Erdogan Hopes Joint Russia-Turkey Center on Karabakh Will Be Launched Soon

TASNIM News Agency, Iran
Dec 31 2020

  • December, 31, 2020 – 16:39
  • Other Media news

  • – Other Media news –

    "I wish success to our military who will monitor ceasefire (in Nagorno-Karabakh). I hope that the center that is being constructed now will start operating soon," Anadolu Agency quoted him as saying to the Turkish officers in Azerbaijan, TASS reported.

    Earlier, Minister of National Defense of Turkey Hulusi Akar reported that 36 officers including a general will serve in the monitoring center.

    Renewed clashes between Azerbaijan and Armenia erupted on September 27 in the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh. 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.

    The Russian leader said the Azerbaijani and Armenian sides would maintain the positions that they had held, and Russian peacekeepers would be deployed to the region. Besides, Baku and Yerevan must exchange prisoners and the bodies of those killed.

    The conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan over the highland region of Nagorno-Karabakh, a disputed territory that had been part of Azerbaijan before the Soviet Union break-up, but primarily populated by ethnic Armenians, broke out in February 1988 after the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Region announced its withdrawal from the Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist Republic.

    In 1992-1994, tensions boiled over and exploded into large-scale military action for control over the enclave and seven adjacent territories after Azerbaijan lost control of them. Talks on the Nagorno-Karabakh settlement have been ongoing since 1992 under the OSCE Minsk Group, led by its three co-chairs – Russia, France and the United States.

    On November 11, Russia and Turkey agreed to create the Nagorno-Karabakh ceasefire monitoring center, the memorandum was signed following videoconference talks between Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu and his Turkish counterpart Hulusi Akar.



    Putin congratulates Armenia’s President on New Year and Christma

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     12:48,

    YEREVAN, DECEMBER 30, ARMENPRESS. President of Russia Vladimir Putin has sent a congratulatory letter to Armenian President Armen Sarkissian on New Year and Christmas, the Armenian President’s Office told Armenpress.

    “I hope the difficulties and concerns which this year brought will stay in the past. I would like to reaffirm the intention to further develop the Russian-Armenian allied partnership for the welfare of our two brotherly peoples, for the strengthening of peace and security in the South Caucasian region.

    I wish you and your relatives good health, happiness and all the best, and to all citizens of Armenia – peace and prosperity”, reads the Russian leader’s congratulatory message.

    On behalf of the Russian President, collection of souvenir stamps dedicated to USSR Hero Gevorg Vardanyan has been handed over to President Armen Sarkissian.  

    Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

    Armenian FM holds farewell meeting with Ambassador of Kazakhstan

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     15:04,

    YEREVAN, DECEMBER 29, ARMENPRESS. Foreign Minister of Armenia Ara Aivazian received today Ambassador of Kazakhstan Timur Urazayev who is completing his diplomatic mission in Armenia, the Armenian foreign ministry told Armenpress.

    The minister thanked the Ambassador for his contribution to the strengthening of the Armenian-Kazakh relations, wishing success to his further activities.

    Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

    Armenian Prosecutor General given time until Tuesday noon to detain PM

    News.am, Armenia
    Dec 21 2020
    Nikol Pashinyan Nikol Pashinyan

    15:14, 21.12.2020

    Nagorno-Karabakh: How did Azerbaijan triumph over Armenia?

    Al-Jazeera, Qatar
    Dec 22 2020

    Azerbaijan placed bets on sophisticated, pricey weapons, while Armenia relied on old Russian-made arms and obsolete strategy, analysts say.

    Azerbaijan’s 44 day offensive abruptly reshaped a decades-long, WWI-like trench war over Nagorno-Karabakh, an impoverished, breakaway region that is inside Azerbaijan’s borders but run by ethnic Armenians.

    Since the mid-1990s, when the battle over Nagorno-Karabakh killed more than 30,000 people and displaced up to a million, the conflict has long been written off as one of the world’s “frozen”, unsolvable political stalemates in which resource-poor Armenia seemed to be punching well above its political and military weight.

    But not this time.

    The victory cost Azerbaijan the lives of almost 2,800 soldiers, dozens of Azerbaijani civilians, and billions of dollars spent on weaponry.

    But according to the Moscow-brokered peace deal inked in November, it got back strategic swaths of Nagorno-Karabakh, including seven districts around the mountainous region that used to be populated by ethnic Azeris but became a no-man’s land dotted with ghost towns and minefields.

    How did Azerbaijan manage to triumph?

