RFE/RL Armenian Report – 07/21/2020

                                        Tuesday, 

Azerbaijan Accused Of Another Cross-Border Attack On Armenia


ARMENIA -- Armenian soldiers take their position on the front line in Tavush 
region, July 14, 2020

The Armenian military accused Azerbaijani forces late on Tuesday of again 
attacking one of its positions at a section of Armenia’s border with Azerbaijan 
where deadly fighting raged last week.

The Defense Ministry spokeswoman, Shushan Stepanian, said an Azerbaijani 
commando unit suffered heavy losses while being repelled by Armenian troops 
deployed in the Tavush province. Some of the unit’s soldiers were “left trapped” 
as a result of the failed incursion, she said without elaborating.

“The Armenian side suffered no casualties,” Stepanian wrote on Facebook.

Azerbaijan’s Defense Ministry denied the claim. “There were no new attacks, let 
alone casualties, from our side,” said its spokesman, Vagif Dargahli. “The 
Armenian report is yet another disinformation.”

Dargahli said earlier in the day that the situation on the border between Tavush 
and the Tovuz district in western Azerbaijan remains “tense but stable.”

Fierce fighting at the volatile border section broke out on July 12, with each 
side accusing the other of trying to seize its frontline positions in the 
mountainous area. At least 12 Azerbaijani soldiers, including a general, and 
four Armenian servicemen died before the clashes involving artillery fire and 
drone attacks largely stopped on July 16.

The international community has expressed serious concern over the worst 
escalation of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict in years.

According to Stepanian, Azerbaijani special forces targeted late in the evening 
the same hilltop post of the Armenian army which they unsuccessfully stormed 
early on July 16.

“Although there was no gunfire as of 00:47 a.m. [on Wednesday] I must 
nonetheless note that the leadership of the Azerbaijani armed forces is not in 
control of the situation,” the Armenian official wrote in another Facebook post 
after midnight.




UN Chief Urges 'Maximum Restraint' By Azerbaijan, Armenia After Clashes


Pakistan -- U.N. Secretary General Antonio Guterres speaks to The Associated 
Press in Lahore, February 18, 2020

(Reuters) - United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres urged Azerbaijan 
and Armenia on Monday to exercise maximum restraint after border clashes between 
the long-feuding former Soviet republics.

“The secretary-general is following with deep concern the current tensions 
between Azerbaijan and Armenia. He calls for maximum restraint, as a full 
conflict between these two countries would be disastrous,” U.N. spokesman 
Stephane Dujarric said.

The neighbors have long been in conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh. But the latest 
flare-ups are around the Tavush region in northeastern Armenia, some 300 
kilometers from the territory.

Russia, which has a military base in Armenia, has urged the two sides to cease 
fire and show restraint. The Kremlin has said Moscow is ready to act as a 
mediator.

International concern is heightened because of the threat to stability in a 
region serving as a corridor for pipelines taking oil and gas from the Caspian 
Sea to global markets.



Yerevan Insists On Armenian-Azeri Confidence-Building Measures

        • Ruzanna Stepanian

Armenia -- Priest Ter Abel prays for peace outside the village of Movses on the 
Armenian-Azerbaijani border, July 15, 2020

Armenia called on Azerbaijan on Tuesday to agree to confidence-building measures 
that could prevent further ceasefire violations in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict 
zone.

“We hope that after the failure of its latest military adventure Azerbaijan will 
demonstrate responsibility on the issue of maintaining and strengthening the 
ceasefire,” Anna Naghdalian, the Armenian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman, said, 
referring to last week’sclashes on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border which left at 
least 16 soldiers from both sides dead.

“There are explicit proposals to strengthen security and confidence, including 
an increase in the number of international monitors deployed on the ground, 
direct communication [between the two sides] and introduction of a mechanism for 
investigating ceasefire violations,” Naghdalian told RFE/RL’s Armenian service. 
“Their implementation could help to avoid a renewed upsurge in tensions.”

Azerbaijani President Aliyev and his former Armenian counterpart President Serzh 
Sarkisian agreed on such safeguards against ceasefire violations during 
face-to-face meetings held after the April 2016 hostilities in Karabakh. Baku 
subsequently refused to implement them, however, saying that they would cement 
the status quo in the conflict.

Sarkisian’s political allies have always portrayed those confidence-building 
agreements, strongly backed by the U.S., Russian and French mediators, as a 
major Armenian diplomatic achievement. They claim that Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian abandoned them after coming to power in May 2018 and embarking on a 
dialogue with Aliyev a few months later.

Pashinian called for an “international system of credible monitoring of the 
ceasefire regime” when he met with Armenia’s Defense Minister Davit Tonoyan and 
top army generals over the weekend.

Pashinian’s office would not say on Tuesday whether he is now trying to revive 
the agreements that were negotiated by Sarkisian.

“I think that commenting on the former authorities’ statements is an ungrateful 
task,” Ruben Rubinian, the pro-government chairman of the Armenian parliament 
committee on foreign relations, said in this regard.

“We have always raised the issue of introducing a monitoring mechanism and will 
continue doing so,” he added.



Armenia Demonstrates ‘Azeri Drones Shot Down In Border Clashes’

        • Artak Khulian

Armenia -- Israeli-made military drones and their fragments are demosntrated by 
the Armenian Defense Ministry, Yerevan, .

Armenia’s Defense Ministry demonstrated on Tuesday what it described as 
Israeli-made military drones of Azerbaijan shot down by its anti-aircraft units 
in last week’s heavy fighting on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border.

The Armenian military claims to have destroyed or intercepted 13 such unmanned 
aerial vehicles (UAVs) during the clashes that broke out on July 12 and largely 
stopped five days later. It says that 10 of them were attack drones that were 
about to strike Armenian military and civilian targets in the northern Tavush 
province bordering the Tovuz district in western Azerbaijan.

Purported fragments of some of those UAVs were put on display at the Defense 
Ministry’s Military Aviation Institute in Yerevan. Ministry officials also 
showed journalists a largely intact ThunderB surveillance drone manufactured by 
Israel’s BlueBird Aero Systems company.

The Armenian military publicized on July 14 what it described as amateur footage 
of a sophisticated Hermes 900 drone of the Azerbaijani armed forces destroyed by 
an Armenian surface-to-air rocket. Hermes 900 is produced by another Israeli 
company, Elbit Systems, and used for reconnaissance and communication relay. The 
Azerbaijani military has denied losing such aircraft.

An Armenian defense news website posted at the weekend a photograph of two 
Armenian soldiers holding a SkyStriker “suicide” drone also manufactured by 
Elbit Systems. Israeli media revealed the sale of such UAVs to Azerbaijan in 
January 2019.


Armenia -- An Israeli-made ThunderB military drone is demosntrated by the 
Armenian Defense Ministry, Yerevan, .

The Azerbaijani army used other types of Israeli-made “suicide” drones during 
the April 2016 hostilities in Nagorno-Karabakh that nearly escalated into an 
all-out Armenian-Azerbaijani war.

Garik Movsisian, a senior officer of Armenia’s air-defense forces, said that a 
total of about 40 Azerbaijani UAVs have been brought down since 2016. He claimed 
that the Israeli drones lost by Azerbaijan in the Tavush-Tovuz fighting were 
worth at least $150 million.

Armenia has long expressed concern over Israel’s large-scale arms deals with 
Azerbaijan which have totaled at least $2 billion since 2012. The Foreign 
Ministry in Yerevan reiterated those concerns following the latest flare-up 
along the border between the two South Caucasus states.

For its part, the Azerbaijani military claims to have shot down two Armenian 
drones last week. The Armenian side denies that.

At least 12 Azerbaijani servicemen, including an army general, and four Armenian 
soldiers died in the border clashes. A senior Armenian official said late last 
week that the Armenian combat deaths were caused by Azerbaijani drone strikes.

The Armenian military says that during last week’s hostilities it used for the 
first time attack drones designed and produced by Armenian companies. It says 
that they destroyed at least one Azerbaijani tank. Baku has dismissed these 
claims.

For the fifth consecutive day the conflicting parties did not report on Tuesday 
serious ceasefire violations at the Tavush-Tovuz section of the border.



Armenia Demonstrates ‘Azeri Drones Shot Down In Border Clashes’

        • Artak Khulian

Armenia -- Israeli-made military drones and their fragments are demosntrated by 
the Armenian Defense Ministry, Yerevan, .

Armenia’s Defense Ministry demonstrated on Tuesday what it described as 
Israeli-made military drones of Azerbaijan shot down by its anti-aircraft units 
in last week’s heavy fighting on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border.

The Armenian military claims to have destroyed or intercepted 13 such unmanned 
aerial vehicles (UAVs) during the clashes that broke out on July 12 and largely 
stopped five days later. It says that 10 of them were attack drones that were 
about to strike Armenian military and civilian targets in the northern Tavush 
province bordering the Tovuz district in western Azerbaijan.

Purported fragments of some of those UAVs were put on display at the Defense 
Ministry’s Military Aviation Institute in Yerevan. Ministry officials also 
showed journalists a largely intact ThunderB surveillance drone manufactured by 
Israel’s BlueBird Aero Systems company.

The Armenian military publicized on July 14 what it described as amateur footage 
of a sophisticated Hermes 900 drone of the Azerbaijani armed forces destroyed by 
an Armenian surface-to-air rocket. Hermes 900 is produced by another Israeli 
company, Elbit Systems, and used for reconnaissance and communication relay. The 
Azerbaijani military has denied losing such aircraft.

An Armenian defense news website posted at the weekend a photograph of two 
Armenian soldiers holding a SkyStriker “suicide” drone also manufactured by 
Elbit Systems. Israeli media revealed the sale of such UAVs to Azerbaijan in 
January 2019.


Armenia -- An Israeli-made ThunderB military drone is demosntrated by the 
Armenian Defense Ministry, Yerevan, .

The Azerbaijani army used other types of Israeli-made “suicide” drones during 
the April 2016 hostilities in Nagorno-Karabakh that nearly escalated into an 
all-out Armenian-Azerbaijani war.

Garik Movsisian, a senior officer of Armenia’s air-defense forces, said that a 
total of about 40 Azerbaijani UAVs have been brought down since 2016. He claimed 
that the Israeli drones lost by Azerbaijan in the Tavush-Tovuz fighting were 
worth at least $150 million.

Armenia has long expressed concern over Israel’s large-scale arms deals with 
Azerbaijan which have totaled at least $2 billion since 2012. The Foreign 
Ministry in Yerevan reiterated those concerns following the latest flare-up 
along the border between the two South Caucasus states.

For its part, the Azerbaijani military claims to have shot down two Armenian 
drones last week. The Armenian side denies that.

At least 12 Azerbaijani servicemen, including an army general, and four Armenian 
soldiers died in the border clashes. A senior Armenian official said late last 
week that the Armenian combat deaths were caused by Azerbaijani drone strikes.

The Armenian military says that during last week’s hostilities it used for the 
first time attack drones designed and produced by Armenian companies. It says 
that they destroyed at least one Azerbaijani tank. Baku has dismissed these 
claims.

For the fifth consecutive day the conflicting parties did not report on Tuesday 
serious ceasefire violations at the Tavush-Tovuz section of the border.


Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
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