ARF’s Ishkhan Saghatelyan detained during anti-Pashinyan protests

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 16:44,

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 11, ARMENPRESS. One of the leaders of the ongoing protests demanding the resignation of the Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan was detained late afternoon on December 11 in downtown Yerevan.

ARF (Dashnaktsutyun) Supreme Body Representative Ishkhan Saghatelyan was detained when the protesters were trying to block traffic at the France Square near the Opera Theater. Police intervened and reopened the streets.

The “civil disobedience” campaigns continue in Yerevan.

The ARF is among the more than a dozen political parties who have formed the “Homeland Salvation Movement” seeking to oust Prime Minister Pashinyan over his handling of the Nagorno Karabakh war and the terms of the armistice and replace him with ex-PM Vazgen Manukyan as an interim leader who would eventually organize early general elections.

Most of these 16 political parties are non-parliamentary ones, with the exception of Prosperous Armenia (BHK) Party. However, the parliamentary Bright Armenia (LHK) party is also calling on the PM to resign, but it hasn’t joined the “Homeland Salvation Movement”.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Artsakh military death toll reaches 2996 as retrieval and identification of bodies continues

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 16:39,

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 11, ARMENPRESS. The death toll of the Artsakh military in the 2020 Nagorno Karabakh war has reached 2996 as the search, retrieval and identification of bodies continues.

“As of this moment 2996 bodies were medically examined,” Armenian healthcare ministry spokesperson Alina Nikoghosyan told ARMENPRESS.  She said a total of 1816 DNA samples were taken from family members of KIA troops, and 993 samples from the bodies of the KIAs of the 2020 Artsakh war.

256 samples from family members and 541 samples from the unidentified bodies are pending results as of December 10.

The examination and identification process continues.

On December 10, the Artsakh authorities said the number of KIA troops who have been identified so far stood at 1779.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Armenia Ombudsman sends new evidence on Azerbaijani atrocities to international organizations

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 17:12,

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 11, ARMENPRESS. Armenia’s Ombudsman Arman Tatoyan is sending new evidence to the international organizations about the Azerbaijani atrocities conducted during and after the recent war launched against Artsakh.

“It’s important that this time they are also sent to the criminal prosecution bodies of those countries which have universal jurisdiction.

The evidence has been subject to legal drafting by our staff, has been translated from Azerbaijani or Turkish to English and Russian”, the Ombudsman said on Facebook.

He informed that together with the evidence a legal analysis is also sent showing that the Azerbaijani side is artificially delaying the process of the return of prisoners of war and the exchange of the bodies of killed servicemen.

“All materials will also be sent to the Armenian foreign ministry, Armenia’s permanent representatives to international organizations, diplomatic missions abroad, as well as Armenia’s representative to ECHR”, Tatoyan said.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Protester and police officer hospitalized in Yerevan

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 17:12,

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 11, ARMENPRESS. A protesters and an on-duty police officer are hospitalized with various traumas they suffered during the anti-government demonstrations in downtown Yerevan.

They have been taken to the Heratsi Hospital.

The hospital’s spokesperson Shushan Danielyan told ARMENPRESS that the 41-year old protester suffered a traumatic brain injury, while the 23-year-old police officer sustained an upper extremity injury.

The protesters demanding the resignation of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan were blocking the intersection at France Square in Yerevan. Police intervened and opened the street.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Turkish Ambassador summoned to Iran’s Foreign Ministry in connection with statements made by Erdogan

Turkish Ambassador summoned to Iran's Foreign Ministry in connection with statements made by Erdogan

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 17:46,

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 11, ARMENPRESS. Ambassador of Turkey to Iran Derya Örs has been summoned to the foreign ministry of Iran on the occasion of an excerpt from a poem recited by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan during a parade in Baku on December 10, ARMENPRESS reports, citing Mehrnews, Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Saeed Khatibzadeh said.

He said that Turkish Ambassador to Iran has been sumonned to the Foreig Ministry for the ''confusing and unacceptable'' remarks made by the Turkish president in Baku.

According to the Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman, Tehran expressed its resolute complaint against such remarks, calling on the Turkish government to give explanations as soon as possible.

