram Dovlatbekyan (40 kg) reached the semifinals.

National Security Service to investigate frequent fake bomb threats

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 13:40,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 15, ARMENPRESS. A criminal investigation on Article 314 of the Criminal Code (Spreading False Information on Terrorism) will be probed by the National Security Service’s Investigative Department following the bomb threats targeting major infrastructures on August 14 which were subsequently determined to be hoax threats.

The general prosecution said it will forward several other proceedings on similar fake bomb threats to the NSS for investigation.

CivilNet: Russia to organize high-level talks with Armenia, Azerbaijan

CIVILNET.AM

11 Aug, 2022 10:08

  • Russia’s Foreign Ministry said it is planning to organize high-level talks with Armenian and Azerbaijani officials by the end of the month.
  • Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi reiterated that Iran will oppose any attempts to alter its borders in the Caucasus in a phone call with Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan.
  • Armenia’s Foreign Ministry denied news in the Turkish press saying that Armenia and Turkey’s special envoys for normalization talks will meet again next month.
  • The Armenian government will allocate over $6.5 million to complete construction on three roads.
  • The authorities in Karabakh said the situation along the line of contact remains “relatively stable,” despite “certain tensions.”

Credits: Ruptly

Camp Javakhk: The best decision I’ve ever made

Pascale Baghdisar at Camp Javakhk 2022

I decided to sign up with Birthright Armenia in December. A few emails and some paperwork later, I arrived in Armenia on April 30. I volunteered in Yerevan for one month and two months in Gyumri. While I was still volunteering in Gyumri, I heard about Camp Javakhk through other Birthright Armenia participants. I signed up as soon as I heard about it, not knowing much about Camp Javakhk other than the FAQ posted on their website. Was this an impulsive decision? Definitely. But, it was honestly the best decision I’ve ever made. 

I returned to Yerevan to meet the other camp counselors and embark on this crazy and unexpected journey with them. One night out and a long bus ride later, we finally reached Tbilisi. I still had no idea of the journey I was embarking on, but I knew I was in good company. Another bus ride later, we finally made it to Akhalkalak, our last destination. 

Pascale Baghdisar leading the youth of Camp Javakhk 2022

I have nothing but positive things to say about Akhalkalak. I think the people here are incredibly warm and inviting. People greet us in the streets and offer us their help all the time. I think Akhalkalak is a very welcoming city, unlike Montreal, where I am from. It is also common to see kids playing in the streets at all hours of the day and even at night. 

I have been a scouts leader for five years now, and I have volunteered in a day camp in Gyumri for a month; but honestly nothing could have prepared me for Camp Javakhk. There is just something special about the kids here. They are genuinely happy to be there and even happier that they get to meet us. I loved playing, singing and dancing with them. I have so many fond memories of them: a very intense dodgeball game, a second Vartavar and a soccer match where the kids told me I should not play with them because I was “worth at least two players.” 

Camp Javakhk staff 2022

I was in Akhalkalak for only a week, but it is a week I will always remember fondly. I think that Camp Javakhk is all about what energy you put into it, and the kids always reciprocate it. I hope I left as much of an impact on these kids as they had on me. This is not a goodbye; this is a see you again, Camp Javakhk! 

Camp Javakhk staff 2022

Pascale Baghdisar is an LL.M student at the University of Sherbrooke, Canada. She completed an LL.B in the University of Montreal. She has a passion for journalism and photography.


RFE/RL Armenian Report – 08/08/2022

                                        Monday, August 8, 2022


Pashinian Ally Downplays Armenian-Russian ‘Differences’ Over Peacekeepers

        • Naira Nalbandian

NAGORNO-KARABAKH -- Armored vehicles of Russian peacekeepers move along the road 
towards Agdam from their check point outside Askeran, November 20, 2020.


An Armenian pro-government lawmaker has denied any major differences between 
Yerevan and Moscow over the activities of Russian peacekeepers in 
Nagorno-Karabakh after last week’s deadly fighting in the disputed region.

