RFE/RL Armenian Report – 11/17/2020

                                        Tuesday, 
Another Armenian Minister Resigns
Armenia -- Minister of Emergency Situations FelixTsolakian speaks at a polling 
station in Gyumri, December 9, 2018
Minister for Emergency Situations Felix Tsolakian stepped down on Tuesday amid 
continuing opposition calls for the Armenian government’s resignation.
Neither Tsolakian nor his spokesperson Anna Baghdasarian gave a reason for the 
move.
Tsolakian hinted at his resignation earlier in the day when he met with a large 
group of Ministry for Emergency Situations employees who returned to Armenia 
from Nagorno-Karabakh where they took part in the six-week war with Azerbaijan.
Tsolakian, 68, is the second minister to leave Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s 
government since a Russian-mediated agreement stopped the war on November 10.
Pashinian announced on Monday that he has decided to sack Foreign Minister 
Zohrab Mnatsakanian. The latter insisted, however, that he himself tendered his 
resignation. But he too gave no reason.
Earlier on Monday, an Armenian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman publicly 
contradicted Pashinian’s comments regarding Shushi (Shusha), Karabakh’s second 
largest city captured by Azerbaijani forces during the war.
The terms of the Karabakh truce brokered by Moscow sparked street protests in 
Yerevan, with Armenian opposition groups accusing Pashinian’s government of 
capitulating to Azerbaijan and demanding his resignation. Pashinian and his 
political allies reject the opposition demands.
Putin Hopes For Final Karabakh Settlement
        • Aza Babayan
RUSSIA -- Russian President Vladimir Putin attends a meeting dedicated to a 
humanitarian mission in the region of Nagorno-Karabakh via a video conference 
call at the Novo-Ogaryovo state residence outside Moscow, November 13, 2020
Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Tuesday that a Russian-brokered 
agreement that stopped the war in Nagorno-Karabakh may have laid the groundwork 
for an eventual resolution of the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict.
Putin mentioned the November 9 deal as he spoke at a virtual summit of the 
leaders of Brazil, China, Russia, India and South Africa making up the BRICS 
grouping.
“It is important that the mentioned agreements are being observed,” he said. 
“Hostilities have been fully stopped and the situation is stabilizing. 
Conditions have thus been created for a long-term and full resolution of the 
crisis on a just basis and in the interests of both the Azerbaijani and Armenian 
peoples.”
Putin, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and Azerbaijani President Ilham 
Aliyev struck the deal six weeks after the start of the war that killed 
thousands of soldiers from both sides.
Azerbaijan agreed to halt offensive military operations in return for an 
Armenian pledge to withdraw by the end of this month from three districts around 
Karabakh. Baku regained control over four other districts, which had been 
occupied by Karabakh Armenian forces in the early 1990s, during the latest war.
The truce accord also calls for the deployment in the conflict zone of around 
2,000 Russian peacekeepers and the return of refugees and internally displaced 
persons. It says nothing about Karabakh’s future status, the main bone of 
contention.
Yerevan has indicated that it will continue to seek international recognition of 
Karabakh’s secession from Azerbaijan. By contrast, Aliyev stated on Tuesday that 
Baku will not even agree to grant the Armenian-populated territory an autonomous 
status.
Russia has for decades tried to broker a Karabakh settlement together with the 
United States and France. The three world powers co-chair the Minsk Group of the 
Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe.
U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le 
Drian discussed the Karabakh conflict when they met in Paris on Monday. 
According to a U.S. State Department official, they acknowledged Russia’s role 
in the end of the hostilities while concurring that Moscow should further 
clarify terms of the ceasefire deal and Turkey’s role in its implementation.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on Tuesday that Moscow is ready to provide 
such clarifications.
Ruling Bloc Silent On Snap Elections
        • Tatevik Lazarian
Armenia -- Pro-government and opposition deputies argue on the parliament floor, 
.
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s My Step alliance did not respond on Tuesday to 
President Armen Sarkissian’s calls for fresh parliamentary elections in Armenia.
In a televised address to the nation broadcast late on Monday, Sarkissian said 
the elections would “save the country from upheavals” in the wake of the 
six-week war that resulted in Armenian territorial losses in and around 
Karabakh, He said they should be held by a new, interim “government of national 
accord.”
Pashinian and his bloc controlling the Armenian parliament did not react to the 
statement as of Tuesday evening. A senior member of My Step, deputy parliament 
speaker Lena Nazarian, said in the afternoon that the ruling political team has 
not yet discussed the issue.
“The official view of [My Step’s parliamentary] faction is expressed by the 
faction leader [Lilit Makunts.] Please talk to her,” Nazarian told reporters.
“I have nothing to add at this point,” said Makunts. “When we have something 
clear to say on this score we will definitely make a statement.”
Sarkissian made the case for the current government’s resignation and snap 
elections amid continuing opposition protests in Yerevan against Pashinian’s 
handling of the war with Azerbaijan and terms of a Russian-brokered agreement 
that stopped it on November 10. Opposition parties staging the protests demand 
the prime minister’s resignation.
“A leader who led his country to defeat must not stay in power,” Naira 
Zohrabian, a senior lawmaker representing one of those parties, Prosperous 
Armenia (BHK), insisted on Tuesday.
Speaking on the parliament floor, Zohrabian charged that Pashinian is trying to 
cling to power “at any cost.”
Deputies from the opposition Bright Armenia Party also demanded Pashinian’s 
resignation. “Under the current government and prime minister our situation 
would worsen by the day,” one of them, Gevorg Gorgisian, said.
Makunts dismissed the opposition demands. “By stirring up such emotions now that 
our officials are holding negotiations and very important processes are 
unfolding with respect to Karabakh one does demonstrate a patriotic and 
statesmanlike position,” she said.
Echoing statements by Pashinian, Makunts said the government is ready for a 
“constructive” dialogue with the opposition. But she did not elaborate.
Karabakh Unveils Post-War Aid Package For Residents
NAGORNO-KARABAKH -- Men walk past a burnt shop in Stepanakert, 
Residents of Nagorno-Karabakh will not have to pay for electricity, natural gas 
and other utilities for the next year as part of an emergency aid package 
approved by Karabakh’s leadership on Tuesday.
Ara Harutiunian, the Karabakh president, said the exemptions are necessary for 
alleviating the socioeconomic plight of the territory’s population in the wake 
of the devastating war with Azerbaijan.
Harutiunian also promised to compensate low-income local residents and those 
Karabakh Armenians whose homes were destroyed during the six-week war. The 
homeless people will receive 300,000 drams ($607) each, he said at a meeting 
with senior officials in Stepanakert.
“The Karabakh government is committing itself to solving the housing problems of 
all our homeless citizens within several years. In the meantime, the state will 
continue providing these families with financial aid that will cover their 
housing rent,” added Harutiunian.
The Karabakh leader did not specify the total cost of the aid package or say 
whether it will be financed by Armenia’s government and the Yerevan-based 
All-Armenian Fund Hayastan.
The pan-Armenian charity has raised about $200 million for economic and 
humanitarian aid to Karabakh since the outbreak of the war on September 27. The 
money has been donated by people in Armenia and its worldwide Diaspora.
The Armenian government announced separately that it will pay one-off 
compensations to all Karabakh residents displaced by the large-scale 
hostilities. It said each of them will receive 68,000 drams.
According to authorities in Stepanakert, at least 90,000 civilians making up 
around 60 percent of Karabakh’s population fled their homes during the war. Most 
of them took refuge in Armenia. More than a thousand refugees have reportedly 
returned to Karabakh since a Russian-mediated agreement stopped the war on 
November 10.
Armenian President Calls For Snap Elections
Armenia -- President Armen Sarkissian addresses the nation, .
President Armen Sarkissian called late on Monday for the holding of fresh 
parliamentary elections in Armenia, saying that they are needed to resolve a 
political crisis sparked by the war in Nagorno-Karabakh.
The elections would “save the country from upheavals” in the wake of the 
six-week war that resulted in Armenian territorial losses in and around 
Karabakh, Sarkisian said in a televised address to the nation.
He urged Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s government and My Step alliance to 
come up with a “roadmap” for the snap polls. They should be held by a new, 
interim “government of national accord,” added the head of state.
Sarkissian, who has largely ceremonial powers, said that his proposals reflect 
the dominant view of political party leaders and public figures with whom he has 
held consultations in recent days.
Some of those parties have been holding demonstrations in Yerevan to condemn 
Pashinian’s handling of the war and demand his resignation. The prime minister 
has rejected their demands. He has yet to publicly clarify whether he could 
agree to snap general elections demanded by his political opponents.
Pashinian and his political team did not immediately react to Sarkissian’s 
speech.
Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
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Asbarez: Nevada’s Clark County Recognizes Artsakh

November 17,  2020



Las Vegas Armenian community members after the Clark County recognition of Artsakh

LAS VEGAS—Las Vegas Armenian-American community representatives gathered at the Clark County Government Building on Tuesday where the Board of Commissioners adopted a Proclamation recognizing the right to self-determination, freedom and independence of the Armenian population of Nagorno-Karabakh / Artsakh.

Clark County is the largest County in Nevada with a population of 2.3 million and jurisdiction over the world-famous Las Vegas Strip, which generated over 45 million visitors in 2019.

The Clark County proclamation

Clark County is also home to a fast-growing Armenian-American community estimated at 20,000 with several prominent Armenians who have significantly helped Southern Nevada’s economic growth; such as MGM Casino Developer Kirk Kerkorian, UNLV Basketball Coach Jerry Tarkanian, Renowned Tennis Player Andre Agassi, and Casino Developer Alex Yemenidjian just to name a few. The community has also recently built two churches in 2013 and 2016.

Commissioners Michael Naft and Justin Jones made an introductory statement in support of Artsakh recognizing the humanitarian crisis suffered by Armenians and presented the Proclamation.

The Proclamation was presented to Adroushan Andy Armenian, the Honorary Consul of the Republic of Armenia in Las Vegas, and to Lenna Hovanessian Esq., cochair of ANCA Nevada. Both recipients thanked the Clark County Board of Commissioners for their efforts in understanding the Armenian population of Artsakh and their belief in their right to self-determination.

Ambassador Armen Baibourtian, Consul General of Armenia in Los Angeles and Mr. Robert Avetisyan, the Permanent representative of Artsakh in Washington DC, along with representatives of Las Vegas Armenian churches and organizations were also present for the presentation of the Proclamation of the Recognition of Artsakh and made statements regarding community and nation involvement.

Due to Covid-19, restrictions the number of people in the Government Building was limited, therefore community activists and supporters were gathered outside to welcome the presentation of the Proclamation and to show their appreciation to the Clark County Board of Commissioners.

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

November 17,  2020



Russian President Vladimir Putin

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Menendez Demands U.S. Sanctions on Turkey and Azerbaijan for Aggression Against Armenia and Artsakh

November 17,  2020



Senator Robert Menendez calls for U.S. sanctions on Turkey and Azerbaijan on the Senate floor on Nov. 17

ANCA Welcomes Calls for U.S. to “Reinvigorate” the OSCE Minsk Group; Provide $100 Million in Aid to Armenians

WASHINGTON—Senator Bob Menendez (D-NJ), the Ranking Member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, issued a powerful call for renewed U.S. leadership in the face of Turkish and Azerbaijani aggression against Armenia and Artsakh, urging $100 million in U.S. assistance to prevent a humanitarian disaster, re-engagement in the OSCE Minsk Group negotiation process, and the end to U.S. arms sales to Ankara and Baku, reported the Armenian National Committee of America.

“Armenian Americans in New Jersey and across the U.S. applaud Senator Menendez’s leadership calling for a reset of U.S. policy toward the South Caucusus region, to aid the Armenians forced out of their homes due to Azerbaijani and Turkish attacks, to meaningfully re-engage in the OSCE Minsk Group peace process, and sanction Erdogan and Aliyev for their aggression,” said ANCA National Board member Ani Tchaghlasian, a New Jersey native.  “We look forward to working with Congress and the Administration to enact Sen. Menendez’s common sense proposals to ensure the safety and security of Armenia and Artsakh.”

The ANCA live streamed Senator Menendez’s remarks on its social media channels.  The video is available on the Senator’s YouTube page at: https://youtu.be/JCh49hna7hA

Speaking on the U.S. Senate floor, Senator Menendez shared his solidarity with Armenian worldwide, in the face of “the devastation inflicted on the region by Azerbaijani President Aliyev, with the full support of President Erdogan of Turkey,” and decried the lack of American leadership “which could have averted much of this tragedy.”

Menendez continued that “the security of the Armenian people, who have already suffered brutal violence at the hands of Presidents Aliyev and Erdogan, now rests with ‘peacekeepers’ sent by Vladimir Putin – a flawed agreement that does nothing about the jihadis sent there by Turkey, who if allowed to remain, could commit further atrocities against Christian Armenians.”

In response, Senator Menendez offered four key areas of renewed U.S. leadership including a call for $100 million in U.S. humanitarian and development assistance.

“Second, the United States must immediately suspend the provision of defense articles to Turkey and Azerbaijan. We cannot and must not enable any future atrocities by either of these authoritarian countries,” stated Senator Menendez, who called for passage of his measures – S.Res.754 and S.Res.755  – which would block arms sales to Erdogan and Aliyev based on their human rights records.

Third, Senator Menendez called for the end of the annual U.S. presidential waiver of Section 907 restrictions on U.S. aid to Azerbaijan, based on their continued aggression against Armenia and Artsakh.

Fourth, Turkey’s aggression, must be addressed, argued, Senator Menendez, who called for U.S. sanctions against Ankara. “President Erdogan clearly aspires to be a modern-day Ottoman sultan, putting down stakes in Libya, in Syria, across the Eastern Mediterranean, and now in the south Caucasus.”

Senator Menendez argued for broader U.S. leadership in the OSCE Minsk Group Artsakh peace negotiations. “Though the OSCE Minsk Group Process appears to be on life support, we can and must reinvigorate it with senior level engagement. We must send a clear message to Ankara, Baku, and Moscow that violence as a means to ‘solve’ the conflict will not succeed, and pressure on Armenia from its eastern and western borders will not be tolerated.”

Senator Menendez’s complete remarks are provided below.

I come to the floor today in solidarity with ethnic Armenians all over the world who have experienced terrible losses in recent weeks.

This is a tragic moment for Armenians everywhere.

Words cannot describe the devastation inflicted on the region by Azerbaijani President Aliyev, with the full support of President Erdogan of Turkey.

Thousands of ethnic Armenian civilians and soldiers have lost their lives due to Azerbaijan’s aggression, with an unknown number more injured. More than half of the population has been driven from their longtime homes. Every day, more are forced to leave.

Azerbaijan’s aggression has created a massive humanitarian crisis that will require a significant response, especially in light of the worsening pandemic.

The historically and religiously significant city of Shushi now sits in Azerbaijani hands, and the security of many sacred Christian sites falls to President Aliyev and his backer Erdogan. The world will be watching if these holy sites are desecrated.

These are dark days indeed – and it did not have to be this way. American leadership could have averted much of this tragedy. Unfortunately, after the conflict began in late September, the highest-ranking Trump administration officials decided to remain largely absent and silent.

Certainly, other world leaders engaged. President Macron made calls and actively pushed to reduce tensions, as one would expect from one of the leaders of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe Minsk Group Co-Chair country.

Unfortunately, others with less noble goals were also at the table.

President Erdogan fueled Azerbaijan’s aggression, fanning the flames by providing devastating drone technology and Syrian mercenaries. President Putin and Foreign Minister Lavrov worked the phones from the early days of the conflict. The result? Russia has a new foothold in the south Caucasus. Evidently, Russia was never fully committed to the Minsk goals and now has what they wanted since the 1990’s.

All of this happened while Donald Trump slept, yet another example of diplomatic malpractice at the highest levels of an administration that will thankfully conclude in January.

But President Trump’s departure is little solace for the ethnic Armenians who have been driven from their homes and seen their livelihoods go up in flames.

So what is the region left with at the end of the day?

The security of the Armenian people, who have already suffered brutal violence at the hands of Presidents Aliyev and Erdogan, now rests with ‘peacekeepers’ sent by Vladimir Putin – a flawed agreement that does nothing about the jihadis sent there by Turkey, who if allowed to remain, could commit further atrocities against Christian Armenians.

Without any commitments to the status of Artsakh, there is no incentive for Azerbaijan to make peace with Armenia. Will we see another case of ethnic cleansing in the future? Do we sit silent?

Madam President, we now have a trio of authoritarians running the show in the south Caucasus. It should alarm anyone dedicated to a peaceful solution of this longstanding conflict. It should alarm anyone dedicated to democratic reform in the region. And it should alarm anyone concerned about basic human rights and respect for international law.

We in the United States should be concerned about national security issues that would affect us in the Caucasus. My colleagues, we are witnessing the return of great power politics in this critical region. And yet the world’s sole superpower is conspicuously absent. This needs to change.

First, and most urgently, the United States must lead a response to the humanitarian needs created by this violence, particularly for the tens of thousands of ethnic Armenians forcibly displaced from their homes by the six-week war.

Winter is fast approaching. The COVID-19 pandemic is raging. There is no time to waste. Congress and the Trump administration must act quickly to save these families.

The United States must make a substantial investment in humanitarian and development assistance along the lines of $100 million to make a difference for those on the ground.

This includes funding for efforts to demine the affected area.

In April, I sent a letter co-signed by 30 other Senators calling for the Senate to appropriate $1.5 million in FY21 funds for demining; robust funding for rehabilitation services in Nagorno-Karabakh; and money for an independent assessment of remaining mine contamination to help inform future efforts. Given the widespread use by Azerbaijan of cluster munitions, rockets, and other such weapons in this conflict, I again urge this body to include those provisions in the final appropriations bill.

Second, the United States must immediately suspend the provision of defense articles to Turkey and Azerbaijan. We cannot and must not enable any future atrocities by either of these authoritarian countries. Either we had a tremendous intelligence failure or the State Department lied when it issued the waiver to Section 907 of the Freedom Support Act.

Either way, we shoulder be gravely concerned about reports that Azerbaijan has utilized U.S.-origin defense equipment in this conflict.

The administration must fully investigate these reports and respond appropriately to any violations of U.S. law.

Indeed, Canada suspended arms sales to Turkey in response to the conflict for this very reason, and I applaud Prime Minister Trudeau for doing so.

The United States must do the same, and work diplomatically to encourage others to join us in common cause.

To that end, I have introduced two resolutions that will require the State Department to report on human rights abuses by Azerbaijan and Turkey, and on the role U.S. security assistance and arms transfers may be playing in those abuses. I urge my colleagues to support those resolutions.

Third, the administration must follow the law. It should not waive Section 907 of the Freedom Support Act, which states that Azerbaijan should ‘cease all blockades and other offensive uses of force’ against Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh as a condition to receive U.S. assistance.

The facts tell us that the Government of Azerbaijan has done the exact opposite. America has no business rewarding this kind of aggressive behavior. I call on the administration to terminate the waiver of Section 907. Congress can also address this injustice in the FY21 appropriations bill by stripping the existing waiver authority so that this security relationship stops. It needs to stop once and for all.

In addition, at my request, the Government Accountability Office is currently reviewing the impact of U.S. security assistance to Azerbaijan, which has skyrocketed under the Trump administration.

The Pentagon alone has provided more than $120 million in equipment to the Aliyev regime in recent years.

This is simply unacceptable and must change. The GAO review will shed light on the impact of the repeated waivers of Section 907 of the FREEDOM Support Act.

Fourth and finally, Turkey’s aggression in this conflict must be addressed. President Erdogan clearly aspires to be a modern-day Ottoman sultan, putting down stakes in Libya, in Syria, across the Eastern Mediterranean, and now in the south Caucasus.

Under Erdogan, Turkey has engaged in unbridled aggression outside of its borders, in violation of NATO’s founding principles and international norms.

Here’s what we know:

Turkey is proving to be an unreliable ally in NATO. It is not a democracy. And it is not a responsible actor on the world stage.

The aggression unfolding in Azerbaijan should make crystal clear what we have long known: Erdogan is, without a doubt, trying to claim the title of most destructive actor in the region today. Without a strong response, he will continue these advances and aggression. I urge the incoming Biden administration to stop him, and Congress has a role to play as well.

We must finally sanction Turkey for its purchase of the S400 from Russia, which is a clear violation of the CAATSA law. I expect that the FY21 NDAA will take this long overdue step and result in S400 sanctions on Turkey.

I would also urge the incoming Biden administration to reassert American leadership in the region. The United States must join with Europe in solidarity against Turkey’s violations of the sovereignty of Greece and Cyprus, which destabilize the Eastern Mediterranean region.

Sanctions against those conducting illegal exploration activities on behalf of Turkey would be a strong show of support for our European allies, not to mention for the rule of law.

Indeed, I have every confidence that President-elect Biden and his team will live up to America’s responsibilities on the world stage by actually engaging on all of these issues.

Though the OSCE Minsk Group Process appears to be on life support, we can and must reinvigorate it with senior level engagement. We must send a clear message to Ankara, Baku, and Moscow that violence as a means to ‘solve’ the conflict will not succeed, and pressure on Armenia from its eastern and western borders will not be tolerated.

I would like to close with this.

Above the road between Yerevan and Stepanakert lies the ancient monastery of Dadivank. Father Hovannes, a priest at the monastery, has vowed to stay, even though the area has fallen under Azerbaijani control. His neighbors have mostly fled, on their way to Yerevan, displaced by weeks of horrific fighting.

The courage of Father Hovannes is hard for most of us to understand, to even comprehend. It comes from a place of deep connection to the land, deep connection to one’s culture and deep connection to one’s faith. The world will be watching as to what happens to Father Hovannes and the ancient monastery of Dadivank.

A neighbor of Father Hovannes who also committed to stay in the area, said, ‘We are here to stay until the end. This is our God. It’s our church. Our cross bears a heavy weight. We are here to carry that weight.’

Throughout this war, Armenians across the region have carried that weight, under relentless assault from Azerbaijan and Turkey. The Trump administration let them down.

The horror of recent weeks will be very difficult to undo. But we must start the work. We must start the work.

By taking the steps that I have described here tonight, we can begin a new chapter of U.S. policy in the region, and right past wrongs. And I am committed, as I have always been alongside the Armenian-American community in New Jersey and across our country, to see this just work through to the end.

Karabakh : Macron prévoit l’envoi d’aide humanitaire à l’Arménie

Le Figaro, France
13 Nov 2020

Par Le Figaro avec AFP
Publié le 13 novembre 2020 à 00:53, mis à jour le 13 novembre 2020 à 07:48


Emmanuel Macron, qui s’est déclaré «au côté de l’Arménie» après le cessez-le-feu au Haut-Karabakh, a reçu jeudi soir à l’Élysée des représentants de la communauté arménienne de France, dont le fils de Charles Aznavour, auxquels il a promis l’envoi d’aide humanitaire à Erevan. Dans la soirée, il s’est ensuite entretenu avec le premier ministre arménien Nikol Pachinian et l’a informé de l’effort humanitaire de la France. Il lui a aussi redit «sa disponibilité pour bâtir une solution politique équitable, durable et acceptable pour toutes les parties au Haut-Karabakh».

À lire aussi : Haut-Karabakh: Vladimir Poutine, maître du jeu dans le Caucase du Sud

La France compte envoyer dans les prochains jours un avion-cargo d’aide humanitaire à l’Arménie, a précisé l’Élysée. Le président a aussi évoqué la poursuite d’une coopération hospitalière avec l’Arménie. Parmi les participants à la rencontre de jeudi soir figuraient des ONG qui soutiennent l’Arménie (Union générale arménienne de bienfaisance, Fonds arménien de France, Fondation Aznavour, Coordination Sud) mais aussi des personnalités comme Nicolas Aznavour, fils de Charles Aznavour, le compositeur André Manoukian ou le footballeur champion du monde Youri Djorkaeff.

Après le cessez-le-feu conclu sous l’égide de Moscou, qui a consacré les victoires militaires de l’Azerbaïdjan au Haut-Karabakh, le chef de l’État avait déjà décidé de l’envoi d’une mission médicale en Arménie.

Paris a demandé mardi «un règlement politique durable du conflit qui puisse assurer le maintien dans de bonnes conditions des populations arméniennes au Haut-Karabakh et le retour des dizaines de milliers de personnes qui ont fui leurs habitations». «Dans ce moment difficile, la France se tient au côté de l’Arménie» à laquelle elle renouvelle son «amitié historique», avait aussi déclaré la présidence française.

A VOIR AUSSI – Haut-Karabakh: le maire de la ville bombardée de Martakert raconte la guerre, au milieu des débris

Russia moves rocket launchers towards Nagorno-Karabakh after peace deal

Reuters
Nov 16 2020

LACHIN, Azerbaijan (Reuters) – Russia has moved truck-mounted multiple rocket launchers into a land corridor it controls between Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh as its peacekeeping forces secure new territory for a deal struck over the enclave last week.

Moscow brokered an end to six weeks of fighting between Azerbaijan and ethnic Armenian forces over the enclave, an accord that prompted the deployment of almost 2,000 Russian peacekeepers to the area, a process that is continuing.

The Russian defence ministry said on Monday it had set up seven temporary observation posts in the Lachin Corridor, which runs from the edge of Armenia to the enclave inside Azeri territory, to ensure the safe passage of Russian peacekeepers to Armenian-controlled parts of Nagorno-Karabakh.

Reuters reporters saw two Russian truck-mounted Grad multiple missile launch systems in the Lachin Corridor. The Soviet-era system can fire 40 rockets in around 20 seconds and their deployment suggests Moscow is not taking any chances with the security of its peacekeepers.

Both Grads were manned by Russian crews and the servicemen confirmed to Reuters that they were from Russia.

One of the Grads had a Russian military license plate with regional code 94, indicating it belonged to the Transcaucasian military district. The other Grad had no license plate, but was accompanied by a Kamaz military truck with a Russian license plate from the same military district.

Reuters reporters also spotted a Russian tank in the area.

A statement about the Russian deployment on the Kremlin website says the armed peacekeepers will be accompanied by armoured personnel carriers and other vehicles and hardware. It made no specific mention of rocket systems.

The Azeri defence ministry did not immediately reply to a request for comment.

The Russian defence ministry said on Monday its soldiers were de-mining the Lachin corridor, and clearing the road of abandoned and damaged armoured vehicles and cars.

Moscow will monitor the peace with the help of 18 Russian-manned observation posts, it said. Russian peacekeepers were in constant contact with the armed forces of Azerbaijan and Armenia to help prevent misunderstandings.

(This story corrects to smooth phrasing in lede paragraph)

Parliament Majority Leader says stabilizing situation is top priority for government and society

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 11:26,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 17, ARMENPRESS. Parliament Majority Leader Lilit Makunts says the top priority for both the government and the society is the stabilization of the situation.

“I am calling for calmness, vigilance and soberness,” Makunts said in parliament in response to repeated calls from the opposition demanding the resignation of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan.

“The top priority task today should be stability, given the fact that the statement signed by the three states is a statement on ending the war,” she said, referring to the Karabakh armistice. “We are now in a very fragile condition and we should find solutions together. Having a mandate, keeping a mandate is very difficult because we are a part of our people and we ourselves have difficult emotions from our own failure,” Makunts said.

She didn’t rule out political changes. “As a government, we have our guilt and share of responsibility for the 2,5 years. But by running passions high at this phase, when our officials are engaged in very important negotiations, important processes are taking place over Artsakh, we don’t anyhow display our patriotism.”

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Tehran: Nagorno-Karabakh ceasefire raises questions in Iran

Tehran Times, Iran
Nov 16 2020
  1. Politics
– 23:31

TEHRAN – The ceasefire agreement between Azerbaijan and Armenia that was brokered by Russia was short of details and raised questions and speculations over the impact that it would have on the geopolitics of the region.

In what appeared to be a bid to relieve concerns among analysts about the impact of the ceasefire agreement on the geopolitics of the region, Saeed Khatibzadeh, the spokesman for Iran’s Foreign Ministry, said on Monday that the country’s borders did not change and will not change in the future.

The spokesman was responding to speculations over a transit corridor that will be established as per a Russian-brokered ceasefire agreement between Azerbaijan and Armenia to connect the autonomous republic of Nakhchivan to mainland Azerbaijan.  

Last week, the leaders of Russia, Armenia, and Azerbaijan signed the 9-clause ceasefire agreement, putting an end to a 45-day long bloody war between Baku and Yerevan over the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh.

According to the agreement, “transport links” will be established inside Armenia to connect the western regions of Azerbaijan to the landlocked exclave of Nakhchivan.

The ninth clause of the carefully-worded agreement stipulates that “All economic and transport links in the region shall be restored. The Republic of Armenia guarantees the safety of transport links between the western regions of the Republic of Azerbaijan and the Nakhchivan Autonomous Republic in order to organize unhindered movement of citizens, vehicles and goods in both directions. Control over transport shall be exercised by the bodies of the Border Guard Service of the Federal Security Service (FSB) of Russia.”

It further stipulates that “By agreement of the Parties [i.e. Azerbaijan and Armenia], the construction of new transport communications linking the Nakhchivan Autonomous Republic with the western regions of Azerbaijan shall be ensured.”

Following the establishment of the ceasefire in Nagorno-Karabakh, wild rumors and speculations swept social media in Iran that the country has lost its transit route to Armenia as a result of the newly-established ceasefire agreement. These speculations have prompted Iranian officials to provide clarifications on the agreement.

Speaking at his weekly press briefing on Monday morning, Khatibzadeh dispelled these speculations, refuting any changes in Iran’s borders.

“The geographical borders of the Islamic Republic in this region did not change at all and will not change in the future. Our perception of what has been announced is just a simple transit route, the security of which should be discussed and the Islamic Republic of Iran is following the issue closely,” the spokesman said. “Iran is located on the highway of many transit routes. Iran is both aware of its geopolitical position and uses it to help its friends.”

He also once again welcomed the ceasefire agreement, underlining that respecting international borders should be part of any solution to the crisis in Nagorno-Karabakh.

“The Islamic Republic of Iran has played and will continue to play a strategic role in all equations in the region. The only permanent solution to this crisis is to pay attention to the principle of fairness, the sovereignty of countries, and the upholding of borders, and we welcome anything that helps in this direction. A ceasefire and an end to the current conflict may not be the final answer to the crisis, but it is a very effective step,” Khatibzadeh remarked, adding that Iran welcomes any permanent solution to the Nagorno-Karabakh crisis.

The spokesman stated, “No subject can be formed outside the normal routine; as no player outside the region can set foot in this region and we have said it explicitly and those who should get the message have taken it. Outside of this path, it is natural that no process will take place.”

Khatibzadeh reiterated that the peace initiative that Iran has recently presented to the four countries involved in the conflict – Azerbaijan, Russia, Armenia, and Turkey – is remarkably convergent with the Russian-brokered ceasefire agreement.

“Iran hopes the agreement whose principles had also been mentioned in an initiative put forward by the Islamic Republic of Iran will lead to final arrangements to establish lasting peace in the Caucasus region in such a way that it will bring tranquility and welfare for people in all regional countries and ease existing concerns,” the Iranian Foreign Ministry said in a statement on November 11.

The statement also underscored the necessity for respecting the territorial integrity and sovereignty of other countries and a lack of change in internationally recognized official borders.

Iran has clearly voiced concern over the potential change in official borders in the region, especially the Iran-Armenia border, which gives Iran a strategic trade advantage in its economic relations with Azerbaijan, Armenia, and to some extent Turkey. This may be the reason why the ceasefire agreement sparked rumors and speculations over the impact that this agreement would have on the Iran-Armenia border.

As Russia, Azerbaijan, and Armenia announced the ceasefire agreement, maps circulating on social media platforms in Iran purportedly claiming that the Nakhchivan-Azerbaijan transport corridor, which Iranian sources estimated to be five kilometers wide, cut off Iran’s transit route to Armenia, a claim that prompted Seyed Abbas Araghchi, the deputy foreign minister of Iran for political affairs, to break his holiday on Friday to refute the “baseless rumors” about the ceasefire agreement’s impact on Iran-Armenia border in a statement to the Islamic Republic News Agency (IRNA).

“Unfortunately, disinformation and misleading information along with fake maps are being spread in cyberspace. Claims such as cutting Iran’s border with Armenia, creating a corridor inside Armenia, or even inside Iran, changing the geopolitics of the region, etc. have been raised but they are fundamentally untrue and being spread for specific political and propaganda purposes,” Araghchi told IRNA on Friday night.

The ceasefire agreement itself was so short that it did not give information on where and when the Nakhchivan-Azerbaijan “transport links” will be established. This ambiguity paved the way for social media users to spread rumors and maps alleging that the corridor will cut Iran’s transit route to Armenia and therefore change the geopolitics of the region. One map that was widely circulated on social media purportedly showed that the corridor cuts the transit route between Iran and Armenia but Araghchi said these maps are baseless and that there were no plans to create a corridor along Iran-Armenia borders.

Araghchi called these rumors “baseless,” saying that “there will be no change in Iran’s transit routes to Armenia or the Republic of Azerbaijan.”

Araghchi himself posted a map on his Telegram channel showing Iran-Armenia borders were intact.

“As can be seen in this map, the much-discussed issue of creating a geographical corridor along the border between Iran and Armenia is completely unfounded,” asserted Araghchi, referring to the map he has published. He also pointed out that the corridor is yet to be completely known.

“What is stated in the Nagorno-Karabakh ceasefire agreement is the creation of a road corridor, or rather a transit route, inside Armenia from Nakhchivan to mainland Azerbaijan, the security of which will be guaranteed by Russia, and the exact route is still unknown,” noted Araghchi, adding, “This is not a new idea and it has a long history, and if it is implemented, which is dependent on a thousand of ifs and buts, it will not make any change in Iran’s transit routes to Armenia or Azerbaijan.”

Araghchi also said that he held “long” talks with the Russian ambassador in Iran in this regard on Wednesday evening.

Iran has said that it will not tolerate any change in the official international borders in the region. At least two high-ranking Iranian military officials warned against changing the borders over the course of the war in Nagorno-Karabakh.

“Respecting the territorial integrity of countries and preserving the official international borders are among our well-known principles and we will not tolerate any changes in these borders. We have opposed these changes and will continue to do so,” Major General Seyed Abdolrahim Mousavi, the commander of Iran’s Army, warned.

Brigadier General Mohammad Pakpour, the commander of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps’ Ground Forces, also echoed the same red line while visiting Iran’s northwestern borders during the Nagorno-Karabakh war.

“We will not accept change in the geopolitics of borders. This issue is the red line of the Islamic Republic of Iran,” Pakpour asserted.



COVID-19: Armenia reports 984 new cases, 2478 recoveries in one day

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 11:22,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 17, ARMENPRESS. 984 new cases of the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) have been confirmed in Armenia in the past one day, bringing the total number of confirmed cases to 118,870, the ministry of healthcare said today.

2478 more patients have recovered in one day. The total number of recoveries has reached 78,343.

2530 tests were conducted in the past one day.

23 more patients have died, raising the death toll to 1811.

The number of active cases is 38,253.

The number of patients who had a coronavirus but died from other disease has reached 463 (9 new such cases).

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan