Russia’s top brass denies claims Iskander missile systems were used in Karabakh conflict – Military & Defense

TASS, Russia
Feb 25 2021
Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan was misled over the use of Iskander missile systems in Nagorno-Karabakh, Russia’s Defense Ministry said

MOSCOW, February 25. /TASS/. Iskander tactical missile systems were not used during the conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh, Russia’s Defense Ministry reported on Thursday.

"According to objective and reliable data confirmed by the live monitoring and recording system, none of the missile systems of this type was used during the conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh," the ministry said.

The entire ammunition load of these missiles is stored at the depots of the Armenian Armed Forces, the ministry stressed.

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan was misled over the use of Iskander missile systems in Nagorno-Karabakh, Russia’s top brass elaborated.

"To all appearances, Prime Minister of the Republic of Armenia Mr. Nikol Pashinyan was misled and, as a result, he used inaccurate information," the ministry said.

Kremlin refrains from commenting on Pashinyan’s claims of Iskander system inefficiency

TASS, Russia
Feb 25 2021
 
MOSCOW, February 25. /TASS/. Kremlin Spokesman Dmitry Peskov refrained from commenting on remarks by Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, who claimed that Russian-made Iskander tactical missile systems used during the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict allegedly "failed to explode or exploded in only 10% of the cases." According to the spokesman, Russian military equipment has repeatedly proven its efficiency.

We leave this without comments," Peskov said in regard to Pashinyan’s remark. "Russian [military] equipment repeatedly displayed its efficiency in all kinds of locations in the world."

On Tuesday, Pashinyan commented on a remark made by ex-president Serzh Sargsyan that Armenia should have used the Iskander missile systems during the early days of the escalation. Pashinyan suggested that Sargsyan explain why "the fired Iskander missiles failed to explode or exploded in only 10% of the cases."

Later, military experts interviewed by TASS disclosed that Iskander systems were not used during the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict at all.

Armenia first announced procurement of Russian Iskander tactical missile systems in September 2016.

Why is Russia behind Armenia military coup plot?

Mirage News, Australia
Feb 26 2021

Armenia’s prime minister Nikol Pashinyan announced on Thursday the country’s top military officers are plotting a “coup,” and called his supporters to the streets in the capital Yerevan.  The opposition staged a rival rally.

He has rejected calls to resign, saying he needs to ensure the post-war security and economic recovery of the impoverished former Soviet republic of less than 3 million.

Pashinyan has faced protests after losing last year’s war with Azerbaijan over Nagorno Karabakh.

Pashinyan emerged as the leader of a wave of anti-government street protests that rocked Armenia in the spring of 2018, bringing an end to 10 years of rule by Serzh Sargsyan who had close ties to Russia.

Pashinyan, who led what has become known as Armenia’s “Velvet Revolution”, swept Russian-backed elites out of power, promised human rights would be protected, and that corruption and election-rigging would end.

For many Armenians this was the first time since independence from the Soviet Union in 1991 that they were able to believe in a better future, loosen ties with Russia and turn to the west and improve relations with neighbouring countries.

During the revolution, Russia recognized its own limitations and refrained from open involvement to not to lose its key foothold for Russia in the South Caucasus.

Although underground activities to rock the boat and end what Russia calls “George Soros project” , Russia mostly adopted a wait-and-see approach.

Russia has accused the billionaire investor George Soros of  masterminding “color revolutions”  that toppled authoritarians in several countries of the former Soviet Union. Indeed, Vladimir Putin has grown obsessed with the color revolutions that have brought down other strongmen regimes, including next door in Ukraine. He reportedly views them as covers for Western-backed coups, worrying that he could be next.

During the street protests, Pashinyan rode anti-Russian sentiment, corruption and poverty, criticized Armenia’s dependence on Russia and the advantage that Russia took of Armenia’s weakness and isolation.

Putin and the Russian media under his control have not always treated Pashinyan kindly, have tried to portray every failure as the failure and consequences of the velvet revolution.

The current crisis has its roots in Armenia’s humiliating defeat in heavy fighting with Azerbaijan over Nagorno-Karabakh that erupted in late September and lasted 44 days.

Nagorno Karabakh is internationally recognized as part of Azerbaijan but was captured along with several adjacent regions by Armenia and was in control of ethnic Armenians from 1994 to 2020.

Russia had long sought to place its “peacekeepers” in the region and had offered a peaceful solution package under which Armenia would return most of lands it had captured from Azerbaijan in 1990s and let Russia deploy its military to the areas where ethnic Armenians live.