Vigen Khachatrian, a member of the ruling Civil Contract faction, said on Monday 
that the situation is far from being described as “tensions” or “differences”, 
but rather is a result of a lack of understanding.

Following clashes between ethnic Armenian and Azerbaijani forces along the 
Lachin corridor near Nagorno-Karabakh early last week that reportedly left two 
Armenian and one Azerbaijani soldier dead Armenian Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian called for “adjusting details” of the Russian peacekeeping operation 
in the region. He, in particular, suggested giving the Russian contingent a 
“broader international mandate.”

“If we see that solutions are not possible in a trilateral 
[Russian-Armenian-Azerbaijani] format, we will have to think about activating 
additional international mechanisms,” Pashinian warned on Thursday without 
elaborating.

Moscow effectively dismissed Armenian criticism as Russian Foreign Minister 
Sergei Lavrov said the following day that they had not received any concrete 
proposals which the Armenian prime minister wants to discuss in the context of 
the Russian peacekeeping operation in Nagorno-Karabakh.

“So I can’t guess now,” the top Russian diplomat said, stressing at the same 
time that the Russian peacekeepers are “making every effort to stabilize the 
situation on the ground.”

Armenian Foreign Ministry spokesman Vahan Hunanian said later on Friday that it 
was still in February 2021 that the Armenian side put in writing and submitted 
to the top Russian leadership its concerns about the activities of the Russian 
peacekeeping contingent in Nagorno-Karabakh in order to raise their efficiency 
and avoid problems in the future.

The exchange between the Armenian and Russian officials gave rise to 
speculations about growing differences between Yerevan and Moscow regarding the 
matter.

Armenia’s Foreign Ministry has not yet disclosed details of the 2021 document 
that it says was submitted to Russia.

Vigen Khachatrian

“I suppose the two countries’ foreign ministries will meet to talk it over and 
will come to an understanding,” Civil Contract’s Khachatrian said.

“I don’t think that the Foreign Ministry should publish the contents of every 
document. What was said is as much as could be said,” he added.

Meanwhile, a phone call between Pashinian and Russian President Vladimir Putin 
was reported on Monday.

The Armenian prime minister’s office did not specifically mention the issue of 
peacekeepers as being discussed by the two leaders. It only said that “issues 
related to the situation around Nagorno-Karabakh, as well as ensuring security 
on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border were discussed.”

“In this context, the importance of the full implementation of all the 
agreements of the leaders of Armenia, Russia and Azerbaijan of November 9, 2020, 
January 11, and November 26, 2021 was reaffirmed,” the brief statement said.

Talking to RFE/RL’s Armenian Service last week, political analyst Tatul 
Hakobian, referring to Pashinian’s statements made during a cabinet meeting on 
August 4, described the language used by the Armenian side as “primitive 
blackmail.” But blackmail, he warned, is far from being the best tool in dealing 
with Russia. “We want to get rid of one thing, but have nothing to replace it 
with,” he said.

Gegham Manukian, a member of the opposition Hayastan parliamentary faction, said 
it was not clear to him how the Armenian side sees the way of raising the 
effectiveness of the Russian peacekeeping operation in Nagorno-Karabakh. But he 
outlined his faction’s vision for that: “We should first discuss the issue of 
raising the number of Russian peacekeepers [deployed in Nagorno-Karabakh]. 
Secondly, we should reconsider the way the Russian force is deployed in separate 
directions. The Armenian side’s initiative of mirrored withdrawals, even if 
implemented, should be done in conditions of full control so as to avoid 
situations similar to what happened in the village of Parukh [in March] and in 
the northwestern part of Artsakh [Nagorno-Karabakh – ed.] in recent days.”

Manukian would not comment on Pashinian’s statement regarding the possibility of 
considering “additional international mechanisms” if solutions within the 
Russian-Armenian-Azerbaijani format fail. He said that the statement was not 
clearly formulated and could be just a “word game”, while there is no official 
information to suggest this is a realistic plan.

Protesters in front of the Russian embassy in Yerevan demand that Russian 
peacekeepers “properly carry out” their mission in Nagorno-Karabakh, August 5, 
2022.

A multination international peacekeeping operation was discussed as part of the 
Nagorno-Karabakh peace process before the 2020 war. But after Russia brokered a 
ceasefire between Armenia and Azerbaijan to put an end to six weeks of bloodshed 
in the conflict zone, the other two OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs – the United 
States and France – welcomed Moscow’s peacekeeping operation, although U.S. 
President Donald Trump talked about the possibility of deploying ‘Scandinavian 
peacekeepers’ in the region during the war itself.

Swedish journalists recently revealed that one week before the Moscow-brokered 
ceasefire was signed, on November 2, 2020, the U.S. co-chair of the OSCE Minsk 
Group, Andrew Schofer, discussed such a possibility with Swedish officials. 
Though, according to the media investigation, that proposal was rejected by 
Stockholm.

In the wake of the recent escalation in Nagorno-Karabakh a small group of 
Armenians displaced from the region by the 2020 war and its consequences 
picketed the Russian embassy in Yerevan demanding that Russian peacekeepers 
“properly carry out” their mission. They also staged rallies in front of the 
embassies of France and the United States as well as the United Nations office 
in Yerevan, calling for an international peacekeeping operation in 
Nagorno-Karabakh.



Armenia Rejects Claims Of Involvement In Greek Surveillance Scandal

        • Gevorg Stamboltsian

Armenian Ambassador to Greece Tigran Mkrtchian (file photo).


Armenia has categorically denied any involvement in a surveillance scandal in 
Greece that has led to the resignation of the country’s intelligence chief as 
well as top prime minister’s aide.

Reports emerged on Saturday of Panagiotis Kontoleon, the former head of Greece’s 
National Intelligence Service who resigned on Friday, alleging that the Armenian 
and Ukrainian intelligence services had requested the surveillance of Nikos 
Androulakis, leader of the socialist opposition PASOK party.

In response to the claim covered in local media, Tigran Mkrtchian, Armenia’s 
Ambassador to Greece, called it a “shameless lie”, stressing that “Armenia has 
never asked any government to listen to anyone’s phone.”

Ukraine’s Ambassador to Greece Sergii Shutenko also rejected the allegations 
about Kyiv’s involvement.

The most high-profile scandal in Greece’s domestic politics in recent years came 
to light last week after Androulakis, who is also an MEP, revealed that the 
European Parliament’s cyber security service had informed him that a spyware 
called Predator had been installed on his phone.

A few days before that, the head of the Greek special service admitted during a 
closed parliamentary hearing that spyware had been installed on the phone of a 
journalist working for media network CNN Greece.

In an address to the nation on Monday, Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis 
distanced himself from the scandal, saying that he did not know that the 
National Intelligence Service had bugged the phone of a rival politician.



Turkey Warns Armenia Against ‘New Provocations’

        • Armen Koloyan

Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu (file photo).


Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu has called on Armenia to “refrain from 
new provocations” several days after Yerevan and Baku traded accusations over an 
escalation of violence in Nagorno-Karabakh that left at least three people dead.

Speaking at a gathering of Turkish diplomats in Ankara on Monday, Cavusoglu 
reportedly also reiterated his country’s vision of peace in the South Caucasus 
region.

“After the end of the war [in Karabakh], Turkey is making efforts to ensure 
peace in the region. Now we are talking not about Azerbaijan’s occupied 
territories, displaced people, refugees and a conflict that can start again at 
any moment, but about regional peace and cooperation. We again call on Armenia 
to refrain from participating in new provocations [against Azerbaijan in 
Karabakh],” Cavusoglu said.

On August 3, ethnic Armenian authorities in Nagorno-Karabakh said that two 
Armenian soldiers were killed and nearly two dozen others wounded in what they 
described as an attack by Azerbaijani forces against their military positions 
along the Lachin corridor conducted with the use of drones, mortars and grenade 
launchers.

Baku, for its part, said that an operation codenamed ‘Retribution’ was launched 
by its forces after one Azerbaijani soldier was killed by ethnic Armenian forces 
in the area on August 1.

Azerbaijan also claimed to have captured some strategic heights in the 
mountainous region overlooking the corridor linking Nagorno-Karabakh with 
Armenia that has been controlled by Russian peacekeepers since the end of a 
deadly 2020 war in which Baku managed to regain control of large swaths of 
territories in and around the disputed region.

Nagorno-Karabakh’s ethnic Armenian leader Arayik Harutiunian ordered a “partial 
mobilization” of army reservists in the wake of the incidents, but the situation 
did not further escalate amid reported agreements that Armenians would be 
leaving several villages along the Lachin corridor that are to be handed over to 
Azerbaijan as part of the 2020 Russian-brokered ceasefire agreement.

Despite what appears to be de-escalation that had also been urged by the United 
States and the European Union, the situation in and around Nagorno-Karabakh 
still remains relatively tense as Armenians and Azerbaijanis continue to accuse 
each other of regular ceasefire violations.

Armenia said that one of its soldiers was wounded along the border with 
Azerbaijan on Saturday, a claim denied by Azerbaijan, but confirmed by the 
Russian Defense Ministry in its latest news bulletin on the Nagorno-Karabakh 
peacekeeping operation.

Turkey, which is Azerbaijan’s top military and political ally, has been engaged 
in a normalization process with Armenia since late last year. Ankara, however, 
has made it clear that establishing diplomatic relations and opening borders 
with Armenia depends on Yerevan’s accepting Baku’s key demands. Commenting on 
prospects for normalizing Turkish-Armenian relations in July, Turkish Foreign 
Minister Cavusoglu said that Yerevan should specifically negotiate a peace 
accord sought by Baku and open a land corridor to Azerbaijan’s Nakhichevan 
exclave.


Reposted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2022 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

 

Turkish press: Crisis within the Western security structure

Flag of NATO (Shutterstock Photo)

The West has been embroiled in a deep political and social crisis since the end of the Cold War and the collapse of the Soviet Union. The Western crisis began immediately after it declared its ultimate victory and global hegemony. The biggest challenge for the West does not come from Russia or China but from within. There are several structural and political reasons for this crisis.

First, the Western people and governments have lost faith in liberal institutions and liberal values, including multiculturalism and peaceful co-existence. They think liberal values and institutions do not serve their national interests anymore. The rise of xenophobia, ultra-nationalism, far-rightism, fascism, racism and Islamophobia have begun to shape the Western political discourse. Mainstream center-left (social democrats) and center-right (liberals) have lost power in favor of populist far-right and far-left political parties in most Western countries. The new normal in the West is shallow political leaders and partisan politics.

After the first generation of populist politicians, such as Silvio Berlusconi, former prime minister of Italy, and Nicolas Sarkozy, former French president, dominated the first decade of the 21st century, the second group of populist politicians, such as Donald Trump, former U.S. president, and Boris Johnson, former U.K. prime minister, rose during the second half of the second decade of the 21st century. Nowadays, the Western world is waiting for the third generation of populist and radical politicians who view world politics from a conflictual perspective. The momentum in the West is still negative and illiberal direction; the Western common denominators continue to weaken and disappear.

Second, the evolution and the future of NATO have been widely discussed at the heart of international politics. Several disputes between the United States and other NATO allies, namely continental European countries and Turkey, have been rising for the last two decades. When the U.S. embarked on a controversial war in Iraq and illegally occupied the country, the majority of the Europeans and many European governments opposed the U.S. Even Germany, who in principle never questioned any American initiative abroad, openly criticized the U.S.' invasion.

Furthermore, Greece, which illegally militarizes the Aegean islands close to Turkey, has been trying to do anything in its capacity to provoke Ankara to increase the tension in the Eastern Mediterranean region. Greece has been insistently asking the Western countries to impose sanctions on Turkey. Recently, the two countries came close to a naval confrontation in the region and the NATO members such as the U.S. and France have been sending military troops and warships to the region to support Greece. Since the U.S. does not act as a broker between the two allies, it has lost its neutral and effective position.

The more NATO expands, it will lose its common denominators. In other words, with the inclusion of new states with different priorities and agendas into the NATO alliance, the alliance's cohesion will weaken. According to the NATO agreement, every ally possesses the right to veto any NATO decision if its demands are not met or if its national interests require otherwise. The most recent discussion about the possible membership of Sweden and Finland, which Turkey questions, indicates the questionable future of NATO.

Souring relations among the NATO allies have been undermining the organization and its ability to make effective decisions and intervene into regional crises. Russia's invasion of Ukraine has relatively reconsolidated the alliance, at least for the short term. However, after the prolonged war in Ukraine, the members of the alliance have begun to return to their previous positions and do not stand united against the crisis. Different members of the alliance have not only different priorities but also conflictual policies. For instance, many NATO members have been supporting and sponsoring anti-Turkish non-state actors and terrorist organizations, which undermine Turkey's national security. On the other hand, while many NATO members have supported Khalifa Haftar, the illegal military actor in the Libyan crisis, Turkey has supported the U.N.-recognized government.

Third, NATO's credibility eroded in the last two decades. The allies of the Western world, both Western and non-Western states, no longer trust the NATO alliance and the leading Western countries. For instance, neither NATO nor the Western states could save the Arab regimes during the Arab uprisings and revolutions or Georgia and Ukraine from the Russian intervention and disintegration. Even the Armenian government has criticized NATO for its inability to intervene in the crisis in the South Caucasus.

The Western NATO allies have different priorities; naturally, they do not consider the national security concerns of other states, including Turkey, a NATO ally. Turkey has been reminding the other NATO allies of the principle of reciprocity, which calls all members to respect the national security of the others. Unfortunately, this principle does not apply to the recent relations between Turkey and some of the other NATO members since many NATO members remain indifferent to the threats directed against it. Despite all constructive steps on the side of Turkey, some NATO members are determined to take a tougher stance against Turkey.

Many direct or indirect developments related to European and Trans-Atlantic security require rethinking the future of NATO. All members have to think about the security concerns of other member states. Otherwise, these developments will lead to counterproductive relations between the member states. Clearly, if the NATO alliance and its most important member, the U.S., do not adopt a proactive approach to restructure the institution and rebuild relations among the members, the alliance, together with the U.S., will lose its global effectiveness.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Muhittin Ataman is Director of Foreign Policy Studies at SETA Foundation. He is a professor in the Department of International Relations at Social Sciences University of Ankara. Ataman is also the Editor-in-Chief of Insight Turkey.

Chess Olympics: Armenian team lose to Uzbekistan team

NEWS.am
Armenia – Aug 7 2022
In the ninth round of the World Chess Olympiad taking place in the Indian city of Chennai, the men's team of Armenia was defeated by the team of Uzbekistan with a score of 1:3.

Gabriel Sargissian and Hrant Melkumyan ended their games in a draw, while Samvel Ter-Sahakyan and Robert Hovhannisyan lost. 

Uzbekistan with 16 points tops the standings. The Armenian team and India's second team scored 15 points each. 


Rep. Pallone calls for diplomatic efforts to halt Aliyev’s dangerous actions

Public Radio of Armenia
Aug 3 2022




 August 3, 2022, 23:22 Less than a minute

Member of US House of Representatives Frank Pallone calls on the State
Department and US Mission to the OSCE to condemn Azerbaijan’s actions.

The Congressman called the new wave of aggression by Azerbaijan
against Artsakh “the latest example of Aliyev threatening the people
of Artsakh over absurd demands like the closing of the Lachin
corridor.”

He urged the State Department and the US Mission to the OSCE to
condemn these actions and use every diplomatic tool available to halt
Aliyev’s dangerous actions.

Two Armenian soldiers have been killed, 19 are wounded in latest
Azerbaijani attack.