EU-Armenia Partnership Council to be held in Brussels

Panorama, Armenia

Dec 17 2020

The EU-Armenia partnership will start in Brussels on Thursday. The meeting will be chaired by Josep Borrell, the EU High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy, the press service at the European Commission reported. 

Participants will first discuss, in a plenary session, EU-Armenia relations, including matters related to political dialogue and reform, democracy, rule of law and human rights. The discussion will focus in particular on the implementation of the EU-Armenia Comprehensive and Enhanced Partnership Agreement (CEPA) and the Partnership's priorities.

Participants will also talk about economic, trade and sectoral cooperation, as well as other issues pertaining to EU-Armenia relations and issues connected to the EU neighbourhood.

Participants will then, in a restricted session, exchange views on the situation in and around Nagorno-Karabakh following the cessation of hostilities on 10 November 2020 and the EU's role in supporting recovery and reconciliation regional issues. 



MEPs initiate cross partisan group of friendship and solidarity with Artsakh

Panorama, Armenia
Dec 16 2020
Politics 11:20 16/12/2020 NKR

MEPs François Alfonsi (Greens-EFA; France), Sylvie Guillaume (S&D; France) and Peter van Dalen (EPP; Netherlands) have initiated the creation of a cross-party “Group of Friendship and Solidarity with Nagorno-Karabakh” within the European Parliament, the European Armenian Federation for Justice and Democracy (EAFJD) reports.

In a letter sent to all the members, the three MEPs called all those who are concerned about the security and survival of the Armenians living in Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh) to engage in the friendship group.

The aim of the friendship group is to give full support to the Armenian people of Artsakh who are suffering from oppression and occupation of their historic territory.


CivilNet: A Look at the Military Lessons of the Nagorno-Karabakh Conflict

CIVILNET.AM

13:38

By Michael Kofman

The article was initially published on Russiamatters.org

On Nov. 9, an armistice was signed to end the fighting in Nagorno-Karabakh between Armenia and Azerbaijan. The conflict was relatively short lived, lasting from Sept. 27 to Nov. 9, but it proved to be an intense inter-state conflict fought by two heavily armed opponents. Both sides employed advanced military technology, with Azerbaijan proving the decisive victor in the war. The implications of the conflict continue to reverberate well outside the region given its potential significance for regional and great powers alike, while further spurring debates on the character of modern warfare.

Azerbaijan’s successful use of drones proved a tactical sensation, although it broadly confirmed long standing lessons on the devastating effect airpower can have on a large ground force with relatively poor air defenses. The use of unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) in this conflict marks an evolution more so than a revolution in the applications of airpower.

Military establishments look to wars like Nagorno-Karabakh for insights about capabilities, doctrine, operational art and how their forces might fare against similarly armed adversaries or perhaps those with far more capable militaries. The United States is on a quest for defining conflicts, like the Arab-Israeli War of 1973, to shape the direction of its future investments, and consequently looks to wars such as the Russian conflict with Ukraine, or Armenia’s war with Azerbaijan, for lessons learned.

In terms of capabilities, it seems clear that remotely operated systems offer the advantage of airpower, sensors and precision-guided weapons to small and middle powers at a dramatically discounted price compared to the cost of manned aviation. This technology is diffusing much more rapidly than customized counters, or air defense systems designed to deal with it. The latter will eventually catch up, but in the interim, drones, especially loitering munitions drones, present a significant challenge for modern air defenses and ground forces. The Nagorno-Karabakh conflict helped settle the question on whether legacy air defenses, such as the dated Soviet systems employed by Armenia, could be suitable or adapted to dealing with contemporary drones. The answer is decidedly negative, especially when combinations of drones are used for target identification and strikes, or via swarming tactics.

While modern air defense appears to have a spotty performance record, the story should not be oversold. A number of Russian exported Pantsir-S1s have been destroyed in other conflicts, but Turkey has also lost plenty of its TB2 drones in places like Libya. It depends on the system, operator and context. Some perform much better than others. The same can be said of electronic warfare systems deployed in this conflict. System on system matchups are not especially revealing. These lessons should not be carelessly generalized to powers like Russia or China, fielding integrated air defense, automated systems of command and control and a much more robust air defense network. That said, saturation via loitering munitions and remotely operated systems is clearly a challenge for any air defense. The problem is hardly limited to legacy Soviet or exported Russian systems, as the Iranian attack on Saudi infrastructure demonstrated in September 2019. According to Stephen Bryen, those facilities were defended by U.S. Patriot, French Crotale (Shashine) and Swiss Oerlikon air defense systems, none of which were able to detect or engage the attacking Iranian drones.

The Nagorno-Karabakh conflict reiterated that individual air defense systems do not aggregate into a layered or integrated air defense, which requires short, medium and operational range systems working with a common picture and with sufficient density. In countries like Russia, ground-based air defense is also heavily integrated with tactical aviation. It’s somewhat of a truism that air defense should be supported by electronic warfare and specialized counter-unmanned aircraft systems (C-UAS), but the key conversation is on force structure. The ratio of support to maneuver units across Western militaries is simply lacking compared to those of other powers, like Russia’s. Armenia’s armor, artillery and infantry fighting vehicles were picked apart over the course of several weeks, while its limited air defense capacity suffered a similar fate. A smaller ground force, which is well-protected from air attacks, will prove a wiser investment than a large fleet of armor and artillery that lacks effective defense from the air. This is hardly a revelation. These trends in warfare were established decades ago, but it is now the case when facing even smaller powers with unmanned aviation.

The cost imposition curve is a significant factor, since drones are simply far cheaper and easier to replace than their targets, and they can be traded in a war of attrition. Armenia’s most expensive air defense systems, the older S-300PS, were easily destroyed by Israeli loitering munitions since the former were never designed to engage the latter. Similarly, tanks have come under fire in recent debates, even though there is no clear platform that offers a better combination of maneuver, firepower and protection. The main takeaway for armor is that they will need protection systems against drones in the same manner that they are now equipped against anti-tank guided missiles (in some militaries). All vehicles will need C-UAS systems mounted. Survivability will once again have to catch up with lethality. While Western militaries may rely on aerospace dominance to shield ground forces, it increasingly looks like this will be at best a partial solution, and at worst misplaced optimism.

Another approach would emphasize the quantity of cheaper or disposable systems in Western militaries, trading out expensive boutique capabilities for numbers able to withstand attrition. However, legacy systems generate inertia in defense acquisition, and it is more likely that militaries will choose to better protect what they have than try to revamp their forces. A useful addition to standing militaries would be capabilities available in large quantities, based on cheaper or disposable systems.

Doctrinally, the war offers useful lessons, especially for Western audiences. Modern militaries tend to worship at the altar of maneuver warfare, and the U.S. in particular is vested in the cognitive effects of maneuver on enemy forces, or in doctrinal parlance, the ability to “impose multiple dilemmas.” However, the diffusion of cheap, high-quality sensors on the battlefield negates many of the benefits of terrain and camouflage and can easily be backed by a reconnaissance-strike package. This raises doubts about the ability of maneuver to generate cognitive dilemmas for great or even middle powers. Similarly, dispersing forces may have negligible effects against loitering munitions, and as the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict illustrated, terrain offers fewer advantages against such systems. Dispersal makes sense tactically, but in terms of operational design, the proliferation of cheap means of surveillance suggests that forces will have to accept much higher levels of attrition, especially against firepower-heavy militaries like Russia’s.

