Scholz explains his reluctance to send Taurus long-range missiles to Ukraine

 19:25,

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 26, ARMENPRESS. German Chancellor Olaf Scholz has reiterated that he objects to supplying Kiev  with Taurus cruise missiles, citing concerns that his country could find itself dragged into the conflict.

"We should not be linked with any targets this system may reach in any way," he told a conference organized by the DPA news agency, the AP reports.

"We must make this clear. I am shocked that some don’t care, that they don’t even stop and think that it might come to  being dragged into the war because of what we are doing," he said.

In previous arguments why Germany could not send Taurus missiles, Scholz said he was concerned German personnel would have to be on the ground in Ukraine to help the missile targeting process, which he has ruled out.

Ararat Mirzoyan, UN High Commissioner for Human Rights discuss the latest developments in the South Caucasus

 20:41,

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 26, ARMENPRESS.  On February 26, in Geneva, on the sidelines of the high-level session of the UN Human Rights Council, Minister of Foreign Affairs of Armenia Ararat Mirzoyan had a meeting with the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Türk, the foreign ministry said.

The interlocutors discussed a number of issues on cooperation within the framework of the UN Human Rights system.

The steps and achievements taken towards the protection of human rights and strengthening the rule of law in Armenia were touched upon, thanks to which Armenia, according to the indexes of various authoritative international bodies, rose to leading positions in the region.

Touching upon the challenges in protection of human rights in different parts of the world, the importance of effective use of existing tools was emphasized, since the opposite leads to failure in preventing the most serious violations and the repetition of tragic outcomes.

Touching upon the ethnic cleansing carried out by Azerbaijan in Nagorno-Karabakh, Minister Mirzoyan briefed his counterpart on the steps taken to address the needs and rights of the Armenian population forcibly displaced from their homeland.

During the meeting, Ararat Mirzoyan and Volker Türk also exchanged views on the latest developments in the South Caucasus. Minister Mirzoyan briefed on the approaches of Armenia to key issues in the normalization process of Armenia-Azerbaijan relations, based on unequivocal respect for the principles of territorial integrity, inviolability of borders, and sovereignty. Minister Mirzoyan stressed that with a clear commitment to these principles, as well as refraining from aggressive rhetoric and from steps aimed at escalating the situation on the ground, it will be possible to move forward in the peace process.

Armenpress: FM Mirzoyan, ICRC President discuss issues on addressing rights of forcibly displaced people from Karabakh

 22:01,

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 26, ARMENPRESS.  On February 26, in Geneva, Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Armenia Ararat Mirzoyan had a meeting with Mirjana Spoljaric Egger, President of the International Committee of Red Cross.

Issues on addressing the needs and rights of forcibly displaced people from Nagorno-Karabakh as a result of the military attack and ethnic cleansing carried out by Azerbaijan last September, as well as the scope of cooperation with the ICRC on humanitarian issues were discussed, the foreign ministry said.

It is noted that Minister Mirzoyan particularly emphasized the importance of the repatriation of persons held in Azerbaijan, as well as working on clarification of the fate of missing and forcibly disappeared persons, reiterating the publicly expressed willingness of the Armenian side to cooperate on this issue.

During the meeting, the current security situation in the South Caucasus and the efforts of Armenia towards establishing peace and stability in the region were also touched upon.

Asbarez: AYF Holds D.C. Protest Commemorating Anti-Armenian Pogroms in Sumgait and Baku

A scene from the AYF D.C. Ani chapter protest and commemoration of Baku-Sumgait pogroms in wake of the 2023 Artsakh genocide


Armenian Youth Lead Call for Justice in the Wake of the Artsakh Genocide

WASHINGTON—The Armenian Youth Federation – Youth Organization of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation Washington, D.C. “Ani” Chapter organized a protest in front of the Azerbaijani embassy on Sunday afternoon in commemoration of those who were killed during the anti-Armenian pogroms of 1988 and calling for justice in the wake of the Artsakh genocide of 2023.