    “It was a technological victory,” Alexey Malashenko, a Moscow-based political expert, told Al Jazeera.

    Azerbaijan placed its bets on sophisticated, pricey weapons and new tactics battle-tested in the Middle East, while their foes relied on old Russian-made arms and obsolete stratagems they mastered in the 1990s, analysts say.

    Armenia-backed troops moved around in large groups or in trucks, their trenches were wide, but not deep, their artillery was barely disguised and stayed put for days, becoming an easy target for air raids.

    Their weapons were hopelessly dated, their fighter jets did not fly a single sortie, and their Russian-made Osa and Strela anti-aircraft missile systems were powerless against Baku’s most lethal battlefield upgrade – unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), popularly known as drones.

    “Apparently, Nagorno-Karabakh’s military didn’t follow the regional wars of the 2010s that were taking place in their neighbourhood,” in Syria and Iraq, researcher Nikolay Mitrokhin of Germany’s Bremen University told Al Jazeera.

    Their technical and tactical disadvantages were obvious from dozens of videos the Azerbaijani military shot from drones that targeted these large groups, jam-packed trucks, shallow trenches and exposed artillery.

    The Turkish-made Bayraktar TB2 drone is pictured on December 16, 2019 at Gecitkale military airbase near Famagusta in the self-proclaimed Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (TRNC) [Birol Bebek/AFP]Azerbaijan used Turkish Bayraktar TB2 combat drones that carry laser-guided bombs and have been battle-tested in Syria and Lybia; Israeli reconnaissance and patrol Heron and Hermes UAVs, and, lastly, “kamikaze” Orbiter drones also made in Israel.

    Reconnaissance drones helped aim artillery fire that forced the Armenians to retreat.

    “It explains the slow movement of the Azerbaijani army and its losses that would have been much higher in case of classic assaults in mountainous areas,” Pavel Luzin, a defence analyst with the Jamestown Foundation, a think-tank in Washington, DC, told Al Jazeera.

    Ethnic Armenian soldiers watch military vehicles of the Russian peacekeeping forces driving along a road in Lachin in the region of Nagorno-Karabakh on November 13, 2020 [Stringer/Reuters]Swarms of combat and kamikaze drones pin-pointedly struck tanks, missile systems, artillery, trenches and troops, achieving not just military superiority, but also “demoralising” the Armenians, he said.

    Luzin, other observers and Armenian officials claimed the drones were operated from Turkey – the way most US drones flying over Iraq and Syria are operated from military bases near Las Vegas.

    Armenian officials and Western media also purported that Turkey deployed thousands of “mercenaries” recruited in pro-Ankara areas of Syria. Azerbaijan and Turkey denied the claims.

    This was the first military parade in history that celebrated one ex-Soviet republic’s victory over another ex-Soviet republic. It was also a combined show of force, new arms and a fledgling military alliance.

    The ceremonial step of some 3,000 soldiers toting assault rifles echoed through the central streets of Baku, Azerbaijan’s capital and a Caspian port of three million, as tens of thousands of spectators, some wearing face masks, cheered, snapped photos on their mobile phones and chanted the national anthem.

    A small contingent of elite Turkish commandos followed.

    A deafening flock of military jets flew over them releasing smoke in the colours of the Azerbaijani flag. Dozens of Russian-made tanks and missile systems, Turkish-made armed-personnel carriers, Belarusian-made anti-tank missiles, and, of course, the Israeli and Turkish drones, were displayed during the December 10 parade.

    Much older, damaged tanks and missile systems captured from Armenia were driven by on long platforms as the crowd booed.

    Beaming Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and his Turkish counterpart Recep Tayyip Erdogan observed the parade from a podium.

    Presidents Erdogan of Turkey and Aliyev of Azerbaijan greet people during a military parade to mark victory in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, in Baku, Azerbaijan, on December 10, 2020 [Murat Cetinmuhurdar/Presidential Press Office/Handout via Reuters]In his speech, Aliyev lambasted Armenia for expelling ethnic Azeris who lived in Armenia, Nagorno-Karabakh and the seven districts around it.

    “Hundreds of thousands of Azerbaijanis who lived at the time [in what is now] the Republic of Armenia have been expelled from their lands,” Aliyev said. “Our people have for centuries lived in those lands.”

    He then issued a veiled threat to continue the war by calling three Armenian regions, including the capital, Yerevan, “historically Azeri lands”.

    Erdogan also looked triumphant – and echoed Aliyev’s words.

    “The 30 years-old injustice is over. Our support to Azerbaijan will continue,” he said.

    But will it?

    Some observers predict the two leaders, who have different backgrounds and political goals, may fall out.

    Erdogan is a religious school graduate who advocates the ideology of pan-Turkism, a unity of Turkic-speaking ethnic groups and nations in Turkey, northern Iran, ex-Soviet Central Asia and parts of Russia.

    Aliyev, whose father and presidential predecessor Heydar was a top officer in the Soviet KGB, graduated from a prestigious diplomatic university in Moscow – and does not want Azerbaijanis to be treated as “second-rate ‘Turks’,” analyst Malashenko said.

    “It’s a radical mistake to think that Azerbaijan will become Turkey’s back yard,” he said.

    Three days after the parade, Aliyev praised another helmsman whose support, he said, was crucial in Azerbaijan’s victory.

    “If it wasn’t for President Putin’s interference and efforts, the situation would have been different today,” Aliyev told a group of European officials in Baku.

    SOURCE : AL JAZEERA

    Armenian, Russian FMs discuss issues related with the trilateral declaration

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     19:09, 23 December, 2020

    YEREVAN, DECEMBER 23, ARMENPRESS. Armenian Foreign Minister Ara Ayvazian and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov discussed a number of issues related with the trilateral declarations signed by the leaders of Armenia, Azerbaijan and Russia, ARMENPRESS was informed from the official website of the Russian Foreign Ministry.  

    The sides also discussed a number of bilateral and international pressing issues.

    Russian FSB prevents terror act in Makhachkala

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     12:11,

    YEREVAN, DECEMBER 26, ARMENPRESS. The Russian Federal Security, in collaboration with the Ministry of Interior, prevented a terror actin Makhachkala, ARMENPRESS was informed from Ria Novosti.

    '’The members of the group planed to use an explosive near one of the administrative buildings of the police and carry out an armed attack against the personnel of the Ministry of Interior of Dagestan'', the FSB informed.

    It's mentioned that on December 25 the low enforcement bodies arrested 4 members of the ''Islamic State'' terrorist organization. Weapons were found in their settlement.

    RFE/RL Armenian Report – 12/25/2020

                                            Friday, 
    
    Pashinian Says Ready For Snap Elections
    
    
    ARMENIA -- A participant addresses Armenian law enforcement officers during an 
    opposition rally outside the government office to demand the resignation of 
    Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian, Yerevan, .
    
    Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian on Friday expressed readiness to hold fresh 
    parliamentary elections next year and offered to negotiate with Armenia’s 
    leading political groups for that purpose.
    
    “I am not clinging to the post of prime minister, but I also cannot adopt a 
    careless attitude towards power and the post of prime minister entrusted to me 
    by the people,” Pashinian said in a statement posted on Facebook. “The fate of 
    that post and the country’s further political leadership must be decided by the 
    people through a free expression of their will and I … consider myself a 
    guarantor of that free of expression of their will.
    
    “I can give up the post of prime minister only if the people decide so,” he 
    said. “Should the people reaffirm their trust I am also ready to continue 
    leading the Republic of Armenia in these difficult times. There is only one way 
    to answer these questions: the conduct of pre-term parliamentary elections.”
    
    “Based on that, I am inviting parliamentary and interested extraparliamentary 
    forces to consultations on holding pre-term parliamentary elections in 2021,” 
    concluded Pashinian.
    
    
    Armenia -- Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian emerges from the main govenment 
    building in Yerevan to lead a procession to the Yerablur Military Pantheon, 
    December 19, 2020.
    
    Virtually all Armenian opposition parties have blamed Pashinian for the Armenian 
    side’s defeat in the recent war in Azerbaijan and demanded his resignation. 
    Their demands have been backed by President Armen Sarkissian, the Armenian 
    Apostolic Church and many public figures.
    
    An opposition coalition uniting more than a dozen parties has been holding 
    anti-government demonstrations in Yerevan and other parts of the country in a 
    bid to force Pashinian to hand over power to an interim government. Its leaders 
    maintain that only that government must hold the snap elections.
    
    Citing what he described as a poor attendance of the continuing anti-government 
    rallies, Pashinian said on Friday that the opposition campaign has not won 
    popular support and is fizzling out.
    
    The beleaguered prime minister earlier dismissed the protests as a revolt by the 
    country’s traditional “elites” that lost their “privileges” after he swept to 
    power in 2018.
    
    
    
    Opposition Party Seeks Parliamentary Probe Of Karabakh War
    
            • Artak Khulian
    
    Armenia -- Deputies from the opposition Bright Armenia Party attend a parliament 
    session, Yerevan, May 26, 2020.
    
