Russian, Armenian defense ministers discuss situation in Nagorno-Karabakh

TASS, Russia
Feb 27 2021
During the conversation, the two sides discussed issues of bilateral cooperation

MOSCOW, February 27. /TASS/. Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu and his Armenian counterpart Vagharshak Harutyunyan have discussed over the phone the situation in Nagorno-Karabakh, the Russian Defense Ministry said on Saturday.

“During the conversation, the two sides discussed issues of bilateral cooperation, the current situation in the region and the areas where Russian peacekeepers perform tasks in Nagorno-Karabakh as well as other issues of mutual interest,” the ministry said.

Prior to that, the two ministers spoke over the phone on February 25. According to the Armenian Defense Ministry, at that time Shoigu and Harutyunyan discussed the domestic political situation in Armenia.

Armenian president refuses to sign order dismissing chief of General Staff

TASS, Russia
Feb 27 2021
Sarkissian added that he was not supporting either of the political forces, but the decree dismissing the chief of the General Staff, according to lawyers, was unconstitutional
– World – TASS

YEREVAN, February 27. /TASS/. Armenian President Armen Sarkissian decided on Saturday not to put his signature under Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan’s order to dismiss Chief of the General Staff Onik Gasparyan, who alongside the other military top brass, had demanded the prime minister’s resignation, the presidential press service said.

“Within his presidential powers, the president has sent back the draft order with objections. The president pursues the only goal of protecting the country from threats to its constitutional order and security, of ensuring the country’s stability and the normal functioning of its Armed Forces,” the statement says.

Sarkissian added that he was not supporting either of the political forces, but the decree dismissing the chief of the General Staff, according to lawyers, was unconstitutional.

“There is no doubt that the Armed Forces should maintain political neutrality. It is evident that due to the war, the Armed Forces’ personnel needs our support more than ever. Our top priority is to address military personnel’s problems. In no way must they be neglected,” he added.

According to the president, the country is experiencing an unprecedented situation, which requires systemic and comprehensive solutions and cannot be solved with frequent reshuffles.

After the president had sent back the prime minister’s proposal to dismiss the chief of the General Staff, Pashinyan has five days to submit it again. After that, the president should either sign the decree or to appeal it at the Constitutional Court within three days.

On February 25, mass rallies of Pashinyan’s supporters and critics began in Armenia after the General Staff of the Armed Forces had called for the resignation of prime minister and his cabinet. The statement was signed by Chief of the General Staff Onik Gasparyan, his deputies and other top brass. Pashinyan slammed the move as a military coup attempt and announced his decision to dismiss the chief of the General Staff. Armenian President Armen Sarkissian, who, under the Constitution, is in charge of appointing and dismissing the chiefs of the General Staff at the prime minister’s initiative, has not signed that order yet.

Turkey’s president says coup attempt in Armenia unacceptable

The Independent, Uganda
Feb 27 2021

Istanbul, Turkey | THE INDEPENDENT |  Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan described on Friday the attempted military takeover in Armenia as “unacceptable,” noting that Turkey is against all types of coups.

“We are against all kinds of coups. It is not possible for us to accept coups,” Erdogan said after Friday prayers in Istanbul.

“If there will be a change in administration, the Armenian people will do that. It should be left to the will of the Armenian people,” he added.

On Thursday, the Armenian military called for the resignation of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and his cabinet.

Armenia’s political tensions still high after PM’s coup talk

The Star, Toronto, Canada
Feb 27 2021

YEREVAN, Armenia – Political tensions in Armenia remained high Friday, a day after the prime minister accused top military officers who demanded his resignation of an attempted coup.

Nikol Pashinyan has faced opposition calls to step down over a Nov. 10 peace deal that ended six weeks of fierce fighting with Azerbaijan over the Nagorno-Karabakh region. The peace agreement saw Azerbaijan reclaim control over large parts of Nagorno-Karabakh and surrounding areas that had been held by Armenian forces for more than a quarter-century.

Earlier this week, Pashinyan dismissed the first deputy chief of the military’s General Staff that includes the armed forces’ top officers. In response, the General Staff called Thursday for Pashinyan’s resignation, but he doubled down and ordered that the chief of the General Staff be dismissed.

Pashinyan’s spat with the top military officers encouraged the opposition supporters. Over 20,000 rallied in the Armenian capital, demanding the prime minister’s resignation, while Pashinyan led his own supporters at a rival rally.

Some opposition demonstrators put up tents outside the government headquarters and barricaded the main avenue to press their demand for Pashinyan’s resignation.

The top military officers didn’t make any further moves Friday in the wake of their demand for Pashinyan to step down.

Pashinyan’s order on Thursday to dismiss the chief of the General Staff, Col.-Gen. Onik Gasparyan, is subject to approval by the nation’s largely ceremonial president, Armen Sarkissian, who has three days to decide.

Sarkissian, who has had previous frictions with Pashinyan and earlier called on him to step down, met Friday with the General Staff chief and opposition leaders but didn’t make any public statements.

Armenian president refuses to sign PM’s order dismissing army chief

WION News, India
Feb 27 2021
WION Web Team
Armenian president refuses to sign PM’s order dismissing army chief, World News | wionews.com

Armenia’s President Armen Sarkisian has refused to sign the prime minister’s order dismissing the chief of the military’s general staff, deepening the country’s political crisis.

“The president of the republic, within the framework of his constitutional powers, returned the draft decree with objections,” the presidency said in a statement on Saturday, adding that the crisis “cannot be resolved through frequent personnel changes”.

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan accused the military of a coup attempt on Thursday and tried to sack the chief of staff, after the army issued a written statement calling for him to resign.

On Friday, hundreds of demonstrators rallied in the capital Yerevan to demand his downfall, and a leading opposition figure called on the army to rebel against him. Two former presidents have already said he must step down. He has faced calls to quit since November from countrymen who blame him for a disastrous six-week war that saw ethnic Armenian forces lose swathes of territory in neighbouring Azerbaijan they had held for decades.

Pashinyan told his supporters on Thursday he was firing Onik Gasparyan, the chief of the army’s general staff. But by Friday the dismissal had not yet been approved by the president, a step needed for it to enter force.

President Armen Sarkissian held a meeting with Gasparyan. Vazgen Manukyan, a politician who has been touted by the opposition as a possible interim prime minister to replace Pashinyan, told hundreds of supporters at a rally that the army would never allow Gasparyan to be sacked.

Pashinyan, a former journalist and lawmaker, came to power in a peaceful popular uprising in May 2018 known as Armenia’s velvet revolution. But the loss of territory in and around the enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh last year was a bitter blow for Armenians, who had won control of the area in the 1990s in a war which killed at least 30,000 people.

The conflict was brought to a halt by a ceasefire deal brokered by Russia. Moscow, which has deployed peacekeepers to enforce the ceasefire, said on Friday it was vital the agreements be fully implemented despite Armenia’s crisis.

(with inputs from agencies)


Armenian President rejects prime minister motion to dismiss army chief

CGTN, China
Feb 27 2021

– CGTN

Armenian President Armen Sarkissian on Saturday refused to approve Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan’s motion on dismissing the chief of the military’s general staff.

“Summing up the viewpoints of lawyers and experts, it can be concluded that the draft decree is explicitly contradicting the constitution,” a statement of the president’s office said.

“The created situation is unprecedented and requires systemic and comprehensive solutions and cannot be resolved through frequent cadre changes without taking into account the existing state in the country,” Sarkissian’s office said, stressing that the president has returned the draft decree with objections.

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan on Thursday sacked the country’s Chief of the General Staff Onik Gasparyan, accusing him of attempting a military coup.

Earlier on Thursday, Gasparyan, his deputies and dozens of top military commanders had signed a statement, demanding Pashinyan and his cabinet resign, the local Armenpress reported.

In the statement, the army said Pashinyan and the government are “no longer able to make reasonable decisions,” adding that the government’s “ineffective” administration and “serious mistakes in foreign policy” have led the country to the verge of destruction.

Pashinyan responded via Facebook that he considers the statement as an attempt at a military coup.

According to Armenian law, Gasparyan will officially be considered dismissed only after the president’s approval.

Source(s): Xinhua News Agency 

Armenian President says he won’t sack Army chief

The Hindu, India
Feb 27 2021


AFP

FEBRUARY 27, 2021 22:00 IST

UPDATED: FEBRUARY 27, 2021 22:01 IST

Armenian President Armen Sarkisian said on Saturday he had refused to sign the Prime Minister’s order to dismiss the Army’s Chief of Staff, deepening a national political crisis.

The ex-Soviet nation has faced turmoil since Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan signed a Moscow-brokered peace accord in November, sealing a humiliating defeat to Azerbaijan after six weeks of fighting over the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region.

Divisions widened on Thursday when Mr. Pashinyan defied a call by the military to resign, accused the Army of an attempted coup, and ordered the Chief of the General Staff Onik Gasparyan to be fired.

On Saturday, Armenian President Sarkisian said that he would not back the sacking. “The president of the republic, within the framework of his constitutional powers, returned the draft decree with objections,” the presidency said. It added that the political crisis “cannot be resolved through frequent personnel changes”.


Thousands march in Armenia to demand PM’s resignation

Yahoo! News
Feb 26 2021
, 11:58 PM

Several thousand opposition supporters march through the capital of Armenia to demand Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan’s resignation over his handling of last year’s war with Azerbaijan which many see as a national humiliation.

[INDISTINCT SPEECH]

RAFFI ABRAHAMYAN: [SPEAKING ARMENIAN]

[SPEAKING ARMENIAN]

THERESA HOVANNISYAN: [SPEAKING ARMENIAN]

[SPEAKING ARMENIAN]

Video at

Armenia’s Military Leadership, Civilian Opposition Move to Oust Pashinian’s Government (Part Two)

Jamestown Foundation
Feb 26 2021

The power struggle in Armenia (see Part One in EDM, February 25) has turned into a standoff confined to Yerevan’s central square. It does not seem to be reverberating beyond downtown Yerevan, let alone in the provinces.

The opposition’s moves to oust the government lack the features of a coup d’état (a possibility that the United States’ Department of State said it took under consideration following Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s allegations—Armenpress, February 25). While the military leadership firmly demands the government’s resignation (see EDM, January 25), the Army has not come out from its barracks. The top brass does not present any kind of alternative vision for the country, shows no ambitions to take over power, and does not endorse any political group to take over.

The opposition’s civilian side pins its hopes on the military to pressure Pashinian into resigning because opposition parties are still failing to mobilize mass support after three months of anemic, scattered protests. The latest public opinion research suggests that the existing opposition parties, whether old and familiar or new and untested, lack a serious electoral base (see below).

Pashinian’s erstwhile mass support is also hardly to be seen in the current power struggle. His efforts notwithstanding, only a few thousand attended Pashinian‘s two events—a march and a rally—in downtown Yerevan on February 25; whereupon he had to announce a stop to mass events. “No more velveting,” he proclaimed (News.am, February 25), alluding to his 2018 “velvet revolution” upheaval. His government’s performance dashed the irrational hopes he had stirred up, but he might still cling to power through the parliamentary majority he commands until 2022.

Overall, this is a power struggle between two worn-out camps with declining popular support. The former governing parties and Pashinian‘s government equally failed to deliver coherent strategies for developing the country. Pashinian and his team then marched into the 44-day Second Karabakh War against Azerbaijan (see EDM, November 25, 2020), pulling its military along to disaster. The Army had enjoyed hallowed status in Armenia under the previous regime (1998–2018), but little appears to remain of that status now.

Both political camps are now seeking support from state institutions amid the standoff. The Armed Forces have spoken up (see above), while the Police and the State Security Service are rumored to tilt toward Paahinian’s government. These two institutions have, each, issued a few curt and sibylline public statements. Separately, a group of 30 senior police officers (five generals and 25 colonels) have signed a statement supporting the military’s demand for the government to resign (Arminfo, February 25, 26).

The old establishment’s cultural and academic institutions have supported the opposition all along and continue doing so. They feel politically marginalized by Pashinian’s anti-elitist demagoguery; and they were culturally compatible with the national-conservative brand of the old regime, some of whose representatives are now among the opposition’s leaders.

On February 26, President Armen Sarkissian took steps to mediate between the two camps. He has deflected Pashinian’s demand to co-sign for the dismissal of the Armed Forces’ chief of staff, General Onik Gasparian. Instead, Sarkissian visited Gasparian in the latter’s office at the Ministry of Defense, in effect complying with Gasparian’s condition that anyone wishing to meet with him should come to the defense ministry. The head of state has also received a delegation of the opposition’s Fatherland Salvation Movement at Sarkissian’s presidential office. The president intends to meet with Pashinian as well (Arminfo, News.am, February 26).

The 17-party Salvation Front has designated the former prime minister and defense minister, Vazgen Manukian, as its candidate for prime minister of a transitional government to replace Pashinian’s cabinet and organize pre-term parliamentary elections. Pashinian and his parliamentary majority would negotiate about holding pre-term elections or awaiting the quadrennial deadline in the autumn of 2022. Irrespective of the elections’ timing, the government insists on organizing the elections itself while the opposition wants them organized by a transitional government. The opposition parties have agreed among themselves that the transitional prime minister—putatively Manukian or anyone else—would refrain from running in the next parliamentary elections (Armenpress, February 26).

Gallup’s opinion poll, released on February 19, is the first credible poll to have been conducted in the aftermath of the Second Karabakh War. Conducted by telephone on February 15–17, through Gallup’s Armenian affiliate Mareketing Professional Group, the poll has measured the rating of parties and politicians on a scale of 1 to 5 points. Overall, it shows that the ratings are low-to-medium, without high ratings. According to these results, Pashinian’s rating is 2.8 points, President Sarkissian has 2.3 points, opposition tycoon’s Gagik Tsarukian achieves 2.2 points, and Manukian receives 1.6 points. The former heads of state, Robert Kocharian, Levon Ter-Petrosian and Serge Sarkissian, are shown at 2 points, 1.7 points and 1.7 points, respectively.

On the issue of which government should organize the parliamentary elections, 39 percent favor Pashinian’s government, while 44 percent favor a transitional government for that task. If parliamentary elections were held “next Sunday,” 33 percent would vote for the Pashinian-led My Step bloc, while two thirds of the vote would split between other parties. The old regime (Kocharian-Sarkisian) and Pashinian’s government are blamed almost equally—32 percent and 29 percent, respectively—for Armenia’s defeat in the recent war (Arminfo, February 19).

Armenia’s Military Leadership, Civilian Opposition Move to Oust Pashinian’s Government (Part One)

Jamestown Foundation
Feb 25 2021

A military-civilian putsch broke out in Yerevan today (February 25) against Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and his government, who are blamed for Armenia’s disastrous defeat by Azerbaijan in the 44-day Second Karabakh War (September 27–November 9, 2020), for complying with the armistice terms, and for general mismanagement of the country.

Armenia’s top military brass demanded Pashinian’s resignation in a collective statement on February 25, backed instantly by a wide array of political parties, some of which were holding pre-scheduled protests in downtown Yerevan on the same day. Civilian opposition parties had organized protest actions almost continuously in Yerevan and some provinces since November, but they were not gaining much traction until the military leadership made its move today.

The military’s deep-seated discontent, hitherto concealed from public view, rose to a boiling point over a seemingly trivial incident: Pashinian’s February 23 interview with a state media outlet, in which he offered yet another self-serving account of the war, lashed out again at his critics, and displayed ignorance of the military issues he attempted to address. His clueless comments about the Russian Iskander missiles in this interview (News.am, February 23) went viral and were ridiculed in Armenia and Russia.

The matter may have been laid to rest had Pashinian not moved to dismiss Lieutenant General Tiran Khachatrian, the first deputy chief of staff of Armenia’s Armed Forces, from his post on February 24. Khachatrian, a recipient of the National Hero of Armenia medal in the Karabakh war, was punished for an interview of his own (News.am, February 24), in which he laughed openly and repeatedly at Pashinian’s earlier remarks. Armenia’s head of state, Armen Sarkissian (convalescing after medical treatment abroad), granted Pashinian’s wish and co-signed for Khachatrian’s removal.

On February 25, 40 senior officers of the Ministry of Defense and the General Staff—among them 20 generals, including the commanders of five Army Corps, and 20 colonels of the General Staff—signed a public statement demanding the government’s resignation. The statement describes Pashinian as “ignoring the national interests, proceeding [instead] from personal sentiments and ambitions,” and the government as “incapable of taking adequate decisions for the Armenian people in this fateful crisis… The current authorities’ ineffective management and misconceived foreign policy have brought the country to disaster.” The Armed Forces’ chief of the General Staff, Colonel General Onik Gasparian, and his first deputy, Khachatrian, led the list of signatories (Arminfo, February 25).

Pashinian upped the ante with a statement terming the military leaders’ action as “an attempted coup d’état” and insinuating that they “rose against civilian authorities in order to avoid scrutiny into the details of the 44-day war.” Pashinian, moreover, ordered the chief of staff, General Gasparian (see above), dismissed; and he asked President Armen Sarkissian to co-sign the dismissal. Sarkissian, however, did not hasten to comply this time (Armenpress, February 25).

The prime minister promptly followed up with a televised appeal “to all” to immediately gather on Republic Square (Yerevan’s traditional venue for mass protests, including those led by Pashinian in the past) in order to thwart the “coup d’état.” Implicitly threatening to turn a crowd against the military high command, Pashinian warned the latter, “The military cannot be allowed to avoid accountability. We ourselves cannot fail to ask them certain questions in order to find out the truth about the war… Some Armenian generals do not like to answer society’s questions about certain events of this war. This does not mean that something must necessarily happen based on the answers, but answers must be given” (News.am, February 25). This final sentence seemed to contain an offer of leniency if the military desisted from the “coup.”

The defense minister, General (ret.) Vagarshak Harutiunian, appeared to remain silent through the day and evening. Two short, unsigned statements on the defense ministry’s behalf adopted an equidistant posture (Armenpress, February 25).

Pashinian’s party, My Step, holds a majority of almost two thirds in the current parliament (since 2018). The government’s resignation or ouster would probably trigger pre-term parliamentary elections, in which Pashinian’s party would be highly unlikely to match its 2018 performance.

Only two other parties are currently represented in the legislature, both opposing the government. These are Gagik Tsarukian’s Prosperous Armenia (an “oligarchic” party, associated with the old establishment) and Edmond Marukian’s Enlightened Armenia party (opposing both Pashinian and the old establishment, Marukian switched from pro-Western liberal to strident pro-Russia positions, as a political lesson of the lost war). These parties have joined a coalition of 17 small extra-parliamentary parties, including the old and still-influential Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutiun) in the anti-government protests on Republic Square. Former prime minister and defense minister Vazgen Manukian is the nominal leader of the 17-party alliance.

All these groups and personalities had been demanding the government’s resignation since November, along with all three former heads of state (Levon Ter-Petrosian, Robert Kocharian, Serge Sarkissian), both Catholicoses (of Etchmiadzin and of Cilicia), and an array of cultural institutions from the old establishment (see EDM, January 7). The military leadership’s entry into the fray should add the weight they seemed to lack thus far.