Trench Warfare Revisited: Armenia’s Indigenous Remote-Controlled Armament

March 2 2021

By Stijn Mitzer and Joost Oliemans
 
Armenia’s small population and limited economic means force the country to come up with creative solutions to address the obsolescence of its military hardware and to introduce entirely new capabilties to its armed forces. Through the years this has led to a highly active R&D industry that has received little media attention outside of its own borders. While most of its projects never progressed beyond prototype status due to a lack of funding, those with a more limited scope (thus requiring less financial commitment) usually had more success. 
 
One of these projects comprises a PKT machine gun that has been adapted to allow to fire it from cover with a thermal sight connected to a screen for aiming. This highly interesting contraption was first shown in use with Armenian forces during the 2020 Nagorno-Karabakh war, and was examined in more detail after having been captured by Azerbaijani forces as they overran Armenian positions. [1] [2] Unsightly but efficient in its intended role, the system is a clear example of the adaptive nature that has come to typify the Armenian defence industry.

Of course, we can’t entirely blame you for opining that the device looks like a modern adaption of something that came straight out of the trenches of the Somme and Verdun during the First World War. Engaged in a bitter standoff ever since the ceasefire agreement of 1994, Armenian trenches along the line of contact were in fact reminiscent of those of World War I, with both sides separated only by a thin strip of no-man’s land littered with mines and other obstacles. The network of defensive fortifications changed little over the past decades, and often still resembled temporary fighting positions rather than modern defensive structures.
While these trenches can be a nightmare for any military ground force to approach and eventually overcome, they proved of little defensive value in the face of Azerbaijani Bayraktar TB2 drones, which could fly circles above them and carefully select which positions were worth targeting either with their own MAM-L munitions or precision-guided munitions delivered by rocket artillery. As a result, most trench lines and positions fell to this invisible opponent long before the enemy it was supposed to keep at bay ever came in sight.
Still, a small fleet of UCAVs can only cover a limited area, and several defensive lines found themselves instead facing repeated artillery barrages on their positions followed by mechanised or infantry assaults. While most of these eventually succeeded in dislodging Armenian soldiers from their positions, other positions managed to keep Azerbaijani forces at bay for days or week on ends. This was true especially in the North of Nagorno-Karabakh, where the mountainous terrain and fierce resistance by Armenian forces limited advances made by Azerbaijan for the entire duration of the 44-day long war.
 

 

The weapon used is the PKT machine gun, a variant of the PK that was specifically designed for use as a coaxial mount in Soviet tanks and AFVs (hence its name, PK-Tank). Designed for remote firing from the onset (by means of an electric solenoid trigger), the PKT needed little modification for its new role as a remote weapon system. Another benefit of the PKT is the size of the magazine, which holds an impressive amount of 250 7.62×54mmR rounds. To enable long periods of almost continuous firing before having to bring in additional magazines, a basket for a spare magazine was welded on the right side of the metal structure.
 
Incidentally, Armenia was already in the possession of large numbers of PKT machine guns, with no apparent practical use for them. These PKTs once equipped BRDM-2 reconnaissance vehicles and BTR-60 armoured personnel carriers (APCs), but after most of these vehicles were relegated to reserve status and eventually decommissioned by the Armenian military, their weaponry was put into storage. Rather than leaving this potentially useful armament to rot, sizeable numbers were then converted to remote weapon systems.

 

The operating method of the system is as simple as it looks, with the PKT fitted to a rudimentary metal structure on top of a pole that can be heightened just above the trenchline when in use, and lowered back into cover when not in use or when having to reload. The gunner aims through the screen in front of him that’s linked to a Russian Infratech IT-615 thermal sight located on the left of the weapon. When someone enters his crosshairs, the gunner presses the trigger on one of two handlebars, which he also uses to aim the weapon system. [3] [4] What appears to be a battery for the thermal sight is crudely fitted to the left side of the metal structure, although this doesn’t appear to be installed on every example.
 

The PKT contraption is not the only attempt made by Armenia at designing automated gun emplacements. Another project called for the automisation of anti-aircraft guns for use against ground targets, and a prototype based on the 14.5mm ZPU-2 anti-aircraft gun was actually built. To increase the lethality of the system against armoured targets, a 73mm SPG-9 recoilless rifle (RCL) was additionally slaved to it. This combination could prove deadly against the armour of anything up to a tank, with BMP infantry fighting vehicles (IFVs) loaded with infantry likely being particularly suitable targets. 
 

Fully remote-controlled and aimed by the means of a thermal sight, the only human intervention required would be reloading the SPG-9 after each shot and the ZPU-2 after firing off the 2400 rounds stowed in the guns’ two huge magazines. Like the PKT machine guns, the ZPU-2s too had been retired from active service in Armenia. However, much in common with most other Armenian indigenous military projects, any further development and an eventual introduction into the armed forces appears to have been prevented by a lack of budget.

Meanwhile a more advanced iteration of the PKT weapon system concept was also in the works, and first unveiled during the ArmHiTec 2018 military exhibition in Yerevan. [5] This version of the PKT could finally be called truly remote-controlled, with the operator of the box system sitting in the safety of an underground bunker. Perhaps unsurprisingly at this point, a lack of budget precluded the introduction of this promising weapons system.
 
The only real downside of the box system is that it has to be manually reloaded each time after emptying its relatively small magazine. This could be a dangerous endeavour depending on the location of the gun box, and could entail Armenian soldiers having to climb to elevated positions in the view of the enemy to reload the system for continued use. Although the magazine used likely contains up to 150 7.62mm rounds, these can be quickly spent in anger, given the weapon’s firing rate of 750 rounds per minute.
 
 
Although Armenia’s PKT contraptions could not turn the tide in a war which was ultimately decided in the skies, and not in trenches, they remain a first-rate example of cost-effective ingenuity in the face of limited means. With its army in tatters after a catastrophic defeat, it is likely that the nation will call on this ingenuity to provide its military with weaponry suitable for the new military balance and the type of warfare witnessed during the 2020 Nagorno-Karabakh War. When provided with sufficient funding, Armenia’s indigenous military industry could well surprise friend and foe alike, and slowly begin to return the country from the adverse condition it currently finds itself in.
 
[1] https://twitter.com/TvIctimai/status/1312037877174480897
[2] https://i.postimg.cc/VNmjFRSH/6jf.png
[3] https://twitter.com/Mukhtarr_MD/status/1357673286704988167
[4] https://twitter.com/neccamc1/status/1362011034891005953
[5] https://twitter.com/Mukhtarr_MD/status/1360539364506402816 

 

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Please View the Panel Discussion on The Artsakh War & COVID: Lessons Learned in Healthcare

Dear compatriots and friends, 
Dear Friends and Compatriots,
 
The ARPA Institute invites you to view the Panel Discussion By Dr. Armen Hagopjanian, Dr. Vicken Sepilian and Dr. Shant Shekherdimian, Moderated by Dr. Ani Shabazian in the following link: 
The Artsakh War & COVID: Lessons Learned in Healthcare
Prior ARPA Lectures (Just click on the title):
1. The Environmental SecurityRisks of Armenia and its Impact, by Dr. Irina Ghaplanyan
2. Daniel Varoujan at theUniversity of Ghent, 1905-1909 , By Simon Payaslian
3. What Are the TechnologicalNeeds for a Strong Post War Armenia , By Yervant Zoryan & Raffi Kassarjian
4. Consequences of the War inArtsakh and its Implications , Eric Hacopian 
 
DONATE TO ARPA: http://www.arpainstitute.org 
 
Please also see how you can help ARPA Institute raise more funds. 

Here is how it works: You can help us by searching on Goodsearch yourself. Just make  your default search engine and do a few searches a day for ARPA Institute (select ARPA Institute as your cause).

How a Montebello DJ spent years tracking down rare Armenian music of the ’70s and ’80s

Daily News
March 7 2021
 
  • PUBLISHED: March 7, 2021 at 8:04 a.m. | UPDATED: March 7, 2021 at 8:04 a.m.


Darone Sassounian gasped when he finally found the record.

For years, Sassounian had been on the hunt for “Sunrise,” a 1979 album from Armenian musician Avo Haroutiounian. The album was recorded and released through a local label, Parseghian Records, after Haroutiounian had settled in Los Angeles.

But when Sassounian, a Montebello-based DJ, stumbled upon it, he was far from home. At the time, Sassounian was digging through records at a friend’s shop in Bourj Hammoud, a Lebanese town outside of Beirut known for its large ethnic Armenian population.

“I’ve never even seen one online,” says Sassounian on a recent phone call. “I found that record that was made in Los Angeles about 7000 miles east of where it was produced.”

Now Sassounian is sharing one of the songs from that album, the incomparably funky “Tears on My Eyes,” on the compilation “Silk Road: Journey of the Armenian Diaspora (1971-1982),” available now digitally and on vinyl via record label Terrestrial Funk. The album is a labor of love that brings together music recorded by Armenian diasporan artists between 1971 and 1982.

It’s an eclectic collection that shows the breadth of Armenian music from this era. “Ammenaïn Serdov (De Tout Couer) (With All My Heart)” from the French-Armenian singer Marten Yorgantz is a slice of electronic funk with a nod to Aram Khachaturian’s “Sabre Dance.” “Taparoum Enk (We’re Wandering)” is a psychedelic cut from Harout Pamboukjian, the beloved Armenian singer and longtime Angeleno.

“Silk Road”  has already garnered support from tastemakers like German house producer Motor City Drum Ensemble, Beats In Space DJ Tim Sweeney and L.A. online radio station Dublab.

A musician since childhood who later turned towards DJing, the 28-year-old Sassounian played regularly at local venues Club Tee Gee and The Standard pre-pandemic and also runs the music management company Rocky Hill. His tastes lean towards disco, soul and boogie from the 1970s and ’80s, along with 1990s house music. Several years ago, while working at indie label Ubiquity Records, he came across compilations of disco, funk, psychedelic and related styles that spotlight a global array of artists. He wondered why he hadn’t seen any similar collections focusing on Armenian artists.

So Sassounian, who is of Armenian heritage, decided to take on the task himself.

It was a quest. Armenian music from this era is hard to find. Sassounian says releases often weren’t pressed in large quantities. Some recordings may have also been lost in the midst of war or political turmoil. That is the case for a lot of music recorded in Lebanon during the 1970s and 1980s, he says.

“A lot of the master tapes are destroyed because of the civil war,” Sassounian explains.

His first find came in 2016 via his father’s collection of cassettes. The song “Sev Sev Achair (Black Black Eyes)” was from Jozeph Sefian, an Armenian singer from Iran who recorded, and eventually settled, in Los Angeles. A month or so later, Sassounian began working on the project in earnest and booked plane tickets to Beirut and Paris, two cities with larger Armenian music communities, to dig for records.

He sought out records in the course of his U.S. travels too, finding a “crazy collection” in Las Vegas. He estimates finding between 100 and 150 records on his searches. The final cut for “Silk Road,” so named for historic Armenia’s position along the famed trading route, features seven tracks from six artists. The digital version includes two edits of songs from the compilation, one from Sassounian and another from New York DJ duo Fundido.

In all, it took about three years for Sassounian to find and license the music. In the process, he was able to get to know some of the artists, or the heirs of the artists, behind the songs. Sassounian says that he was struck by how the music reflects not just the artists’ Armenian identity, but the countries in which the music was made.

“A lot of these records have a fusion of those sounds,” he says.

The fusion points to the history of Armenians, who formed diasporan communities across the globe in the aftermath of the Armenian Genocide. The artists featured on “Silk Road” are about two generations removed from the events of 1915 and reflect the geographic diversity of Armenians as well. Eddy Jeghelian was based in Australia. Adiss Harmandian (spelled Harmandyan on “Silk Road” to correspond with the spelling on the original release) began his career in Beirut but relocated to Los Angeles, where he lived until death in 2019.

In light of that, the compilation also has a powerful message. “Because the culture still continues, the music continues, the people continue,” Sassounian says. “The people continue to live along with the music.”

Sassounian dedicates the album to diasporan communities, whether Armenian or of another ethnicity, who have been impacted by “systemic racism, slaughter and injustice.” In a note on the vinyl edition, he writes, “the rhythm of all diasporas must continue.”


Scarred by war, Armenian veterans look warily to the future

Yahoo! News
March 7 2021
More than 300 veterans are undergoing treatment at the Centre for the Rehabilitation of the Homeland’s Defenders in Yerevan

Mariam HARUTYUNYAN

Sun, March 7, 2021, 4:58 AM
AFP

Nver Gasparyan, who was injured during the fighting for control of the mountainous Caucasus region of Nagorno-Karabakh last year, is haunted by memories of the war that ended in national humiliation for Armenia.

The 20-year-old was one of thousands of people wounded during six weeks of a brutal conflict that erupted in September and saw swarms of Azerbaijan’s drones pummel the ageing Soviet-era hardware of Armenia’s military.

“I don’t want to talk about it. I don’t want to remember,” Gasparyan told AFP as he was undergoing physiotherapy to strengthen his injured legs.

“I want to forget everything as soon as possible, to erase the sounds and images of war from my memory.”

At a hospital for veterans being treated for physical and psychological wounds in the capital Yerevan, Gasparyan said he avoids ruminating about the future.

“I don’t think about tomorrow, whether or not I’m going to study. Right now I’m focused on getting better and restoring the mobility in my legs,” he said.

– ‘Not going to give up’ –

The latest flare-up in fighting between the ex-Soviet rivals left more than 6,000 people dead on both sides and sparked a political crisis in Armenia, which has struggled to come to terms with the devastating loss.

Thousands returning from the front are now also processing the war and what comes next.

Military doctor Roman Oghanyan was wounded by shrapnel near the frontline when artillery hit his ambulance, killing his colleague.

He told AFP he lost consciousness and woke up later in a hospital.

“God saved me… from an imminent death, and I’m not going to give up,” the 25-year-old said.

“I plan to go back and work in the ambulance service and continue helping people.”

The health ministry in the tiny Caucasus nation has said that some 600 soldiers are disabled and around 150 require prosthetics.

More than 300 veterans are undergoing treatment at the Centre for the Rehabilitation of the Homeland’s Defenders in Yerevan, one of several facilities designated for former soldiers.

“We are helping the wounded understand how their bodies have been affected … and are trying to motivate them to go on to live,” the hospital’s chief physician Lusine Poghosyan said.

“These guys not only have to learn how to live without an arm, a leg, or an eye, but also to heal their moral trauma,” she told AFP.

“The 18-20-year-olds have seen horrible things. Many have persistent nightmares or suffer from insomnia.”

– ‘In a hurry to live’ –

Thousands of people have been taking to the streets in Armenia near daily, calling for revenge and demanding the government’s resignation, ever since Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan signed a ceasefire agreement that handed over significant territory to Azerbaijan.

But the embattled premier has said he had no choice but to agree to the humiliating ceasefire agreement, or see his country’s forces suffer even bigger losses to a superior enemy.

Unlike protesters on the streets, Sarkis Harutyunyan, who lost both his legs in the fighting, is eager to move on.

The 20-year-old conscript was just a few months shy of fulfilling his contract when the war broke out and now says he can’t wait to start learning to walk with his new prosthesis.

“I’m in a hurry to live. I have plans. My girlfriend is waiting for me and we plan to get engaged in two months,” he said with a bashful smile.

The war in Karabakh ended in November with a Russian-brokered ceasefire that saw Yerevan cede swathes of territory, and a mass exodus of Armenians from what they say are ancestral lands.

But Harutyunyan’s native Martakert district has remained under Armenian control and he says he hopes to return there one day with his family.

“There is no need to look back. The guys did not die in vain. Nothing was in vain.”

mkh-im/jbr/acl/txw

Armenian president, opposition discuss ways out of political crisis

TASS, Russia
March 7 2021
Armen Sarkissian held a meeting with member of the executive body of the Republican Party Vahram Baghdasaryan

YEREVAN, March 7. /TASS/. Armenian President Armen Sarkissian met with representative of the opposition Homeland Salvation Movement, board member of the Republican Party Vahram Baghdasaryan to discuss ways out of the internal political crisis, the presidential office’s press service reported on Sunday.

“President Armen Sarkissian held a meeting today with member of the executive body of the Republican Party of Armenia within the Homeland Salvation Movement Vahram Baghdasaryan. The meeting was held at the invitation of the republic’s president. The sides exchanged opinions on the variants of settling the situation in the country and reducing tension caused by recent developments,” the statement says.

The political crisis in Armenia broke out after the end of hostilities in Nagorno-Karabakh and escalated on February 25 when Armenian General Staff Chief Onik Gasparyan and about 40 top officers issued a statement demanding Prime Minister Pashinyan and the government step down.

Armenia’s President Sarkissian, who is authorized by the national constitution to appoint and dismiss the chief of the General Staff at the prime minister’s behest, refused to sign the decree removing the general. However, he also did not challenge Pashinyan’s motion on Gasparyan’s resignation at the Constitutional Court. Instead, Sarkissian sent the 2017 law on military service, which vests the prime minister with the right to initiate dismissal of senior officers of the army command without providing any reasons for that to the Court for examination.

Iranian, Armenian Foreign Ministers Discuss Bilateral Relations

Iran Front Page
March 6 2021

During the talks, the two sides conferred on the latest status of bilateral relations and the regional developments.

They also expressed pleasure with the growing trend of reciprocal ties in various fields, and underlined the two countries’ resolve to further develop collaborations in all areas.

The phone call came a few days after Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan warned of an attempted military coup.

On February 25, Iranian Foreign Ministry Spokesman Saeed Khatibzadeh called on all parties in Armenia to show self-restraint and avoid violence.

Pashinyan has faced protests after losing last year’s bloody conflict with Azerbaijan over a disputed region.

Russia tightens its grip on Armenia

Arab News
March 7 2021

Follow @arabnews

A crisis was expected in Armenia after the 2020 Nagorno-Karabakh War, and it did not take long to arise. It started as an arm-twisting exercise between the civilian and military authorities of Armenia but evolved to further consolidate Russia’s influence in the country.

Hopes were high when Nikol Pashinyan won the 2018 elections with about 70 percent of the votes. People expected miracles from such a strong government, but they would ultimately be disappointed with the defeat in the Nagorno-Karabakh war. The discontent had to explode at some point, and Prime Minister Pashinyan provided a perfect opportunity for it to do so.

When former Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan raised the issue of why Russian-manufactured Iskander missiles were not used at the beginning of the war, Pashinyan commented that the missiles “did not explode or exploded 10 percent.” While it is not easy to check the veracity of this statement, it may be assumed that any information must have been provided to Pashinyan by military experts. Pashinyan’s comment triggered a chain of events that led to the present turmoil in the country’s domestic policy.

As the subject matter was the efficiency of Russian-manufactured defense equipment, Russian members of parliament and military experts joined the choir to challenge Pashinyan’s statement. Either upon their provocation or by his own initiative, Lt. Gen. Tiran Khachatryan, the first deputy chief of general staff of the Armenian armed forces, reacted with a chuckle, implying that the prime minister’s comment was unrealistic. Upon this offending gesture, Pashinyan dismissed the general from his post.

While the tension was rising in Yerevan, Pashinyan and Russian President Vladimir Putin had several telephone conversations. Russia expected a concrete explanation on the question of the performance of the Russian manufactured missiles.

Last Monday, Pashinyan’s press secretary said that “an analysis of available facts and data has led the Armenian prime minister to conclude that he did not receive correct reports about this matter.” She added that Pashinyan and Putin discussed the issue in a telephone call on Feb. 25.

Pashinyan reconfirmed that he was misled by the military and expressed his indirect apology to Putin, which the latter accepted with a statement from Kremlin Spokesman Dmitry Peskov: “It is very important that the truth about this issue has been restored.”

The reaction of Armenia’s opposition parties has not yet subsided. The high rating of 70 percent that Pashinyan received in 2018 might now have been diminished, but he still remains defiant. It is difficult to foretell how the row between the military and civilian authorities in Armenia will unfold.

As for Russia-Armenia relations, it may be assumed that each move that involves Russia in Armenia’s domestic affairs is likely to further tighten the former’s grip on the country. Now, it is a matter of how tight this grip will get or how much ammunition is left in Pashinyan’s hand to resist Moscow’s pressure.

• Yasar Yakis is a former foreign minister of Turkey and a founding member of the ruling AK Party. Twitter: @yakis_yasar

President Sarkissian meets Vahram Baghdasaryan from Republican Party

Public Radio of Armenia
March 7 2021

President Armen Sarkissian met with Vahram Baghdasaryan, a member of the Executive Body of the Republican Party of Armenia, which is part of the Homeland Salvation Movement. The meeting took place at the invitation of the President of the Republic.

The interlocutors exchanged views on ways to resolve the situation in the country and reduce tensions caused by recent events.

Azerbaijan and Turkey must be held accountable: Armenia’s Justice Minister presents war crimes against Artsakh

Public Radio of Armenia
March 7 2021  

Armenia’s Minister of Justice Rustam Badasyan is participating in the 14th UN Congress on Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice (UNODC) in Kyoto, Japan from March 5 to 11, 2021.

In his speech on March 7, Minister Badasyan thanked Japan for organizing the event UNODC Secretariat, noting that this UN platform is a good opportunity for governments to discuss crime prevention, criminal justice issues, as well as the necessary mechanisms and tools.

According to the Minister, since the Velvet Revolution of 2018, Armenia has embarked on an ambitious reform agenda with new determination, made significant progress in promoting a culture of legality, preventing crime and improving the legal framework for criminal justice.

Referring to the process of judicial reform, Rustam Badasyan stressed that the primary goal is to ensure the independence of the judiciary and strengthen public confidence in the system through the introduction of balanced mechanisms for checking the conduct of judges and other tools.

Minister Badasyan touched upon the issues of hate speech, noting that this issue is urgent for Armenia, as the Armenian people have been victims of discrimination, persecution, hate crimes and genocide throughout history.

“In this context, the Armenian delegation has initiated the inclusion of a separate paragraph on hate crime in the Kyoto Declaration,” said Rustam Badasyan, emphasizing that hate crimes based on identity are the first step that can lead to serious crimes against humanity, including war crimes. crimes և ethnic cleansing.

“I think that impunity for past crimes, their justification and denial pave the way for a resurgence of violence and new atrocities,” he said, citing the example of the Turkish-Azerbaijani aggression in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict zone in September 2020,  the involvement of mercenaries from Libya and Syria in the fight against Nagorno-Karabakh, emphasizing that the causes of the first war in Nagorno-Karabakh in the early 1990s were due to hatred for Armenians, discrimination, and denial of fundamental human rights.

“Azerbaijan’s anti-Armenian policy, which has been promoted for decades, has found its most inhuman _expression_ during the recent aggression against the people of Artsakh, which was accompanied by crimes against humanity. One of the most notable examples of such crimes is the use of cluster munitions against civilians, targeting, destroying Armenian cultural heritage, and using banned phosphorous weapons, causing enormous damage to both humanity and the environment,” Rustam Badasyan said, citing as another evidence Azerbaijan’s attempts to grossly violate the UN Convention on the Treatment of Prisoners of War by refusing to return Armenian prisoners of war to other prisoners, including women.

“The recruitment of foreign terrorists by Turkey, their subsequent deployment in the ranks of the Azerbaijani Armed Forces for hostilities against Artsakh, is another serious crime committed by Azerbaijan and Turkey in gross violation of all international norms. Numerous pieces of evidence from relevant sources show that Turkey and Azerbaijan supports and contributes to the spread of the terrorist threat in our region. Therefore, we believe that the international community should join efforts to counter this threat, to bring to justice the perpetrators of this crime,” said Rustam Badasyan.

The Minister once again thanked the organizers for the warm reception and wished all the participants an effective discussion.

https://en.armradio.am/2021/03/07/azerbaijan-and-turkey-must-be-held-accountable-armenias-justice-minister-presents-war-crimes-against-artsakh-at-tokyo-meeting/

Reports on tension on Armenian-Azerbaijani border “blatant misinformation” – MoD

Public Radio of Armenia
March 7 2021    

The Ministry of Defense has refuted the reports on tension on Armenian-Azerbaijani border.

According to the Ministry, various social networks and media outlets report tension on the border, shootings, and large gatherings of the enemy forces.

In particular, the reports claim that “there are accumulations of Turkish-Azerbaijani heavy equipment on the front lines of Ijevan and Shamshadin, an alarm has been declared in the 3rd Army Corps of Tavush, etc.”

“The mentioned information does not correspond to reality,” the Defense Ministry said, strongly urging to refrain from spreading “blatant misinformation.”