Ankara Hopes Turkish, Armenian Peoples Can Mend Ties – Defense Minister

April 6 2023

 (@FahadShabbir) 

MOSCOW (UrduPoint News / Sputnik – 06th April, 2023) Ankara hopes that the Turkish and the Armenian peoples can establish relations of friendship and cooperation, Turkish Minister of Defense Hulusi Akar said on Thursday.

Armenia and Turkey, lacking diplomatic relations since 1993, launched the process of normalizing relations in 2022. The root cause of their estrangement has been Turkey’s opposition to the process of international recognition of the 1915 Armenian genocide in the Ottoman Empire.

“Turkey continues to believe that the Turkish and the Armenian peoples, which have lived together in tolerance and peace for centuries, can establish relations of friendship and cooperation,” Akar said, as quoted by Turkish newspaper Aydinlik.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan “has said at every opportunity and every platform” that Ankara is open to an objective inquiry into the events of 1915 by historians, Akar added.

“We repeat our call on this issue. Armenia, like Turkey, should open its archives to historians of international acclaim, come to terms with their findings and not worry about it. However, so far we have received no response to our call,” he said.

The 1915 Armenian Genocide has been recognized by 34 countries to date, including Russia, Argentina, Brazil, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Mexico, and the United States, as well as by the European Parliament and the World Council of Churches. According to estimates, 1.5 million Armenians were killed in the Ottoman Empire in the early 1900s.

Turkey has repeatedly denied the accusations of genocide, claiming that the killings were part of hostilities during World War 1.

https://www.urdupoint.com/en/world/ankara-hopes-turkish-armenian-peoples-can-me-1672227.html

Armenians Used as Proxy Directors by Eastern European Oligarchs

April 6 2023
  • Published: 06 April 2023
    • WRITTEN BY VINICIUS MADUREIRA

Dozens of Armenian citizens acted as proxy directors for a network of companies used by Eastern European oligarchs to move millions of dollars, transfer assets from closed banks abroad, and pay for lobbying services in the United States, according to an investigation by Forensic News and Hetq.

Many of the companies are shareholders of each other and nearly all of them have similar websites that were created by two men. Some of them were directly involved in the Russian Laundromat scandal, which saw US$1 billion stolen.

Registered in Central Europe and Southeast Asia, the companies have been allegedly used in various money laundering schemes to cover up crimes and sponsor political campaigns. Money is moved using invoices for goods such as textiles, equipment, and agricultural items, although there was doubt if any physical exchange of goods ever took place.

Mushegh Jabakhjuryan, who was injured in the Artsakh 2020 war, founded Equimach Sp Zoo, a company registered in Poland in 2017, and serves as its board chairman. His company is one of many that have been created with the data of nearly 100 Armenian citizens, who are not fully aware of the purposes.

When reporters asked Jabakhjuryan about his company, he initially denied having ever traveled to Europe, let alone founding a company there. But when they pointed to the photographs he had posted on social media of himself visiting Europe, he became angry and refused to talk.

His neighbor, Gevorg Setyan, who accompanied him on his European trip, registered the Polish Agrofusion Sp z.o.o. company in his own name. Setyan, who drives a cab in Armenia’s capital, was also involved in the creation of the company, but from contacts with him, reporters concluded that he might have not “understood the bigger picture” of the story he was involved in.

Reporters who interviewed many directors said they don’t want to talk about their European trips or admit who invited them to Europe and for what purpose. Many of them only knew they were invited to Europe by friends, where they stayed in the best hotels and then returned home.

In the case of a company called Agrofusion, reporters found that it has sent and received millions of dollars from Russian, Ukrainian, and Moldovan companies and has accounts at the Polish banks ING Bank Slaski and Bank Ochrony Środowiska S.A.

Agrofusion also acted on behalf of Mountain Group Limited, which has Aleksander Mamut, a Russian oligarch who has been sanctioned by the President of Ukraine, as an ultimate beneficiary.

According to the investigation, Baltic banks are becoming more vigilant towards companies that have accounts in their banks due to previous scandals. Consequently, criminals have shifted their illegal activities to other countries, with the Czech Republic being one of them.

The laxness of Czech law enforcement agencies about company registration requirements is creating gaps, senior analyst at Transparency International in the Czech Republic Marek Chromy told reporters.

But as for Armenia, there are those who are now set on cracking down on such proxy schemes.

“If there is money laundering, wherever it takes place, they [Armenian authorities] will come after those people,” said Ara Ghazaryan, an attorney and specialist in international law.

And while the country will not extradite its own citizens should they commit such crimes abroad, Ghazaryan notes that this kind of protection ultimately will not save them.

“Armenia will be obliged to prosecute them here,” she said.

Armenia fears it will soon be invaded again – with no one to help

Switzerland – April 6 2023

In the shadow of the Ukraine war, another confrontation is brewing on the edge of Europe. The rising petrostate Azerbaijan wants to redraw the political map. Neighboring Armenia is defenseless, as a visit to the disputed border area shows.

Andreas Rüesch, ShurnukhApril 6, 2023
For more articles in English, visit our homepage or sign up for our Weekly Edition newsletter. Please note that the following story was machine translated with minimal editing.

Thick fog clings to the slopes of Shurnukh, but the division of this mountain village can be seen immediately. Three different flags greet you upon entering: the Armenian on a hill, the Azerbaijani one 50 meters further down. However, it is a third power that decides whether a visitor’s journey may continue.

«Your documents, please,» says a voice in Russian. It is a young officer, somewhat surprised at the visit, who has emerged from behind a camouflage net. His uniform identifies him as a member of the Russian border troops who monitor the borders of this mountainous country under an agreement with Armenia. A new-looking armored personnel carrier with the Russian flag underlines who is ensuring a precarious calm here, 2,000 kilometers south of Moscow.

At 1,400 meters above sea level, the drastic changes brought about by the Armenian-Azerbaijani war of autumn 2020 can be seen here from up close. Until then, the village had been far from the front lines. The fact that in communist times someone had drawn an administrative border between the Soviet republics of Armenia and Azerbaijan right here played no role in the everyday life of the 150 inhabitants.

For decades after the collapse of the Soviet Union, Armenians ruled on both sides of the main road – the authorities of the Republic of Armenia in the upper part, and those of the Armenian pseudo-state of Nagorno-Karabakh, which had broken away from Azerbaijan, below. This changed abruptly with the Armenian defeat two years ago: Azerbaijan gained control over seven districts in the west of the country, and Shurnukh suddenly became a divided border village.

When the new masters took position below the road, they forced an exodus from that part of the village. «They just came one morning and gave us until midnight to leave our homes,» says war veteran Ararat Aghabekyan, a resident with a graying beard and military camouflage vest. Aghabekyan packed his things, but he didn’t go quietly. He set fire to his house so that it would not fall into the hands of the enemy, and posted the video of the blazing flames on the internet in protest. He loudly rails against «the Turks,» as the Azerbaijanis are often called here, and the «scoundrel» Ilham Aliyev, the authoritarian head of state of Azerbaijan.

The farmer comes back only on days like today, when he works his field in the Armenian-controlled upper part of the village. New houses are now being built there for the 13 displaced families. However, the construction, which began two years ago, is progressing slowly. This is also due to the tricky logistics; the isolated outpost of Shurnukh can only be reached with a special permit from the Armenian secret service.

Once, vital north-south transit flowed through here, in the form of extensive freight traffic with neighboring Iran, which is only 50 kilometers away as the crow flies. However, the winding road in this area runs along the Armenian-Azerbaijani border – sometimes a few meters to the left of it, sometimes on the other side. The regime in Baku is using this to assert its supremacy here as well. On the way to Shurnukh, a large blue sign at the side of the road makes it clear that we are entering Azerbaijani territory. An Armenian officer in Shurnukh contemptuously dismisses this as grandstanding. However, traffic on this route has come to an almost complete standstill.

Whereas the journey from Shurnukh to the nearest town used to take just over half an hour, those affected now have to take a detour that is four times longer on a narrow side road. Long-distance international traffic is also using this route now. At least, on a rocky spur along this route, you can admire Tatev Monastery, a historic jewel dating back to the 9th century that bears testimony to the long Armenian-Christian presence in the area.

From Tatev, Iranian trucks drive down on winding roads into a 500-meter-deep gorge before climbing up again on the other side. Some of them break down and are left at the side of the road, or are unable to pass by oncoming traffic on the bends. All this means economic losses for Armenia. However, it is harmless compared to the military threat that seems to grow daily.

It is abundantly clear that Azerbaijan is not content with the 2020 triumph, and has an appetite for more territory. Three times since that war, it has advanced into Armenian territory in short military campaigns, occupying border areas totaling 140 square kilometers, according to the government in Yerevan. These are strategic heights from which Armenian villages and roads can be shelled. This is a turning point in the decades-old conflict, because now, for the first time, the focus is not only on the fate of the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region – the territory of the motherland Armenia itself is being called into question.

In March, the number of violations of the 2020 ceasefire agreement skyrocketed. In addition, martial rhetoric coming from Baku makes one fear the worst. Aliyev, Azerbaijan’s president, has made it clear in several speeches that he doesn’t recognize Armenia’s territorial integrity. At the summit meeting of Turkic states in mid-March, he portrayed the neighboring country as an artificial entity, and used the term «Western Azerbaijan» to describe it.

In particular, he regularly refers to southern Armenia as «our historic land». This brings back memories of Putin’s approach in speeches dismissing the Ukrainian state as an error of history before then taking military action. Appeals for moderation from Washington and Brussels have so far failed to impress Aliyev.

Specifically, Baku is demanding the creation of a land corridor through Armenian territory to Nakhchivan, an Azerbaijani exclave on the border with Turkey. In this way, there would be a direct land connection between the two Turkic states for the first time. Armenia categorically rejects this. It offers to open east-west transit routes, but wants to retain sovereignty over its territory – and not allow uncontrolled transit, as the Azerbaijanis envision. Armenians fear that such a corridor would otherwise cut their country in two. The fact that Aliyev always speaks of the «Zangezur corridor,» thus using using the old Turkish name for southern Armenia, further reinforces the fear of territorial claims.

Who could prevent Azerbaijan from achieving its goals by force? The southern tip of Armenia is highly vulnerable militarily. At its narrowest point, the country is only 26 kilometers wide. On the roads of the region, it is notable that, despite the tensions, there are hardly any military vehicles to be seen. Armenia’s army is considered grossly inferior – weakened by the 2020 defeat and burdened by supply problems, as its traditional supplier, Russia, is now short of war materiel itself.

However, Moscow still represents a power factor, not least thanks to its military presence in the country. Driving north from Shurnukh, a large new building with a Russian flag is visible, obviously a military base. Satellite photos indicate that it was created only in the last two years. However, Russia is not a reliable security guarantor for Armenia. Although the two countries are bound by a mutual defense pact, Moscow didn’t come to the rescue during the recent Azerbaijani border violations.

The consequences of this lack of protection can be observed an hour’s drive further north at Jermuk. The spa and ski resort, located at 2,100 meters above sea level, owes its fame to its medicinal springs and Jermuk mineral water, which is exported to many countries. But it has been making headlines since last September primarily because of the military threat it faces. Azerbaijani troops advanced unexpectedly through mountain passes at that time, occupied an area of about 38 square kilometers and shelled the village with artillery for two days. Horrified tourists sought shelter in the basements of their hotels.

The cable car entrepreneur Armen Tadevosyan found dozens of exploded shells and rockets on his premises. He quickly had the damage to his restaurant and the ski rental house repaired, but the scars on the walls caused by bomb fragments are still visible. That winter, only one-tenth of his usual clientele showed up. «People are scared. The Azeri positions are now only 4.5 kilometers from here,» Tadevosyan says. The Armenian state subsidized the renovation work, but that didn’t change the fact that the image of the resort has suffered badly, he says.

One can only speculate about the Azerbaijanis’ motives. Satellite photos show that they established supply routes at altitudes of up to 3,000 meters prior to their advance. Perhaps they wanted to inflict economic damage with the shelling or terrorize the population in order to force concessions.

Tadevosyan mentions another hypothesis, which is also being considered by political scientists. A well-developed road leads from Jermuk into the valley, where it meets the main north-south axis, which is vital for Armenia. If Azerbaijani troops succeed in advancing to that point in the next attack, the entire south of the country will be cut off from supplies, the entrepreneur says. Aliyev could then dictate the terms of peace.

No matter who you talk to in Armenia, the fear of a new war is palpable. Foreign policy and strategy experts in the capital Yerevan appear dejected. The moment seems ideal for Azerbaijan to create new facts on the ground by force. Russia, Europe and America are distracted by the Ukraine war, and for the West, Azerbaijan has even gained in importance as an energy supplier as a result of that conflict.

Journalist Maria Titizian nevertheless argues for help for her adopted country with all her energy. Born in Canada as a descendant of Armenian emigrants and genocide survivors, she moved to Yerevan over 20 years ago to help shape the young Armenian state. «We’re realistic. The world doesn’t care about Armenia. But it should!» she says. Titizian, editor-in-chief of a politically rebellious online weekly magazine, speaks of a battle between David and Goliath. Armenia doesn’t want pity, she says, adding that it also has nothing to offer, certainly no petroleum. However, one thing is clear, she says: «We need Western help for our security.»

 

07 Apr L.A. County Supervisors Show Support for Armenian Community

April 8 2023

This week, the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors unanimously approved two separate motions reaffirming their support of the Armenian community,  proclaiming April as Armenian History Month and approving legislative advocacy steps that will urge the federal government to add an Armenian category to the 2030 Census.

Their action comes on the heels of anti-Armenian hate flyers having been found posted on light poles near Glendale’s St. Mary’s Armenian Apostolic Church and in other areas of the city a week ago.

“I want to make sure the public at large knows that our Board fully supports our Armenian community and stands in solidarity with them,” stated Supervisor Kathryn Barger, lead author of both motions. “My prior motions supporting legislation – from condemning Azerbaijan’s deadly and unprovoked military operation in Artsakh to providing $10 million to the Library of Congress to support Armenian Genocide education – unequivocally reflect my strong support for Los Angeles County’s Armenian residents. I will continue to work with my colleagues to invest in and strengthen this community.”

Supervisor Janice Hahn, who is currently serving as Board Chair, also voiced her support. “Los Angeles County is the proud home of the largest population of Armenians outside of Armenia,” said Supervisor Janice Hahn. “Armenian History Month is an opportunity to celebrate the rich Armenian culture and the contributions Armenian people have made to Los Angeles County, as well as recognize the dark days of the Armenian Genocide.”

https://kathrynbarger.lacounty.gov/l-a-county-supervisors-show-support-for-armenian-community/

Top Armenian lawmaker sorry for spitting at man who called him ‘traitor’


April 8 2023

Armenian parliamentary speaker Alen Simonyan apologised for spitting on a pedestrian this week, as the media flurry around the incident continued on Friday.

“I’m sorry, I lost my self-control because of an insult directed at me,” the 43-year-old wrote on his Facebook page on Thursday.

The incident continued to spark heavy discussion across Armenian media outlets on Friday. Former Armenian president Levon Ter-Petrosyan was one of many demanding Simonyan’s resignation.

The incident occurred earlier this week, when a member of the public supposedly called the politician a traitor on the street. The politician ordered his bodyguards to hold on to the man and Simonyan proceeded to spit in his face, the man said later.

Simonyan himself did not deny the act, but initially said about the incident: “Get it into your head that your impudence will not go unanswered, an insult directed at the legitimate authorities of the state will receive a legitimate response.”

After the affair went public, the head of the National Assembly and leading member of the ruling party Civil Contract came under considerable pressure.

The country’s government is already considered weakened after losing the war with neighbouring Azerbaijan over the embattled region of Nagorno-Karabakh in 2020. The conflict plunged the country into a deep crisis.

Many citizens consider the ceasefire agreement that Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan signed, which resulted in Armenia having to give up large parts of Nagorno-Karabakh, a betrayal.

Armenia: A Global People


March 18 2023


The Modern Republic of Armenia lies in the turbulent south Caucuses. Although the Armenians as a people have existed for thousands of years, they have known the safety of living within peaceful and independent borders at only brief times. In fact, the Armenians have long lived between larger, warring powers and as minorities within larger empires. Because of this, they have developed into an exceedingly mobile people; the vast majority of Armenians does not live in Armenia, but rather is scattered across the globe.

A map of Armenia’s major waterways within its region.

That the Armenians have maintained a distinct culture despite geographic distances and despite having absorbed so many influences from so many diverse and often dominating cultures is remarkable. It is a feat they have achieved through pride in their language, religious faith, and mountainous homeland.

Today’s Armenia continues to be affected by international issues and border disputes, but is also helped by its geostrategic position and by its generous ethnic diaspora which helps support it.

Armenia is a mountainous, landlocked country slightly smaller than the US state of Maryland. The majority of its population and irrigated agricultural land are concentrated around its south western border, with Yerevan at its center. More than a third of the country’s three-million strong population lives in the capital. The mountains, which make up the majority of the country, are sparsely populated and offer small mineral deposits such as copper, gold, and molybdenum. The main cash crop is grapes, which feeds the nation’s famed cognac, wine, and brandy production. However, most of the country’s main industries, including tobacco processing, diamond cutting, and energy production (nuclear and gas), rely on imported raw materials for processing.


Due to the mountains, Armenia’s rivers are fast moving and, while much of the region’s water originates in Armenia, Armenia itself experiences water shortages during the hot summer months when evaporation is high. Thus, the Armenians have long been skilled in building irrigation, dams, and reservoirs. Today, thanks to an extensive and long-running hydroelectric program, the country produces about a third of its electricity from its rivers.

Armenia’s farmland is fed by rivers that run to the Aras River, which flows between Armenia and Turkey and into Azerbaijan. Both Turkey and Azerbaijan are currently imposing a military blockade on Armenia due to the Nagorno-Kabarakh conflict, making the river essentially useless in terms of transportation for Armenia.

Armenia’s dominant feature is Lake Sevan, a massive, natural fresh water lake that also provides irrigation waters as well as fish, recreation, and tourism.

Much of what Armenian culture considers its traditional heartland is today located in Turkey. This includes large amounts of agricultural land and Mount Ararat. This mountain is visible from Yerevan, featured in the center of Armenia’s coat of arms, and the home of the pantheon of gods whose stories are told in Armenian mythology.

Successive invasions and occupations of Armenia by foreign powers encouraged pockets of Armenians to form and move around the area. Due largely to Soviet planning, not all of these pockets were included in the Armenian SSR and thus are not included in today’s Armenia, which retains the same borders.

Due to conflicts with its neighbors, Armenia’s only open borders lie with Iran and Georgia, the latter providing the country’s only rail link for freight shipments. That rail, however, also passes through Abkhazia, an unrecognized republic that broke from Georgia and closed its borders with Georgia. So, freight in and out of Armenia usually travels through Georgia’s Black Sea ports in a relatively expensive and inefficient process. Through Georgia, Armenia also receives nearly all of its gas needs via a pipeline from Russia.

Perhaps because of its largely non-functioning borders, Armenia has been forced to rapidly develop a services industry, particularly in IT services, to allow its economy to continue to function. As of 2021, services made up about 53% of the economy, more than any other sector (with mining taking 27% and agriculture 10%). Much of the investment and construction needed to make this happen (and to develop Nagorno-Karabakh), is financed through remittances and investments made by the sizeable populations of Armenians living in Russia and the US.

For more on Armenia’s foreign policy and security imperatives, click here.

The Armenians are an inherently international people. Most scholars agree that they likely originated in South Eastern Europe, then migrated to the Caucuses where they mixed linguistically, culturally, and/or genetically with various Caucasian groups as well as various other groups that would later conquer what became the Armenian homelands: Persians, Turks, Greeks, Romans, and, later, the Russians.

Armenians call their country “Hayk” and refer to themselves as “Hayer.” The legend of Hayk, a hero from ca 2500 BC, is told by the 5th century Armenian historian Movses Khorenatsi. Hayk left Babylon (today a city in Iraq and long a major part in Middle Eastern empires) due to the oppressive King Titanid Bel. Hayk settled with his kinsmen at the foot of Mt. Ararat. Hayk named his settlement Haykashen and later killed Titanid Bel in battle. Hayk had a son, Aram, whose name is the root of the exonym Armenia. Armenian tradition traces the heritage of all Armenians back to this family of heroes.

The name “Armenia” was most often used in ancient Persian and Greek sources and thus is still most commonly used in the Western world to refer to the country.

For centuries after Hayk, the Armenians lived under various rulers including the Hittites and, most importantly, the Kingdom of Urartu (860-590 BCE), from which the Armenians adopted a pantheon of gods, elements of the Armenian language, and began to solidify as a cultural and political entity. Urartu, named for Mount Ararat which sat at its center, is often pointed to by Armenian nationalists as a pivotal time for the formation of the eventual Kingdom Armenia.

That kingdom first gained independence with the fall of the Seleucid Empire. The Seleucid Empire was a Hellenic state formed from lands originally conquered by Alexander the Great. The Armenian language and culture were deeply influenced by the Seleucids, under whom Armenians served as local rulers. When the Seleucids crumbled under Roman pressure, the Kingdom of Armenia was recognized by Rome an independent political force in 190 BCE.

The Kingdom of Armenia briefly became an empire under Tigranes the Great in the final century BCE. At its height, the Empire covered present day Armenia, parts of Georgia and Azerbaijan, Iran and Iraq, and stretched southwest across Turkey to Syria and the Mediterranean Sea. Tigranes was eventually conquered by Rome, however, in 55 BC and his former Kingdom would spend the next 500 years as a contested border province between Rome and the successive Middle Eastern empires. Because of Tigranes’ ambitious expansion, however, ethnic Armenians migrated throughout the area, most notably the region of Cilicia on the coast of the Mediterranean in what is today south eastern Turkey.

In the late Roman period, Armenia became the first country in the world to formally adopt Christianity as its state religion when King Tiridates III of Armenia converted in 301 AD. This predated the Roman religious tolerance edicts from Galerius and Constantine by 10 and 12 years respectively. That Armenia was first and that it managed to retain its Christianity throughout the centuries despite being surrounded by majority Muslim populations is a key element to Armenian identity today. The Armenian Apostolic Church remains a major cultural influence among the Armenian people. Churches are found across the globe wherever the people reside.

The Armenian Empire at its height under King Tiridates. Note the placement of the Kingdom of Cilicia at the top of the Mediterranean Sea.

Rome fell and what had been Armenia was eventually split between the Byzantines and the Persians. Persian influence on Armenia’s language and culture became pronounced during this time.

The rise of the Arab states eventually led to the Byzantine-Arab wars, which ravaged the Armenian homelands. In the chaos, the Armenians united under Ashot I in the 9th century and fought the Emirs. Although full independence was not achieved, Ashot was crowned king and granted considerable autonomy which he used to expand his lands and revitalize the Armenian economy and culture from 862-890 AD.

Armenian autonomy continued until the Arabs began to reassert power in the late 1,000s. Several splinter kingdoms formed during this time, among them the precursor to the modern territory of Nagorno-Karabakh.

Upheavals in the Caucasus over the next 300 years caused by the Byzantines and Seljuk Turks triggered mass migrations away from the Armenian’s traditional homeland south toward the Mediterranean. Many settled across Anatolia (modern day Turkey) with many ending in Cilicia, joining communities of Armenians that had settled there under Tigranes the Great over 1,000 years before. Eventually, the Armenian Kingdom of Cilicia was founded there and prospered through its relations with Western Europe and by serving as a launching site for the Crusades.

The end of Crusades, the arrival and later Islamization of the Mongols, and repeated invasions, particularly from Egypt by the Muslim Mamluks, weakened and broke the Cilician state in 1375. Many of the Armenians there again dispersed, traveling westward and settling is places such as Cyprus, Cairo, Venice, Marseilles, Paris, and Holland.

Although many Armenians migrated, many stayed. In fact, the Armenians retained a majority or significant minority in an area stretching from modern Armenia through central Turkey. Those who stayed behind, however, suffered under numerous invasions. Successive Mongol and Arab rulers ruled over the divided Armenian homeland over the following centuries. Starting in the mid-17th century, the Ottomans would rule the west and the Persians controlled the East. This would be the case until the 19th century.

Those who emigrated tended to be those with the means to so. The Armenians also tended to form cohesive Armenian communities in their new homelands, and to keep in contact with other Armenian communities elsewhere. They also, however, tended to learn the local language and to try integrate. This unique position often led the Armenian to become translators and intermediaries. The international network of Armenians that developed helped many to excel in trade. The international stereotype of the Armenian as a wily businessman reflected a genuine entrepreneurial spirit that permeated Armenian culture. It also, however, led to discrimination that closely resembled antisemitism.

Russia had been pressing towards the Caucasus Mountains for some time, seeking to give their empire a defensible southern anchor by controlling the entirety of the high mountain range. Many Armenians looked on this as an opportunity. The Russians were a Christian nation that had pledged to protect the interests of Christians everywhere. Surely living under the Russian empire would be preferable to living under a Muslim empire?

Nicholas I annexed most of what is today modern Armenia from the Persians in 1828. This sparked hope for many Armenians still living in Persia and the Ottoman Empire, and about 50,000 total immigrated into Russian Armenia. Armenia, however, was now a militarized zone bordering Russia’s rivals and it was ruled as such. Little autonomy was granted, Armenian nationalism was distrusted, and an occupying army, led by the harsh General Tsitsianov, remained to rule and defend the new possession. The Russians built the railroad from Georgia at this time to improve transportation and communication. This railroad was also a boon for the local economy, and today represents the main overland transport line out of Armenia.

There are no reliable figures to determine exact populations, but roughly over half of the world’s Armenians were estimated to be residing in the Russian-controlled territory in the mid 1800s. Another 20 to 40 percent lived in the Ottoman Empire in the eastern regions of Anatolia. The remainder was spread out to other parts of Europe or Africa.

Russian rule did give the Armenians greater access to European thought and to ideas of nationalism. Armenians in both Russia and the Ottoman Empire used the mostly peaceful second half of the 19th century to rebuild their national identity. Although they faced oscillating policies of Russification and more liberal autonomy from Moscow, the Armenians opened schools, their writers modernized the vernacular Armenian language, and the national entrepreneurial spirit was allowed to flourish in many parts of the Russian empire, including in the native Armenian lands.

The Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF) emerged in 1890, pressing for more autonomy from the Tsar and the Sultan alike. This nationalism was not welcomed by either Russia nor the Ottomans, and the Sultan lashed out particularly harshly. The years 1894-96 saw many Armenians arrested, tortured, and some 300,000 killed.

In the lead-up to World War I, the political structure of the Ottoman Empire shifted radically and abruptly. Although more liberal Young Turk leaders rose to power, Turkish ultranationalists soon supplanted the progressives and pushed blame on the Armenians for the problems of the aging empire.

When World War I began and the Ottomans aligned with the Central Powers, even the Young Turks viewed the Armenians as a tool of the Allies. Suspicion turned violent in late April, 1915 when deportations and executions of Armenians erupted on a massive scale. Many were forced on boats that were then sunk into the Mediterranean. Hundreds of thousands of Armenians, young and old, were forced to march from their homes and into the barren wildernesses of Syria. The death toll is estimated anywhere between 600,000 and 1.5 million, a significant portion of the Ottoman Empire’s Armenian population. Most Armenian historians and an increasing portion of the international community now cite this as history’s first modern genocide.

Some Armenians fled abroad, many to Europe or America. Armenians around the world today observe an annual day of mourning in late April, usually April 24th, the day in 1915 when many members of the Armenian intelligentsia were arrested and later executed. This has proven to bind the Armenian community even closer together despite the borders that may separate them from their homeland. Armenia has also founded an impressive Armenian Genocide Museum to memorialize and study the event.

Following World War I, Armenia experienced another short breath of autonomy when the Allies sought to give them a homeland that would incorporate much of what had been the ancient kingdom of Armenia into an independent state. This would reunite Russian and Ottoman Armenian populations for the first time in centuries. Woodrow Wilson proposed the state it is sometimes referred to as “Wilsonian Armenia.”

That Armenia was not to be, however. Russian Armenia did declare independence in 1918, after the Tsarist government fell. The Republic of Armenia existed for two years before the Red Army marched into Yerevan, reasserting Russian control. This, with collapse of the Ottoman Empire and the Turkish War of Independence, eventually led the US to drop the demands for Armenia from the treaty negotiations. The treaty itself went largely unratified.


The newly formed Soviet Union joined Armenia with Azerbaijan and Georgia to create the Transcaucasian Soviet Federated Socialist Republic. This lasted until 1936 when they were disjoined into their respective current nations. The soviets had hoped newly independent Turkey would develop into a socialist state and sought close ties. In negotiations with Turkey, the USSR agreed to weaken the Armenian political entity, which Turkey felt might still have aspirations to an independent state that would include eastern Turkey. The Soviets thus ceded the Armenian-populated Karabakh to Azerbaijan.

World War II affected Armenia the least out of the three Caucasian republics, as it did not have the oil reserves of Azerbaijan, nor the industrial capacity of Georgia (although Armenia’s industrial capacity had doubled three times over under the Soviets). The Armenian people did contribute many lives to the Great Patriotic War, with approximately 500,000 Armenians taking part and half of those not returning home. During and after WWII, the USSR practiced population redistribution on a massive scale. Armenians found in Nazi camps and some Armenians in other border regions of the USSR were moved to Central Asia and the South Caucasus, including, sometimes, to Armenia itself.

The thaw that occurred after Stalin’s death lead to more self-governance in Armenia and a revitalization of the Armenian Apostolic Church. Armenia also began to consider ways to rejoin their homelands, asking Moscow to take historically Armenian populated regions from Turkey. Later, following Glasnost in the late 1980s, the Armenian SSR sought to reclaim Karabakh and Nakhichevan through a petition to Moscow. In 1988, demonstrations for and against the petition in Armenia and Azerbaijan broke into ethnic violence, rioting, and spiraling tensions between the two republics.

This topographic map shows Azerbaijan’s effective borders before (top) and after (below) the 1993-1994 war. Note that the loss of this territory eliminates much of a defensible mountainous border that once separated it from its long-time enemy, Armenia. In a wider conflict, this would be a great advantage to Armenia, making the defense of southern Armenia easier (by eliminating a bottleneck and expanding the territory) and make the invasion of eastern Azerbaijan easier.

In December, 1988 a major earthquake hit Northern Armenia, affecting in particular the cheaply-built Soviet housing stock, leaving many homeless in the winter. The Soviets, mired in internal difficulties and a faltering economy, were slow to respond, drawing still more ire from the Armenian SSR.

A group known as Karabakh Committee developed out of growing anti-Moscow sentiment in the late 1980s, and the New Armenian Army, developed largely to defend Armenian interests from Azerbaijan, was formed 1990. As cracks began to form in the USSR, Armenia was one of the first republics to declare independence. The Communist Party peacefully transitioned power to the new leadership when the vote was finally held in 1991, and Armenia democratically elected its first president, Ter-Petrosyan, who would lead for most of the decade.

War broke out with Azerbaijan in 1992. Although Azerbaijan had a larger military, Armenia had more officers and equipment and emerged victorious.

However, the war meant that reconstruction of the earthquake-devastated north was hindered for several more years as resources were pulled toward the war effort. Further, both Azerbaijan and its ally Turkey both closed their borders to Armenia. Food which had traditionally come from Turkey halted and oil and gas from Azerbaijan likewise stopped, disrupting the Armenian economy. A new wave of population redistribution followed, with Armenians displaced from the war flowing into Armenia, but also with many Armenians who had the means to do so seeking better economic fortunes abroad.

Like most former Soviet republics, politics in Armenia have been contentious. Armenia’s first president, Levon Ter-Petrosyan, an academic fluent in multiple languages that had led efforts to reunite Nagno-Karbakh with Armenia under the USSR, was elected with great fanfare and public support. He was then accused of rigging his 1996 reelection. Later, when he ran and lost an election, he accused his opponent of wrongdoing. Armenia has had a history of forcibly putting down protests, but despite all this, it remains in the West’s good graces and elections have generally passed OSCE inspections.

In late 2015, Armenia held a constitutional referendum that sought to shift the state from a semi-presidential system to a parliamentary one. Organized by the ruling Republican Party of Armenia (RPA) and was supported by a coalition of political parties, it passed with 63% of voters believing that it would result in a fairer, more democratic Armenia.

The president was made largely a figurehead and the prime minister gained the ability to appoint and dismiss the government, approve the budget, and oversee the work of the executive branch.

In 2018, however, Serzh Sargsyan, the president who spearheaded the reforms ran for prime minister, rather than stepping down from power peacefully as promised. It also became clear that the new electoral system created by the referendum greatly favored the ruling party.

Mass protests broke out led by opposition leader Nikol Pashinyan that led to Serzh Sargsyan’s resignation and the appointment of Pashinyan as prime minister. In December 2018, Armenia held new parliamentary elections, which were won by Pashinyan’s political party, the Civil Contract party.

While some hoped that the new government would steer Armenia in a more solidly liberal and pro-EU direction, it soon became clear that Pashinyan intended to rule solidly from the center but was also struggling to balance the interests of Armenia’s various power centers.

This came to a head in September-November 2020, when war broke out again between Armenia and Azerbaijan over the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh. Both countries had worked to build up their militaries since the previous war but energy-rich Azerbaijan had far outstripped Armenia in spending. Armenia was soundly defeated and in the ceasefire agreement brokered by Russia, Azerbaijan took back much of the land it lost in the first war.

This created a political crisis in Armenia, where the defense and support of Nagorno-Karabakh became a point of national pride and identity. In June 2021, snap parliamentary elections were held in Armenia, but the Civil Contract Party and Pashinyan retained their positions.

However, Paninyan was still struggling to consolidate power. In November 2021, the Armenian government declared a state of emergency and arrested several opposition politicians and activists, including former President Robert Kocharyan, on charges of attempting to stage a coup. The move was criticized by human rights groups and the international community.

Today’s Armenia faces many challenges and opportunities. Its citizens list national security and Nagorno-Karabakh has their main concern. Issues of economic security come next as issues of widespread poverty and economic emigration remain unresolved from the Soviet era. The environment is also a concern as the country hopes to tap more of its mineral resources but this could threaten water quality and the country’s plans to become a tourism center.

For more on Armenia’s foreign policy and security imperatives, click here.

Today, less than a quarter of Armenians worldwide reside in Armenia. A strong sense of ethnic and national pride means that Armenians in this large diaspora are likely to give back to their homeland, whether it be through the Armenian Apostolic Church or direct investment in local business.

Since Russia began what it calls its “special military operation”* in Ukraine, an estimated 65,000 Russians have immigrated to Armenia, or about 2% of the overall population. Although the arrival of these immigrants has led to higher inflation, particularly in Yerevan, they have also helped plug the emigration crisis and brain drain the country was facing. Further, Armenia’s trade with Russia has risen by nearly 450% since 2020 with the country becoming a hub for re-exported electronics and vehicles to Russia.

Internationally, Armenia has sought to gain international recognition of the Armenian Genocide. This effort has been gaining force, thanks in large part to the influential diaspora. The nearly half million Armenians in the US carry electoral weight and have convinced most US states to recognize the event although the federal government has not made a formal pronouncement. Russia is home to more than two million Armenians, with many of them in high profile positions – including Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, RT Chief Margarita Simonyan, and opposition politician Gary Kasperov. Russia officially recognized the genocide in 2015.

A map of the Armenian Diaspora. Countries shown in dark red have between 100,000 and 3,000,000.

Armenia’s economy is closely linked with Russia, with Russia being by far the country’s major trading partner. It also relies on Russia for much of its new military equipment, of which it has purchased massive amounts in recent years as an arms race has mounted with Azerbaijan. Russia also provides parts and service for many of the older Soviet-built weapons that Armenia still uses. Thus, despite the historically rocky relationship between Armenia and Russia, Armenia still sees its fortunes as tied, in many ways, to Russia. Armenia joined the Russia-led Eurasian Economic Union in 2015 to secure lower gas prices and more opportunities to export their products.

Armenia today officially retains its Soviet borders and the people of Nagorno-Karabakh declare themselves to be an autonomous republic. However, Nagorno-Karabakh is unrecognized by the international community and his been shrunk from its 1994 borders to roughly its Soviet-era borders by the most recent conflict. Peace negotiations remain unresolved. Borders with Turkey and Azerbaijan remain closed, making transport routes with Georgia and Iran essential. Armenia still tries to balance ties with Russia and the US.

As of 2023, the conflict remains hot. Armenia is in a weakened position and Azerbaijan is angling for deeper control of Nagorno Karabakh and of a corridor to its enclave of Nakhchivan through southern Armenia. With America and Russia distracted with Ukraine, Armenia currently feels that it lacks a strong international partner in its conflict. If Azerbaijan chooses to push further with its demands, it may well be successful.

With every unknown, one thing remains constant for Armenia: The men, women, and children who make up the Hayer, whether they live in Yerevan, New York, Sydney, Sao Paulo, or Moscow, each know their heritage and will proudly bear it into the coming generations.

*part of the content of GeoHistory is produced in Russia, where there are laws restrictive of what current events can be called. 

https://geohistory.today/armenia/




US military delegation visits Armenia — top brass

 TASS 
Russia – April 9 2023
Deputy Chief of Staff of the US Army Command in Europe Patrick Ellis discussed with representatives of the Armenian Ministry of Defense the possibility of training personnel and conducting joint exercises

YEREVAN, April 8. /TASS/. A delegation led by Brigadier General Patrick Ellis, deputy chief of staff of the US Army Europe-Africa, has visited Armenia, the press service of the Armenian Defense Ministry reported on Saturday.

“From April 5 to 7, Armenia was visited by the delegation led by Deputy Chief of Staff of the US Army Europe Command Brigadier General Patrick Ellis. Patrick Ellis and the representatives of Armenia’s Defense Ministry discussed the opportunities to train personnel, hold joint drills and share best practices and knowledge,” its statement said.

The press release notes that the delegation visited training facilities as well as the training center of the ministry’s peacekeeping brigade.

Armenpress: Blinken to visit Vietnam next week, US senator says

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 16:51, 8 April 2023

YEREVAN, APRIL 8, ARMENPRESS. U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken will visit Vietnam next week, Senator Jeff Merkley told a news conference in Hanoi on Saturday, Reuters reports.

Blinken’s visit, which has not yet been officially announced, would come after U.S. President Joe Biden had a phone call last week with the chief of Vietnam’s ruling Communist Party, Nguyen Phu Trong.

“Next week the Secretary of State will be here,” Reuters quoted Senator Merkley as saying at a press conference during a visit to Vietnam by a delegation of U.S. lawmakers aimed at boosting relations with Hanoi.

Blinken is expected to visit Vietnam, likely on Saturday, before he heads to a meeting of foreign ministers of the Group of Seven (G7) countries in Japan on April 16-18.

PM Pashinyan holds phone call with Putin

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 13:40, 7 April 2023

YEREVAN, APRIL 7, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan held a phone call with Russian President Vladimir Putin to discuss the ongoing humanitarian crisis in Nagorno Karabakh resulting from the illegal blockade of the Lachin Corridor by Azerbaijan.

In the context of overcoming the crisis in Nagorno Karabakh, PM Pashinyan attached importance to the implementation of consistent steps by the Russian peacekeeping mission, the Prime Minister’s Office said in a readout.

Issues related to the implementation of the 9 November 2020, 11 January and 26 November 2021 and 31 October 2022 Armenia-Russia-Azerbaijan trilateral statements – including the unblocking of regional transport connections – were also discussed.

Pashinyan and Putin also exchanged views on the Armenian-Russian relations and other developments, the PMO reported.

Elon Musk to visit China this weekend – Bloomberg

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 12:48, 8 April 2023

YEREVAN, APRIL 8, ARMENPRESS. Tesla and SpaceX founder Elon Musk will be in China for a visit from Saturday, with a possible stop at Tesla Inc.’s Shanghai factory, Bloomberg reported citing people familiar with the plans.

The billionaire’s schedule is expected to include a meeting with local Shanghai authorities, the sources said, declining to be identified because the trip hasn’t been disclosed publicly. The plans are fluid and may still change, they said.

Tesla declined to comment on Musk’s possible China visit when asked by Bloomberg.