‘Turkey has a clear objective of reinstating the Turkish empire’, Armenian PM says

France 24
Oct 3 2020
 
 
 
‘Turkey has a clear objective of reinstating the Turkish empire’,
Armenian PM says
 
 Heavy fighting escalated this week between Armenian and Azerbaijan forces over the disputed separatist region of Nagorno-Karabakh. On Friday, global leaders renewed calls for a ceasefire with French President Emmanuel Macron pressing for a fresh round of peace talks. In an interview with FRANCE 24’s Gulliver Cragg in Yerevan, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan sat down to discuss the crisis embroiling his country.
 
 
Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan told FRANCE 24 that Turkey would continue its expansionist footprint and its goal of  “the genocide of Armenians”.
 
“Armenia is the last obstacle in the way of Turkey and their expansion towards the north, and the east,” Mr Pashinyan said.
 
He pointed to recent evidence of Turkish aggression in the Mediterranean Sea towards Greece and involvement in Syria and Iraq.
 
“Turkey has a clear objective of reinstating the Turkish Empire. Don’t be surprised if that policy succeeds here, don’t be surprised if they attempt to incorporate into their empire not only the Greek islands but expand further into continental Europe. If Turkey succeeds in this, wait for them in Vienna.”
 
>> Is Turkey a brother in arms or just extending its footprint into Nagorno-Karabakh?
 
The fighting in and around Nagorno-Karabakh is the biggest escalation in years in the decades-long dispute over the region, which lies within Azerbaijan but is controlled by local ethnic Armenian forces backed by Armenia.
 
Please visit the webpage to view the  full interview.
 
 
 
 
 

Tbilisi: Georgia’s National Security Council on Karabakh Developments

Civil Georgia
Oct 3 2020

The National Security Council (NSC) of Georgia convened on October 3 in connection to the renewed Armenia-Azerbaijani clashes over Nagorno-Karabakh, stated that “since the inception of escalation, [Tbilisi] temporarily suspended the issuance of permits for transiting military cargo through its territory in the direction of both countries, be it by air or land.” The NSC said the decision “was duly communicated to both sides.”

The Council stated, however, that “civilian goods and cargo are transited through Georgia safely, without obstacles, in all directions, including to Azerbaijan and Armenia,” adding that “the intensity of freight transport is high, and it has not changed since the resumption of the armed conflict.”

The NSC noted that since the escalation of the conflict, Georgia has not and will not impose any restrictions for the purposes of civilian cargo air transportation.

Noting that Georgia continues meeting its international obligations with due diligence, including in relation to its neighbors, Azerbaijan and Armenia, the Council said, “Georgia’s transit function is an important factor for the economic functioning and development of both said countries, and that, naturally, serves Georgia’s interests as well.”

The NSC also highlighted that “we should not allow that, amid the crisis between Azerbaijan and Armenia, certain destructive elements in or outside of Georgia cast shadow over our friendship and historic experience.” 

Georgia, the Council underlined, “has always prided itself on the peaceful coexistence of Georgians and different ethnicities, including Azerbaijanis and Armenians, which is our common achievement requiring great care and shared commitment.”

The National Security Council of Georgia also reaffirmed its readiness to contribute, in any form, to the defusing of tensions, including by facilitating dialogue and hosting a meeting of representatives of the conflicting sides in Tbilisi, if need be.

“It is our common interest to promptly stop the military confrontation and restore the peace in the region,” the statement noted.

NSC is an eight-member advisory body chaired by the Prime Minister. The rest of the permanent members include: Defense, Interior, Foreign and Finance ministers, heads of State Security and Intelligence services, and Chief of the Armed Forces. The role of its Secretary is currently assumed by Interior Minister Vakhtang Gomelauri.

Georgia suspends military cargo transit to Armenia, Azerbaijan

Xinhua, China
Oct 3 2020
 
 
 
 
Source: Xinhua| 2020-10-03 20:46:36|
Editor: huaxia
 
TBILISI, Oct. 3 (Xinhua) — Georgia on Saturday decided to suspend the issuance of permits for transiting military cargo through its territory to Armenia and Azerbaijan due to the ongoing Nagorno-Karabakh conflicts.
 
According to a statement released by the National Security Council of Georgia on Saturday, the transition of military cargo through the country to Armenia and Azerbaijan, both by land and air, has been temporarily suspended by the Georgian side.
 
However, civilian cargo can still transit through Georgia as usual, including to Azerbaijan and Armenia, the statement said.
 
It also called on the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe Minsk Group Co-Chairs and international community to take all necessary measures to stop the violence and resume dialogue between Armenia and Azerbaijan.
 
Meanwhile, Grigol Liluashvili, head of the State Security Service, denied that some Syrian militants were moving from Turkey to Azerbaijan via Georgia, according to local media.
 
A new round of clashes broke out on Sept. 27 in the Nagorno-Karabakh region between Armenia and Azerbaijan.
 
Armenia and Azerbaijan have been at loggerheads over the mountainous region of Nagorno-Karabakh since 1988. Peace talks have been held since 1994, when a ceasefire was reached, but there have been occasional minor clashes along the borders. Enditem
 

Stop Turkey’s allegedly looming second Armenian genocide, now, before it happens

The Times of Israel
Oct 3 2020

Turkey never acknowledged the genocide it perpetrated on many Christian communities, predominantly Armenian, just over a century ago. Just imagine present-day Germany if it would deny the Holocaust. How scary would they be?! That’s how terrifying Turkey is today. They’ve done it before. They don’t acknowledge it, let alone regret it.

For people who’d say “No, such a thing is impossible now,” I want to remind them that the Holocaust was also unimaginable but executed anyway. By the most developed nation at the time, the center of science and counter-culture–something you can’t say about Turkey.

When some of his leaders told Hitler that genocide on the Jews was not possible and would lead to a worldwide protest, he said: Who now remembers the Armenian Genocide?

And the Armenians were not slaughtered by anonymous invisible killers like by gas chamber, carpet bombing, or a nuclear bomb. They were murdered one-by-one, soldiers against civilians, from babies to the elderly, women and men, poor and rich, slaughtered by bullet or ballonet.

Just imagine how scary it would be if Nazi-Germany could have ‘helped solve’ a border disputed between the Jewish State and its neighbors.

Stop Turkey from finishing the job. The news is they’re about to try.

Turkey is no longer a democracy with opposition or freedom of the press.

Don’t get distracted or misled by who fights whom there. Turkey is accused of sending Syrian mercenaries to do the work for them.

The NATO must tell member Turkey that if it harms one Armenian, directly or indirectly, NATO troops will invade Turkey and capture its leadership for facing a tribune for war crimes and crimes against humanity. (The US has a clown for president who likes the Turkish dictator, so count them out.)

Stop Turkey. Everyone is responsible for speaking up. Bloggers in blog posts, politicians in politics, journalists in the media, citizens on social media going viral, voters contacting their political representatives, scientists and other influencers taking clear positions, etc. Silence is complicity. Just like I don’t shut up, neither need you or your friends.

Moshe-Mordechai van Zuiden
Psychology, Medicine, Science, Politics, Oppression, Integrity, Philosophy, Jew


​Azerbaijan president criticizes mediators; fighting rages on

The Washington Times
Oct 3 2020
 
 
 
 
 
Azerbaijan president criticizes mediators; fighting rages on
 
 Damages are seen inside an apartment in a residential area after shelling during a military conflict in self-proclaimed Republic of Nagorno-Karabakh, Stepanakert, Azerbaijan, Saturday, Oct. 3, 2020. The fighting is the biggest escalation in years in the decades-long dispute over …
By AIDA SULTANOVA – Associated Press – Saturday, October 3, 2020
 
BAKU, Azerbaijan (AP) – Heavy fighting between Armenia and Azerbaijan continued Saturday in their conflict over the separatist territory of Nagorno-Karabakh, while Azerbaijan’s president criticized the international mediators who have tried for decades to resolve the dispute.
 
Fighting that started Sept. 27 is the worst to afflict Nagorno-Karabakh and surrounding areas since the 1994 end of a war that left the region in Azerbaijan under the control of local ethnic Armenian forces backed by Armenia.
 
“Intensive fighting is taking place along the entire front line,” Armenian Defense Ministry spokeswoman Shushan Stepanian told The Associated Press on Saturday.
 
She said that Armenian forces had shot down three planes, which the Azerbaijan Defense Ministry denied, The Azerbaijani ministry said Armenian forces had shelled civilian territory within Azerbaijan, including the city of Terter.
 
Nagorno-Karabakh officials have said more than 150 servicemen on their side have been killed so far. Azerbaijani authorities haven’t given details on their military casualties but said 19 civilians were killed and 55 more wounded.
 
Vahram Poghosyan, a spokesman for Nagorno-Karabakh president’s, claimed Saturday on Facebook that intelligence data showed some 3,000 Azerbaijanis have died in the fighting, but did not give details.
 
Nagorno-Karabakh was a designated autonomous region within Azerbaijan during the Soviet era. It claimed independence from Azerbaijan in 1991, about three months before the Soviet Union’s collapse. A full-scale war that broke out in 1992 killed an estimated 30,000 people.
 
By the time the war ended in 1994, Armenian forces not only held Nagorno-Karabakh itself but substantial areas outside the territory’s formal borders. Several United Nations Security Council resolutions have called for withdrawal from those areas, which the Armenian forces have disregarded.
 
Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev said in a television interview the Armenians must withdraw from those areas before the latest fighting can stop.
 
In the interview with Al Jazeera, a transcript of which was distributed Saturday by the presidential press office, Aliyev criticized the so-called Minsk Group of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, which has tried to mediate a resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute.
 
One reason behind the current fighting is that “the mediators do not insist or exert pressure to start implementing the resolutions of the United Nations Security Council,” he said.
 
“We have no time to wait another 30 years. The conflict must be resolved now.” Aliyev said.
 
Armenia has repeatedly claimed over the past week that Turkey sent Syrian fighters to Azerbaijan and that the Turkish military is aiding Azerbaijan’s.
 
“Turkey and Azerbaijan are pursuing not only military-political goals,” Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian said Saturday in an address to his nation. “Their goal is Armenia, their goal is continuation of the genocide of Armenians.”
 
Some 1.5 million Armenians died in mass killings in Ottoman Turkey beginning in 1915, which Armenia and many other countries have labeled a genocide. Turkey firmly rejects that term, contends the total number of victims is inflated and says the deaths were the consequence of civil war.
 
Azerbaijan’s Foreign Ministry released a statement Saturday alleging that thousands of ethnic Armenians from abroad were being deployed or recruited to fight for Armenia.
 
“Armenia and Armenian disapora organizations bear international legal liability for organizing these terrorist activities,” the statement said.
 
___
 
Associated Press writers Avet Demourian in Yerevan, Armenia, and Jim Heintz in Moscow contributed to this report.

Syria urges Azerbaijan, Armenia to end conflict peacefully

China.org
Oct 3 2020
Xinhua | October 3, 2020

DAMASCUS, Oct. 3 (Xinhua) — The Syrian Foreign Ministry on Saturday urged Azerbaijan and Armenia to end the conflict by peaceful means, according to the state news agency SANA.

In a statement, the ministry lamented the confrontation between the two countries, extending condolences to the families of the victims from both sides.

The ministry urged the two sides to put an end to the current escalation and find a settlement to the conflict by peaceful means.

It called on the Azerbaijani government to heed to the Armenian initiatives for pacification and dialogue to end the conflict. Enditem

http://t.m.china.org.cn/convert/c_xqF8VOII.html?fbclid=IwAR1IvGVrzZCMN_mTGChqqdRTW1p6J8iuQd8wNawyNZ2BGdyuCgg2N6QcNVE

JP: Iran, Egypt and Gulf cautiously watch Azerbaijan-Armenia conflict

Jerusalem Post
Oct 3 2020
 
 
Iran, Egypt and Gulf cautiously watch Azerbaijan-Armenia conflict
 
By SETH J. FRANTZMAN  
OCTOBER 3, 2020 16:02
 
Previous clashes between Armenia and Azerbaijan in 2016 and in July of this year did not receive the same level of attention.
 
The Middle East is closely watching the outcome of fighting between Armenia and Azerbaijan. This is unusual because previous clashes in 2016 and in July of this year did not receive the same level of attention. The reason that the region is watching is because of Turkey’s deep involvement in pressuring Azerbaijan to push forward and “liberate” territory as protests take place in Iran. Syrian fighters, mostly from the Turkmen minority, have been recruited to fight on the side of Baku.
 
Turkey’s ruling party, which has close relations with Hamas and the Muslim Brotherhood, wants the region to see the conflict as both an “Islamic” conflict and one that is important to Turkish speakers. On October 1, Turkey put out a statement claiming “Jerusalem is ours,” which appears to link its foreign policy of threatening Israel to its policy of trying to fan the flames against Armenia. Ankara stands to gain in ways from the conflict that are not shared interests with Baku. For instance, Ankara wants to use it to pressure Russia in Idlib. Russia has been trying to secure the M4 highway and there are rumors of Russia-Turkish discussions behind the scenes, trying to take over the Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict and link it to Syria where they have partitioned northern Syria.  
 
Iran has a more sympathetic view of Armenia. Iran’s Fars News has sought to make the conflict appear “Islamic” in order to reduce the support for Azerbaijan by Azeri protesters in Iran. There are millions of members of the Azeri minority in Iran and the country’s leadership fears any local ethnic protest because it knows that it will undermine the already tenuous regime. With Azeris in the streets chanting slogans against Armenians and against Russia and Persians, the regime moved to try to channel them in a different direction.
On Saturday, Iran’s Fars News wrote about Armenia downing an Azerbaijan military aircraft. Tehran is clearly watching closely what the outcome may be. It does not want the conflict to continue. Iran’s Fars News ran a second article about Iran’s view of the conflict arguing that Iran does not want spillover from the war and that it is warning the parties involved to stop.
Meanwhile, media that is sympathetic to Iran and Hezbollah has also written on the conflict. Al-Mayadeen has noted that Turkey is “declining” and thus fanning the flames in the Caucuses. The same media notes there are clashes in the countryside of Aleppo, showing how Syria is linked to the battles in Nagorna-Karabakh. One author notes, “it can be said that the Turkish-Azerbaijani military adventure in Nagorno Karabakh is on the way to an end, and it can also be said that Turkey, or President Erdogan in particular, is on the way to losing another file.” The author argues that Turkey’s leader is pressured in Syria and the Mediterranean.
Meanwhile, countries that tend to oppose Turkey’s aggression, such as Egypt and the United Arab Emirates (UAE), have been less critical of the Azerbaijan offensive. This is because, while they view Ankara’s Muslim Brotherhood ambitions in Gaza and Libya as dangerous, they do not view Baku as a problem.
They would prefer, much as Israel appears to prefer, a good relationship with Azerbaijan and not to let Baku move too close to Turkey. Israel’s close relationship with Azerbaijan, ostensibly alongside Turkey, thus upsets some of the usual patterns of the region where Ankara and Jerusalem oppose one another. This is largely because this conflict was seen as outside the Middle East alliance system until the last several weeks. Now that alliance system takes on more importance from the Eastern Mediterranean to the Caucuses as it is all knit together globally.
The general regional alliance system in recent years has cemented itself around several groups. There is the Israel-UAE-Bahrain-Jordan-Egypt-Greece-Cyprus group that is linked to Saudi Arabia’s role as well. There is the Turkey-Qatar-Gaza-Libya group that supports Tripoli’s embattled government. Then there is the Iran-Hezbollah-Houthi-Syria regime-Baghdad group that includes Iran’s allies and proxies across the region. Azerbaijan does not fit into these groupings because it has sought an independent foreign policy and not to get involved in Middle East disputes. However, it appears some countries want to link these battles to the Middle East. In a world where the US hegemonic role of the 1990s is changing rapidly, the role of major states such as Russia, Turkey and Iran are growing and that means they will try to broker deals regarding this Caucuses conflict. That has major implications for the rest of the Middle East.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Where the Hell Is Azerbaijan, and Why Should Americans Care?

The Street
Oct 2 2020

Eddie_T

Sep 30, 2020

I keep hearing about the way Azerbaijan and Armenia are fighting. It seems to be turning into a real hotspot. I’ve been reading about it because world wars have broken out before in places Americans can’t find on a map. I don’t like the way this one looks at all, fwiw.

Turkey and Azerbaijan are culturally and linguistically almost one country…closely aligned……both nearly 100% Muslim…and Erdogan is backing Azerbaijan in what is a long standing land dispute with Armenia. There are ancient hatreds at play, with genocides having been carried out on both sides in the past.

Azerbaijan is run by a strong man dictator, who wants to add some or all of Armenia to his little fiefdom. Turkey’s president Erdogan has also set himself up as president-for-life now….although Turkey is supposed to be our NATO ally…..

Azerbaijan is a fairly big oil and gas producer.

Armenia is Christian, and they are under the protection of the Russians. They are also a real, functioning democracy.

The US seems to me to already to be squarely on the wrong side of this….worse than we are in Syria.

Both Azerbaijan and Armenia are bordered by Iran, Russia, and Turkey.

What could possibly go wrong?


Armenians and Azeris At It Again; US Should Stay Out

NewsMax
Oct 2 2020
(Dreamstime)

By Marek Jan ChodakiewiczFriday, 08:32 AMCurrent | Bio | Archive

A low-level war has broken out anew between Armenia and Azerbaijan in the southeast of the Intermarium, in the Caucasus, just east of the Black Sea. Both sides blame each other for the outbreak of the hostilities.

This unfrozen conflict is simply a continuity of the previous ones that have plagued the area since the First World War. As usual, Russia backs Armenia, and it is a good thing, too. Otherwise, Yerevan would be outmatched. The Armenians not only square off against the Azeris but they fear the looming Turkish danger as well.

The Armenians are the ultimate survivors. They endured over a millennium of Muslim occupation. Initially, it was indirect, a function of the balancing power of the Byzantine Empire, and, for a short period, of Christian crusader states in the Levant.

The Armenians usually sided with other Christians, but not always. Sometimes they tried to play their own game of survival, submitting to the Muslims tactically, if they calculated that those Christian powers could not be relied upon to protect the Armenian principalities. After the demise of the Crusader kingdoms and the Byzantine Empire, the Armenians found themselves on their own. Their states destroyed, they were incorporated into either the Ottoman Empire or the Persian Empire.

The latter tended to be a rather more tolerant overlord, which even today translates into unsurprisingly proper, and sometimes even cordial, relations of Yerevan with Teheran. On the other hand, the Ottomans exercised harsh rule over the Armenians. In their national narrative it was a vale of tears of discrimination and prosecution punctuated by pogroms which culminated in the Armenian genocide (1915-1921).

That is perhaps the single most important formative event in Armenian history. For Armenians, Turkey means death. The reality of genocide was so vivid that, upon establishing their fragile independence, the Armenians preferred to capitulate to the Bolsheviks rather than fall under the Turkish boot again in 1920.

Genocide looms large in the Armenian imagination and Yerevan views its geopolitical predicament largely through the prism of that tragedy. The Armenians see themselves as cornered by “the Turks,” by which they also mean the Azeris. What keeps Baku and Ankara at bay is Moscow. Russia looms large in the geopolitical game in the Caucasus. Russian Army units are still stationed in Armenia, which Yerevan does not mind because those troops are the best deterrence ever against genocide. At least so goes strategic thinking among the Armenians.

Like Armenia, Azerbaijan is a post-Soviet successor state. During the implosion of the USSR, Azerbaijan witnessed the Kremlin’s attempt to foment inter-ethnic unrest there. The KGB is said to have provoked anti-Armenian pogroms in Baku. The more chaos, the more the people would miss Soviet control and the Communist peace of the prison, as Angelo Codevilla terms this sort of predicament. In this case, urban pogroms metastasized into rural fighting.

In 1988 uprisings broke out in regional enclaves of Nakhichevan and Nagorno Karabakh, where the Armenians enjoyed a majority. The former failed and the latter succeeded. Both sent waves of refugees, both Christian Armenians and Azeri Muslims fleeing from violence. Both sides committed atrocities against the civilian population, even if the Azeris were more prolific at that sordid pursuit.

Circa 30,000 people died before a cease fire went into effect in 1994. Ultimately, the Armenians managed to establish a self-proclaimed separatist republic, the Artsakh, smack in the middle of Azerbaijan, recognized virtually by no one but Erevan.

The end result is a landlocked Cyprus. A chunk of land to the west separates the Artsakh from Armenia proper. The main difference is that the enclave never enjoyed a frozen conflict. It has always been half-frozen at best. It has simmered continuously. There were cyclical armed forays and counterforays by both sides, sniping, and other acts of violence, in addition to a constant propaganda war.

And now the conflict has spilled into Armenia proper. It is not that there were cordial Azeri-Armenian relations before: not at all. It is that now Armenia has proclaimed a general mobilization, and it is not kidding. Even the captain of the national soccer team, Warazdat Harojan, has been drafted, and, is reportedly now at the front line.

Live on national TV, prime minister Nikol Pashinyan, who is the nation’s Commander in Chief, proclaimed his willingness to die in battle. Armenia proclaimed martial law, and so did Azerbaijan in response.

The fighting is definitely more intense than the last time around, which was in 2016. We do not know exactly what’s going on but it looks more serious than usual.

Both sides have deployed heavy artillery and tanks. There is urban combat and strafing in Azeri Terter. The Armenians brag about ambushing Azeri armor. The Azeris boast about routing Armenian infantry, allegedly killing 27 troops in one place on September 28 alone.

So far 59 Armenian soldiers have died. According to Armenian sources, which can’t be verified, the Azeris suffered “about 200 casualties and more than 30 pieces of destroyed military hardware.” There are further reports of downed “20 drones and three helicopters.” The war also rages in the cyberspace. Both sides have attacked cyberassets of the enemy. Both indulge in hyperbolic war propaganda, on Twitter and other platforms.

More troubling are Yerevan’s accusations that Baku’s troops have targeted the Armenian civilian population. Azerbaijan refuses to reveal its losses and denies hitting non-military targets.

Even Moscow is alarmed. Its MIG-29 planes have overflown Yerevan in a show of solidarity. Vladmir Putin has called for a cease fire. And so has the European Union, the Vatican, and France. Baku is disappointed that Kiyv refused to back its strategic ally and expressed its wish for a peaceful solution of the conflict.

Meanwhile, however, the Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has appealed to the world to support Azerbaijan.

The U.S. should observe closely the developments in Armenia. It is in our interest to see a breach between Russia and Turkey. It is not in our interest to let Ankara drag us into its mess in the Caucasus.

We should not help Azerbaijan against Armenia even indirectly. We should let Moscow handle the situation. We should also look forward to Teheran’s firmly deterring Ankara’s aggressive moves. It would be wise to extend humanitarian aid to the civilian refugees on both sides as an incentive to stop the fighting.

And the Trump administration should be helping to calm things down all around. Nothing less; nothing more. That’s the best type of genocide prevention at this stage.

Marek Jan Chodakiewicz is Professor of History at the Institute of World Politics, a graduate school of statecraft in Washington D.C.; expert on East-Central Europe’s Three Seas region; author, among others, of “Intermarium: The Land Between The Baltic and Black Seas.” Read Marek Jan Chodakiewicz’s Reports — More Here.

President of Azerbaijan tells Armenia to ‘leave our territory, and then, the war will stop’

CNN News
Oct 2 2020

(CNN)President Ilham Aliyev of Azerbaijan has said Armenia and its military forces “need to leave our territory, and then, the war will stop and then the conflict will come to an end.”

In an interview with Al Jazeera, President Aliyev went on to say that once the war is over “maybe some time later people of Azerbaijan and Armenia can again live together, in peace.”
Aliyev, however, gave no indication that a cessation of hostilities would end anytime soon, adding: “I think Armenian government overestimated their so-called importance on global arena, overestimated the possible international support to them and made very serious mistakes provoking us, attacking us and now they are suffering the very serious defeat.”
    Rebels from Syria recruited to fight in conflict between Azerbaijan and Armenia, source says
    Long-simmering tensions between Armenia and Azerbaijan have flared up in the contested Nagorno-Karabakh region in recent days, with both sides accusing each other of attacking civilians amid reports of casualties.
    The neighboring countries have long been at odds over the mountainous territory — which is situated within the borders of Azerbaijan — and fought a war over it that ended in 1994.
    Although the conflict finished with a Russian-brokered cease-fire, military skirmishes between the two sides are not uncommon.
    Further evidence has emerged this week of rebels from Syria being recruited to fight as mercenaries in the conflict between Azerbaijan and Armenia, over the disputed enclave.
    But both Azerbaijan and Turkey have denied the presence of Syrian rebels in the conflict — something that Aliyev maintained in his Al Jazeera interview, adamant that no such fighters were in the country.
      Aliyev urged French President Emmanuel Macron to provide proof that Syrian mercenaries were fighting in Nagorno-Karabakh, saying, “He made the statements without any evidence. Let him give us evidence. Let him give us proof.”
      In a statement released Saturday, the Armenian Foreign Ministry warned: “The political-military leadership of Azerbaijan will pay a high price for committing such grave crimes against the Armenians of Artsakh, for importing terrorists to the region and for undermining the regional security.”


    https://edition.cnn.com/2020/10/03/asia/azerbaijan-armenia-president-intl/index.html?fbclid=IwAR0Uc49AlwprYbpEkaZ_ww5KmTwL2BEmVqFkDQby2_XEKLjQonWwGGnyaJ8