Azerbaijan, Turkey Watching Armenia’s Political Crisis

Jamestown Foundation
March 3 2021

Viewed from Baku and Ankara, the political conflict in Armenia pits military and civilian nationalists unreconciled to defeat in the Second Karabakh War (September 27–November 9, 2020) versus the armistice-accepting government of Nikol Pashinian. As the former seek to oust the latter from power (see EDM, February 25, 26, March 1), the governments of Azerbaijan and Turkey view Armenia as facing a choice between relentless hostility toward its Turkic neighbors or cooperating with them to lift Armenia from entrenched poverty.

The latter option, however, is conditioned on Armenia’s compliance with the terms of the November 10, 2020, tripartite declaration that ended the war. Those terms refer to the ceasefire in Karabakh and region-wide transportation projects in the South Caucasus that would include Armenia. Subject to Yerevan’s observance of the armistice terms, Ankara and Baku would lift the blockade they have maintained since 1993 in response to Armenia’s occupation and ethnic cleansing of Azerbaijani territories.

Baku and Ankara would clearly prefer to deal with Pashinian’s government in the interest of normalization of relations and regional cooperation. Simplifying their choice is the fact that Russia acts to consolidate the new status quo (at least for the time being); Moscow also clearly prefers to deal with Pashinian’s government rather than its opponents. While proverbially incompetent at governing, Pashinian complies with the armistice at this stage and does not thirst for revanche (he had provoked the recent war through political blunders rather than nationalist grand designs).

By contrast, the opposition rejects the armistice terms. Most opposition forces are associated with former governments inspired by past-oriented nationalism and territorial ambitions vis-à-vis Azerbaijan and Turkey. Symbolizing that legacy, former prime minister and defense minister Vazgen Manukian leads the 17-party opposition alliance (Fatherland Salvation Movement) while former presidents Robert Kocharian and Serge Sarkissian support the opposition unofficially with their still-considerable media and organizational resources. The opposition groups gathering on a daily basis in Yerevan’s Republic Square mainly represent the former regime’s political personnel, the national-patriotic intelligentsia, and retired military officers and war veterans.

The opposition portrays the armistice as shameful and unacceptable to Armenia, the retrocession of territories to Azerbaijan as an act of state treason, and Pashinian as an enemy of the nation, himself “a Turk.” Those opposition members see Turkey as betting on Pashinian’s government and the latter as playing Ankara’s alleged game. They are, moreover, suspicious of region-wide transportation projects with Azerbaijan and Turkey. The anti-government forces are, in effect, opposing armistice terms agreed upon between Moscow and Baku, supported by Ankara, and accepted by a Russian-approved government in Yerevan. The Armenian Armed Forces’ command has not expressed its views on the November 10, 2020, tripartite declaration, but the generals want the government that accepted those terms to resign from office (News.am, Armenpress, Arminfo, February 24–March 3).

All this can only reinforce Baku’s and Ankara’s choice to bet on Pashinian’s government (albeit on the conditions stated) and hint at that choice publicly, though careful not to offer ammunition to Pashinian’s opponents.

Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev has made known the authorized interpretation of the ongoing confrontation in Yerevan and the potential for region-wide cooperation from Baku’s perspective. In so doing, he has implicitly signaled Baku’s relative preference for Pashinian (warts and all) over his nationalist and military opponents. Addressing a large visiting group of international journalists, Aliyev offered the following theses (Azertag, February 26–28), with follow-up authorized commentaries echoing the same points (1News.az, Haqqin.az, February 28, March 1, 2).

  • Armenia in its current crisis presents an “embarrassing, tragicomic” picture of mismanagement and disorder, both on the government’s and the opposition’s side. It is reminiscent of Azerbaijan’s own chaos in 1992–1993 under the Popular Front government. (Aliyev had already offered this analogy on the morrow of the November 10 armistice, “for the edification of today’s youth,” equating the Popular Front’s then-leader Abulfaz Elchibey and Pashinian as revolutionary demagogues too incompetent to govern.)
  • Armenia’s former leaders bidding to return to power today—Sege Sarkissian, Robert Kocharian and former defense minister (2008–2016) Seyran Ohanian—“are war criminals” who occupied Azerbaijani territories. The “Kocharian-Sarkissian junta” ruled Armenia for 20 years, “brainwashing it” and “leading it to the precipice.” Under their rule (1998–2018), “Armenia lost the main features of state independence, it came to resemble a colony.” The underlying cause for this was their “occupation policy” directed at Azerbaijan.
  • At the present time, however, the armistice declaration “is being implemented, and it must be implemented [a half-nod to Pashinian].”
  • Armenia has no resources for economic recovery unless it cooperates with Azerbaijan and Turkey; “there is simply no other way.” “Any attempts at non-compliance with the declaration would gravely damage Armenia. This is why I do not particularly worry that a change of government in Yerevan would stop the declaration’s implementation.”
  • The Russian president’s signature on the November 10 declaration should ensure Yerevan’s compliance with its terms. “Armenia’s dependence on Russia is ten times greater than it was before this war. Will Armenia dare to disregard the Russian president’s signature? [The onus is on the Kremlin to discipline its client.]”
  • Demonizing Azerbaijan has been counterproductive to Armenia in the first place. Innocent people in Armenia fell prey to anti-Azerbaijani propaganda. They will need time to understand and heal.
  • Azerbaijan needs a durable peace in order to restore and expand transportation routes and trade. In that case, Armenia will realize the advantages of peace. For this, “I warn, Armenia must fully implement the armistice terms, without attempts at revanchism.”
  • This will be a step-by-step process. If the Armenian government cooperates, “We may at some stage sign a peace treaty.”
  • A threat now exists that “a revanche party may come to power in Armenia and go to war against Azerbaijan… This would be a disaster for them” (Azertag, February 26, 28).

Turkey’s government, for its part, has refrained from commenting on Armenia’s power struggle except on the day when it broke out publicly in Yerevan, February 25. Many international observers initially perceived that event in Yerevan as a military coup. Ankara was no exception to that misunderstanding, but the Turkish government is especially sensitive to military coups, given its own—and the ruling Justice and Development Party’s (AKP)—experience with military interventions and coup attempts in Turkey itself (most recently in 2016).

In that light, and also as a declared general principle, Ankara hastened to condemn the perceived military coup in Yerevan. President Recep Tayyp Erdogğan, his top advisor İbrahim Kalın, spokesperson Fahrettin Altun and Foreign Minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu issued parallel, closely coordinated statements, condemning the perceived military coup attempt in Yerevan. According to Erdoğan, even if the people of Armenia seek the government’s resignation, overthrowing it would be unacceptable. “Any change of government in Armenia should be up to the people to decide” (Anadolu Agency, Daily Sabah, February 25, 26).

It became apparent within hours, however, that the Armenian generals’ move lacked the features of a military coup attempt (see EDM, February 25).

Other than taking a strong stand on the question of a military coup, the Turkish government has thus far withheld comments on Armenia’s compliance with the armistice terms or the country’s internal political situation.

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The president will announce his decision in the coming hours – Artur Vanetsyan

Panorama, Armenia
March 3 2021

The meeting of the representative of the opposition Homeland Salvation Movement with the President of Armenia Armen Sarkissian has ended. 

“We met with the president and discussed the issue of submitting the draft decree on dismissing the Chief of the General Staff of the Armed Forces to the Constitutional Court. The President took note of our position and informed he would announce about the decision in the coming hours,” Vanetsyan told reporters. 

Earlier, the representatives of the opposition demanded an urgent meeting with the President. As the Movement said in a released statement, they considered the president’s position on the Chief of the General Staff of the Armenian Armed Forces  quite concerning. The statement came, after President announced he had applied  to the Constitutional Court with a request to determine the constitutionality of only the law “On the Status of Military Service and Servicemen” but failed to turn to the Court to determine the compliance of the decree decree itself on relieving the Chief of the General Staff of his duties.  

There is one provocateur in our country and his name is Nikol Pashinyan, opposition politician says

Panorama, Armenia
March 3 2021

“We have never resorted to provocations and will never do. There is only one provocateur in our country and his name is Nikol Pashinyan,” the coordinator at opposition Homeland Salvation Movement Ishkhan Saghatelyan told reporters on Wednesday. 

Saghatelyan’s remarks came when asked to comment on the heightened security measures undertaken in the vicinity of the building of the National Assembly with opposition staging a rally with the central Baghramyan avenue shut down and barricaded for the sixth consecutive day. 

Saghatelyan noted that Pashinyan’s movement in Armenia is now possible only accompanied by large police forces which has been the result of all his actions being in power. 

The opposition representative stressed that Pashinyan will bear full responsibility for any incident that may happen and its iconsequences. 

“We will never make provocations since this is a matter of national political struggle for us, and our aim is to complete this cause. “

To note, Pashinyan is expected to visit the National Assembly at 16.30 where the cabinet members are set to hold a Q/A session with lawmakers. 

Recital by pianist Hayk Melikyan to open spring concert season of National Center of Chamber Music

Panorama, Armenia
March 2 2021

Armenia’s National Center of Chamber Music announces the opening of its spring concert season with a recital by Hayk Melikyan, an outstanding pianist and Honored Artist of Armenia.

The concert will take place on March 3, at 7pm, at the Komitas Chamber Music House. The concert will feature compositions by F. Chopin, R. Schumann, F. Liszt, P. I. Tchaikovsky and R. Wagner, the National Center of Chamber Music reported.

“I am heartily dedicating this concert program to the memory of my teacher, professor, pianist Alexander Gurgenov. He would have turned 70 this year. By the way, I have included works of exclusively romantic composers in the program, on which I worked with my teacher years ago. I am also very happy to announce my return to this beautiful concert hall. We have been deprived of a proper instrument before, that was the reason I was not performing in this hall for many years. This is a symbolic and responsible concert for me,” says Hayk Melikyan.

“We are extremely happy that the long-awaited Yamaha grand piano has finally arrived in the Chamber Music Hall. From now on, the piano evenings will be properly organized for the benefit of both the performer and the audience. As a manager, this was of significant importance for me, we are grateful to the government of Japan, the Ambassador of Japan to the Republic of Armenia, Mr. Jun Yamada for this wonderful present,” says Alexander Plato Hakobyan, the Pianist’s manager.

Dutch parliament passes motion calling on government to recognize the Armenian, Syriac, and Pontic Greek genocides of 1915

Greek City Times
Feb 26 2021
by Gct
Dutch Parliament Passes Motion Calling On Government To Recognize The Armenian, Syriac, And Pontic Greek Genocides Of 1915 – Greek City Times

Dutch parliament today passed a widely supported motion calling “on the government to recognize the Armenian Genocide.”

Dutch Member of Parliament Joël Voordewind (ChristenUnie) and his cosponsors submitted motion 21501-02-2277 stating,

“Noting that the Dutch government still does not recognise the Armenian genocide of 1915 [perpetrated] by the Ottoman Empire (in which also the Arameans, Assyrians, and the Pontic Greeks were victims);”

“Whereas the Tweede Kamer [Dutch parliament] has already unanimously recognized the Armenian genocide since 2004 with the Rouvoet motion, followed thereafter by explicit recognition by parliament through the Voordewind et al. motion in 2018, the House of Representatives believes that there is more urgency than ever for countries to clearly speak out about the past in order to advance reconciliation and prevent repetition in the future;”

“and calls on the government to recognize the Armenian Genocide.”

The Sayfo Genocide of 1915 was committed by the Ottoman Turks and Kurds against the Syriac people and occurred parallel to the genocides of Armenians and Greeks, which was not only reduced to the region of Pontus, but all Greeks in the Ottoman Empire.

1.5 million Armenians, more than 300,000 Pontic Greeks and up to another 700,000 other Greeks, as well as 300,000 of the regions estimated 700,000 Syriacs (Assyrians-Chaldeans-Arameans) were massacred during the Ottoman genocide.

More than 200,000 were forcefully displaced or deported south.

READ MORE: Book Review: “The Genocide of the Greeks in Turkey” is a MUST READ book.



Yerevan rally: Police colonel apprehended

News.am, Armenia
Feb 20 2021

Law enforcement officers have apprehended a member of the VETO social-political movement, Police Colonel Robert Melkonyan.

On February 20, Freedom Square will host a rally of the Homeland Salvation movement. Citizens demanding the resignation of Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan are marching from different parts of Yerevan to Freedom Square.

Krisp nearly triples fundraise with $9M expansion after blockbuster 2020

Tech Crunch
Feb 16 2021

Image Credits: Bryce Durbin / TechCrunch

Krisp, a startup that uses machine learning to remove background noise from audio in real time, has raised $9M as an extension of its $5M A round announced last summer. The extra money followed big traction in 2020 for the Armenian company, which grew its customers and revenue by more than an order of magnitude.

TechCrunch first covered Krisp when it was just emerging from UC Berkeley’s Skydeck accelerator, and co-founder Davit Baghdasaryan was relatively freshly out of his previous role at Twilio. The company’s pitch when I chatted with them in the shared office back then was simple and remains the core of what they offer: isolation of the human voice from any background noise (including other voices) so that audio contains only the former.

It probably comes as no surprise, then, that the company appears to have benefited immensely from the shift to virtual meetings and other trends accelerated by the pandemic. To be specific, Baghdasaryan told me that 2020 brought the company a 20x increase in active users, a 23x increase in enterprise accounts and 13x improvement of annual recurring revenue.

The rise in virtual meetings — often in noisy places like, you know, homes — has led to significant uptake across multiple industries. Krisp now has more than 1,200 enterprise customers, Baghdasaryan said: banks, HR platforms, law firms, call centers — anyone who benefits from having a clear voice on the line (“I guess any company qualifies,” he added). Enterprise-oriented controls like provisioning and central administration have been added to make it easier to integrate.

Image Credits: Krisp

B2B revenue recently eclipsed B2C; the latter was likely popularized by Krisp’s inclusion as an option in popular gaming (and increasingly beyond) chat app Discord, though of course users of a free app being given a bonus product for free aren’t always big converters to “pro” tiers of a product.

But the company hasn’t been standing still, either. While it began with a simple feature set (turning background noise on and off, basically) Krisp has made many upgrades to both its product and infrastructure.

Noise cancellation for high-fidelity voice channels makes the software useful for podcasters and streamers, and acoustic correction (removing room echos) simplifies those setups quite a bit as well. Considering the amount of people doing this and the fact that they’re often willing to pay, this could be a significant source of income.

The company plans to add cross-service call recording and analysis; since it sits between the system’s sound drivers and the application, Krisp can easily save the audio and other useful metadata (How often did person A talk versus person B? What office locations are noisiest?). And the addition of voice cancellation — other people’s voices, that is — could be a huge benefit for people who work, or anticipate returning to work, in crowded offices and call centers.

Part of Krisp’s allure is the ability to run locally and securely on many platforms with very low overhead. But companies with machine learning-based products can stagnate quickly if they don’t improve their infrastructure or build more efficient training flows — Lengoo, for instance, is taking on giants in the translation industry with better training as more or less its main advantage.

With AI translation service that rivals professionals, Lengoo attracts new $20M round

Krisp has been optimizing and reoptimizing its algorithms to run efficiently on both Intel and ARM architectures, and decided to roll out its own servers for training its models instead of renting from the usual suspects.

“AWS, Azure and Google Cloud turned out to be too expensive,” Baghdasaryan said. “We have invested in building a data center with Nvidia’s latest A100s in them. This will make our experimentation faster, which is crucial for ML companies.”

Baghdasaryan was also emphatic in his satisfaction with the team in Armenia, where he and his co-founder Arto Minasyan are from, and where the company has focused its hiring, including the 25-strong research team. “By the end of 2021 it will be a 45-member team, all in Armenia,” he said. “We are super happy with the math, physics and engineering talent pool there.”

The funding amounts to $14 million if you combine the two disparate parts of the A round, the latter of which was agreed to just three months after the first. That’s a lot of money, of course, but may seem relatively modest for a company with a thousand enterprise customers and revenue growing by more than 2,000% year over year.

Baghdasaryan said they just weren’t ready to take on a whole B round, with all that involves. They do plan a new fundraise later this year when they’ve reached $15 million ARR, a goal that seems perfectly reasonable given their current charts.

Of course startups with this kind of growth tend to get snapped up by larger concerns, but despite a few offers Baghdasaryan says he’s in it for the long haul — and a multibillion dollar market.

The rush to embrace the new virtual work economy may have spurred Krisp’s growth spurt, but it’s clear that neither the company nor the environment that let it thrive are going anywhere.

CivilNet: Emile Ghessen On His Time in Artsakh and His Upcoming Karabakh War Documentary Film

CIVILNET.AM

February 5, 2021 9:00 p.m

British documentary filmmaker Emile Ghessen looks back on his time in Artsakh, as he prepares to leave Armenia. Emile had been covering the war for 3 months, and is preparing to release a documentary film on the 2020 Karabakh War. Emile himself has covered other military conflicts, and has served in Afghanistan and Iraq as a Royal Marine. 

Turkish press: In Spain, virtuoso violinist pays tribute to war-torn Lebanon childhood

In the garage where he sought shelter from bombs in his native Lebanon, Ara Malikian discovered the power of music.

The bearded and heavily tattooed 52-year-old paid homage to this childhood hiding spot in his latest album released online in January called “Petit Garage”.

“It was a place full of rats and cockroaches,” he said during an interview with AFP in Madrid where he has lived for the past two decades.

“We would hear the bombs, it was a very dramatic situation and suddenly some of us started to make music, others to sing, everyone dancing,” he added.

“I saw how music and art changed people’s mood, gave them hope, joy. We forgot all our sorrows, the war and the bombs.”

Born in Beirut in 1968 to an Armenian family, Malikian started playing the violin at a very young age, encouraged by his violinist father who has performed with legendary Lebanese singer Fairuz.

“From the moment I was born, he put a violin against my chin and, whether I liked it or not, I had to play it,” he recalled.

“Luckily I fell in love with this instrument, so I had no psychological problems,” he added with a smile.

“It is true that my father was very strict, very severe, he forced me to study and practice for hours since I was very little.”

The hours of work turned him into a prodigious musician and allowed him to go to Germany to perfect his skills.
But there he found a “very, very conservative” world of music conservatories which did not appeal to him.

“I had to earn a living so I secretly played in bars and nightclubs,” said Malikian, adding he learned the importance of being “mad and open-minded” during this period.

He recalled feeling embarrassed because he did not know who The Doors were when asked to play the U.S. rock band’s music at a “transvestite bar”.

So in addition to hours of practising the classical repertoire, he began to learn pop and rock songs.

“It was thanks to these jobs that I was able to get out of this very closed world of classical music,” said Malikian whose repertoire includes classical, gypsy and Arabic influencies.

“And while I still play classical music, I see music as music, not just as a tin can which is classic music.”

Malikian has even performed a version of famous Icelandic singer Bjork’s hit “Bachelorette” which replaces the sound of her voice with that of his violin.

The pandemic caught Malikian while he was in the middle of a world tour, forcing him to call it off.

He had already performed at the French capital’s famed Olympia concert hall but still had engagements in Moscow, Milan or Buenos Aires.

Malikian spent Spain’s strict national virus lockdown last year with his son, composing a lot of music which he plans to release in another album.

He has resumed giving concerts in Spain where concert halls have reopened although with strict capacity limits, well-spaced seating policies and rules requiring the use of face masks.

“The concerts were very moving,” he said. “Between the distance and the masks, we thought it would be very hard but it was wonderful because people, despite the fear, came to listen to us and this is very encouraging.”

An advocate for migrants’ rights, Malikian on New Year’s Day greeted passengers at Madrid airport with a surprise concert.

He said he hopes the pandemic will lead to a “more united” world, instead of creating “more borders, more walls and more hatred”.