Turkish press: MHP to build school in Azerbaijan’s liberated Shusha

Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) Chairperson Devlet Bahçeli during his party’s parliamentary group meeting in Ankara shows the plans of the school to be built in Azerbaijan’s key city Shusha, Jan. 26, 2021. (AA Photo)

Adelegation from the Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) will visit Azerbaijan Friday to determine a location to build a school in Azerbaijan’s key city of Shusha that was liberated during the clashes between Baku and Yerevan over the Nagorno-Karabakh region in November.

According to a statement by the MHP, Vice-Chairperson Mevlüt Karakaya, Ahmet Yiğit Yıldırım, chairperson of the Gray Wolves, a pan-Turkist organization which was established by MHP founder Alparslan Türkeş in late 1960, and former Isparta mayor and architect Yusuf Ziya Günaydın will first stop in the capital Baku to hold meetings for the project before heading to Shusha.

MHP Chairperson Devlet Bahçeli had announced the intent to build the school on Jan. 16 with a post on social media saying that the party would like to establish a school with nine classrooms if President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan allows.

Bahçeli had stated that the school could be named after Uzeyir Hajibeyov, the composer of the Azerbaijani national anthem who was born in Shusha.

The Azerbaijani armed forces liberated Shusha in November after 28 years of Armenian occupation. Shusha, known as the pearl of Nagorno-Karabakh, was occupied by Armenia on May 8, 1992.

The town has a significant military value since it is located on strategic heights about 10 kilometers (6 miles) south of the region’s capital over Khankendi (Stepanakert) and on the road linking the city with Armenian territory. Besides its strategic significance, the town is known as a symbol of Azerbaijani history and culture with many historic sites, the restoration of which has started. Many prominent Azerbaijani musicians and scholars were born in the city.

Azerbaijanis celebrated Shusha’s liberation with great enthusiasm.

Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev earlier this month declared Shusha the country’s cultural capital.

“I declare Shusha to be the capital of Azerbaijani culture. The city of Shusha deserves that. I think that it can be considered not only the cultural capital of Azerbaijan but also of the entire region,” Aliyev said during a videoconference with Culture Minister Anar Karimov.

Relations between the former Soviet republics of Armenia and Azerbaijan have been tense since 1991 when the Armenian military occupied Nagorno-Karabakh, internationally recognized as Azerbaijani territory, and seven adjacent regions.

New clashes erupted on Sept. 27, 2020, when Armenia launched attacks on civilians and Azerbaijani forces and violated humanitarian cease-fire agreements.

During the six-week-long conflict, Azerbaijan liberated several cities and nearly 300 settlements and villages, while at least 2,802 of its soldiers were killed. There are differing claims about the number of casualties on the Armenian side, which, sources and officials say, could be as high as 5,000.

The two countries signed a Russian-brokered agreement on Nov. 10, 2020, to end fighting and work toward a comprehensive resolution.

Turkish press: ANALYSIS – Re-thinking open-source intelligence in the information age and digital change

Dr. Can Kasapoglu   |28.01.2021

ISTANBUL

*The writer is the director of the Security & Defense Research Program at EDAM.

“It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness, it was the epoch of belief, it was the epoch of incredulity, it was the season of Light, it was the season of Darkness, it was the spring of hope, it was the winter of despair, we had everything before us, we had nothing before us …”

Charles Dickens’ abovementioned opening lines in his classic “A Tale of Two Cities” masterfully depicts the zeitgeist in the heart of Europe at the time, with London and Paris, avalanching en route to the coming French Revolution. Indeed, periods of great changes in the long-established informational, political, and economic status quo are tantamount to the best and worst of times. That is definitely the case for two reasons. The first is the change itself, which threatens the winners and gives hope to the losers of the current strategic environment. Second, it does so by not favoring one side over the other, but by altering the main parameters and even the rules of the power play. Natural selection, based on adaptability, favors new settings and new winners.

At present, the craft of intelligence faces both the best and the worst of times in the face of the information age. 

Enter the “Brave New World” of intelligence

With the digital age on the rise, the world of intelligence has been undergoing profound change. Technology and growing interconnectivity remain at the epicenter of this reshuffle. The game and its rules will never be the same again.

The first thing to grasp is the internet, social media, and similar platforms, and their roles in harvesting raw intel from battlegrounds.

At present, every single armed conflict has an ‘internet front’ and an information geopolitics dimension, – or the ‘infosphere’ – where the war continues to be fought by other means. This front is also an intelligence arena for gathering data, analyzing information, and manipulating the adversary.