In late February, nearly 40 years ago, the Armenian population of Azerbaijan faced a brutal and merciless massacre organized and committed by ordinary Azeri citizens. In Sumgait, mobs of Azeris gathered to attack helpless Armenian families, while in Baku, dozens to hundreds were killed, raped, and brutally injured by similar mobs. Every year since these ambushes, Armenians around the world commemorate those we lost during the pogroms.

Although decades have passed since the annihilation of Armenians from Sumgait, Baku, Kirovabad, and Maragha, Armenian Americans and supporters demonstrated that they have not forgotten this miscarriage of justice, spending a cold Sunday afternoon passionately chanting their pleas to “stop threats of war” and “recognize the Artsakh Genocide.” 

AYF D.C. “Ani” Chapter member Hovsep Seferian, who, last year,  had shared his family’s story of survival from Azerbaijan’s murderous attacks in Baku, roused the crowd with his speech condemning Azerbaijan’s genocidal ethnic cleansing of Artsakh Armenians, and warned of further aggression against Armenia.  “Aliyev has made his intent to take Syunik very clear and has gone so far as to claim Yerevan as historic Azerbaijani territory. Make no mistake, that’s where he’s going next,” stated Seferian. He urged Armenian Americans to “answer the call of our homeland in what will become its darkest hours if we don’t act.”  He emphasized the need to pass the “Armenian Protection Act of 2024 and the 502B legislation in the House and Senate [to] cut American aid from Azerbaijan and keep American taxpayer dollars out of the hands of dictators like Aliyev and Erdogan.” 

AYF D.C. “Ani” Chapter member Sune Hamparian, describing the 1988 Sumgait massacres, noted, “These pogroms should not and cannot be confused with the spontaneous acts of an angry crowd. Like the genocide of 1915 – they were premeditated.” Spotlighting the existential threat on the Amenian Homeland, Hamparian explains, “Having emptied Western Armenia, then Nakhichevan, and now Artsakh – they’ve turned their sights on Syunik. Their goal: An Armenia emptied of Armenians. Their weapon: Terror and violence.” 

Armenian National Committee of America Executive Director Aram Hamparian followed, urging Congressional action to sanction Azerbaijan, send assistance to survivors of the Artsakh Genocide, and ensure their dignified and safe return to Artsakh. “If you all show up, if you all turn out, we can get our Congressional delegations on board,” stated Hamparian. 

AYF D.C. “Ani” Vice Chair Matt Girardi then closed the gathering with brief remarks reminding Armenians that “[while] some see our struggle as a burden, I see it as a sign of life– because we have much to fight for!” Then adding, “Artsakh will return to us, Nakhichevan will return to us, and we will leave future generations of Armenians with peace, prosperity, and security in a free, united, and independent Armenia.”

The AYF urges all readers to take action on the ANCA website to support the passage of the Armenian Protection Act, impose sanctions on Azerbaijan by passing 502B legislation, and divest funds from Turkey and Azerbaijan.

Asbarez: Russia ‘Not Concerned’ about Armenia’s Interests, U.S. Says

CSTO leaders gather in Yerevan for an annual summit on Nov. 23, 2022


The Unites States said Russia is “not concerned” with Armenia’s interests and warned that Moscow cannot be a reliable ally in the South Caucasus.

This latest U.S. posturing was made in response to an inquiry from Voice of America’s Armenian Service regarding the announcement made last week by Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan about Armenia “freezing” its membership in the Russia-led Collective Security Treaty Organization.

“We respect Armenia’s aspirations as an independent country to continue its chosen security relationship, and we support the sovereignty and territorial integrity of all countries in the region,” the State Department said in a statement.

“Russia is not a reliable and bona fide ally or partner in the South Caucasus or anywhere else. We have seen repeatedly that Russia is not concerned about Armenia’s interests,” the State Department added.

The Kremlin said on Friday that it wants clarifications from Pashinyan about the decision to “freeze” its membership in CSTO.

Pashinyan made the announcement a few days after meeting with President Emmanuel Macron of France, who pledged his country’s continues support to Armenia’s defense sector. A day after that meeting, France’s defense minister Sebastien Lecornu visited Yerevan and signed several more agreements with his Armenian counterpart. Reports also indicated that a new shipment of military equipment from France arrived in Armenia on the same of Lecornu’s visit.

The strengthening of Armenia’s relations with the West has angered not only Moscow, but also Baku.

The Russian foreign ministry has warned Yerevan about its ongoing rapprochement with the EU and the West, saying earlier this month that history has shown that no good comes of such alliances.

As New Talks are Announced, Aliyev Threatens Armenia

President Ilham Aliyev of Azerbaijan speaks in occupied Artsakh on Feb. 26


President Ilham Aliyev of Azerbaijan on Monday threatened Armenia, saying that Yerevan should accept all of Baku’s conditions, as both countries announced that their foreign ministers will meet in Berlin this week for a new round of peace talks.

“Armenia and its patrons believed that no one would punish them. They were completely wrong, and they are still wrong today,” Aliyev said, according to the Trend news agency.

“Armenia, which is looking for a new owner and seeking refuge in somebody else’s arms, should understand that the only way is to accept all of Azerbaijan’s conditions and give up its territorial claims against Azerbaijan,” Aliyev added.

His remarks come two days after Azerbaijani forces attacked the Verin Shorzha region of the Gegharkunik Province on Saturday, prior to which another attack on Armenian positions in Nerkin Hand in the Syunik Province killed four soldiers.

Foreign minister Ararat Mirzoyan will meet his Azerbaijani counterpart Jeyhum Bayramov in Berlin later this week.

Spokespersons from both foreign ministries confirmed the meeting, which they said will take place from February 28 to 29.

Aliyev and Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan met in Munich earlier this month during talks mediated by German Chancellor Olaf Scholz.

Aliyev has criticized the European Union and France, accusing them of advancing pro-Armenian policies.

He criticized the EU’s mission in Armenia and France for selling weapons to Yerevan.

President Emmanuel Macron of France said last week that his country will continue to support Armenia and advance its military capabilities. Macron also emphasized that Azerbaijan should recognize Armenia’s territorial integrity explicitly.

A day later, France’s defense minister Sebastien Lecornu visited Yerevan and signed several more agreements with his Armenian counterpart. Reports also indicated that a new shipment of military equipment from France arrived in Armenia on the same day of Lecornu’s visit.

RFE/RL Armenian Service – 02/26/2024

                                        Monday, 


Aliyev Insists On Azeri Terms Of Peace With Armenia

        • Ruzanna Stepanian

Turkey -- Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan meets his Azerbaijani 
counterpart Ilham Aliyev in Ankara, February 19, 2024.


Armenia has no choice but to accept Azerbaijan’s terms of a peace deal, 
Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev said on Monday ahead of fresh talks between 
the two nations.

“Armenia, which is trying to find a new master and is throwing itself into 
others’ arms, should realize that its only option is to accept all the 
conditions of Azerbaijan and give up its territorial claims to Azerbaijan,” he 
said during a visit to Nagorno-Karabakh recaptured by Baku last September.

The warning came just over a week after Aliyev and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian met in Munich for talks hosted by German Chancellor Olaf Scholz. The 
two leaders agreed that their foreign ministers will meet soon for further 
discussions on an Armenian-Azerbaijani peace treaty.

The Armenian Foreign Ministry told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service that the ministers 
will meet in Berlin on Wednesday and Thursday. It did not say whether German 
Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock will attend the talks.

Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov said earlier in the day that 
Armenian and Azerbaijani officials will negotiate “in the coming days.” He noted 
that despite a lack of face-to-face contacts between them, the two sides have 
continued to exchange written proposals on the peace treaty in recent months.

Armenia’s Deputy Foreign Minister Vahan Kostanian said last week that they still 
disagree on some key terms of the treaty. Pashinian complained, meanwhile, that 
the Azerbaijani leadership remains reluctant to recognize Armenia’s borders 
“without ambiguity.”

Pashinian went on to accuse Azerbaijan of planning military aggression against 
Armenia. The Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry rejected the claim as “absolutely 
baseless.”

“The last five months have been the calmest period along the presumptive border 
between Armenia and Azerbaijan,” Bayramov said on Monday. He accused the 
European Union and France in particular of seeking to whip up tensions there.

Bayramov specifically reiterated Baku’s discontent with an EU monitoring mission 
deployed on the Armenian side of the border and denounced France for continuing 
to support Armenia in the conflict.

Meeting with Pashinian in Paris last Wednesday, French President Emmanuel Macron 
said Azerbaijan should explicitly recognize Armenia’s territorial integrity. His 
defense minister, Sebastien Lecornu, delivered a new batch of French military 
equipment acquired by Armenia during an ensuing visit to Yerevan. Lecornu 
stressed that Armenia will use that hardware only if it is attacked by one of 
its neighbors.




Armenian Church Also Opposes New Constitution

        • Robert Zargarian

Armenia - The Supreme Spiritual Council of the Armenian Apsotolic Church starts 
a meeting in Echmiadzin, February 20, 2024.


The Armenian Apostolic Church has added its voice to opposition criticism of 
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s plans to try to enact a new constitution 
demanded by Azerbaijan.

The issue was on the agenda of a five-day session of the church’s Supreme 
Spiritual Council that drew to a close in Echmiadzin at the weekend.

“The Supreme Spiritual Council found the initiative to adopt a new Constitution 
very bewildering, especially given that it is widely perceived in public circles 
also as a consequence of external coercion,” read an official statement on the 
session chaired by Catholicos Garegin II.

“It was noted that the discourse of various high-ranking Armenian officials as 
well as the president of Azerbaijan regarding the adoption of the new 
Constitution only deepens existing suspicions,” it said.

Pashinian declared last month that Armenia needs a new constitution reflecting 
the “new geopolitical environment” in the region. Analysts believe that he first 
and foremost wants to get rid of a preamble to the current constitution that 
makes reference to a 1990 declaration of independence adopted by the republic’s 
first post-Communist parliament. The declaration in turn cites a 1989 
unification act adopted by the legislative bodies of Soviet Armenia and the then 
Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast.

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev said on February 1 that Armenia should remove 
that reference if it wants to cut a peace deal with his country. Armenian 
opposition leaders portrayed Aliyev’s statement as further proof that Pashinian 
is planning to change the constitution at the behest of Baku. Pashinian has 
denied the opposition claims while saying that Armenia “will never have peace” 
as long as it sticks to the 1990 declaration.

The church council defended the country’s existing constitution, saying that it 
is anchored in “the cherished past of our people” and their “national 
aspirations.” It also condemned Azerbaijan’s “expansionist ambitions” and 
“continuing encroachments” on Armenian territory.

Armenia - Catholicos Garegin II leads Christmass mass at the St. Gregory the 
Illuminator Cathedral in Yerevan, January 6, 2024.

Pashinian’s relationship with the ancient church, to which the vast majority of 
Armenians belong, has increasingly deteriorated since the 2020 war in 
Nagorno-Karabakh. Garegin and other senior clergymen joined the Armenian 
opposition in calling for Pashinian’s resignation following Armenia’s defeat in 
the six-week war.

Pashinian and other senior Armenian officials have boycotted Christmas and 
Easter liturgies led by Garegin for the past three years. In May 2023, the 
premier accused the church of meddling in politics, prompting a scathing 
response from Garegin’s office.

Tensions between the government and the church rose further last October when 
Garegin blamed Pashinian for Azerbaijan’s recapture of Karabakh and the 
resulting mass exodus of the region’s ethnic Armenian population. The church had 
repeatedly condemned Pashinian for recognizing Azerbaijani sovereignty over 
Karabakh before Baku’s September 19-20 military offensive.

The Supreme Spiritual Council concluded its session as over 200 supporters of 
Garegin gathered at the church’s Mother See following reports that an obscure 
group of Armenians planned to hold the same day a rally in Echmiadzin to demand 
his resignation.

The town’s municipal administration sanctioned the rally, slated for February 
24, late last month but revoked the permission shortly afterwards amid an uproar 
from vocal critics of the Armenian government. They claimed that Pashinian is 
behind the attempted rally.

The crowd that gathered on Saturday to show support for the church’s supreme 
head included several opposition figures, notably Levon Kocharian, a parliament 
deputy from the opposition Hayastan alliance led by his father and former 
Armenian President Robert Kocharian.

Another senior Hayastan member, Ishkhan Saghatelian, last week warned Pashinian 
against pressing ahead with his plans for the new constitution. He said that the 
Armenian opposition would “do everything” to turn a possible constitutional 
referendum on into a popular vote of no confidence in the premier.




Ukraine’s Zelenskiy Said To Visit Armenia

        • Artak Khulian
        • Shoghik Galstian

Spain - Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian talks to Ukraine's President 
Volodymyr Zelenskiy during a European summit in Granada, October 5, 2023.


Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskiy is planning to visit Armenia next week 
amid the South Caucasus country’s mounting tensions with Russia, a diplomatic 
source told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service.

The visit will likely take place on March 4, the source said, adding that 
Zelenskiy will also travel to Azerbaijan in that case.

The Armenian Foreign Ministry pointedly declined to confirm or deny the 
information, saying only that it informs the public about the visits of foreign 
leaders “in due course.”

Ukraine’s charge d‘affaires in Yerevan, Valeri Lobach, was also coy about the 
possibility of such a trip. “The spring will bring positive events to Armenia,” 
he told reporters on Friday.

News of Zelenskiy’s possible trip followed Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s 
recent visits to Germany and France during which he stepped up his criticism of 
Russia. In particular, Pashinian for the first time denounced the Russian 
invasion of Ukraine, saying that it violated a December 1991 declaration in 
which newly independent Soviet republics recognized each other’s Soviet-era 
borders.

Lawmakers representing Pashinian’s ruling Civil Contract party on Monday gave 
more indications that the Ukrainian president, who has not visited any 
non-Baltic ex-Soviet state since the outbreak of the war with Russia, is due in 
Yerevan.

“After all, the president of Ukraine is the elected leader of his country, and 
just like other heads of state, can visit Armenia unless there are some special 
hurdles,” one of them, Babken Tunian, told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service.

Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskiy speaks during 'Ukraine. Year 2024' 
conference, in Kyiv, .

“We don’t care about how Russia will or will not react [to Zelenskiy’s visit,]” 
said another pro-government lawmaker, Gagik Melkonian.

There has been no such reaction from Moscow yet. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov 
said on February 19 that Russia and Armenia now have “diametrically opposite 
views” on the war in Ukraine.

Relations between the two longtime allies have further deteriorated in recent 
months, with the Russian Foreign Ministry accusing Pashinian of “destroying” 
them.

Dmitry Suslov, a senior analyst with Russia’s Kremlin-linked Council on Foreign 
and Defense Policy, told the Sputnik news agency on Monday that Zelenskiy’s 
visit to Armenia could mark “the point of no return” in the erosion of bilateral 
ties. Suslov claimed that it would be part of the West’s efforts to reorient 
Armenia towards the United States and the European Union.

Armenian opposition leaders have expressed serious concern about the 
far-reaching change in Armenia’s traditional foreign policy, saying that it is 
reckless in the absence of security guarantees or military aid offered by 
Western powers.

Pashinian embarked on the apparent rapprochement with Ukraine last year despite 
Kyiv’s strong support for Azerbaijan in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.



Reposted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2024 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

 

Belarusian president denies Armenia’s withdrawal from CSTO

 Prensa Latina
Feb 25 2024
Minsk, Feb 25 (Prensa Latina) Belarusian President Aleksandr Lukashenko affirmed on Sunday that his Government has not received any statement on Armenia's withdrawal from the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO).

 

 

 

 

“The foremost issue is that as we have not received any official notification that Armenia is going to leave the CSTO, that country remains a member of the organization,” Lukashenko told reporters at a polling station on Sunday, after having cast his vote in the Belarusian parliamentary and local council elections.

The head of State noted that the CSTO countries will react “absolutely calmly” to the corresponding statement. “If they do not want to be in the CSTO, it will not collapse, it will not be destroyed.”

Lukashenko added that Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian cannot make a decision on the country’s withdrawal from the CSTO.

“The system of power in Armenia is not the same as in Belarus. Pashinian cannot make the decision to join or leave. There, the parliament makes the decision.”

jg/omr/mem/gfa

https://www.plenglish.com/news/2024/02/25/belarusian-president-denies-armenias-withdrawal-from-csto/

Russia Presses Neighbor Over Exit From Putin’s ‘Mini-NATO’

Newsweek
Feb 25 2024

The Kremlin is asking for clarification from Armenia that it had frozen its participation in the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO), a group of post-Soviet states considered to be Moscow's answer to NATO.

A military alliance formed in 2022, the CSTO also consists of Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan and, akin to Article 5 of NATO's North Atlantic Treaty, an act of aggression against one signatory is considered an attack on all members.

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said on Thursday that the pact had failed the country, after months of expressing discontent over its longstanding ties with Moscow, which he said Armenia can no longer rely on for its defense needs.

He told France 24 television that the CSTO bloc "has not fulfilled its objectives as far as Armenia is concerned, particularly in 2021 and 2022, and we could not let that happen without taking notice."

This was reiterated by Andranik Kocharyan, an MP from the ruling Civil Contract Faction and chair of the government's defense and security committee, who told reporters on Monday, "the word 'frozen' means that it is frozen," Armenian outlet News AM reported.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on Monday that there has been no "clarity" about Armenia's position on leaving the bloc, according to state media. "We have frequent contacts with our Armenian partners in this area. Of course, we will clarify," Peskov said, "we will find out."

Speaking to Newsweek from Yerevan, Olesya Vartanyan, the International Crisis Group's (ICG) senior analyst for the South Caucasus region, said as yet there is no formal procedure under way for Armenia to exit the bloc.

"It's clear that they have been discussing it for quite some time, including with their western partners," she said. "The list of grievances on the Armenian side has been growing over the last couple of years.

"Since Russia started its invasion of Ukraine, Armenia stopped profiting from the CSTO because before they used to get discounts for weaponry that they were receiving from Russia, and Russia doesn't have any weapons to sell anymore.

"Russia was not able to prevent continuous attacks from the Azerbaijani side of the border and Russia basically telling everyone that it's busy in Ukraine."

Despite the region being an area of Russian influence, Moscow has been unable to defuse tensions between Armenia and its neighbor Azerbaijan.

Last September, Baku launched an offensive in the breakaway Nagorno-Karabakh region, recognized internationally as part of Azerbaijan which was home to a majority ethnic Armenian population.

A swift Azerbaijani victory was followed by the exodus of almost all the Armenian population and the dissolution of what was known in Armenian as the Republic of Artsakh. Armenia has raised concerns about Russia not intervening in the conflict and Baku was accused of ethnic cleansing

But Vartanyan said this was not among the main grievances that Yerevan had with Moscow. "Armenia is still having enormous security issues with Azerbaijan," said Vartanyan, which could see it "attack and cut the country into two."

Even with ever-dwindling military benefits from its membership of the alliance, leaving the CSTO would be a big wrench for Armenia politically and economically.

"If Armenia leaves or freezes its membership with CSTO, it will not automatically affect the economic alliances," Vartanyan said, because Yerevan has a separate deal with Moscow through the Customs Union of the Eurasian Economic Union.

"Armenia's economy is very much dependent on Russia and it will take the country a lot of time to diversify its markets," she said.

Newsweek has contacted the Armenian and Russian foreign ministries for comment.

Update 02/26/24, 7 a.m. ET: This article has been updated with further information and comment from Olesya Vartanyan.