NATO talked about the alliance`s position regarding Armenia`s humanitarian mission to Syria

Arminfo, Armenia
Marianna Mkrtchyan

ArmInfo.NATO did not express a position on the issue of sending Armenia a humanitarian mission to Syria.  The special representative of the NATO Secretary  General in the South Caucasus and Central Asia, James Appathurai,  stated this on March 11 at a press conference in Yerevan.

However, he stressed that the reaction of the North Atlantic Alliance  will not be in the future.  At the same time, Appatruai informed that  he had discussed this issue during today’s meeting with the Minister  of Defense of Armenia.  “I heard an analysis of the reasons for  sending the Armenian side of the humanitarian mission to Syria. You  know about the position of the United States and other states on this  issue. We clearly understand the causes and humanitarian aspirations  based on which the Armenian side acted,” Appathurai said.

Recall that on February 8, the humanitarian mission of Armenia,  consisting of 83 people, began its work in Aleppo; it is entrusted  with the task of demining outside the combat zone, mine awareness of  the population and providing medical assistance to the residents of  Aleppo.

The US embassy issued a statement by the US State Department, in  which Washington criticized this move by Yerevan.  The statement also  notes that Washington does not support cooperation between Armenia  and Russia in the implementation of this mission.  Moscow, on the  contrary, highly appreciated this step of Yerevan. 

Armenian Patriarch in Turkey, Mesrob II, Dies at 62

The National Herald


FILE – In this Oct. 21, 2005 file photo, Patriarch Mesrob II, the spiritual leader of Turkey’s Armenian Orthodox community, holds his dog in Istanbul. (AP Photo, File)

ANKARA, Turkey (AP) — Patriarch Mesrob II, the leader of the Armenian Orthodox Christians in Turkey, has died. He was 62.

Turkey’s state-run Anadolu Agency said Mesrob Mutafyan, the 84th Armenian Patriarch of Constantinople, died Friday at Istanbul’s Armenian Surp Pirgic hospital where he was being cared for. He had been incapacitated since 2008 with an early onset of dementia.

Mesrob was elected Patriarch in 1998, replacing the late Karekin II. He withdrew from his duties in 2008 and Archbishop Aram Atesyan was appointed as the acting patriarch for the Armenian community which numbers an estimated 70,000.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and other Turkish officials called Atesyan to offer their condolences.

Garo Paylan, a member of the Armenian community and a legislator in Turkey’s parliament said on Twitter: “Patriarch Mutafyan will remain in our minds as a memorable spiritual leader.”

FILE – In this Oct. 21, 2005 file photo, Patriarch Mesrob II, the spiritual leader of Turkey’s Armenian Orthodox community, holds his dog in Istanbul. (AP Photo, File)

Mesrob was born Minas Mutafyan in Istanbul in 1956. He was ordained in 1979 following studies in Germany and the United States.

Funeral details weren’t immediately available.

Preparations for the election of a new patriarch for Turkey were expected to begin after a 40-day mourning period.

Last year, the Turkish government intervened to halt elections at the patriarchate, on the grounds “that the necessary conditions for the electoral process had not been met” and that Mesrob was still alive.

FILE – In this Thursday, March 29, 2007 file photo, Patriarch Mesrob II, the spiritual leader of Turkey’s Armenian Orthodox community, after a ceremony marking the restoration of the Akhtamar church, in Lake Van in eastern Turkey. Turkey’s state-run Anadolu Agency said Mesrob Mutafyan, 62, the 84th Armenian Patriarch of Constantinople, died Friday March 8, 2019, at Istanbul’s Armenian Surp Pirgic hospital where he was being cared for. (AP Photo, File)

Asbarez: Gulbekian Foundation Announces Intensive Western Armenian Summer Courses

Intensive Western Armenian courses to be offered this summer in Budapest

The Programme of Armenian Studies announced the Summer Intensive Courses in Western Armenian for the sixth consecutive year. For the second time, the courses will be held in Budapest over the months of June, July and August at advanced, elementary and intermediate levels, respectively. The courses will be held at the following times:

Elementary: Monday July 1 to Friday July 26
Intermediate: Monday July 29 to Friday August 23
Advanced: Monday June 3 to Friday June 28

We are constantly working to improve these courses. This year we have introduced the following changes:
We have extended daily teaching time by 15 minutes and added an extra day of teaching per course. These changes are designed to allow students more time for speaking practice.

We have changed the teaching hours in order to avoid the afternoon heat of Budapest in summer.

More details regarding changes to the courses to follow.

The Summer Intensive Courses are an excellent way to start learning or to improve your Western Armenian. With each month-long course you will become more and more at home in the language. Take advantage of this opportunity to make the progress in Western Armenian that you have always wanted to.

Please be aware that there are a limited number of accommodation spaces, and they will be given out on a first-come-first-serve basis. For further queries and to express your interest in these courses, please contact Dr. Krikor Moskofian at [email protected].

The Programme of Armenian Studies is endebted to Pázmány Péter Catholic University for their moral and practical support and cooperation, especially that of Dr. Bálint Kovács and Márta Sándor.

The courses are designed, organized and taught by Dr. Krikor Moskofian (Founder and Director, Programme of Armenian Studies).

168: HHK Vice President calls for accountability in brawl incident involving activist

Category
Politics

Armen Ashotyan, Vice President of the Republican Party of Armenia, the former ruling party, condemns the incident that took place between members of the Restart initiative and public activist Narek Malyan.

“The attack on Narek Malyan is one of the flagrant displays of the situation that is created in Armenia. The atmosphere of irresponsibility, impunity that is created in our country has a history of many months,” he said at a news conference today.

Ashotyan called on law enforcement agencies to carry out a complete process as required by law.

“This is a consequence of dividing the society into friendlies and critics, and a circumstance of treating according to this division. I expect and demand the law enforcement system to carry out a complete process as required by law this time. Those guilty are known, this is entirely about bringing those guilty to justice in the legal arena and preventing this kind of manifestations in Armenia in the future,” he said.

An incident took place between members of the Re-Start initiative and public activist Narek Malyan in downtown Yerevan on March 4 after midnight.

Malyan has said on Facebook that he was physically assaulted by members of the group.

Police told ARMENPRESS that on-duty officers in the city saw and interfered in the brawl, prevented it and detained 6 participants of the incident. Another citizen has been summoned for questioning. All detainees have been released as police said they are preparing proceedings.

Davit Simonyan from Re-Start said on Facebook they will release a video detailing the incident.

Shortly after the news broke, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan personally made a statement, apparently referring to the incident.

Any attempt of solving issues with violence in Armenia must receive a strict legal counteraction, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said on Facebook.

“All those who act with the logic of violence, distribution of lies and fakes in new Armenia, are acting against Armenia, against democracy, against the people,” he added.

Azerbaijani Press: Armenian saboteur sentenced to 20 years in prison in Azerbaijan

AzerNews, Azerbaijan
Feb 27 2019

By  Trend

Trial on the criminal case of an Armenian saboteur Karen Kazaryan, who was detained while trying to commit sabotage in Azerbaijan, has ended in the Ganja Court on Grave Crimes, Trend reports Feb. 27.

During the trial process conducted under the chairmanship of Judge Karamat Aliyev, a verdict was read out to the accused person.

By a court decision, Kazaryan was sentenced to 20 years of imprisonment with strict detention regime.

story will be updated

Armenian Defense Minister visits north-eastern section of borderline

Armenian Defense Minister visits north-eastern section of borderline

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YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 26, ARMENPRESS. Defense Minister of Armenia Davit Tonoyan visited Tavush Province on February 26.

As ARMENPRESS was informed from the press service of the Defense Ministry, during the discussion at the Governorate the cooperation between the Defense Ministry and self-government bodies and the issues facing the bordering communities were touched upon.

The Defense Minister also visited the north-eastern borderline, military positions, got acquainted with the engineering works on site and gave relevant tasks.

Minister Tonoyan talked to the servicemen, assuring that the social and living conditions of the servicemen is in the daily focus of the military-political leadership.

Edited and translated by Tigran Sirekanyan




RFE/RL Armenian Report – 02/22/2019

                                        Thursday, 
Armenia Invited To More NATO Drills In Georgia
        • Sargis Harutyunyan
GEORGIA -- U.S. servicemen attend a drill during the multinational military 
exercises "Noble Partner 2018" at Vaziani military base outside Tbilisi, August 
6, 2018
Georgia’s Defense Minister Levan Izoria expressed hope that Armenia will 
continue to participate in NATO-led military exercises held in his country each 
year as he visited Yerevan on Thursday.
Izoria met with his Armenian counterpart Davit Tonoyan for talks which he 
described as productive.
Both men called for closer military ties between the two neighboring states at 
a joint news conference held after the meeting. They also signed a plan of 
joint activities by their ministries for this year.
“I agree with Mr. Izoria on the need to expand our cooperation in the area of 
defense and to include new elements in it,” said Tonoyan. He cited 
“millennia-old friendship between the two peoples” in that context.
Izoria voiced appreciation for the participation of Armenian army officers in 
the “Noble Partner 2018” exercise held near Tbilisi in August. “And I hope that 
the Armenian side will continue to be actively involved in such exercises held 
in Georgia under the NATO aegis,” he said.
Armenia - Armenian Defense Minister Davit Tonoyan (R) and his Georgian 
counterpart Levan Izoria meet in Yerevan, .
The “Noble Partner” drills involved 3,000 soldiers from Georgia, the United 
States and a dozen other nations, including Azerbaijan and Turkey.
The Armenian military did not participate in another NATO-led exercise, 
codenamed “Agile Spirit,” which took place elsewhere in Georgia in September.
Yerevan controversially dropped out of the previous “Agile Spirit” war games 
held in 2017. Armenian officials denied that the decision was made under 
pressure from Russia, Armenia’s main military ally. Moscow has repeatedly 
denounced the annual exercises organized by NATO or the U.S. military in 
Georgia.
Yerevan University Head Under Mounting Pressure To Resign
        • Marine Khachatrian
        • Naira Nalbandian
Armenia - Aram Simonian, the Yerevan State University rector, holds a news 
conference in his office, 29 May 2018.
Education Minister Arayik Harutiunian on Thursday called for the resignation of 
the long-serving rector of Armenia’s largest university who is facing 
corruption allegations denied by him as politically motivated.
Aram Simonian, who has run Yerevan State University since 2006, came under 
pressure to resign following last spring’s “velvet revolution” that toppled the 
country’s previous government headed by Serzh Sarkisian. A member of 
Sarkisian’s Republican Party (HHK) since 1997, Simonian had long been accused 
by his detractors of suppressing student activism and placing YSU under a 
strong HHK influence.
The pressure on Simonian grew in December after the State Oversight Service 
subordinate to Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian implicated the YSU administration 
in financial irregularities which it said had cost the state at least 800 
million drams ($1.65 million). The 63-year-old rector angrily denied the 
allegations, linking them to his continuing membership in the former ruling 
party.
On Wednesday, the Armenian police claimed that an unnamed “managing official of 
the university” has embezzled YSU funds and engaged in other corrupt practices 
over the past decade. In particular, a police statement said that in 2015 a 
private firm remodeled the official’s apartment and separate house in return 
for being granted a 400 million-dram construction contract by the YSU 
administration.
The police did not formally charge anyone. Instead, they sent the case to 
another law-enforcement body for further investigation.
Speaking to journalists later on Wednesday, Simonian acknowledged that the 
police statement most probably referred to him. “I see political motives behind 
that,” he said.
Accordingly, Simonian rejected the “ridiculous” allegations, saying that they 
are part of the current government’s efforts to force him out of YSU. He said 
he will not step down before serving out his current term in office in 2020.
Meanwhile, Harutiunian made a case for Simonian’s resignation after a weekly 
cabinet meeting in Yerevan. The education minister said that the YSU head 
should go because he is widely “associated with many negative practices that 
have existed in YSU and the sphere of higher education in general.”
Harutiunian, who taught at YSU before being appointed to Pashinian’s government 
in May, went on to accuse Simonian of trying to “politicize” the corruption 
inquiries and “using many deans and scholars as a shield
Armenian Authorities Confirm Hefty Payout From Sarkisian’s Brother
        • Astghik Bedevian
Armenia -- President Serzh Sarkisian's brother Aleksandr (L) is seen outside 
the parliament building in Yerevan, June 10, 2010.
The National Security Service (NSS) said on Thursday that an indicted brother 
of Armenia’s former President Serzh Sarkisian has paid the state $30 million 
from a bank account that was frozen last summer.
It emerged earlier this week that the NSS is pressing fraud charges against 
Aleksandr “Sashik” Sarkisian. Also, Armenian media reports said that he has 
donated $18.5 million from his frozen account to the government.
The NSS director, Artur Vanetsian, confirmed the reports. He said that 
Sarkisian has also agreed to settle a back tax debt by transferring the 
remaining $11.5 million the state treasury.
“The criminal investigation is continuing and its results will be made public,” 
Vanetsian told reporters.
The NSS chief declined to comment on reasons for the hefty donation made by 
Sarkisian. He denied striking any deals with the ex-president’s brother.
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian publicly demanded in September that Aleksandr 
Sarkisian “return the money to the state budget.” Sarkisian rejected 
Pashinian’s demand as illegal but later offered to donate a part of the $30 
million account if his and his family members’ assets are unblocked.
Armenia - An armed officer of the National Security Service guards an entrance 
to the Yerevan house of former President Serzh Sarkisian's brother Aleksandr 
searched by investigators, 4 July 2018.
Sarkisian’s lawyer on Tuesday dismissed the fraud charges brought against his 
client. He said they stem from over a dozen drawings by the 20th century 
Armenian painter Martiros Saryan which were found in Sarkisian’s Yerevan house 
in July. The NSS confiscated the drawings, saying that his fugitive son Narek 
had fraudulently obtained them from Saryan’s descendants.
The 62-year-old Sarkisian, whose brother was overthrown in last spring’s 
“velvet revolution” led by Pashinian, is thought to have made a big fortune in 
the past two decades. He held a parliament seat from 2003-2011.
Also facing prosecution are another former Armenian president, Robert 
Kocharian, and his elder son Sedrak. The NSS said on Tuesday that it has 
charged the latter with evading nearly $2 million in taxes and laundering an 
even larger amount of money. Sedrak Kocharian rejected the accusations as 
“fabricated,” saying that they are part of the current authorities’ persecution 
of his arrested father and broader family.
Vanetsian denied any political motives behind the high-profile case. He noted 
in that regard that Robert Kocharian had also accomplished “many positive 
things” while in power.
Armenia - President Serzh Sarkisian (L) and his predecessor Robert Kocharian 
visit Gyumri, 7 December 2008.
Vanetsian announced in September that his agency is scrutinizing what he 
described as hundreds of millions of dollars worth of assets belonging to 
Kocharian’s family. A few weeks later, the NSS launched a corruption 
investigation into Armen Avetisian, who ran Armenia’s customs service during 
Kocharian’s rule. It said that Avetisian is suspected of illegal involvement in 
entrepreneurial activity and money laundering.
In particular, it said, he financed the construction of a luxury hotel in 
Yerevan through an obscure company registered in Cyprus. It remains unclear 
whether Avetisian has been formally charged.
Vanetsian confirmed on Thursday that the former customs chief’s son has offered 
to donate another five-star hotel, located in the resort town of Tsaghkadzor, 
to the state. “That process is now in progress,” he said.
During Avetisian’s tenure in 2001-2008, the customs service solidified its 
reputation as one of Armenia’s most corrupt government agencies.
Press Review
“Haykakan Zhamanak” also comments on a $18.5 million donation to the state 
reportedly made by former President Serzh Sarkisian’s controversial brother 
Aleksandr. The latter at the same denies fraud accusations brought against him. 
“This naturally raises the following question: if he doesn’t admit his guilt 
and maintains that he became rich by honest means why did he donate $18.5 
million to the state? Does hope to save his fortune by sacrificing a part of 
it?”
For his part, Robert Kocharian’s son Sedrak is facing similar charges and 
strongly denying them. “Whether or not the law-enforcers will succeed in 
proving those accusations in court is a different question,” says “Haykakan 
Zhamanak.” The pro-government paper say that through “propaganda manipulations” 
Sedrak Kocharian and Aleksandr Sarkisian are trying to make Armenians believe 
that they became millionaire businessmen without benefiting from government 
corruption.
“Zhoghovurd” reports that the U.S., Russian and French co-chairs of the OSCE 
Minsk Group will not visit Stepanakert during their latest tour of the 
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict zone. A senior Karabakh official, Davit Babayan, is 
quoted as playing down this fact, saying that “such exceptions happen 
sometimes.” Babayan also argues that the main purpose of the co-chairs’ trip is 
to organize another meeting of Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and 
Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev. The paper notes that an official press 
release on Pashinian’s meeting with the mediators held on Wednesday made no 
mention of the next Armenian-Azerbaijani summit.
“Zhamanak” comments on Georgian Defense Minister Levan Izoria’s visit to 
Armenia which begins on Thursday. “Armenia and Georgia are on different 
security vectors,” writes the paper. Nevertheless, it says that they have 
“common interests” and are in a position to jointly contribute to regional 
security. “These are vital interests as they involve issues conditioning the 
continued existence of the Armenian and Georgian states,” it says.
(Lilit Harutiunian)
Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2019 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
www.rferl.org

Robert Fisk: This new history of the Christian genocide during the Ottoman Empire sounds a dark warning for the future

The Independent, UK
Feb 21 2019
 
 
This new history of the Christian genocide during the Ottoman Empire sounds a dark warning for the future
 
Is it possible for a people to be so inured to cruelty that they changed, that their acts of sadism could alter their humanity?
 
Robert Fisk Middle ,East Correspondent

Israeli historian Benny Morris doesn’t do things by half. The footnotes of his new book on the 30-year genocide of Christians by their Turkish rulers, cowritten with his colleague Dror Zeevi, take up more than a fifth of the 640-page work. “It was nine years, a long haul,” he admitted to me this week, with an audible sigh over the phone. And he talks about the involvement of Ataturk in the later stages of the genocide of around 2.5 million Christians of the Ottoman empire; how “religions do drive people to excessive violence” – he has in mind the Turks, Isis, the Crusades – and even condemns the Arabs for their inability to criticise themselves.

The mere title of the Morris-Zeevi book, The Thirty-Year Genocide: Turkey’s Destruction of Its Christian Minorities 1894-1924, is going to have the Turks enraged, from Erdogan down. The Armenians and other Christians will dispute his apparent claim that he has only just discovered that their slaughter lasted for 30 years – others have talked of the Armenian genocide of 1915 bookended by the late 19th-century massacres in Turkey and the post-1915 killing of surviving Armenians and Greeks, Assyrians and others. And the Arab world will challenge his view that the holocaust (my word) of Christians was more motivated by Islam than Turkish nationalism.

Having written about the genocide of the Armenians for 35 years, I have doubts that the actual call for “jihad” in the Turkish Ottoman empire unleashed at the start of the First World War was as ferocious as Morris makes it out to be. Muftis were indeed told they were in a holy war against Christians – but not against German Christians, Austro-Hungarian Christians, neutral Christians or allies of the Central Powers (Bulgaria, for example). Many Muslim worshippers, sitting on the carpets of mosque floors, must have shaken their heads in puzzlement at these caveats. Well, one way was to notice the German officers training the Ottoman army, the German diplomats and businessmen who witnessed the genocide of the Armenians with their own eyes, and wrote home about it. Hitler asked his generals who now remembered the Armenians just before invading Poland in 1939.

But again and again, I was brought up short by the sheer, terrible, shocking accounts of violence in Morris’s and Zeevi’s work. “Strident religiosity” moved through the Muslim lands, write the authors.

The date: 1895. The place: Severek. The witness: Armenian survivor Abraham Hartunian. “The first attack was on our pastor [Mardiros Bozyakalian]. The blow of an axe decapitated him. His blood, spurting in all directions, spattered the walls and ceiling with red. Then I was in the midst of the butchers. One of them drew his dagger … Three blows fell on my head. My blood began to flow like a fountain … The attackers [were] sure that I was dead … Then they slaughtered the other men in the room, took the prettier women with them for rape …”

Now it is July 1915. The place: Merzifon. The witness: missionary JK Marsden. “They were in groups of four with their arms tied behind them and their deportation began with perhaps 100 … in a batch … they were taken about 12 miles across the plains, stripped of their clothing and, in front of a ditch previously prepared, were compelled to kneel down while a group of villagers with knives and axes quickly disposed of them. For a week, this was repeated until 1,230 of the leading Armenian men had been disposed of.”

In January 1920, YMCA secretary CFH Crathern was in Marash. The wife of an Armenian pastor had reached his hospital. “She was bleeding … from three bullet and three dagger or knife wounds while a child of 18 months had been taken from her breast and slain with a knife, and an older girl killed with an axe. To add to the sorrow of it, this woman was pregnant and had a miscarriage as soon as she reached the hospital.” The woman died the following day. 

I have repeated above only a few of the less bloody episodes from the 30 years. I will spare readers the chopped off fingers, the thousands of raped girls, the priests beheaded or burned on crucifixes.

In the final annihilation of the Armenians, an American missionary spoke of “minds obsessed with Muslim fanaticism seven times heated”. Turks, he wrote, had “become drunk with blood and rapine, and plunder and power, and he will be a different man from what he was before the atrocities”. Benny Morris thinks it was more to do with a mixture of modern nationalism and the decline of “Islamic polity”.

I discussed all this with him. Is it possible for a people to be so inured to cruelty that they changed, that their acts of sadism could alter their humanity? Religions drive people to excessive violence, he said again, and then repeated this as “excessive sadism”. Morris agreed that the Romans were cruel, but they were pagans. “In terms of religion, the Romans were amateurs. Abrahamic religions drive people to excess.” Jews had avoided this. Palestinians will disagree.

There is certainly a frightening geographical scope to the killings. Many thousands of horrors were perpetrated in Mosul, Raqqa, Manbij and Deir ez-Zor, names grimly familiar from the Isis torments of 2014 onwards.

Why, one keeps asking, didn’t the Christians leave after 1924? But of course, they had been urged to return to settle in Cilicia and in Mesopotamia and Syria by the French and British – who left; and thus the Christian descendants waited for the next generational bloodletting.

The Turks were not the only killers, and Kurds also killed the Christians for the Turks, as Ukrainians killed the Jews for the Nazi Germans. At one point in Morris’s text, a group of Circassians plait a rope 25 yards long from the hair of young women they have killed, and send it as a present to their commander.

Mustafa Kemal Ataturk gets pretty well trashed in this volume. “There are accounts of him saying in 1922 that, ‘Our aim is to get rid of the Christians’ – he said this in a number of conversations,” Morris contends. “He gave orders, and men in his later government were responsible.” But if this 30-year history of blood was fuelled by “Muslim fanaticism”, there are “good Turks” in the book. In the first massacres, government officials arrested Essad Bey, an “honest, impartial and tolerant” judge who tried to help the Christians. There is a heroic Turkish doctor who throws out his sick Turkish soldiers from a hospital and replaces them with Armenian refugees. Missionary Tacy Atkinson hoped to meet the doctor one day “in the Kingdom of Heaven”.  There are others. It’s true that the Greek Christians have fewer historians than the Armenians. Tens of thousands of Greeks were transported to Greece in return for an equal number of Muslims – official agreements kept the massacres a trifle smaller – but Morris and Zeevi give too little attention to the awe in which the Nazis held Ataturk’s people.

Ataturk himself cared little for Islam: he smoked and womanised, and was a nationalist before he was a Muslim. The Nazis admired his “Turkified” non-minority republic. When he died, the front page of Volkischer Beobachter was fringed in black.

The authors briefly compare the Jewish Holocaust and the Armenian genocide – I prefer the terms Jewish Holocaust and Armenian Holocaust – and there are some already published parallels. Armenians might be spared if they would convert to Islam or marry Muslim men. Jews could not save their lives by converting. The Turkish massacres were more sadistic. I rather think the German-inspired slaughter could be just as bad in the Second World War: witness the head-chopping at the Jasenovac camp on the Croatian-Bosnian border. Persecution of the Jews under the Nazis lasted at most 12 years, but persecution of Christians in Ottoman territories 30 years.

German civilians played little role in the Jewish Holocaust. Turkish civilians played a far greater role. If 2.5 million Christians is the correct figure for those murdered in the 30 years – Morris warned me that it cannot be accurately tallied, and I’m sure he’s right – at least six million Jews were killed in the 1939-1945 period, and so it took the Nazis five times as few years to slaughter more than twice as many human beings. The Turks simply didn’t have the industrial tools to kill more Christians more quickly, because these mechanics were unavailable at the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries. But working on this basis, how many people will be killed in the future – and how quickly – with new technology?

Armenian-Azerbaijani Talks on Karabakh Appear Positive Even as Conflict Continues to Simmer Underneath

The Jamestown Foundation
Feb 13 2019


Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev (L) and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan (Source: Contact.az)

The foreign ministers of Armenia and Azerbaijan held four-hour-long consultations in Paris, on January 16, under the auspices of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe’s (OSCE) Minsk Group. The joint statement to come out of the meeting included telling language. In particular, the two sides acknowledged the need for “concrete measures to prepare the populations for peace” (Osce.org, January 16).

The Paris consultations were the second meeting of Ministers Elmar Mammadyarov and Zohrab Mnatsakanyan within a month. Amidst overall accelerated dynamics of bilateral contacts and relatively softened rhetoric, there is now reinvigorated optimism that a tangible breakthrough may soon be possible in the over-two-decades-old internationally mediated negotiations over Azerbaijan’s breakaway region of Karabakh. Nevertheless, an apparent discrepancy continues to persist between the words and deeds of Armenian and Azerbaijani political elites.

The evolving positive sentiment surrounding the Karabakh peace process was underpinned by an informal meeting between Armenia’s Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, on the margins of this year’s Davos World Economic Forum (Azatutyun.am, January 22). Pashinyan subsequently disclosed the details of the talks, noting that he told the Azerbaijanis that Artsakh (formerly known as the “Nagorno-Karabakh Republic” or NKR) should be allowed to represent itself in the negotiations. Armenians in Karabakh did not participate in Armenia’s snap parliamentary elections, and thus he has no confidence vote to represent them, Pashinyan argued. In response to Aliyev’s assertion to also involve the Azerbaijani minority that had to flee Karabakh, Pashinyan claimed he opposed the idea, saying that those individuals had voted for Aliyev in last year’s presidential elections, thus empowering him to speak on their behalf (Galatv.am, February 1).

It is unclear what has motivated Pashinyan to seek to “sovereignize” Artsakh within the context of the OSCE Minsk Group, particularly since accepting the region as a separate negotiating entity would imply its separation from Armenia as well. Does this signal a qualitatively new plan or is the Armenian leader seeking to shirk responsibility ahead of an inevitable reescalation of tensions. Perhaps, it is linked to Pashinyan’s overwhelming opposition to former president Robert Kocharyan. The latter, upon taking office in 1998, agreed to exclude Karabakh from any negotiations with Azerbaijan. He had insisted that since he had previously served as elected president of the NKR, this legitimated him to speak on behalf of Karabakh as Armenian head of state. In contrast, Pashinyan may be rejecting the Kocharayan negotiations formula in an effort to distance himself further from his predecessor.

In the broader context of the Karabakh peace process, preparations for full-fledged combat operations by both sides continue. This is despite verbal agreements to defuse tensions along the frontline by setting up “hot line” military-to-military communications between the two sides. So even as the intensity of multi-format talks has increased, neither side believes a negotiated solution is possible and both have adopted an approach akin to “lulling mutual vigilance.” Indeed, talks of needing to establish mechanisms to investigate clashes along the frontline—an idea Yerevan and Baku both endorsed in 2016—have almost subsided.

Last year, Azerbaijan made a series of important strategic arms purchases, including two battalions of Belarusian Polonez multiple-launch rocket systems (MRLS), together with about 1,200 A200-type rockets; at least one battalion of Israeli-origin LORA high-precision ballistic missile systems; and substantial numbers of various models of sophisticated unmanned aerial vehicles (see EDM, January 21). In turn, Armenia obtained four Su-30SM multirole 4+ generation fighter aircraft, along with additional procurements yet to be implemented consistent with its previously approved $100 million loan from Russia (Kommersant, February 1). To stand up to the evolving military supremacy of Azerbaijan, Armenia is preparing to fundamentally reform its “active deterrence” strategy by overhauling and expanding its fleet of Su-25 close-air-support jets while eventually procuring a total of 12 Su-30SMs to carry out combat air-patrol and air-to-surface deep interdiction missions.

In late December 2018, Aliyev reiterated Azerbaijani’s tough red lines on Karabakh, making clear that neither independent status, nor Artsakh’s formal accession to Armenia would be at all acceptable for Baku. He also stressed that the maximum scope of concessions Baku would be willing to offer would be some level of autonomy for the breakaway region but within a unified Azerbaijan (Haqqin.az, January 1, 2019). Subsequently, Pashinyan strongly rebuffed the Azerbaijani leader’s words, stating, “[W]e cannot discuss the ‘territories for peace’ formula” (Armenpress, January 30). In response, Aliyev declared that the “ ‘might makes right’ principle prevails in the world at present,” and therefore, preserving a viable military solution to resolve the Karabakh dispute will continue to constitute a key agenda of Azerbaijan (Trend.az, February 12).

Considering these geopolitical realities, Armenia arguably has four options for how to deal with the Karabakh conundrum. First, it could completely withdraw its military from the breakaway region. But then it would also need to evacuate the 150,000 ethnic Armenians who live there since, after decades of conflict, the Armenian and Azerbaijani societies are highly antagonistic toward one another.

Second, it might seek to recognize the so-called independence of Artsakh, as Turkey did with Northern Cyprus. Of course, such an initiative would by no means prevent Azerbaijan from launching an assault on Karabakh in response.

Third, Armenia might choose to agree to the Russian plan, which would offer a transitory status for Karabakh coupled with the deployment of Russian “peacekeeping” troops throughout Artsakh (which in fact claims territories beyond the administrative borders of the Soviet-era Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast or NKAO). In this case both rivals—Yerevan and Baku—would end up losing control over the situation, while opening the door to more direct and overt manipulative actions by the Kremlin. This option would almost certainly have unpredictable repercussions in addition to likely putting an end to Armenia as a serious politico-military factor in the region.

Fourth, Armenia could seek to unilaterally incorporate the region into its territory as Israel did with the Golan Heights, and de jure declare Artsakh an inherent part of Armenia—thereby fulfilling the century-long wishes of the Armenian population of Karabakh. Such a scenario might delay the looming fighting, but in the meantime would trigger furious criticism around the world, including from Moscow.

None of the options are ideal for Pashinyan’s government as it seeks to dramatically reform the country’s economy, political system and military. Continued talks with Baku may thus be the only policy likely to offer Yerevan at least some period of breathing space.

Armenian government’s grounding of rejection of bill lacks any humane motivation: Naira Zohrabyan

Aysor, Armenia
Feb 15 2019

Chairperson of the NA’s Human Rights and Public Affairs Standing Committee Naira Zohrabyan expressed regret that the government gave a negative conclusion to the bill authored by her which offers calculating one pre-trial detention day as 1,5. She said she had some expectations that the executive would reject her proposal.

“Such like bill has been earlier submitted by MP Edmon Marukyan but was rejected. Rejection of my bill was expected too. Of course, the groundings of the government are not acceptable for me, as having worked as a journalist for quite a long time and having covered the sector for quite a long time, I know what is going on in cells for preliminary detention,” she told Aysor.am.

“About 23-25 people are being kept in cells intended for 7-8 people. People are sleeping in turns, which is an additional punishment for the detainees. We offer to display a humanitarian step and consider one detention day as 1,5 day,” Zohrabyan said.

She stressed that the government’s comments that the courts will be overloaded if the bill is approved are ungrounded.

“You have seen on the eve that relatives of hundred convicts and detainees came to the NA yard to meet me. I am being informed that the convicts are planning to declare mass hunger strike, but I have urged them not to undertake such desperate steps hoping that my bill would have been approved today,” she said.

Zohrabyan said her last hope is for the bill to receive the positive conclusion of the State-Legal Committee and they will have an opportunity to discuss it at the parliament.

“If not, my authorities as a chairperson of the Human Rights and Public Affairs Standing Committee and a lawmaker will end,” Zohrabyan stressed.

The MP also added that there is no humane motivation in the grounding of the government for which she regrets.