Armenia asks Russia for help after border clash with Azerbaijan

EuroNews
Nov 17 2021
By Reuters 17/11/2021 – 11:40

MOSCOW -Armenia on Tuesday asked Russia to help defend it against Azerbaijan after a border clash in which it said 15 of its soldiers had been killed, 12 captured, and two combat positions had been lost.

The fighting was the worst since a 44-day war last year fought between ethnic Armenian forces and the Azeri army over the Nagorno-Karabakh enclave which killed at least 6,500 people and ended in a decisive victory for Azerbaijan.

That conflict ended after Russia brokered a peace deal and deployed almost 2,000 peacekeepers to the region. Turkey took the side of Azerbaijan, which took back swathes of land it had lost in an earlier conflict.

In a series of statements carried by Armenian and Russian news agencies, the Armenian defence ministry said its troops had come under fire from Azeri artillery, small arms and armour.

It said 15 of its soldiers had been killed, 12 captured and that two combat positions near the border with Azerbaijan had been lost.

“Since Azerbaijan has attacked Armenia’s sovereign territory we are asking Russia to defend Armenia’s territorial integrity based on an existing 1987 (mutual defence) agreement between our countries,” the Interfax news agency quoted Armen Grigoryan, the secretary of Armenia’s Security Council, as saying.

Russia has a military base in Armenia as well as a peacekeeping force in Nagorno-Karabakh. There was no immediate response from Russia to the Armenian appeal.

The Azeri defence ministry said it had launched a military operation to respond to what it called large-scale “provocations” from the Armenian side and in a statement blamed Armenia’s military-political leadership.

It said Armenian forces had shelled Azeri army positions with artillery and mortar fire and that its own operation had been successful.

“The Azerbaijan Army has operational and tactical superiority,” it said in the same statement, saying it had targeted Armenian troops and hardware along the border.

“Armenian servicemen are leaving their positions in fear and panic. Military equipment belonging to the opposing side has been destroyed.”

Large-scale Azerbaijani offensive against Armenia marks worst fighting since war

Nob 17 2021

Around 25 Armenian soldiers are reported as dead or missing, with 13 captured. Baku said 7 Azerbaijani soldiers were killed in the fighting on November 16.



By Neil Hauer in Yerevan November 17, 2021

Azerbaijan and Armenia have agreed a ceasefire to end a large-scale Azerbaijani offensive against Armenian territory in the worst fighting between the two countries since the end of last year’s Karabakh war.

Armenia’s defence ministry announced that at 1pm local time on November 16, Azerbaijani forces launched a major assault on Armenian positions on the country’s eastern border. lost two military positions. Azerbaijan television subsequently showed Armenian prisoners being taunted by their Azerbaijani captors.

Baku reported that seven of its soldiers had died and 10 were wounded.

The fighting comes as Azerbaijan continues to push for a ‘Zangezur corridor’ that will provide it land access to the ethnic Azerbaijani Nakhchivan enclave inside Armenia. As part of its pressure, Azerbaijan has closed several Armenian roads that pass through its territory in recent weeks.

Russia had urged both sides to step back from confrontation.  Russian President Vladimir Putin and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan discussed the situation on the border by phone, the Kremlin said. Russian Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu also spoke by phone to the Armenian and Azeri defence ministers by phone, Interfax news agency said.

Armenia had asked Moscow to help defend it after the worst fighting since the 44-day war last year over the ethnic Armenian Nagorno-Karabakh enclave inside Azerbaijan that killed at least 6,500 people and in which Azerbaijan reconquered territory surrounding the enclave it had lost during the early 1990s.

Last year’s conflict ended after Russia, which has a military base in Armenia, brokered a peace deal and deployed almost 2,000 peacekeepers to the region. 

“In accordance with an agreement mediated by the Russian side, fire ceased on the eastern section of the Armenian-Azeri border, and the situation is relatively stable,” Armenia’s defence ministry said, Reuters reported.

The Azeri defence ministry said it had retaliated to large-scale “provocations” after Armenian forces shelled Azeri army positions.

Metsamor 2 to operate until 2026

Nov 17 2021

17 November 2021

A collaboration with Armenia has extended the service life of the country’s only nuclear power plant, Metsamor, to 2026, said Russia’s state nuclear company, Rosatom. “I am proud that we are participating in a project that helped make the Armenian nuclear power plant safer and more efficient,” said Rosatom head Alexey Likhachev, attending a ceremony at the plant.

The Metsamor nuclear power plant (Image: ANPP)

Likhachev said there had been “a huge amount of work on replacement and modernisation of equipment” and that now Metsamor 2 “meets the most modern international requirements.”

Also present at Metsamor was Gnel Sanosyan, Armenia’s Minister of Territorial Administration and Infrastructure. He stressed that Metsamor “plays a decisive role in ensuring energy security and independence in our country,” adding that “this large-scale project can be called without exaggeration one of the most important in Armenia.”

“We are not going to stop there,” said Sanosyan, “and set ourselves new goals to extend the life of the station after 2026 for 10 years and further develop the industry – the construction of a new nuclear power plant.”

Armenia has long been in discussions with Russia about replacing Metsamor, which comprises two Russian-built 376 MWe VVER reactors which started operating in 1976 and 1980, respectively. Both units were taken off line in 1988 due to safety concerns regarding seismic vulnerability. Unit 2 was restarted in 1995, and accounts for some 39% of total electricity generation in the country.

In October, Armenia’s Prime Minister Nikol Pashiyan said that negotiations were already underway towards a nuclear power plant to support a new copper smelter at Zangezur. This project is led by Roman Trotsenko, a businessman who has recently taken over the Zangezur Copper and Molybdenum Combine.

Researched and written by World Nuclear News

Azerbaijan ready to normalize relations with Armenia, sign peace treaty – UN envoy

TASS, Russia
Nov 17 2021
Azerbaijan is certain that there is no alternative to normalization of relations between the two countries, based on mutual recognition, Yasar Aliyev said

UNITED NATIONS, November 17. /TASS/. Baku believes that there is no alternative to normalization of relations with Yerevan, Permanent Representative of Azerbaijan to the UN Yasar Aliyev told the Security Council, stating Baku’s readiness to sign a peace treaty with Armenia.

“Azerbaijan states its readiness to normalize relations with Armenia, including by signing a peace treaty that would ensure a sustainable peace, development, progress,” the diplomat said, assessing the situation at the border as a result of Armenia’s “dangerous revanchist ideas.”

“Azerbaijan is certain that there is no alternative to normalization of relations between the two countries, based on mutual recognition, respect of each other’s sovereignty and territorial integrity within internationally recognized borders,” he said, adding that such normalization aims for reconciliation and peaceful coexistence of Azerbaijan and Armenia.

On Tuesday, intensive hostilities sparked in border districts of Armenia’s Syunik Province. Yerevan stated that the Azerbaijani Armed Forces commenced an advance deeper into the republic’s territory, threatening the highway connecting the capital with Armenia’s southern regions and Iran. Baku blamed Yerevan, accusing the Armenian Armed Forces of a provocation. According to the Ministry of Defense of Azerbaijan, Armenian servicemen attacked Azerbaijani outposts.

In regards to these events, Russian Defense Minister Sergey Shoigu had phone calls with his Armenian and Azerbaijani counterparts. After that, Russian Defense Ministry stated that Defense Ministers of both republics took measures to stabilize the situation at the border.


West seeks to weaken Russia’s influence on Armenia amid escalation in the region – expert

TASS, Russia
Nov 17 2021
According to the Vladimir Yevseyev, head of the Caucasus division at the Institute of CIS Studies, Armenia, who calls on Moscow to provide support to Yerevan, seeks to shift all responsibility on Russia

MOSCOW, November 16. /TASS/. A number of Western states seek to weaken Russia’s position in Armenia, taking advantage of the escalation at the Armenian-Azerbaijani border, says Vladimir Yevseyev, head of the Caucasus division at the Institute of CIS Studies.