    The opposition Bright Armenia Party (LHK) has called for a parliamentary inquiry 
    into the causes and the outcome of the recent war in Nagorno-Karabakh.
    
    “Ever since the war ended with the November 9 ceasefire the most important 
    questions preoccupying the Armenian people have been: why did diplomacy fail to 
    prevent the war, why did the war break out … and why did we lose?” LHK leader 
    Edmon Marukian said on Friday.
    
    Marukian’s party wants these questions to be answered by a “fact-finding group” 
    that would mostly consist of deputies from the three political groups 
    represented in the Armenian parliament: the ruling My Step bloc, the LHK and the 
    opposition Prosperous Armenia Party (BHK). Each of them would appoint four 
    members of the group.
    
    Three other members would be named by other forces which finished fourth, fifth 
    and sixth in the 2018 parliamentary elections and failed to win any seats in the 
    National Assembly. They include the former ruling Republican Party of Armenia 
    (HHK) and the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun).
    
    “The group must work and draw up conclusions regarding the pre-war period and 
    the war,” said Marukian. “The parents of our heroes, our soldiers and everyone 
    must know what happened … Until we answer these questions we cannot carry on 
    with our lives and build a strong Armenia.”
    
    My Step, which is headed by Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian, and the BHK said 
    they will discuss the LHK proposal and respond to it.
    
    The BHK, Dashnaktsutyun and the HHK are part of a coalition of more than a dozen 
    opposition parties that has been holding anti-government protests in a bid to 
    force Pashinian to resign over his handling of the war. Although Marukian’s LHK 
    is not involved in the protests it too has blamed Pashinian’s administration for 
    the Armenian side’s defeat in the six-week war.
    
    The prime minister has repeatedly rejected opposition demands for his 
    resignation. “I consider myself the number one person responsible [for the 
    defeat] but I don’t consider myself the number one guilty person,” he told 
    RFE/RL’s Armenian Service on December 16.
    
    
    
    Armenian Ban On Imports From Turkey Set To Take Effect
    
    
    Armenia -- A commercial truck enters Armenia from Georgia through the Gogavan 
    border crossing, November 29, 2018. (Photo by the Armenian State Revenue 
    Committee)
    
    Armenian tax authorities said on Friday that they will start enforcing next week 
    a government ban on the import of all Turkish goods to Armenia which was imposed 
    during the recent war in Nagorno-Karabakh.
    
    The Armenian government cited Ankara’s “inflammatory calls,” arms supplies to 
    Azerbaijan and “deployment of terrorist mercenaries to the conflict zone” when 
    it approved the ban on October 20. It said the measure is meant to not only hurt 
    Turkey financially but also neutralize “various kinds of dangers” relating to 
    imports of goods from the “hostile country.”
    
    The ban will come into effect on December 31 and remain in force for six months. 
    Government officials have said that it could be extended.
    
    In a statement, the State Revenue Committee (SRC) warned importers to “strictly 
    comply” with the ban, saying that “enhanced customs controls” will be put in 
    place at Armenian border checkpoints. The SRC said they must be prepared to 
    produce documents indicating the “country of origin” of goods imported by them.
    
    The statement also stressed that Turkish-manufactured products cannot be 
    re-exported to Armenia from Georgia, Russia or any other country.
    
    According to government data, Armenia imported $178 million worth of Turkish 
    goods, including clothing and machinery, in January-October 2020. The imports 
    from Turkey were down by 15 percent year on year.
    
    Deputy Prime Minister Mher Grigorian expressed confidence in October that 
    Armenian businesspeople will not have trouble importing the same types of goods 
    from other countries or manufacturing them in Armenia. He said the government 
    plans to subsidize loans designed for such import substitution.
    
    Turkey has refused to establish diplomatic relations with Armenia and kept the 
    border between the two states closed since the early 1990s out of solidarity 
    with Azerbaijan. It has also banned all imports from Armenia.
    
    
    
    Another Anti-Pashinian Mayor Avoids Arrest
    
            • Ruzanna Stepanian
    
    Armenia - Kajaran Mayor Manvel Paramazian.
    
    An Armenian court blocked on Friday the arrest of another town mayor who has 
    demanded Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s resignation and backed protests 
    against his rule.
    
    Armenia’s Investigative Committee asked the court on Wednesday to remand Manvel 
    Paramazian in pre-trial custody immediately after charging him with kidnapping 
    and beating up another man in April this year.
    
    Paramazian denies the charges. His lawyer, Yervand Varosian, told RFE/RL’s 
    Armenian Service that the court found no legal grounds to allow his arrest.
    
    Paramazian has run Kajaran, an industrial town in southeastern Syunik province, 
    since 2016. He was among the heads of more than a dozen provincial communities 
    who issued earlier this month statements condemning Pashinian’s handling of the 
    war with Azerbaijan and demanding his resignation. They accused him of putting 
    Syunik’s security at grave risk with Armenian troop withdrawals completed over 
    the weekend.
    
    The mayors encouraged hundreds of local residents who blocked a regional highway 
    to disrupt Pashinian’s visit to Syunik on Monday. One of the mayors, Arush 
    Arushanian, was detained hours before the protest.
    
    A Yerevan court ordered the Investigative Committee to free Arushanian on 
    Tuesday.
    
    Nevertheless, the law-enforcement agency leveled a string of criminal charges 
    against the 29-year-old mayor of the town of Goris and demanded a court 
    permission to arrest him again. The court rejected the demand on Thursday.
    
    Paramazian and Arushanian have led some of the government-backed local militias 
    that were set up in October to defend Syunik against advancing Azerbaijani 
    troops.
    
    
    
    Armenian President, PM Discuss Political Crisis
    
    
    Armenia -- President Armen Sarkissian (L) and Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian 
    meet in Yerevan, November 12, 2020.
    
    President Armen Sarkissian and Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian met late on 
    Thursday to discuss lingering political tensions in Armenia resulting from the 
    recent war in Nagorno-Karabakh.
    
    “The meeting focused on the situation in the country, the emerging challenges, 
    the safety and defense of Armenia’s border communities, ongoing efforts to 
    restore normal life in Artsakh and the Government’s support measures,” 
    Pashinian’s office said in a short statement.
    
    The presidential press service issued an identical statement on the meeting held 
    amid continuing opposition protests against Pashinian’s rule.
    
    With no other details reported, it was not clear if the two men reached any 
    understandings on how to end the political crisis.
    
    Sarkissian held earlier a series of consultations with the leaders of various 
    Armenian political groups, including members of a coalition of more than a dozen 
    opposition parties staging the protests in a bid to force Pashinian to step down.
    
    The president, who has largely ceremonial powers, has repeatedly backed 
    opposition demands for Pashinian’s resignation and the formation of an interim 
    government that would hold snap general elections within a year. He has said 
    that Armenia is in a “deep crisis.”
    
    The prime minister has rejected these demands, dismissing the anti-government 
    protests as an “elite revolt” not supported by most Armenians.
    
    Some Pashinian allies have said that the ruling political team is ready to 
    discuss with the opposition the possibility of snap elections.
    
    Opposition leaders insist that the vote must be held by the transitional 
    government. They blame Pashinian’s administration for the Armenian side’s defeat 
    in the war with Azerbaijan and say it is not capable of meeting security 
    challenges facing Armenia.
    
    
    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.
    
     
    
    
    

    Opposition member: Senior Officer of Armenia MOD Conscription and Mobilization Service resigns

    News.am, Armenia
    Dec 22 2020
     
     
    14:15, 22.12.2020
     
    Senior Officer of the Conscription and Mobilization Service at the Ministry of Defense of Armenia, Lieutenant Colonel Razmik Gevorgyan has submitted his resignation letter. This is what member of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation-Dashnaktsutyun political party Gegham Manukyan declared during the rally demanding Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan’s resignation at Republic Square today, adding that several high-ranking officers and various government officials have also submitted their resignation letters during the day.
     
    “These people have taken oaths and can’t fulfill criminal orders. They are professionals who are required in order to ensure the country’s security, and the person occupying the seat of Prime Minister needs to resign as soon as possible so that the officers can fulfill their duties,” Manukyan said.
     
     
     
     

    Armenian government approves more relief programs for Artsakh citizens

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     12:58,

    YEREVAN, DECEMBER 17, ARMENPRESS. The Armenian government approved on December 17 more relief programs to support the affected citizens of Artsakh.

    Citizens who were displaced as a result of the war and are now living in Armenia, and are unemployed, will be enabled to work paid social jobs for a three-month period. Their salaries will comprise 8000 drams a day.

    Citizens of Artsakh who were living in the areas that were lost during the war and who are currently living in Armenia will be offered to undergo internships as part of an employment assistance program. Unemployed citizens participating in the internships will receive 100,000 drams a month for three months.

    Another approved project increases the compensation to troops who were wounded in action with an additional 200,000 drams per month for half a year.

    Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan