Azerbaijani press: Azerbaijani Defense Ministry: Rumors about Colonel-General Sadikov – misinformation

BAKU, Azerbaijan, July 21

Trend:

The Azerbaijani Ministry of Defense has issued an official statement in connection with the information spread recently on social networks that allegedly, First Deputy Minister of Defense, Chief of the General Staff of the Azerbaijani Armed Forces, Colonel-General Najmeddin Sadikov was dismissed, and that his brother holds a high position in the Armenian army, Trend reports on July 21 referring to the ministry.

“These are lies, slander and misinformation spread by Armenia for provocative purposes,” the ministry said. “Unfortunately, such news has been often spread and discussed on social networks recently. This is clearly done with malicious intent to cause confusion in the society.”

“We inform that Sadikov is performing his official duties at his post,” the ministry said. “Sadikov’s brother died in early 1980s. We call on the media outlets to be extremely careful and use the official sources when covering the activity of the Ministry of Defense.”

Turkish press: Turkish, Qatari defense ministers meet in Ankara – Turkey News

Turkey’s defense minister and his Qatari counterpart on July 20 met in the capital Ankara to discuss bilateral security cooperation as well as regional issues.

In the meeting, Hulusi Akar and Khalid bin Mohammed el-Atiye stressed the strategic partnership between the two countries.

On security cooperation, Akar said Turkey appreciates Qatar’s efforts to promote stability in Libya.

Last weekend, Akar visited Qatar and met with Qatari officials.

Libya has been torn by a civil war since the ouster of Muammar Gaddafi in 2011.

Its new government, headed by premier Fayez al-Sarraj, was founded in 2015 under a U.N.-led agreement.

Efforts for a long-term political settlement, however, have so far failed due to an ongoing military offensive by warlord Khalifa Haftar. In recent months, the Libyan Army has made significant gains against Haftar.

Turkey supports the country’s legitimate government, while Haftar has support from Russia, Egypt, the UAE, and France.

‘Turkey will continue to stand with Azerbaijan’

Meanwhile, in the wake of aggression by Armenia, Turkey will continue to stand with its Azerbaijani brothers in the face of military attacks and other challenges, said Akar on July 20. 

Akar made the remarks in the capital Ankara when receiving Ramiz Tahirov, Azerbaijan’s deputy defense minister, and Kerem Mustafayev, army chief of the Nakhichivan Autonomous Republic, an exclave of Azerbaijan bordering Armenia, Turkey, and Iran.

At the meeting, also attended by Turkish Chief of General Staff Gen. Yaşar Güler and other top ministry officials, Akar and Azerbaijani officials stressed the brotherhood between the two countries.

Akar stressed, against the backdrop of the attacks by neighboring Armenia, that Turkey will always stand with its Azerbaijani brothers.On the security of Azerbaijan and the region, Akar said Turkey and the Turkish Armed Forces will continue to do what they have to do, adding: “No one should doubt that.”

After killing a dozen Azerbaijani soldiers since June 12, Armenian forces, suffering losses from Azerbaijani retaliation, have withdrawn.

Azerbaijan has blasted Armenia’s “provocative” actions, with Turkey supporting Baku and warning Yerevan that it will not hesitate to stand against any attack on its eastern neighbor.

Since 1991 the Armenian military has illegally occupied the Upper Karabakh (Nagorno-Karabakh) region, an internationally recognized territory of Azerbaijan.

Four U.N. Security Council and two U.N. General Assembly resolutions, as well as decisions by many international organizations, decry the illegal occupation and demand the withdrawal of Armenian forces from Upper Karabakh and
seven other occupied regions of Azerbaijan.

Asbarez: U.S. to Buy Back Fighter Jets It Sold to Turkey

July 21,  2020

American taxpayers will be footing the bill for the Pentagon’s decision to buy back the F-35A jets it sold to Turkey

American taxpayers will be stuck paying for eight F-35A conventional jets originally built for Turkey at the hefty price tag of $77.9 million per unit, after Turkey was ousted from a joint strike fighter program last year.

After a year of speculation about what would happen to the jets, the Pentagon announced late Monday that the U.S. Air Force will buy eight of the jets built by Lockheed Martin for Turkey as part of an $862 million contract, Defense News reported. The deal also includes an additional six F-35As built for the Air Force and modifications that will bring the Turkish jets in line with the U.S. configuration.

Turkey was kicked out of the program last July after Ankara purchased the S-400 air defense system from Russia in defiance of U.S. and NATO concerns that it is not compatible with NATO systems and threatens the stealth capabilities of the new fighter jets.

Turkey had planned to buy 100 F-35As, and took ceremonial delivery of the first two in June 2018. The planes were delivered to the Luke Air Force Base in Phoenix, Arizona, where Turkish pilots and maintenance workers were training to fly and fix them.

The F-35A program was designed by the United States to produce fighter planes not only for use by the U.S. but also its allies, which would contribute to the cost of developing the jet, in exchange for contract to produce the plane’s components locally.

But after Ankara decided to purchase the Russian S-400 defense system and was ousted from the program, the U.S. essentially was left holding the bag. Congress, under the FY 20 National Defense Authorization Act, allocated $30 million to the Pentagon to move the six jets to a secure location. Defense News reported that the Senate version of the FY 21 NDAA includes language that would allow the Air Force to accept, update and even modify the F-35A fighter jets.

Ankara is disputing that it is out of the joint strike program. President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey, upon learning that his country was ejected from the program due its decision to go the Russian route, said that withholding the delivery of jets amounted to theft.

Now, American taxpayers are left paying the bill for Ankara’s deviation from commitments to its allies while defense contractor Lockheed Martin will make more money, as the Administration continues to cave in to Ankara’s whims on issues like the recognition of the Armenian Genocide.

Asbarez: Thousands in Javakhk Express Solidarity with Armenia, Demand Peace

July 21,  2020

[see video]

Thousands of Javakhk Armenians on Tuesday gathered at the Akhalkalak soccer stadium in Georgia on Tuesday to show their solidarity with Armenia and its Armed Forces, condemn Azerbaijani aggression against Armenia and demand peace in the region.

The participants of the gathering told the Yerevan-based Yerkir.am that through their peaceful gathering they condemned the war and military aggression by Azerbaijan, when it brazenly attacked military and civilian targets in Armenia’s Tavush Province beginning on July 12.

One of the participants also condemned threats by Azerbaijan against Georgia and its efforts to engage Georgia in their anti-Armenian campaign.

Thousands of Armenians gathered at the Akhalkalak soccer stadium in Georgia’s Javakhk region to express solidarity with Armenia and condemn Azerbaijan

The Georgian-Armenian told Yerrkir.am that he believes Georgia and Armenia must prosper together, adding that Azerbaijan’s efforts to instigate racial clashes in Georgia are doomed to fail.

“Our peaceful gathering also carries this message,” said the Georgian-Armenian.

Javakhk Armenians danced and sang patriotic songs during the peaceful gathering

“Javakhk has always stood strongly with the Republic of Armenia,” said one of the clergy from the Javakhk Diocese.

“Just as during the 1988 Spitak earthquake and the Artsakh War, the same is true today: we always stand by Armenia—our heart and soul—and we declare that we are all Armenian and we are all united,” added the cleric. “Long live Javakhk, long live Armenia and long live all Armenians.”

The gathering was unprecedented given Georgia’s strict guidelines to combat the coronavirus pandemic, becoming the first of such gatherings in Georgia.

During the gathering, which took place under the slogan of “No to War” Armenian songs could be heard, with participants taking part by dancing and singing patriotic songs.

Asbarez: Azerbaijan Launches Another Attack on Armenia

July 21,  2020

Armenian soldier at their posts on the border in Tavush Province

  • Pre-midnight attack targeted the “Anvakh” military post
  • Azerbaijan’s Elite Forces suffered heavy losses; some are reported to be trapped
  • No Armenian casualties were reported

Azerbaijani forces suffered heavy losses late Tuesday when Azerbaijan’s elite forces attempted to breach Armenia’s border for another failed try to capture the “Anvakh” military outpost.

Armenia’s Defense Ministry reported the new round of attacks took place at 11:30 p.m. local time Tuesday. The Armenian Armed Forces repelled the attack, causing significant losses to the Azerbaijani forces.

Defense Ministry spokesperson Shushan Stepanayan said based on preliminary reports, not only did Azerbaijan’s elite forces suffer losses, some of the troops have been trapped. There were no Armenian casualties.

As of 12:50 a.m. local time on Wednesday, the shooting had dissipated on the border, according to Stepanyan, who said that the leadership of Azerbaijan’s Armed Forces “is not in control of the situation.”

“A little while ago, the enemy again attempted to attack in the direction of ‘Anvakh’ [military outpost]. They were pushed back with losses,” said Defense Ministry representative Artsrun Hovhannisyan. “Aliyev’s ‘Elites’ have been trapped.