Many analysts, including myself, had expected terrain to be a significant factor in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and, in early analysis, for Armenian forces to fare much better in the conflict. In some ways this was accurate, given that Azerbaijan advanced in the south where it was easiest for ground units, but not in the north. Yet on the whole, this thesis was proven incorrect, and expectations that Armenia might fight to a stalemate seem incredibly rosy in retrospect. Azerbaijan was able to attrition Armenia’s defending forces with airpower. They in turn were ill-prepared for the war, lacking good lines to fall back to. There was considerable lag between the degradation of Armenian forces and Azerbaijani territorial advances, but momentum quickly shifted two weeks into the conflict. Early on, Azerbaijan appeared unable to translate tactical success into significant gains, which explains in part the surprise (including my own) at how quickly they were able to put Armenian forces into a precarious and untenable position a few weeks into the war.

Could Armenia have fought differently and won this conflict? The short answer is probably not, although it most certainly could have fared better. Armenia was disadvantaged from the outset given the quantitative and qualitative superiority on the Azerbaijani side, together with considerable Turkish support for Baku. Armenia’s political leadership appeared to be delusional about the military balance and the potential course of a war, while insufficiently investing in the right capabilities, force structure and prepared defenses. The problems were structural. For example, rather than buy more advanced air defense or electronic warfare systems, they invested in old and used OSA-AK air defense systems from Jordan. Azerbaijan had used drones and loitering munitions against Armenia in the four-day war of 2016, yet over the four years separating these respective conflicts, the Armenian military failed to adapt in almost every respect.

The Nagorno-Karabakh conflict is a reminder about the need to link military power, and military strategy, to state policy. The conflict continues to illustrate the gap between political leaders’ perceptions and military reality. While planners often believe that what matters for deterrence is the military balance, assessed military potential, etc., Armenia’s and Azerbaijan’s decisions proved once again that perception is the supreme qualifier. The qualitative or quantitative advantage often does not translate meaningfully into political calculus, and it is what leaders choose to make of it. Yerevan appeared to act as though it was the stronger power in the equation, perhaps buoyed by the mythos of earlier victories in 1992. Chauvinism and war optimism continue to be pernicious problems in decision making, often misleading the aggressor, but in this case, misleading the defender. This is something Western militaries should take to heart given the degree to which they subscribe to being the best, especially at the tactical level.

The traumatic postmortem will continue to unfold in Yerevan as recriminations abound regarding the course of the conflict. Armenia’s policies and rhetoric in the run up to the conflict appeared out of touch with the reality of a country outmatched in every single respect. Yes, it had a sizable military, but Armenia’s investments simply did not match political strategy. They were not prepared for this war and steadily marched toward a military disaster.  

The use of autonomous or unmanned systems is simply the latest evolution in the modern character of war. They hold implications for the survivability of ground forces, the efficacy of contemporary air defense and the need to think differently about terrain and maneuver. The diffusion of drone power continues to outpace viable counters and defenses. Undoubtedly some lessons from this conflict will be overhyped, as is always the case; however, it would be a mistake for great and middle powers to ignore the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. It is no 1973, but it will suffice until a more defining conflict gets here.

Michael Kofman is director of the Russia Studies Program at CNA and a fellow at the Kennan Institute.

Armenia prepares to ban Turkish imports

EurasiaNet.org
Dec 16 2020

Ani Mejlumyan Dec 16, 2020

Azerbaijan’s local actions aim at setting a broader agenda for withdrawal of peacekeepers – Armenian PM

Public Radio of Armenia
Dec 16 2020

Azerbaijan’s operations on local level have a much broader, global perspective, a far-reaching goal of setting the agenda for the withdrawal of peacekeepers, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said in an interview with Radio Liberty.

Speaking about the recent attacks on Hin Tagher and Ktsaberd villages in Hadrut region, the Prime Minister said the actions are taking place in the zone of responsibility of the Russian peacekeepers and added that “our assessment is that the Azerbaijani forces are specially resorting to provocations to devalue the presence of peacekeepers in the conflict zone.”

“At least as of yesterday, Azerbaijan had not signed the document confirming the mandate of the peacekeepers. In this regard, we consider all these actions in this context,” PM Pashinyan noted

As for Armenia’s responsibility, he said the Republic of Armenia “does not shirk any responsibility, but the concrete analysis of the situation shows that here we must solve these issues in close cooperation with the peacekeepers, in close cooperation with the Russian Federation.”

Nikol Pashinyan said the issue of withdrawal of peacekeepers cannot be brought into agenda now, but the attempts to devalue their presence are obvious.

“And in this regard, I consider it important for the peacekeepers and the Russian Federation respond adequately to this situation,” PM Pashinyan stated.


Republic of Armenia : Third Review under the Stand-By Arrangement and Modification of Performance Criteria-Press Release;

EIN News
Dec 16 2020

Scandal continues in Armenia over Aliyev’s proposed $5 bln ‘Karabakh buyout’

JAM News
Dec 16 2020
Scandal continues in Armenia over Aliyev's proposed $5 bln 'Karabakh buyout'

    JAMnews, Yerevan

Fresh on the heels of news that former Armenian president Serzh Sargsyan was offered $5 billion by Azerbaijani president Ilham Aliyev in exchange for the seven districts surrounding Nagorno Karabakh, new reports suggest the same offer was made to current PM Nikol Pashinyan.

These seven regions in question came under the control of the Armenian side during the first Karabakh war in the early 1990s and which were considered a ‘security belt’ for Nagorno-Karabakh. Following the results of the second Karabakh war, in the fall of 2020, these areas returned to the control of Azerbaijan.

Former ambassador to the Vatican, son-in-law of former Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan, Mikael Minasyan, said that in October 2018, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan was allegedly given an envelope with a proposal from Azerbaijan offering to pay for the seven regions around Nagorno Karabakh.

Minasyan says the sealed envelope was handed over to the former head of the National Security Service of Armenia Artur Vanetsyan by the head of the special services of Azerbaijan. And Vanetsyan handed it over to Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan.

A direct participant in the events, the former head of the National Security Service, has already confirmed the fact of communication with his Azerbaijani counterpart.

All the details of the story below.


  • Armenian PM on calls for resignation, clashes in Karabakh, prisoner exchange
  • No more prisoners? Azerbaijan, Armenia claim ‘all for all’ prisoner exchange completed
  • Aliyev lays claim to ‘historical lands’ in Armenia. Moscow, Yerevan react


Commentary of the former head of the NSS

In an interview with Hraparak newspaper, Artur Vanetsyan recalled that since 2018, Armenia and Azerbaijan have established operational communication to prevent incidents on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border. In September 2018, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan himself also said that such an agreement had been reached following a meeting with Ilham Aliyev in Dushanbe.

According to Vanetsyan, this proposal was carried out through him and another state official:

“Within the framework of operational communication, I periodically met with representatives of Azerbaijan, including in Dubai. During these contacts, I received a lot of information and passed it on to Pashinyan, and all the members of the Security Council knew about these contacts”, Vanetsyan says.

Vanetsyan refused to disclose further content of the conversations during these meetings, as he received this information while on duty.

Aliyev’s proposal to Sargsyan

Most recently, the Bagramyan 26 Telegram channel distributed an audio recording of a personal conversation between former Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan and Belarusian leader Alexander Lukashenko, which took place in Yerevan on October 14, 2016.

In the recording, the President of Belarus says that the President of Azerbaijan is ready to pay Armenia five billion dollars for seven regions around Nagorno-Karabakh. Serzh Sargsyan replies that he is ready to give Aliyev six billion to give up his claim to these territories.

Ex-President Sargsyan’s office declined to comment on the conversation “in a closed session”, but did not deny the authenticity of the recording.

The South Caucasus: New Realities After the Armenia-Azerbaijan War (Part One)

Jamestown Foundation
Dec 16 2020
(Source: Anadolu Agency)

The Second Karabakh War (September 27–November 9, 2020) has resulted in an Azerbaijani national triumph, a self-inflicted Armenian trauma, geopolitical gains for Russia, another debacle of Western diplomacy, and Turkey’s reassertion as a regional power in the South Caucasus.

The significance of Azerbaijan’s military victory transcends the battlefield by far. It caps Azerbaijan’s maturation from a mere project in nation- and state-building (as it was in the early 1990s, when Armenia seized 20 percent of Azerbaijan’s territory) into a fully consolidated, successfully modernizing nation-state. Azerbaijan presents a stark contrast to Russian-allied Armenia’s failed modernization.

Azerbaijan’s Western orientation in terms of oil and natural gas resource development and export destinations laid the economic basis for its overall modernization, including the military modernization that enabled this triumph. While its Western orientation is bound to continue in the energy sector, Baku sees itself treated with neglect bordering on the malign by Western powers in political and geopolitical terms. This sentiment had been swelling in Baku for years, seemingly unnoticed by Western diplomacy, which actually exacerbated this sentiment in Baku during this war (see EDM, November 25, December 1, 3, 7). Azerbaijan has, therefore, turned to Turkey as a natural protector and strategic partner, as well as to Russia for a transactional partnership to regain the Armenian-occupied territories.

This war has successfully operationalized the Turkish-Azerbaijani strategic partnership in the military sphere for the first time. While rooted ultimately in Turkic solidarity, Azerbaijan made this strategic partnership materially possible by becoming a major, high-value economic partner to Turkey. The Baku–Tbilisi–Ceyhan oil pipeline, Baku–Erzurum and Trans-Anatolia gas pipelines, Baku–Tbilisi–Kars railway, and the Star oil refining complex (Aliaga near Izmir) have turned Azerbaijan into the single largest investor country in Turkey, and they have contributed to Turkey’s national goal to become a major energy transit country. This year, moreover, Azerbaijan became Turkey’s largest direct supplier of natural gas, overtaking Russia in that role (see EDM, July 6). All of that amounts to a vital Turkish national interest to support Azerbaijan’s security and success. Turkish weaponry and military advice were key to Azerbaijan’s victory in this war.

Azerbaijan’s war aims were initially limited to regaining the seven inner-Azerbaijani, Armenian-occupied districts adjacent to Upper (“Nagorno”) Karabakh. This formulation of goals was acceptable to Russian President Vladimir Putin who, exploiting Western disengagement, had positioned himself as the unique mediator between Azerbaijan and Armenia. At every stage of the Azerbaijani forces’ advance, President Ilham Aliyev offered to stop if Armenia’s Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian would publicly commit to withdrawing Armenian forces from those seven Karabakh-adjacent districts by a certain date. Given Yerevan’s refusal, not only of this demand but of any negotiations unless Azerbaijan stopped advancing, Baku enlarged the definition of its war aims to include Upper Karabakh’s southern part, with the town of Shusha. This turned out to be the limit of what Putin would accept, and only in return for Azerbaijan’s consent to a Russian “peacekeeping” intervention in Upper Karabakh’s remaining territory (see EDM, November 12, 13).

Under the November 10, 2020, armistice, Azerbaijan has regained some 80 percent of the total area that the 1994 armistice had left under Armenia’s control. However, some two thirds of Upper (“Nagorno”) Karabakh’s territory, including its administrative center Stepanakert (Khankendi), remains under Yerevan’s and (increasingly) Russia’s control since the November 10 armistice (see EDM, December 8, 10).

Russia and Azerbaijan have thereby arrived at an undeclared quid pro quo, largely at the expense of Russia’s official ally Armenia. Adopting a mediator’s role, Russia accepted Azerbaijan’s resort to war, which Azerbaijan strictly limited to regaining its own territory from Armenian control. Moreover, the Kremlin compelled Yerevan to withdraw its forces from three of those seven districts without combat. Although Azerbaijan’s forces had almost crushed the Armenian forces before November 10, a pursuit operation into the mountainous and forested terrain of those three districts could have cost the Azerbaijani army many combat casualties.

Thus, Russia’s studied “neutrality” posture during the 44-day war, then the green light for Azerbaijan to regain three (out of seven) Karabakh-adjacent districts without having to fight for them, and finally Putin’s consent to partitioning Upper (“Nagorno”) Karabakh into Armenian- and Azerbaijani-controlled zones, amount to major Russian concessions. In return for these, Baku has consented to Russia’s “peacekeeping” operation in the remainder of Upper Karabakh, a territory universally deemed as part of Azerbaijan. Moreover, Baku is postponing—apparently sine die—the return of that territory under Azerbaijan’s effective sovereignty, as distinct from legal but nonfunctioning sovereignty.

The terms of that quid pro quo look fairly balanced at this time; but they also look more risk-fraught for Azerbaijan than for Russia in a medium-term perspective—or even in the short term, should Russia choose to wield the leverage it has gained through the “peacekeeping” presence on the ground.

Baku’s quid pro quo with Moscow is, in part, a well-nigh inevitable result of Western diplomacy’s disengagement from conflict-resolution efforts in recent years. Disengagement (and the resulting inadequate information about developments on the ground) robbed Western diplomacy of effectiveness on four levels: first, it failed to induce Russia to be more responsive to Azerbaijan’s interests in the protracted negotiations; next, Western diplomacy failed to restrain Armenia from repudiating the “basic principles” for conflict-resolution, worked out earlier in consensus with Russia (the Kremlin did not restrain Armenia either); third, Western diplomacy failed to stop Azerbaijan from resorting to military force after Russia had given its green light to Baku to redress its legal rights through force; and fourth, vitriolic Western criticism of Turkey failed to dissuade Baku from allying with Turkey in their mutual, vital interests.

With its inactions and flawed actions, Western diplomacy unwittingly helped to prepare the ground for this major deal between Baku and Moscow. For its part, Baku paved the way to this deal by securing Turkey’s protection vis-à-vis Russia, absent Western engagement. The sum total of these realignments—to wit, Western disengagement, a seeming entente between Moscow and Baku, and the blossoming alliance of Azerbaijan and Turkey—point the way to a regionalization of security arrangements in the South Caucasus, reducing the West’s role and clout.


EU-Armenian Partnership Council to meet

Foeign Brief
Dec 16 2020
  • In Daily Brief
  • December 17, 2020
  • Can Eker

Photo: European Union

Armenian delegates will attend the Armenia-EU Partnership Council today in Brussels.

Topics to be discussed include repercussions of the six-week Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, which roiled the Caucuses. The meeting takes place amid prisoner swaps between Armenia and Azerbaijan. On Monday, Armenia’s deputy prime minister welcomed a Russian plane returning 44 Armenian former captives to the capital Yerevan.

Today, Brussels will urge investigation of possible war crimes committed during the conflict. The EU’s resolution concerns providing substantial humanitarian aid to locations where atrocities agonised the civilian population. The EU has largely abstained from assuming a key role in the gas-rich South Caucuses, thus leaving the area under Russian and Turkish influence. Seizing the opportunity, Moscow upheld its status in the region by mediating the ceasefire agreement and deploying Russian peacekeepers.

Although the EU was not extensively involved in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, it will likely strive for a stronger foothold to counter the Russian and Turkish presence in the region. Concerned that the conflict could resurface in the near future, the EU will seek to ensure that ceasefire procedures are fully abided by. Otherwise, it will likely penalise the aggressor.

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Repatriated POWs questioned by Armenian detectives probing Azeri war of aggression

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 16:51,

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 15, ARMENPRESS. The Committee of Investigations says its detectives have carried out ‘necessary investigative and other procedural actions’ with the participation of the 44 prisoners of war and captive civilians who were repatriated from Azerbaijan.

The Committee of Investigations said the actions were namely “questionings”, and that a number of examinations will take place.  It added that its criminal investigation into the Azeri war of aggression, international terrorism, gross violation of international law norms and involvement of foreign mercenaries against Artsakh is still ongoing.

The prisoner swap between Armenia and Azerbaijan was carried out as part of the terms of the armistice which ended the war. 

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan