Azerbaijani bombing destroys buildings in Stepanakert, damages gas pipeline of a district

Save

Share

 22:46,

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 23, ARMENPRESS. As a result of the bombing of Artsakh capital Stepanakert by the Azerbaijani armed forces, a car burned down in the city, public buildings were destroyed, and the gas pipeline of the district was damaged, ARMENPRESS reports the Armenian United Information Center informed.

”The Azerbaijani armed forces again targeted Artsakh’s capital Stepanakert, violating the norms of the international humanitarian law. As a result of the bombing a car has burned down, public buildings, shops have been destroyed. The pipline supplying gas to the district has been damaged. There are no casualties”, reads the statement.

Mercury Public Affairs drops Turkey as a client

 

Save

Share

 01:00,

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 23, ARMENPRESS Mercury Public Affairs has terminated its registration as a foreign agent of the Republic of Turkey in response to calls by the Armenian community demanding an end to the company’s association with the Turkish regime amidst its support for Azerbaijan’s genocidal war against Artsakh, ARMENPRESS was informed from the Armenian National Committee of America.

“As a result of our community’s persistent activism and the steadfast support of our friends in elected office, I was just informed by Fabian Núñez, who is a partner at Mercury’s Los Angeles office, that Mercury Public Affairs would be terminating its registration as a foreign agent of Turkey,” remarked Chair of the Armenian National Committee of America – Western Region (ANCA-WR) Board of Directors, Nora Hovsepian, Esq. “We welcome Mercury’s decision to stand on the right side of history in ending its association with the Government of Turkey and its genocidal policies, and we hope that this decision will serve as an example for every entity which works for or with the authoritarian regimes of Turkey and Azerbaijan.”

Mercury has a long history of working with not only the Turkish government but its many proxies. Mercury has rendered services to the American-Turkish Council Turkish-American Business Council (TAIK) – headed by close ally of Turkish President Erdogan, Mehmet Yalcindag. Last year, Foreign Agent Registration Act filings show Mercury contacted over 150 Congressional offices on behalf of TAIK to set up meetings for Turkish Economy Minister Berat Albayrak – who also happens to be President Erdogan’s son-in-law.

Mercury’s decision to terminate its registration as a foreign agent of Turkey also follows decisions by the Livingston Group and DLA Piper to end their representation of Azerbaijan amidst growing public outcry over Turkey and Azerbaijan’s genocidal aggression against the Armenians of Artsakh. 

The Turkish and Azerbaijani governments have for years sought to enforce a gag-rule over United States human rights policy through their insidious attempts to deny the Armenian genocide, and undermine the fundamental rights of the Armenians of Artsakh. Both states rate amongst the worst in the world in terms of democratic standards, media freedoms, and basic civil and political rights.

“Both Turkey and Azerbaijan have spent millions throughout the years on hiring public affairs firms to clean up their public image – tainted by a deplorable track record on human rights, and a severe disregard for democratic freedoms,” said Hovsepian. “The actions taken by DLA Piper, the Livingston Group and now Mercury Public Affairs are an important step in bringing the Turkish-Azerbaijani influence machine to a grinding halt, and preventing their exertion of malign foreign influence here in the United States.”

CivilNet: L’Azerbaïdjan continue de bombarder les zones civiles du Karabakh

CIVILNET.AM

02:26

Tôt le matin du 21 octobre, Martakert et les villes et villages adjacents du Haut-Karabakh ont continué d’être pris pour cible par les forces armées azerbaïdjanaises, selon des témoignages d’habitants ainsi que du centre d’information unifié officiel du Karabakh.

Le bombardement aérien des zones civiles du Haut-Karabakh est continu depuis le début de la guerre, le 27 septembre.

“Dans la nuit du 20 octobre, le cessez-le-feu a été plus ou moins maintenu dans les zones civiles. Cependant, vers l’aube, Martakert et les villages environnants sont redevenus la cible de l’ennemi. Le 19 octobre, les infrastructures civiles ont été bombardées dans les mêmes zones”, rapporte le centre d’information.

Selon des responsables arméniens, les forces armées azerbaïdjanaises continuent de violer grossièrement le cessez-le-feu humanitaire, mais aussi l’interdiction d’utiliser des armes interdites contre les civils.

Hier, lors de la réunion à huis clos demandée par la France, la Russie et les États-Unis, les 15 membres du Conseil de sécurité des Nations Unies ont réitéré un appel du chef de l’ONU Antonio Guterres pour que les parties honorent un nouveau cessez-le-feu.

La reprise des affrontements entre les deux camps a débuté le 27 septembre, à la suite d’une offensive azerbaïdjanaise, soutenue par des tirs d’artillerie et des frappes de drones de précision. Le New York Times rapporte que si les défenses aériennes limitées de l’Arménie n’ont pas permis d’arrêter les drones, ses troupes, renforcées par des volontaires et des conscrits, ont ralenti l’avance azerbaïdjanaise. L’utilisation de mercenaires syriens, déployés par la Turquie en Azerbaïdjan, a ajouté une nouvelle couche aux problèmes sécuritaires de la région.

CivilNet: 71 Missiles Landed in Iran in One Day as a Result of the Karabakh War

CIVILNET.AM

05:25

Aliyar Rastgou, the Deputy Minister of Political and Security Affairs of Iran’s Eastern Azerbaijan Province said more than 70 missiles fell near the Iranian border town of Khoda Afarin on October 22 as a result of fighting in Karabakh conflict

According to ParsToday, a statement by Rastgou said that, “Fortunately, the missiles struck the agricultural areas of the neighboring villages of Khoda Afarin and did not cause any human casualties or financial losses.”

Rastgou added that during the prior 24 days of Karabakh conflict, a total of 68 missiles landed in Iran. But on October 22 alone, there were 71 missiles.

He also stated, “Iranian Border Guard Command has taken the appropriate steps to ensure Iran’s safety and the Azerbaijan and Armenian sides have been given serious warnings to prevent repeating such incidents.”

Iran has been closely minoring the situation on its borders since fighting broke out between neighboring Azerbaijan and Armenians in Karabakh.

“The Islamic Republic of Iran is seriously and with high sensitivity monitoring the moves at the bordering areas of Iran and declares that any aggression against our country’s territories by any party engaged in the (conflicts in the) region will not be tolerated and we seriously warn all sides to show necessary caring in this regard,” Foreign Ministry Spokesman Saeed Khatibzadeh had said earlier. 

At the same time, Iran’s government has offered to mediate in the conflict. “We call on both sides to exercise restraint, to end the conflict immediately and to resume negotiations,” said Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Said Chatibsadeh.

Tehran wants to prevent the conflict from spilling over into Iranian society. Iran is home to both an Armenian and an Azerbaijani minority.

OU (Oklahoma) Armenian, Azerbaijani students reflect on war back home, impacts on their daily lives

OU Daily – University of Oklahoma
Oct 22 2020


  •  

  • Oct 22, 2020 


Margarita Parsamyan chats with her roommate, Ofelya Baghdasaryan, while waiting for their fellow Armenian OU students, Tamara Kocharyan and Kristina Aleksanyan. As they prepare tea for their guests, the jarring sound of an airplane flying over their apartment in Traditions East paralyzes them. 

In their minds, the airplane is going down, it’s ready to attack and their apartment is not theirs anymore: It’s Armenia in war. 

They take a deep breath when Kocharyan and Aleksanyan finally walk into the silent room, smiling. Although tears well up in their eyes, the warmness of each other’s hugs and the sound of their home language keeps them strong. This is home for them, too. 

Vocal performance senior Parsamyan, biochemistry senior Baghdasaryan, international businesses and management information systems sophomore Kocharyan and international studies sophomore Aleksanyan are Armenian students at OU, caught between two worlds — a life of studying and exams in Norman, Oklahoma, and a brutal war tearing apart their home country. 

Armenia and Azerbaijan broke out in a new on-going war for the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh on Sep. 27. OU students from Armenia woke up to the news of martial law – the imposition of direct military control on a civilian government during a temporary emergency – implemented  by their home country in response to Azerbaijan’s missile attacks on the disputed territory. 

The Nagorno-Karabakh conflict has its roots centuries back, with  the fall of the Ottoman Empire and during the Armenian genocide – when Armenians were “slaughtered” and expelled from Turkey. Considered to be a “decades-long conflict”, Armenians and Azerbaijanis started a  “bloody war” in 1988 that left the region in hands of ethnic Armenians when a “Russian-brokered” ceasefire was signed in 1994. 

The Daily spoke to several OU Armenian students and an Azerbaijani student about impacts of the Armenian-Azerbaijani war — a war whose reach travels across borders, continents, oceans – all the way to their new lives in the U.S. 

‘That day was a nightmare.’

“I woke up Sunday morning (to a) message from my mom saying that a war has started (in Armenia). My initial reaction was that it might be one of Azerbaijan’s disturbances of the ceasefire, (but) I realized this (was) more serious,” Aleksanyan said. “(I knew) this (was not) something that (was) going to end quickly or that I have experienced before in my life.”

Baghdasaryan was on the phone with her parents, trying to believe the news she was hearing. She said while she was on the phone, her dad was standing in front of the window telling her how the tanks from her town – Sisian, near Nagorno-Karabakh – were moving toward the Azerbaijan border.

Meanwhile, back in the U.S., Baghdarsaryan woke up her roommate Parsamyan and told her there is war in Armenia. 

“That day was a nightmare. We couldn’t sleep properly because we were checking the news every single second,”  Parsamyan said. “Next morning, when we finally woke up, we (realized) Armenia is doing the military mobilization (while) other people are on the streets going as volunteers to the border. That never happened before for us.”

Since Sep. 27, Armenians and Azerbaijanis have been mobilized into military service. Armenia started conscripting men to send them to the front line, and while some do it voluntarily, others don’t. 

Mobilization for training started Sep. 21, and general mobilization on Sep. 28 — right after the first clash between both countries. Kocharyan said she is worried about her friends on the front lines. 

“My best friend is in the front line right now, and I couldn’t get in touch with him (before he left),” Kocharyan said. “I (now) wake up every hour to check the names of the people who died to make sure that I don’t know any of them.”

After Kocharyan talked about her fears with The Daily, one of her high school friends from Armenia died in the war on Sep. 28. 

“He was an ambulance driver in the army. He was transporting soldiers from the front line when the ambulance car was bombed,” Kocharyan said during a follow-up interview. “My second friend died (Oct. 13). We went camping together for the last three summers, and I still don’t know how he died. It’s just difficult.”

While Baghdasaryan said many of her relatives are already on the front line, Aleksanyan said she was getting ready to talk to her dad before he left to join the fight.  

“I am supposed to call him around 10 p.m. When they wake up in the morning, I have to tell him that I love him and how proud I am of him,” Aleksanyan said. “It might be the case I don’t ever speak to him again. Knowing that (I am) abroad  makes it really difficult.”

These students also shared their experiences with mental health since the conflict started. They agreed that every time a 19-year-old soldier passes away, it causes “a breakdown.” 

But they don’t lose hope. 

Kocharyan said she thanks her friends and the community at OU and back home for helping her “keep going,” and Aleksanyan considers the Armenian community and therapies at the Counseling Center to be “a big support” at OU. 

A student from Azerbaijan also spoke to The Daily about the repercussions on her life caused by the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict since it started in September. She asked to remain anonymous for safety reasons.

“At first I could not believe it. I thought it was just another ‘border clash,’ which happens regularly between these two countries. But it escalated very quickly,” the Azerbaijani student said . “I know I am surprised about the war, but people should not be surprised if Azerbaijan finds war the only solution, and since it has a legal right to use military force to protect its territorial integrity, considering Armenian forces are the forces of occupation on international law.”

The student said she fears her family could be “the next victim” since “residential neighborhoods are targeted by Armenian forces.” While she is safe at OU, her mind is continuously affected by the violence of the war.  

“Of course we are safe and ‘unaffected’ by the war here. But our thoughts are affected by it,” she said. “It is truly hard to sleep peacefully at night knowing innocent people and kids in large cities of Azerbaijan, which have nothing to do with conflict, are getting bombed and killed in the middle of the night, in their sleep.”

‘I am also a minority in the international community.’

While experiencing the emotional impact of the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict, OU’s Armenian and Azerbaijani students also needed to keep focused on their midterms. Parsamyan said she tried to speak about the conflict in each of her classes, but she did not always receive a positive response from her classmates. 

“(During my) first class, (I) decided to talk about the war at home. Everyone was shocked listening to me, but when I asked if anyone (had) a question, nothing happened,” Parsamyan said. “This (was) not going to discourage me. These communities should know that besides (the) pandemic and besides the (U.S.) elections, there is so much going on in this world that is not being covered in the media. If I’m the one telling them, they should listen to me.” 

During the same week, professors showed their support for the Armenian students by allowing them to reschedule some of their midterms, understanding when these students couldn’t attend to their classes, and explaining the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict to the class. The International Students Services office also reached out to the students to offer mental health support and financial aid resources if needed. 

“My honors professor (Julia Ehrhardt) is teaching American Literary culture this semester. She organized an Armenian Awareness picnic for students to hear about Armenian history,” Baghdasaryan said. “I was so happy after class. She has been the biggest support.”

Parsamyan, Baghdasaryan, Kocharyan and Aleksanyan are organizing an international fundraising event for the on-going humanitarian crisis in Armenia. The collected funds will be sent to Armenian nonprofits to rebuild houses that were bombed during the conflict and provide victims with food and clothes. 

“We’re finding OU organizations (that) are willing to pay speakers to come and talk about the (Armenian and Azerbaijani conflict),” Kocharyan said. “We’ve contacted the OU Model UN club, the International Business Association, the International Advisory Committee and the Undergraduate Student Congress. We’re waiting for their response(s).”

On the other hand, the student from Azerbaijan claims she has not felt supported by the OU community while experiencing the emotional impact of the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict.

“I am also part of (the International Advisory Committee), and no one from that organization has reached out to me so far despite knowing where I am from and how I am going through tough times,” she said. “They have posted biased, one-sided stories of the conflict, putting me in a very uncomfortable and awkward position.”

The student is demanding an apology from IAC due to the “one-sided” stories posted on their social media since she considers it was an “unfair move” toward her. She believes the IAC’s goal is “to unite international students to celebrate diversity, not to blame a side while leaving their (part) of the story out.”

She said she was disappointed at the lack of support from the international community. Her hardest moment was realizing  she is “not only (a) minority on campus, (but) also a minority in the international family.”

Although she is aware “there are (more) Armenian students at OU and their voices could be louder” than hers, she said the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict has caused “a lot of national and cultural conflict between (both countries).”

“I have heard a lot of Armenians saying to never trust Azerbaijanis, and I have seen and heard many Azerbaijanis saying the same,” she said. “Unfortunately, it is very rare for Armenians to meet Azerbaijanis, and when they do they doubt every single behavior.”

The Azerbaijani student said losing friendships at OU because they applied “double standards” was one of her hardest moments since the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict started.

“I remember meeting an Armenian girl last year. I hugged her to show how friendship and peace are more important than our countries’ propaganda against each other. I told her how we are similar more than anyone, I asked her (to) stay in touch,” she said. “However, when the border clash between Armenia and Azerbaijan happened (in) July, she made a post about it (blaming) Azerbaijan’s political and education system and (making) assumptions on me and my friendly behavior. I was shocked she did not (say she) hate(d) me.” 

‘We’re far away from home.’

Baghdasaryan and Parsamyan – who will graduate in May 2021 – said the war between Armenia and Azerbaijan shifted their personal purpose for their futures. Baghdasaryan now believes “there are more important things to worry about” in order to “to pay (Armenia) for all these lives taken away,” she said. Meanwhile, Parsamyan said she is shifting from “such an individualistic mindset.”

“I only thought about my goals. My classes or my mental health were the most important things, but then I realized we don’t really think about what we can do for the good of the community,” Parsamyan said. “There is a big individualistic culture here trying to change ourselves.”

Although the four of the Armenian students are following different professional paths, their love for their home country unites them. 

Parsamyan dreams of opening a “big” musical conservatory back in Armenia since she had to leave her home country in order to become a professional singer; Aleksanyan wants to be a “good diplomat” who could represent the Armenian’s interests within the international community, and Kocharyan hopes to inaugurate an IT center for Armenians seeking a better education. 

“We’re far away from home, and the only best way we can support (Armenia) is raising awareness in the international community,” Baghdasaryan said. “We’re the eyes and the ears of our country for those who can’t. We are more connected to Armenia from now on.” 

The Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict has gone around for almost 30 years now. Parsamyan, Baghdarsaryan, Kocharyan and Aleksanyan look forward to finally bringing peace into Armenia — just as the student from Azerbaijan wishes the same for her country too. 

The Azerbaijani student said it is important to remember although their two nations are at war, the conflict is political — not necessarily personal.

“Of course we each have different political beliefs and stances regarding this issue, and I totally understand their frustration and will to defend their homeland, however, we should express our beliefs respectfully in relation to each other,” the Azerbaijani student said. “We should remember that this is a political war, it is very racist and nationalistic to generalize and hate on the whole nation and their people, culture and history. It does not fix the problem but lets the hate grow deeper and deeper.”

http://www.oudaily.com/news/ou-armenian-azerbaijani-students-reflect-on-war-back-home-impacts-on-their-daily-lives/article_a812db7e-14b7-11eb-9243-33d92f935abc.html?utm_medium=social&utm_source=facebook&utm_campaign=user-share&fbclid=IwAR29CSprm0WqpixWBLlGr8WirBbnjFRZod6XRt9AJQeY3YToz9Ti0oAlKV0

Azerbaijan’s Violence Impacts the Hearts of Angelenos

Knock LA – Los Angeles
Oct 23 2020

Anthony Torossian



If you live in the greater Los Angeles area, you have likely seen during the past few weeks the display of Armenian flags on cars across the roads and raised on the sides of buildings throughout the city. These displays are borne more out of necessity than out of pride, though national honor undeniably bleeds deeply into that tricolor banner. Many Los Angeles residents have become accustomed to witnessing similar head-turning images but typically during the month of April each year when the Armenian community commemorates the Armenian Genocide and remembers the sacrifices of its fallen martyrs.

Why have Angeleno Armenians now, in the month of October, suddenly engaged in such a strong exhibition of support for their heritage and homeland? The answer to this question is an all too familiar one for the Armenian people, may trigger a foggy familiarity for others, and still remain completely sealed off from the consciousness of most.

On September 27, 2020, approximately 7,000 miles from our Los Angeles, Azerbaijan’s forces launched a large-scale military attack against the region of Nagorno-Karabakh (historically referred to by the Armenian people as Artsakh) igniting the worst violence the region has seen in decades. Since the initial Azerbaijani attacks, the dispute has quickly erupted into a full-scale military conflict which has unfortunately decimated largely civilian areas of Artsakh, particularly the capital city, Stepanakert. As a result of the recent Azerbaijani aggression, Armenians all around the world stand together in unity and condemn the violence that has been committed against the people of Artsakh.

The history of Armenians’ nativity in Artsakh dates back several millennia. This history plays a significant role in the current dispute and is largely the reason why ethnic Armenians knowingly feel that they are the rightful inhabitants of the Artsakh territory. Armenians have roots in the region of Artsakh since as early as the 9th century B.C. and have continuously lived and prospered on the land even after the last kingdoms of Armenia fell under foreign rule. The Armenian majority presence in the region was sustained uninterruptedly even through the Armenian Genocide in 1915, when the Ottoman Empire (modern day Turkey) systematically massacred 1.5 million Armenians while simultaneously misappropriating what was historically Armenian land. In 1921, despite Azerbaijan’s previous commitment that Artsakh was to remain an integral part of Armenia, direct and arbitrary interference by Joseph Stalin forced the incorporation of Artsakh, as an autonomous territory, into Azerbaijan SSR without any keeping with legal procedure. This was a decision that was never recognized by the League of Nations, nor did the Armenians of Artsakh ever acquiesce to with this fiat and for decades struggled for reunification with their motherland, Armenia.

The current phase of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict began in 1988 when Azeri authorities organized and perpetrated massacres and ethnic cleansing of the Armenian population on the entire territory of Azerbaijan. In 1991, the population of Artsakh, pursuant to a public referendum in full compliance with constitutional requirements, declared the establishment of the Nagorno Karabakh Republic. In response, the Azerbaijani authorities organized large-scale military actions against the Republic of Nagorno-Karabakh. The Artsakh forces defended their independence and liberation for several years until the two sides eventually signed a ceasefire agreement in 1994. Despite multiple violations, the ceasefire remained active until the most recent Azerbaijan attacks.

On September 27, 2020, the Armenians in Artsakh once again found themselves the target of unprovoked Azerbaijani aggression. What makes the current conflict distinguishable from past violations of the ceasefire is the fact that the Armenians of the region are no longer only facing the onslaughts of the Azerbaijan forces. Instead, they now must defend their right to live against the triangular force of Azerbaijan, the Turkish government and recruited Jihadist. The Armenians have never viewed the regional dispute as an ethnic or religious conflict. However, the indisputable evidence of Turkish and Jihadist involvement has proven to the Armenians that the conflict has evolved from a territorial dispute to an existential threat.

On October 1, 2020, United States, French and Russian leaders called for an unconditional cease fire, which both the Republics of Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenia expressed a willingness to agree to. However, Azerbaijani dictator Ilham Aliyev has expressly stated that the aggression perpetrated by his forces will not stop until all ethnic Armenians have abandoned the Artsakh region. Since this time, Azeri aggression has only increased and thousands of lives on both sides of the conflict, including civilians, have perished as a direct result. Thus, considering the history outlined above, and in light of the most recent aggression against the Armenian people, one can easily understand why the Armenians have declared their right to live freely in the Artsakh region.

In the current conflict, the Armenians have proven to have a particular advantage that most parties to international conflicts do not ordinarily consider — the strong and unconditional support of its diaspora. As a direct result of the Armenian Genocide, there are close to 7 million Armenians living outside of Armenia throughout the world. Several hundred thousand Armenian-Americans reside in the greater Los Angeles area alone. The outpouring of support and activism from this global community has been evident in all parts of the world. The Armenian people do not only see the current conflict as a battle for Artsakh, but it is a battle for survival, for justice, for human rights, and for the Armenian people’s centuries-old dream to live on their rightful lands in peace.

Support and activism within the Armenian community has surfaced in many shapes and forms. Led by various Armenian organizations working in unity, the local Armenian community has rallied and demonstrated in various parts of the Los Angeles area. One location has become a rather consistent forum for Armenian demonstrations, the Consulate General of Azerbaijan. The demands of the Armenian community have been clear since the violence broke out on September 27 — the aggression against the Armenians of Artsakh must cease immediately and peace must be brought to the region. Armenians also demand that the United States and international community condemn the ongoing violence against the Armenians of Artsakh and that Artsakh be recognized as an independent sovereign once and for all.

On October 5, 2020, demonstrations were joined by government officials including Congressman Adam Schiff, Mayor Eric Garcetti, and other local officials in a show of solidarity with the Armenian people while urging leaders in Washington to conduct the necessary diplomacy to bring peace to the Artsakh region. On October 11, over 150,000 Armenians marched and peacefully protested from Pan-Pacific Park to the Turkish Consulate to raise awareness about the ongoing Turkish-Azeri aggression against the Armenian people. During the March for Victory, the message was once again clear, recognize the independence of Artsakh, condemn the violence against the Armenians of Artsakh, and bring lasting peace to region. This mass showing of solidarity received international media coverage and demonstrations throughout the world have since followed daily.

The Armenian community has also directed its attention to the media’s mishandling of the conflict. On October 3, 2020, demonstrations drew about 500 participants to the CNN building in Hollywood where they gathered and called for broadcasters to provide more accurate coverage of the conflict. On October 12, nearly 100 demonstrators blocked traffic in front of the CBS Studios in Los Angeles to protest the network’s subjective and inaccurate local coverage of the 150,000-person March for Victory.

On October 18, 2020, hundreds of local Armenians gathered in Newport Beach while President Trump arrived at his private fundraiser. The Armenian community once again called on the president to sanction Azerbaijan and Turkey on account of their unjustifiable aggression against the Armenians of Artsakh.

City streets have not been the only forum for demonstrations. On several occasions, Armenian activists have blocked major freeways such as 101, 170 and 134 to bring awareness to the conflict, and as a call for action to the United States government and international community. Demonstrations and massive showings of support are not confined to the Los Angeles area, rather, similar demonstrations have taken place and will take place from San Diego to San Francisco, New York, Washington D.C., Chicago, Boston, and virtually every other place throughout the world that is home to an Armenia community.

Importantly, Armenian activism has produced more than just symbolic gestures. Instead, support and activism by the Armenian diaspora have produced practical results that are sure to benefit the people of their homeland. On October 1, 2020, Congressman Adam Schiff, who tirelessly hears and supports the voices of his Armenian constituents, along with a bipartisan group of 48 Members of the House, wrote to Secretary of State Michael Pompeo. The Members of the House expressed concern about the conflict between Azerbaijan and Armenia while raising their particular concern about Turkey’s illicit involvement in the conflict. On October 19, it was announced that Secretary of State Pompeo will host both the Armenian and Azerbaijan Foreign Ministers on October 23 as a forum for further negotiations and peace talks.

The massive level of activism and dissemination of awareness has prompted certain foreign powers such as Canada to take action as well. On October 5, 2020, the Canadian government announced that it had suspended all relevant arms exports to Turkey after allegations had been reported of Canadian imaging and targeting systems on unmanned drones being used by Azerbaijan in the conflict. Additionally, certain parts of the international community have begun to consider or even acknowledge the sovereignty of Artsakh. On October 15, 2020, the Italian city of Milan became the first ever large European city to recognize the Republic of Artsakh. On October 19, 2020, the mayor of Paris, Nouvelles d’Arménie said in an interview “if the only solution to the current conflict is recognition of Nagorno-Karabakh, I think we should not hesitate.”

The Armenian community’s fundraising efforts in support of the Armenians of Artsakh has gone into full force as well. The Armenian community in Southern California alone has already raised millions of dollars in relief funds and fundraising efforts continue to grow. Since the initial Azeri attacks on September 27, the Armenia Fund, which is the main aggregator of donations, has collected over $120 million dollars from people around the world and donations continue to be given each day.

The Armenian community has also organized supply drives all over Los Angeles collecting items such as medical supplies, trauma supplies, clothing, canned food, and tools. On October 10, 2020, a cargo plane carrying 20 tons of donated items that were collected in Los Angeles landed in Yerevan, Armenia to be delivered to Artsakh. On October 14, the government of Turkey blocked 100 additional tons of humanitarian aid from traveling through Turkey’s airspace to Armenia. However, on October 19 another plane from the U.S. West Coast carrying 43 tons of humanitarian aid landed in Yerevan after the Eurocontrol organization forced Turkey to allow the plane to travel through its airspace given the plane’s humanitarian purpose.

Some Los Angeles residents have even decided that their assistance would be best served from within the conflict zone. Several Armenians traveled to Artsakh where they are now providing humanitarian aid to civilians affected by the Azerbaijani attacks. Reports from these brave individuals also confirmed that Azerbaijani forces have targeted civilian areas in Artsakh with heavy shelling and bombing on the capital city of Stepanakert.

The Armenian people, including those here in Los Angeles, see peace and autonomy for the region of Artsakh as the only resolution to the current conflict. The Armenian community stands by the notion that protecting human rights is a moral and multicultural principle, and any infringement on human rights anywhere must be recognized and addressed. They have demonstrated that they will unconditionally defend this principle, and accordingly, Armenian activism in Los Angeles and all throughout the world will undoubtedly continue until the conflict in Artsakh is resolved.


Azerbaijani Official Tells Germany’s Bild Aliyev Not Giving Interviews to ‘Yellow Media’

Sputnik
Oct 21 2020
23:20 GMT 21.10.2020

MINGECEVIR, Azerbaijan (Sputnik) – Azerbaijani presidential assistant Hikmet Hajiyev told Germany’s Bild newspaper that President Ilham Aliyev was not giving interviews to tabloids.

On Wednesday, Bild’s acting editor-in-chief Paul Ronzheimer wrote on his Twitter page that Aliyev had agreed to do an interview with Bild about the situation in Azerbaijan’s conflict-torn region of Nagorno-Karabakh, but later decided not to do that. The reporter asked the Azerbaijani president what he was afraid of.

“@ronzheimer please be informed that no one has given any consent to give interview to BILD. Your statement on behalf of Azerbaijani Gov is unprofessional. My President @presidentaz prefers to give interview to professional media not ‘yellow media outlets,’” Hajiyev wrote on his Twitter page on late Wednesday.


The fighting on the line of contact in Nagorno-Karabakh started on 27 September. The sides have accused each other of starting the firing. The international community strongly condemned the escalation and called on parties to settle the differences via dialogue, while Turkey has pledged its full support for Azerbaijan.

Yerevan and Baku have signed two ceasefire agreements, but both of them collapsed soon after entering into force. Within the past several days, the Azerbaijani troops managed to make significant achievements on the southern flank.


Russia interested in Karabakh regulation more than anyone else, says Putin

TASS, Russia
Oct 22 2020
Russian Politics & DiplomacyOctober 22, 21:41

NOVO-OGARYOVO, October 22. /TASS/. All participants of the Nagorno-Karabakh negotiations genuinely strive for regulation, but Russia is interested in it more than anyone else, Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Thursday during a session of the Valdai Discussion Club.

“All participants of the negotiation process genuinely want the situation to be regulated, but no one is interested in this more than Russia,” the Russian leader stressed during a session of the Valdai Discussion Club on Thursday.

“I would very much like for a compromise to be found. As you know, I’m in close contact with President [of Azerbaijan Ilham] Aliyev and [Armenian] Prime Minister [Nikol] Pashinyan. I speak to them over the phone several times a day. Our foreign minister, defense minister, heads of special services are in constant contact,” Putin said.


How Turkey’s Erdogan is getting away with his foreign policy adventurism

The Print, India
Oct 22 2020

For Erdogan, the absence of a red flag is a green flag. If you’re looking for a unifying theory, it is this: Turkey’s president does what he does because he gets away with it.

BOBBY GHOSH

In 2010, Turkey’s “Zero Problems” foreign-policy doctrine was the marvel of the Mediterranean and the Middle East. Under the leadership of Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the country was using diplomacy and commerce to develop cordial — or at least civil — relations, not only in its neighborhood and near abroad, but across the world. Erdogan himself was the toast of the high table of international affairs, where leaders of the great powers sought his counsel and company.

Ten years later, Turkey’s foreign-policy landscape might more accurately be described as “Only Problems.” Ankara is deploying hard power and harsh rhetoric, rather than diplomacy, to maintain its influence.

It is in various degrees of confrontation with most countries that adjoin either its land borders or the waters of the Eastern Mediterranean: Greece, Syria, Israel, Cyprus, Iraq, Armenia and Egypt. Farther afield, it is in conflict with France, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.

And at a time when the world powers can’t seem to agree on anything, they seem to reached near unanimity that Erdogan is a troublemaker.

Turkey’s pugnacious president has recently been attracting sharp jabs even from those who used to pull their punches. The U.S. State Department has said it “deplores” Turkey’s decision to restart a controversial geological survey of the Eastern Mediterranean, and called on Ankara to “end this calculated provocation.”

This language is some of the strongest that the Trump administration has directed against Erdogan, who has the ear and affection of his American counterpart.



Meanwhile, Russian President Vladimir Putin, described by Erdogan as a “good friend,” is taking a dim view of his role as cheerleader of the Caucasian conflict, where Turkey is enthusiastically backing Azerbaijan against Armenia. The Kremlin has accused Turkey of adding “fuel to the flames” of the long-simmering dispute over the region of Nagorno-Karabakh. A ceasefire called by Moscow has not ended the fighting.

Other sources of criticism are more predictable. French President Emmanuel Macron, who has fulminated against Erdogan for Turkey’s intervention in the Libyan civil war (pot, meet kettle), has added its conduct in the Eastern Mediterranean and the Caucasus to his list of grievances. German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who has fended off wider European calls to punish Turkey, finds herself in an awkward position with the resumption of exploration in the troubled waters. It “most certainly would be anything but conducive to the continued development of EU-Turkish relations,” her spokesperson said.

As if all this wasn’t enough, condemnation has come from unexpected quarters — such as India, which was not pleased by Erdogan’s comments about Kashmir to the United Nations General Assembly. “Turkey should learn to respect the sovereignty of other nations and reflect on its own policies more deeply,” sniffed New Delhi’s Permanent Representative to the UN.

The “how” of Turkey’s foreign-policy freefall is well documented: Most of Ankara’s conflicts are of Erdogan’s choosing. He might have easily avoided entanglement in the Libyan civil war or the Caucasian crisis, and held his rhetorical fire on Kashmir. In each instance, he elected to wade in.

The “why” of it all is harder to fathom. Those seeking doctrinaire explanations for Erdogan’s adventurism can choose from neo-Ottomanism, Turkish ethno-nationalism and Islamism. Others point to geopolitics: Turkey, they say, is maneuvering for space in an emerging multipolar order, where it sees itself as a mid-sized world power, with an economic and cultural reach to befit that status as well as the requisite military muscle. Seen in this light, the aggressive foreign policy is an assertion of rights.

Still others focus on more narrow mercantile motivations, such as the scramble for hydrocarbon resources and the quest for new markets. And then there’s the argument from domestic politics, which posits that Erdogan, his approval ratings sinking amid the deepening economic gloom, is waving the Turkish flag abroad to distract his people.

There is more than a little truth in all those explanations. But if you’re looking for a unifying theory for Erdogan’s foreign policy, it is this: Turkey’s president does what he does because he gets away with it.

Whether in domestic politics or regional trade, he has not paid a significant price for his adventurism. The cost in Turkish blood has been remarkably low, not least because a great deal of the fighting is done by foreign mercenaries recruited from the killing fields of Syria. If there is any Turkish presence in the Libyan or Caucasian frontlines, it is more likely to be in the air — showing off the country’s burgeoning capabilities in drone warfare — than on the ground.

In terms of Turkish treasure, the costs are likely to be substantial, but Erdogan can reasonably argue that these will be defrayed by economic gains. By intervening in Libya, for instance, Ankara hopes to salvage construction deals worth $18 billion, as well as open up new opportunities for oil and gas exploration. The maritime maneuvers in the Eastern Mediterranean are designed to lay Turkish claim to vast gas reserves, as well as show off some naval muscle. And economic ties to Azerbaijan will be strengthened by the sale of Turkish military hardware.

In purely commercial terms, the potential profit from these forays greatly outweighs any loss of opportunity with, say, Greece, Armenia or Egypt, none of which is a major trading partner. Turkish businesses complain they’re being pushed out of the Saudi market because of the hostility between Ankara and Riyadh, but the numbers involved are relatively small. (Remarkably, bilateral trade with Israel has held up despite the acrimony between Erdogan and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.)

In contrast, Turkey’s antagonists among major powers have enormous economic leverage, but they have been reluctant to use it. In the European Union — far and away Turkey’s biggest trading partner — diplomats talk airily about a “carrots and sticks approach” toward Ankara, but they are beginning to recognize that it isn’t working. The problem is that they are unwilling to wield the stick.

Despite Macron’s repeated calls for economic sanctions, the EU has yet to summon the collective will to follow through on threats to punish Turkey. This reluctance can only partially be explained by Erdogan’s counter-threat to unleash waves of refugees westward. The EU’s rules for imposing sanctions are too unwieldy for the group to deploy them as a weapon.

That is not a problem for the Trump administration, which dispenses sanctions like candy. But the American president has been coy about applying them to Turkey. When he has, they have carried all the sting of a rap on the knuckles — and Trump has been quick to lift them.

The most enduring disciplinary action the U.S. has taken against Turkey is its suspension from the purchase of F-35 jets and participation in their manufacture. Erdogan still went ahead with the purchase and installation of Russian S-400 missile-defense systems. Trump has disregarded a bipartisan clamor from Congress for sterner measures.

Without full-throated support from the U.S., NATO will not exact any punishment upon its recalcitrant member. Erdogan can dismiss the alliance’s concerns without fear of Turkey’s expulsion.

That leaves Russia as the only other power that might be able to push back against Turkish aggression. The Azeri-Armenian war is the second theater, after Libya, where Erdogan stands in the way of Putin’s objectives. (The two have some common interests, if not always a shared goal, in the third: Syria.)

The Russian leader has tolerated Erdogan’s presumptions in order to pursue Moscow’s greater goals of undermining NATO and prizing Turkey away from the West. In turn, the Turkish president has been careful not to turn his sharp tongue on Russia, a courtesy he has not offered to any Western leader who crosses him. The last time the two men were in a face-off — in the fall of 2015, when Turkey shot down a Russian jet near the border with Syria — Putin, using Erdoganesque rhetoric, called it a “treacherous stab in the back,” and announced economic countermeasures. Erdogan backed down, with a written apology.

In the Caucasian conflict, Erdogan has again avoided barbs at Putin, but he has name-checked Russia in his attacks against the international community for failing to hand the Armenian-majority Nagorno-Karabakh region over to Azerbaijan. And for the first time, Turkey is intervening in what Moscow regards as its sphere of influence: the Caucasus is closer to Russia — not just geographically but also in historical, cultural, strategic and economic terms — than Syria or Libya.

That explains Moscow’s “fuel to the flames” riposte to Erdogan. But it is not in the same league as a “treacherous stab in the back.” What’s more, it didn’t come from the lips of Putin, nor was it accompanied by the threat of sanctions. Moscow is not — or at least not yet — inclined to put Ankara on notice.

For Erdogan, the absence of a red flag is a green flag: He will see Moscow’s reticence as license to pursue his agenda.

In the Caucasus as elsewhere, this pursuit has been opportunistic and the agenda jerry-rigged to fit the circumstances. Seen from a high altitude, Erdogan’s adventurism does not fit any comprehensible doctrine, certainly nothing as coherent as “Zero Problems.” Rather than follow a systematic game plan, he has made it up along the way.

As a result, the Erdogan doctrine is different things from different points of view — a kind of foreign-policy Rashomon.

It is neo-Ottoman to the extent that many of the places that have drawn his attention were part of the old empire. Erdogan frequently embraces Ottoman-era symbolism, and peppers his speeches with invocations of ancient glories. But his adventurism doesn’t follow the map of the world once ruled from Istanbul. There are have been no forays into Eastern Europe, the Balkans or Georgia, all of which were more integral to the empire than, say, Libya. And he seems perfectly happy to coexist with the Ottomans’ sworn enemies, the Persians.

Likewise, the religious motivations for Erdogan’s adventurism are often overstated. He is an avowed Islamist, and can lace his rhetoric with citations from religious texts and expressions of solidarity with Muslims in foreign lands. Much is also made of his support for the Muslim Brotherhood and, especially in Israel, for Hamas. To some of his critics, this all adds up to a quest for leadership of the Muslim world.

But look closer, and you’ll see faith is an instrument rather than a motivation for Erdogan’s foreign policies. Here, too, opportunism is a better explanation than dogma. Meeting with a top Hamas leader is an easy way to set Israeli noses out of joint. Bringing up Kashmir at the UN is a convenient way to please Pakistan, and especially useful when Prime Minister Imran Khan is at odds with his country’s traditional ally, Saudi Arabia.

Ethno-nationalism? If you strain very hard, you might make the case for ancient ties between modern Turks and the Azeris, but the binding power of oil and gas pipelines that connect Azerbaijan to Turkey is a much stronger argument.

Hydrocarbons are at least as thick as bloodlines, and they connect more of the dots that form the outline of Turkish foreign policy than most other theories. In general, economics offer a more consistent explanation for Erdogan’s international outreach — going all the way back to the start of his stewardship of the Turkish state in 2003. At the height of the “Zero Problems” years, he rarely traveled abroad without a retinue of business leaders, and the success of his visits was measured in signed contracts.

But economics don’t explain everything. After all, a leader driven by commercial considerations would be more inclined to make nice with India rather than Pakistan, for instance. He would more likely make common cause with Saudi Arabia and the UAE than be at loggerheads with their leaders. And he might be more circumspect about antagonizing his country’s biggest trading partner.

That leaves the argument from domestic politics, that Erdogan is using the assertion of Turkey’s “deserved place in the world order” to shore up his support base against the headwinds of economic difficulty. Foreign policy has provided the one bright spot in the president’s reign, and his approval ratings have indeed edged upward in recent weeks, despite the decline of the Turkish lira.

But if this is indeed the underlying motivation for Erdogan’s aggressive forays abroad, then the we should all brace for more as the coronavirus-stricken economy worsens. As long as he has opportunity for troublemaking and impunity from punishment, Turkey’s president is not going to stop.- Bloomberg


UN chief appeals for cease-fires, warns pandemic wins wars

Associated Press
Oct 22 2020



UNITED NATIONS (AP) — The United Nations chief is appealing for cease-fires in the world’s major conflicts, from Yemen and Libya to Afghanistan and Nagorno-Karabakh, warning that if fighting continues “the only winner is the pandemic.”

Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said in an interview with The Associated Press that he was renewing his March 23 call for an immediate halt to all conflicts to tackle the coronavirus crisis and to spotlight the most serious global hotspots ahead of Saturday’s 75th anniversary of the entry into force of the U.N. Charter, which officially established the United Nations and is celebrated as U.N. Day.

“We need a massive support of the international community,” he said. “We need a massive support of all those who have an influence on the parties to the conflict to stop all those more dramatic situations of conflict until the end of the year.”

Guterres said his initial appeal won support from 180 U.N. member states, more than 800 civil society organizations, “and 20 armed groups that at least adopted some temporary truces.”

“But we still have a number of situations where the spoilers or the mistrust that existed has not allowed the cease-fire to materialize,” he said.

The secretary-general pointed to the newest conflict, between Armenia and Azerbaijan over the enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh, which lies within Azerbaijan but has been under the control of ethnic Armenian forces since a 1994 war.

“In the last two weeks, COVID cases have doubled in Armenia and increased 80 percent in Azerbaijan,” he said in Wednesday’s AP interview. “Armenia is not winning. Azerbaijan is not winning. But COVID is winning. We need to stop.”

Guterres said the same holds true for the conflicts in Libya, Yemen, Syria, Afghanistan, Africa’s Sahel region and elsewhere.

“I’m here to appeal to all of them to understand that there’s no way to win any war,” he said. “The only way is to join efforts for cease-fires, political talks and to defeat COVID. If not, the only winner is the pandemic.”

Guterres noted that initiatives by Russia and France have failed to halt fighting over Nagorno-Karabakh which began about four weeks ago.

“Let’s make sure” that after U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo’s separate meetings with the foreign ministers of Armenia and Azerbaijan in Washington on Friday “there is a cease-fire,” he said.

The secretary-general said there are also “some good signals,” pointing to cease-fires holding in Syria, Ukraine, Sudan and South Sudan, “so there are reasons to be optimistic.”

“In Libya, there is not a declared cease-fire but there is a standstill — the fighting has stopped,” he said. “And in Yemen, we are making a huge diplomatic effort to bring the parties together to come to a joint declaration with a cease-fire,” confidence-building measures in economic and social areas, and a re-start of political talks.

On the other hand, Guterres said, Afghanistan has seen an intensification of combat, but “at least peace talks have started.”

In Africa, while the Central African Republic is also “doing well,” he said “the most dramatic cases are the ones where terrorist organizations … do not respect any kind of appeal for cease-fire” and are taking advantage of the pandemic to intensify their actions.

Guterres said he’s very worried, for example, with what’s happening in the Sahel, the Lake Chad area, eastern Congo and Mozambique “where terrorist groups are intensifying their actions.”

Appealing for massive global support to achieve cease-fires, the secretary-general said the often-divided U.N. Security Council has come together on Yemen, Libya, Afghanistan and Armenia-Azerbaijan.

With the most important powers united, Guterres said, “what we need now is to make sure that the smaller spoilers do not undermine peace.”

The U.N. chief said that with global power relations less clear, “a number of small and medium-size actors started to get much more active in creating conflicts or in supporting parties to the conflict.”

Guterres said his hope is that the unity of the five veto-wielding permanent members of the Security Council — the United States, Russia, China, Britain and France — on key conflicts “will help us put pressure on those that are still not yet convinced that there is no way that anyone can win a war.”

And he stressed again: “The only way is to stop the war, start the political process and not let the COVID become the only winner.”