Russia covertly supported Armenia in its conflict with Azerbaijan, but more or less kept a show of political balance and refrained from extending open political and military support to Armenia as it also needed warm relations with Azerbaijan and its green-light for the peacekeeping mission.

By playing strategically to earn some points with Azerbaijan, Russia also sought to increase its influence and “peacemaker role” in what it calls its “near abroad” where Azerbaijan is the largest, most populous and most resources-rich country which it hopes to attract to its Eurasian Economic Union (Armenia is already a member) to one day re-create the Soviet Union.

During the war, Putin deliberately waited for Azerbaijan to achieve certain territorial gains to weaken Pashinyan in Armenia so that he can use its own influence in Yerevan to oust him and install another Armenian leader more pliable to Russia’s wishes.

Eventually on the midnight of November 10, 2020, the leaders of Armenia, Azerbaijan and Russia signed the Russian-brokered deal to end the 44-day war in which the Azerbaijani army routed Armenian forces.

Under the deal, as Russia had long sought, Russian peacekeepers were deployed in the areas of Nagorno Karabakh where ethnic Armenians live, Azerbaijan got back part of Nagorno Karabakh plus 7 adjacent regions, including 3 from which Armenia withdrew without a fight.

Pashinyan has defended the peace deal as a painful but necessary move to prevent Azerbaijan from overrunning the entire Nagorno Karabakh region, and to ensure the peace in the South Caucasus region to move forward.

This week Nikol Pashinyan  questioned the effectiveness and quality of Russian weapons, especially Russia’s most boasted-about Iskander ballistic missile (NATO name SS-26 Stone) used by his country during the recent conflict against Azerbaijan.

He said Iskander missiles the army fired “didn’t explode on impact or rather only 10% did”, drawing harsh reactions from top Russian officials and the Kremlin-controlled media.

Some top military officers, including the deputy chief of the General Staff rushed to criticize the PM for publicly discussing sensitive military matters.

Pashinyan fired the deputy chief of the General Staff, Lieutenant General Tiran Khachatryan.

The General Staff responded with a statement demanding Pashinyan’s resignation and warned the government against using force against the opposition protesters.

Pashinyan responded by firing the General Staff chief Colonel General Onik Gasparyan, and later took to the streets of the capital, Yerevan, in a bid to rally supporters behind him. Thousands came out in support of Pashinyan.

After the statement, Pashinyan dismissed the General Staff chief Colonel General Onik Gasparyan although the country’s President Armen Sarkisian has so far refused to approve his the dismissal request.

Talking to his backers on Republic Square in the heart of Yerevan, Pashinyan said  any change in power must take place “only through elections”.

“The army is not a political institution and attempts to involve it in political processes are unacceptable,” he said.

He told his supporters he mulled over his resignation.

“But then I said that I did not become prime minister of my own free will, but that the people decided so. And the people must decide the issue of my departure. Let the people demand my resignation, let them shoot me in the square, ” he said at the rally.

He also threatened those behind the coup and demonstrations attempt with arrests if they cross the read line, hinting at the old elite (two former presidents Serzh Sargsyan and Robert Kocharyan who have close ties to the Kremlin).

“Those who robbed people will not return”.

“If somebody goes beyond the line of political statements, they will be arrested”.

Meanwhile, Russian President Vladimir Putin’s spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Moscow was monitoring the situation in Armenia with “concern”.

NATO urges democracy in Armenia

Middle East Monitor
Feb 25 2021
– Middle East Monitor

NATO encouraged democracy in Armenia on Thursday amid growing tension between the military and prime minister, Anadolu Agency reports.

"We are closely monitoring developments in our partner country Armenia. It's important to avoid words or actions that could lead to further escalation," NATO spokesperson Oana Lungescu said on Twitter.

"Any political differences should be resolved peacefully & democratically and in line with Armenia's constitution," she added.

The remarks follow the Armenian military's demand for Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan to resign.

Army Chief of General Staff Onik Gasparyan, along with other senior commanders, released a statement Thursday that called for Pashinyan to step down.

Pashinyan responded by labelling the demand a coup attempt and urged his supporters to take to the streets to resist.

READ: Russia and Turkey open monitoring centre for Nagorno-Karabakh

The unrest follows the end of a military conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan last fall widely seen as a victory for Baku.

Relations between the former Soviet republics 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.

During the six-week conflict, which ended with a Russian-brokered truce, Azerbaijan liberated several strategic cities and nearly 300 of its settlements and villages from Armenian occupation.

