Why the Stakes in the Nagorno-Karabakh War Are So Much Higher This Time Round

The Moscow Times
Oct 5 2020

The Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, which has simmered relatively peacefully for the past 25 years, blew up on Sept. 27. Although violence had flared up on several occasions in the past it seems as though this time the stakes are significantly higher, with a slim chance of an immediate end to violence. 

Why is this the case?  

Azerbaijan seems determined this time to fully “liberate” all the so-called occupied territories and, if possible, the non-recognized republic of Nagorno-Karabakh in its entirety. 

This explains why Baku launched a major military campaign involving heavy artillery, tanks and aviation against Nagorno-Karabakh. It hoped to take advantage of the surprise factor, although clashes had already occurred in July along the Azerbaijan-Armenian border. 

While fighting was initially concentrated in three areas — Fizuli and Jabrayil in the south, Talysh and Mardakert in the north-east and Murovdag in the north-west — it was nevertheless large-scale. 

In the past few days the theatre of war has expanded quite significantly. 

On Oct. 2, Azerbaijani artillery directly hit Nagorno-Karabakh’s capital city Stepanakert and violence also extended to the town of Hadrut inside the disputed region. Armenians, in turn, attacked several Azerbaijani villages in the neighboring Agham region, according to the Azerbaijani Defense Ministry. 

Over the week-end Armenian artillery shelled Ganja, Azerbaijan’s second city lying to the north of Nagorno-Karabakh, in retaliation over attacks on Stepanakert. 

The conflict now has all the aspects of a full-scale war for control over the disputed territory. 

Increased frustration after years of fruitless negotiations, and hopes of a surprise military victory, prompted Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev to strike first, confident that his well-trained and well-equipped armed forces would make significant inroads against the weaker Armenian military structure. 

Baku counted on Russia’s military neutrality and non-intervention in support of its ally Armenia, as long as Armenian territory was not purposefully hit. 

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President Aliyev has made it clear that his armed forces will not stop until the occupied lands are fully liberated. Yet, by raising the stakes so high, the Azerbaijani president is backing himself into a corner. This uncompromising position is making it harder for him to agree to a cessation of violence without losing face, if military operations do not turn out as he expects. 

Yet the use of force does give Baku a stronger hand in any upcoming negotiations on the future status of Nagorno-Karabakh and the neighboring occupied territories. 

From now on, even if a ceasefire is reached, Armenia will have to consider the possibility that Azerbaijan may once again resort to the use of force if the talks reach an impasse. Yerevan may feel the pressure to make some meaningful concessions if it wants to avoid a resumption of large-scale violence and risk losing additional occupied territory. 

Up until this summer, even Yerevan didn’t believe Baku would use massive force. This partly explains why Armenia felt confident to move ahead with the de-facto progressive integration of the entire “Astrakh” region — the Armenian name for Nagorno-Karabakh — into its territory. Things may look different now.  

This time round, international actors with stakes in the region are divided. 

In the past, whenever violence flared up, France, the United States and Russia — the co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk group — and the rest of the international community would call for an end to the fighting and urge the sides to return to the negotiating table. 

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The same position was usually also taken by Iran and Turkey — two neighboring countries with high stakes in the resolution of the dispute. This time, however, things are not the same. 

While the three Minsk co-chairs — and Iran — are in unison calling for an immediate cessation of hostilities, Azerbaijan’s closest ally Turkey has given its support to Baku’s military actions. 

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has said Azerbaijan’s operations will only stop once Armenia withdraws entirely from the occupied territories. The Nagorno-Karabakh conflict has become an additional element in Turkey’s regional ambitions to return to its past role as protector of Muslim lands and their peoples. 

This new predicament makes a peaceful resolution of the conflict much more difficult to achieve. While there are reports in the Russian press that Erdogan has privately agreed to work with President Putin to find a diplomatic outcome to the dispute, it remains to be seen whether Ankara will be able to exert enough influence over Baku to end hostilities. 

Reports that Ankara has been providing military support to Aliyev over the past months, including sending Syrian mercenaries, clearly indicate that Ankara had a stake in a military resolution of the dispute. 

The presence of an Islamist-jihadist military contingent risks adding a very dangerous dimension to the conflict that didn’t really exist in the past. 

Although Muslim jihadist contingents did participate in the Nagorno-Karabakh wars of the early 1990s on the Azerbaijani side, they did not have significant resonance or military success. Things, once again, may be different this time round. 

Although most Azerbaijanis are Shia Muslims, a significant number of Azerbaijani Muslims have, in the past decade, converted to Sunni Islam, and many have embraced the more extreme forms of Salafi/Wahhabism. They therefore may welcome the presence of Sunni Syrian jihadists fighting on their behalf. 

Even if some Syrian fighters in Azerbaijan may be there for the money, it cannot be excluded that many may be joining the war for ideological reasons. For them, and for the Azeris, the Shia/Sunni divide may no longer be of much relevance. 

Rightly or wrongly, the war could easily be portrayed as a “defensive jihad in which Muslims are helping to liberate traditional “Muslim lands” from the control of Christian Armenians. 

Such a predicament can no longer be excluded, especially if the conflict is long and results in severe casualties on the Azerbaijani side. Nagorno-Karabakh could rapidly become the latest in a series of Islamist-jihadist conflicts that becomes internationalized, attracting a significant number of Muslim foreign fighters. 

Within this negative predicament, Russia has a hard task — ensuring a rapid end to hostilities while trying to play a balancing act between Armenia and Azerbaijan, two of its close partners across its borders in the southern Caucasus. 

Armenia provides Russia with strategic depth on its southern military flank, along Armenia’s borders with NATO-member Turkey. Azerbaijan has been a reliable partner for Russia in its own “War on Terror” against jihadism and separatism in the Russian North Caucasus, as well as an important strategic ally in a region beset by instabilities and domestic upheavals. 

This explains why President Putin took some time before speaking publicly on the dispute and refrained from siding openly with Armenia, Moscow’s South Caucasus ally within the Collective Security Treaty. Instead, he has engaged in active behind-the-scenes diplomacy, while talking openly of the need for a peaceful resolution of the dispute. 

There is little doubt that Russia will make every effort and use any available instrument of diplomatic pressure at its disposal to ensure that a ceasefire is reached soon. 

The Kremlin will try to make sure the conflict does not escalate further and last too long. A Donbass scenario of simmering conflict and trench warfare is not what it wants. While many have argued that Russia may benefit from constant instability along its borders, this is not necessarily the case. The Kremlin would much prefer to have two antagonistic partners allied to itself, albeit in perennial tension. 

That might be a difficult goal to reach this time. Moscow now has to contend not only with increased, large-scale violence, but also with a much more assertive regional actor on the scene — Erdogan and Ankara’s new regional geopolitical ambitions. 

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On the other hand, Moscow can count on strong support from its Western partners. Paradoxically, this is one of the few military conflicts where Europeans, Americans and Russians find themselves on the same side. 

Over the past two decades, they have worked together to find a negotiated resolution to the dispute, albeit with limited success. It remains to be seen whether pressure from Russia and the other members of the Minsk Group will this time bring the most violent aspects of this enduring conflict to an end.

What is clear is that the dynamics of the past two and a half decades in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict have radically changed. 

The views expressed in opinion pieces do not necessarily reflect the position of The Moscow Times.



https://www.themoscowtimes.com/2020/10/05/why-the-stakes-in-the-nagorno-karabakh-war-are-so-much-higher-this-time-round-a71653









Nagorno-Karabakh conflict’s second week: What is happening there right now?

112 Ukraine
Oct 5 2020

Author : 112.ua News Agency

Source : 112 Ukraine

The military conflict continues, the parties are not negotiating yet. Although it seems that both Azerbaijan and Armenia are ready for them

Fierce fighting between the Armed Forces of Azerbaijan, Armenia and the unrecognized Nagorno-Karabakh Republic (‘NKR’) has been going on in Nagorno-Karabakh for more than a week. It involves the use of heavy weapons.

Armenia and Azerbaijan have previously declared readiness to negotiate, but have not yet begun it.

– President of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev said on Twitter that the military has taken control of the town of Jabrail in the unrecognized NKR. Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh denied this.

– Aliyev also stated that he was renaming the controlled village of Madagiz to Suqovuşan.

– The Ministry of Defense of Azerbaijan stated that Armenia carried out a missile strike at the city of Ganja. The unrecognized NKR said that the shelling was in response to the shelling of NKR capital Stepanakert.

At the same time, the ‘NKR’ announced the destruction of the military airfield in Ganja. Azerbaijan refuted this statement and reported that “civilians, civilian infrastructure and ancient historic buildings were damaged” as a result of the shelling.

– There is still no exact information on military losses.

For example, according to The Bell, the press secretary of the president of unrecognized NKR Vagram Poghosyan stated that the losses of Azerbaijan during the fighting had exceeded 3,000 people, and the NKR's own losses – 150 people.

One week ago, Azerbaijan reported that there were 2,300 of killed and wounded in Armenia. Armenia stated about 1,750 people killed in Azerbaijan.

– Aide to the President of Azerbaijan Hikmet Hajiyev told TASS about the “severe wounding” of the President of the unrecognized NKR Arayik Harutyunyan. A spokesman for the NKR leader denied the information.



21 more Armenian troops confirmed killed repulsing Azerbaijani offensive

Public Radio of Armenia
Oct 5 2020

As Nagorno-Karabakh battle goes on, Armenia wants Washington to explain if it supplied Turkey with F-16

RT – Russia Today
Oct 5 2020
s to aid Azerbaijan
Armenia’s prime minister wants clarification from the US about the sale of F-16s to Turkey, claiming the advanced jets are bombing civilians amid the 'existential' battle with Azerbaijan over the contested Nagorno-Karabakh.

Turkey and Azerbaijan strongly denied the claims, but the rebuttals have not prevented Armenia from raising the issue of Ankara's perceived involvement in the Nagorno-Karabakh fighting with its major NATO ally, the United States.

Last Thursday, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan held a telephone conversation with US National Security Advisor Robert O'Brien, the New York Times reported on Monday. Washington “needs to explain whether it gave those F-16s [to Turkey] to bomb peaceful villages and peaceful populations,” Pashinyan told the Times.

According to the Armenian leader, O'Brien “heard and acknowledged” his grievances and promised to arrange a separate phone call with President Donald Trump. That conversation did not take place, however, as Trump announced he had tested positive for Covid-19 shortly afterward.

Yerevan has long insisted that Turkey's backing of Armenia's arch-foe Azerbaijan is not restricted to diplomatic and propaganda support. In recent days, Armenian officials have repeatedly accused Ankara of funneling Syrian mercenaries into Nagorno-Karabakh, as well as deploying US-built F-16 fighter jets to aid Azerbaijani troops on the ground.

    

The Turkish Air Force, one of the largest within NATO, is in possession of an estimated 245 F-16C/D aircraft assembled locally by Turkish Aerospace Industries.

Hostilities broke out again between Azerbaijani and Armenian forces in Nagorno-Karabakh on September 27, with both sides blaming each other for firing the first shots. The disputed enclave, populated by ethnic Armenians but internationally recognised as an illegally-occupied territory of Azerbaijan, has seen many military flare-ups over three decades. But the current one poses an "existential threat" because of the Turkish factor, Pashinyan told the Times. 

READ MORE: Armenia warns it will deploy Russian-made Isubuilt F-16 jets in Nagorno-Karabakh conflict

Armenia has always been wary of Turkey, not least because of the bitter 20th century legacy of the genocide of Armenians by the Ottoman Empire – which killed an estimated 1.5 people – but also due to its long-standing military and political support for Azerbaijan.

According to officials in Yerevan, Turkish officers are commanding Azerbaijani Air Force operations in Nagorno-Karabakh. Last week, Armenia's military claimed that a Turkish F-16 shot down their Su-25 attack aircraft, leading to the death of a pilot.

A spokesman for Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan denied Yerevan's claim, and Ankara’s Defense Ministry said Azerbaijan’s military is able to fight a war on its own. Baku, in turn, also dismissed Armenian assertions as “lies and provocation,” noting that its air force does not have F-16s in its inventory.

Sports: Albania cancels friendly with war-troubled Armenia

WTOP
Oct 5 2020
Listen now to WTOP News WTOP.com | Alexa | Google Home | WTOP App | 103.5 FM

TIRANA, Albania (AP) — The Albanian soccer federation canceled a friendly match at Armenia on Monday because of the political upheaval in the former Soviet republic.

The federation said the friendly in Yerevan on Wednesday was canceled “due to the grave situation and the turmoil currently occurring in Armenia.”

Since late September, Armenia and Azerbaijan have been fighting over the separatist territory of Nagorno-Karabakh, with both sides accusing each other of launching attacks.

The friendly against Armenia was planned ahead of Albania’s Nations League matches next week in Kazakhstan and Lithuania.


How Erdogan is testing bond with Putin, or ‘his patience’, in Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict

The Print
Oct 5 2020
 
 
 
 
Turkey and Russia have already taken opposite sides in two major conflicts, in Syria and Libya. The current stalemate at Caucasus seems to be another bone of contention between the two.
 
Marc Champion and Ilya Arkhipov 5 October, 2020 1:15 pm IST
 
London/Moscow: If Vladimir Putin made one thing clear over the years, it’s that no power but Russia—not the U.S., the European Union, or even China—is allowed to meddle in the security affairs of its former Soviet stomping ground.
 
It appears Recep Tayyip Erdogan didn’t get the message. By ramping up support for Azerbaijan as it tries to win back territories lost to Armenian forces in 1994, the Turkish president has put his relationship with Russia to the test.
 
Erdogan’s forceful approach has broad support at home and may have unlocked a fitful stalemate in the Caucasus that lasted almost 30 years. It could also win him a voice in the settlement. But if over-reached, it risks rebuke from a military power able to strike at Turkish interests in multiple theaters. Putin has long pressed for a new multipolar world order where regional powers would pursue their interests without meddling from the U.S., but this was not what he had in mind.
 
“Erdogan is really testing Putin’s patience,” said Alexander Dynkin, president of the Institute of World Economy and International Relations of the Russian Academy of Sciences, which also advises the Kremlin. “He irritates Putin more and more.”
 
The relationship was under strain before fighting broke out around Nagorno-Karabakh on Sep. 27, despite perceptions in the West that Turkey has abandoned the U.S. and other North Atlantic Treaty Organization allies to partner with Moscow.
 
Russia and Turkey have had either military advisers, mercenaries or troops deployed on opposite sides of two major conflicts, in Syria and Libya. Now concern is growing in Moscow that red lines could be crossed in the ex-Soviet Caucasus, amid claims that Turkey has sent Syrian militants to aid Azerbaijan.
 
The number of disputes for the two leaders to manage and compartmentalize is only growing. Russia perceives Turkey to be squeezing its natural gas giant, Gazprom PJSC. Turkey imported 28% less Russian gas in July compared with a year earlier, while imports from Azerbaijan rose 22%. Turkey will soon also open a new pipeline that will allow Azeri gas to compete directly with Gazprom for market share in Europe.
 
Speaking to the Turkish parliament on Oct. 1, Erdogan condemned as “unacceptable” Putin’s call for an immediate cease-fire in Azerbaijan, which the Russian leader made in a joint statement with U.S. President Donald Trump and French President Emmanuel Macron. France, Russia and the U.S. are co-chairs of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe’s so-called Minsk Group aimed at resolving the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute.
 
In his speech, Erdogan said the Minsk Group was no longer fit for purpose. He also linked the latest resurgence of fighting to Russia, saying it was part of a wider crisis that began with the “occupation” of Crimea. Russian forces annexed Crimea in 2014, part of a conflict in eastern Ukraine that’s still playing out.
 
________________________________
 
Also read: Israel’s new friendship with the UAE will come at a cost
 
________________________________
 
 
 
On Saturday, the leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan each said they would consider a truce, but only on terms the other is unlikely to entertain.
 
The mainly ethnic Armenian enclave and seven districts around it are recognized by the United Nations as occupied territories that, according to U.K.-based Caucasus specialist Thomas De Waal, account for 13.6% of Azerbaijan’s land.
 
Russia and France, meanwhile, say Turkey has sent militants from Syria to fight for Azerbaijan, a move that could introduce an Islamist element to a conflict that already pits Muslim Azeris against Christian Armenians. Turkey and Azerbaijan have denied the accusation.
 
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a U.K.-based group that monitored death tolls throughout the war in Syria, said on Saturday that 36 Syrian fighters had been killed in the fighting around Nagorno-Karabakh in the previous 48 hours, bringing the total to 64. The group said Turkey had sent 1,200 Syrian fighters to Azerbaijan so far, mostly ethnic Turkmen.
 
“If the direct participation of the Turkish military or militants from Syria is proven, that will be a red line,” said Dynkin. “This isn’t the kind of multi-polarity Putin wanted.”
 
Turkey has long supported fellow Turkic-speaking Azerbaijan over the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, but the strength of Erdogan’s intervention this time is unprecedented. Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu has said his country will do more if Azerbaijan should ask. Large-scale joint Turkish-Azerbaijani military exercises finished as recently as August.
 
Russia is hardly hands off. It has a security treaty with Armenia and has sold arms to both sides. The Kremlin has publicized at least two conversations between Putin and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan since Sep. 27, though none with Erdogan or Azeri President Ilham Aliyev.
 
According to a senior official in Ankara, far from betraying NATO for Moscow, Turkey sees itself as standing alone against a crescent of Russian pressure in the region.
 
That’s not a view widely shared in the West. While Turkey’s leaders never harbored illusions about their essentially transactional relationship with Russia, they’ve left the country exposed by simultaneously alienating NATO allies that might have acted as a backstop, said Sinan Ulgen, a visiting scholar at Carnegie Europe, a Brussels-based think tank.
 
Erdogan’s goal in Azerbaijan is to marginalize the Minsk Group and force his way to a place at a new negotiating table where an eventual settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict would be worked out, according to Ulgen.
 
That’s the same strategy of leverage building Erdogan has used with some success in Libya, Syria and the eastern Mediterranean. But it also involves risk, because Putin can strike back in Turkey in any of these theaters, should events on the ground run beyond what he is willing to accept.
 
“Turkey is in a much more brittle position than it needs to be, because of the erosion of trust in its traditional alliances, and that is mutual,” said Ulgen. Erdogan’s decision to take delivery of Russian S-400 air defense systems played a part in that.
 
The problem for Russia is that unlike in other so-called frozen conflicts in the ex-Soviet space, it has no troops on the ground to control the situation and—unlike Turkey—is trying to keep a relationship with both sides, according to De Waal, author of “Black Garden,” a book on Nagorno-Karabakh.
 
“So long as there is equilibrium, they have leverage, but they cannot afford to pick sides,” he said. “That always seemed a bit of a losing strategy and it seems to be running out of road.”
 
Russia may also be holding back to teach a lesson to Armenia’s reformist government that “anti-Russian policies could lead to the total halt of support,” said Arkady Dubnov, a Moscow-based analyst. Pashinyan replaced a more pro-Kremlin leadership in 2018.
 
“For the moment these two big bears are managing to mark out their territory, but Erdogan should be careful not to overstep the limits,” said Dubnov. “His country is a major regional power, but he mustn’t forget that Russia considers itself the dominant player here.” – Bloomberg
 
 

Syrians Make Up Turkey’s Proxy Army in Nagorno-Karabakh

Foreign Policy
Oct 5 2020
 
 
 
After fighting Turkey’s battles in Libya, the Syrian National Army is caught in the conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan—and dozens are dying.
 
By Liz Cookman | October 5, 2020, 5:35 PM
 
Early Sunday morning, the bodies of more than 50 Syrians killed in a conflict raging far from their own borders—in a land many had barely heard of a few months ago—were returned home for funeral preparations.
 
They were members of militias that had fought previously in northern Syria, then Libya, and now in the disputed enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh—but always on behalf of Turkey.
 
“No one wants to make money from wars” after almost a decade of civil war, said the father of one Syrian mercenary. But displacement inside Syria, and the inevitable economic troubles that accompany long-term unrest, has left some young men with little choice.
 
According to sources within the Syrian National Army (SNA), the umbrella term for a group of opposition militias backed by Turkey, around 1,500 Syrians have so far been deployed to the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region in the southern Caucasus. It’s the latest proxy standoff between Turkey and Russia, which are already on opposing sides in Syria and Libya. Ankara has declared strong support for Azerbaijan, while Moscow is traditionally closer to Armenia.
 
The mountainous and landlocked region of Nagorno-Karabakh is recognized internationally as Azerbaijan’s territory but has a mostly Armenian population. The two countries went to war between 1988 and 1994, eventually declaring a cease-fire, but never reached a settlement over the dispute. The border between the two is considered one of the most militarized in the world, and the current fighting, which broke out last month, is the worst seen since the cease-fire, with each of the two former Soviet republics placing the blame on the other.
 
Heavy clashes continued over the weekend, and Armenian forces fired rockets at Ganja, Azerbaijan’s second-largest city, killing at least one civilian and injuring four more. More than 220 people have died since violence flared just over a week ago, many of them from artillery shelling.
 
Shortly after conflict erupted between Armenia and Azerbaijan, Turkey sought to mobilize the SNA, sometimes called Turkey’s proxy army. Thousands of SNA fighters have been hired by Turkey over the last year to fight in Libya on behalf of the U.N.-backed Government of National Accord in Tripoli, which is fighting Russian-backed forces. Some of the SNA fighters have since reportedly returned to Syria for training ahead of dispatch to Nagorno-Karabakh; some were given only five days of training before shipping out, while others had between two weeks and a month of training, according to SNA sources.
 
The first fighters were transferred in late September to southern Turkey and then flown from Gaziantep to Ankara, before being transferred to Azerbaijan on Sept. 25. According to fighter accounts, SNA commanders arrived earlier to explore the region and coordinate with the Azerbaijani army about the distribution of troops.
 
For many young men, displaced by years of civil war at home and bereft of economic opportunities, the lures of a mercenary life are religious propaganda—and money. Fighters are offered four-month contracts for $1,500 a month, paid in Turkish lira.
 
But many are already regretting it, especially now that a reported 55 Syrian mercenaries have been killed after being confronted with a lot more hands-on fighting than they’d been promised.
 
“All fighters are unhappy with the situation here in Azerbaijan,” said one Syrian on the ground in Azerbaijan’s Barda district, who asked to remain anonymous out of fear of reprisal. “The psychological situation is bad after the martyrdom of a number of our friends.”
 
 
 

International Leaders Urge Cease-fire in Nagorno-Karabakh

Voice of America
Oct 5 2020
By VOA News
05:44 PM

Leaders from France, Russia and the United States issued a joint statement Monday urging a cease-fire between Armenia and Azerbaijan in the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh.

Representing the co-chair countries of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) Minsk Group, which is tasked with finding a peaceful solution, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian, and U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo condemned the violence, which began just more than a week ago.

“The ministers stress unconditionally that recent attacks allegedly targeting civilian centers — both along the Line of Contact and on the territories of Azerbaijan and Armenia outside the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict zone — and the disproportionate nature of such attacks constitute an unacceptable threat to the stability of the region,” the statement read.

More than 40 civilians have been killed in escalating violence, with 200 more wounded and hundreds of houses seriously damaged in the violence, according to the United Nations.

“We call on all sides to respect international human rights law, and international humanitarian law, in particular, by ensuring the protection of the civilian population and by preventing damage to essential (civilian infrastructure),” U.N. spokesperson Stephane Dujarric told reporters Monday.

In a call with Armenian and Azerbaijani foreign ministers Monday, U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Stephen Biegun urged both sides to agree to a cease-fire immediately, adding, “There is no military solution to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict,” according to a readout of the call by State Department spokesperson Morgan Ortagus.

Hikmet Hajiyev, an aide to Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, said Sunday that Armenian forces shelled Azerbaijan’s second-largest city of Ganja with heavy artillery and rockets, killing one person and injuring 32 others. Hajiyev said Armenian forces also targeted the industrial city of Mingachevir and other smaller towns.

Hajiyev’s claims were denied by Armenian defense forces, but Arayik Harutyunyan, leader of the contested Nagorno-Karabakh, said in a post on Facebook that his forces targeted military objects in Ganja before he ordered them to stop to avoid killing civilians. Harutyunyan warned that his forces would begin targeting other large cities in Azerbaijani and urged those cities to evacuate immediately.

Authorities in the breakaway territory have warned that the "last battle" for the region has begun. They called on the international community Saturday to "recognize the independence" of Nagorno-Karabakh as “the only effective mechanism to restore peace."

The reports of attacks on Ganja and Mingachevir came a day after Armenia said the territory’s capital, Stepanakert, was targeted by Azeri forces.

Aliyev has demanded the withdrawal of Armenia from Nagorno-Karabakh as the only way to end the fighting.

The predominantly ethnic Armenian territory, a formerly autonomous territory that sits inside Azerbaijan, declared its independence from Baku in 1991 during the collapse of the Soviet Union, sparking a war that claimed the lives of as many as 30,000 people before a cease-fire was declared in 1994.

Peace efforts in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, mediated by the Minsk Group, collapsed in 2010.

Canada suspending arms exports to Turkey amid Azerbaijan-Armenia conflict

Al Monitor
Oct 5 2020

Foreign Affairs Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne said he is suspending the permits pending an investigation.


Canada has halted arms exports to Turkey while it investigates whether the drone technology was improperly used by Azerbaijan’s forces during ongoing clashes with Armenia, the Canadian foreign minister said Monday.

"In line with Canada's robust export control regime and due to the ongoing hostilities, I have suspended the relevant export permits to Turkey so as to allow time to further assess the situation," Foreign Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne said in a statement.

Azerbaijan and Armenia are locked in the worst outbreak of violence the South Caucasus region has witnessed in years. Hundreds have died during clashes this past week in the contested Nagorno-Karabakh enclave, which is officially part of Azerbaijan but run by ethnic Armenians backed by Yerevan. Turkey is backing Azerbaijan in the conflict.

Last week, video analysis from Project Ploughshares, a Canada-based arms control group, appeared to indicate that drones used by Azerbaijan had been equipped with imaging and targeting systems developed by the Ontario-based L3Harris Wescam. The Globe and Mail newspaper reported that Wescam was granted permission this year to supply Turkish drone manufacturer Baykar with seven systems.

The Ploughshares report alleged that "Canada's export of WESCAM sensors to Turkey poses a substantial risk of facilitating human suffering, including violations of human rights and international humanitarian law."

Canada last froze new export permits to Ankara in October 2019 following the Turkish military campaign against Syrian Kurdish forces, but the suspension was lifted in May.

"Canada continues to be concerned by the ongoing conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh resulting in shelling of communities and civilian casualties," Champagne said. "We call for measures to be taken immediately to stabilize the situation on the ground and reiterate that there is no alternative to a peaceful, negotiated solution to this conflict."

Last week, Armenia recalled its ambassador to Israel, citing Israeli weapons sales to rival Azerbaijan. On Monday, Amnesty International said it had verified the use of Israeli-made cluster munitions by Azerbaijani forces.

This story contains reporting from Agence France-Presse.


ANN/Armenian News Conversations – The Armenia-Azerbaijan Conflict in Regional Context – 10/03/2020

Armenian News Network / Armenian News

Conversations on Armenian News: The Armenia-Azerbaijan Conflict in Regional Context

ANN/Armenian News

October 3, 2020

Hello and welcome to Armenian News Network, Armenian News. I’m Hovik Manucharyan.

It has now been 7 days since Azerbaijan initiated a wide-scale attack against Armenia and Artsakh. The tragic news of deaths and destruction continue to stream in every hour.


In today’s conversation on Armenian News, we talk to Jirair Libaridian and Thomas DeWaal about the regional geopolitics that helped create a ripe environment for renewed fighting and various potential scenarios that may develop as a result of it.

To help guide this conversation, we have Asbed Kotchikian, who is a senior lecturer of political science and international relations at Bentley University in Massachusetts where he teaches courses on the Middle East and former Soviet space.

Before we begin however, we appreciate your help in reaching a wider audience. So please hit the pause button and make sure to subscribe and like us on whatever platform you listen to us on and help spread the word by sharing this podcast on your social media channels. Thanks in advance!

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  • Thomas de Waal

  • Jirair Libaridian

  • Asbed Kotchikian

  • Hovik Manucharyan

  • Asbed Bedrossian

Tom de Waal is a senior fellow with Carnegie Europe, specializing in Eastern Europe and the Caucasus region.

He is the author of numerous publications about the region, the most relevant to the current developments being Black Garden: Armenia and Azerbaijan Through Peace and War.

From 2010 to 2015, de Waal worked for the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in Washington, DC. Before that he worked extensively as a journalist in both print and for BBC radio. From 1993 to 1997, he worked in Moscow for the Moscow Times, the Times of London, and the Economist, specializing in Russian politics and the situation in Chechnya. He co-authored (with Carlotta Gall) the book Chechnya: Calamity in the Caucasus (NYU Press, 1997), for which the authors were awarded the James Cameron Prize for Distinguished Reporting.

Prof. Jirair Libaridian is the former Director of Armenian Studies Program at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor where he also held the Alex Manoogian Chair in Modern Armenian History until 2012. 

From 1991 to 1997 he served as an advisor and then a senior advisor to Armenia’s first president Levon Ter-Petrossian and was the chief negotiator on Karabakh.

He is the author of numerous books and articles on modern and contemporary Armenia. 

Hello everyone!

Just two and a half months ago, in July 2020, we witnessed border skirmishes between Armenia and Azerbaijan on their border. Last Sunday the conflict between the two countries escalated into what all observers agree to be the deadliest round of hostilities since the 1994 ceasefire. Since 1994 the uneasy “no war, no peace” state between the two countries around the future state of Nagorno Karabakh is no more.

There’s been a deluge of coverage around the war itself, the weaponry, the tactics, casualty lists and ongoing outcomes. We wanted to step back from the day to day of this conflict and examine the meta-alignments in the region.

One major outcome of the July skirmishes has been the activation of the Turkish foreign policy in the direction of Armenia and the South Caucasus. Regardless of any statements by anyone, Turkey has de-facto become party to the Nagorno Karabakh conflict.

Meanwhile and puzzling, Russia has been slow in reacting and pointing to its “red line” in the Caucasus throughout Turkey’s activation. Russia and Iran’s slow reactions have allowed the current war to gain in intensity over the past week.

Iran is another regional actor that must be watching the developments closely and has called for restraint. From your experiences knowing Iranian foreign policy on this specific issue, what do you think the drivers are, in their approach and potential actions in the region?

Prof. Libaridian recaps the meta-politics that have led to this round of the war. 

Tom de Waal discussed what is going on behind the scenes in Baku and Yerevan and the indicators preceding the renewed large-scale conflict.

That concludes this week’s Conversation On Armenian News on Armenia’s debate on Armenia’s IT Industry. We’ll continue following this discussion and keep you abreast on the topic as it progresses.

We hope this Conversation has helped your understanding of some of the issues involved. We look forward to your feedback, including your suggestions for Conversation topics in the future. Contact us on our website, at groong.org, or on our Facebook PageANN – Armenian News”, or in our Facebook Group “Armenian News – Armenian News Network.

Special thanks to Laura Osborn for providing the music for our podcast. I’m Hovik Manucharyan, and on behalf of everyone in this episode, I wish you a good week. Thank you for listening and we’ll talk to you next week.

Nagorno Karabakh, Turkey,  Azerbaijan, Russia, Iran, Artsakh, Stepanakert

Additional: Nikol Pashinyan, Ilham Aliyev, Levon Ter-Petrosyan