Category: 2020
Nagorno-Karabakh: How did Azerbaijan triumph over Armenia?
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.
Putin, Macron discuss situation in Nagorno Karabakh
Russian President Vladimir Putin had a telephone conversation with President of the French Republic Emmanuel Macron.
The situation around Nagorno-Karabakh was thoroughly discuss. The President of Russia stressed that the situation in the region is stabilizing, and the agreements, enshrined in the Statement of the leaders of Armenia, Azerbaijan and Russia – are generally being consistently implemented.
The parties emphasized the successful work of the Russian peacekeepers, providing, at the request of Baku and Yerevan, the ceasefire and the safety of the civilian population.
They reaffirmed their mutual readiness to continue coordination on various aspects of the Nagorno-Karabakh settlement, in particular, within the framework of the OSCE Minsk Group.
Among the most urgent issues were the humanitarian problems associated with the return of refugees, the restoration of infrastructure, the preservation of religious and cultural monuments, in particular through the International Center for Humanitarian Response.
VoA: Thousands Rally in Armenia Demanding PM’s Resignation
Thousands of people have poured into the Armenian capital’s main square as the opposition continues its campaign to pressure Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan to quit over last month’s cease-fire deal with Azerbaijan.
The protesters gathered in Republic Square on Tuesday and chanted slogans such as, “Nikol, traitor” as riot police guarded the prime minister’s offices nearby.
Another group of demonstrators walked into another building that houses several government ministries and briefly scuffled with security forces there, while a major highway was reportedly blocked by opposition supporters in the afternoon.
Leaders of a coalition of more than a dozen opposition parties have vowed to hold daily demonstrations until Pashinyan agrees to hand over power to a “transitional” government tasked with organizing snap parliamentary elections within a year.
Vazgen Manukian, who has been nominated by the opposition National Salvation Movement to head such a government, urged Armenian armed forces and police to stop carrying out Pashinyan’s orders and “join the people.”
“Switch to our side so that we solve the issue today,” Manukian told the crowd on Republic Square.
Pashinyan earlier on Tuesday made clear that he has no intention to leave office and portrayed the anti-government protests as a revolt by the country’s “elites” who had lost their “privileges” when he swept to power amid nationwide protests in 2018.
The prime minister has come under fire since agreeing to a Moscow-brokered deal with Azerbaijan that took effect on November 10, ending six weeks of fierce fighting in and around the breakaway region of Nagorno-Karabakh.
His opponents want him to quit over what they say was his disastrous handling of the conflict that handed Azerbaijan swaths of territory that ethnic Armenians had controlled since the 1990s.
They also say Pashinyan is not capable of dealing with the new security challenges Armenia is facing.
Calls for his resignation have been backed by President Armen Sarkisian, the head of Armenia's Apostolic Church Catholicos Karekin II, as well as other prominent public figures in the country and the Armenian diaspora.
Turkish Press: Belgium’s U.Karabakh resolution is illegitimate: Turkey
ANKARA
Turkey’s ruling party on Tuesday voiced criticism over the decision of the lower house of the Belgium parliament on Upper Karabakh, calling it “null and void”.
Speaking at a news conference following the ruling Justice and Development (AK) Party's Central Executive Board meeting, Omer Celik, the spokesman of the party, said that resolution 1597 related to Nagorno-Karabakh adopted by Belgium’s Chamber of Representatives, is “unjust, unlawful, unfair, and illegitimate.”
"The situation to which radicalism and aggression brought Armenia is clearly downfall," Celik asserted.
New clashes erupted on Sept. 27 and the Armenian army launched attacks on civilians and Azerbaijani forces, violating cease-fire agreements.
During the 44-day conflict, Azerbaijan liberated several cities and nearly 300 settlements and villages from Armenian occupation.
The two countries signed a Russia-brokered agreement on Nov. 10 to end the fighting and work toward a comprehensive resolution.
50,000 trees to be planted in Artsakh
The Foundation for the Preservation of Wildlife and Cultural Assets launched its We are our Forests campaign as part of its Aid for Artsakh project, in order to provide emergency relief to the forests and ecosystems of Artsakh. By raising $50,000, the FPWC will be able to plant 50 000 site-specific trees as part of its mission to protect and conserve the biodiversity of the region.
Trees will be grown in a tree nursery owned by FPWC with a Target Plant Concept(TPC) methodology. The TPC is an effective framework for selecting seedlings based on specific characteristics best-suited to a given site. These characteristics are often scientifically derived from testing the factors that can be linked to outplanting success, such as seedling morphology and physiology, genetic source, and overcoming limiting factors on outplanting sites. The method allows to have very high survival rates (80-90%).
The growing cycle will begin in March, 2021. By October, 2021 plants will be ready for the outplanting. The planting season starts from mid-October to late November. The days can vary based on weather conditions. It’s also possible to maintain some part of the trees during winter and plant during March and early April neat year.
FPWC will cooperate with the Artsakh Nature Fund, the first environmental CSO in Artsakh to provide the further care and track survival rates of planted trees. Artsak Nature Fund was established to conserve and sustain the unique natural heritage and biodiversity of Artsakh. It is the first organization to receive an international funding from Fondation Franklinia, a Geneva based organization, which recognized Artsakh and supported the initiative towards conservation of its unique forests in Y2019.
FPWC and ANF will maintain and monitor the growth of trees 5 years after planting. This includes irrigation during summer months, patrolling by rangers to prevent unregulated grazing, remove and prevent weeds around the plants, etc. During these years the tree species will grow and develop a strong root system to grow independently. Though the main maintenance will last two years, we will continue monitoring and patrolling the reforested areas during at least another 5 years, to make sure no negative human impact is recorded on the site.
Rangers will patrol the planted areas and monitor the survival rates. This is a huge benefit for the project, as we have a constant supervision of planted trees, which help us to respond quickly to any disruption of normal growth.
An evidence-based approach will be used by applying data gathering with GPS coordinates. Planted trees will be divided into blocks and recorded with the GPS coordinates, type of species, etc. The survey team will locate each tree block and record its measurements along with survival rates during the year. This will give us a better understanding of survival rates, as well as get access to real-time data, so if there is any sort of mistake or issue that disrupts the normal growth of trees, we can prevent and take actions before it’s late.
On September 27th, 2020, Azerbaijan launched a robust military offensive on the Republic of Artsakh. During the course of the war that ensued, Azerbaijan caused terrible human losses and disastrous damage to civilian infrastructures by bombing cities and villages, destroying schools, hospitals and churches. Intense destruction was also caused to Artsakh’s forests, where the illegal use of white phosphorous munitions had devastating effects on the environment and on the biodiversity of the region. These have given rise to concerns of an ecocide in the South Caucasus.
The region of Artsakh is a biodiversity hotspot. Its primary forests are home to over 6000 plant species, 153 species of mammals and 400 species of birds. Of these, hundreds are currently listed on the International Union for Conservation of Nature’s Red List of Threatened Species. Indeed, the destruction of forest caused by this war has threatened the very existence of countless species, including the brown bear, the bezoar goat, the mouflon, the lynx, the vulture, the eagle and the Caucasian leopard, a critically endangered feline at a high risk of extinction.
Artsakh’s forests play an important role in the preservation of favourable environmental conditions for sustainable development, but they are also essential for the local people who depend heavily upon it for their livelihood. In fact, the indigenous people of Artsakh have accumulated and passed down traditional forest-related knowledge for thousands of years, and their social and cultural practises, as well as their economy, are deeply rooted in this environment, and dependent on its wellbeing for their survival. As a direct result of the illegal use by Azerbaijan of white phosphorus munitions, hundreds of hectares of forest have burned, habitats have been destroyed, ecosystems have been ravaged, and the soil and bodies of water of the region have been contaminated. This represents a major threat for humans and all living creatures of the wider region of the South Caucasus; the consequences of this destruction can be devastating for decades and centuries to come.
After the war of 2020, due to the loss of areas, there is a new challenge for Artsakh population – the shortage of water, as most of the water resources are now under Azerbaijani control. Naturally, forests serve as our natural water collection, storage, filtration, and delivery systems by collecting rain and snow and delivering it into streams, wet meadows, and aquifers throughout the year.
Armenian opposition sets up protest tents to pile pressure on PM
Opposition rally to demand the resignation of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan in Yerevan
(Reuters) – Hundreds of opposition supporters set up a protest camp outside Armenian government headquarters in central Yerevan on Tuesday, escalating a campaign against Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan.
His opponents demand that he resign over what they say was his mishandling of a bloody six-week conflict over the Nagorno-Karabakh enclave and surrounding areas which ended with a Russian-brokered truce and big territorial gains for Azerbaijan.
Opposition groups had threatened to launch a national strike on Tuesday and, as Armenian police looked on, protesters waving Armenian flags set up four tents outside government headquarters.
"We've already set up tents, we intend to stay as long as we have to, including sleeping here. Pashinyan must resign," Ishkhan Saghatelyan, an opposition politician, was quoted by TASS news agency as saying.
On Saturday, thousands of Armenians led by Pashinyan marched through the capital to its Yerablur military cemetery to commemorate soldiers killed in the conflict over the Nagorno-Karabakh enclave.
Although his supporters filled the cemetery to its brink, footage published on Armenian television showed Pashinyan's critics shouting "Nikol is a traitor!" as his convoy passed by, escorted by heavy security.
Pashinyan, who swept to power in a peaceful revolution in May 2018, has rejected calls to resign.
(Reporting by Dmitry Antonov; Writing by Tom Balmforth; Editing by Mark Heinrich)
Strikes and blocked roads in Armenia: how the opposition is trying to overthrow the PM
- JAMnews, Yerevan
One of the activists of the protest movement Gegham Manukyan told the demonstrators that the Ijevan-Yerevan and Vanadzor-Dilijan roads were also blocked.
“People are demanding Pashinyan’s resignation,” the oppositionist said.
Who resigned
Khachatur Tovmasyan, deputy commander of the special battalion of the patrol and guard service, resigned in protest against the current authorities. This unit is popularly called “red berets”.
Opposition leaders announced this at the rally and read out the officer’s address. In it, Khachatur Tovmasyan says that human and spiritual values are important to him, and he “does not consider it possible to serve a deceitful and self-respecting government, irresponsible people.”
Photo by JAMnews
What Nikol Pashinyan thinks
The prime minister called this opposition movement a “riot of the elites” of the former government.
“Deprived of power as a result of the 2018 revolution, the ‘elite’ is trying to achieve revenge,” Nikol Pashinyan wrote on his Facebook page.
According to him, the real confrontation is not between the government and the opposition, but between the “elite” deprived of privileges and the people:
“But in any case, the decisive word will be for the people, because if the people say their word, the“ elite ”will not be able to do anything. Of course, I will do my best to ensure that people do not miss the opportunity to have their say. But at the moment, the priority for us is to ensure the external security of Armenia and Artsakh. In these processes, external security should by no means be called into question. “
Brutal war between Azerbaijan, Armenia makes peace a hard bargain
Just over a month ago, Armenia lost control of the Nagorno-Karabakh region in a short-lived and brutal war with Azerbaijan. But while Armenian forces have handed these territories back to Azerbaijan it may be a long time before civilians return to them safely, with hundreds of miles of frontline to de-mine and evidence of war crimes. Special correspondent Simon Ostrovsky reports.
-
Judy Woodruff:
Nearly three months ago, a dormant conflict on the fringes of Europe broke into brutal warfare. The former Soviet republic of Armenia and Azerbaijan went to war again over the enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh, drawing in regional powers.
Now, after the Azerbaijani victory, as special correspondent Simon Ostrovsky tells us, with the support of the Pulitzer Center, peace will be a hard bargain.
-
And a warning:
Some images in this report may disturb viewers.
-
Simon Ostrovsky:
Earlier this month, allies reviewing the captured spoils of a brutal war, Azerbaijan's President Ilham Aliyev with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on the capital Baku's main square.
Column after column of captured Armenian weapons rolled by in a victory parade to celebrate neighboring Armenia's defeat and the capture of a larger prize, the Nagorno-Karabakh region, after the latest war over Karabakh ended November 9, a decidedly unusual, even repellent spectacle for modern Europe.
But these are dark times in this corner of the continent, where Turkey, Russia and Iran intersect. Just over a month ago, Armenia lost control of these areas of Azerbaijan, which it held since the end of the first war between Azeris and Armenians here in 1994. Now the Azerbaijani and Turkish leaders exult in their popularity.
-
Ilham Aliyev (through translator):
The famous Bayraktar drone, which is made by the Turkish defense industry, was a game-changer and played an important role in our success.
-
Simon Ostrovsky:
Azerbaijan's successful military campaign was helped by Turkish know-how and drone technology. It will shape the geopolitical map for years to come in this vital region.
Russia, Turkey's rival in theaters as diverse as Karabakh, Syria and Libya, seems to have secured a place on that map. It wielded its influence with Armenia and Azerbaijan to broker a deal that not only ended the fighting, but secured a role for its military in the contested enclave in the form of peacekeeping troops.
-
RECEP TAYYIP ERDOGAN, Turkish President (through translator):
I have to mention Mr. Putin's approach. His approach made it possible to carry this process out in a positive manner and get things to where they are.
-
Simon Ostrovsky:
While Azerbaijanis are jubilant over the return of lands long coveted, some worry that the Russians are there to stay.
-
Elnur Aliyev (through translator):
In my opinion, it's bad that the Russian peacekeepers arrived. They should not have come. At minimum, Russia is a country that helps Armenia and sends peacekeepers. If Turkey came, yes, but I don't approve of Russian peacekeepers.
-
Simon Ostrovsky:
More frequently, though, responses like this one when we asked residents of Baku what they thought of the Russian presence:
-
Woman (through translator):
We trust our president. He knows everything very well. It must have been the right decision.
-
Simon Ostrovsky:
Armenian forces may have handed these territories back to Azerbaijan, but it might be a long time before civilians can come back here safely. There's hundreds of miles of front line to de-mine.
But it's not just about clearing unexploded ordnance. If civilians from both sides are to return to these areas, painful steps toward reconciliation must first take place. That includes the prosecution of war criminals.
Rachel Denber is a deputy director of Human Rights Watch.
-
Rachel Denber:
It's imperative for a couple of reasons. First, it's imperative as a deterrent to ensure that these crimes don't repeat, to send a very strong signal to — throughout the chain of command, from the highest level to the lowest level, that these kinds of actions will not be tolerated and that they will be vigorously punished.
But it's also — it's also important for a sense of justice and a sense of security.
-
Simon Ostrovsky:
While Azerbaijan's leader promised to govern regained territory for the benefit of both the Azeri and Armenian communities, his troops are sending another message.
Here, they chant, "They will destroy Armenians."
And, here, just a small sample of the gruesome footage that has emerged from this conflict. A soldier cuts off the ear of a dead Armenian fighter.
In its war to take back control of Karabakh, Azerbaijan is accused of war crimes, including the beheading, mutilation and humiliation of Armenian fighters and civilians, according to recent reports by both Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch.
And while Armenians also stand accused of humiliating captive soldiers and killing at least one POW, they didn't mistreat any civilians, possibly because their troops were in the retreat. That puts the onus on Azerbaijan to show first and foremost that it's serious about being a just steward for everyone who will live here.
For the "PBS NewsHour," I'm Simon Ostrovsky in Nagorno-Karabakh.
Thousands protest in Armenia, demand PM’s resignation