Before this, about 20% of Azerbaijan's territory had been under illegal Armenian occupation for nearly three decades.

Putin calls for restraint in Armenian political crisis: Ifax – International

AHRAM Online, Egypt
Feb 25 2021
Reuters , Thursday 25 Feb 2021
 
Russia's President Vladimir Putin called for restraint from all sides in the Armenian political crisis in a phone call with Armenia's Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, the Interfax news agency quoted the Kremlin spokesman as saying on Thursday.

Pashinyan has called on his opponents to stop protesting and invited them to hold talks to discuss the political crisis earlier on Thursday, after the military called on Pashinyan and his government to resign.

Live Updates: PM Pashinyan Says Armenian People Will Not Allow Military Coup

Sputnik
Feb 25 2021
© REUTERS / ARTEM MIKRYUKOV
World

09:14 GMT 25.02.2021(updated 13:19 GMT 25.02.2021) Get short URL

Earlier in the day, the general staff demanded Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan's resignation and warned him against using force against the Armenian people.

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan announced that he had sacked the chief of the armed forces' general staff, Onik Gasparyan.

Nikol Pashinyan assessed the general staff's calls as an attempt to stage a military coup and had invited his supporters to gather at the Republic Square in Yerevan. He also pledged to address the nation soon.

The Armenian Defence Ministry's spokesman, Gevorg Altunyan, declined to comment on the armed forces' statement.

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  • 19:46

    WASHINGTON (Sputnik) – The United States is watching the situation in Armenia very closely and is calling on all sides to exercise restraint, State Department spokesperson Ned Price said on a press briefing, held on Thursday.

    “We are of course aware of recent developments in Armenia. We are following the situation very closely ,” Price said at a briefing. “We urge all parties to exercise restraint and to avoid any escalatory or violent actions. We remind all parties of the bedrock democratic principle that [a] state’s armed forces should not intervene in domestic politics.”

     

  • 18:36

    Iran is closely monitoring the developing political situation in neighbouring Armenia, expecting all parties to exercise restraint, Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Saeed Khatibzadeh said on Thursday.

    "We closely follow the situation in Armenia," Khatibzadeh said in a statement, extending a call on "all parties" to exercise restraint.

    Supporters and opponents of Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan staged new demonstrations in Yerevan earlier in the day. This followed a series of high-profile military layoffs, including of army chief of staff Onik Gasparyan and deputy chief Tigran Khachatryan, who mocked the prime minister's controversial comment about the alleged failure of Russian-supplied Iskander missiles during the conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh.

    The military demanded that Pashinyan step down, which the prime minister slammed as an attempted coup.

  • 16:08

    Russian President Vladimir Putin and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan discussed the situation in Armenia by phone, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on Thursday.

    The phone conversation took place at the initiative of the Armenian side.

    "The situation in Armenia was discussed … Putin spoke in favour of maintaining order and calmness in Armenia, resolving the situation within the framework of the law," the spokesman said.

    "The head of the Russian state also called on all sides for restraint," Peskov added.

    Another political crisis erupted in Yerevan after Pashinyan's careless words about Russian missile systems Iskander. The deputy chief of Armenia's general staff, according to media reports, ridiculed the prime minister, for which he was dismissed, and the chief of the general staff was offered to resign as well. On Thursday morning, the Armenian Armed Forces issued a statement demanding the resignation of Pashinyan himself. The prime minister regarded this as an attempted coup and called on his supporters to take to the streets. In the meantime, the opposition has erected barricades and set up a tent camp near the parliament, they are not inclined to negotiate with the authorities and demand the resignation of the prime minister.

  • 15:35
  • 14:22

    Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan wrapped up his rally and urged all political forces to start consultations, a Sputnik correspondent reported Thursday.

    "From this moment on, we have finished our events and we expect our colleagues in the opposition to do the same," the prime minister said, adding that he was going back to the government building.

    Pashinyan led a rally of his supporters through the streets of Yerevan for the second time in one day. Earlier on Thursday, the General Staff of the Armed Forces demanded that Pashinyan resign.

  • 14:05

    Armenian opposition leader Vazgen Manukyan on Thursday urged for barricading the streets next to the parliament amid the standoff between the government and the General Staff of the Armed Forces.

    Earlier in the day, the General Staff demanded that Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and his government resign.

    "We are not leaving, we are staying here and blocking the streets with barricades so that lawmakers would come and send him [Pashinyan] packing. To waste this opportunity would be to lose the country," Manukyan said.

  • 13:55

    Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said Thursday he had given up the idea of early parliamentary elections, although he had entertained it before.

    "Upon your request, I am taking the idea of early legislative elections off the table," the prime minister said at a rally with his supporters.

  • 13:41

    The Armenian Defence Ministry said Thursday that any attempts to get armed forces involved in political activity were unacceptable.

    "Armenian Armed Forces guard the borders of the homeland to the fullest of their abilities and ensure their security. The armed forces are a non-political entity and any attempts to get the armed forces involved in any political activity are unacceptable," the ministry said in a statement.

  • 13:28

    Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan on Thursday said his opponents might face arrests if they crossed any lines from statements to action.

    "If someone crosses the line from political statements, they will be arrested. No more velvet," Pashinyan said at a rally.

    Pashinyan came to a power as a result of a so-called velvet revolution.

  • 12:57

    Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said on Thursday at a rally in Yerevan it was up to the people to decide if he should step down.

    Earlier in the day, Armenia's general staff demanded Pashinyan's resignation in the wake of his decision to sack the first deputy chief of the general staff.

    "It is only up to the people to decide if I should step down," Pashinyan stressed.

    The prime minister recalled he had invited the opposition to study the possibility to hold snap parliamentary elections, but the opposition made use of it to escalate tensions.

    "It is only up to the people to address such issues. Let the people demand, let the people judge me," Pashinyan said.

  • 12:46

    Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan called on the general staff chief, Onik Gasparyan, to step down voluntarily, as President Armen Sargsyan has not signed the decree on his dismissal.

    "I held a phone conversation with the president and I told him he should sign my petition to fire [Gasparyan]. If he does not sign it, does it mean he joins the coup?" Pashinyan said at a rally in Yerevan.

    The prime minister called on Gasparyan to step down voluntarily.

    "I expect either the president to sing the decree, or the chief of the general staff to resign on his own. Then I will start political consultations with the sharpest critics," Pashinyan noted.

  • 12:42

    President of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev said Thursday that the situation in neighboring Armenia had never been worse and the country was in that state because of its leadership.

    "Armenia has never been in such a pitiable state. It is their leadership that got them to this place," Aliyev said, as quoted by his press service.

  • 12:38

    Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said on Thursday that the army cannot get involved in any political process, since it must obey the people and the elected government.

    "The army cannot participate in political processes. The army must obey the people and the authorities that were elected by the people," Pashinyan said at a rally in Yerevan.

    The Armenian leader stressed that the previous governments had some "stooges" in the armed forces and called on them to leave.

  • 12:27
  • 12:25

    Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan called on the military on Thursday to fulfill their duties and focus on protecting the country's borders and territorial integrity.

    "I order all the soldiers, officers and generals to mind their business and protect borders and Armenia's territorial integrity," Pashinyan said.

    The prime minister also expressed confidence that the Armenian people would never allow a coup.

  • 12:23

    Armenian warplanes on Thursday flew over the capital of Yerevan during rallies of supporters and opponents of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan amid a political crisis in the country, a Sputnik correspondent reported.

    The military aircraft flew over Liberty Square, and the opposition supporters who gathered there welcomed this move.

  • 11:59

    Armenian President Armen Sargsyan said on Thursday he was already taking steps to de-escalate tensions and secure a peaceful settlement to the conflict between the government and the military.

    "I am urgently initiating steps to reduce tensions and find a peaceful solution," Sargsayn said in a statement, released on his official website.

    The president called on Armenians not to fall for provocations.

    "Our people cannot afford a discord, we must reject any attempt to destabilize the country," Sargsayn continued.

    The Armenian leader asked all the state bodies, law enforcement agencies, political forces and the people to exercise restraint. According to  Sargsayn, a single ill-considered word is enough to deepen the crisis.

  • 11:52

    Armenian opposition leader Vazgen Manukyan, who used to serve as prime minister and defenсe minister, expressed the belief on Thursday that the events enfolding in his country were not an attempt to overthrow the government.

    "This is not a coup, the army has a constitutional right to point at the key enemy who jeopardizes Armenia's safety, and it did point to him, saying that this is [Prime Minister] Nikol Pashinyan," Manukyan said at an opposition rally.

    The opposition figure called on the police and security agencies to side with the army.

    According to Manukyan, Armenia's "agonizing" authorities are trying to "pit people and the army against each other."

    "We must purge Pashinyan and restore our homeland through common effort," Manukyan added.

  • 11:41

    Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavorv and his Armenian counterpart, Ara Ayvazyan, held a phone conversation on the developments in Armenia on Thursday, and Lavrov expressed hope for a peaceful settlement of the political crisis, triggered by disagreements between the government and the military, the Russian Foreign Ministry said.

    "The Russian side stressed that we see the situation as Armenia's domestic issue and hope it will be settled peacefully," the ministry added.

    Ayvazyan briefed Lavrov on the latest developments, the ministry said.

  • 11:31
  • 11:30

    The general staff of the Armenian armed forces said on Thursday its earlier statement calling for resignation of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan was not made under any pressure.

    "This is a clear conviction, the position of generals and officers, whose only goal is to contribute to the salvation of our motherland at this critical moment. We once again confirm our clear position," the general staff said.

  • 11:14
  • 11:11

    Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan assured on Thursday that attempts to stage a coup in his country would not succeed.

    "No," Pashinyan told reporters at an online press conference, when asked if a coup was possible.

    Pashinyan is currently marching the streets with his supporters in Yerevan. He earlier pledged to make a statement at the Republic Square, where a rally of his supporters will be held, at 4 p.m. local time (12:00 GMT).

    A new wave of protest rocks Yerevan, as the armed forces requested Pashinyan's resignation in the wake of his decision to fire the deputy chief of the general staff.

  • 11:10

     Turkey sees the events enfolding in Armenia as an attempt to stage a coup, which it resolutely condemns, Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said on Thursday.

    "Wherever a coup takes place, we condemn this. We condemn this attempt [to stage a coup in Armenia] resolutely. Criticizing the government and calling for its resignation is normal, while overthrowing the government with army assistance is unacceptable, as well as mere calls [to overthrow the government]," Cavusoglu said during his working visit to Budapest,

    Stability in Armenia is vitally important for the implementation of the Karabakh ceasefire, therefore Turkey closely follows the developments in Yerevan, the foreign minister continued.

  • 10:47

    Former Armenian President Robert Kocharyan called on the people on Thursday to support the military, calling on Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan to step down.

    "Authorities who lost the war and gave up our land must step down. This is the key condition for our national revival," Kocharyan said.

    Kocharyan, who headed the country between 1998 and 2008, called on Armenian citizens to side with the armed forces.

  • 10:38
  • 10:36
  • 10:30

    The president of the self-proclaimed Nagorno-Karabakh Republic, Arayik Harutyunyan, is currently in Yerevan and is ready to mediate a political crisis that emerged due to disagreements between the Armenian government and the military.

    "I call on all the sides to show composure and sanity. Otherwise, our defeat will deepen and become more fatal. Stop that, we have shed so much blood. Now it is time to soften the crisis and follow the path of long-term development and strengthening," Harutyunyan said, expressing concerns over the political situation in Armenia.

    Andranik Kocharian, the head of the Armenian parliament’s defense and security committee from the ruling My Step Faction, dismissed Harutyunyan’s offer of mediation.

    "There is no need for this. We can solve our problems on our own. Arayik Harutyunyan should instead focus on the security of Artsakh," he said, calling the breakaway region by its preferred name.

  • 10:28

    Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan expressed the belief on Thursday that the situation in the country was manageable and called for avoiding clashes despite differences.

    "The army obeys the people and the prime minister," Pashinyan told reporters.

    Asked about the possibility of civilian clashes, the prime minister noted that "there is always such a threat."

    "But we must agree that this will not be the case. There are no enemies inside Armenia. There are some issues we should certainly discuss," Pashinyan continued.

    Asked if a coup could take place in the country, the prime minister assessed the situation as "manageable" and expressed the belief that the armed forces' move was motivated by their strong emotional reaction.

    "Even those whom I sacked remain my brothers, they are soldiers of our homeland," Pashinyan concluded.

  • 10:17

    Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said on Thursday, amid tensions between the government and the military, that he and his family had no intentions to leave the country.

    "I hope you have already got used to the information terror. They keep spreading different rumors, they claim we have prepared an aircraft and are going to flee. We are here and we will not leave our homeland no matter what happens. My family is here," Pashinayn said, while marching with his supporters in Yerevan.

  • 10:10
  • 10:02

    Opposition political party Prosperous Armenia supported on Thursday the general staff's "game-changing" demand for Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan's resignation and called on the head of the government to step down immediately.

    "The statement of the armed forces and the general staff, calling for standing side by side with the people and the statehood is a game-changer. We call on Nikol Pashinyan not to go toward a civil war, not to shed Armenian blood inside the country, not to sow discord among Armenians. Nikol Pashinyan has the last chance to step down politically with no shocks," Prosperous Armenia said in a statement.

  • 09:34

    The Kremlin follows with concern the developments in Armenia, where tensions are escalating between the government and the military, but considers the situation to be the country's internal affair, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on Thursday.

    "We watch the developments in Armenia with concern. We believe this is exclusively an internal affair of Armenia, which we see as a very important and close ally in the Caucasus," Peskov said at a briefing.

    The Kremlin calls on all the sides in Armenia to exercise restraint and act in compliance with the constitution, Dmitry Peskov said.

    "We are certainly calling on everyone to exercise restraint. We believe the situation should not go beyond the constitutional framework," Peskov said at a briefing, commenting on the developments in the neighboring country.

  • 09:15
  • 09:14

Armenian army demands prime minister resign | TheHill

The Hill, DC
Feb 25 2021

Armenia’s army has demanded the resignation of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan over his management of a six-week conflict with Azerbaijan.

The conflict took place in 2020 in the Nagorno-Karabakh, an enclave internationally considered part of Azerbaijan but which has a majority ethnic Armenian population. The 2020 fighting ended with Armenian forces ceding territory to Azerbaijan, leading to calls for Pashinyan’s resignation. The prime minister has said he takes responsibility for the outcome but will not step down, Reuters reported.

The army officially called for the prime minister’s resignation Thursday, saying “the ineffective management of the current authorities and the serious mistakes in foreign policy have put the country on the brink of collapse.”

It specifically cites his decision to fire the first deputy head of the Armenian army’s general staff.

Pashinyan rejected the army’s call for his resignation and said the demand constituted an attempted coup. “The most important problem now is to keep the power in the hands of the people, because I consider what is happening to be a military coup,” he said in a Facebook livestream.

Pashinyan said in his livestream that he has fired the head of general staff of the armed forces, which also requires the approval of President Armen Sargsyan.

The prime minister then addressed a crowd of thousands of supporters outside the main government building in the capital of Yerevan. “The danger of the coup is manageable,” Pashinyan said, according to Reuters. “We don’t have enemies inside Armenia. We have only brothers and sisters.”

Pashinyan is set to deliver additional remarks later in the day.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov told his Armenian counterpart that the Kremlin, which has a military base in the former Soviet state, is closely monitoring the situation but considers it a domestic matter at this point, according to Reuters.

Pashinyan, Putin discuss the situation in Armenia

Public Radio of Armenia
Feb 25 2021
– Public Radio of Armenia

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan had a telephone conversation with Russian President Vladimir Putin.

The situation in Armenia was discussed.

Vladimir Putin attached importance to maintaining peace and order in Armenia, resolving the situation within the framework of the law.

The Russian President called on all parties to show restraint.

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan today warned of an “attempted military coup,” after the country’s armed forces said he and his cabinet must resign.

The army “must obey the people and elected authorities,” he told thousands of supporters in the capital Yerevan. The opposition staged a rival rally.

Russian peacekeepers assisted in the resumption of the operation of the Lachin hydroelectric power station

Panorama, Armenia
Feb 25 2021

As part of the implementation of the trilateral statement of the President of Russia, the President of Azerbaijan and the Prime Minister of Armenia dated November 9, 2020, Russian peacekeepers continue to assist in the restoration of peaceful life in Nagorno-Karabakh, the Russian Defense Ministry reported on Thursday. 

As a result of the previously reached agreements, the machinery room of the Lachin (Berdzor) hydroelectric power station was in the zone of responsibility of the Russian peacekeepers, and the dam of the hydroelectric power station in the territory passed under the control of Azerbaijan.

With the assistance of the command of the Russian peacekeeping contingent, the work of the hydroelectric power station was resumed; at present, the Russian peacekeepers ensure the safety and unhindered access of power engineers to carry out maintenance work on the units and systems of the power plant. This allows the supply of electricity to nearby settlements, as well as the city of Stepanakert.

President has not signed Pashinyan’s decree on relieving Chief of the General Staff of his duties

Panorama, Armenia
Feb 25 2021

President of Armenia Armen Sarkissian has received the decree of PM Nikol Pashiyan on relieving Onik Gasparyan of his duties as the Chief of the General Staff of the Armenian Armed Forces. 

As the Administration of the President told the media, the president has not signed the decree yet.

To note, Pashinyan sacked the Chief of the General Staff shortly after the top military leadership Armenia demanded the resignation of the Prime Minister and his government in a statement on Thursday.