Azerbaijan’s cynical approach to Jews is demeaning to all

Washington Examiner
Dec 16 2020


Against the backdrop of this autumn’s Nagorno-Karabakh war, another battle raged in Washington: partisans to the conflict seeking to sway American Jewry to their cause. In their telling, Azerbaijan was an enlightened society tolerant of all while Armenia was a deeply anti-Semitic country that supported Adolf Hitler.

Countries that embrace religious freedom seldom need to brag about how good they are to their minorities. The Netherlands, for example, seldom brags about how happy its Jews, Muslims, Sikhs, Hindus, or Buddhists are. To hold indigenous Jewish communities on a pedestal, as Turkey and Azerbaijan do, is an obnoxious strategy. Not only does it suggest Jews think singularly and interpret policy through a religious lens rather than through the interests of the country in which they are citizens, but the strategy also carries an implied threat: Religious tolerance will be fleeting if Washington or Jerusalem do not abide by Ankara or Baku’s wishes. It’s the mafioso equivalent of, “Nice place you’ve got here; it would be a shame if anything happened to it.”

Indeed, representatives of Turkey’s Jewish community simultaneously tell American visitors how happy they are under President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s leadership but appear terrified of running afoul of the mercurial ruler and quietly ask for advice on securing visas. While Turkish Jews can honestly say Turkey has historically been kind to the community, the community has declined under Erdogan as Turkish Jews vote with their feet. The Turkish president, meanwhile, makes little secret of his view that Turkey’s Jews are hostages to his approval of Israel’s behavior. That the Azerbaijani government and its proxies now embrace the same strategy does not assuage concerns.

Indeed, while Azeri diplomats and officials tell visitors that Azerbaijan is home to 30,000 Jews, the true population is less than a third of that as many in the community chose to emigrate when they had the opportunity. Jews also have a long history in Armenia. Armenian officials sometimes tell visitors the country is home to 500 Jews, although both emigration and intermarriage have also taken a toll on this number, and the true figure may be only half that. Regardless, numbers of Jews are likewise a silly metric for supposed anti-Semitism. Consider the fact that the Mountain Jewish community of Azerbaijan aside, most of the Jews in Baku and its environs date their arrival just to the late 19th or early 20th centuries and tied their presence to certain industries: Does that mean that anti-Semitism declined during the influx and then increased after the Ashkenazi Jews again emigrated? Or, to question the logic in a different way, is Bhutan more anti-Semitic than Iran because Iran has more Jews? Is Canada more anti-Semitic than the United States?


 


Azerbaijan has historically been enlightened with regard to religious pluralism, and polls show anti-Semitic attitudes among Azerbaijanis to be less in most cases than Armenians. But there still have been anti-Semitic incidents in Azerbaijan in recent years, such as the desecration of a Jewish cemetery in Baku. Nadraran, a town just 15 miles from Baku, is famous for being a stronghold of Hezbollah, though this is certainly the exception rather than the rule in Azerbaijan today.

Of greater concern, however, should be Azerbaijan’s partnership and general submissiveness to an increasingly anti-Semitic Turkey. Diplomats say the Turkish Foreign Ministry demarches its Azeri counterparts to limit the number of Jews and Israelis at diplomatic functions. Azerbaijan’s recent utilization of Syrian mercenaries, some of whom previously worked for al Qaeda affiliates or the Islamic State, also undercut the notion of Azeri liberalism. To ally with and fight alongside those who would behead Christians and enslave non-Muslim minorities is hardly a sign that Jews will remain safe in Azerbaijan. Sometimes, lavish spreads in luxury hotels for visiting dignitaries are not enough to obscure reality.

There is an irony when Azeris accuse Armenians of sympathy toward Hitler when Azeri President Ilham Aliyev appears to harbor a fascination with the German dictator. Just as Hitler defined his enemy as Jews inside Germany, Jews outside Germany, and those who would support the Jews, Aliyev has made similar comments with regard to Armenians. Aliyev has also embraced eliminationist rhetoric. “Armenia, as a country, is of no importance. In fact, it is a colony, an outpost; a territory governed from abroad which was artificially created in ancient Azerbaijani lands,” he said in 2012. In 2018, the Azeri dictator declared, “Yerevan is our historic land and we, Azerbaijanis, must return to these Azerbaijani lands.” Just last week, Aliyev repeated his quest for further territorial conquest (Azeri lebensraum) defining Zangerzur, Sevan, and Yerevan as “Azerbaijani territories” while Erdogan bragged about his “Caucasus Islamic Army.”

Simply put, while it is true that religious freedom is the canary in the coal mine to determine the reality of a regime, trajectory also matters. Azeri and Armenian officials and their respective diasporas may castigate the other, but both societies have traditionally embraced tolerance toward their indigenous Jewish communities. What should be of greater concern, however, is the recent trajectory of Azerbaijan’s leadership not only to embrace rhetoric rooted in the Armenian genocide but also to welcome as a partner a Turkish leader whose obsession lays not with territorial dispute but rather with religious warfare, jihad, and deeply anti-Semitic conspiracies. Simply put, the days of Azerbaijan being an oasis for Jews is now in the past.

Michael Rubin (@Mrubin1971) is a contributor to the Washington Examiner’s Beltway Confidential blog. He is a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute and a former Pentagon official.

Armenian ombudsman: Government must provide proper explanations to public (corrected source)

Panorama, Armenia
Dec 17 2020

The anxiety and anger of residents of Kapan, Goris and other towns and border villages of Syunik Province of Armenia, including those related to the process of demarcation and delimitation of borders in the region, are justified, Human Rights Defender (Ombudsman) Arman Tatoyan said on Thursday.

“We are talking about the right to life and other fundamental rights of the residents of these settlements, their physical safety and security, the opportunities to ensure their livelihood and, finally, the security of Armenia’s state borders,” he wrote on Facebook.

“Along with specialists of my office, I paid a special working visit to Syunik and was convinced of the relevance of these issues. In addition, since early yesterday morning and today, the Office of the Human Rights Defender has been receiving alarming calls and concerns from residents of Syunik border communities over the same issues, and protest actions are being monitored.

“I emphasize that the government of Armenia (not the local authorities of Syunik), the supreme executive body of our country, must provide proper explanations to the public and especially residents of border settlements on issues and developments concerning them and our society as a whole.

“This is a right of citizens granted by the Constitution. The state has a direct obligation to ensure it, period!” the ombudsman said. 


Artsakh denies fake Azerbaijani news of taking 62 Armenian soldiers hostage

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 18:48,

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 18, ARMENPRESS. The Defense Army of Artsakh denies the fake publications of Azerbaijan about taking hostage 62 Armenian servicemen. ARMENPRESS reports the statement issued by the Defense Army notes that a footage is being spread on the internet saying that 62 Armenian servicemen have been taken hostage by the Azerbaijani army.  

The Defense Army of Artsakh informs that in the recent days no incident of taking hostage of Armenian servicemen by Azerbaijani troops has been recorded in the zone of the Defense Army responsibility and the mentioned information does not correspond to the reality.

The Defense Army also calls on the domestic news outlets not to spread false Azerbaijani publications that are aimed at influencing on the public moods.

Armenian President continues consultations with different political forces

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 12:14,

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 17, ARMENPRESS. President of Armenia Armen Sarkissian continues consultations with parliamentary and extra-parliamentary forces, the Presidential Office told Armenpress.

This time the President met with chairman of the Social-Democratic Hunchakian party Radik Karapetyan, the Ramghavar party chairman Hrachya Karapetyan, president of the Green party Armenak Dovlatyan, as well as a number of other party leaders.

The meeting participants exchanged views on the current situation in the country and the ways of solving it.

The party representatives presented their views and approaches on the situation.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Reuters: Hundreds block streets in Armenia after PM ignores deadline to step down

Yahoo! News
Dec 8 2020

Reuters
December 8, 2020, 1:32 PM

YEREVAN (Reuters) – Opposition demonstrators blocked streets in Armenia’s capital on Tuesday to mark the start of a protest campaign after Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan ignored their call to step down over a ceasefire deal struck with Azerbaijan.

Hundreds chanted “Nikol, traitor” and “Armenia without Nikol” in the streets of Yerevan, answering an opposition call to protest after a deadline of midday Tuesday set by the opposition for Pashinyan to quit passed with him still in power.

Pashinyan, who swept to power in a peaceful revolution in May 2018, accepted a Russian-brokered ceasefire deal last month to end a bloody conflict between Azerbaijan and ethnic Armenian forces over the Nagorno-Karabkh enclave and surrounding areas.

Pashinyan’s opponents want him out over what they say was his disastrous handling of the six-week conflict that handed Azerbaijan territorial gains.

Pashinyan has accepted responsibility for the conflict’s outcome, but said he is now responsible for ensuring national security and stabilising the ex-Soviet republic of around three million.

Ishkhan Saghatelyan, an opposition politician for the Armenian Revolutionary Federation party, announced the start of coordinated civil disobedience in a televised address on Tuesday after the deadline passed.

“Nikol, you will go anyway. Leave peacefully,” he said.

“…from now until 17:00 Armenia’s citizens have the legitimate right to use their right to peaceful actions of disobedience to express their demand and to make it heard,” he said.

The opposition has said it plans to block streets nationwide and to paralyse the national transport network if needed.

Armenian spiritual leader Karekin II said in a statement that he had met Pashinyan and urged him to resign.

Pashinyan did not comment on the protests publicly on Tuesday.

(Reporting by Nvard Hovhannisyan; writing by Tom Balmforth; editing by William Maclean)


Also at

2021 U.S. Defense Authorization Act Mandates Sanctions Against Turkey

December 5,  2020



ANCA, Hellenic American Leadership Council Welcome Provision Punishing Turkey for Purchase of Russian S-400s

ANCA, Hellenic American Leadership Council Welcome Provision Punishing Turkey for Purchase of Russian S-400s

WASHINGTON—The Hellenic American Leadership Council (HALC) and the Armenian National Committee of America applauded the completion of the 60th Annual National Defense Authorization Act.  The NDAA for Fiscal Year 2021 included a provision that effectively mandates that the United States imposes sanctions on Turkey.

In the 115th Congress, ANCA and HALC launched a joint advocacy initiative to remove Turkey from the F35 program and to hold Turkey accountable for violating the Countering America’s Adversaries Through Sanctions Act.  The ANCA-HALC advocacy campaigns warned members of Congress against the dangers of failing to hold Turkey accountable and allowing it to have weapons that President Erdogan may turn against our allies – including Greece, Cyprus, Israel, and Armenia – and possibly even U.S. forces.

Senator Bob Menendez (D-NJ), who played a key role in the NDAA amendment, tweeted: “Incredibly proud to have helped secure inclusion of a provision in the NDAA to do what President Trump refused to do: Officially determine on behalf of the U.S. government that Turkey took delivery of Russian S-400 defense systems and therefore will be sanctioned under existing law.”

Endy Zemenides, HALC’s Executive Director praised Senator Menendez’s leadership and noted:  “It took a while but the days of whitewashing Turkey’s consistent destabilizing behavior, violations of American and international law, and lack of reliability as an ally are over.  Congress is sending a clear signal to the incoming Biden Administration that ‘Accountability’ and not ‘Appeasement’ must be the key to US-Turkey policy.”

“The adoption of this key NDAA provision – long sought by the ANCA and our HALC and IDC allies – holds Erdogan accountable for his increasingly reckless and anti-American actions,” said ANCA Executive Director Aram Hamparian. “It is our hope that the incoming Biden Administration will reflect and reinforce this broad bipartisan consensus, bringing to an end a shameful era in which the first instinct of U.S. diplomacy has been to erase every Turkish sin, excuse every Turkish offense, and appease even the most irrational Turkish demand.”

Everyone’s Happy, Except Poor Armenia

NewsMax
Dec 3 3030
(Dreamstime)

By Marek Jan Chodakiewicz Thursday, 12:17 PM


The Azeris have just cleaned the Armenians’ clock. A month or so ago the frozen conflict thawed out and the perennial adversaries joined battle yet again in an Armenian enclave situated within Azerbaijan. The latter won, in no small measure thanks to Turkey, Israel, and the United States, but also because of dysfunctionality of post-Soviet Armenia itself.

The enemies do not even agree on the name of the place where they fought, which, historically, is rather usual in ethnically contested areas. The original ancient Armenian designation of the region is Artsakh. For the Azeris it is Nagorno Karabakh. That means “the Black Garden” with a Russian descriptive “Upper” or “Mountainous.”

Surrounded by Azerbaijan, Artsakh has been a contested area from times immemorial. However, the Armenians have had a strong claim to the place for demographic and historical reasons. They have lived there for at least two millenia, including after the destruction of the last independent Armenian principality by the Muslims. Nonetheless, they survived without their state until the 20th century.

When free Armenia finally arose from the ashes of the Russian Empire in 1918, it wrangled over the enclave with the Democratic Republic of Azerbaijan, which also emerged as an independent entity at that time. At the time, the Armenians faced extermination in the Ottoman Empire, and, driven by pan-Turkism, the specter of death menaced the Armenian Republic, including Arsakh. The Soviet army invaded, however, and enslaved both the Armenians and Azeris. The former preferred Communist slavery to Turkish death.

In 1923, the Bolsheviks designated the disputed region as the Nagorno Karabakh Autonomous District and the status quo remained unchallenged until 1991, when the local Armenians held a referendum in favor of sovereignty. Almost immediately a war broke out against Azerbaijan with atrocities and ethnic cleansing on both sides (1991-1994).

The Armenians prevailed at that time. The enclave became even more uniformly Armenian and Christian, now at over 99%. It proclaimed itself the Republic of Artsakh. With a bi-cameral parliament and a president, it is a democracy governed out of Stepanakert. For all purposes, Artsakh functions virtually as an integral part of Armenia, which maintains a narrow land corridor to the enclave. Yerevan is also virtually the only capital that recognizes the entity diplomatically.

Periodically, after 1994, fighting would break out between the adversaries but the hostilities tended to be brief and Artsakh invariably managed to maintain the status quo. This changed in the current war which lasted from September 27 to November 10, 2020. The Armenians lost. They were outmatched and outgunned. They agreed to cede much adjacent land to the Azeris except for the Nagorno Karabakh proper.

There were many reasons for the defeat. First, Armenia is poor, and Arsakh is even poorer. Neither can afford to maintain a top of the line, technologically advanced military unlike oil-rich Azerbaijan.

Second, it appears that the professional Armenian army’s assistance to Arsakh was half-hearted at best. Reportedly, in addition to a rather negligible local military, it was mostly volunteers who flocked to the colors. For them it was a Christian crusade. But they were not enough to stem the tide. It was not only because Armenian volunteers were successfully countered by the Syrian and other jihadis imported by Azerbaijan.

All this, to an extent, reminds one of the developments in eastern Ukraine, following the Russian invasion in 2014. The Ukrainian volunteer regiments fought courageously; regular Ukrainian army tended to avoid armed engagements whenever it could and performed poorly. The opposite, secessionist side also consisted of volunteers, including foreign fighters, but they were under an overall Russian command, including, tactically, military intelligence officers. Most heavy weapons were Russian. However, in the current struggle in Nagorno Karabakh, professional Azeri military was paramount, and the jihadi volunteers served as adjuncts.

Although, unlike in Ukraine, there were no widespread defections to the enemy in Artsakh, there have been nonetheless complaints that the Armenian brass failed to acquit itself with distinction. Further, rumors of treason at the top have swirled wildly. At least one colonel was arrested for allegedly supplying the enemy with intelligence. One hears about summary executions of alleged high ranking traitors.

More seriously, the people have accused their elected civilian leaders of sedition. In Yerevan vicious riots broke out. Politicians were assaulted and beaten up. The crowd invaded the national parliament. The riot police and military had a tough time quelling the unrest.

The spirit at the Armenian grass roots is strong. The leadership is flaccid. Truthfully, the Armenians do not have much to choose from. It is either monumentally corrupt post-Communist oligarchs who fawn before Moscow or predictably spineless post-Communist liberals who defer to Brussels.

Putin shocked the Armenians for he refused to help them to victory but, instead, coerced them to accept a disastrous peace settlement. The folks are also disappointed that Iran did not move (except for reinforcing its military along the border with Azerbaijan) and that France was largely absent throughout the fighting.

Of course, as their default, the Armenians uniformly blame Turkey for all their travails, always fearing another genocide. But this time, the popular ire also includes the United States and Israel. Our State Department apparently OK’d the arms sales to Baku and the Israelis provided technologically advanced weapon systems, including drones, which the Azeris credit for their triumph. That assistance proved so valuable on the battlefield that during the post-victory celebrations a few in the crowds openly waved Israeli flags. Naturally, there was a sea of Turkish banners displayed prominently. Pan-Turkism galore.

As they evacuate, the Armenians leave scorched earth behind them, burning buildings, implements, orchards, and fields. They only leave their churches standing. Some of them are historical gems and pleas go out to the Russians to save them from the Azeri wrath.

As most weak people tend to, the Armenians believe that they fell victim to a plot. But there was no plot. The mighty are usually pretty brazen about their intentions. In this instance, Russia gets to insert its troops back into Azerbaijan; Turkey augments its influence in the region; and its Azeri sidekick acquires land and encourages former Muslim residents of Nagorno Karabakh to return. The U.S. is understandably happy that the killing stopped and it has convinced itself that it has secured Georgia’s independence once again. France will be able to talk big about its garrulous leadership that made things better.

The international community accepts the assurances that we are only dealing with small border corrections. There probably will be no more enclave. The “corrected” Artsakh will abut Armenia proper, so the frozen conflict will be no more and peace will reign.

And thus everyone is happy. Except the poor Armenians.

Marek Jan Chodakiewicz is Professor of History at the Institute of World Politics, a graduate school of statecraft in Washington D.C.; expert on East-Central Europe’s Three Seas region; author, among others, of “Intermarium: The Land Between The Baltic and Black Seas.” Read Marek Jan

Putin briefs Security Council members on phone talks held with Armenian and Azerbaijani leaders

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 16:49,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 27, ARMENPRESS. Russian President Vladimir Putin has discussed the situation in Nagorno Karabakh, the activity of the Russian peacekeepers and the humanitarian mission in Karabakh with the permanent members of the Security Council, the Kremlin said in a statement.

In this context President Putin briefed the Security Council members on the telephone conversations held with Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Putin Says Armenia’s Recognition of Karabakh Could Have ‘Significantly Influenced’ Outcome

November 17,  2020



Russian President Vladimir Putin

  • Putin Says Return of Shushi to Azerbaijan Was Never on the Table, Until the Current War
  • He Says Yerevan Rejected Proposal of Armenian-Controlled Shushi with Azeri Refugees
  • Karabakh Status Issue is Effectively Tabled

Armenia’s recognition of Artsakh could have “significantly influenced” the course of the conflict throughout the years, said Russian President Vladimir Putin on Tuesday, citing Russia’s recognition of Abkhazia, South Ossetia and Crimea as examples of how his country has handled people’s right to self-determination.

Answering reporters’ questions a week after he, along with Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev and Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan signed an agreement that ended the war in Karabakh, but brought forth more complex complications as Armenia was forced to surrender territory to Azerbaijan, including Shushi. The agreement also did not stipulate a specific solution to the issue of Artsakh’s status—a key element of the conflict settlement negotiations during the past almost three decades.

Putin explained that the issue of returning Shushi to Azerbaijan was never part of the Karabakh settlement process and it emerged during the negotiations to end the current war and never before.

On Monday, Pashinyan told Parliament that the surrender of Shushi had been part of the Karabakh settlement talks since 2016, when negotiations resumed after the April War.

The Russian president also added that weeks before the final agreement was signed, Armenia rejected a proposal whereby Shushi would remain under Armenian control but Azerbaijanis who were displaced after the liberation of the city in 1992 would be allowed to return and settle there.

Putin said he did not understand why Pashinyan rejected the condition for the return of displaced persons to Shushi.

“What surprised me was the position of our Armenian allies who didn’t accept this. Prime Minister Pashinyan directly told me that this posed a threat to Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh. I still don’t understand what the threat was, taking into consideration the presence of Russian peacekeepers. Pashinyan told me that the Armenian party would fight,” Putin explained.

In discussing the status of Karabakh, Putin said that the parties have agreed that the current status quo would be maintained with the matter being revisited in the future.

This is stark contrast to assertions by Aliyev, who on Tuesday said that there cannot be any further discussion of Karabakh’s status, because Azerbaijan has “regained its territorial integrity” and there cannot be any talk of a second Armenian state since Azerbaijan is “a single country.”

“What will happen next is to be decided in the future or by future leaders, future participants in this process. But, in my opinion, if conditions are created for a normal life, for the restoration of relations between Armenia and Azerbaijan, between people, especially in the conflict zone, then this will create conditions for determining the status of Karabakh,” said Putin.

At this point the Russian president reflected to when Artsakh declared independence in 1991, acknowledging that since the 1994 ceasefire agreement Karabakh has functioned as such. He pointed out, however, that no other country, including Armenia, has recognized Karabakh’s independence, which he said “without a doubt, was a significant factor, including during the course of the conflict because the very fact of Karabakh was not recognized, including by Armenia, left a significant imprint on the course of events and on the perception.”

Putin explained that after Russia’s dispute with Georgia, Moscow “recognized the independence of South Ossetia and Abkhazia. We recognized the _expression_ of the will of the people living in Crimea as just, and the desire of the people living there to reunite with Russia, we went to meet the people, we did it openly.”

“Some people may like it, some people may not like it, but we did it in the interests of the people who live there, and in the interests of the all of Russia, and we are not ashamed to speak about it directly,” said Putin. “This was not done with regard to Karabakh, and this, of course, significantly influenced all the events taking place there.”

Putin, once again, reflected back on the Azerbaijani-perpetrated pogroms against Armenians beginning in Sumgait in 1988.

“In order to understand what is happening, we still have to go back to history, literally in a nutshell. I have to remind you that all this began back in 1988, when ethnic clashes broke out in the Azerbaijani city of Sumgait. Then the civilian population, the Armenians, suffered, then these acts spread to Nagorno-Karabakh,” said Putin.

“Since the then leadership of the Soviet Union did not react properly to the events taking place… I repeat once again: these are subtle things. I do not want to take sides and say who is right and who is to blame… It is impossible to say that now, but it was necessary to put things in order, it was necessary to protect the people, the civilian population. This was not done,” explained Putin.

Ex-NSS Chief Arrested for Plotting Pashinyan Assassination

November 14,  2020



Artur Vanetsyan

Armenia’s former head of that National Security Service Artur Vanetsyan was arrested on Saturday on suspicion of plotting the assassination of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, his lawyer announced on Facebook.

Vanetsyan, who leads the newly-formed Homeland Party, allegedly was part of large plot revealed by the NSS on Saturday, which involved other opposition figures.

“Today Artur Vanetsyan was invited to the Investigative Department of the National Security Service and detained. The authorities charged him based on false suspicions of usurping power and preparing the murder of Nikol Pashinyan,” Vanetsyan’s lawyer Lusine Sahakyan wrote on Facebook on Saturday.

Vanetsyan was part of the group of 10 opposition leaders who were detained late Tuesday, early Wednesday for disorderly conduct and violating Armenia’s martial law. Among the arrested were Armenian Revolutionary Federation Supreme Council of Armenia chairman Ishkhan Saghatelyan, Yerkir Media television political director Gegham and ARF Supreme Council member Artsvik Minasyan. The latter three were released when the presiding judge at the arraignment threw out their cases.