According to the expert, Armenia, who calls on Moscow to provide support to Yerevan, “seeks to shift all responsibility on Russia, which [from Armenia’s standpoint] must ensure their territorial integrity for them.”

He noted that a number of politicians in Yerevan stated that failing to provide such aid may affect the Russian-Armenian relations negatively.

“I would not rule out that this kind of action was initiated by certain foreign states. The interference is obvious here. I would name the US, France and the UK among the countries that interfere in the affairs of the Republic of Armenia. [These states] seek to weaken the Russia’s presence in Armenia, force Russia to abandon Armenia completely. It is in their interests to show that Russia does not aid Armenia,” he said.

Meanwhile, according to the expert, the US and France, being co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group, are interested in a settlement of the situation in the Region, but they also seek to worsen Yerevan’s relations with Moscow.

“There is a certain coincidence of positions on Nagorno-Karabakh, but there’s also grudge against Russia, because Russian peacekeepers have been deployed there, but no French or American ones,” Yevseyev said.

Casualties Reported in Clashes on Armenia-Azerbaijan Border

Nov 17 2021

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Armenia and Azerbaijan reported renewed military clashes on their shared border Tuesday and blamed each other for starting the renewed conflict. (Shutterstock)

Armenia and Azerbaijan reported military clashes on their shared border Tuesday and blamed each other for starting the conflict amid tensions between the two ex-Soviet nations that have simmered since a six-week war last year over Nagorno-Karabakh.

The Armenian Defense Ministry accused Azerbaijan’s military of opening fire on Armenian positions, killing one person and capturing 12 servicemen. The Azerbaijani government, meanwhile, accused Armenia of a “large-scale provocation” on the border.

Armenian lawmaker Eduard Aghajanyan told reporters that 15 Armenian soldiers were killed in Tuesday’s clash, but so far there has been no official confirmation. The Azerbaijani military said two of its servicemen were wounded.

Later Tuesday, Russia’s Defense Ministry reported that hostilities on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border had ceased, following talks with Moscow. Armenia’s Defense Ministry confirmed that report.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken issued a statement Tuesday calling for de-escalation.

“The United States is deeply concerned about reports of intensive fighting today between Armenia and Azerbaijan,” Blinken’s statement said. “We urge both sides to take immediate concrete steps to reduce tensions and avoid further escalation.  We also call on the sides to engage directly and constructively to resolve all outstanding issues, including border demarcation.”

Armenia and Azerbaijan have been locked in a decades-old dispute over the separatist region of Nagorno-Karabakh, a region that lies within Azerbaijan but was under the control of ethnic Armenian forces backed by Armenia since a separatist war there ended in 1994.

Moscow brokered a peace deal last November to end six weeks of fighting over the territory, during which more than 6,600 people were killed. The Russia-brokered truce allowed Azerbaijan to reclaim control over large parts of Nagorno-Karabakh and surrounding areas that the Armenia-backed separatists controlled.

Tensions on the two nations’ border have been building since May, when Armenia protested what it described as an incursion by Azerbaijani troops into its territory. Azerbaijan has insisted that its soldiers were deployed to what it considers its territory in areas where the border has yet to be demarcated. Clashes have been reported ever since.

On Monday, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan accused Azerbaijani forces of an incursion into his country’s territory, and reports of fighting, with the use of artillery, followed Tuesday from both countries.

Armenia’s Security Council has called on Russia to help protect the country’s territorial integrity.

Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu spoke on the phone with his Armenian and Azerbaijani counterparts Tuesday, urging “both sides to cease activities that provoke the escalation of the situation,” the Russian Defense Ministry said.

Pashinyan also spoke by phone to Russian President Vladimir Putin about the situation on the border, according to the Kremlin.

European Council President Charles Michel called Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and voiced concerns over the escalating tensions on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border, according to Aliyev’s press service.

At a U.N. Security Council meeting in New York on preventive diplomacy, the Armenian and Azerbaijani ambassadors accused each other of starting Tuesday’s border clashes.

Armenian Ambassador Mher Margaryan said Azerbaijan had launched “armed attacks” that hurt international efforts to de-escalate the situation and undermine prospects for peace.

“A strong and unequivocal reaction to Azerbaijan’s illegal actions is critical for preventing further major escalations of the security situation in the region and beyond,” he said.

Margaryan called for urgent steps by “international actors” to prevent further escalation and demanded the “unconditional and complete withdrawal of Azerbaijani armed forces” from Armenian territory.

Azerbaijan’s ambassador, Yashar Aliyev, requested the floor at the end of the meeting Tuesday evening to respond to what he called “the false and potentially misleading statement” by his Armenian counterpart.

Aliyev said Tuesday’s confrontation stemmed from “large-scale armed provocations by Armenia” and the “armed forces of Azerbaijan adequately responded.”

He said that “Armenia’s continued territorial claims are the result of irresponsible actions on state level and of dangerous revanchist ideas overtly propagated in Armenia.”

After last year’s war, Aliyev said, Azerbaijan expressed readiness to normalize relations with Armenia, including signing a peace treaty, but “Armenia has failed to reciprocate the peace agenda.”

Nonetheless, Aliyev said, “Azerbaijan is confident there is no alternative to the normalization of relations between the two countries … and is determined to advance the agenda of peacebuilding, reconciliation, peaceful coexistence and development.”

Armenia, Azerbaijan agree to cease-fire following day of intense fighting

UPI
Nov 17 2021
By Darryl Coote
The fighting between Armenia and Azerbaijan erupted on Tuesday nearly a year after brutal fighting between the two sides agreed to a cease fire. File Photo by Azerbaijan Defense Ministry/EPA-EFE

Nov. 16 (UPI) — Armenia and Azerbaijan agreed to a Russia-brokered cease-fire Tuesday evening following hours of intense fighting along their disputed border.

The fighting stopped at 6:30 p.m., according to the agreement, Armenia’s Ministry of Defense said in a statement.

“The situation has relatively stabilized,” it said.

Armenia confirmed the death of a contract soldier with the number of wounded being determined while 12 service members were captured by the Armenian side, which said two of its soldiers were injured.

Both sides claimed to have inflicted significant damage to the other as well as traded accusations that the other had started the fighting earlier Tuesday.

The eruption of fighting and the abrupt cease-fire occurred a year after the two ended 44 days of war in the disputed mountainous Nagorno-Karabakh region, which resulted in thousands dead.

Yerevan on Tuesday said Azerbaijan attacked its border at about 1 p.m., resulting in the loss of two military positions while Baku said Armenia launched an attack at 11 a.m “in order to capture the high grounds” and “take more advantageous positions, thereby gaining military superiority.”

Azerbaijan has yet to comment on the ceasefire, which was announced after Col. Gen. Zakir Hasanov, its defense minister, held a phone call with his Russian counterpart, Sergei Shoigu.

Tuesday’s fighting was met with quick rebuke from world leaders calling for de-escalation.

European Council President Charles Micheal urged via Twitter for a full cease-fire and committed the 27-nation bloc to working with partners to overcome tensions in the South Caucasus.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said the United States calls for “immediate concrete steps” to reduce tensions and for both sides to dialogue.

“The recent increase in tension between Armenia and Azerbaijan underscores the need for a negotiated, comprehensive and sustainable settlement of all remaining issues related to or resulting from the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict,” he said in a statement.

​The US Worries About Armenia-Azerbaijan Tension Spike

Al-Bawaba
Nov 17 2021

The US Worries About Armenia-Azerbaijan Tension Spike

Published November 17th, 2021 – 07:20 GMTFacebookTwitterLinkedInPinterestShare

Highlights

  • ’We urge both sides to take immediate concrete steps to reduce tensions, avoid further escalation,’ says US Secretary of State
  • The US voiced concern Tuesday over the increased tensions between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

“We also call on the sides to engage directly and constructively to resolve all outstanding issues, including border demarcation,” he added.“The United States is deeply concerned about reports of intensive fighting today between Armenia and Azerbaijan. We urge both sides to take immediate concrete steps to reduce tensions and avoid further escalation,” said US Secretary of State Antony Blinken in a statement.

“As noted in the Minsk Group Co-Chairs’ statement on November 15, the recent increase in tension between Armenia and Azerbaijan underscores the need for a negotiated, comprehensive, and sustainable settlement of all remaining issues related to or resulting from the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict,” statement said.

The Azerbaijani Defense Ministry said Tuesday in a statement that Armenian forces have carried out “large-scale provocations” against the combat posts of the Azerbaijani army in the Kalbajar and Lachin regions of the state border, while two Azerbaijani soldiers were wounded in the attacks.

The Azerbaijani army immediately carried out an emergency operation, the statement said, adding the movement of the Armenian forces was blocked and its forces and means were damaged.

Azerbaijan and Armenia took steps to stabilize the situation on their borders, said a statement by the Russian Defense Ministry later in the day.

It said the clashes in Karakilise have ceased and the situation is currently back to normal and under control.

“As of 5.30 p.m. (1330GMT), with the mediation of Russia, a cease-fire was declared on the Azerbaijan-Armenia border,” the Armenian Defense Ministry said.

Meanwhile, Russian President Vladimir Putin discussed the tensions on the Azerbaijan-Armenia border with Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan.

Putin and Pashinyan agreed to stay in contact, the Kremlin said in a statement.

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

During a 44-day conflict that started in late September last year, Azerbaijan liberated several cities and 300 settlements and villages that were illegally occupied by Armenia for almost 30 years.

This article has been adapted from its original source.

Iran urges for restraint amid new Azeri-Armenian conflict

Mehr News Agency, Iran
Nov 17 2021

Foreign Ministry spokesman Saeed Khatibzadeh stressed the need for the two countries to respect internationally recognized borders and called on them to resolve their differences through dialogue and peaceful means.

Khatibzadeh described the current tensions as dangerous for the gradual process of achieving peace and progress in the region and said, “The Islamic Republic of Iran like in the past, is ready to assist the sides to resolve disputes and establish stability and security in the region.”

Armenia’s eastern border with Azerbaijan has witnessed a new round of escalating tensions between the two countries while they accuse each other of violations, Russia’s Interfax news agency reported, quoting the Armenian parliament.

Interfax also reported that the Armenian Ministry of Defense announced today that 12 Armenian soldiers had been captured by the Republic of Azerbaijan. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Azerbaijan stated in a separate statement that it blames Armenia for the deliberate escalation of tensions on the border between the two countries.

Earlier, the Armenian Defense Ministry said that the situation on the eastern border of the country had been very tense since 4 pm (local time).

KI/Spox

 

Armenia becomes associated with Horizon Europe

EU Reporter
Nov 15 2021
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 European Commission

The Commission has signed an agreement with Armenia for tighter co-operation in research and innovation. For the period 2021-2027. Armenia has been granted association status to Horizon Europe, Europe’s €95.5 billion research and innovation programme. Researchers, innovators and research entities established in the country can now participate, under the same conditions as entities from the EU member states. Innovation, Research, Culture, Education and Youth Commissioner Mariya Gabriel said: “I welcome Armenia to our Horizon Europe programme. Armenia has continuously increased its participation in the previous Horizon 2020 programme and has supported the acceleration of the reforms of the Armenian national research and innovation system in the past few years. Armenia will build on its past successes in Horizon Europe.”

Association to Horizon Europe supports the ‘Global Approach to Research and Innovation‘ and reconfirms Europe’s commitment to a level of global openness needed to drive excellence, pool resources for faster scientific progress and develop vibrant innovation ecosystems.Armenia was since 2016 fully associated to Horizon 2020, the previous EU research and innovation programme (2014-2020), and multiple success stories resulted from this co-operation in areas like health, skills and innovation capacity for SMEs, and more. Further information is available here