Film Review: ‘Amerikatsi’ Review: A Prisoner in His Homeland

The New York Times
Sept 7 2023

The actor-director Michael Goorjian explores the urge to reconnect with one’s roots in this movie about an American who moves to Soviet Armenia.

Sept. 7, 2023, 7:00 a.m. ET

In the late 1940s, the Soviet Union invited Armenians living abroad to resettle in Soviet Armenia. In “Amerikatsi,” the actor-director Michael Goorjian imagines one such journey and finds an unusual way to express the aching urge to reconnect with one’s roots.

Goorjian plays Charlie, a naïve, bumbling American who returns to Armenia years after being spirited away as a boy during the genocide. Despite befriending a Soviet official’s wife (Nelli Uvarova), he gets thrown in jail as a suspicious interloper. Charlie languishes behind prison walls, and is mocked and beaten by guards. As awful as that sounds, the film’s tone stays on the light side, even hokey, warmed by Charlie’s hopes.

Charlie finds an escape from despair by gazing into an apartment visible from his barred windows. He realizes that the man he’s watching, a bearish, temperamental painter named Tigran (Hovik Keuchkerian), is a guard in the prison’s watchtower and turns out to be Armenian. So Charlie takes to eating his meager meals at his window, following along with Tigran’s marital woes, dinner toasts, and attempts at painting.

The setup eloquently symbolizes the predicament of many who, like Charlie, left their homelands very young. His heart beats Armenian even if he speaks English, yet a nagging distance wards off total belonging. But he schemes indirect ways to communicate with the guard and finds a kindred spirit.

It’s an intriguing scenario, though not always played out skillfully. For better and worse, we feel Charlie’s confinement fully, as he watches another’s life go by and yearns for a proper home of his own.

Amerikatsi
Not rated. In Armenian, English and Russian, with subtitles. Running time: 1 hour 55 minutes. In theaters.

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Director
Michael A. Goorjian
Writer
Michael A. Goorjian
Stars
Michael A. GoorjianHovik KeuchkerianNelli UvarovaMikhail TrukhinJean-Pierre Nshanian
Rating
Not Rated
Running Time
1h 55m
Genre
Drama
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/09/07/movies/amerikatsi-review-a-prisoner-in-his-homeland.html?searchResultPosition=2

Austrian lawmakers call on Azerbaijan to open Lachin Corridor in line with ICJ order

 11:08, 5 September 2023

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 3, ARMENPRESS. Two lawmakers representing the major political parties of Austria, the Greens and the Social Democratic Party of Austria (SPÖ), which comprise the ruling coalition, have called on Azerbaijan to reopen the Lachin Corridor.

Austrian Member of Parliament Ewa Ernst-Dziedzic, The Greens’ spokesperson for foreign policy, has released a statement calling on the EU and the international community to ramp up pressure.

“The escalation in the conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan continues constantly. We are receiving reports of an impending famine if the situation doesn’t urgently change. Nagorno-Karabakh has been cut off of supplies for months, with devastating consequences, such as malnutrition, miscarriages, absence of medication. Now there’s an urgent need to return to dialogue between the two parties to the conflict and find a solution to swiftly mitigate the disastrous humanitarian situation,” Ewa Ernst-Dziedzic said in a statement.

She added that the EU and the international community should increase pressure and that Azerbaijan must open the Lachin Corridor in line with the ICJ ruling. “We can’t tolerate when the civil society becomes a toy for politics and starves because of political reasons. As long as this is the case, Azerbaijan should not be a trade partner for the EU,” she added.

“We can’t tolerate the explicit destruction of the Armenian population in Nagorno-Karabakh, and therefore we must use all levers to prevent it,” the Austrian lawmaker added.

"Despite the Russian aggression in Ukraine, the South Caucasus developments shouldn’t be ignored", she said.

SPÖ’s spokesperson for foreign policy, MP Petra Bayr said in a statement that the situation in Nagorno-Karabakh is disastrous and 120,000 people are cut off from the outside world by Azerbaijan. “There, near the gates of Europe, a crime against human rights is taking place,” Petra Bayr said.

Noting the ICJ ruling ordering Azerbaijan to open the Lachin Corridor, Petra Bayr said she expects that the EU will finally discuss the situation.

“The fact that responsible decision-makers in international organizations are silent is absolutely unforgivable. I expect Foreign Minister Schallenberg to address this crime in the EU and to bring it to the agenda as soon as possible. The National Council asked him to do so as early as last year.”

Bayr said she would send a parliamentary inquiry to Austrian FM Schallenberg asking him to present what measures the Austrian government has taken for opening humanitarian aid supplies through Lachin Corridor and what questions he’s raised during his meetings with his Azeri counterpart.

Blocking the “Road of Life”: Nagorno-Karabakh asks for help to lift blockade

Sept 5 2023


The sole road connecting the Nargorno-Karabakh enclave between Armenia and Azerbaijan has been blocked since December 2022.

The blockade is causing a humanitarian disaster due to the shortage of essential goods for tens of thousands of Armenians.

Redmond Shannon explains what the dispute surrounding the “Road of Life,” how the conflict could be resolved and why Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan now regrets leaning on Russia for help.

Watch the video at https://theglobalherald.com/news/blocking-the-road-of-life-nagorno-karabakh-asks-for-help-to-lift-blockade/

Armenpress: EBRD First Vice President to visit Armenia

 09:46, 4 September 2023

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 4, ARMENPRESS. The EBRD’s First Vice President and Head of Client Services Group, Jürgen Rigterink, will visit Armenia as part of a regional trip, the EBRD said in a press release.

The trip starts 4 September in Armenia, and will continue in Georgia and finish in Azerbaijan.

First Vice President Rigterink, accompanied by Matteo Patrone, EBRD Managing Director for Eastern Europe and the Caucasus, will meet government officials, central bank governors, business leaders and representatives of international financial organisations in each country. He will also mark the handover between the outgoing EBRD Regional Director for the Caucasus, Catarina Bjorlin Hansen, and her successor, Alkis Vryenios Drakinos.

In Armenia, the First Vice President will sign a credit line with a local partner bank to further boost the development of the private sector. In Georgia, Mr Rigterink will launch a programme with one of the EBRD’s key partner banks as part of its commitment to supporting small and medium size enterprises. In Azerbaijan he will participate in the launch of the public-private partnership for technical and vocational education and training organised by the State Vocational Education Agency, aimed at strengthening skills capacity in the food production industry. 

Ahead of the visit, Mr Rigterink said: “This visit is an opportunity to meet government representatives and members of the business community to discuss the priorities in the region, especially given Russia’s war on Ukraine and increasing economic uncertainty. The Caucasus is an important region for the Bank and we are committed to offering continuous support for the sustainable economic development in the region through our investments, advisory services and policy engagements.”

The EBRD has invested over €10 billion in 680 projects across the region, in both the private and public sectors.

Azerbaijan blocks French convoy from reaching Nagorno-Karabakh, sends its own

Aug 30 2023
 30 August 2023

The French humanitarian aid convoy to Nagorno-Karabakh. Image via social media.

Azerbaijan has blocked access to a French humanitarian convoy to Nagorno-Karabakh in less than a month, as Baku attempts to send a convoy of its own through Azerbaijani-controlled territory.

The convoy made up of ten lorries was sent by the Paris municipality and a number of humanitarian organisations on Wednesday morning. It set off from Yerevan to Kornidzor, joining other convoys at the Azerbaijani checkpoint on the Lachin Corridor previously sent by Armenia and France in late July and early August.

The convoy was accompanied by the Mayor of Paris Anne Hidalgo, who tweeted out at the Azerbaijani checkpoint on the Lachin Corridor — the only road connecting Nagorno-Karabakh to Armenia — that they had been barred entry.

Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo with the French humanitarian convoy at the Lachin Corridor. Image via social media.

‘Here at the Lachin Corridor, we testify that no humanitarian aid can enter Artsakh [Nagorno-Karabakh] in total violation of human rights’, said Hidalgo. ‘Our 10 humanitarian aid lorries were blocked.’

‘A humanitarian crisis is underway, it is urgent’, she added.

France has supported Armenia and its efforts to lift Baku’s blockade of Nagorno-Karabakh and the Lachin Corridor.

On Tuesday, French Foreign Minister Catherine Colonna called the blockade ‘immoral’, and stated that it aims to ‘provoke a mass exodus of Armenians from Nagorno-Karabakh’.

Also on Tuesday, French President Emmanuel Macron and his Azerbaijani counterpart Ilham Aliyev held a phone conversation, in which Aliyev accused Yerevan and Stepanakert of ‘creating artificial obstacles’ to prevent Nagorno-Karabakh’s access to humanitarian aid.

He criticised them for not agreeing to receive Azerbaijani aid through Aghdam and said that the Lachin Corridor would only be opened after Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh agree to the opening of the Aghdam–Stepanakert road.

Both Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh reject Azerbaijani proposals to send humanitarian aid through Azerbaijani-controlled territory. 

While some Western countries and the EU have welcomed Azerbaijan’s offer, EU High Commissioner Josep Borrell has made clear that the Aghdam–Stepanakert road cannot be an ‘alternative’ to the Lachin Corridor.

Nagorno-Karabakh has been under varying degrees of blockade since December and has been completely cut off from supplies from Armenia since mid-June.

Azerbaijan continues to deny that the region is under blockade as the humanitarian situation in Nagorno-Karabakh worsens.

On Tuesday, Baku announced that it was sending 40 tonnes of humanitarian aid to Nagorno-Karabakh through Aghdam with the mediation of the Azerbaijani Red Crescent.

The Azerbaijani convoy reached the Russian peacekeepers’ checkpoint on the line of contact outside of Askeran (Asgaran) later that day. They are waiting for the peacekeeping mission to facilitate the passage of the goods to Nagorno-Karabakh.

Armenians residing in Askeran gathered to protest the arrival of the Azerbaijani convoy. Both the Azerbaijani Red Crescent and the Armenian protesters have erected tents on either side of the line of contact.

Azerbaijani media reported that Russian peacekeepers stationed at the checkpoint had erected barriers to prevent the advancement of the Azerbaijani convoy.

Nagorno-Karabakh has also rejected Azerbaijan’s offer of humanitarian aid, with its parliamentary speaker, Davit Ishkhanyan, stating that Stepanakert had decided to ‘keep that road closed’.

Earlier this week, Nagorno-Karabakh president Arayik Harutyunyan similarly stressed that Stepanakert would only accept humanitarian aid sent through the Lachin Corridor.

After the Azerbaijani convoy was sent, the Armenian Red Cross criticised the Azerbaijani Red Crescent for ‘violating the fundamental principles of the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement’.

‘Presently, Azerbaijan […] using the Azerbaijan Red Crescent Society is trying to obstruct the activity of the ICRC as the only humanitarian international organisation operating in Nagorno-Karabakh’, stated the organisation.

 For ease of reading, we choose not to use qualifiers such as ‘de facto’, ‘unrecognised’, or ‘partially recognised’ when discussing institutions or political positions within Abkhazia, Nagorno-Karabakh, and South Ossetia. This does not imply a position on their status.


Turkish Press: Russian checkpoint delaying 40 tons of flour aid from Azerbaijan to Armenians in Karabakh

Anadolu Agency
Turkey – Aug 30 2023
Alperen Aktaş  |30.08.2023 – Update : 30.08.2023

BAKU 

The Azerbaijan Red Crescent's 40-ton flour aid for Karabakh Armenians is stuck Wednesday at a Russian-controlled checkpoint on the Aghdam-Stepanakert road. 

Two trucks that departed from Baku, loaded with the flour destined for Armenians in Stepanakert and surrounding areas, have not been granted passage through the Russian checkpoint, where they arrived Tuesday.

Azerbaijan Red Crescent officials spent the night in tents set up in the region and handed the quality certificate for the flour to Russian authorities.

Azerbaijan has been imposing restrictions for some time on the Lachin-Stepanakert road — which Armenians living in Karabakh use to travel to and from Armenia — citing border guards being fired on from Armenia and the transportation of smuggled goods with vehicles from the International Red Cross Organization.

Heavy vehicles are not allowed to travel on the route that is open to civilians, a source told Anadolu, who asked to remain anonymous.

Armenia's trucks, claiming that the Armenian population in Karabakh is facing a "humanitarian crisis" due to the closed road, have been waiting at the border for about a month.

The Baku administration said it will not allow shipments to its sovereign territories that were not previously discussed.

It proposed the Aghdam-Stepanakert road for shipments to the Armenian population in Karabakh.

https://www.aa.com.tr/en/world/russian-checkpoint-delaying-40-tons-of-flour-aid-from-azerbaijan-to-armenians-in-karabakh/2979520

Armenians are facing genocide in Nagorno Karabakh. The world must not sit idly by

The Telegraph, UK
Sept 3 2023

The Azerbaijani blockade in the Lachin Corridor is going unchecked. This must change




Armenia has a solid claim to be the world’s first Christian nation. Since St Gregory the Illuminator emerged from a long imprisonment for his faith at the beginning of the fourth century, the Armenian people have been no strangers to violence and atrocity.  Surrounded by hostile neighbours and often – within and beyond their own boundaries – persecuted for their faith, they have preserved an unshakeable commitment.  This has been an inspiration to many, just as their sufferings have been a cause of shock and outrage. Now they once again need our urgent help.  

Since December of last year, more than 120,000 Christian Armenians — including elderly people, women, and more than 30,000 children — have been under siege. A long-standing territorial conflict with Azerbaijan has led to the blocking by Azerbaijan of the Lachin Corridor linking Armenia itself with the Christian Armenian communities of Artsakh/Nagorno-Karabakh, cutting off supplies of food, medicine, fuel, and other essentials. Luis Moreno Ocampo, a former prosecutor of the International Criminal Court (ICC) has recently summed up the situation: “Starvation is the invisible genocide weapon. Without immediate dramatic change, this group of Armenians will be destroyed in a few weeks.”

This is no rhetorical exaggeration. Hospitals in the besieged region are operating at severely limited capacity, unable to perform vital procedures. Miscarriages and stillbirths have risen by a reported 30 percent. Malnutrition is widely spread and cases of death by starvation are regularly registered. And things are only getting worse.

“You will find no crematoria in Nagorno-Karabakh, nor machetes, but genocide by starvation is no less devastating for being silent,” Ocampo wrote in his damning report. “It was the same deadly method used against Armenians in 1915, against Poles and Jews in 1939, and against the people of Srebrenica in 1993.” Starvation as a tool of war is condemned by every principle of international law and natural justice.  It is not acceptable to turn our faces away from this. 

Yet the blockade continues uninterrupted and unchecked. We know from the recent meeting of the UN Security Council that Azerbaijan is preventing the International Red Cross from visiting Nagorno-Karabakh, and the government in Baku continues to ignore calls from a wide array of international organisations — including the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) and the International Court of Justice (ICJ) — to restore freedom of movement and the transfer of vital supplies through the corridor.  

Numerous religious leaders have already raised their voices to demand a response to this humanitarian crisis before it becomes much grimmer. All such crises grow more acute with the onset of winter. But the urgency is acute: lives are already being lost and blighted, and we are witnessing an open assault on a vulnerable civilian population.  

If our own government, the United States and all the world’s other committed democracies are serious about the absolute duty of protecting civilian populations, they have tools at their disposal – diplomatic and economic – to bring pressure to bear so that lives may be saved. 

It is a moment of opportunity. Russia – technically the guarantor of the Lachin Corridor – has been left significantly weakened by its brutal invasion of Ukraine. Its weight as the region’s traditionally most prominent player is diminished, leaving the door open to Turkey. Whilst Turkey is itself struggling with economic and political tensions it may, for this very reason, be more open to diplomatic pressures that might lead to some influence being brought to bear on an aggressive neighbour. 

In September, the United Nations General Assembly will meet in New York. Such events are usually more to do with political theatre than political change, an occasion for varieties of grandstanding. But the situation in Artsakh is a clearly identifiable issue that is not beyond resolution. The leaders of our democracies, including our own government, have the opportunity to send an unambiguous message about the unacceptability of genocidal tactics and ensuring that the blockade ends without delay. 

Time is running out – not only to save lives but to honour the possibility of a dependable moral commitment in international affairs. The Lachin Corridor crisis is not the only current threat to such a possibility, as we know all too well. But it is one that can and should be resolved without delay. Lives are at stake; but so is the principle of justice and security for the vulnerable.    

The Azerbaijani blockade in the Lachin Corridor goes unchecked and the region faces a genocide


The Rt Revd and Rt Hon Dr Rowan Williams is the former Archbishop of Canterbury 

Georgia and Armenia are complicated havens for Russian LGBTQ émigrés

EurasiaNet.org
Aug 19 2023
Andrea Palasciano Aug 18, 2023

Oksana Polovinkina vividly remembers the thrill of dancing at a drag ball last December in a Tbilisi club. She had just fled to Georgia with her girlfriend, seeking an escape from repression in Russia.

“Being in the crowd, it truly felt like a community,” Polovinkina recalled in a phone interview recently. “Just for a brief moment, I felt like I was in a beautiful dream.”

A half-year after that exhilarating moment, however, the 26-year-old Russian software specialist could only look on in “disgust” as a right-wing mob violently disrupted Tbilisi’s pride fest in early July. Festival organizers denounced the perpetrators as “Putinist” and accused the Georgian Dream government of being complicit in “the well-planned operation.”

The experience left Polovinkina deeply unsettled. While Georgia in general offers a far higher degree of individual political and economic freedom than Russia, members of the Russian LGBTQ community who have moved to the South Caucasus country have found the country to be a complicated haven, where they struggle with twin challenges – homophobia and general wariness of Russian newcomers.

While she doesn’t think twice about her decision to leave Russia, where “being gay is basically illegal,” Polovinkina says it’s hard to feel at home in Georgia. She must tread carefully: she can be open about her sexuality, but not too open. 

“The Caucasus is not the most friendly place … but it’s a comfortable place for me to rest,” said Polovinkina, adding that she refrains from engaging in public displays of affection with her partner. “As much as I love it, I want a different life.”

Georgia, along with Armenia, have been a major destination for Russians émigrés amid the Russia-Ukraine war, in part because Russian passport holders don’t need a visa to travel to the two countries. Both also feature more open political systems and a lower cost of living relative to Russia. Polovinkina is one of over 100,000 Russians currently residing in Georgia, with tens of thousands having arrived after the start of the war in early 2022. But in a country with a population of less than 4 million, the presence of so many Russian émigrés, most of whom have settled in Tbilisi, is exerting inflationary pressure on the Georgian economy, thus stoking societal tension. 

“The basic rule is that the older the generation of Georgians [i.e. those who grew up during the Soviet era] is more welcoming of Russians. Young people are very critical, skeptical,” says Polovinkina, adding that she has had several unpleasant encounters with Georgians.

Anti-Russian sentiment has deep roots in Georgia, stretching back to the April 1989 Soviet crackdown on autonomy-seeking protesters in Tbilisi. The brief war fought between the two countries in 2008 compounded the hard feelings. The rapid influx of Russian émigrés over the last 18 months has added a new layer of complexity to the situation, evidenced by the proliferation of anti-Russian graffiti on Tbilisi’s walls.

Russian LGBTQ migrants have generally reported a friendlier welcome in Armenia, but according to international and local human rights organizations, homophobia remains deeply entrenched across the Caucasus. On the NGO ILGA-Europe’s 2023 index, Georgia ranks 35th out of 49 countries surveyed, while Armenia comes in 47th – worse than Russia (46th) and better only than Turkey and Azerbaijan.

Polovinkina is far from the only LGBTQ émigré from Russia looking to keep moving. The South Caucasus is proving to be a temporary stop for many. “Russian queers don’t move here to live here. They come, obtain refugee status, and then move to Europe,” says Leo, a 25-year-old community officer at the LGBTQ organization Pink Armenia, who declines to give his last name.

Some countries, such as Germany, can grant humanitarian visas to members of Russia’s LGBTQ community. But obtaining one is a time-consuming process. The Berlin-based organization Quarteera, which offers support services for Russian-speaking LGBT people in Germany, reported in January having helped over 80 people receive humanitarian visas.

Relations between Russian émigrés and local LGBTQ activist groups are complicated. Locals haven’t exactly rolled out a red carpet for newcomers, while émigrés have tended to be insular and slow to engage with local LGBTQ communities.

“There are Russian LGBTQ activists but they’re possibly only active in their communities. Our organization provides services to people of Russian nationality, if they request them. But we don’t collaborate with any Russian LGBT organizations,” says Ana Aptsiauri, Project Coordinator at Equality Movement, a Georgian NGO for the protection of LGBTQ+ and women’s rights. 

She attributes lingering mistrust to general national security concerns connected to the lingering effects of the 2008 Russian-Georgian war. Some Georgians worry that some émigrés are informers, helping to keep tabs on émigrés’ activities and subtly advance Kremlin priorities. “Do the people who come have links with the current war?” Aptsiauri wondered. “Nobody in Georgia is sure that those who come will have a friendly attitude towards Georgians.” 

Suspicion among Georgian and Armenian activists is heightened by perceptions that Russia funds anti-LGBTQ organizations in both countries. “Russia doesn’t want the Caucasus to enter the European cultural sphere,” says Leo, the Armenian activist. At the same time, he acknowledges that many Armenians are culturally “conservative,” adding that transgender women are often the targets of hate crimes.

Leo adds that the standoffishness of émigrés has been a source of friction. “Russian queers didn’t initially want to integrate with Armenians. They had separate parties. On the dating app Grindr, some explicitly state; ‘no locals, only Russians or visitors.’ These seemingly little things accumulate,” he says. However, he notes that, of late, things are starting to improve, citing a Russian-Armenian dancer who has started organizing parties and hiring Armenian performers.

Back in Russia, repression of sexual non-conformity is intensifying. In mid-July, the Russian legislature outlawedgendertransitioningprocedures, annulling marriages in which one person has transitioned and banning transgender Russians from adopting children. As living conditions continue to toughen for LGBTQ people in Russia, more of them are likely to seek refuge in the Caucasus. 

“Of course, it’s better than Russia,” Leo says, referring to the reception LGBTQ émigrés will receive in the Caucasus. “Anywhere is better than Russia right now.”

Andrea Palasciano has worked as a correspondent for AFP for a decade, most recently in Moscow. She is currently in the Knight Bagehot Fellowship in Business Journalism at Columbia University and is completing her MBA.

Biden, others deaf to Muslim extermination of Christians in Armenia

AFN – American Family News
Aug 22 2023

The United States has a chance to prevent a humanitarian crisis in Armenia simply by throwing its weight around against Azerbaijan. Instead, not only the U.S. but Israel and Turkey as well are supplying weapons to Azerbaijan while it seeks to choke out a Christian population in Armenia.

The Azeris have set up a military blockade on the main artery to Nagorno-Karabakh, home to 120,000 Armenian Christians in an odd territory that left them surrounded by Azerbaijan after land was divvied up by former Russian dictator Joseph Stalin.

Nagorno-Karabakh is internationally recognized as part of Azerbaijan, but its people are ethnic Armenians. Regardless what the maps say, it remains a contested region.

Appearing on Washington Watch Friday, Sam Brownback – the former U.S. Ambassador at-large for International Religious Freedom – said it's an age-old story.

"This is a kind of replay that we've seen throughout the Middle East of ancient Christian populations being strangled and run out by a radical Muslim country and individuals," Brownback said. "The road going in is being shut off by Azerbaijan, and you've got these 120,000 Christians being strangled and starved to death."

That road is essentially the link to the outside world for this part of Armenia. Medicine and food have become issues, Brownback told show host Jody Hice. Both Azerbaijan and Armenia have claimed border shootings by the other since the checkpoint was set up, according to Aljazeera.

Brownback (pictured) says the U.S. has considerable leverage to use against Azerbaijan if it would simply stop supplying weapons and encourage Israel and Turkey to do the same.

"There's a substantial Armenian community in the United States because so many of them have gotten driven out by prior genocides. There was one there 100 years ago during the fall of the Ottoman Empire … if we will just push and say, 'Mr. President, no more weaponry to Azerbaijan,'" Brownback said.

The goal for the Azeris, he continued, is to squeeze Nagorno-Karabakh until the Armenian Christians simply walk out. The coming winter and the shortage of gas and oil will complicate things.

For now, U.S. President Joe Biden has no interest in applying pressure.

The state-run Azerbaijan news agency in May ran a short piece on the "partnership" between the two countries with President Ilham Aliyev and Biden shaking hands and smiling.

"The partnership between Azerbaijan and the United States has helped advance prosperity across the region. Together we are combating terrorism, addressing narcotics trafficking and countering the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction," wrote Biden in a letter to Aliyev on the occasion of Azerbaijan Independence Day.

Brownback says current conditions will lead only to the Armenian Christians giving up their homes.

"Food is in short order then you start [losing] natural gas, heating oil. This is going to become unlivable – and that's exactly what the Azeris want," he described. "They want the Armenians to walk out and leave like what has happened in so much of the Middle East before. Then they'll end up immigrating to the United States or Europe because they're asylum seekers.

"There's no reason for this, but at the end of the day you've forced out yet another historic population," Brownback concluded.