Memories of Armenia: St. Nicholas of Dadivank Monastery

Queens Gazette, NY
Dec 3 2020

“Don’t be astonished to see an icon of Saint. Nicholas in our monastery,” said Garush, our 2018 guide of the Holy Martyrs Armenian Apostolic Church pilgrimage. “We are Orthodox Christians. We believe in Saint Nicholas.”

St. Nicholas stands apart from Christian saints. His fame spread across empires and generations to make him one of the most recognizable saints in history. But the popular perception of Saint Nicholas today diverges greatly from his original veneration as a compassionate alm

Dadivank Monastery, Artsakh

sgiver and defender of the poor. Saint Nicholas has been reduced to the pop culture fi­gure of Santa Claus, a jolly old man who brings presents to good little boys and girls.

Nicholas, a man who found greatness not simply in spreading “good cheer,” but in being a true icon of Jesus Christ in word and deed. He was born in Patara, Asia Minor, in 270 AD.. He died on December 6, 343 A.D. at Myra, the southern coast of present day Turkey. In Nicholas’ time, the region was part of the Greek- speaking world known as Lycia.

He was an orphan raised by his uncle, Bishop Nicholas of Patara. As no biography of Nicholas was written until centuries after he died, much of Nicholas’ life is known more from legend than from contemporary sources. What is certain is that he became Bishop of Myra and that, after his death, he was recognized as a saint. Thousands of churches have been named in his memory. He is seen as a model of gift giving and pastoral care.

“The Enthronement of St. Nicholas” fresco, St. Mary Mother Church of Katoghike, Dadivank

I experienced a moving moment when we traveled to Dadivank monastery in the  Nagorno-Karabakh Republic, before the devastating Azerbaijan war in October-November  2020.  A charismatic priest, Father Abraham Malkhasyan, invited me to join his pilgrimage to Armenia recentl

St. Nicholas icon, St. Mary Mother Church of Katoghike, Dadivank

y with the Holy Martyrs Church under the leadership of President Aram Ciamician in coordination with the Fund for Armenian Relief (FAR ).
In Artsakh, we traveled to Dadivank, a monastery of incredible beauty in a scenic gorge. It is being restored. Poor Kurds, struggling to exist, lived in it, destroying its mosaics through heating sources. This monastery’s restoration will rewrite our perception of Armenian Orthodox monasteries. The numerous monasteries we visited did not have mosaics or iconography as in Greece, Russia, or Italy.
Restoration of the 1214 fresco of St. Stephen is being conducted in the Katoghike Church that was used as stables during communist regime. The “Enthronement of St. Nicholas and restoration of the St. Stephen frescoes are beautiful.
Father Abraham had a religious service in Katoghike Cathedral. He chanted Armenian hymns, blessing the souls of all martyrs with traditional Armenian religious chanting.

The St. Nicholas fresco in St. Mary Mother Church of Katoghike was explained in detail by a monastery sign. It was erected in the year 1214 by the Queen Arzou of Haterk. The interior walls of the Memorial Cathedral are richly decorated with frescoes. Part of a large inscription in Armenian, which covers the entire entrance wall of the Cathedral  reads: “I, Arzou-Khatoun, obedient servant of Christ … wife of King Vakhtang, ruler of Haterk and all Upper Khachen, with great hopes built this holy cathedral on the place where my husband and sons rest in peace … My first-born Asan martyred for his Christian faith in the war against the Turks, and, three years later, my younger son Grigor also joined Christ … Completed in the year 663 of the Armenian calendar.”

Photo4 – Natural beauty of Dadivank overlooking river.

“The Enthronement of St. Nicholas” fresco amazed me. St. Nicholas was an exact replica of Byzantine icons, with fair features in religious Roman garments. Jesus is passing the bible to St. Nicholas. The Archangel Michael and Virgin Mary are seen watching the enthronement. Some fragments of the frescoes were painted in crimson red (vordan karmir) color. According to the inscription, they were made in 1297.1

Dadivank is no longer part of Artsakh. As a result of Nagorno-Karabakh war in 2020 which resulted in a cease-fire agreement stipulating an Armenian withdrawal from Dadivank and a hand-over of the surrounding area to Azerbaijan, the Abbot of the Dadivank Monastery decided to transport the monastery’s Christian art of significance, including bells and khachkars, to Armenia. After the withdrawal of Armenian forces from the region, the monastery was placed under the protection of the Russian peacekeeping forces.2

I stood in an abandoned church built by a Queen who lost husband and children fighting for their Christian faith. St. Nicholas, the wonderworker, meant a lot to this sorrowful Queen. This image haunts me at the time of St. Nicholas Feast Day. Father Abraham’s service was in a church of martyrs. Will there ever be a religious service in front of the St. Nicholas fresco again? St. Nicholas, Bishop of Myra, has always been the most admired saint. I went to Artsakh in 2018 to see St. Nicholas is alive and well in the hearts of Armenians.

  

References:

  1. artsakh.travel/en/sights/dadivank-monastery
  2. en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dadivank

Conquest and exile in the disputed enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh

France 24
Dec 3 2020

After a 44-day war with Armenian forces, Azerbaijan has recaptured swathes of territory in and around Nagorno-Karabakh in the South Caucasus. That includes about half of the disputed enclave itself, but also seven Azerbaijani provinces which were seized by Armenia in the early 1990s. These have been handed back under a ceasefire deal brokered by Russia. Our reporters received authorisation from Azerbaijan's authorities to film inside districts which have just changed hands.
Watch video at

Azerbaijan Says Nearly 3,000 Troops Killed in Nagorno-Karabakh Fighting

Voice of America
Dec 3 2020
By RFE/RL’s Azerbaijani Service , RFE/RL’s Armenian Service
11:41 AM

BAKU – Azerbaijan has revealed the number of casualties sustained by its military personnel during the recent 44-day war with Armenia over the breakaway Nagorno-Karabakh region.

The Interior Ministry said in a December 3 statement that 2,783 of its soldiers and officers were killed during the conflict, which the ministry described as the Patriotic War, adding that the number included bodies of 103 servicemen who are still being identified via DNA analysis.

According to the statement, more than 100 military personnel remain missing, and 1,245 servicemen wounded during the war — which started on September 27 and ended on November 10 with the restoration of Baku's control over seven adjacent districts and some parts of the breakaway region — are currently receiving treatment at medical institutions.

On December 2, Armenian Health Ministry officials told RFE/RL that the remains of 2,718 servicemen killed in the war had been examined by medical personnel, adding that the bodies of Azerbaijani soldiers could be among the corpses.

De facto officials of the Nagorno-Karabakh region have said that 1,741 Armenian soldiers and officers killed in the war had been identified so far.

FILE – Relatives and friends of Mkhitar Beglarian, an ethnic Armenian soldier of the Nagorno-Karabakh army, killed during fighting in the enclave, lower his coffin into a grave during his funeral in Stepanakert, Nov. 15, 2020.

The office of Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev announced on December 3 that November 8, the day when Azerbaijani troops regained control over the key Nagorno-Karabakh city of Susa (Shushi in Armenian), will be marked each year as Victory Day.

A previous proposal to commemorate Victory Day on November 10, the day when the war was ended through a Russia-brokered truce, has been reconsidered as it coincides with the Ataturk Memorial Day in Turkey, the president's office said. Ankara openly supported Azerbaijan during the war.

Nagorno-Karabakh is internationally recognized as part of Azerbaijan, but the ethnic Armenians who make up most of the population reject Azerbaijani rule.

They have been governing their own affairs, with support from Armenia, since Azerbaijan's troops and ethnic Azeri civilians were forced out of the region in a war that ended in a cease-fire in 1994.

 

Turkish Press: Azerbaijan’s Karabakh victory creates new realities

Anadolu Agency, Turkey
Dec 3 2020
Azerbaijan’s Karabakh victory creates new realities

Ruslan Rehimov   | 03.12.2020

BAKU

After 30 years of uncertainty in Azerbaijan's Nagorno-Karabakh and surrounding territories under Armenia's occupation, the Azerbaijani army’s victories in the battlefield created new realities in the region.

With Azerbaijan's victory, Armenia eventually had to accept the defeat and withdrew from the occupied territories, and a Russia-brokered cease-fire agreement was signed on Nov. 10.

In the course of combat operations which started on Sept. 27 and lasted 44 days, Azerbaijan liberated the provinces of Fuzuli, Jabrayil, Zangilan, Qubadli and the city of Shusha, while Khojavend, Agdere, and Khojaly provinces were liberated partially. Also, in line with the cease-fire agreement, Armenian forces withdrew from Aghdam, Lachin, and Kalbajar.

"We have expelled the enemy from our land and created a new reality. Everyone should acknowledge this reality," Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev said in an address to the nation on Dec. 1.

This new reality entails the Azerbaijani rule over its liberated territories and return of displaced Azerbaijanis to their ancestral homelands.

Azerbaijanis will return to their homelands in the liberated Fuzuli, Jabrayil, Zangilan, Qubadli, and Shusha. After re-building and restoration of the infrastructure in these liberated places, Azerbaijanis, who had to flee to other parts of the country, will be able to return to their homes.

Under the cease-fire conditions, Armenia's troops and illegal Armenian settlers were evacuated from the provinces of Aghdam, Lachin, and Kalbajar, where Azerbaijanis will now return to live. According to Azerbaijani sources, around 1 million Azerbaijanis have been living away from their homes, which were under the Armenian occupation.

The cease-fire agreement does not include an article regarding the administrative status of Nagorno-Karabakh. In Khankendi, Khojavend, Khojaly, and Agdere, Armenians — who have already been living in these regions — and Azerbaijanis — who had to flee due the occupation — will live together. Armenians living in these regions will become Azerbaijani citizens. Aliyev has repeatedly stressed that Armenians of the region will now have a better life.

Security of these Armenians will be ensured by Russians for now, and a Turkish-Russian joint center which is currently under construction in the area will monitor the implementation of the cease-fire.

New corridors to be built

The Lachin corridor, connecting Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenia, will be under the temporary control of Russian troops for five years. The city center of Lachin, located within the 5-kilometre corridor, will also accommodate the Russian troops. This route is planned to be moved out of the city center within three years. With the construction of the corridor, which Aliyev said will be completed in sooner than three years, Russian troops’ mission in the city center will end.

The road from Armenia to Khankendi passes through the Shusha city center, recently liberated by Azerbaijan. Under the cease-fire, this road will also be moved out of the city center. Armenians with Azerbaijani citizenship living in Khankendi will be able to travel to and from Armenia through the new corridor. In the coming period, the exits and entrances will be monitored by Azerbaijan.

Among the new regional realities, there is also a corridor that connects Nakhchivan to the western Azerbaijani provinces, which President Aliyev particularly asked for during the negotiations for the cease-fire agreement. During the Soviet era, there were railway and highway connections between Nakhchivan and Azerbaijan. This connection which was cut during the Armenian occupation will be restored but will be under the Russian control for five years. As long as there is an objection from either parties, the presence of the Russian troops in the area will continue. The objecting party is obliged to declare this six months before the end of the five-year period.

Completion of the corridor will also enable a land connection between Turkey and Azerbaijan. President Aliyev said Armenia, if it wishes, would also be able to join this corridor, along with Iran, Russia, and Turkey. 

Karabakh conflict

Relations between the ex-Soviet republics of Azerbaijan and Armenia have been tense since 1991, when the Armenian military occupied Nagorno-Karabakh, also known as Upper Karabakh, a territory recognized as part of Azerbaijan, and seven adjacent regions.

When new clashes erupted on Sept. 27, the Armenian army launched attacks on civilians and Azerbaijani forces and violated several humanitarian cease-fire agreements.

During the 44-day conflict, Azerbaijan liberated several cities and nearly 300 settlements and villages from the Armenian occupation.

On Nov. 10, the two countries signed a Russian-brokered agreement to end fighting and work toward a comprehensive resolution.

The truce is seen as a victory for Azerbaijan and a defeat for Armenia, whose armed forces have been withdrawing in line with the agreement.

* Writing by Ahmet Gencturk in Ankara

Anadolu Agency website contains only a portion of the news stories offered to subscribers in the AA News Broadcasting System (HAS), and in summarized form. Please contact us for subscription options.


POSTPONED: Journalist Simon Ostrovsky Will Delve into Latest Conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh

Pulitzer Center, Chicago
Nov 3 2020

Unfortunately, the University of Chicago has decided to postpone this event. They hope to post a new date in the near future.

Pulitzer Center grantee Simon Ostrovsky will speak at a panel titled “What Just Happened in Nagorno-Karabakh: Deja Vu or Geopolitical Trend?” The virtual event will be presented by The University of Chicago.

The panel will consider the causes and repercussions of the fighting that broke out on September 27 between Azerbaijan and Armenia over Nagorno-Karabakh, how this violence should be viewed in light of the region’s history, and whether the conflict should be understood as part of larger geopolitical trends.

Ostrovsky reported on the Nagorno-Karabakh crisis for PBS NewsHour as part of a Pulitzer Center-supported project. The project looks at the humanitarian consequences of the war, the process of brokering a cease-fire, and the geopolitical implications for the region. 

The panel also will feature Dr. Nerses Kopalyan, an assistant professor-in-residence at the Department of Political Science at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, and Arman Grigoryan, associate professor in the International Relations Department at Lehigh University.

The University of Chicago is part of the Pulitzer Center’s Campus Consortium network. The event will be presented by The University of Chicago’s Center for East European and Russian/Eurasian Studies, Center for Middle Eastern Studies, and the Pozen Family Center for Human Rights.

Register for the panel discussion here.


Over 5,000 servicemen killed in Nagorno-Karabakh conflict: reports

XINHUA, China
Dec 3 2020

Source: Xinhua| 2020-12-04 01:00:45|Editor: huaxia
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BAKU, Dec. 3 (Xinhua) — Azerbaijan announced on Thursday that it lost a total of 2,783 servicemen in the latest round of its armed conflict with Armenia in Nagorno-Karabakh that erupted on Sept. 27 and was brought to a halt by a Russia-brokered ceasefire.

Work was still ongoing to identify 103 soldiers among the total casualties, using DNA analysis, the country's defense ministry said in a statement.

More than 100 Azerbaijani servicemen went missing, the authorities said, adding that 1,245 servicemen are being treated in medical facilities.

Earlier on Nov. 14, Armenian health ministry spokeswoman Alina Nikoghosyan confirmed via her social media platform that the country's forensic service has examined the bodies of 2,317 dead Armenian servicemen.

Moreover, over 600 bodies of servicemen were found during the search operations in the Nagorno-Karabakh region, according to the report of Armenia's media outlet Armenpress on Wednesday.

Armenia and Azerbaijan have been at loggerheads over the mountainous region of Nagorno-Karabakh since 1988. The latest round of armed conflict broke out in the region in September, causing heavy casualties and property losses.

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and Russian President Vladimir Putin signed a ceasefire deal, in which the three sides agreed on a complete ceasefire in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict zone starting from Nov. 10. Enditem

Minsk Group Co-Chair countries urge Armenia and Azerbaijan to negotiate a lasting and sustainable peace agreement

Public Radio of Armenia
Dec 3 2020

The Heads of Delegation of the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chair countries – Foreign Minister of the Russian Federation Sergey Lavrov, Deputy Secretary of State of the United States Stephen E. Biegun, and Minister for European and Foreign Affairs of France Jean-Yves Le Drian – welcome the cessation of military activities in the area of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict in accordance with the statement by the President of the Republic of Azerbaijan, Prime Minister of the Republic of Armenia, and President of the Russian Federation from November 9, 2020.

The Co-Chair countries of the OSCE Minsk Group call upon Armenia and Azerbaijan to continue implementing fully their obligations under the November 9 statement, in Nagorno-Karabakh and the surrounding districts, as well as their previous ceasefire commitments. The Co-Chair countries highlight the significance of measures taken by the Russian Federation, in agreement with Azerbaijan and Armenia, to guarantee the non-renewal of hostilities. They also call for the full and prompt departure from the region of all foreign mercenaries, and call upon all parties to facilitate this departure.

The Co-Chair countries remind Armenia and Azerbaijan of their obligation to comply with the requirements of international humanitarian law, in particular with regard to the exchange of prisoners of war and the repatriation of remains.  They underline the importance of guaranteeing conditions for the voluntary, safe, dignified, and sustainable return of people displaced by the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, including during the recent hostilities. They underscore the importance of protecting historical and religious heritage in and around Nagorno-Karabakh. The Co-Chair countries call on Azerbaijan and Armenia to cooperate fully with the relevant international organizations to implement their obligations in these areas and ensure humanitarian access. 

The Co-Chair countries appeal to the international community including ICRC, UN institutions, and other appropriate structures as well as OSCE Minsk Group individual countries to take concrete steps to improve the humanitarian situation in Nagorno-Karabakh and adjacent areas in a coordinated way.  The Co-Chairs also reiterate their strong support for the continuing work of the Personal Representative of the OSCE Chair-in-Office (PRCiO) and his team.

The Co-Chair countries urge Armenia and Azerbaijan to take advantage of the current ceasefire to negotiate a lasting and sustainable peace agreement under the auspices of the Co-Chairs. In that context, the Co-Chair countries urge the parties to receive the Co-Chairs in the region at the earliest opportunity and to commit to substantive negotiations to resolve all outstanding issues in accordance with an agreed timetable. 

The Co-Chair countries of the OSCE Minsk Group recall their firm commitment to the non-use or threat of force to settle disputes. They reiterate their consistent and united position in favor of a negotiated, comprehensive, and sustainable settlement of all remaining core substantive issues of the conflict in line with the basic principles and elements well-known to both Armenia and Azerbaijan. The Co-Chair countries remain fully committed to pursuing this objective in line with their long-standing efforts to promote peace, stability, and prosperity in the region. 


Azerbaijan-Armenia war: Lessons for the military

Times of India
Dec 3 2020
December 3, 2020, 10:52 PM IST                          

The texture of the on-going Azerbaijani- Armenian conflict is a reflection of future wars. Any military thinker will be happy to analyse the invaluable lessons, which global militaries, should adopt. The constant advent of newer technologies, should logically lead towards smarter military tools and their more lethal and prcessioned weaponisation. Moreover, it is felt, that there is, even a need to change ‘Force Structures-Tactics and Operational Manoeuvres’ so as to outsmart the adversary. The art and science of war also needs to be calibrated accordingly. Military strategy cannot only be based on erstwhile mindsets of mass manoeuvre (akin to the German blitzkrieg) or of only holding ground in a defensive posture like the Maginot line in the Second World War (Line of concrete fortifications, built by France in the 1930s to deter invasion by German).

Does the template of Indian Military defences in Ladakh depict a similar mind set? What lessons can India learn to adopt a process of fast track transformation by 2030? Does India require a new doctrine to match the suggested template? These need more examination and that the current on-going effort needs to be reviewed to allow for adoption of some of these lessons. There are six clear lessons for India’s modernisation drive.

Lesson 1: Does The Concept of Military Geo-Strategic Calculus Remains Relevant Today (Attacking/Holding ground physically)?

The first and foremost relevance of conventional operations carried out to capture and hold ground remains as important as it was in the first and second world war and many other wars. For instance, the Kargil war, which was fought at Great Heights above 15,000 feet, could not have been won alone by technology. Brute force of assault on an objective remains necessary. This aspect has also been proved again in the Ladakh area during the existing standoff with the PLA.Thus the combat ratio and differential superiority in the mountains has denied the PLA the capture of held Indian defences. Similarly, although, initially in February 2020, the Azerbaijani military showcased a good drone warfare performance, but its territorial gains remained limited due to lack of application of military force on the ground. However, now the situation has changed as the Azerbaijani military has captured critical positions, such as the Iranian frontier of its occupied territories, and, since then has been advancing towards the strategic ‘Lachin-Corridor’. Thus, this again confirms the relevance of conventional military operations towards the traditional war-fighting capabilities of assault, mop up and holding of territory. This is indicative that newer technologies are more like force multipliers to conventional military operations.

This factor is in India’s favour in the Ladakh standoff scenario. The holding of Siachen heights, the Daulat Beg Oldie complex and further south towards Pangong-Tso,Chusul and Demchok almost makes an impregnable defence. By PLA attacking with drones only or even by indirect fire can cause some damage only. The ground position will have to be over-run by the PLA before they can claim any success. Thus, the stalemate continues, as the PLA is incapable of physical assault. Thus, clearly, the age-old principal of the traditional geostrategic calculus remains intact as an important rider.

Lesson 2: Need for interface of sensors, electronic warfare cover, counter-drone weaponry and integration with space assets to increase combat effectiveness.

The Azerbaijani–Armenian clashes have shown vulnerability of traditional land units, both mechanised and foot infantry, in the face of Hi-Tech drone warfare weaponry driven by networked sensors, which can target men and material at, will. Similarly, Electronic and Information warfare ascendancy gives a free run and advantage in combat duels. So far, it has been documented that some 175 main battle tanks were lost to the Armenian occupation forces in the Nagorno-Karabakh battle zone. Whilst, it can be said with authority, that the era of tanks is still not over. However, what is important is to understand that the main battle tanks, along with other traditional land warfare platforms, would make easy targets for drones/Unarmed Aerial Vehicles (UAV) etc. unless they are accompanied by an organic composition of mobile short-range air defences, electronic warfare assets, and counter-UAV systems.
However, as seen in the Ladakh Sector, both sides are extensively using all the above mentioned meausures.Thus there is parity, even in this electronic and drones domain. This again has created a stalemate. The future Indian Army has to focus on the seamless and real time integration of these elements with the combat elements. In fact, integration with Low Earth Orbit (LEO) satellites should also be enabled for telescoping the OODA (Observe, Orientate, Decision, and Act) loop. With the signing of the Five Foundational Pacts with the USA, India should derive maximum benefit by fast tracking ‘BECA’ for gaining real time PLA deployments in Ladakh. This can become a game changer.

Lesson 3: Integration of Air/Land-Based Fire-Support Arsenals with the Surveillance and Killer Drones, Force Multiplies the Combat Capability

The Syrian war recently fought has tested many systems in which new technologies like drones and sensors were used. Likewise, having digested the lessons from the Syrian battleground, the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation now integrates Orlan-10 drones to the 152mm-class artillery. In the current on-going clashes, Azerbaijani military has shown yet another example of integration of the drone & land-based fire-support arsenals including during night fighting. The Azerbaijani artillery and indirect fire systems are presently firing in close coordination with drone warfare assets. This brings out a great lesson for the Indian Military too. The aim should be again to telescope the ‘OODA’ loop. The whole sequence should become autonomous from the sensor to the shooter in the Himalayan region catering for the changes in Trajectory of fire at such High Altitudes. The phase 2 of the PLA offensive as per their prevalent practise comprises mass scale artillery and other fire at the pin pointed targets to cause enough destruction before start of Phase 3 of ground manoeuvre. The idea is to create an edge over the PLA.

Lesson 4: Drones make good offensive weapons against low-to-mid-range air defences.

In the Syrian and Libyan battlegrounds, Turkey’s Bayraktar TB-2 drone had a successful kill scorecard of the Russian-manufactured Pantsir short-to-medium range mobile air defense systems. Apart from the game-changer Turkish weaponry, Azerbaijan has procured the Israeli Harop loitering munitions called the kamikaze drone, which carry a warhead tipped on the platform. Therefore, instead of following a weapon release system, loitering munitions dive onto their targets. It has two key features. First, it enjoys great autonomy. Second, it has anti-radiation capabilities and can autonomously home onto radar emissions.

This loitering type drone needs to be immediately procured as regards the Indian standoff situation to give edge to the Indian forces. First, because on the PLA side north of the Himalayas, the terrain is flat almost like a plateau. This will enable easier detection of the Air defence gun as compared to undulating ground/slopes on the India side. Second, some PLA missile systems will be initially deployed in tunnels/deep entrenchments. They will require a self-autonomous system like the suicidal-Kamikaze to home on to the targets.

Lesson 5: Asymmetric Deterrence and Control of Escalation Ladder.

Devastated by the Azerbaijani offensive, the Armenian side has resorted to targeting Azerbaijan’s population centres and critical national infrastructure with ballistic missiles to deter them. The side, which can control the escalation ladder of war, has an advantage. For instance, the “Intra-War” measures, which fall short of war, create thresholds below the full escalation of war. Pakistan’s proxy war against India and China’s psychological warfare form such a category. India’s ability to strangulate at Malacca as part of QUAD operations becomes a tool to leverage over the adversary who will then, not escalate the war.

Lesson 6: The Emergence of the Greyzone/Hybrid Warfare Concept

Hybrid warfare refers to power being employed to achieve national objectives in a way that falls short of physical conflict. Such warfare is conducted in the “greyzone” of conflict, meaning operations may not clearly cross the threshold of war. That might be due to the ambiguity of international law, ambiguity of actions and attribution, or because the impact of the activities does not justify a response. The PLA is trying the same in Ladakh.

Conclusion

The so-called integrated way of warfare is characterized by the application of joint fires within a highly integrated command and control network to rapidly destroy enemy formations and command and control nodes. The ability to ruthlessly exploit the information environment at the strategic, operational, and tactical level, thus becomes mandatory in such a cohesive and intense approach. This India should attempt to build by 2030 and beat the PLA in their own game with total allied support. This will in turn ensure the security of the Indian Himalayas as also give credibility to India’s status as the pivot of Asia, and enable global security.

———-

Dr. Maj Gen (Retd) Anil Kumar Lal is a Defence Analyst who has authored many path-breaking concepts on Nuclear and Space Warfare strategies.He feels that the future Military Forces would be dictated by a new concept of Strategic detternce which would be a combined effect of Nuclear and Space detternce. He is a third generation Indian Army Officer, who has participated in the many India-Pakistan battles including the Kargil conflict, 1999. A captured ‘Defence Post’ has been named after him on the LOC.He has been Commanding General in the Siachen/Ladakh sector and had been Director Nuclear warfare in the Army Headquarters during the Pokhran-II test. He has held Fellowship at the IDSA and the Chair of Excellence twice at the USI of India. He has authored six books on National Security issues including a book on ‘Space warfare and Military Strategy.’ He had raised the Integrated Space Cell for India and pioneered the path-breaking document called the “Indian Space Defence Vision”. The author has also written the book:”Transformation of the Armed Forces: 2025”, which has already covered the methodology for a transformation with Indian characteristics. His last book: “Siachen Conflict Zone: Looking beyond the Himalayas” is covering contemporary issues including the present India-China standoff scenario.

Artsakh identifies 34 more KIAs

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 15:26, 2 December, 2020

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 27, ARMENPRESS. The Ministry of Defense of Artsakh released the names of 34 more troops who were killed in action in the war, bringing the number of identified KIAs to 1746.

On November 18 the health authorities had announced they examined 2425 bodies of killed servicemen, of whom 1746 are identified as of December 2. However, the number 2425 doesn’t include the servicemen whose bodies were recovered from the battlefield after November 18.

The total number of the killed troops and those missing in action are yet to be announced as the search and retrieval of bodies, as well as the identification process continues. 

Updates:

15:51 – the health authorities said they have examined the bodies of 2718 killed troops so far, of whom 1746 are identified. 

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Armenia proposes “all for all” principle in exchange of POWs

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 15:47, 2 December, 2020

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 2, ARMENPRESS. Deputy Prime Minister Tigran Avinyan held a meeting on December 2 with the Ambassador of Russia to Armenia Sergey Kopyrkin.

Avinyan thanked the ambassador for the key role Russia played in ending the war in Artsakh and establishing ceasefire.

Issues related to the exchange of prisoners of war, search operations for the missing persons and the retrieval of the bodies of the victims were discussed. Avinyan said that these issues are top priority tasks for the Armenian government and everything is being done to accelerate the process, his office said in a news release. 

Avinyan told the ambassador that Armenia is proposing the “all for all” principle in the exchange of prisoners. In addition, a mechanism is proposed envisaging that in the event of new prisoners appearing in either of the sides in the future, they should immediately be returned without any preconditions.

The Russian ambassador said that the issues of the POWs, the missing persons and the search for the bodies of the dead are under the spotlight of the top leadership of Russia.

Avinyan also highlighted Russia’s help in solving humanitarian problems of the Artsakh population.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan