Putin warns Armenia backing out of Nagorno-Karabakh deal would be ‘suicidal’

The Guardian, UK
Nov 18 2020
 
 
 
Putin warns Armenia backing out of Nagorno-Karabakh deal would be ‘suicidal’
 
Putin says any move to leave Russian-backed ceasefire with Azerbaijan would be huge mistake
 
 
Vladimir Putin has said it would be “suicidal” for the Armenian government to back out of a Russian-brokered ceasefire in the war in Nagorno-Karabakh, as opposition forces in Yerevan protest against the week-old truce and call for the resignation of the prime minister, Nikol Pashinyan.
 
In a Russian state television interview about the deal aired on Tuesday evening, Putin was asked about a new government potentially coming to power reneging on the deal. “That would be a huge mistake,” he said.
 
The deal, which gave Azerbaijan significant territorial concessions after launching a bloody six-week war, was seen as a capitulation in Armenia and sparked protests against Pashinyan’s government. The country’s president has demanded snap elections and his foreign minister resigned this week in a high-level departure tied to the controversial deal.
 
Armenian security services last week also said they had prevented an assassination plot against Pashinyan involving an opposition politician and a war veteran.
 
“A country that is at war or in danger of resuming hostilities, as it has always been in past years, still cannot afford to behave in such a way, including in the sphere of organising power, as to split society from within. I think this is absolutely unacceptable, counterproductive and extremely dangerous,” Putin said.
 
Pashinyan has said he does not plan to step down, but on Wednesday he offered a government roadmap out of the crisis to “ensure the democratic stability of Armenia”.
 
The 15-point plan includes assistance to those injured in the war, provisions to return Armenian refugees to Nagorno-Karabakh, and plans to modernise the military, all steps designed to appeal to those who say the government did not do enough to protect the region and its residents from Azerbaijan.
 
He also called for the resumption of OSCE [the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe] talks including Russia, France and the US on the final status of the region, which Armenians call Artsakh. The ceasefire deal does not indicate what will happen to Stepanakert, the region’s largest city, and other territories in Nagorno-Karabakh after a Russian peacekeeping deployment is scheduled to end in five years.
 
Putin has a complicated relationship with Pashinyan, who rode to power in 2018 on a wave of popular and non-violent protest in Armenia. But the Russian leader played down their differences as he tries to hold together a truce that involves an entrenched conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan, the growing regional ambitions of Turkey, and the historic involvement of France and the US.
 
Russia muscled out other parties when it sent in nearly 2,000 peacekeepers to the region in its most significant deployment in the South Caucasus in a decade.
 
The ceasefire deal releases territories that were won by Armenia following a deadly conflict in the early 1990s. Tens of thousands of ethnic Armenians have left Nagorno-Karabakh and the surrounding regions as they prepare for territories to change hands. Many families have loaded lorries with their possessions and some have set their houses on fire upon leaving.
 
 
 
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​Armenian PM, under pressure to quit after Karabakh defeat, unveils action plan

Reuters
Nov 18 2020
 
 
 
Armenian PM, under pressure to quit after Karabakh defeat, unveils action plan
 
By Reuters Staff
 
 
YEREVAN (Reuters) – Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan on Wednesday unveiled a six-month action plan he said was designed to ensure his country’s democratic stability even as the make-up of the government was in flux.
 
Pashinyan has rejected calls from opponents and protesters to resign over what they say was his disastrous handling of a six-week conflict between Azerbaijan and ethnic Armenian forces over the Nagorno-Karabkh enclave and surrounding areas.
 
Under a Russian-brokered peace deal, swaths of territory previously controlled by ethnic Armenians are being handed over to Azerbaijan whose forces recaptured chunks of territory which Baku lost in an earlier war in the 1990s.
 
The Armenian foreign minister resigned earlier this week.
 
Pashinyan, in a Facebook post, reiterated on Wednesday that he took full responsibility for what had happened, but said he was now responsible for stabilising Armenia and ensuring its national security.
 
“I am completely resolved,” he wrote, before listing 15 action points he wanted to target.
 
He said he wanted to try to restore a formal negotiation process over Nagorno-Karabakh under the auspices of the OSCE Minsk group and to prioritise the return of people to territory still controlled by ethnic Armenians.
  
That meant helping people restore homes and damaged infrastructure, offering financial help to the families of soldiers killed in the conflict, and caring properly for those who had been wounded.
 
He said he also wanted to address the legal status of Nagorno Karabakh, carry out military reform, amend election law, and focus on tackling the coronavirus pandemic and the economy.
 
“In June 2021 I will present a report on this road map,” Pashinyan wrote. “Public opinion and reaction will be taken into account for deciding future actions”.
 
Reporting by Nvard Hovhannisyan; Editing by Andrew Osborn
 
 

Putin says Armenia could have stopped the war and kept Shusha

EurasiaNet.org
Nov 18 2020
Ani Mejlumyan Nov 18, 2020

Armenia had the chance to stop the war in mid-October and maintain control of the key city of Shusha, Russian President Vladimir Putin has said.

The remarkable claim is likely to put even more pressure on Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, who is facing the political fight of his life over his handling of the war and his country’s defeat.

In a November 17 interview with Rossiya 24, Putin recalled that he had a series of conversations on October 19 and 20 with Pashinyan and Azerbaijan President Ilham Aliyev.

“On the whole, I managed to convince President Aliyev that it was possible to end hostilities, but the return of refugees, including to Shusha, was a mandatory condition on his part,” Putin said.

Shusha (which Armenians spell Shushi) was Azerbaijan’s key goal in the war; it regards the city as its cultural and historical center in the region.

“Unexpectedly for me, the position of our Armenian partners was that they perceived this as something unacceptable,” Putin continued. “Prime Minister Pashinyan told me openly that he viewed this as a threat to the interests of Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh. I do not quite understand the essence of this hypothetical threat, I mean, it was about the return of civilians to their homes, while the Armenian side was to have retained control over this section of Nagorno-Karabakh, including Shusha, and meaning that our peacekeepers were there, which we have agreed upon both with Armenia and Azerbaijan. At that point, the prime minister told me that his country could not agree to this, and that it would struggle and fight.”

Putin’s claim contradicted Pashinyan’s many recent public statements in which he insisted that he had never been presented with an option to end the war that didn’t involve the surrender of Shusha.

Pashinyan and his allies have not directly responded to Putin’s statement. But military journalist and analyst Tatul Hakobyan said that the prime minister needed to explain in better detail his reasoning.

“Why did Pashinyan not agree with Putin’s proposal when he had clear information about the capabilities of the Armenian army?” Hakobyan asked in a column on the news website CivilNet. Hakobyan suggested that Pashinyan may have been hoping for a military turnaround, or that he preferred to lose the war fighting rather than submit to the return of Azerbaijani refugees to Shusha. “There may be other options, and in order to give a complete answer to the question, Nikol Pashinyan’s explanation is needed, how, why and under what circumstances Shushi fell,” he wrote.

In the aftermath of the war, many Armenians have turned against Pashinyan, and a common claim is that he “sold out” to Azerbaijan, including by ceding Shusha when the country still had a chance to win. A series of military officials have backed Pashinyan on that claim, arguing that Armenia’s military position was much more dire than many people believed. (That belief, incidentally, was fed by government officials’ overly rosy assessments of how the war was proceeding while Armenia was rapidly losing ground.)

In a way, Putin’s statement was a defense of Pashinyan. Following his account of the October 19 and 20 discussions, he concluded: “Therefore, these accusations of treason against him are absolutely groundless. On the other hand, it remains unclear whether this was right or wrong. This is a different matter, but there was certainly no treason here.”

Some of Pashinyan’s allies seized on that latter statement.

Deputy speaker of parliament Alen Simonyan tweeted Putin’s statement, commenting, “Accusations of treason against Pashinyan have no basis.” But others mocked his selective quoting: “You are publishing only one sentence as if we can’t read, listen and understand Russian,” one responded.

But Putin’s defense of Pashinyan, such as it was, was a backhanded one, and is likely to feed into increasing criticisms of the prime minister’s decision-making during the war.

Chief of Staff of the Armenian Armed Forces Onik Gasparyan issued a statement on November 17 claiming that military officials told Pashinyan “on the fourth day of the war” that the Armenian forces were hopelessly outmatched against Azerbaijan and Turkey and that “measures must be taken to end the war in two or three days.”

On November 16 Mikayel Minasyan, the son in-law of former president Serzh Sargsyan and a frequent critic of Pashinyan, published a document on Facebook that he claimed was an earlier iteration of a ceasefire deal that could have given Armenia better conditions, including retaining Shusha, no access road to Nakhchivan, and a broader security zone around the Lachin corridor connecting Karabakh to Armenia – 10 kilometers rather than five. “This was one of the options before the document you signed. After that, you received one more offer, after which you created a hopeless situation by signing the capitulation document,” Minasyan wrote.

Pashinyan has rejected such claims, arguing repeatedly that he was never presented with an option to end the war that didn’t involve losing Shusha. “I want to explain so people understand. Before Shushi had fallen, in all possible scenarios we were going to have to surrender Shushi,” he said in a November 13 interview with public television.

Pashinyan repeated the claim on November 16 in a press conference. Later that day, the spokesperson for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Anna Naghdalyan, responded to a question about Pashinyan’s statement: “Let me make it clear that there has been no question about renouncing the city of Shushi in any stage of the peace process.

Pashinyan soon after said that he intended to fire Foreign Minister Zohrab Mnatsakanyan and almost simultaneously Naghdalyan posted Mnatsakanyan’s resignation letter on Facebook.

 

Ani Mejlumyan is a reporter based in Yerevan.


Patriots coach Belichick calls on US to take action against Turkey and Azerbaijan for attacks on Armenians

MSN.com
Nov 18 2020


New England Patriots head coach Bill Belichick called for U.S. action on behalf of Armenia in ongoing clashes along its border with Azerbaijan.

Reporters at Belichick’s Wednesday morning press conference asked him for his reaction to a memo from acting Defense Secretary Christopher Miller invoking the coach’s “Do Your Job” slogan. Miller had added to military personnel, “We are a team, and that should be our mindset.”

“Well, I really appreciate the kind words from Secretary Miller,” Belichick said in the video call, according to CBS Boston. “When you consider the type of leadership that he’s shown throughout his career serving our country, it really means a lot. I’m flattered by the reference that he made.”

“I’ll just say, while we’re on the subject, I read his point about combating traditional threats. And I couldn’t help but think and hope that we’ve seen from other countries around the world, and I hope that our country will take action against Turkey and Azerbaijan for their unprovoked and deadly attacks on Armenians,” Belichick continued. “We’ve seen that when a humanitarian crisis and things like that, like ethnic cleaning, go unpunished, that they just continue to happen. I hope that we can put a stop to that.”

Belichick has weighed in on Armenian politics before, making similar comments in a video posted to Patriots director of football Berj Najarian’s Instagram profile in October.

Nejarian himself has long spoken out on issues relating to Armenia and has urged the U.S. to recognize the killing of 1.5 million Armenians by Ottoman Turks as a genocide despite pressure from Turkey to not use the designation. Nejarian said he directly pressed then-President Obama on the matter when the team visited the White House in 2015.

The Boston area has one of the country’s largest concentrations of Armenian immigrants and their descendants, with about 50,000, according to the Armenian Diaspora Survey, which tracks Armenian communities.


Dutch coalition MPs call for EU weapons embargo against Turkey

Dutch News, The Netherlands
Nov 11 2020

MPs from three of the four coalition parties want foreign minister Stef Blok to put pressure on Europe to establish a weapons embargo against Nato coalition partner Turkey, broadcaster NOS said.
MPs say the embargo would be a punishment for Turkey’s involvement in the recent violence between Azerbaijan and Armenia in the Nagorno Karabakh region. MPs are also concerned that Turkey could use European weapons in Libya and in eastern parts of the Mediterranean area, broadcaster NOS said.
D66, CDA and ChristenUnie MPs have submitted a motion calling for a weapons embargo, which will be discussed during Wednesday’s foreign affairs ministry budget debate.
‘If (Turkish president Recep Tayyip) Erdogan encourages military conflict rather than stability, we have to be clear: no more weapons should be sent to Turkey as long as this continues,’ D66 MP Sjoerd Sjoerdsma said.


​Dutch Parliament calls for Nagorno-Karabagh sanctions

European Sanctions
Nov 18 2020
 
 
Dutch Parliament calls for Nagorno-Karabagh sanctions
 
November 18th, 2020 | Michael O’Kane
 
The Dutch Parliament has adopted 3 motions concerning the on-going Nagorno-Karabagh conflict, calling on the Government to encourage the EU to:
 
  • Apply a moratorium on exports of weapons to Turkey that could be used in the conflicts in the Nagorno-Karabagh region, Libya or Syria (motion);
  • Impose sanctions on people in Azerbaijan and Turkey who are responsible for the violence in Nagorno-Karabagh (motion); and
  • Impose sanctions against Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, his family members, other key figures in the Azerbaijani offensive, and the Syrian fighters deployed by Turkey in Nagorno-Karabakh (motion).
  
 

Exclusive: Eric Hacopian breaks down war between Armenia and Azerbaijan

Fox 11 Los Angeles
Nov 18 2020

It’s been over a week since a ceasefire agreement was signed between Armenia, Azerbaijan and Russia— bringing in Russian peacekeepers for the next five years into the region.

There are a lot of unknowns about the agreement including what happens when the five years are up.

RELATED: Armenia, Azerbaijan agree to end fighting in Nagorno-Karabakh

American political consultant Eric Hacopian who now lives in Armenia, explains why the war wasn’t immediately stopped by world powers and contextualized what happened — and why it happened this way.

RELATED: Click here for more coverage of the war between Armenia and Azerbaijan

In an exclusive interview with FOX 11’s Araskya Karapetyan, Hacopian provides historical insight on the war between Armenia and Azerbaijan, how this war was unlike any other, the war crimes committed, the recent ceasefire, the political chess match in the Caucasus, why there was a lack of international involvement, why it is important to recognize Artsakh, and his message to the Armenian Diaspora— among other things.

Hacopian is a 30-year veteran of American politics, having worked on local and presently campaigns over the years. Hacopian has his own political consulting firm— EDH & Associates, a Southern California-based firm.

West wants to undermine Nagorno Karabakh peace deal, warns Russia

Prensa Latina
Nov 18 2020
Moscow, Nov 18 (Prensa Latina) The West is trying to cancel the agreement reached between Russia, Armenia and Azerbaijan to end the conflict centered around Nagorno Karabakh, the head of the Foreign Intelligence Service of Russia, Sergei Narishkin, warned.
Western powers encourage Armenian and Azerbaijani nationalists to torpedo the settlement brokered on the 9th of this month by Russian President Vladimir Putin, his Azerbaijani counterpart Iljam Aliyev and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, the official said.

The intention is for the Armenians to see that the compromise was a defeat for Nagorno Karabakh and Yerevan, while the Azerbaijanis are presented with the thesis of the need to have continued warring until the final victory in the confrontation, which began on September 27th, the politician explained.

For Narishkin, such manipulations demonstrate that the United States and its European friends, as always, solve their tasks at the expense of the interests of ordinary people and, this time, the Armenians and the Azerbaijanis are on the line.

Americans and Europeans are not at all concerned that their provocative activities could lead to new bloodshed when the region becomes once again embroiled in a harsh war, the official said.

The tripartite agreement provides for the end of the fighting, the exchange of prisoners and the evacuation of bodies, the deployment of a contingent of almost two thousand Russian military personnel on the line of confrontation and in the so-called Lachin corridor, as well as the return of refugees.

The spokesman for the Ministry of Defense of Russia, Igor Konashenkov, reported that the peacekeeping contingent made a change of observation posts and changed the number of them in the Nagorno Karabakh region.

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Sports: UEFA Nations League: Armenia beat North Macedonia 1-0

Public Radio of Armenia
Nov 18 2020
UEFA Nations League: Armenia beat North Macedonia 1-0
Armenia beat North Macedonia in an UEFA Nations League C league Group 2 match.

Hovhannes Hambardzumyan scored the only goal in the 55th minute.

Armenia thus picked up the much-needed 3 points to top the group. The winner of Group C2 gains promotion and move up in the tiers.

Armenia played without Sargis Adamyan, Gevorg Ghazaryan, Andre Calisir and Grigor Meliksetyan as they have tested positive for Covid-19.

Captain Henrikh Mkhitaryan was not allowed to join the team. Roma asked the Armenian Football Federation to relieve the player of his duties in the national team given the tense situation with Covid-19.


Bill Belichick wants US to ‘take action’ in Armenia-Azerbaijan dispute

NY Post
Nov 18 2020

This may be Bill Belichick’s most unexpected play call ever.

The New England Patriots head coach stepped off the gridiron and into the political field Wednesday, as he demanded the US take action in the recent dispute between Azerbaijan and Armenia.

The comments came as he was asked about how Acting Secretary of Defense Christopher Miller recently quoted his mantra, “Do your job,” in a letter to Department of Defense employees.

“Well, I really appreciate the kind words from Secretary Miller,” the Pats coach said in a video conference with Patriots reporters, according to CBS Boston. “When you consider the type of leadership that he’s shown throughout his career serving our country, it really means a lot. I’m flattered by the reference that he made.”

The Super Bowl-winning NFL strategist then tried his hand at a little global strategic thinking.

“I’ll just say, while while we’re on the subject, I read his point about combating traditional threats,” he said. “And I couldn’t help but think and hope that we’ve seen from other countries around the world, and I hope that our country will take action against Turkey and Azerbaijan for their unprovoked and deadly attacks on Armenians.

“We’ve seen that when a humanitarian crisis and things like that, like ethnic cleaning, go unpunished, that they just continue to happen. I hope that we can put a stop to that.”

The Boston area is home to some 30,000 to 50,000 Armenians, The Hill reported, citing the Armenian Diaspora Survey.

Belichick made similar comments in support of Armenians earlier this month amid the Nagorno-Karabakh war.

“To Armenians around the world, I just want to give a quick message and let you know that I stand with you during these difficult times,” he said in a video on Instagram. “I have learned that throughout Armenian history, regardless of any adversity or tragedy, the Armenian people have continued to thrive and persevere.”

Enlarge Image Bill BelichickGetty Images

Belichick also wore an Armenian flag pin during a visit to the White House in 2015, Boston.com reported.

Berj Najarian, the Pats’ director of football/head coach administration and Belichick’s right-hand man, is Armenian.

The six-week conflict over the Nagorno-Karabakh region ended on Nov. 10 with a peace deal brokered between Armenia, Azerbaijan and Russia.

The disputed area sits within Azerbaijan but has been under the control of ethnic Armenians since 1994.