Prime Minister gets acquainted with construction works of the Ashtarak-Talin road section of the "North-South" project

 19:18,

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 15, ARMENPRESS.  Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan on December 15 visited Aragatsotn region and got acquainted with the construction works of the Ashtarak-Talin 34 km road section of the "North-South" project implemented with the support of the Asian Development Bank, the Prime Minister's Office said.

The construction works of the project started on November 13 of the current year. On the instructions of the client, the works started from the outskirts of the Nerkin Bazmaberd community to the Talin community.

Thanks to the efficient organization of work, large-scale work was completed in the 10-kilometer section in a short time. Work on marking and equipping the specified area is being completed. As a result, on the mentioned 10-kilometer section the traffic will be one-way.

Deputy Foreign Minister Paruyr Hovhannisyan meets Paraguayan counterpart

 19:33,

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 15, ARMENPRESS. Deputy Foreign Minister of Armenia Paruyr Hovhannisyan on December 14 had a meeting with the Vice Minister of Foreign Relations of Paraguay Wilma Patricia Frutos Ruiz, who was in Yerevan to participate in the Ministerial Meeting of Landlocked Developing Countries, the foreign ministry said.

During the meeting, the Armenian side underscored its interest in developing multifaceted relations with Paraguay. In this regard, the Deputy Minister mentioned that in the nearest future the Embassy of Armenia in Montevideo will be jointly accredited to the Republic of Paraguay, and will definitely contribute to the bilateral agenda.

According to the source, the Deputy Foreign Minister of Paraguay expressed her gratitude for the hospitality and reiterated her country's interest in developing relations with Armenia.

During the meeting, the interlocutors discussed the prospect of developing the Armenia-Paraguay agenda on bilateral and multilateral platforms.

It is noted that the Deputy Minister briefed on the current security situation of Armenia, as well as the process of normalization of relations between Armenia and Azerbaijan. The efforts of the Government of Armenia towards addressing the needs and rights of the Armenians forcibly displaced from Nagorno-Karabakh as a result of the ethnic cleansing by Azerbaijan were emphasized.

Current developments in Latin America and the South Caucasus, as well as a number of urgent issues were touched upon during the meeting.




Armenian Deputy Foreign Minister participates in the 47th meeting of the BSEC Council of Ministers

 20:24,

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 15, ARMENPRESS. Deputy Foreign Minister of the Republic of Armenia Paruyr Hovhannisyan on December 5 participated in the 47th meeting of the Council of Ministers of Foreign Affairs of the Organization of the Black Sea Economic Cooperation (BSEC) held online, the foreign ministry said in a statement.

Commending the achievement of the agreement on important issues reached under the current presidency, particularly the adoption of the 2024 budget, the completion of the process of updating the fundamental document “BSEC Economic Agenda”, and the reactivation of the Project Development Fund (PDF).

In his statement, Paruyr Hovhannisyan presented the national macroeconomic policies and legislative reforms and emphasized Armenia’s continuous strong economic growth as well as significant increase of foreign trade volumes, including with several BSEC member states.

According to the source, Hovhannisyan reiterated Armenia’s position on unblocking the communication links in the region on the basis of sovereignty, territorial integrity and national jurisdiction. The Deputy Minister briefed on the “Crossroads of Peace” project, recently presented by the Armenian Government, which, through regional connectivity, will contribute to strengthening economic cooperation and political dialogue between the countries of the region. 

The Deputy Minister drew the participants’ attention to the issue of the flow of more than 100,000 forcibly displaced refugees from Nagorno-Karabakh to Armenia in September this year, which seriously affected Armenia’s socio-economic development. He highlighted the measures by the Government of Armenia to address the life-saving and early recovery needs of the refugees, among them 30 thousand children, with the support of the international partners.

It is noted that the Council of Ministers endorsed a number of important resolutions and decisions and at the conclusion, the Chairmanship-in-Office of BSEC was handed over to Albania.




Yerevan New Year Tree lighting ceremony to be held on December 19

 20:26,

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 15, ARMENPRESS. The New Year Tree lighting ceremony will be held on December 19 in Yerevan’s Republic Square, at 19:30 to the music of Aram Khachatryan.

 Yerevan Mayor Tigran Avinyan  said on social media.

In addition to the main Christmas tree of the Republic, the lights of the  streets and bridges in the administrative districts of the capital will also be lit.

 Yerevan Mayor noted that on the same day, a Christmas fair will be opened in Yerevan 2750th Anniversary Park.

If You Thought Dubai Was a Bad Place for COP, Wait Until It Goes To Azerbaijan

Dec 14 2023
JEVA LANGE
When the announcement came that COP29 will be held in Baku in 2024, the immediate reaction in the climate community was “again?!

It wasn’t that Azerbaijan — a nation of about 10 million people, situated on the Caspian Sea at the southern tail of the Caucasus mountains — had hosted the global climate summit before. Actually, it almost didn’t get the 2024 hosting gig at all: COP29 was briefly homeless after Russia vowed to block Bulgaria’s bid (because Bulgaria is part of the European Union) and longtime enemies Azerbaijan and Armenia vowed to block each other’s bids (because of what many have characterized as an ethnic cleansing). Other nations in the region balked at the sheer size of what the COP event has become. At one point, even Australia and Bonn, Germany, were on the table as potential COP29 replacements if the Eastern European bloc couldn’t pull things together.

But, rather amazingly, it did. That means — as countless headlines have blared, and as you’re undoubtedly already aware — that the United Nations summit intended to assess and progress the goal of limiting climate change will be held in an oil and gas-producing state for the third consecutive year. Cue the groans.

That is reason enough for hand-wringing, especially after a record turn-out of fossil fuel lobbyists at the convention this year, not to mention the scandal over the head of ADNOC leading the whole shebang. But if you thought all that was absurd and disturbing, wait until you hear about Azerbaijan.

“It’s stunning to me that they would make Baku the next place for COP,” Ronald Suny, a distinguished professor emeritus of History at the University of Michigan and an expert on the South Caucasian nations who’s written extensively about Azerbaijan, told me.

Yes, Azerbaijan is a petrostate. But more alarmingly, it is also even more repressive and authoritarian than the United Arab Emirates based on the scale developed by Freedom House, a human rights watchdog group. “Azerbaijan is not even a one-party state,” Suny explained. “It’s a one-person or one-family state.”

To make a long and complicated history very short, former First Secretary of the Communist Party of Azerbaijan Heydar Aliyev came to power after the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1993 and eventually passed his title of head of state onto his onlyson, Ilham Aliyev, in “irregular” elections in 2003. Ilham Aliyev is still president today, and will remain so indefinitely. “There’s no dissent allowed,” Suny said. “There’s absolute control of the media — much stricter than Russia. Anyone who criticizes [the government] is either in jail or in exile. And lots of people are in jail.”

On the one hand, having COP29 in Baku could be viewed as a small positive. “For years, climate change has been a factor…in wars and conflicts,” reads one effusive lead paragraph in The Associated Press. “Now for the first time, it’s part of a peace deal.” True, the attention from the UN helped to spur a prisoner exchange and peace talks between Azerbaijan and Armenia following renewed bloodshed over the contested Nagorno-Karabakh region earlier this fall. It’s also likely that Azerbaijan will be on its best behavior ahead of the UN convention, given that it’s now under a higher-than-usual level of international scrutiny. Giving Baku the convention “is not necessarily a bad thing,” argues Rashmee Roshan Lall, an international affairs columnist, on her blog, “because it shows that COPs reflect the diversity of the world in which we live and seek to preserve.”

But allowing COP29 to happen inAzerbaijan also helps to legitimize and sanitize Ilham Aliyev’s ruleThis is why other authoritarian regimes from Russia to Saudi Arabia to Qatar and Dubai have vied to host global events such as the soccer World Cup and the Olympics. Since 2012, Baku has played host to the Eurovision Song Contest, the First European Games, and the Formula 1 Grand Prix, according to Gubad Ibadoghlu, a senior policy analyst at Azerbaijan’s Economic Research Center, writing for the website Crude Accountability. The government in Baku explicitly “tries to whitewash its damaged image in the international arena by ‘paying attention to modernization’ and by creating connections with global leaders in the sphere of sports and culture,” Ibadoghlu said.

Suny sees the same thing happening now with COP. “It could be that Azerbaijan, which has tried and worked very hard to refurbish and beautify its image, will benefit from such an event and will be happy to put on a good face,” he said. And as Ibadoghlu pointed out, Azerbaijan has spent a huge amount of money on this program over the years. “It’s a very rich state and it can divert its resources — because it certainly doesn’t go into the people — to building extraordinary buildings,” Suny added. By allowing COP to be held in a country that viciously cracks down on dissent and free speech, then, the UN is not only turning a blind eye to but actively assisting what is basically a twisted form of greenwashing.

Curiously, estimates indicate that Azerbaijan might not be an oil state for much longer. The nation is expected to deplete its supply and sole source of wealth within the next 25 years — an involuntary phase-out by 2050, if you will. According to a World Bank report published two weeks ago, “urgent action on climate” — including investing in renewable energy, prioritizing energy efficiency, and climate-proofing its agricultural sector — “can help Azerbaijan minimize the risks emerging from the global low-carbon transition and protect the living standards of its people.”

In that sense, at the least, Baku needs COP. Now we have to wait to see what it does with its chance.

Meet the lobbyists fronting for Azerbaijan in Washington

Dec 14 2023
REPORTING | WASHINGTON POLITICS

Senate Foreign Relations Committee chair Sen. Ben Cardin (D-Md.) recently sent a letter to Secretary of State Antony Blinken urging him to get tougher on Azerbaijan for its “brazen campaign of ethnic cleansing in Nagorno-Karabakh.”

This follows an earlier statement from Cardin, shortly after Azerbaijan’s September “lightning offensive” against Nagorno-Karabakh, that called for the U.S. to “halt security assistance to Azerbaijan,” and increase humanitarian support for the 100,000 ethnic Armenians who fled en masse from Nagorno-Karabakh.

As of this writing, neither of those things has occurred and the Biden administration has done little to address Azerbaijan’s military aggression. While there are undoubtedly myriad reasons for the U.S. government’s lukewarm response, one possible explanation is one of Washington’s oldest pastimes: lobbying. For years, the Azerbaijan government has been financing a well connected lobbying and influence operation in the U.S. that has worked diligently to keep U.S. military assistance flowing and to ensure that policymakers turn a blind-eye to the country’s consistent human rights violations.

As documented in a just released Quincy Institute brief, The Lobbying Battle for Nagorno-Karabakh, the government of Azerbaijan has spent millions of dollars on registered lobbyists and much more on illicit influence operations that have helped foster and maintain support for Baku across Europe and the U.S.

“The United States will not countenance any action or effort – short-term or long-term – to ethnically cleanse or commit other atrocities against the Armenian population of Nagorno-Karabakh,” was an assurance from then-Acting Assistant Secretary of State for European Affairs Yuri Kim in testimony to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on September 14.

Just five days later, the U.S. did exactly what Kim said it would not, standing idly by on September 19 as Azerbaijan launched an “anti-terrorist” operation against what remained of Armenian Nagorno-Karabakh, leading to the ethnic cleansing of over 100,000 of its residents as they fled to the neighboring Republic of Armenia.

The territorial dispute over Nagorno-Karabakh — the mountainous breakaway region internationally recognized as part of Azerbaijan but self-governed by Armenians — now appears over as the de facto officials announced that all institutions will be dissolved on January 1, 2024. These developments followed what had been a year of Azerbaijani escalation against Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenia proper, including an Azerbaijani blockade of Nagorno-Karabakh which lasted almost 10 months and saw the territory’s food, medical, and energy supplies all but run out. When Baku launched its military assault, Washington and Brussels were only able to muster strongly worded statements, but no meaningful reaction.

Don’t count out Azerbaijan’s influence operations in Washington for helping to thwart what should have been a stronger response on Capitol Hill and in the White House. The government of Azerbaijan has spent over $7 million on lobbying and public relations firms registered under the Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA) since 2015, according to OpenSecrets. Chief among the Azerbaijan lobby’s hired guns is BGR Government Affairs, one of Washington’s top lobbying firms, which is contracted to serve as a liaison for the Azerbaijan Embassy in the U.S.

FARA filings reveal that the firm contacted congressional offices more than 1,000 times on Azerbaijan’s behalf in just the first half of 2023, and that their work included efforts “to ensure there were no negative Azerbaijan amendments on the National Defense Authorization Act” and “fair language for Azerbaijan” in the appropriations process. More generally, BGR “educated policymakers in Congress about the important role Azerbaijan plays as a key security partner of the United States.”

In 2018, BGR signed an agreement with another lobbying firm — Baker, Donelson, Bearman, Caldwell, and Berkowitz — to aid its efforts on behalf of the Azerbaijan Embassy. An analysis of that firm’s FARA filings shows that they’ve been laser focused on the State, Foreign Operations Subcommittee of the House Committee on Appropriations, which is responsible for, among many other issues, determining how much U.S. military assistance flows to Armenia and Azerbaijan.

Overall, it would seem both firms have been successful at allowing Azerbaijan to dodge criticism and continue to receive millions of dollars in security assistance every year.

Most notably in 2023,the Azerbaijan Embassy hired The Friedlander Group, whose namesake Ezra Friedlander has been a prominent American-Israeli lobbyist for years, rubbing shoulders with a number of top policymakers, including former President Donald Trump. When he was hired by Azerbaijan he immediately put his connections to work, according to his firm’s FARA filing, securing meetings with dozens of congressional offices, including even a face-to-face meeting with Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.).

This is just the tip of the iceberg for Azerbaijan’s influence operations in the U.S. As documented by the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP), the Azerbaijan government has a history of laundering its influence in Europe and the U.S. The “Azerbaijani Laundromat,” as described by the OCCRP, was “a complex money-laundering operation and slush fund that handled $2.9 billion over a two-year period through four shell companies.” This 2012-2014 scheme which involved funneling government funds through shell companies, included payments to several pro-Azeri Americans, one of whom later pleaded guilty to concealing the fact that a congressional trip to Azerbaijan he’d helped organize was secretly funded by the State Oil Company of Azerbaijan Republic (SOCAR).

Azerbaijan’s often illicit influence operations in Europe have dubbed it “caviar diplomacy,” given the country’s repeated attempts to bribe European officials with all manner of luxury goods, including caviar. At least one investigation resulted in FBI agents raiding the home of the co-chair of the Congressional Azerbaijan Caucus, Henry Cuellar (D-Texas), in January 2022.

Armenians have also sought to influence the U.S. public debate surrounding Nagorno-Karabakh. However, this has been done at a significantly smaller scale than their Azerbaijani counterparts, and the main actors of Armenian lobbying efforts in the U.S. have been the estimated one to two million diaspora Armenians in the U.S.

In the early 1990s, during the First Nagorno-Karabakh War, the Armenian diaspora in the U.S. achieved its first major political victory via Section 907 of the 1992 Freedom Support Act, which explicitly prohibited the vast majority of U.S. assistance from the Act to post-Soviet Azerbaijan until Baku “cease[es] all blockades and other offensive uses of force against Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh.”

However, in 2002, as the “Global War on Terror” was heating up, Azerbaijan was granted a waiver for Section 907 that has allowed over $160 million of U.S. security assistance to flow to the country ever since.

Nevertheless, during the war in 2020, Armenians boycotted lobbying and PR firms working for Azerbaijan and, in 2021, President Joe Biden recognized the systemic mass killings of Armenians during World War I as genocide, a long-standing priority of the Armenian diaspora in the U.S. More recently the Senate unanimously passed the “Armenian Protection Act,” that would cut off aid to Azerbaijan for at least two years.

For Armenians, these developments are viewed as too little too late, however, as Azerbaijan has already achieved what it wanted in Nagorno-Karabakh with little international pushback. This result is likely due in no small part to Azerbaijan’s concerted influence operations in the U.S. For years, the lobbyists on Azerbaijan's payroll have worked to keep U.S. military assistance flowing to the country and to tip the scales of U.S. support in their favor.

While they may not have “won” this influence battle they have no doubt done enough to keep the U.S. on the sidelines of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.


Editor's Note: Artin Dersimonian was an intern at the Armenian Embassy in Washington in 2018. The Terjenian-Thomas Assembly Internship Program at the Armenian Assembly — which is mentioned in the QI brief on which this article is based — facilitated Dersimonian's internship with the embassy.

Parliamentary Friends of Armenia Group formed in Victorian State Parliament

Dec 15 2023

MELBOURNE: In historic news, a Parliamentary Friends of Armenia Group has been formed for the first time in the Parliament of the Australian state of Victoria, and will be co-chaired by South Eastern Metropolitan Region Upper House parliamentarians, Michael Galea MP and Ann-Marie Hermans MP, reported the Armenian National Committee of Australia (ANC-AU).

The group, which consists of 18 Victorian Parliamentarians, will be convened by Hermans and Galea, both of whom serve the largest concentration of Armenian-Australians in Victoria.

In addition, Liberal Member for Rowville, Mr Kim Wells MP, who also boasts a sizeable Armenian-Australian community in his electorate, will assume the role as Secretary of the group.

Members of Victoria’s Armenian-Australian community, who were present at the 2023 ANC-AU Advocacy Week event in Melbourne, were informed of the historic establishment of the group, which has been in the pipelines since the 2022 Victorian State Elections.

Executive Director of the Armenian National Committee of Australia, Michael Kolokossian, welcomed the formation of the group.

He said, “Prior to 2023, the last time an Armenian-Australian issue was raised in the Victorian parliament was in 2006. In 2023, we witnessed five Parliamentarians go on the record of the Armenian Genocide, two parliamentarians visit the Republic of Armenia and two speeches on Artsakh being delivered on the floor of the Victorian Parliament. Now we are pleased to hear of the formation of the Parliamentary Friendship group.”

“We express our sincere thanks to our parliamentary friends, including Mr Galea, Ms Hermans and Mr Wells, whose collective ongoing efforts helped us reach this milestone. Thank you for your ongoing support and we look forward to working with the co-chairs and all members of the cohort in 2024,” Kolokossian added.

The formation of the Parliamentary Friends of Armenia in Victoria, takes the number of friendship groups across the country to three, with similar groups in the New South Wales Parliament (co-chaired by Dr Hugh McDermott – Member for Prospect and Mr Tim James – Member for Willoughby) and in the Federal Parliament (co-chaired by Mr Jerome Laxale – Member for Bennelong and Hon. Paul Fletcher – Member for Bradfield).

https://www.anc.org.au/news/Media-Releases/Parliamentary-Friends-of-Armenia-Group-Formed-in-Victorian-State-Parliament

Armenia and Azerbaijan are Finally Talking Directly. Is Peace Next?

The National Interest
Dec 15 2023

Armenia and Azerbaijan's willingness to engage directly may suggest that the region is finally on the cusp of being ready for geopolitical prime time.

by Damjan Krnjević Mišković

Earlier this week, Azerbaijan was elected unanimously by UN member states to serve as the host country for COP29—the world’s premier climate change summit or “conference of the parties”—which will take place in late 2024. This makes Azerbaijan the first former Soviet republic and only the second state belonging to the Eastern European Group (one of five UN “regional groups” that rotate the distribution of various top posts and the chairmanship of various bodies within the UN system) to be granted this responsibility.

Of even greater significance is the fact that this unexpected outcome was one of two concrete results of the first-ever, directly negotiated written agreement between Baku and Yerevan, not only regarding each other’s leadership in interstate bodies and organizations but also on the ongoing peace process that began in the wake of the Second Karabakh War (September 27, 2020–December 10, 2020).

The December 7, 2023, joint statement announcing this breakthrough consists of two basic elements. The first declared the withdrawal of Armenia’s candidacy to host COP29 and its unconditional support of Azerbaijan’s bid, while also calling on other countries to support the latter. In return, Azerbaijan agreed to support Armenia’s bid to become one of eleven members of the COP Bureau—a subsidiary body that mainly assists the COP presidency in process management matters. The background here is that Yerevan had sought to host COP29 once it became clear that Russia would break the necessary consensus on any EU or NATO member state belonging to the UN’s Eastern European Group to host the world’s annual climate summit (in this case, Bulgaria) due to diplomatic tensions with the West arising from the conflict over Ukraine. Yerevan’s candidacy—announced last year—had prompted Baku to do the same this past summer, which had further complicated matters.

Azerbaijan’s successful election to host COP29 reinforces my contention that Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev teaches a longstanding masterclass in statecraft and that his classroom is located in one of the world’s toughest, most unforgiving neighborhoods. It also lends further credence to my argument that Azerbaijan has become an indispensable country for the advancement of Western and Turkish strategic connectivity (and energy security) ambitions in Eurasia, or what I have argued should better be described as the “Silk Road region.”

My assessment of the growing importance of Azerbaijan builds on one of the most striking judgments made by Zbigniew Brzezinski in his 1997 book, The Grand Chessboard, in which he called Azerbaijan the “cork in the bottle containing the riches of the Caspian Sea basin and Central Asia.” Two recent underappreciated events speak to the growing salience of this point: the first-ever participation of Azerbaijan’s president in the September 2023 Dushanbe summit of the Central Asian heads of state and the first-ever summit of the heads of state of countries belonging to something called the UN Special Program for the Economies of Central Asia (SPECA). The latter was held in Baku, where Aliyev stated that “Azerbaijan and Central Asia represent a single historical, cultural and geopolitical space, with increasing strategic significance.” A few days later, at a major conference attended by sixty think-tank experts from thirty countries organized by ADA University and the Center of Analysis of International Relations (AIR Center), Aliyev had added that “now, with this [high-level] political interaction and concrete projects, we can create a synergy. We are doing that, and we talk about the political interaction.”

Indeed, the scale and scope of the plans now being laid (largely away from public view) may call to mind some of the initial arrangements that had been undertaken in other geographies in decades past, including the Association of Southeastern Asian Nations, the Nordic Council, the Gulf Cooperation Council, and, going back much further in time, the Hanseatic League. One of many recent pieces of evidence in this regard is the June 2023 agreement between Azerbaijan, Georgia, and Kazakhstan that should amount to a logistics and regulatory compact. In this context, it may be useful to recall that the focus of the original European Economic Community was on fostering economic interdependence—without sacrificing political sovereignty—through a reduction of trade barriers, the establishment of an embryonic customs union, and common arrangements regarding agriculture, transport, and the like.

This strategic possibility should not be as surprising as it may appear at first blush. Together with Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan, Azerbaijan belongs to the troika of the Silk Road region’s middle powers or “keystone states” (the term was coined by Nikolas Gvosdev in 2015 and refined in 2020). The next logical step would be trilateral summits between the heads of state of those three countries, building on the achievements of the inaugural trilateral meeting held between the ministers of economy and energy of those same three states in Baku on November 14, 2023. Should peace between Armenia and Azerbaijan be reached, this critical region would find itself one step closer to becoming—in the next decade or so—an autonomous subject of international order rather than remaining an object of major power rivalry.

To make this case properly is beyond the scope of this essay, but it is sufficient for present purposes to note that, for the first time in centuries, the strategic reality of the Silk Road region is one of “geopolitical heterogeneity,” as Vasif Huseynov put it in mid-2020. This, in turn, suggests that outside power agenda-setting in the Silk Road region may be on the way out—with implications for the future course of somewhat competing flagship projects like the EU’s Middle Corridor and Global Gateway, on the one hand, and the China-led Belt and Road Initiative, on the other.

The key here is to take seriously the qualitative distinction between a transport corridor and an economic corridor: the former conception relegates the Silk Road region to the status of a multimodal thoroughfare while the latter envisions the region as contributing substantially to the value chain of goods and services that would thus not merely traverse from east to west and vice versa, but also be produced or assembled in part in the region itself. There is obviously much work to be done in this context, but a recent World Bank report—which had been preceded by one issued by the EBRD—suggests recognition by major political and financial players that the latter option is the one now in play. The fulfillment of the potential of unique bodies like the Alat Free Economic Zone and the Astana International Financial Centre would also advance this proposition.

All this indicates that something of truly geostrategic importance is taking place in the Silk Road region. The cumulation of these and other developments, which are unlikely to bear fruit in the short term, may very well require the major outside powers—Western and non-Western alike—to no longer harbor aspirations of domination, primacy, sphere of interest, or anything similar. What I wrote in these pages in May 2023 still may be true today: “the South Caucasus [is] the sole geopolitical theater in which the White House and the Kremlin are presently not in overt opposition, which suggests a tacit realization by each that their respective interests in this part of the world are not entirely incompatible.” The fact that an “off-diary meeting” between U.S., EU, and Russian envoys to the Armenia-Azerbaijan peace process took place in Istanbul on September 17, 2023 speaks to this point, even if its outcome was reported to be unsuccessful.

That is the strategic context within which we can now turn to the second element of the December 7, 2023, joint Armenian-Azerbaijani statement, which speaks directly to the peace process itself. I refer to a very concrete confidence-building step, namely the exchange of military servicemen by the two sides (thirty-two Armenians for two Azerbaijanis). The text implies that this prisoner release on December 13, 2023, is but the first of “tangible steps towards building confidence between two countries,” including future meetings, with concrete results, of two “state commissions” (one on the delimitation of the state border and another on border security). There also could be talks on unblocking road and rail links between the countries, including what Baku calls the “Zangezur corridor,” while stating explicitly that Armenia and Azerbaijan “will continue their discussions regarding the implementation of more confidence-building measures, effective in the near future, and call on the international community to support their efforts that will contribute to building mutual trust between two countries and will positively impact the entire South Caucasus region.”

This last passage can be interpreted to mean that Baku and Yerevan now see an advantage to continuing peace talks directly, without foreign intermediaries—that is to say, without Russia as a “mediator,” the EU as a “facilitator,” and the United States as a “supporter,” as they style themselves, respectively.

I believe this is due at least in part to Yerevan coming to terms with the deleterious consequences of the West’s (and particularly France’s) rather quixotic flirtation with Armenia—a country that remains locked in an unhappy marriage with Russia with no short-term perspective whatsoever for separation, much less divorce, given the country’s geopolitical and geoeconomics realities. Azerbaijan is unwilling to participate in a negotiating process involving third parties it sees as violating the basic precondition of an intermediary, i.e., neutrality (Aliyev rather directly articulated this position during the aforementioned ADA University-AIRCenter conference, a full transcript of which is available here). The same passage from the December 7, 2023, joint statement may also suggest that Armenia and Azerbaijan recognize both the political and practical limits of the 2+3 format for talks (the 3 here are Iran, Russia, and Turkey), which was made manifest most recently on October 23, 2023 at a meeting hosted by Iran.

However, the foregoing does not necessarily mean that Baku and Yerevan have shut out foreign intermediaries from the peace process for good (except for France, whose exclusion from the normalization process Aliyev has explicitly indicated). As the text of the aforementioned joint statement indicates, this appears to be going in the right direction: “[we] share the view that there is a historical chance to achieve a long-awaited peace in the region. The two countries reconfirm their intention to normalize relations and to reach a peace treaty on the basis of respect for the principles of sovereignty and territorial integrity.” Rather, what it does suggest is that both Armenia and Azerbaijan seem to have reached a level of mutual trust and understanding whereby substantive progress on a treaty text is not predicated on the direct involvement of one or more outsiders, who, after all, can be expected to have distinct interests from those of the two sides themselves.

https://nationalinterest.org/feature/armenia-and-azerbaijan-are-finally-talking-directly-peace-next-207984

Armenian Foreign Minister Discusses Prisoner Return Conditions Amid Ongoing Diplomacy

bnn
HongKong
Dec 15 2023

By: Momen Zellmi

In an unfolding diplomatic saga, Armenian Foreign Minister, Ararat Mirzoyan, has asserted that the conditions governing the return of detainees remain unchanged. This revelation comes in the wake of a dialogue with ‘Azatutyun’ (Freedom), wherein questions regarding the repatriation of captives were raised.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and his wife, Anna Hakobyan, recently met with the kin of war prisoners from the Shirak region. These individuals have recently been repatriated to Armenia. Pashinyan extended his gratitude towards the relatives for their patience and assured that every possible measure would be implemented to help the returned prisoners reintegrate into normal life. In response, the relatives expressed their appreciation for the government’s sustained efforts.

The exchange involved 31 RA servicemen, captured between 2020 and 2023, along with one serviceman from Nagorno-Karabakh, detained in September 2023. All have successfully traversed the Azerbaijani-Armenian border and are currently in the Republic of Armenia. This exchange was facilitated as a part of an agreement encapsulated in a rare joint statement between Armenia and Azerbaijan. Interestingly, the deal also entails Armenia relinquishing its veto of Azerbaijan hosting the COP29 UN Climate Change Conference next year.

Armenia has expressed its readiness to sign a peace treaty with Azerbaijan before the close of this year, indicating a desire for diplomatic resolution. The Speaker of the National Assembly of Armenia, Alen Simonyan, voiced a similar sentiment to journalists. However, he also suggested that Azerbaijan is seemingly complicating the peace treaty process. Amid these developments, expectations for the implementation of the ‘second component’, as referenced by Foreign Minister Mirzoyan, are now on the horizon, though the details of this component remain undisclosed. The return of the remaining 32 Armenian prisoners of war from Azerbaijani captivity is expected soon, underscoring the ongoing international diplomacy and negotiations revolving around the issue of detainees.

Armenia singer Ara Martirosyan cause of death reason, biography, age, wife, songs, net worth

Dec 16 2023
On , the world bid farewell to a musical legend as Armenian singer Ara Martirosyan passed away at the age of 46.

The news of the untimely death of Ara Martirosyan due to cardiac arrest sent shockwaves through the music industry and triggered an outpouring of tributes from fans and fellow artists alike.

Ara Martirosyan was born on June 3, 1976, in Yerevan, Armenia. His musical journey began at a young age when he developed a passion for music, learning to play the piano and guitar. He later joined the choir at an Armenian Apostolic Church before graduating from the Yerevan State Conservatory with a degree in music theory and composition.

In 2002, Ara Martirosyan married Mercedes Khachatryan and the couple had two children, a son named Arman and a daughter named Ani. They lived in Yerevan before eventually settling in Los Angeles, California.

In 1998, Ara Martirosyan entered the music industry by joining the musical group Song State Theatre. The year 1999 marked a significant milestone in his career with the release of his first single, “Arevik,” which quickly became a hit in Armenia. Over the years, Ara released several popular tracks with the album “Nerir” standing out as a fan favorite.

Ara Martirosyan’s contributions to Armenian music were widely recognized, earning him prestigious awards such as the Golden Lyre Award for Best Male Singer in Armenia in 2001, 2003, and 2005. His versatility as an artist was reflected in winning awards at the Armenian Music Awards for Best Pop Album and Best Pop Song.

Apart from his solo career, Ara Martirosyan made significant contributions to the industry by composing songs for other singers, including Anush Petrosyan, Arsen Safaryan, and Nune Yesayan. His involvement in the music department of the 2011 film “The Fiancé From Circus” showcased his diverse talents.

The singer’s sudden passing left a void in the hearts of fans, fellow artists, and the Armenian music community. His influence will undoubtedly continue to resonate through his timeless tracks, including “Hayastan,” “Siro Ashun,” “Du Es,” “Yes U Do,” and “Imn Es,” among others.

Ara Martirosyan’s funeral took place on December 18, 2023, at the St. Mary Armenian Apostolic Church, and he was laid to rest at the Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Hollywood Hills, California.

Ara Martirosyan was estimated to have a net worth close to $5-10 million.

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