Category: 2020
Survey Shows What Armenians Think About Russia
MOSCOW (Sputnik) – More than 80 percent of Armenians have a positive attitude toward Russia and see the country as an ally, a poll for Radio Sputnik revealed, a week after the nation struck a Moscow-brokered ceasefire deal with Azerbaijan.
Of those surveyed Armenians, 83.8 percent said that they have a positive attitude to Russia, while 9.4 percent expressed their negative attitude. Another 6.8 percent were unable to give a definitive answer. The poll was conducted by MPG, the exclusive representative of the GALLUP International Association in Armenia.
Russia also topped the list of friendly nations on whose support Armenia could count in difficult times, with 62.3 percent of respondents mentioning this country. Russia was followed by France (39.9 percent), neighbouring Iran (6.4 percent), the United States (5.8 percent), Germany (1.2 percent) and Georgia (0.6 percent). A total of 4.6 percent were unable to give a definitive reply.
When asked whether Russia is Armenia’s ally, 84.6 percent replied in the affirmative, while 11.8 percent replied in the negative. Another 3.6 percent were undecided.
As for military assistance or political support, the majority of Armenians would be ready to accept it from Russia (79.6 percent). Armenians would also welcome assistance from France (14.4 percent), Iran (6.8 percent), the US (5 percent) and Germany (0.4 percent). Slightly over 12 percent mentioned other countries, and 7.4 percent did not provide a clear answer.
https://sputniknews.com/amp/world/202011191081209643-survey-shows-what-armenians-think-about-russia/?fbclid=IwAR2Cni855uK2WDEhLSbPsXZ3DP6XeI1VoCUztcExkpH2hA7p4RShpvstGmg
Another 936 people return to Stepanakert escorted by Russian peacekeepers – ministry
TURKISH press: Germany follows France’s example banning nonexistent Turkish group
The German federal parliament has approved a motion that proposes the prohibition of Turkish organizations linked to the so-called Grey Wolves movement, following the precedent set in France, reports said Thursday.
The Bundestag passed the motion titled “Opposing nationalism and racism, suppressing the effect of the Grey Wolves movement” prepared by the union parties of the Christian Democratic Union of Germany (CDU) and the Christian Social Union in Bavaria (CSU), as well as the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD), the Free Democratic Party (FDP) and the Greens.
The motion includes taking action to prevent and suppress the spread of the Grey Wolves movement in Europe, the German government keeping track of its activities, prohibiting linked associations and opposing online propaganda to allegedly inform the public and institutions about the goals of the movement.
Meanwhile, the Interior Ministry, which has the prerogative to shut down organizations and associations, has not commented on the issue.
Earlier this month, the Turkish Foreign Ministry criticized France’s controversial move to ban the group, saying that no such organization or movement exists.
France’s “imaginary decision,” as if such a movement exists, is the “final manifestation of the contradictory psychology of the country,” the ministry said.
However, it added, it is unacceptable to ban cultural symbols used in many countries around the world, which are extremely common and have no illegal dimensions.
Germany, a country of over 82 million people, has the second-largest Muslim population in Western Europe after France. Among the country’s nearly 4.7 million Muslims, 3 million are of Turkish origin. Germans of Turkish origin have been part of German society for nearly three decades. In 1961, Turkey and Germany signed a recruitment agreement, which allowed Turkish citizens to work in Germany as guest workers.
This Turkish population, largely descending from the country’s “guest workers” who arrived to aid the post-World War II development boom, often complain of the racist attacks and lack of follow-up in police investigations for such incidents.
Germany has witnessed growing anti-Muslim hate crimes in recent years sparked by hate propaganda by far-right parties.
The number of attacks targeting the Turkish minority in France has also increased recently. Last month, members of the Armenian community wounded four Turkish citizens who were demonstrating on the A7 motorway connecting Lyon and Marseille.
Rising Islamophobia, racism and xenophobia in Europe threaten the safety of approximately 6 million Turkish citizens living in European countries, according to Deputy Foreign Minister Yavuz Selim Kıran.
TURKISH press: Iranian sniper posts provocative photo taking aim at Azerbaijani President Aliyev
An Iranian sniper published provocative photos of Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and his wife, first Vice President Mehriban Aliyeva, as the couple visited the recently liberated ancient Khudaferin Bridge in the city of Jabrayil near the border with Iran on Tuesday.
The sniper took aim at the Azerbaijani president and the vice president during their visit.
The photos received criticism on social media outlets, with Azerbaijanis criticizing the Iranian sniper for sharing such controversial shots, while Armenians said the sniper should have shot the couple.
Neither Azerbaijan nor Iran has made an official statement regarding the incident.
The Azerbaijani army liberated Jabrayil’s city center and some villages from the occupation of Armenia in mid-October.
On Monday, Aliyev and his wife started visiting regions recently liberated from nearly three decades of Armenian occupation.
Hikmet Hajiyev, the Azerbaijani president’s assistant, shared footage of Aliyev on Twitter.
“President Ilham Aliyev and First Lady Mehriban Aliyeva are in the center of Jabrayil after liberation. Everything razed to the ground. Magnitude of Armenia’s vandalism is beyond any imagination. President Ilham Aliyev emphasized that all-out reconstruction work will be conducted,” he said.
More than 1,000 people have been reported killed in the six-week flare-up between Azerbaijan and neighboring Armenia over the Nagorno-Karabakh region.
Relations between the former Soviet republics of Azerbaijan and Armenia have been tense since 1991 when the Armenian military occupied Nagorno-Karabakh, a territory recognized as part of Azerbaijan, and seven adjacent regions.
New clashes erupted on Sept. 27, and the Armenian Army continued its attacks on civilian and Azerbaijani forces for 44 days, even violating three humanitarian cease-fire agreements. Azerbaijan liberated several cities and nearly 300 of its settlements and villages from Armenian occupation in the past few weeks.
On Nov. 10, the two countries signed a Russia-brokered agreement to end the fighting and work toward a comprehensive resolution.
Turkey welcomed the truce as a “great victory” for Azerbaijan.
Following the Russian-brokered peace deal signed between Yerevan and Baku, Armenian residents in the occupied areas had until Nov. 15 to leave the area but that date was extended by another 10 days.
TURKISH press: Iranian FM to visit Moscow, Baku to discuss Nagorno-Karabakh
Iran’s Foreign Minister Javad Zarif will be touring Russia and Azerbaijan next week to discuss the situation in the recently liberated Nagorno-Karabakh.
In a statement Thursday, Foreign Ministry spokesman Saeed Khatibzadeh said Zarif’s visit to Moscow and Baku on Monday and Tuesday is aimed at “talking to the regional parties.”
He said Nagorno-Karabakh, the latest regional developments and bilateral issues will be on Minister Zarif’s agenda.
The visit comes days after a Moscow-brokered peace deal between Azerbaijan and Armenia, ending weeks of fighting over the region.
The truce is being seen as a victory for Baku, which had been fighting to seize back control of its territory from Armenian occupation.
Iran has welcomed the agreement, hoping it would “lead to final arrangements in establishing sustainable peace in the Caucasus region.
Reports about Iran’s border with Armenia being closed as part of the deal surfaced on social media a few days ago, creating a stir in Tehran.
Iran’s Deputy Foreign Minister Abbad Aragchi, reacting to the reports, which he termed “untrue,” said creating a “geographical line” on the Iran-Armenia border is “baseless.”
Aragchi had toured Armenia, Azerbaijan, Russia and Turkey recently to discuss Iran’s “peace proposal” on the Karabakh crisis, which called for cease-fire and end to the occupation.
Official sources in Tehran told Anadolu Agency (AA) that the issue of Iran’s border security would figure prominently in Zarif’s discussions with officials in both Moscow and Baku.
Iran, which shares a border with both Azerbaijan and Armenia, has traditionally maintained a neutral stance on the conflict. However, calls have been growing in the country in favor of Azerbaijan.
Earlier this month, Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei unequivocally backed Azerbaijan’s right to liberate the occupied territories, saying international borders should be respected.
Among other issues on Zarif’s agenda, sources said, would be the “post-Trump scenario” and “Iran’s options” if the new U.S. administration decides to rejoin the 2015 Iran nuclear deal.
TURKISH press: Future of US-Turkey relations at stake as Pompeo visits Istanbul, avoiding Ankara
Before U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo embarked on a seven-nation blitz tour – with stopovers including France, Turkey, Georgia, Israel, the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Qatar and Saudi Arabia – both the American and international media questioned the “true purpose” of Pompeo’s visit to Istanbul. Pompeo went to the Turkish metropolis to hold talks on religious freedom, with the recent reversion of Hagia Sophia to a mosque a topic high on the agenda in talks with religious figures, including Patriarch Bartholomew I, the Greek Orthodox Christian leader.
Some experts were perplexed with Pompeo’s Istanbul visit and wondered why America’s top diplomat did not visit Ankara where he could call on Turkish officials, including President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, instead of just religious figures in Istanbul.
To clear the air, the U.S. State Department held a special press briefing before Pompeo started his visit, with two senior diplomats explaining the purpose of Pompeo’s visit to Istanbul and not Ankara. One of the diplomats explained that Pompeo’s Istanbul visit would concentrate primarily on religious freedom issues. It had also been difficult for Pompeo to meet Turkish interlocutors because of scheduling issues resulting from their travel.
Responding to this explanation from State Department officials as to why Pompeo was not meeting Erdoğan and other high-ranking officials, the Turkish Foreign Ministry described Pompeo’s meetings in Istanbul with religious figures as “extremely inappropriate.”
Pompeo, speaking anonymously, did not seem enthusiastic about visiting Ankara for a meeting with his Turkish counterpart Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu and had instead asked Çavuşoğlu to come to Istanbul to meet him, according to Turkish sources.
But in a statement, the Turkish Foreign Ministry also had some blunt words to convey to the United States on the issue of religious freedom purportedly being addressed by the secretary of state: “It would be more advisable for the United States to look in the mirror first and to show the necessary sensitivity to human rights violations such as racism, Islamophobia and hate crimes in its own country.”
U.S.-Turkey tensions have intensified in recent years even though U.S. President Donald Trump played down differences with Turkey over a host of issues, including the acquisition of Russian S-400 defense systems.
Turkey has been excluded from the internationally developed F-35 program after its decision to acquire the S-400 missile defense systems from Russia. The F-35 program is managed by the Pentagon’s F-35 Joint Program Office, with the U.S. Air Force, the U.S. Marine Corps and the U.S. Navy are all procuring and operating F-35s.
Turkey’s role in the Armenian-Azerbaijan conflict was also criticized by some U.S. lawmakers who said that Turkish involvement exacerbated the conflict. U.S. politicians are empathetic toward the sizeable Armenian population in the U.S.
On the other hand, Turkey was clearly annoyed by the U.S. House of Representatives and U.S. Senate passing resolutions to officially recognize the 1915 Armenian events as “genocide.”
With Trump set to move out of the White House in January, Turkish diplomats are not sure how the next president, Joe Biden, will view Turkey. Many analysts on both sides are wary about how the relationship will evolve under Biden.
U.S. observers noted that Erdoğan took a little longer than other European leaders to congratulate Biden – and also thanked Trump in a separate message. After all, it was Trump who seemed to support Erdoğan when he was criticized by fellow NATO members for cozying up to Moscow. Trump had also resisted pressure from the U.S. Congress to impose sanctions against Turkey.
But the Biden years could create challenges for Turkey. The U.S. and the so-called core members of the NATO alliance could see Turkey’s acquisition of the S-400 as an affront, constituting a violation of U.S. laws and also compromising NATO’s defense systems.
Indeed, U.S. senators were indignant when Turkey test-fired the system last month, ignoring their warning that the test-firing would attract sanctions against Turkey.
Çavuşoğlu, addressing a gathering of Turkish ambassadors in November, urged the U.S. to get over its opposition to the S-400 because the issue was a foregone conclusion. But U.S. experts believe that Biden may face pressure from within the Democratic Party to impose sanctions against Turkey over the S-400 issue and Turkey’s growing ties with Russian President Vladimir Putin.
The Countering America’s Adversaries Through Sanctions Act (CAATSA) offers a legal basis for Biden to fall back on for imposing sanctions. The U.S. Treasury Department has so far not taken any action against Turkey, even though a New York court jailed a senior official of the Turkish state-owned Halkbank official in 2018 for violating sanctions against Iran. In early 2021, Halkbank is, again, going to face charges in a New York court for alleged sanction violations.
The U.S. has been slow, so far, to take action against Turkey whose strategic location – sharing borders with Iran, Iraq and Syria – helped it avoid sanctions; another factor that helped Turkey to dodge sanctions is that it hosts a radar base allowing the U.S. military to operate from its Incirlik Air Base.
But some Americans are also warning that Turkey is “not entirely indispensable” and should not “test American and NATO patience.”
However, others say that Turkey is stoutly confident of its “indispensable position” within NATO, which will enable it to avoid sanctions, particularly with Biden likely to take a tough stance against Moscow. Experts say that Erdoğan has skillfully played the U.S. against Russia and vice versa.
However, if the U.S. did impose sanctions, Turkey might move closer to both Russia and China, but this will in turn ostracize Turkey from the Western camp.
To strengthen their bilateral relationship, both Washington and Ankara will need to navigate through the complex maze of ties which seemed to face a downward turn because of a failed military coup in 2016. Turkey had accused the U.S. of being involved in the deadly July 15 coup attempt in the country. During that time, Biden was the vice president and denied any U.S. role in the coup plot of the Gülenist Terror Group (FETÖ).
Repairing and strengthening relations is necessary on both sides, which will need to work conscientiously toward that goal. Biden knows Turkey well; he visited Ankara as vice president to defuse tensions with Turkey following the aborted coup. If Turkey patches up its differences with the U.S. and the Western alliance, it can benefit from its NATO membership and its existing ties with the U.S. and European allies, sparing itself the disruptions the changes in the existing arrangements can cause.
*New York-based op-ed contributor, expert on foreign affairs and global economics
TURKISH press: No trans-Atlantic unity complete without Turkey
A jointly penned letter by France and Germany’s foreign ministers, Jean Yves le Drian and Heiko Maas, for the Washington Post rightly suggests that much-anticipated trans-Atlantic unity can be reached between Europe and the United States under President-elect Joe Biden’s administration. The ministers underlined that a new deal between the two sides of the Atlantic is needed to adapt their partnership to global upheavals.
One interesting point reflected in the letter is the illustration of Turkey as a country with problematic behavior in the eastern Mediterranean and beyond. “We will have to address Turkey’s problematic behavior in the eastern Mediterranean and beyond,” wrote le Drian and Maas.
Depicting Turkey as a source of problems in its region is not fair and realistic. The problem in the eastern Mediterranean is very complicated, both legally and politically, and has multiple angles and actors.
By pinning the whole blame on Turkey and categorizing its actions as problematic, it seems the ministers don’t want to remember that it was Greek Cyprus that launched hydrocarbon exploration activities in the area, disregarding the interests and rights of Turkish Cypriots and Turkey.
Again, Paris and Berlin seem to be comfortable with the Greek claims that Meis Island generates a 40,000-square-kilometer continental shelf. That’s why they declare Turkey’s seismic works in this part of the Mediterranean as “illegal,” even though neither has any jurisdiction at all. It was noteworthy to see how the European chorus slammed Turkey and Libya for signing a delimitation agreement while they were silent on similar agreements that Greece and Greek Cyprus have signed in the past. There is for sure a problem in the Mediterranean, but the burden cannot be placed on Turkey’s shoulders alone.
The Europeans are also not very happy about the Turkish stance concerning Syria, Libya and Nagorno-Karabakh. For the record, Turkey is not the source of any of these conflicts; on the contrary, it is the external country that has suffered the most from the Syrian conflict. Hundreds of Turkish nationals have lost their lives in terror attacks across the country while its borders were controlled by one of the world’s most dangerous terrorist groups. The 4 million Syrians still in Turkey have cost the Turkish economy more than $40 billion.
Libya is no different. Turkey did help the Tripoli government against Field Marshal Khalifa Haftar’s forces who are backed by France, Russia, Egypt and the United Arab Emirates. But before categorizing Turkish actions there as problematic, it would be fair to note the French role in deepening Libya’s divide since the conflict started in 2011.
On Nagorno-Karabakh, the United States and France should question their 30-year-long unwillingness to solve the conflict before slamming Turkish support for Azerbaijan, whose territories were under Armenian occupation.
Another important message conveyed to the Biden administration is the Europeans’ will to defend their own security as part of a more balanced trans-Atlantic partnership. “We are developing joint security and defense capabilities. They are necessary to strengthen both the European Union and NATO. Already, Europe takes on much greater responsibility for security in its neighborhood — from the Sahel over the Mediterranean Sea to the Near and Middle East, including the Gulf. This is the road we will follow,” it said.
A joint response to all these challenges requires Turkish participation, not its exclusion. With this letter, the two ministers give the impression that Turkey’s place within NATO is no longer relevant as they describe Turkey solely as a problem forgetting its decades-old contribution to global security.
In addition, with this letter, the two ministers are also trying to influence the new U.S. administration against Turkey in a way to block any bilateral effort to start a new process between Ankara and Washington.
In sum, it is very unfortunate for France and Germany to portray their ongoing disputes with Turkey in such a way. Trans-Atlantic unity won’t be complete without Turkey.
Asbarez: Lavrov, Minsk Group Co-Chairs Discuss Karabakh Settlement
November 19, 2020
OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs during a 2018 meeting in Yerevan
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov discussed with the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs the coordination of efforts to resolve the situation in Nagorno-Karabakh, the Russian Foreign Ministry said on Wednesday.
The meeting was attended by Igor Popov of Russia, Stephane Visconti of France, Andrew Schofer of the U.S., as well as the personal representative of the OSCE Chairman-in-Office Andrzej Kasprzyk.
“During the consultations, they discussed the situation in and around Nagorno-Karabakh after the statement by the President of the Republic of Azerbaijan, the Prime Minister of the Republic of Armenia and the President of the Russian Federation on a complete ceasefire and stopping all hostilities on November 9. The coordination of further mediation efforts of the three countries were considered,” the ministry said, according to Sputnik.
There were no other or official press statement from this highly-anticipated meeting—the first time the Minsk Group co-chairs were meeting since the Karabakh War agreement was signed on November 10.
French Senate to Discuss Artsakh Recognition Resolution
November 19, 2020
French Senate Chamber
The French Senate on Wednesday decided that it would discuss on November 25 a resolution on the recognition of the Republic of Artsakh.
The measure is supported by the heads of the five largest political factions represented in the French Senate—Bruno Retalier, Patrick Cannet, Herve Marmel, Eliane Assassi, Guillaume Gontard.
The senate announcement came hours after the Paris City Council adopted a detailed resolution recognizing Artsakh and urging the French government to follow suit. Mayors of 15 municipalities in France on Tuesday also urged the French government to recognize Artsakh. France, which is one of three co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group, was taking part in a meeting of the mediation body in Moscow on Wednesday.
A similar resolution was also introduced in France’s Lower House last month, as reports of Azerbaijani aggression and war crimes against Artsakh were mounting and Turkey’s active role in the conflict through military assistance and backing of mercenaries posed a threat to the region.
During talks in Paris earlier this week, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Derian signaled the they wanted further clarification from Moscow about Turkey’s role in the “end of war” agreement engineered by President Vladimir Putin of Russia, who along side his Azerbaijani counterpart Ilham Aliyev and Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan signed the document. Pompeo and Le Derian also called for details about the terms of the agreement.
While France and the United States separately welcomed the end of military hostilities, they urged that the conflict settlement process through the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairmen continue, in order to find what Pompeo called a “lasting solution” to the conflict.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov was quick to brush aside the French and American concerns saying on Tuesday that that Moscow worked in close contact with the co-chairs from the United States and France “from the very beginning of the efforts that Russia made in the interests of ending the military phase of this conflict.” He addd that the State Department’s statements about the lack of information either reflect the lack of information by its officials, or are the result of a misunderstanding.
Sergei Naryshkin, Russia’s head of foreign intelligence service on Wednesday accused the U.S. and its European allies of taking provocative steps to disrupt the “end of war” agreement, reported Sputnik-Armenia.
Naryshkin cited “available intelligence” to claimed that the U.S. and EU were trying to convince the Armenians that Karabakh peace was a “defeat to Yerevan.”