''During the meeting with the Ambassador, the Director General of the Foreign Ministry for Eurasia Affairs stressed that the era of territorial aspirations and belligerent empires is long over. The Islamic Republic of Iran will not allow anyone to interfere in its territorial integrity, and history shows that Iran will not compromise on its national security'', Khatibzadeh said.

During a military parade in Baku on December 10, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan recited a poem containing separatist ideas about the Araks River. Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif harshly responded to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on his Twitter account.




Central Bank of Armenia: exchange rates and prices of precious metals – 11-12-20

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 17:27,

YEREVAN, 11 DECEMBER, ARMENPRESS. The Central Bank of Armenia informs “Armenpress” that today, 11 December, USD exchange rate up by 1.85 drams to 520.62 drams. EUR exchange rate up by 3.02 drams to 630.94 drams. Russian Ruble exchange rate up by 0.05 drams to 7.11 drams. GBP exchange rate down by 2.95 drams to 688.00 drams.

The Central Bank has set the following prices for precious metals.

Gold price up by 153.06 drams to 30871.32 drams. Silver price down by 1.92 drams to 399.79 drams. Platinum price up by 311.93 drams to 17374.38 drams.

Armenpress: People of Artsakh have the right to self-determination – Russian MP

People of Artsakh have the right to self-determination – Russian MP

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 19:41,

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 11, ARMENPRESS.  Head of the Institute of the CIS countries, First deputy chairman of the committee of the State Duma for the CIS and relations with Russian nationals abroad Konstantin Zatulin thinks the people of Artsakh have the right to self-determination, ARMENPRESS reports Zatulin said during a Yerevan-Moscow online discussion on December 11.

''I continue to think that the people of Nagorno Karabakh or Artsakh have the right to self-determination, particularly, given that at the moment of the collapse of the Soviet Union the Socialist Republic of Azerbaijan had already lost control of the territories Nagorno Karabakh Autonomous Oblast. The announcments of Azerbaijan that it's their territorory needs to be reconsidered'', Zatulin said.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 12/11/2020

                                        Friday, 

Armenian President, Speaker Discuss Political Crisis


Armenia -- President Armen Sarkissian (R) and parliament speaker Ararat Mirzoyan 
meet in Yerevan, .

President Armen Sarkissian met with a key political ally of Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian on Friday after discussing mounting political tensions in Armenia with 
his two predecessors critical of the current government.

Sarkissian’s press office said he and parliament speaker Ararat Mirzoyan 
“exchanged thoughts on the current situation in the country and spoke about 
possible ways of resolving it.”

A statement by the Armenian parliament said the two men discussed the domestic 
political situation and each other’s “visions for resolving a number of issues.” 
It too did not elaborate.

Sarkissian held similar consultations with former Presidents Robert Kocharian 
and Serzh Sarkisian earlier this week. All three men publicly called on 
Pashinian to resign as prime minister and pave the way for fresh parliamentary 
elections following the Russian-mediated ceasefire that stopped the war in 
Nagorno-Karabakh on November 10.

Kocharian has been particularly scathing about Pashinian’s handling of the war 
that resulted in heavy Armenian casualties and territorial losses. He has 
encouraged his supporters to participate in ongoing anti-government protests 
staged by opposition parties.

Pashinian has rejected opposition demands for his resignation, the formation of 
an interim government and the holding of snap parliamentary elections. At the 
same time he signaled through some of his allies readiness to discuss with the 
opposition the possibility of such a vote.

Mirzoyan was beaten up and severely injured early on November 10 as angry mobs 
attacked and ransacked key state buildings in Yerevan following the announcement 
of the ceasefire agreement. The 41-year-old speaker, who is a leading member of 
Pashinian’s Civil Contract party, underwent several surgeries as a result.

Sarkissian again strongly condemned the beating and said “any manifestation of 
violence” is unacceptable. According to his office, the president also called on 
Armenian political actors to show “restraint” and avoid violent actions or calls 
for violence.

The parliament statement likewise said that Sarkissian and Mirzoyan spoke out 
against any violent methods of political struggle.



Yerevan Seeks End To Russian Entry Ban For Armenians


RUSSIA -- A passenger waits at a coronavirus testing station at the Vnukovo 
airport in Moscow, October 8, 2020

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian on Friday again called on Russia to lift a 
coronavirus-related entry ban for Armenian nationals which has aggravated 
Armenia’s economic problems.

The Russian government banned the entry of visitors from many foreign countries 
this spring in a bid to contain the coronavirus pandemic. A few months later it 
allowed citizens of some of those countries, including all other members of the 
Russian-led Eurasian Economic Union (EEU) except Armenia, to visit Russia.

The ban directly affected tens of thousands of Armenian migrant workers earning 
a living in Russia on a seasonal or permanent basis. Many of them had to return 
to Armenia following lockdown restrictions imposed across Russia in March.

Most migrant workers have had trouble finding jobs in Armenia since then. The 
Armenian economy is on course to contract by at least 7 percent this year due to 
the pandemic and the recent war in Nagorno-Karabakh.

The Armenian government has repeatedly pressed Moscow to lift the ban in recent 
months. Russian officials have yet to publicly say when that could happen.

Pashinian raised the matter at a virtual summit of EEU leaders held on Friday.

“Unfettered cargo and passenger traffic with the other countries of the Union is 
of fundamental importance to us,” Pashinian told the presidents of Russia, 
Belarus, Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan.

“Restrictions are especially sensitive in this area, and the creation of 
conditions for lifting the bans on the entry of Armenian citizens into a number 
of EEU member states is therefore imperative now,” he said.


Armenia -- Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian attends a virtual summit of 
the Eurasian Economic Union from Yerevan, .

All of those ex-Soviet states have been hit hard by the pandemic. The Armenian 
authorities have confirmed over 146,000 COVID-19 cases and 2,445 deaths caused 
by them in the country of about 3 million. The real number of cases is believed 
to be much higher.

Pashinian also reiterated his calls for the creation of a single energy market 
that would lower the cost of Russian natural gas imported by Armenia and other 
EEU member states.

The gas price is currently significantly lower for consumers in Russia than 
other ex-Soviet states making up the trade bloc. Armenia and Belarus want Moscow 
to agree to uniform EEU energy tariffs.

Russian President Vladimir Putin rejected the idea at an EEU summit in May, 
implying that Yerevan and Minsk should agree first to even deeper economic 
integration with Moscow which would result in a “single budget and system of 
taxation” for all EEU member states.



Government’s Resignation Nonnegotiable For Tsarukian’s Party

        • Naira Nalbandian

Armenia -- Opposition supporters demonstrate in Yerevan to demand Prme Minister 
Nikol Pashinian's resignation, .

The resignation of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and his cabinet remains a 
necessary condition for holding fresh parliamentary elections in Armenia, Gagik 
Tsarukian’s opposition Prosperous Armenia Party (BHK) insisted on Friday.

A senior member of the BHK’s parliamentary group, the second largest in the 
National Assembly, stood by opposition claims that Pashinian’s government has 
lost its legitimacy as a result of the war in Nagorno-Karabakh.

“A government solely associated with defeat, loss of lands and capitulation 
cannot organize and hold pre-term parliamentary elections,” said Iveta Tonoyan.

“I do realize that the authorities could take that step … and use their 
administrative resources to achieve [electoral] victory and retain power. But I 
repeat that we have only one political agenda now: the change of the government 
and only then the conduct of fresh parliamentary elections under a new prime 
minister,” she told reporters.

The BHK is part of a coalition of more than a dozen opposition parties staging 
street protests and demanding that Pashinian hand over power to an interim 
government tasked with holding the snap elections within a year.

The prime minister and his political team reject the opposition demands. Still, 
a senior member of the ruling My Step bloc indicated on Thursday that the 
country’s leadership is ready to discuss with the opposition the possibility of 
fresh polls.

Both the BHK and the Bright Armenia Party (LHK), the second and more moderate 
parliamentary opposition force, said they have received no such offers from My 
Step yet.

LHK leader Edmon Marukian signaled his readiness to hold election-related talks 
with the authorities.

“If they are talking about holding the elections after enacting a [new] 
Electoral Code there should certainly be discussions because the rules of the 
game must be clear to all players,” Marukian told a news conference.

“I don’t know who will hold the pre-term elections but I predict that they will 
take place after six months at the latest,” he said.


Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2020 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

 


Zatulin says statements addressed to Armenia in Baku are insulting also for Russia

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 19:14,

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 11, ARMENPRESS.  First deputy chairman of the committee of the State Duma for the CIS and relations with Russian nationals abroad Konstantin Zatulin says that the statements made by Azerbaijani president Ilham Aliyev addressed to Armenia are insulting also for Russia, ARMENPRESS reports Zatulin said during a Yerevan-Moscow online discussion on December 11.

''The parades are attempts to insult and humiliate not only Armenia and the Armenian people, but also Armenia's ally Russia. Russia and Armenia are allies and for that reason the announcements made during that parade, particularly the remarks and comparisons made by the Azerbaijani president between the Great Patriotic War and Karabakh war, fight against fascism and the operation in Karabakh, are a sacrilege, they are lies, they deserve all kinds of condemnation'', Zatulin said.

During the December 10 parade Aliyev said Yerevan, Sevan and Zangezur are Azerbaijani territories, and Erdoğan said in his speech that this day is ‘’the he day of enlightenment of the souls of Enver Pasha, Nuri Pasha and soldiers of the Caucasus Islamic Army’’.




Why Turkey returned to the Caucasus after a hundred years

Middle East Eye
Dec 11 2020
Ragip Soylu


Published date: 14:22 UTC       

Ankara and Azerbaijan put their differences aside in pursuit of a military victory over Armenia in Nagorno-Karabakh. The outcome is a huge geopolitical shift in Turkey's favour

It took 44 days for Azerbaijan to defeat Armenian forces in Nagorno-Karabakh and make Turkey one of the fundamental players in the Caucasus.

And today, Turkey's power in the region could not be clearer.

Words thanking Ankara were some of the first from Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev's lips when he joyously declared a ceasefire on TV last month.

In response, people flocked to the streets with Turkish and Azerbaijani flags, bellowing chants praising Ankara.

Two days later, some of the leading members of Azerbaijan's opposition addressed an open letter to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, ignoring Aliyev. They called on Turkey to deploy permanent troops to the Nagorno-Karabakh city of Shusha (Shushi in Armenian), which was recently captured by Baku, to safeguard the area against a perceived Russian threat.

And on Thursday, Erdogan stood beside Aliyev during a military parade, celebrating victory in a conflict marred by shocking human rights abuses on both sides.

A hundred years after the Ottoman army seized Baku, Turkey had returned to Azerbaijan. You wouldn't guess it from the outpouring of fraternal feelings, but it marks a stark and abrupt change in the country.

Ten years ago, “liar, cheat and betrayer” were the words used by Aliyev to describe Turkish officials, after Ankara sought to normalise relations with Armenia. That broadside against the Erdogan government came in meetings with senior US officials, according to diplomatic telegrams released by Wikileaks.

Meanwhile, protests in Baku railed against Ankara for seeking normalisation with Yerevan without leveraging anything for Azerbaijan regarding Nagorno-Karabakh.

Now, things couldn't be more different, as - daily - Aliyev calls Erdogan his trusted brother and Azerbaijanis of various political stripes urge Turkey to establish military bases on their own soil.

The question, asked over and over by foreign diplomats as they attempt to decipher this volte-face, is "Why now?"

“Because Azerbaijan asked for help,” said a senior Turkish official, speaking on condition of anonymity. “It is that easy. There is no broader conspiracy.”

+ Show – Hide

How Turkey and Azerbaijan’s relations went from frosty to familial in 10 years:

April 2009: Provisional agreement to normalise ties between Turkey and Armenia announced 

May 2009: President Ilham Aliyev of Azerbaijan boycotts an international meeting hosted in Istanbul 

October 2009: Turkey and Armenia sign Zurich protocols to normalise their ties. Azerbaijani officials condemn it as against their national interests

November 2009: Turkey takes a step back and says it won’t normalise its relations with Armenia until Yerevan withdraws from Nagorno-Karabakh 

January 2010: The Constitutional Court in Armenia approves the protocols but effectively restricts the authority vested on the planned subcommittee on the Armenian Genocide claims  

August 2010: Turkey and Azerbaijan sign a strategic and military cooperation deal, a starting point of annual drills between the two countries 

October 2011: First Turkey-Azerbaijan strategic cooperation council held in Izmir 

December 2011: Turkey and Azerbaijan sign Trans-Anatolian Natural Gas Pipeline (TANAP) deal after Ankara cools down the Armenia reconciliation 

June 2012: Turkey, Azerbaijan and Georgia establish a trilateral diplomatic mechanism to deepen cooperation 

May 2013: Azerbaijan state oil company begins to build STAR refinery in Turkey, valued at $4bn

November 2013: Baku allows visa-free travel for Turkish businessmen 

April 2016: Azerbaijan and Armenia clashes turned to a full-scale conflict. Armenian media outlets close to the government claim Turkish military advisers are closely supporting the Azerbaijani army 

October 2017: The Baku-Tbilisi-Kars railway (BTK) is completed 

June 2018: TANAP is completed

September 2018: Azerbaijani company close to Aliyev establishes Haber Global news channel in Turkey 

Nagorno-Karabakh and seven surrounding regions have been occupied by Armenian forces since 1994, despite the multiple UN Security Council decisions that determined that the area belonged to Baku. Both the Armenian and Azerbaijani communities have long historical and cultural roots in the mountainous region.

Sporadic clashes have broken out since the 1990s, most recently in 2016 and in July, but essentially Nagorno-Karabakh was a frozen conflict until Ankara decided to get involved.

In various interviews, Turkish officials have underlined to Middle East Eye that the peace process run by the international "Minsk Group", headed by France, Russia and the United States, has been useless for the past 30 years. It was time, they said, for a new approach.

Turkey and Azerbaijan have strong ethnic links, as they speak almost the same language and share a common history.

“Is it weird that we tried to help our brethren?” asked the Turkish official. 

Turkish officials are quick to say that, despite the conflict being advantageous for Ankara and Baku, it was Armenia that sparked the latest war.

In July, Armenian forces attacked the strategic Ganja Gap in northern Azerbaijan, killing a general and his aides, who had been trained by Turkey. Armenia's defence ministry said at the time that the clashes began after Azerbaijani forces tried to cross the border illegally. 

Matthew Bryza, a former US ambassador to Azerbaijan, said the attack left a diplomatic vacuum in the Azerbaijan-Armenia conflict, which indicated that Yerevan was going to have a more aggressive approach.

“It was clear that neither the US nor France would play any role in mediating that uptick in violence," Bryza told MEE. "Russia filled in on the Armenia side, and Turkey filled in on the Azerbaijan side."

Azerbaijan-Armenia conflict: Turkey's military exports to Baku jump 600 percent

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Bryza added that, in August, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan "suddenly and foolishly" began talking about the Treaty of Sevres, a 1920 settlement that would have handed eastern Turkey to Armenia.

“I think that upset President Erdogan and others at the top of the Turkish leadership. Protecting yourself, that’s a strategic response by Turkey.”

Others believe Pashinyan had been ramping up tensions in the region since the beginning of this year.

“Pashinyan said that Nagorno-Karabakh was Armenia and there wasn’t any need for further talks,” said Ceyhun Asirov, an independent Azerbaijani journalist and expert on Caucasus. “It was really astonishing. People felt violated as he continued to encourage illegal settlements by ethnic Armenians in occupied Azerbaijan soil.”

Asirov said that the July attack on the Ganja Gap was extremely concerning for Azerbaijan, as well as Turkey.

“Armenian forces attacked the area where you have an energy corridor with Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline, TANAP gas pipeline and Baku-Tbilisi-Kars railway,” he said. “This is the lifeline for Baku and a crucial energy and trade line for Turkey.”

The attack prompted protesters to pour into Baku's streets and demand revenge in unprecedented numbers. Some of them even broke into the parliament. Turkish flags were waved in the city's squares.

“People publicly asked for Turkey’s help during the protests,” Asirov added. 

Gubad Ibadoghlu, the leader of opposition party Movement for Democracy and Prosperities and a professor at Rutgers University, said the attack revealed Azerbaijani weaknesses.

“It showed everybody that we needed Turkey to face the Armenian threat,” he said.

Over the years, Turkey and Azerbaijan had overcome their differences.

First, the Turkish government dropped the normalisation process with Armenia after a strong intervention by Aliyev, who sent Azerbaijani MPs to Ankara in October 2009 to pressure Turkey into abandoning reconciliation.

Later, Erdogan and Aliyev moved their relationship to a new level, eased by the construction of the Trans-Anatolian gas pipeline (TANAP), which strengthened Turkey’s role as energy hub in the region by transferring gas to Europe.

'The West in time has distanced from Azerbaijan due to its repressive domestic policies'

- Arastun Orujlu, ex-Azerbaijani intelligence officer

Azerbaijan’s state oil company SOCAR, meanwhile, has nearly $20bn of direct investments in Turkey, which purchased strategic assets such as petrochemical company PETKIM and built an oil refinery called STAR. An Azerbaijani media company with close ties to Aliyev also launched a news channel, Haber Global, in Turkey in 2018.

Arastun Orujlu, a former Azerbaijani intelligence officer, said Aliyev also changed course in his foreign policy.

“The West in time has distanced from Azerbaijan due to its repressive domestic policies,” Orujlu said. “He had to make a course correction in 2015. Aliyev has been balancing Russia with the Western support. He is now in need of Turkey to do so.”

Turkish officials say by the time clashes erupted between Azerbaijan and Armenia last July, the preparations for an annual joint military drill with Baku were already underway.

“We have already had F-16s deployed in the country and then there was a ground military drill with tanks and everything else,” the official added.

A second Turkish official said the presidential elections in the United States had created fertile ground for Ankara to craft a plan for Baku to capture the territories. While Washington and the rest of the world were distracted by the elections, Azerbaijan suddenly had enough time and space to make its move.

“We have offered to sell them armed drones since last year. But our Azerbaijani counterparts refused to purchase them,” said a third Turkish official.

“They had considerations with the Western powers and it could be even about Israel. They didn’t want to damage their relations. But now they were in need, almost forced to get our help by the circumstances.”

Turkey had many perks to offer: A batch of seasoned armed drones that could destroy the heavily fortified battlefront; a strategy shaped by experienced senior commanders who had fought in Syria and Libya; advanced weaponry such as precision-guided missiles; and Syrian mercenaries that added to the boots on the ground.

For everyone in Ankara, it was almost natural for Turkey to do something for Azerbaijan. Since the fall of the Soviet Union, Turkey had always wished to expand its role in the Caucasus and Central Asia, where a number of Turkic republics emerged. 

Asirov, the journalist, said Turkey has been excluded from the Caucasus since Ottoman times.

“Turkey has always been part of the Minsk Group, but Russia and Armenia have always blocked Turkey from getting any meaningful role,” Bryza, the former ambassador, said. “Turkey has long aspired to have [access] to Azerbaijan and all the way to the Caspian Sea.”

Caught between Russia and Turkey, Armenians say West has abandoned them

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There were some obstacles before Turkey as well.

Turkish officials had strong suspicions about Russian influence in Azerbaijan and its army, with which Moscow has had long-standing deep ties, according to several Azerbaijani experts.

They suspect pro-Russian factions in Azerbaijan's army passed information to Armenia ahead of the July attack on the Ganja Gap, including intelligence on the exact location of high-ranking Azerbaijani military officers.

“The war in 2016 also indicated that there was a pro-Russian faction within the Azerbaijan army,” said Ibadoghlu. “Russian influence is high in the judiciary, military and the police."

Necmettin Sadikov, chief of general staff of the Azerbaijani armed forces, is considered among the pro-Russian ranks. 

Suspicions that Armenia received intelligence from Russia have been made public. An article on the website of a think-tank led by Erdogan’s close military advisor Adnan Tanriverdi in October accused Sadikov of leaking the location of the Azerbaijani officers in the Ganja Gap.

Since last summer, Sadikov, who had been the top Azerbaijani commander for 27 years, has disappeared from sight, and rumours suggest he was informally dismissed from his role.

Ibadoghlu said another high-ranking official, Baylar Eyyubov, chief of the security service for the president, has also disappeared. Several reports allege that he was previously accused of helping some members of the PKK, the Kurdish separatists who have waged a deadly decades-long war against Turkey.

Once the operation started against Armenia on 27 September, the Turkey-backed Azerbaijan army slowly progressed from the south and made concrete gains. However, the pace wasn’t particularly satisfactory for officials in Ankara, where many questioned the training and the reliability of the Azerbaijani army.

Another concern for Turkey was Russia. It was an open secret that Turkey's leadership knew Russian resistance against Azerbaijan's operation could put a stop to the entire offensive.

In October, a Turkish delegation visited Moscow and realised that Russian President Vladimir Putin had no quarrels with Turkey's aims. Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov described Shusha as an “Azerbaijani city”, and only conveyed criticism over the deployment of Syrian mercenaries, according to the Turkish officials.

As the Azerbaijani army neared Stepanakert, the capital of Nagorno-Karabakh known as Khankendi in Azerbaijan, Armenia agreed a ceasefire brokered by Russia and supported by Turkey.

EXCLUSIVE: Azerbaijan, Armenia 'near ceasefire deal' on Nagorno-Karabakh

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“We weren’t part of the negotiations as the deal was getting drafted, but we were consulted,” said the first Turkish official.

One of the 10 November deal's conditions was the opening of a road between Nakhcivan, an Azerbaijani enclave, and Azerbaijan proper, going through Armenia and creating a direct transportation link between Ankara and Baku.

“Everyone thinks this is a strategic victory for Turkey, as if we wanted it,” said the first Turkish official. “We didn’t even know anything about it until we saw the final version of the deal. Yet, we are happy about it.”

However, there was another condition which sparked a huge controversy in Azerbaijan, which was the deployment of Russian forces to Nagorno-Karabakh as a peacekeeping force.

“There has never been a Russian force in Azerbaijan since the fall of the Soviet Union,” said Orujlu. “They aren’t just a ceasefire mission. They have heavy weaponry, they are building permanent military bases that have drones and everything. Russian influence in the region and Azerbaijan will be directly felt.”

Ibadoghlu, the Azerbaijani politician, said the so-called Nakhcivan corridor would also serve Russian interests. “Moscow is trying to have direct access to Iran, as they are trying to extend their influence towards the south,” he said.

Many of Turkey's Nato allies blame Ankara for facilitating a victory for Russia, which didn’t even fire a bullet. There is near consensus in Azerbaijan that a permanent Turkish military presence in the country near Nagrono-Karabakh is needed to balance the increasing Russian influence.

'This is a huge geopolitical shift in Turkey’s favour and I would argue in Nato’s favour'

- Matthew Bryza, former US ambassador

Ankara seems unphased by Russia's presence in the region. Turkey and Russia reached a deal to establish a joint ceasefire observation centre near the Karabakh border earlier this month, but the terms of the deal have been kept secret. “It is only a regular ceasefire observation mission, nothing more,” said the first Turkish official.

Even though it might have helped Russia gain a foothold in Azerbaijan, many in Turkey and in the West believe that the conflict cemented Turkey’s power and role in the region.

“This is a huge geopolitical shift in Turkey’s favour and I would argue in Nato’s favour,” Bryza, the former US ambassador, said. “Turkey’s involvement in the Caucasus politically and militarily is a good thing, and I would argue that it is unequivocally good thing for Nato.”

Orujlu agrees. “Turkey has given an example to the neighbouring Turkic countries that it was reliable and effective,” he said.

“Azerbaijan's people would like to see Turkish soldiers on their soil. This could become a gateway for Turkey to Central Asia.”