Rise of bug-borne illnesses (Sophia Garabedian)

2a602d9de951bc2_5f1f6a80_f64 
Rise of bug-borne illnesses
By Philip Marcelo
The Associated Press
Sophia Garabedian had been dealing with a persistent fever and painful
headache when her parents found her unresponsive in her bed one morning last
fall.
Doctors ultimately diagnosed the then-5-year-old Sudbury, Massachusetts,
resident with eastern equine encephalitis, a rare but severe mosquito-borne
virus that causes brain swelling.
Garabedian survived the potentially fatal virus after about a month in
Boston hospitals, but her parents say her ordeal and ongoing recovery should
be a warning as people take advantage of the outdoors this summer.
"It's been a rough year," said David Garabedian, her father. "With any brain
injury, it's hard to tell. The damage is there. How she works through it is
anyone's guess."
As the coronavirus pandemic subsides for now in the hard-hit Northeast,
public health officials in the region are warning about another potentially
bad summer for EEE and other insect-borne illnesses.
EEE saw an unexpected resurgence last summer across 10 states: Alabama,
Connecticut, Georgia, Indiana, Massachusetts, Michigan, New Jersey, North
Carolina, Rhode Island and Tennessee.
There were 38 human cases and 15 deaths from the virus, with many of the
cases in Massachusetts and Michigan, according to the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention. Most years, the country sees just half a dozen cases
of the virus in humans, the agency said.
In Massachusetts and New Jersey, officials have already detected EEE in
mosquitoes this year, the earliest on record in those states. There have
been no human or animal cases yet.
"It's unnerving," said Scott Crans, who heads up mosquito control efforts
for the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection. "It could signal
a busy year."
Crans and other state health officials say EEE, which has no cure in humans,
tends to come in two- to three-year cycles, but they also stress that
mosquito borne-diseases are notoriously tricky to predict.
A relatively mild winter may have benefited mosquito populations, but
belowaverage rainfall could have also provided a welcome counterweight, he
said.
Local health officials are also warning about the risk of contracting other
insect-borne illnesses as more people are spending a longer time outdoors
amid the coronavirus pandemic.
In Michigan, an invasive mosquito known to transmit dengue, Zika and other
tropical viruses has already been detected for the first time this season,
said Mary Grace Stobierski, the state's public health veterinarian.
The state also had its first case of West Nile virus this season. A more
common but less severe mosquitoborne disease than EEE, it can cause fevers,
headaches, body pain and other symptoms. The infection was found in a
captive hawk in early June.
Ticks are also expected to be out earlier and in larger numbers this season
because of the relatively mild winter, warned Aaron Bernstein, a
pediatrician at Boston Children's Hospital and a director at Harvard's
School of Public Health.
That could mean more cases of debilitating Lyme disease and other tick
related illnesses for local health care systems already feeling the pressure
of responding to the coronavirus, he said. "Some of the people going into
the woods more now might not be experienced with how to protect themselves
in the forest, and that's a concern," he said.
Officials say people should avoid the evening and early morning hours when
mosquitoes are most active, use bug spray and wear long clothing where
possible when outdoors.
The CDC has offered states additional help with mosquito testing this season
as the coronavirus pandemic has overwhelmed state public health offices,
said Candice Hoffmann, an agency spokeswoman.
Officials in eight states and the District of Columbia have so far taken up
the offer: Maryland, Ohio, North Carolina, South Carolina, Vermont, Maine,
Florida and Arizona.
Sophia Garabedian, 6, of Sudbury, Mass., who contracted Eastern Equine
Encephalitis in 2019, stands for a photograph on a playground July 8 in
Sudbury, Mass. [STEVEN SENNE/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS]

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 07/21/2020

                                        Tuesday, 
Azerbaijan Accused Of Another Cross-Border Attack On Armenia
ARMENIA -- Armenian soldiers take their position on the front line in Tavush 
region, July 14, 2020
The Armenian military accused Azerbaijani forces late on Tuesday of again 
attacking one of its positions at a section of Armenia’s border with Azerbaijan 
where deadly fighting raged last week.
The Defense Ministry spokeswoman, Shushan Stepanian, said an Azerbaijani 
commando unit suffered heavy losses while being repelled by Armenian troops 
deployed in the Tavush province. Some of the unit’s soldiers were “left trapped” 
as a result of the failed incursion, she said without elaborating.
“The Armenian side suffered no casualties,” Stepanian wrote on Facebook.
Azerbaijan’s Defense Ministry denied the claim. “There were no new attacks, let 
alone casualties, from our side,” said its spokesman, Vagif Dargahli. “The 
Armenian report is yet another disinformation.”
Dargahli said earlier in the day that the situation on the border between Tavush 
and the Tovuz district in western Azerbaijan remains “tense but stable.”
Fierce fighting at the volatile border section broke out on July 12, with each 
side accusing the other of trying to seize its frontline positions in the 
mountainous area. At least 12 Azerbaijani soldiers, including a general, and 
four Armenian servicemen died before the clashes involving artillery fire and 
drone attacks largely stopped on July 16.
The international community has expressed serious concern over the worst 
escalation of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict in years.
According to Stepanian, Azerbaijani special forces targeted late in the evening 
the same hilltop post of the Armenian army which they unsuccessfully stormed 
early on July 16.
“Although there was no gunfire as of 00:47 a.m. [on Wednesday] I must 
nonetheless note that the leadership of the Azerbaijani armed forces is not in 
control of the situation,” the Armenian official wrote in another Facebook post 
after midnight.
UN Chief Urges 'Maximum Restraint' By Azerbaijan, Armenia After Clashes
Pakistan -- U.N. Secretary General Antonio Guterres speaks to The Associated 
Press in Lahore, February 18, 2020
(Reuters) - United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres urged Azerbaijan 
and Armenia on Monday to exercise maximum restraint after border clashes between 
the long-feuding former Soviet republics.
“The secretary-general is following with deep concern the current tensions 
between Azerbaijan and Armenia. He calls for maximum restraint, as a full 
conflict between these two countries would be disastrous,” U.N. spokesman 
Stephane Dujarric said.
The neighbors have long been in conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh. But the latest 
flare-ups are around the Tavush region in northeastern Armenia, some 300 
kilometers from the territory.
Russia, which has a military base in Armenia, has urged the two sides to cease 
fire and show restraint. The Kremlin has said Moscow is ready to act as a 
mediator.
International concern is heightened because of the threat to stability in a 
region serving as a corridor for pipelines taking oil and gas from the Caspian 
Sea to global markets.
Yerevan Insists On Armenian-Azeri Confidence-Building Measures
        • Ruzanna Stepanian
Armenia -- Priest Ter Abel prays for peace outside the village of Movses on the 
Armenian-Azerbaijani border, July 15, 2020
Armenia called on Azerbaijan on Tuesday to agree to confidence-building measures 
that could prevent further ceasefire violations in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict 
zone.
“We hope that after the failure of its latest military adventure Azerbaijan will 
demonstrate responsibility on the issue of maintaining and strengthening the 
ceasefire,” Anna Naghdalian, the Armenian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman, said, 
referring to last week’sclashes on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border which left at 
least 16 soldiers from both sides dead.
“There are explicit proposals to strengthen security and confidence, including 
an increase in the number of international monitors deployed on the ground, 
direct communication [between the two sides] and introduction of a mechanism for 
investigating ceasefire violations,” Naghdalian told RFE/RL’s Armenian service. 
“Their implementation could help to avoid a renewed upsurge in tensions.”
Azerbaijani President Aliyev and his former Armenian counterpart President Serzh 
Sarkisian agreed on such safeguards against ceasefire violations during 
face-to-face meetings held after the April 2016 hostilities in Karabakh. Baku 
subsequently refused to implement them, however, saying that they would cement 
the status quo in the conflict.
Sarkisian’s political allies have always portrayed those confidence-building 
agreements, strongly backed by the U.S., Russian and French mediators, as a 
major Armenian diplomatic achievement. They claim that Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian abandoned them after coming to power in May 2018 and embarking on a 
dialogue with Aliyev a few months later.
Pashinian called for an “international system of credible monitoring of the 
ceasefire regime” when he met with Armenia’s Defense Minister Davit Tonoyan and 
top army generals over the weekend.
Pashinian’s office would not say on Tuesday whether he is now trying to revive 
the agreements that were negotiated by Sarkisian.
“I think that commenting on the former authorities’ statements is an ungrateful 
task,” Ruben Rubinian, the pro-government chairman of the Armenian parliament 
committee on foreign relations, said in this regard.
“We have always raised the issue of introducing a monitoring mechanism and will 
continue doing so,” he added.
Armenia Demonstrates ‘Azeri Drones Shot Down In Border Clashes’
        • Artak Khulian
Armenia -- Israeli-made military drones and their fragments are demosntrated by 
the Armenian Defense Ministry, Yerevan, .
Armenia’s Defense Ministry demonstrated on Tuesday what it described as 
Israeli-made military drones of Azerbaijan shot down by its anti-aircraft units 
in last week’s heavy fighting on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border.
The Armenian military claims to have destroyed or intercepted 13 such unmanned 
aerial vehicles (UAVs) during the clashes that broke out on July 12 and largely 
stopped five days later. It says that 10 of them were attack drones that were 
about to strike Armenian military and civilian targets in the northern Tavush 
province bordering the Tovuz district in western Azerbaijan.
Purported fragments of some of those UAVs were put on display at the Defense 
Ministry’s Military Aviation Institute in Yerevan. Ministry officials also 
showed journalists a largely intact ThunderB surveillance drone manufactured by 
Israel’s BlueBird Aero Systems company.
The Armenian military publicized on July 14 what it described as amateur footage 
of a sophisticated Hermes 900 drone of the Azerbaijani armed forces destroyed by 
an Armenian surface-to-air rocket. Hermes 900 is produced by another Israeli 
company, Elbit Systems, and used for reconnaissance and communication relay. The 
Azerbaijani military has denied losing such aircraft.
An Armenian defense news website posted at the weekend a photograph of two 
Armenian soldiers holding a SkyStriker “suicide” drone also manufactured by 
Elbit Systems. Israeli media revealed the sale of such UAVs to Azerbaijan in 
January 2019.
Armenia -- An Israeli-made ThunderB military drone is demosntrated by the 
Armenian Defense Ministry, Yerevan, .
The Azerbaijani army used other types of Israeli-made “suicide” drones during 
the April 2016 hostilities in Nagorno-Karabakh that nearly escalated into an 
all-out Armenian-Azerbaijani war.
Garik Movsisian, a senior officer of Armenia’s air-defense forces, said that a 
total of about 40 Azerbaijani UAVs have been brought down since 2016. He claimed 
that the Israeli drones lost by Azerbaijan in the Tavush-Tovuz fighting were 
worth at least $150 million.
Armenia has long expressed concern over Israel’s large-scale arms deals with 
Azerbaijan which have totaled at least $2 billion since 2012. The Foreign 
Ministry in Yerevan reiterated those concerns following the latest flare-up 
along the border between the two South Caucasus states.
For its part, the Azerbaijani military claims to have shot down two Armenian 
drones last week. The Armenian side denies that.
At least 12 Azerbaijani servicemen, including an army general, and four Armenian 
soldiers died in the border clashes. A senior Armenian official said late last 
week that the Armenian combat deaths were caused by Azerbaijani drone strikes.
The Armenian military says that during last week’s hostilities it used for the 
first time attack drones designed and produced by Armenian companies. It says 
that they destroyed at least one Azerbaijani tank. Baku has dismissed these 
claims.
For the fifth consecutive day the conflicting parties did not report on Tuesday 
serious ceasefire violations at the Tavush-Tovuz section of the border.
Armenia Demonstrates ‘Azeri Drones Shot Down In Border Clashes’
        • Artak Khulian
Armenia -- Israeli-made military drones and their fragments are demosntrated by 
the Armenian Defense Ministry, Yerevan, .
Armenia’s Defense Ministry demonstrated on Tuesday what it described as 
Israeli-made military drones of Azerbaijan shot down by its anti-aircraft units 
in last week’s heavy fighting on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border.
The Armenian military claims to have destroyed or intercepted 13 such unmanned 
aerial vehicles (UAVs) during the clashes that broke out on July 12 and largely 
stopped five days later. It says that 10 of them were attack drones that were 
about to strike Armenian military and civilian targets in the northern Tavush 
province bordering the Tovuz district in western Azerbaijan.
Purported fragments of some of those UAVs were put on display at the Defense 
Ministry’s Military Aviation Institute in Yerevan. Ministry officials also 
showed journalists a largely intact ThunderB surveillance drone manufactured by 
Israel’s BlueBird Aero Systems company.
The Armenian military publicized on July 14 what it described as amateur footage 
of a sophisticated Hermes 900 drone of the Azerbaijani armed forces destroyed by 
an Armenian surface-to-air rocket. Hermes 900 is produced by another Israeli 
company, Elbit Systems, and used for reconnaissance and communication relay. The 
Azerbaijani military has denied losing such aircraft.
An Armenian defense news website posted at the weekend a photograph of two 
Armenian soldiers holding a SkyStriker “suicide” drone also manufactured by 
Elbit Systems. Israeli media revealed the sale of such UAVs to Azerbaijan in 
January 2019.
Armenia -- An Israeli-made ThunderB military drone is demosntrated by the 
Armenian Defense Ministry, Yerevan, .
The Azerbaijani army used other types of Israeli-made “suicide” drones during 
the April 2016 hostilities in Nagorno-Karabakh that nearly escalated into an 
all-out Armenian-Azerbaijani war.
Garik Movsisian, a senior officer of Armenia’s air-defense forces, said that a 
total of about 40 Azerbaijani UAVs have been brought down since 2016. He claimed 
that the Israeli drones lost by Azerbaijan in the Tavush-Tovuz fighting were 
worth at least $150 million.
Armenia has long expressed concern over Israel’s large-scale arms deals with 
Azerbaijan which have totaled at least $2 billion since 2012. The Foreign 
Ministry in Yerevan reiterated those concerns following the latest flare-up 
along the border between the two South Caucasus states.
For its part, the Azerbaijani military claims to have shot down two Armenian 
drones last week. The Armenian side denies that.
At least 12 Azerbaijani servicemen, including an army general, and four Armenian 
soldiers died in the border clashes. A senior Armenian official said late last 
week that the Armenian combat deaths were caused by Azerbaijani drone strikes.
The Armenian military says that during last week’s hostilities it used for the 
first time attack drones designed and produced by Armenian companies. It says 
that they destroyed at least one Azerbaijani tank. Baku has dismissed these 
claims.
For the fifth consecutive day the conflicting parties did not report on Tuesday 
serious ceasefire violations at the Tavush-Tovuz section of the border.
Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2020 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
 

Turkish Press: What is role of foreign players in Azerbaijan-Armenia conflict?

Daily Sabah, Turkey
What is role of foreign players in Azerbaijan-Armenia conflict?

In the South Caucasus, a matter whose roots stem back a long time has been reawakened after a short sleep.

Over the last six years, Azerbaijan-Armenia relations have been dominated by tension over the Nagorno-Karabakh region that could form the basis of a new conflict process in which the frozen conflicts are resolved. Since the summer of 2014, dangerous but limited clashes between the military forces of the two countries were an almost daily occurrence, but it only became part of the international agenda when there were casualties.

After the Four-Day War of 2016, when 94 Azerbaijanis, including two civilians, and 84 Armenian soldiers were killed, the parties are again on alert.

The tension in the region escalated once again, however, when Armenia suddenly attacked Azerbaijan on July 12. This offensive was different, as Tovuz, the target of the attack, is within the Azerbaijani territory, not a a part of dispute in Karabakh. The Yerevan administration’s aggression that took place in an undisputed area, accepted by Armenia, is an action that is contrary to international law and clearly reveals Armenia’s policy against peace.

Although Armenia’s new prime minister, Nikol Pashinian, has stated that they are making plans to normalize relations with Azerbaijan and Turkey, he has been taking an aggressive line, contrary to his rhetoric. In a previous visit to Karabakh, Pashinian said, “This is the land of Armenia.” His so-called peace-promising statements seem to be mere efforts to create an image.

Whether there is one country or several countries that support or even encourage Armenia is still unknown. The place where the attack took place is highly suspicious. Tovuz is very close to the Azerbaijan-Georgia-Turkey corridor, right next to transportation and energy routes. Caspian oil and gas are carried to Turkey via this corridor. A conflict in this region, where the heart of the Azerbaijani economy beats, has the potential to directly affect the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline, the Southern Gas Corridor and the Baku-Tbilisi-Kars railway.

The Minsk Group, founded 24 years ago by the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) to resolve the issue, has failed to turn a cease-fire between the two countries into a compromise and has since been unable to make any progress beyond bringing an international aspect to the problem. The Minsk Group is co-chaired by France, the U.S. and Russia, along with its members Turkey, Germany, the Netherlands, Italy, Portugal, Belarus, Sweden and Finland. It is known that France’s approach to the Armenian issue, in particular, is not very neutral, while the process jointly maintained by the U.S. and Russia is unlikely to produce good results. This being the case, even just by looking at the co-chairs, it is possible to understand why the group has made little progress, and moreover, it has no intention of inviting Armenia to withdraw from the territories it occupies.

Both countries have been arming for years against a possible large-scale conflict. Azerbaijan has and continues to invest in its defense industry, thanks to its high oil and gas revenues. While Armenia is able to buy special equipment in exchange for loans from Moscow, Azerbaijan can more easily acquire large numbers of weapons from Russia and other countries. Baku has bought arms from Turkey and imported Altay tanks, T129 ATAK helicopters, unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) and armed unmanned aerial vehicles (AUAV). With the UAVs and quasi-ballistic long-range missiles (LORA) it has purchased from Israel, Azerbaijan has the capacity to hit any target in Armenia. Neither Yerevan nor Moscow have in their inventories some of the weapons owned by Azerbaijan, such as Israeli and South Korean-made anti-tank missiles. On the other hand, Armenia has Soviet-era tanks and similar heavy weapons and is capable of hitting sensitive areas such as Azerbaijan’s oil and gas facilities with its Scud and new quasi-ballistic missiles. Such an attack, however, could lead to the bombing of the Metsamor nuclear power plant, 40 kilometers (25 miles) west of Yerevan. Therefore, Armenia is in a weaker position against Azerbaijan.

It is normal that ongoing regional conflicts pit global players against each other as the new games built on energy lines and the recent developments in Libya and the Eastern Mediterranean bring Russia to mind as a hidden player in the tension between Armenia and Azerbaijan. Indeed, Russia seeks to maintain close ties with both countries while also selling arms to each.

Pashinian took office two years ago as a result of anti-regime demonstrations. For the time being, Russia regards him as a Western-backed “revolutionist,” hence it is watching and following Yerevan.

On the other hand, it does not want to escalate the tension between Azerbaijan, which has rich oil and natural gas resources, and Armenia, and allow Baku to turn into a bigger player in the Caucasus beyond its control. It is possible to say that Russia, which maintains good relations with Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, aims to dominate the region by maintaining its strategic proximity not only with Yerevan but also with Baku and Tbilisi. Therefore, it does not want to be involved in tensions with Azerbaijan. When Turkey gave its harsh response to the most recent attack, Yerevan called on the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO), which itself and Russia are members of, to provide support and solidarity against Azerbaijan and “any possible Turkish intervention.” All it could find, however, was a call for a truce by its allies.

Furthermore, the ongoing closeness between Azerbaijan and Israel due to their oil and gas initiatives, apart from arms sales, is not overlooked by Russia. Israel also wants to block the acceptance of Armenia’s “genocide” lie as it wants to be the “only nation that has suffered genocide.”

Iran, on the other hand, is Armenia’s leading trade partner. Besides Azerbaijani Turks, there is a large and highly influential Armenian community in Iran. Therefore, Russia stands one step closer to the Iran-Armenia side against a Turkey-Azerbaijan-Georgia coalition in the region. Armenia’s proximity to Iran is noted by U.S. ally Israel, although it has a broad Armenian lobby.

All this shows that Russia wants to lose neither Armenia nor Azerbaijan. Nevertheless, Moscow may be sending messages that it is distracted due to Turkey, which has grown in strength from the Caucasus to the Mediterranean. Although Ankara has developed close relations with Moscow over the last four years, it is obvious that Russia does not want a powerful Turkey, which has announced that it will provide military support to Azerbaijan against Armenia’s aggression. Russia has several thousand troops, fighter jets, armored vehicles and anti-aircraft missiles at its military base in Armenia. The purpose of their presence is not to fight Azerbaijan, but to have a deterrent in Armenia against Turkey. If push comes to shove, however, Ankara is in a more advantageous position. This is because, for Russia, sending military support to Armenia via Georgia would be a problem. It should also not be forgotten that Russia has threatened places it cannot reach, such as Eastern Europe, with its nuclear power.

As a result, the tension that started with Armenia’s attack is unlikely to lead to worse consequences, and the cease-fire will be resumed. That is what the equation in the region shows. To put it in a nutshell, it seems that the frozen conflicts will fall into a short sleep until they are awakened again, and the tension, which rises and falls, will continue until it at some point explodes.

Apparently Azerbaijan was testing the resolve and the capacities of Armenia far from Nagorno-Karabakh: Armenia’s FM

Aysor, Armenia

Armenia’s Foreign Minister Zohrab Mnatsakanyan gave interview to France 24.

Question: Mr. Foreign Minister, for the past week violent clashes have occurred between Azerbaijan and your country Armenia. The two countries have been at loggerheads for decades now over the fate of the Nagorno-Karabakh region. However unlike in previous flare ups the latest round of violence has occurred far from this disputed region – at the north of the border between the two countries. At least 16 people have lost their lives – the worst death toll since 2016. We have seen a lull in the fighting for the past few days. Are you optimistic that the fighting is now over or you are still concerned that it could resume very soon? 

Zohrab Mnatsakanyan: Thank you very much. Indeed we had a situation over the past week: on 12th of July, we had an attempted aggression, attempted infiltration of the Armenian positions by the Azerbaijani armed forces across the Armenia-Azerbaijan border to the north-east of Armenia. This has been decisively thwarted. It has been followed subsequently by missile attacks at Armenian positions, also civilian infrastructure and the population.

We have been decisive in our defense. And we have also been working very hard with our partners with the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairmanship, comprising France, the United States and Russia, in order to halt the hostilities and in order to restore the ceasefire.

Now what happened in fact is a material manifestation of the ongoing warmongering and hate induced rhetoric that was very intense over the past weeks and months from Azerbaijan. Apparently they have been testing the resolve and the capacities of Armenia far from Nagorno-Karabakh. And this was, of course, a very dangerous development.

We have managed to calm the situation so far. Since Thursday we have again through the engagement of the Co-Chairs, the Russian Co-Chairmanship in strong coordination with the other partner France and the US, we have managed to restore ceasefire. This is again a shaky situation. So far it is holding and our intention is to make sure that we firmly restore ceasefire. In fact take further specific measures to reinforce the ceasefire regime and to deny any further challenge to the calm across the border and across the line of contact in Nagorno-Karabakh. This is, of course, a very big priority that we have before us now.

Question: Azerbaijan says that you started the fighting. It has also threatened to strike the nuclear plant, the Metsamor Nuclear Plant, if you continue what they call your “provocations.” What is your response to that?

Zohrab Mnatsakanyan: Well, on the first question. We have been quite insistent on establishing measures to reduce risks of escalation and to investigate ceasefire violations. We are very insistent on that. We are very insistent on further measures including the expansion of monitoring, the establishment of a direct line on the ground. And those are the measures that will help us to control the ceasefire regime. Azerbaijan has not been very forthcoming to accept those proposals and to establish such measures which would deny opportunities for further ceasefire violations. So, once again I am calling upon them to come to reason and to accept those proposals, and to work with us towards strengthening the ceasefire regime.

So far as the threats to the nuclear power plant are concerned, I think this is a very vivid manifestation of irresponsibility, of threat to the broader region, a threat in fact to their own people. This is very disturbing and this demonstrates a crisis of reason. And I think it is very important that they come to their senses in Baku.

Question: Who is responsible? I imagine you are pointing the finger at Azerbaijan’s leader Ilham Aliyev who has publicly said a couple of weeks ago that the efforts to bring a peaceful solution were leading nowhere, or are you also thinking that Turkey’s president Rejep Tayyip Erdogan might be the real reason for what happened at the border?

Zohrab Mnatsakanyan: Well, I would reiterate in very strong terms Armenia’s full commitment to the strictly peaceful resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. The war is not an option. The war is a total catastrophe for the entire region. Armenia is capable to defend. Nagorno-Karabakh is capable to defend. But war should be totally ruled out in this. We are fully committed to the peaceful resolution of the conflict in a way that needs the interests of Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh in equal measure as it is expected for Azerbaijan. This is the compromise-based solution that we are working for and we will continue to invest every effort in the peaceful settlement. This has been and remains the commitment of Armenia.

So far as Turkey is concerned, again this is particularly concerning, because we have been observing a very destabilizing role of Turkey in its other neighbourhoods – the Eastern Mediterranean, North Africa, the Middle East. Now what we are observing is an attempt to export this factor of instability in our region, in the South Caucasus. This attempt has been also laced with a notion of “historical mission” of Turkey in the South Caucasus. Now you understand that for Armenia such “historical mission” revives very sad memories of the Armenian Genocide at the beginning of last century, and of course, we received this with serious concern. We also observe that the impunity for these atrocities against the Armenians is also the reason in which Turkey decisively claims any role in the South Caucasus.

Question: I am going to ask you maybe very bluntly, you have mentioned the example of Turkey’s role in  Syria and Libya. Are you concerned that Turkey could play a more direct role in this dispute with Azerbaijan, including militarily? Is this a concern, or you believe they are just talking, declaring their support?

Zohrab Mnatsakanyan: There is no role for Turkey in this. The peaceful resolution concerns Armenia, Nagorno-Karabakh, and Azerbaijan, and we will continue to work closely in a very constructive manner with Azerbaijan on finding a solution together with Nagorno-Karabakh. We need to work on strengthening and steeling the very firm ceasefire regime, we have to hear from Azerbaijan the firm denouncement of the threat or use of force. We need to work on an environment, which favors progress in the negotiations.

We have to work on such a balance of commitments that helps to achieve a measurable compromise, it has to be a compromise-based solution, a maximalist position of Azerbaijan is not helpful in this. So we will continue to work for this purpose within the internationally agreed format of the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairmanship. We value very highly the role of the Co-Chairs – France, Russia, and the United States, and their contribution is very solid, their commitment and engagement is also very solid. Within this format and within this arrangement we will continue to work for peace.

Question: I am going to repeat my question. Are you concerned about potential Turkish intervention, a more direct intervention in this conflict?
Zohrab Mnatsakanyan: Obviously, we cannot be indifferent, because this role is a role of instability, and of course we cannot receive this indifferently; of course it’s a matter of concern.

Question: You mentioned the Minsk Group Co-Chairmanship, but it has not worked. I mean all these negotiations have led to nowhere. Why not to rejuvenate this negotiation format and do something else? Why continue something that has not worked so far? 

Zohrab Mnatsakanyan: Well, I cannot agree that it hasn’t been working. It has been working very effectively, it has been a very solid basis, very solid platform, in which all the three countries – Russia, France and the United States, have been working in a very engaging manner. They continue to make very important contribution to the peace process. I do consider this is a very positive role and we do not see any reason why it should change.

Question: Just let me ask one last question. Do you think in order to break the impasse, a meeting between the leaders of both countries is something that would play a decisive role in calming the tensions.

Zohrab Mnatsakanyan: We are committed to use every measure, every way of promoting the peace process. The meeting between the leaders is part of the process, it has been happening before and it will happen again, I am sure. But these meetings have to be prepared carefully, so that we do strive, we do aim to establish a good foundation for progress.

So there is a direct engagement of the foreign ministers who negotiate and the foreign ministers prepare the work of the leaders. We will continue to work in the most serious way towards achieving progress in negotiations. So leaders’ meeting will happen when we prepare the good grounds for this meeting to happen, so that we establish progress in negotiations.