Introduction of smartphones and social media to war zones marked the belle époque of open-source intelligence (OSINT) gathering for analysts. A few years ago, regular personnel and private military contractors connected to the Russian campaign in eastern Ukraine offered, unintentionally, many hints about their geo-locations and combat mission characteristics as well as the delivery of weapons to the proxies on the ground. Likewise, the Syrian Arab Army personnel’s social media posts have long helped us identify arms, units, and key commanders during the Assad forces’ campaigns. Such trends now pertain to nearly all conflicts in every corner of the world.

Is it top secret anymore?

The devil is in the details. This _expression_ is probably the most accurate representation of modern open-source intelligence efforts. A sniper rifle abandoned in a clash site, or a security detail accompanying one of the Russian-backed generals of the Baath regime in Syria, could speak volumes about war-monitoring. What I am talking about here is not hypothetical or futuristic. It is happening right now, as you read this article.

The key question is, can militaries and security agencies swim against the current? Well, sure they are trying. In recent years, for example, the Russian Federation’s armed forces have adopted new regulations prohibiting selfies, the use of social media, and the upload of visual material to the internet. But there is a fundamental problem they have to face.

While military forces around the world are struggling to keep their secrets — while fighting actual wars in the meantime — they have a tough uphill battle ahead of them. Selfie bans can work for elite units and their highly-trained and well-disciplined elements. Yet, hybrid warfare incorporates a large number of proxies, private military contractors, and paramilitaries. Dictating a digital discipline on these formations would not be easy. In addition, dictating the same rules to conscript formations would be equally daunting. Second, a ban on selfies for only one of the belligerents would not be enough. Unless, say, the Ukrainian anti-terror operations follow suit, the Russian covert campaign in eastern Ukraine can still be exposed.

When assessed cumulatively in clusters, social media and communications materials could offer a great deal of insight for open-source intelligence analysts. In EDAM’s recent work on the Karabakh War, for example, my colleague Barış Kırdemir examined the Armenian information operations activity in cross-platform settings by working across several sources, such as Twitter and Telegram. With large data sets, the report was able to map out the Armenian side’s entire information campaign strategy and techniques.

At this point, the trends in drone proliferation and their implications for social media must also be carefully watched. As observed during the Karabakh War, as well as Turkey’s Syrian expeditions to tackle PKK and Daesh terrorism, footage obtained from drones often dominated social media uploads.

Another revolutionary change in OSINT remains in imagery intelligence through commercial satellites. Today, think tanks, private intelligence firms and even journalism benefit from satellite imagery when assessing high-value geopolitical issues such as Iran-harvested militancy close to the Golan Heights or North Korean missile sites.

A new ocean to sail or sink in

To understand the nature of the emerging power play, one needs to have a quick look at its drivers and primary players. Contemporary open-source intelligence trends are driven not by governments but private intelligence companies, think tanks, and research institutions. Well, that means two things.

First of all, we are to face not only new waves in the ocean of information gathering and analysis but also new surfers. When defining a nation’s intelligence community or strategic community, one must now count non-governmental parts of it too. And, any nation that lags behind along this path will have to fight, sooner or later, with bows and arrows against gunpowder. Furthermore, a new breed of players brings new interactions to the game. Some nations’ intelligence and foreign and security policy offices have already started outsourcing some of their research activities to emerging OSINT providers and analysts.

Secondly, and essentially, we have new waves and even new rules of nature in the ocean. Think for a second; a few decades ago, imagery intelligence about a possible Iranian missile site in Syria, the Russian surface-to-air missile (SAM) configuration in the vicinity of NATO forces, details of a ballistic missile, or the number and condition a nation’s main battle tank arsenal were all intelligence assets of high-secrecy. Are they now? Well, give it a try yourself through some commercial satellite imagery firm’s services, a military database that you can buy for a few hundred euros or dollars, or a customized think tank work on Russian air defenses’ doctrinal order of battle.

As a result, the nature of secrecy is subject to change. In his 2019 Foreign Policy article, Edward Lucas argued that with the digital age rising, spycraft has become “less esoteric” as intelligence operations have become an integral part of business, finance, and even sports. Lucas strikingly adds that “over-classification and excessive secrecy do not protect countries from their adversaries. Such methods only protect bureaucrats from scrutiny.”

Of course, this does not mean that intelligence has become, or will become, all transparent. Critical functions such as professional human-intelligence (HUMINT) data, specific surveillance of terror cells, or the assets of a nation’s intelligence service operating or sleeping in a foreign country will continue to be subject to high-secrecy. The private intelligence world will not have its hands on these areas, unless we see a fundamental change in the existing world order based on nation-states. And for now, such a change is unlikely.

The frontiers where secrecy begins, however, along with the limits of keeping things secret have already started to change. The Syrian Arab Air Force cannot get away with its chemical strikes, nor could Russia when it comes to the presence of the Wagner private military contractors in NATO’s southern flank or when an airliner was downed over Ukraine by a Russian SAM. The new players of intelligence communities can detect, assess, and disseminate findings about these activities without government help.

The digital age is not the end of secrets. It is their mutation into a still unfolding setting. Open-source intelligence is now concerned with capabilities of adaptation to a new strategic environment and its infosphere.

*Opinions expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Anadolu Agency.

TURKISH press: Turkey, Azerbaijan have zero Nazi monuments: Report

Beyza Binnur Dönmez   |28.01.2021

ANKARA 

Turkey and Azerbaijan have zero monuments of Holocaust perpetrators but many countries, including the US, still erect statues, according to an American Jewish website.

The Forward’s article was written one day before Germany marked Holocaust Remembrance Day and sought the same sensitivity shown to racist and colonist statues in 2020.

Monuments symbolizing racism and colonialism began to be questioned and toppled across the US in the wake of the killing of George Floyd, an unarmed Black man in police custody last May.

The news site listed 320 monuments and street names in 16 countries that honor those who abetted or took part in the murder of Jews and others during the Holocaust.

They include Armenia, Australia, Belgium, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Canada, Croatia, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, Romania, Serbia, Slovakia, Ukraine and the US.

The US has one plaque of Pierre Laval, pro-Nazi French prime minister, Nazi collaborator Philippe Petain on Broadway Canyon of Heroes in New York and 12 monuments of Nazi-related individuals across the country.

It also has 11 streets named after Petain: Hartselle, Alabama; Prichard, Alabama; Yuma, Colorado; Abbeville, Louisiana; Monroe, Louisiana; Goffstown, New Hampshire; Milltown, New Jersey; Defiance, Ohio; Ellwood City, Pennsylvania; Nemacolin, Pennsylvania; and Dallas, Texas, according to the report.

In the report, Armenia stood out as one of the most Nazi-friendly countries with dozens of monuments honoring those who had helped Adolf Hitler’s deadly cause.

Armenian nationalist Garegin Nzhdeh ((1886–1955), the report said, placed the Armenian Legion at the disposal of the Nazis, serving the Third Reich in the Caucasus, Crimea, and France. A giant monument in his memory was erected in Armenian capital Yerevan in 2016, making international headlines.

Jan. 27 is designated by the UN as Holocaust Remembrance Day and Germany remembered victims with a ceremony in parliament attended by representatives of the Jewish community and political leaders.

Turkish press: Turkey remembers diplomat martyred in US

Ahmet Gençtürk   |29.01.2021

ANKARA

Turkey on Thursday remembered its martyred diplomat Kemal Arikan. 

Recalling that Arikan, Turkey’s consul general in the US city of Los Angeles, was martyred by Armenian terrorists affiliated with the JCAG terror group, Serdar Kilic, Turkey’s ambassador to the US, noted that he will be remembered with respect as a distinguished diplomat.

Arikan was shot to death 14 times by Hampig Sassounian and Krikor Saliba. Saliba escaped justice, but Sassounian was arrested and sentenced to life in prison in 1984.

Since the 1970s, Armenian terror groups martyred 31 Turkish diplomats and their family members, according to data compiled by Anadolu Agency.

The vast majority of the attacks were conducted by the Armenian Secret Army for the Liberation of Armenia (ASALA) and JCAG.

The assassinations took place in the US, Austria, France, Italy, Spain, Lebanon, Greece, Switzerland, the Netherlands, Canada, Portugal, Iran and the UK.

Armenpress: Armenian Armed Forces celebrate 29th anniversary of foundation

Armenian Armed Forces celebrate 29th anniversary of foundation

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 09:00,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 28, ARMENPRESS. The Republic of Armenia and Armenians around the world celebrate the 29th anniversary of foundation of the Armenian Armed Forces on January 28.

The formation of the Armenian Armed Forces coincides with 1992-1994, when the newly independent Republic of Armenia, along with the Nagorno Karabakh Republic, being in undeclared but de facto war with Azerbaijan, simultaneously embarked on the creation of a national army. The Declaration of Independence of 1990, however, played a decisive role in the creation of the Armenian Army.

On January 28, 1992, the Government adopted the historic decision titled “On the Defense Ministry of Armenia”, heralding the formation of the Armenian Armed Forces. In May of 1992, the Defense Ministry carried out the first drafting.

The establishment of the Armenian Armed Forces passed through several stages. The first stage lasted from February 1988 to May 1992. In this period, ensuring the safety and security of the populations of Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh was more than pressing, as the Karabakh Movement became active and the Armenian-Azerbaijani relations escalated.

The second stage, June 1992 – May 1994, when the Republic of Armenia and the Republic of Nagorno Karabakh were in the crosshairs of the Azerbaijani aggression.

The third stage began since June 1994 and continues to present day. During this period, significant works were carried out in the direction of improving the combat readiness of the troops, strengthening discipline, training of officers, Army-public relations etc.

In September of 1990, the special regiment of Yerevan was formed, while five companies were established in Ararat, Goris, Vardenis, Ijevan and Meghri. In 1991, the Government approved the formation of the State Committee of Defense.

Men aged 18-27 are subject to compulsory military service in Armenia for a two year period. Drafting is carried out twice a year – in winters and summers. In 2017 the Defense Ministry introduced “I am”, “I have honor” and “Outlook” service options.

Since its establishment, the Armenian Armed Forces have cooperated and continue cooperating with international organizations.

On May 15, 1992, Armenia became a member of the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO).

Military cooperation with Russia has a great role in the international cooperation field of the Armenian Armed Forces. Russia is Armenia’s strategic partner and the defense cooperation between the states is on a high level.

Cooperation with NATO is also expanding year by year.

The Armenian Armed Forces greatly focus on training and educating highly skilled personnel. With this purpose, the Military aviation college was formed, which later transformed into the Military-Aviation institute, the Defense Ministry’s Command College was established – currently the Vazgen Sargsyan Military Institute, and the military-medical faculty of the Yerevan State Medical University.

Graduates of the abovementioned institutions have continued trainings in foreign educational facilities. Namely, more than 1500 officers and cadets have trained and continue training in Russia and Greece.

Armenian peacekeepers have a significant role in the history of the Armenian Armed Forces. Due to the peacekeepers, various countries around the world saw and appreciated the highly skilled and professional Armenian soldiers.

On February 12, 2004, Armenia deployed a platoon-sized unit (three squads) to Kosovo to join the NATO peacekeeping mission as part of the Greek peacekeeping contingent.

In 2005, Armenia deployed peacekeeping forces consisting of sappers, engineers and doctors to Iraq. The mission was on duty until 2009.

Armenian servicemen are carrying out peacekeeping missions also in Afghanistan since 2010.

Since November 26, 2014, Armenian peacekeepers are deployed in Lebanon, within the UNIFIL.

In 2015, one peacekeeper was dispatched to Mali on a monitoring-peacekeeping mission.

The Armenian Army has been and will remain the guarantor of security and borders of Armenia.

“We are indebted to our heroic martyrs” – Armenian President addresses message on Army Day

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 10:15,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 28, ARMENPRESS. President of Armenia Armen Sarkissian has addressed a message on the occasion of the 29th anniversary of the foundation of the Armenian Armed Forces, the Presidential Office told Armenpress.

The message says:

“Dear compatriots,

This year, the Army Day is of particular importance. We are marking it in a state of emergency for our country and nation: a difficult post-war situation, various crises and heaviest losses.

Once again, I bow my head to the ever-living memory of all our martyrs who died defending our Homeland and freedom.

I wish recovery to all our injured heroes.

I extend my support to all the families, waiting day and night for their captive or missing sons and relatives.

Today, more than ever, we must use our minds and deeds first of all to strengthen and support our army.

We need programmatic-conceptual approaches and radical steps from reorganization to re-equipment, taking into account the advancement of modern military art and technologies, also geopolitical tendencies.

However, even the most modern weapons cannot bring forth the wished result

if we have no courage to admit the mistakes made and be ready for fundamental changes,

if we do not recover the honour of the officers and the respect towards military service,

if we do not have a program and the will to carry it out,

if we do not stop looking for enemies among us, having left the external ones aside,

if we are not united and consolidated as a state and society, as one nation in Armenia, Artsakh and the Diaspora.

We are indebted to our heroic martyrs.

Our army, like our state and the entire nation, is going through trials. But we have more than once been able to turn the ordeal into a victory. And that, first of all, owing to our army.

Long live the Armenian army!

Glory to our heroes!”

Catholicos of All Armenians addresses message on Army Day

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 10:24,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 28, ARMENPRESS. His Holiness Garegin II, Supreme Patriarch and Catholicos of All Armenians, has addressed a message on the occasion of the 29th anniversary of the foundation of the Armenian Armed Forces, the Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin told Armenpress.

The message runs as follows:

“From the Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin, We extend Our Blessings to the officers and soldiers of our Armed Forces, and all our people, on the occasion of Armed Forces Day.

Over the centuries, the Armenian soldier has shown great courage and devotion in all our struggles, heroically defending the Homeland and its native people. In the wars for the defense of Artsakh; the brave commanders and soldiers of the Armenian Army; including the intrepid sons of the national minorities; fought heroically for the Homeland with the same courageous spirit, and many of them gave their lives for their love towards the Homeland and nation.

This year we celebrate the Armed Forces Day with the pain of the tragic consequences of the war in our souls. Ahead of the new challenges; we believe, that the Armenian nation around the world must forge new successes and achievements with the spirit of our past victories, restore the prosperous and productive life in Artsakh and Armenia; for the virtuous memory of our sons who died in honour of the Fatherland.

With prayers to Almighty God We ask to protect our beloved sons – the defenders of the Fatherland under His care; and grant them secure service. May the Heavenly Lord shed His Blessings and mercy to all our people in the Homeland and in the Diaspora; today and always. Amen”.

Armenian PM visits Yerablur Military Pantheon on Army Day

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 10:35,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 28, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan visited on January 28 the Yerablur Military Pantheon on the occasion of the Army Day to pay tribute to the memory of soldiers fallen for the independence of the Homeland, the PM’s Office told Armenpress.

The PM was accompanied by Speaker of Parliament Ararat Mirzoyan and members of the Security Council.

Pashinyan laid flowers at the tombs of the Artsakh War heroes, Commanders Vazgen Sargsyan and Andranik Ozanyan and a wreath at the memorial dedicated to the fallen war volunteers.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

 

 

3rd President of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan addresses message on Army Day

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 10:49,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 28, ARMENPRESS. The Army has been and remains the axis of Armenia’s independent statehood, the guarantor of the security of the Artsakh people, Third President of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan said in a message addressed on the Army Day.

The message reads:

“Armenian army, our beloved offspring, your birthday is one of our people’s most cherished holidays, which we have always celebrated with joy.

Today, however, the mood is different: we are all saddened, grieving for the loss of a part of our Homeland, for our martyrs, concerned for the future of our state and nation. However, a parent should never deny his child under any circumstances, especially in time of hardship.

Our people have raised their children at the cost of deprivation, subjected to unspeakable ordeals, and raised a patriotic child.

Therefore, today I say without hesitation, happy birthday, Armenian Army. On behalf of my comrades-in-arms standing at the roots of the formation and development of the Armenian Army, I tell you, you have not lost the war, I know you well. You have been betrayed, struck from behind, severely injured, while before that in recent years everything was done to discredit or weaken you, but you did your duty selflessly. Today thousands of parents tell episodes of your exploits without even imagining who or where misled and trapped you.

The enemy, who has always been afraid of you, knows very well what insidious means he used to achieve his goal. You are as much powerful, and let no one boast that they have defeated you. You will still show the strength of your arm, remind the enemy of his not-so-distant shameful past. You have been the axis of our independent statehood, the guarantor of the security of our people, our sisters and brothers in Artsakh.

Learning from the past, straighten your back, squeeze the pain under your teeth, look ahead. No matter how difficult and mined is our path, inside or outside, we will cross it together, relying on each other, defying challenges.

Our big family, our Homeland, the land and the water soaked in the blood of our heroes, needs your protection today more than ever.

Eternal glory to you, glory to all our heroes, alive or martyred, who shaped your glorious path!”

Armenia records major progress in Corruption Perceptions Index 2020

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 11:03,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 28, ARMENPRESS. Armenia has recorded a major progress in the Corruption Perceptions Index 2020, Minister of Justice Rustam Badasyan said on social media.

“Dear compatriots,

The results of the Transparency International’s Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI) 2020 have been released.

Armenia continues recording a major progress, improving its positions by 7 points this year.

With 49 score, Armenia is ranked the 60th in the CPI 2020, whereas in 2019 and 2018 it was ranked 77th and 105th respectively.

Transparency International says “with a score of 49, Armenia is a significant improver on the CPI, rising 15 points since 2012. Armenia has taken a gradual approach to reform, resulting in steady and positive improvements in anti-corruption”.

At the same time, Transparency International notes that the problems existing in the judiciary remain as a challenge in Armenia’s anti-corruption efforts.

I would like to remind that the CPI results are important because it assesses the citizens’ perception over the actions taken by the government.

I am confident that the consistent and real anti-corruption reforms, the judicial reforms will contribute also to the strengthening of our Armed Forces.

Congratulations on the Armenian Army Day…

Glory and honor to the defenders of the Homeland…”, the minister said.

 

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan